HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-01-14 - Orange Coast Pilot. I
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THURSDAY .JJ\NUAllY 11 1<J82 ORANGE COUNTY CAL lfORNIA 25 CENl S
New evidence revealed in jail death
BJ STEVE MITCHELL CJf Ille Delly ...... SlaH
New evidence in the jailhouse
death of Robert Gary Wardman
last summer in Laguna Beach
shows the victim was in a right
with four Laguna Leen-agers just
hours before he was discovered
dead in his cell.
But no criminal charges will
be sought against any of the four
youngsters as a result of a
four-month i~vesli5?ation that
shows the boys left Wardman
lying on a sidewalk outside a bar
following a physical altercation.
Wardman, a 35-year-old apa
s alesman was found
semi-conscious outside the Main
Street bar on South Coast
Highway last July 22.
Police transported Wardman
to the city jail alter paramedics
<-'ailed to the scene determined
the man was intoxicated.
Le881 than 12 hours after he
was bobked into Laguna Beach
city jail, Wardman was found
dead in his cell
An officer later admitted he
dropped Wardman on hls bead
while heJping him out or a patrol
car in the back of the police
s tation, but failed to notify
superiors about lbe fall.
Thal admission came after an
autopsy performed on Wardman
showed he died of a severe skull
fracture suffered nine to 12
ho_urs prior to his death.
Hut Dr. Peter Yatar of the
county's coroner's office sald
the skull fracture was of such
magnitude that It couldn't have
occurred by dropping the victim
from a height 'of only three-to-20
inches from a patrol car.
It was not until Sept. 24 that
police received Information that
several boys had been involved
in a flsht with Wardman on
South Coast IDgbway the night
he was found unconscious on the
sidewalk. .. Investigators spoke to two of
-the boys who were identified as
having been involved in the
altercation, said police Lt. Terry
Temple.
·'Information from the boys
.was strongly indicative they and
two other boys had, in fact.
gotten involved in a physical
altercation with Mr. Wardman
on July 22."
He sald the four boys, aged 16
and 17, had gone grunion
hunting off Brooks Street beach
late on the night of July 21.
(See JAIL, Page A%)
Divers hunt plane crash viotints
·Winter toll hits 184
Snow covers Gulf states snapping po~er lines
By Tbe AalocJated Press
Winter refused lo release its
1rip on the South today,
dumplng snow lo the GuJ.f stat.es,
while the East dug out from a
storm that roared up the
A ll a n ti c C"O as t c 1 o g g i n g
highways and closing airports.
Six days of cold and snow have
killed at least 184 people.
The snowfall Wednesday was
a curiosity in the Gulf states, but
It became a severe...e.roblem as
icy power ·linei iftii>piCJ,
deprlvin1 nearly a million
people ol electrical power and
sending thousands to abelten.
The storm dropped a ball-toot
of snow as it cbar1ed up the
Atlantic coast, and left u muc:b
as eight inches from Vlr,mla to
Rhode laland.
The NatJonat WeatJter 8en6ee
said snow is expected •1aJn
Laguna and Newport
fjgbt off shore oil
Laguna 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 the two cities.
Laguna Beach City manager
Ken Frank said Wednesday that
following a rp~ting 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 lo decide
whether lo lease Southern
California offshore waters,
including areas as close as three·
miles lo Laguna and Newport,
for drilling and production of oil
and gas.
·Utah police
slay suspect
in killings ...
'SALT LAKE CITy, Utah (AP>
-Eugene Gonzales , a
California man killed lo a
Wedneaday night shootout with
Sall Lake City police, is believed
to be the man wanted ln
October's s hooting of two
California Highway Patrol
offteers, authoritJet said:
A Salt Lake City policeman
and another man died in the
excban1e of 1unflre, a nd a
MCOncl policeman was wounded,
police said.
Salt Lake City Police Capt.
Jobn PoUet aald preliminary
eomput.er cbects of
ldentlftcat.loa found q11 Gomalel' body Indicated '•W. ia tbe .. me ·~bjeet.''
Fln•.,,nnt cheeks to coaftiili I.be patent.la! llnl were .........
lat. today, be aaJd.
Salt Lake City Poltce Cpl. l.Ollald ..._.,SI wu ibat to •••tla •· l»atroiman DeuU 11e11oB. M. wla woaded ID tM
... batde. ~ Cblef &.L . "Bud" .., Mid Oonaalel ...
.... Ill tM ICeM and AatbaaJ
CIM IVIP9CI', Pac• All
Earlier this month Laauna
Beach Mayor Sally Bellerue
fired off a letter lo the
Department of Interior terming
a s "insufficient '' an
environmental impact report on
a proposed offshore oil lease.
The letter, endorsed by the
City Council, sought deletion or
possible sale next month of
tracts directly oa the coast of
Laguna Beach.
In her letter, Mrs. Bellerue
s aid the department's
environmental impact report
.. gave Insufficient consideration
to the sensitive and significant
nature of the Laguna Beach
shoreline."
She warned of the possible
adverse impact an oil spill
would have on tbe city's
inlerticf8J zone.
today from the Appalachians
-and-leww~Gt'fft Lakes to the
m.Jd-AUantlc states and loto New
En11Md. witb taln forminc to
.tbe.:. South. lllnne1otan1 were
warned that the •torm beadlnc
thetr way was "potentially
daqeroua."
Temperatures were expected to remain lo the teens and 20s
for much of the central and
eutem parts of the nation. Tbe
mercury bit 30 below zero today
ln St. Cloud, Minn., and 11 below
lo Travene City, Mlch., records
for the date.
Temperatures were expected
lo remain in the teen.s and 20s
for much of the central and
eastern parts of the nation.
Schools and businesses were
closed throughout the South and
East on Wednesday and
University of Tennessee
students went sledding on the
streets of the KnoxviUe campus
during the first full -day closure
of the wtiversity ln 18 years. The
snowfall was the worst for
Georgia in 42 years.
With ice and snow
everywhere, some people had
very little waler lo drink as
pipes froze and burst. Two
Mississippi cities declared water
emergencies and a water-main
break in Elmwood Park, Itl.
prompted officials to urge
people to boiJ their water.
Snow f ell today from
Shreveport to New Orleans as
Louisiana Gov. Dave Treen
advised slate employees lo <See FREEZE, Pa1e A%>
•
.,. .......
WHERE IT HAPPENED -This map locates the scene of the
Air Florida airliner crash in the Washington, O.C. area near
some of the capital's most well -known landmarks.
Sex off ender held
in murder of boy
Tbe Orange County Grand
Jury bas indicted a 35-year-old
convicted sex offender for the
Augwst, 1981, kidnap-murder of
a 12-year -old Anaheim
newspaper delivery boy.
The four-count indictment,
banded down Wedneaday,
accused Robert ~actson
Thompson of murder, kicblap,
sodomy and sex pervenion in
connection wlth the deatb of
Benjamin Lee Brennem11n.
The jury also add6d a apedal
circumstance allegation of
murder committed during ·a kidnapping, a count thal eoulcl
lead lo imposition of the death
penalty if Thompson is
convicted.
Tbe Brenneman boy's body
was found in the Rancho Palos
Verdes area after be
disappeared from an Anaheim
apartment complex on Aug. ~.
1981. The youngster died of
strangulation.
The Indictment against
Thompson was soueht by the
Orange County District
Attorney's office lo move the
case Into superior court.
An indictment is a formal
charge made against a person
by a grand Jury. It does not
establish gullt or innocence.
Thompson already bad been
arrested and charged with the
slaying, but the start of bis
preliminary heating ln North
Orange County Municipal Court
had been delayed by defense
lawyers.
Because of the Indictment, the
defendant was now to be
arraigned today before Orllllle
County Superior Court Judie
Luis Cardenas.
Newport City Ball
bans Wayne brorue
76 killed
• m DC
tragedy
WASHINGTON <AP> -
Divers in thermal suits chopped
through thick ice on the
Potomac River today lo their
grim search for scores of bodies
entombed lo the fuselage of a
crashed jetliner. A police official
said "the slow, tedlous tuk" of
recovery may take three days.
Seventy-four or the 79 peopte
on the plane were ldlled in tbe
crash ol the Florida-bound jet
taking off from National Airport
Wednesday and most sank with
the plane, stiU strapped ln their
seats. District of Columbia
police said two other people
were killed when the Air Florida
plane broadsided cars as they
inched across the 14th Street
Bridge laden with rush-hour
traffic. The impact sheared the
tops off some cars.
Air Florida tried to purchase
Air California last year. and has
been trying to buy a controlling
share ol Western Airlines.
As heavy equipment was
brought in today to hoist the
aluminum crypt from beneath
the ice, the bodies of two victims
-an infant and an adult -were
spotted in the river between ice
floes. A helicopter lifted them
out. The bodies were frozen
solid.
A crane was positioned on the
span. ll lowered a ca1e bearing
two men to the waler for a
closer look. Although a forecast
snowstorm had not begun, the
midmorning temperature was 27
degrees and the sky was gray.
adding to the difficulties of the
task. ·
The divers were mating boles
In the ice for a platform from
which to dive. The Army Corpe
(See IET, Page Az>
lllllil ClllT 1111111 ·
Fair tonight through
Friday but with some bitb
clouds at times. Patchy
fog or low clouds near the
coast early Friday
morninc. Ovemilht lows
38 lo 48. IDgbs M to 73.
illlllT•Y
Rut0Krafe11r <:arrou
BfMOn Im beft ~ .. /Id
bw 1cllOMM"f 1111• A8C1 -
afttfq.,e1, borf>cc"t, attd
ct11tom.er1. SH Page Bl.
11111
•
'
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..
l•
I'
i
l ,
Ir.
f ,
i i .. ..
Ufa .... -An unld~ P_..,.ter frqn durlfw a rescue attempt. The
an Afr Florida jet that crashed mto t~e taken from a television monitor.
Potomac River holds onto a safety ring
FromPageA1
JET CRASH CAUSE PROBED. • •
of Jtnlineers brouaht a huge
plank tD lJ)lace in the river for
the ~appurpose ..
lia J. Furmao, a spokesman
for tbe National TransportaUoo Safety Board, said there wj.U be
parallel divinl operaUona -one
aet of dtvera trytnc to locate the
plane's fllaht data recorder; t.be
other aurveylnl t.be fuaelaae to
see whether it can be lilted out
intact.
Francia McAdams, bead of the
NTSB team of inveatigaton,
said, '"l'bey may have to lift the
wreckqe before they get to the
bodies."
The airport, closed after the
crash Wednesday, reopened at 7
a .m . EST and was operating
normally. JeUiners flew-in a
steady slreJm over the site, less
than a mile from the end of the
rwiway, u ere• members on a
recovery boat poked lone poles
into tbe dart wate'r'.
Helicopters were flying so low,
they almost touched the river.
"We expect t.be recovery to be
a slow, tedious task, taking
anywhere ~rom one to two to
from Page Al.
three days perhaps," said
J.amea Sbu1art, a D.C. police
inspector. "We want to mate the
recovery u quickly u possible,
but you must keep in mind the
fact that weather condiUona a.re
such that they are not conducive
to rapid recovery.••
The NTSB "10 team" of
lnvestt1ators set up abop at
nearby NaUonal Airport.
Transportation Secretary
Drew Lewis; Sen. John Warner,
R -Va .; and Virginia 's
governor-elect, Charles Robb,
visited the crash site early in the
day.
The la.st major crash involving
.an airliner was on Oct. 31, 1979,
when Wettero Airlines J>C-10
eras ed in Mexico City.
A least ti ve people were
pl ed from the fragments of
tb plane or from the river
w ter, cold enough to kill in
lout.es.
The Boeing 737, carrying 74
passengers and five crew
members , took oll Crom
National Airport, hit the span of
the. 14th Street Bridae. broke in
'• ..
SUSPECT KII,IJID. • •
Reyes, 28. Salt Lake City, died a CHP Offlcer Ken Gazaway
short time later. said in Loe Aqeles that "it's
Tbe chief said Nelson was ln about 95 pereent sure It's the stable COftdltion in LDS Hospital, same guy."
with womda in his legs and an ••He used tbe same flnt,
arm. "middle and lut name -Eucene
Two other penons were beinl Dale Gomales -tbe same date
questioned by police, Wlllougbby of birth, and lt'1 tbe same
said. id\ACd11Uon of .v.eblcle," Wijloulbby s.td the two...poU~ · · Gauw·&Y said of the motorbome
olflcera, riding ln separate cats, where the 9:30 p.m. shootout
responded to a disturbance call occurred.
at a mobile home behind a Authorltiea bad issued an
bouae. 'Ibey were talking with all·points bulletin for a ~root
four people ln the trailer when white and oran1e 1976 Itasca
one railed a 9-mm pistol and motorbome.
sbot Heaps twice point-blank In A Eugene Gonzales was being
the chest from a distance of 9-12 sought for questioning in the
inches. Oct. 1 shooting along the San
Pollet said it was Gonzales Bernardin<> freeway about 5
wbo e>pe.eed fU'e. miles eut of downtown Loa
Bear parts
sale charged
LOS ANGELES (AP) -'[llree
Koreatown men have been
charted by the city attorney
with aeWna gall bladders, teeth,
cla•L ~d paws or bean to
orle.JI ~1lerb doctors and
a11r~· · bear parts in
C We1al, whether the pnnesh are purcbaed f1 llunters or Imported
froM hr S.t, aaid ;Sa.ate
Flab -'Game Warden Job
Da•••, who nked for-tbe crlmlml ftllnp.
Dawson laid tba~ many Aaiam ~ar tall· bladders 1!9ft m powers. and a Iliad
martet ._ been .created fot the
pl'Odut=t.
Vaiidals puncture
500 vehicle tires
CON<X>RD (AP> ...._ Police are
buaUn1 •vandal•· who bave puaetun.t about sqo tires on LSt
ears in two suburban apartment
P..-tlDl&aU. i
laYe1tl1atora said an "ice
plck·Wle u.trumeat~· was ued. If conttted, a vandaJ could
reeetft a maximum $500 ftne
ud alx IDOfttba in Jail.
Angeles. CHP Of.fi-cer-.Joh
Martinez was killed and bis
partner, Officer James Szabo,
was wo\IDded by shots fi!ed
from a passing 1969 Buick
Riviera.
The FBJ was also seekinc
Gonsales, 35, and his alleeed
partner in the attack, Thomas
Martinez, 3S, on ~ warra.at for
the May 15' rob~f)' of •.ooo·
from the First National Bank of
La Jara, Colo.
Martinez was arrested Oct. 15
and la hetd in the Loe Angeles
Co\Ulb' Jail on two counts of
rob6""ery stemming from an
unrelated Sept. 16 .robbery it a
Looa Beach market an'1 botet.
lie lias not F>een chareed in the
rreew~y .sboolill&, CHP
com muai,ca~ion• supervisor
Barry Polen said today.
Tbe onlr man charged in
conllecUon . with shootlna is
Anthon)' zamora, 31, accU$ed u
an accessory for allegedly
repainUng the car believed used
in the unprovoked freeway
attack. ~
Authorities s uggested
Gonzales alid Martinez were
fleeing from an armed robbery
at a San Gabriel supermarket
and opened rtre when it
appeared the officers, who were
clearlq ~from the freeway,
were manni.nC a n>adblock.
Stabo wH wounded ln the
neck, shoulder and side but
recovered and bas rebu'ned to•
duty.
. .
two, then toppled Into the river
barely 100 yards from a second
span crowded with commuters
beaded home to Virginia in the
driving snow. ·
Furman said there was no hint
why Air Florida Flight 90 to
Tampa and Fort Lauderdale
crashed.
The airport control tower
reported no distress calla from
tile doomed plane durin1 its few
seconds of. fllght Wednesday.
The last crash or a commercial
plane at National, a smallish
40·year-old airport snuggled on
the Virginia bank of the
Potomac, was ln 1949.
The blue and green airliner
had just taken off from National
Airport, where it had been
serviced by American Airlines.
The airport had been closed
temporarily to clear snow from
the runway until about an hour
before the aircraft took off.
Visibility was about a hall
'mlle, close to the minimum.
Three inches of snow had fallen,
and it was snowing heavily at
the Ume of the crash.
FromPageA1
FREEZE~ ..
report to work only "if roads
permit."
Georgia Gov. George Busbee
declared a state of emergency in
Atlanta, which was immobilUed
by half a foot or snow. and
ordered National Guardsmen to
aid stranded motorists and help
. move •baadoned cars. · •
Tbe Red Cross opened 25
disaster shelte rs in Georgia,
Alabama, Mississippi and South
Carolina.
Alabama imported 100 utility
wor~ers from Florida to help
restore electricity to 750,000
people, a nd thousands lit
candles or moved in with
friends. An Alabama Powt:r Co.
spokesman said it probably will
be se\letal days be{Are all .~ed --~
As the storm ldt the South,
the s now began fall i ng
Weanesday in the Northeast.
and the accumulations by the
afternoon rush hour snarled
traffic badly in New Yori( City,
Baltimo re a nd Spr ingfie ld,
Mass., and on highways in New
Jersey and Pennsylvania.
Texas highways we re clogged
by up to 18 inches or snow.
··People are stranded on just
about every road we have north,
west and south of Austin," said
Texas Highway Department
spo~esman Larue MclArin. ·
lo South Carolina, up to 6
inches of s now fell Tuesday
nlgbt and Wednesday morning.
· from Page A 1
WAYNE •••
Carradine in addition to Wayne
hlmsell.
The Jaycees do not have
enough money to pay artis t
Matson. "-
To a person, city otricials
acknowledge the finished plece
ts handsome and likely worth
more than the asking price.
But Councilman Don Strauss
said be made the motion to )eep
it out of city ball because "I'm
leas than enthused with It al this·
point.''
The sculpture was to "8ve
been '-~•iled ln city, baU tb1a month.
City officials, who suaaeat the
bronae wort eventually may be
displayed in an expMded ~
at the Newport Theater Arts
Center. said they're uqture
where it wUl be placed in the
mtanUme.
"Biil we will bavf an
unvetllng ceremony
,aomewbere." added *o• t Wbltley, N•wport's )•~•. beacta. and .... ctJon directar.
P'or hla part, arUlt Mldlon
1aid be wu liven pennlu• to "'fud tiia a,ronae work and taDk OU AoMI •Pinal bis ~ to cover cialtl.
HEW YORK (AP> -
Prealdent Rea.ran t.oJd a CfOUP
of N.w York bualnetlDMD and
elvic a.den lotay that "&bett
l• a aew aplrlt of indlvldual
lnttJaUve rlllnl lJl our land" to
supplant the faiJed efforu ol bl1
eovernment.
The president ltew from
W asbin1ton to meet tbe new
secretary-sene.-aJ of tbe United •
NaUooa and to address the New
York Clty Partnership, which
aervea as a model for his
campat1n to encoura1e
¥Olwatary effo.rU to solve aoclal
problems.
Jn ' speech prepared for a
luncheon of th~ two·year-old
association at tbe
Waldorf-Aatoria Hotel, R'aean
told the sroup: "You are t.hat
tousb little tu1 that can pull our
sblp of ai.te otf the attoall and
out into open water."
The partnership, headed by
David Rockefeller, la dedicated
to improving economic and.
social cooditions in the city by:
eoordinatina private and public
proera\'DS and has task forces
concentrating on publlc safety
and youth employment.
Reagan left the While House
at 7 a.m. PST. his Mari.Qe Corps
helicopter kicking up a blizzard
of blowing snow on the South
Lawn u it headed for Andrews
Air Force Bue, Md.
· En route to the air base, t.he
heUcopter tl.w over the site of
-recovery operations tor •n Air
Florida Jetliner that itruck a
brldae and crashed rnto the
Potomac River on Wednepday.
Deputy White Hoate Jress
secretary Larry Speakes-said
the president wanted to t4ke a
look at the search effortl.
One ol Rea1an's pet projects
bas been formation of wbat he
calla bis Private Initiative Task
Force, .a group of about 40
corporate executives and civic
leaders assigned to idenllfy,
reward and foste r voluntary,
se lf ·help projects in
communities across the country.
He called today for "a
rennaissance of the Americap
community, a rebirth of
neighborhood. This ls the heart
and soul of rebuilding America.
"We are not going back to the
glory days of big aovenunenl,"
Reagan pledged. "Some in
W asbington still pif\e for the
politics or th~ past; policjes that
didn't work lmd never wUI. We
are living with the mJsery of
their mistakes. The best view of
big government is in a rear view
mirror as we leave it behind."
Using new rhetoric, Reagan
reiterated his claim that the
present recession is a result ot
the failed policies of,tbe tat._
"Our administratior It \he
cleanup crew for those who went
on a non·stop binge and left the
tab for us to pick up.
"The recessio n hurts, it
causes pain. But we'Jl work our
way out or it and faster than
expected."
He predicted the incentives
provided by his economic
program and the will of the
Vietnam veteran
gives burial cash
LOS ANGELES CAP) -A
businessman, Henry Rushing,
36 , of Vent ura County, who
served in Vietnam has donated
$9 ,000 toward the burial of
indigent veterans.
The county morgue in Los
Angeles may have as many as 30
bodies of U.S. combat veterans
tbat were not buried because no
one would pay. Some are not
identified officially, according to
the authorities.
Ammc:aa people ar• the dri¥1Di
t.rce1 behind r1cover1, ina
appU.led few volunteers to help
IOht tM problems of poverty
aAd aeed that hf 11ld
aovernment baa failed to cure ..
It bu been a fundamental
tHel or Rea1an '• polltlca!
phlloaophy tbat. 1overnmea& •
•bould atop trYtaa to aolve t.be
array ol IOdal piobMma lt baa
•tackled llDCe U. New Deal ud
that tbaM cloMlt to community
prob&ema are better equipped to
implement IOluUons efflcteQUy
and effectlvety.
arson case cured
Night 'blindness' linked to late ~V '
BOSTON <AP> ~ Diseases often get their names from
their causes, and so it was a natural that someone would
come up with Carsoriogenous -or Johnny Carson disorder
It is a harmless form of night blindness that may be
caused by people who spend their nights watching late
television shows. ,
Dr. Park alehl of CinciMati, in a letter in ~y ·s New
England Journal of Medicine. wrote that .a patient
complained about not being able to see out of her left eye al
night. Funny thing, but the doctor told her he had tbe same
affliction.
"She customarily watched a popular late-evening talk
show while lying prone in bed with her head turned to the
left and her right eye buried in the pillow.•
"Naturally, when it came time to turn off the set. she
could see well only with the dark-adapted right eye. The
problem was explained a np she was relieved.··
From Page A1
JAIL DEATH.
They were walkine back to
their car about midnight wi.n
they saw Wardman on the Inland
.side or South Coast Highway. Lt.
Temple said.
"Wardman appeared lo be
extremely intoxicated and was
stagaertng,'' Temple said. He
said the younpters were talldnl
loudly and Wardman apparently
thought they were yelling at
him.
"He (Wardman ) started
yelling inc:oberently at them,
the n crossed over t o the
ocean aide or the hiebway and
confronted the i>oys," he &aid.
The boys purportedly ignored
ward man and in the middle of
the 1400 block, crossed to t.he
inland side of Uie highway.
Tbe_y were standin& near the
Main Street bar when Wardman
allegedl~ ran toward then again,
waving bi.a arms and attempting
to strike dne .-ith his fist.
The boy avoided the blow. and
Wardman reportedly slugged a
second youth in Ui'e face. Then
he tried to hit the first boy
again, at which time the second
rounister t ckled ,wardman,
• •
brlngine him down to tbe
sidewalk.
When t.he boy stood up, be saw
Wardman lying on bis back,
mumbling and moving his head
from side to side.
The four boys went to their car
and drove back past the tavern
where they said they saw two
people atandine ov e r
Wardman's body.
The boys never reported the
incident to police, and, Temple
said, one parent actually
instructed his c hild not to
discuss the fight.
Sheriff's coroner's officials
determined Wednesday that
Wardman's death certificate
will remain classified as an
accidental death.
That WU baaed OD the findings
of the distri ct a ttorney's
investigation that revealed there
was no criminal ·intent on the
p~rt of the four )'OUths.
The investigation determined
the incident was ''more or a
self-defense situation on their
part," U . Temple s aid.
The boys were not identified
because of thelr ages.
Siaie Pllnel urges
TWclear waste ban
SACRAMENTO (AP> -The ( resolution, Sen. Barry Keene. '
state Senate Rules Committee is '-1). Me ndocino, the ··Pacific
u r g i n g t h e .R e a g a n Ocean is California's back ya~.
administration to maintain the Now is the lime for us to speak
prohibition against dumping out to protect our food supplies.
nuclear wastes off the California bealtb and economy."
coast. Keene said radiation leaks in
By a 5-0 vote Wednesday, it the ocean would eventually
approved a resolution that also affect humans through the food
calls for an international chain. increasing the threat of
agreement barring nuc lear cancer.
dumping ln the Pacific Ocean Three sites off California have
until it's proven safe. been used for nuclear wastes.
The committee said the U.S. One was near tbe Farallon
Environmental Protection Island, less than 50 miles west of
Agency is. preparing regulations San Francisco. Another was
to lift the moratorium on ocean south of Santa Cruz: Island, and
dumping, and the Navy is the third was 200 miles weal of
considering plans to scuttle San Diego.
nuclea4,.s ubmarines in the l'he vote sent the resoluUon
ocean. SJR27, to the Senate Finan~
Said tbe author of the Committee.
ALL BETS ARE IN ..•
AND YOU 'RE THE WINNER!
when you give your man that which he deserves.
You aJone know what he likes and
we offer a wide selection of
the fl,_,. men's rings. available.
There's no gamble • to
quality. Each ring is hand crafted
l
14 Kt. gold and flt to carefully'
•Aecl8d one of a kif'4
gemstones ..
-
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pli ... '9dlapolW•·
• '' l'cl lib to laa" IWD aU to aarHlf,'' •b• uid la 1a
intenlew ln llel.ean, Va.
PoUUca "la a very JHJom mlat~.... I dOD't Uke UM Hparetlon1. 1t 11 ,..,y am&IMllna .••
But lbt11 be Nady for tbe
••upald job" ot flnt lady
wta-o Democrat CU,... &;
•••• ii aworn la as Vtr1lnl1'1 1overnor
Saturday.
llra. R'obb bu been
'eonaeeted with politics for
aJma.t all ol HI' f1 yean.
lier f1tber former P,...._ LJ•••• j•~••••• wa1 a Texaa con1re11man when
IM WU bora.
Tlte Cape Town Soutb
Africa Supreme Court bu
cranted a divorce to tbe
second wife of heart
transplant pioneer Dr.
C~Bananl •.
KING OF SWING -Benny Goodman holds a caricature of
himself at awards ceremony in which Goodman received
Stereo Review magazine's Certificate of Merit award for
"outstanding contributions to the quality of American
musical life."
aart.ra Bananl, 31, wbo
married ·the surseon in 1970,
ii the dauabter of wealthy
lndustrlaliat Fred Zoellaer.
The coupJe bu two IOOI.
GrouoCla for divorce may
not be dlaclosed under South
African law. The 58-year-old
Barnard was previoualy
married for 22 years to
AJle&&a Bal1lard.
Sister aaya Bo can.'t act
Bo Derek may be
good-looting, but sbe is bossy
and can't act, according to
ber sister, model Kelly
Colllna.
"She's dragged me down
the street by my hair,·· the
20-year-old Miss Collins said
ln an interview published this
week in the British magazine
Woman.
Miss Collins, a rising
actress herself, and ber more
famous 25-year-old sister
have been feuding since
Kelly got a job promoting
jeans. Her sister's husband,
The widow of Aawar Sadat
says the slain Egyptian
leader bad premonitiontJ of
his death but refused to take
precautions that might have
saved bis life.
In an interview with
Barban WaJ&ers for ABC's
'20·20," Jelau Sada& said her
husband believed bis mission
was ended and told her, "I'm
preparing to meet God.'•
Tbe interview from Mrs.
Jolln Derek, accused bel' ol
trying to cub in on Bo's
fame.
But the two slaters have never been very close, Mis.a
Collins said in the interview.
··Bo was pretty bossy at
home," she said in London.
"She always told me what to
do, so we bad some real
screaming sessions in those ·
days."
Of her sister's talent, Misa
Collins said, "Bo is beautiful,
but I haven'{ seen anything
in which sl\e showed she
could act."
Sadat's home in Giza, Egypt,
was the r1r1t lbe former first
lady of Egypt bas granted
since Sadat's assassination
last Oct. 6.
After rumors of
assassination attempta last
fall, •.·1 really begged blm" to
wear a bulletproof vest, Mrs.
Sadat said. "He refused.
'Don't think to this way,
Jebf.o.' be said.''
SURVIVOR -Sierra crash
survivor Donnie Priest.
10 , lost both feet to
frostbite suffered in the
five days he·spent aboard
plane wreck. Amputation
was performed al
Stanford Universit y
Medical Center.
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MEXICO CITY CAP>
-Santa Fe Avenue was
widened recently to
improve traffic flow in
the aoutbern part of the
Mexican eaplt11. But
someone apparently
forsot to tell tbe
telephone company.
Tbe telefbone poles
are stl I there,
1oldier-1trat1bt ill tbe
middle of tbe newly
added lane. Ruldentl
on the street report
aeveral drtftn a day
aer.-cb to an utonlabed
halt or slam into the
poles.
What do YoU like about the Dally Pilot? What don't you like?
Call the number below and your meuat• wUl· be recorded,
traumbed and delivered to tbe appropriate editor.
The same If.hour anewenn, HrYlee •97 be UHd to ...ct I«:
ten to tbe .._, on any topic. MaUboa caatrlbuton mutt include
their name and telephone number for vertfteaUoa. No circulation calla, plea..
~ell UI wiMll'I OD your .......
-
Or1nge Cout DAILY PfLOT/Thurtday, January 1 ... 1982
Residents pPess ·light
Lake Forest group won initial shOoting range battle
After winnJ.ni an ldial wti.
to block conatruetlon of 1
lboot1fta rue• Mar tbelr IOUtb
county llom•, a Lak• ~ clUsem' 1roup ta pl...., to
1tep up ita c1mp1l1n a1almt
otber proposed polloo or
flrefllhte:r facWU..
Members ol the Lake Fo.-t 11
Master ffom•owaer1'
Alaoclatioll are boD&al to CGllect as many u 10,oOo lepatww
from Saddlebaet Vall•y
residenta proteatln• poa9'b1o
expanaioa of the Orani• Couaty
aovernment'• James A. MUllck
Facility.
A.pplicatiom
/oraeroice
horwn due
Applications to Disneyland's
25th anniversary Community
Ser'f'ice Awards Proaram mu.st
be postmarked or delivered to
Disneyland no later than
midnlgbt Friday.
A spok~man for the proaram
said $150,000 wlU be distributed
this year in 63 cash awards
which include one $25,000
out.standina award. two $12,500
special judges award.a, 10 $5,000
ana 50 $1,000 category awards.
Categories selected for the
1982 program are: cultural art.a;
education; service for youth;
accomplishments by youth
groups; special health services;
accomplishments by support
groups ; social community
service; civic community
service; service by or for senior
citizens, and environment.
ecology and energy.
Orange County organiutions
wi.nnina awards will be selected
by a committee beaded by
Norma Brandel Gibbs, former
mayor ol Huntington Beach.
Tb• l•au• wblcb eparked community lntnHl ,, .. a
propoeal In DecomMr from
Orant• Cowity Sberlff Brad
Oat.a for an acreement wtt.b tbe
Ma.rlDe Corpe to loue ao .,.. ot .... 8'ljateat to the eouaty
PJ"Ol*V, eurreatlY tbe alte of an
honor fann for Jall inmatet.
la exdwlse for free UH of the
land, the county wouJd aJAow the
Martn.. JoUlt U10 of the ftrtnt
raa1e. The Marines wanted a
deallion from the county Board
of Supervlsora by Friday to
mMt a deadline for 1ub1Jllttin1
federal budcet applications.
But the residents proteeted,
elalmlnt tbe qwck 4eclalon
would ban paved tM WIJ for
future esp~natoa tbout
properly llucl.Ytna all opticm1. ·
Homeowner P,...ldent Paul JobJUIOD N1d tbe ,........ .... ,
favor develol>meot at tM tlte of
tralnlnl acaclemle& or exNDCled
Jall facllltiea, botb of which are
under comlderation.
LHt Friday, llarlM. S.adon
called off tbelr Friday dU411ne.
The supervisors, wltb the
pressure off , decided
Wednesday to lnclud6 the
20-acre canyon ln a conaul&ant'•
master plan study for Muaick.
County said free
of waste danger :.; :
No danger of spread of
diseues from illegal dumpinc of
infectious human tlaaue
currenUy faces Oranae County
reaide~t.a1 county health officials relteratea Wednesday.
Dr. Rex Ebling, assistant
director of the county's Health
Care Aaency, told members ol
the board of supervisors the
county bas "no major proble•·
with the disposal of infectious
waste."
The report from Eb.Ung and
several other top admini&trators
was ordered by the super-
visors , who claimed to be
surprised earlier this week
about allegations that Oran1e
County mi&bt be affected by
alleged illegal dumping reported
in Los Ange~es County.
After bearing the reports,
however, board chairman Bruce
Nestande said be was satisfied
that county residents are not
being subjected to possible
Infectious diseases,· 'such aa
hepatitis, salmonella or sbigeUa,
that can be ~p'Fead •from
improperly disposed wute. .... ~
Ray Rhoads , pr~iram
manager for the county's aolid
waste management pTogram,
said Wedn~ay be la convinced
current surveillance procedures
at the four county llindfills
prevent almost· any UJegal
dumping. He said Tuesday that
DO problems seemed to ex.1st in
the county.
"After further 'mvettli&~tion
yesterday, J still ifeei we don't
hive this P!'Obiem," he aai.d.
Assembly backs tax
indexing measure
Nes taode said the i,sue,
described by several Jj)JU.lters
as "sensational," came up
because of an investieation
started in Los Angeles County to
examine the practices of a
Garden Grove-b•secf firm ,
Security Environmental
Services, which is Uc'e'naed to
dispose of such waste. He said
the Orange County Djstrict
Attorney's Office also will
investigate the issue.
Speech on
Ki'!i. slated
at SJ4 CJllege
An lpcome tax indexin' me11~ authored bJ fltewport
Beach Assemblywoman .l(artan
Berteaoo hu been forwarded to
tbe state Senate where it must
be approved by Jan. 28 to be
placed on the June ballot.
The 1ndexina measure -
billed u "a vote for tbt! Working
class" -was approved Monday
by the state Assembly on a 62·8
vote.
Indexing is the process of
adjusting income tax brackets
upward to reflect inflation ao
that a taxpayer receiving a
cost-of-living raise won't be
push-ed into a hi&her tu.
bracket. .. ·
Generally, lbe measure would
mean more money for taxpayers
and less money for the stale.
If the Senate passes Mrs.
Berge.on 's proposed
conatltutlonal amendment, it
would Join a Ho-.t,.rd ;Jarvi•
lnltlative, also dUUog with
Income tax indexing, on the
June ballot.
Jarvis' initiative is linked to
the state Consumer Price Index
and Mrs. Bergesoo's ls tied in
with the state Wage and Salary
Index.
Santa Ana College will
commemorate Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr.' s birthday
Friday when Dr . Harry'
Bdwards, ibciol~ pi-Ol'~r at UC Berkeley, asks, His It a
Dream Deferred?"
Dr. Edwards ' address.
sponsored by the Black Student
QJiion, is scheduled for 8 p.m.
Friday in Phillips Hall. The
speech is free to lbe pul>llc.
Sofa, OKlir • Ottoman
in Matching Leathers • '' I
CHAIR & onoMAN
.... 'ZOii.ff
.. CIAL
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.. ., ''
I tti .... ,. . , ,, . .
ea · er 5 1195 ...........
SPICIM •••
'895
if you fall ~ love with this grOlip
you have company, a lot of com.plQIY
In your choice of 8
top grtln leather ·
. ca:ORs: Carmel, Lugg1ge, · I Marigold, Wedgewood,
Palomino. Snuff,
Cranberry, Flagblue >-
I
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOTfThul'9day, Janu~ 14, 1882
e
J W AiSHlNGTON <AP> -
,President Reaaan's decision to ~eny Taiwan's request for
1tdvanced Jet fighters may be of
"lttle diplomatic or military
teonsequence but it··says quite a
eltit about tile man in 'lhe White
cJlouse.
H& will compromis~.
Peking bu been o~ a peace ~ffenaive toward the Island it
11:onsiders a temporarily ~stranged province. A shot
hasn't been fired in anger across
•lftbltuc>'fl . course instead of
tr.~"-'& Tai~ like any other
friiftdly toUntry with lertttmat~
sell-defeme need.I. Indeed. .._.... bad implied it
.Ot ....... the dlp&o~Uc
nlitlelal e.aablllbed In 1179 if
the •ale WU approvect. ·
It cl9la)'ed Hndin1 a bJlh·level
mllltary ~on Mre ln an
1111 IUlYlll
AP' ........ ~he strait lp years. In fac~.
hinese le~rs have returned
o the admonition of the lat.e,
ragmatic pre mjer , Chou
En-lal, that the mainlanders
2\'can learn from Taiwan."
apparent move to underscore its
objection and China scholar A.
Doak Barnell said in November
there was "a high probability"
the U.S. ambassador in PeJdng
would be kicked out if the sale
was approv~.
COLD WORK - A member of the rescue team yells to shore
as he and another rescuer look over wreckage of Air
Florida jetliner that crashed into the Potomac River in
Was hington Wednesday . An estimated 70 were killed
i 1 Pred~ctably, the Nationalist
tvover'nmenl in Talpei took
exception to the decision to deny
some 150 North•op F·SG •
igersbarks. Reagan's campaign record
s uggested be would have
granted Taiwan the new jets,
which have a 15 percent greater
range than the F·5Es and a
more powerful engine that allow
them to carry improved
e l ectronics a nd Sidewinder
missiles.
'It just dropped out of the sky_'
Just as predictably, a foreign
inistry spokesman in Peking Witnesses' reports say plane was going too slow, too low
ged a strong protest against
e president's approval of the
onlinu ed sale of l ess
phJsticated F·SE Tiger II jets
Taiwan.
But apparently bent on a
on·violent reunification -and
eking much in the way of a
odem air force itself -China
not likely to launch a military
ffensive against Taiwan just
cause Reagan has held back
igersharks.
And while Peking may draw
me satisfaction from the
jection, Reagan's compromise
ecision to permit continued
oduction on Taiwan of Tiger
s under license from the
.orthrop Corp. prevents any
oating within the Politburo.
After having Taiwan's request
his desk since he took office
early a year ago -it was
In his While House race,
R eagan called for restoring
official government status to the
U.S. office in Taipei and bavinc
the best possible relations wilJi
Taiwan. He went so far along
those lines. he had to dispatch
his running mate, George Bush,
a former ambassador to Peking,
lo China lo ca lm the
Communists' nerves.
It was no wonder that two of
the Senate's most conservative
Republicans, Jesse Helms o{
North Ca rolina and S .I.
Hayakawa of California, were
dismayed by Reagan's decision.
WASHINGTON (AP> -"The
plane started to shake and the
next thing I knew I was in the
water," said Kelly Dunan, a
stewardess on Air Florida flight
90 out of National Airport.
MPOlent.s after taking off in a
blindine snowstorm. the plane
struck a bridge crowded with
homebound commut ers and
plunged into the Potomac River.
Miss Ounan, rescued from the
icy water by a passerby who
swam 20 feet to reach her. was
rus hed to a Vi rginia hospital
where she told Dr. Richard
Schwartz what she remembered
of the seconds before the crash.
Schwartz quoted Miss Dunan,
of Miami, as saying she was in a
seat in the tail section of the
plane. Her rescuer waS\ Lenny
. Skatnik, 28, of Lorton, Va., an
employee of the Congressional
Budget Office. He said he saw
• Miss Dunan cllnling to ~ rope
and trylna to reacn land.
''I felt so helpless,'' be said. ''I
couldn't do al'\ything . . . She
just gave out. I jerked off 1'111
coat and my boots and dove in."
When he reached her, "I think
she was out. Her eyes rolled
back and she just started to go
under and I grabbed her."
Miss Du nan was lis ted in
stable condition suffering from
hy pothermia.
Another passenger, Joseph
Stiley, 42, of Alexandria, Va .. a
pilot himself, said he realized
during take-off "we were out of
runway, and when we reached
that point we weren't going to
make it."
Stiley, who suffered two
broken legs , said the plane
"might have been just a little bit
heavy from the ice" though it
was de-iced "two or three
limes" while waiting to take off.
After the second of two
impacts, Stiley lost
consciousness and was revived
by the cold water. Escaping
through a hole in the fuselage,
he clung to the tail until a
helicopter dropped a line to him
and dragged him to shore.
Air Force Airman Terence
Bell wa s h eadi ng h o me
Wednesday from his job at the
Pentagon when he saw the Air
Florida jetliner appe ar out of a
heavy snowstorm.
"I saw him coming in too
low." said Bell, who was driving
onto the 14th Street Bridge.
"The midsection of the plane
smacked the bridge
"The nose went into the water
and sank right away. The tail
skidded off the bridge into the
river where it fl oated atop the
water ror about 20 minutes ...
"They JUSt dropped right out
of the sky ... s aid Lloyd Creger.
"l couldn't see anything wrong
with the plane at all ... Jl just
dropped out of the sky · ·
ged in 1978 -Reaaan struck
e kind of compromise that has
e practical effect of not tipping
e military balance while
However, it was not the first
surprising foreign policy move
Reagan has made in his first
year as president.
-Despite bis criticism of the
SALT fl treaty limiting nuclear
weapons, he has authorized
arms-control talks with the
Soviet Union. And while takinf a
tough line toward Moecow, be
appears beaded for the summit
this year with Soviet President
Airline o r dered to rehire stewardesses
isappointing some
onservati ves and othe r s
mpathetic toward the island.
Ray Cline, former deputy
irector of lb~ Central
telligence Agency,-cal~ the
ecision a s urrender to
lack mail." Cline believes that
eagan was convinced by the
ate Department, and against
is own convictions , that
anting Taiwan's request for
·5Gs could imperil relations
ith China.
• He says the president chose to
eep U .S . policy on an
Leonid Brubnev. .
-His support for lar ael did
not stop him from approvine an
$8.5 billioa arms sale to Saudi
Arabia and approvi.n1 official
U.S. criticism of Israel at the
United Nations for bombinc
Iraq's nuclear reactor and
annexing the Golan Hei1bts.
CHICAGO (AP) -About 1,400
United Airlines mgbt attendants
fired 14 years ago becJuse they
were married must be offered
their old jobs back, but the
judges who ordered the
reinstatement says it's doubtful
the airline will be able to rehire
them quickly.
In his ruling Tuesday. U.S.
District Judge James Moran set
no timetable for the rehiring,
which is to be based on
seniority.
henandoah confmion told
HARRISONBURG. Va. <AP>
A partner in a vineyard and
inery in Virginia's Shenandoah
alley said be has encountered
nsumer confusion over wines
ade in a California area called
e Shenandoah Valley.
·James B. Randel Jr., a
artner in Shenandoah
ineyards at Edinburg, said
ustomers have come lo his
ales room saying they have
ugbt his wine in Washington
res.
.. And jt wasn't our wine ...
this in spite of the fact that the
California label wa.s all over it
. . .. " Randel said.
The U.S. Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco and Firearms is
holding a bearing here on a
petition by the Amador County,
Calif., grape growers to use the
name Shel'\andoah Valley on
their labels.
The California group wants
tbe ATF to . designate a
10,000·acre section of Amador
Decorative Hard~are By
County as the Shenandoah
Valley Viticultural Area because
it is known locally by that name.
A petition also has been filed
by Virginia grape growers lo
claim the Shenandoah Valley
name.
Randel told the panel that
.association of the n ame
Shenandoah Valley with the
California product would burl
his vineyard and others that are
springing up in the new wine
industry in Virginia's valley.
AMALf I Swing• you into Spring
The flnMt Italian croftsmon1hip
SpedallzJng in the coordination of the
d«oratJ.-e hardware (Of' your proj«t.
Flnlslled hllrdnn tor:
DOORS, BATH, KITCHEN,
BARS, CABINET AND
BATH ACCESSORIES
(714) 642-4186
(."bed ,..,...,.
1514 Newport ....
that lftakes thl• IO'"'°I o
pure pt.a.ure to wear r-::::::~--
lone Calf.
S. •• 6 to 10
N. • .IYJ .. 10
M. .. 4 .. 10
~ WcMi~ SHOES
He said he saw little chance or
re hiring them all quickly
because of .. current trends at
the airline and in the national
economy.·· and he noted that
United has had no openings for
flight attendants since October
1979.
The hiring list now includes
about 1,000 attendants laid off
because oC flight cutbacks, said
Thomas Meites, the lawyer for
the married attendants. About
300 of the attendants would go to
Machine gun
law repealed
SPRINGFIELD, lll. <AP) -
The Illinois House and Senate
voted in rapid succession
Wednesday to repeal a new state
law that allowed private cilizens
to own machine guns.
The Senate voted 50·0 and the
House 148-4, despite complaints
by some House members that
lawmakers were yielding to
public .. hysteria."
·'This is a tempest In a
teapot," said Rep. Roman J.
Kosinski, D·Chicago.
the top of the list automatically
because of their seniority, he
said.
Since all the ma'rrted
attendatnls were hired before
1968, they would receive the top
salary of more than $25,000 a
year once back with the airline,
he said.
United spokesman Joseph
Hopkins said the airline would
not comment on the orde r
because other issues in the case,
including whether the fired
attendants s h ould get
retroactive pay, remained in
litigation.
Moran said the case is
"unique in the ironi es it
presents" because it grew out of
the women's movement of lbe
late 1960s but now leaves "one
class or women ... pitted
agai ns t another class or
women.''
"The 'sisterhood ' that might
otherwise exist between these
two groups has now been
frus trated by compf;lilion for
existing positions, perhaps the
last casually of the 'no
marriage' rule," Moran said.
The order stems from a suit
filed in 1970 to protest an airline
rule that flight attendants must
be unmarried. The rule. found to
violate the ~ivil Rights Act. was
dropped later that year .
But the suit filed by attendants
who were d1 s m1 ssed had
lingered in federal and appellate
courts Cor more than a decade
while lawyers wrangled over
compensation for the firings.
During hearings on the suit in
May, airline officials testified
they expected to hire about 2,000
new attendants by 1985 But
Moran noted that the airline bas
laid off more than 1,000 flight
attendants in the last six
months . making airli n e
predictions "wtreli able."
Lawye r s for th e fired
employees had asked Moran to
reins tate immediately those
with retroactive seniority and
order them retrained a nd
rehired within three years -
before oth e r furloughed
employees.
But Moran said that to act on
such requests, United would
have to spend $10 million to fire
the attendants in the positions to
be given the plaintiffs , and
another $21 million in retraining
them, as well as other costs.
OCTDwill
p/anyour bus
triJ!for
~ ~ A"-. ---r-
No matter where you want to go
in Orange County, we'll make it easy for you to
get there on an OCTD bus. Just call us at
686-RIDE. We1l tAtll you the exact routes
and timee. And if you need achedules and
Ride Guides, we'll eend them free. & give ua a ~11. You'll find the bus is
your easy·t.o-uee ticket to work, school,
:Si~IE::::~ shopping and entertainment in ,
.-!: Orimp County.
Cainqrillo reduction· due?
1Udge re/Uses to block planned cutback in beds
Camarillo faclUty. /
CHINA LAK• NAVAL
WEAPONS STATION, Calif.
<AP)-Ajalal cout~ '#•
Hy they wUJ ~nr! a Na~ plans to start I bwTOI at
LOI ANGSLU (AP> -A Superior Court Jud1• bu
rtftlled to block a planned
Naedaa ID tM number of beds
at CamarWo Stat. Hoepttal t.bat
LOI A.qelel County HYI wUl
hinder treatlnc of county mental
pattenta.
Before bll n&llnf. Judie John
Cole beard l•Umony from the
atate Department of Mental
Health and county attorney•
w.ho are embroUed ln a nap over
bow to serve Loi An1elt1
County's mental patlntl', by far
the most numeroue «roup ta the
The state ~ant to reduce tbe
number of beds by 154 .
Generally Camarillo staffs
between 800 and 900 beds, said
Deputy County Counsel Gre1
Holland. About 590 patient.a are
from Los Angeles County, he
Hid.
the Cblna Lake weapou fadlit)',
but for now the poupt aay tbey
are cODUa•"'Ja eJfo$ ~ ttae anlmt)i ve.
· Monday wu the flnal day for
_Coast Guard probes
. boat disappearance
Holland said the dispute
between the county and the etate
wlll now go to arbitration before
a etatewide Citizens Adviaory
Council, a lS-member body that
advises the state Legislature
and the Department. of Mental
Health on mental health issues.
public comment on the Navy'•
Envlr9omental IJDJ>•ct.t
Statement. oo seveul pl.-f'I!_
r e m o v a l • a D~ b a lac
environmental section otflcl~~ Tom Dodeon aay1 the Nu,.
recommend• tbat aoim•I
protection J?OUP8 be 1weo * months to ute their mooey ~
remove the burros for adoption. SANTA BARBARA (APf -
The Coast Guard baited a search
for three Monterey fishermen
whose companion was found
dead but bas launched an
i.nvestigation into a rePorted
radio transmission that bad
delayed the search for their boat
more than a day.
The 36-foot Monterey fishing
vessel, The Three Sisters, was
reported overdue with four men
aboard Saturday morning,
officials said.
. However, another skipper
reported bearinJ a transmission
from the vessel the same day
and called the owner's father to
say The Three Slaten was safely
en route to Ventura Harbor, said
Lt. j.g. Mark Jones al the Coast
Guard's rescue coordination
center in Long Beach. He said
be· did not have the name of the
second vessel.
The search was then called off
until another fishing vessel
spotted the body, of one of the
men, Ysidro Mendoza Ramirez,
27, of Oxnard.
In a contract between the
state and county last year, the
state agreed to pay $6.2 million
last year And a minimum of
$6. 72 million this year lo the
county to pay for the care of
patients who will no longer be
admitted to Camarillo, said
Holland. The money is at issue
in the arbitration talks, because
the county contends they shQuld
be getting a total or $7 .2 million
this year under a part or the
agreement that said a cost of
living sum should also be paid
by the state, Holland said.
TOGETHER AGAIN Brothers Charles. left. and Max
Schneider e mbrace on their reunion at Los Angeles
International Airport this week. Charles. 71 . a Los Angeles
resident, and Max. 761 of New York lost track of each other
during the Depression. Each thought the other W<JS dead u_ntil
a chance conversation with a friend put Char les on the trail of
his broth.er.
Robinsons
He said the Navy would be~ shooting the animals lf t e
removal ls not completed in th t
lief eveland Amory, head ol ~ Fund for Animals, says h
group bas removed 400 of
animals so far, and will contin
efforts in that area. i
The Navy says the burros
endanger both aircraft takina
off and landing at the base 111f1
ground traffic in the area. ,
SALE. HOW TO HANG IT UP
AND SAVE 20°/o TO 450/o
~-
A. Extra storage closet from Lee/Rowan, will
be $40 after Jan. 31 , Introductory sale $29.99
B. Set of 3 Adda-Hangers for suits
from Lee/Rowan, reg. $4.75,
sale $3.79.
C. Vinyl hangers from Lee/Rowan tn
jade, rose, ivory, light blue. lavender
and white, reg. $.35 ea .. sale 12.tl doz.,
6 doz .. case pack, one color, 115.tl.
D. Bag of 5 ac~nted satin hangers
by Ashland In beige, tight blue,
peach, dusty rose, gold, pink or
cognac, reg, $12, sale sa.•.
F Champagne vinyl hamper bag by
K·C Products, reg. $16. sale S12.79.
H. Set of 6 Crystal Cuts plastic
dress hangers by Bogene. reg .
$4.50. sale U.59.
J. Champagne vinyl stow-all box by
K-C Products. reg. $19, sale $15.18.
M. Champagne vinyl 10-shelf
shoe/utility bag by K·C Products,
reg. $19, sale $15.10.
G. K-C Products' champagne vinyl
Jumbo dress bag, reg. $16,
sale 112.71.
All of these closet organizers are In
Robinson's Notions, 14, except
Mltalon Viejo, Palm.Springs, Santa
Monica and Sherman Oaka. To
0rder1 call toll·free 1-IOC).Hl-ll01.
K. K·C Products' champagne vinyl
multi-purpose organizer chest. reg .
$25, sale 118.esJ.
L Lee/Aowan•s awing out alack rack, reg. se.
sale2111.•.
IHOP THU .. IDAY AND PRIDAY 10-1.
NEWPORT FASHION ISLAND• WllTMINITIA MALL .
) "
N. Men's hardwood suit hanger by
Spieg'I Bogene. reg. $7, sate $5.58.
P. 8ef of 8 h~r~ skirt hangert
by Spiegel ~ene, reg, $5, sale .. n.•. . .
I
a. Set of 3 hardwood trouser
hangers by Spleget Bogene, reg. $5, .. , .••.
.. ,
# ..
I.
..
and 40it, and half ot the vlctlml die w1t.bln two to
lout yean after the dlHue 11 dlapoeed.
"It'• a bad dlleaae with 1 abort pfOlllOSla,"
.. ld Dr. Alexander Fefer, who d.lrected the
research. ''We are pleased with these results.••
Tbe docton used bone marrow tr•planta on
12 leukemla vtctlm1 who were lo early 1ta1ea of
the dlleue. All received the marrow f\"om their
1enetlcally identical twins~ tbelr tluue could
be awltehed without fear of rejection. . . -
_ "We are taking a
patient who feels well, who
lpoks well, who has a
probably brief time
programmed to live.'' .
Eipt were completely free ol diaeue two to
.fJve yean later. Leukemia recurred in three of
them about two yean alter tbe operations, but
only one patient died of the cancer. Four more
patients have since bad tramplanta, and "all are
doing beautifully,'' Fefer said.
•
In an Interview. Fefer aaJd the declllon to
perfonn the trauplanta required mucb "IOUJ aearc~" by dodOra and patlen~.
"We lri taklnt a paUent wbo feel.I well, who
look• well, who la functlonlna and who bu an
unknown tbouab probaS>l)' brtel tlme procrammed
to Jive," tbe cfoc:tor •aJd. "And we are 1ubJeetln1
the patient to vlaoroua, .,.,_.Ive, potentially
fatal treatment ID the hope that we can prevent the
development ot the acute pbue and thereby cure
the dlaeue." .
Leukemia 11 a dlleue ol tbe bope marrow,
whlch forms the body'• blood cells. People with
chronic tnnulocytjc leukemia usually die aooo
alter the dlleue reaches a criUcaJ ata1e called
blast crtsll. Tbil occun when the marrow makes
mUUona of uaelesa, Immature white celJa that
crowd out other necessary blood cella.
The doctors alao performed. m•rrow
transplants on io people who were lo blut crllls,
and the resulta were far leas successful. Eight
died, and the other two were free of dlaeue a year
and later.
The idea be.hind the treatment ii almple .
Doctors eave the patienta huge doses of dru11 and
radiation to ktll their cancerous bone marrow
cell•. Then they replaced the marrow with healthy
marrow from their twins.
HONORED -
Entertainer Harry
Belafoote, wiMer or
the 1982 Martin
L u t h ff r K i n g
Non·violent Peace
Prize, ha s
·'dedicated his life to
the s truggle for
justice, peace a nd
e quality ," said
Coretta King, widow
o( the sl ain ci vi I
rights leader.
•
SACRAMENTO (AP> -Cblld abuH 11 expenal~1 1 lellalaUve commlUM wu told.
''Cbl10 abuM 11 tU mOlt ftacaJ.11 IDd laWDIAl)'
coatly dev&.Dt '*aavlor tbal •• : la our
1oclety in terma of DGD·prodUcU" ~. i.t ener~ from the work force ID4 other ~ma " aaldndale AJmdale, ~ UM Callfo;;ia
Conaortlum of Cblld AbUae OoqacUI.
Sb• 11ld Lee Hant)' Oawald, wbo
aaaa11lnattd Prealdeat Je>bn Kennedy, m111 murderer Charlea Maiiaoa and Texaa Tower
1nlper Olarlel Whitman were all abuled cbUdren.
lb. AJmdale tettlfled Tuelday at a beartnc by
several leetslative committees oa two pendln1
tyPff ol ltreM, wbo bave never learDed to deal
with sueb problem.
Oae of 'b• pea4lDI bill•, AB171f-bf AIM~~ ..... l).l&Wbree, would take
adv.-.. GI Ill m.mtoa ta federal wy o.er tM
tbree yean by parnllDI It out to vol\lfttffr
a1encle1 throu1b · tb• Department of Sooial
ServlHt.
Ttie other, 5814 by Sen. Robert P"'ley,
D·Rlverskle, would appropriate $6 mlllloo IA state
f undt to create l\l)dellnes and oversee all of the
a•enclea that bave to do wttb chUd abuu.
.
bllla. .
Other •llneaaes said half of the battered babies under a year of .,. wbo at'9 treate4 in
emer1ency rooms will eUber. be dead or
permanently crippled by the Ume they are a year
old unless authorities st~p in.
Veteran newsman ·
Ban nixed·
Witnesses described bables who starved lo
death, were put in trub compactors, or. were
i&nored µntiJ they simply died.
I
Beech to retire
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP ) -PuUtaer
prllewlnner Keyes Beech ls returnln1 to the
United States next week lo retire after three and a
half decades of reportin1 from Asia.
UKIAH <AP > -A
'udge baa ruled that
M e ndocino County
cannot ban tbe spraying
of phenoxy herbicides
because the state bas
taken over pestltlde
control.
Odelle Robinson, director of a Santa Barbara
proaram, said only 3 lo 1 percent of abusen are
severely disturbed. About t1 percent are
personality-disturbed, sbe sJJd, while the other 15
percent are normal parents. eXl>eriencinc normal
Beech, 68 won a Pulitzer Prize in 1"° for bis
coverage of the Korean War whUe a reporter for l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_.. the Chica o Daily News.
•
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I '
ROM' IN THE SNOW -A mother horse and ~olt eajoy a
. gallop across the winter landscape near Fairbault, Minn.. ,
..........
where plenty of snow has fall en in recent weeks .
~hool asked to OK 'lnheriit the Wind' I ' I
panel of educators recommends staging of play on famous Scopes trial
BALTIMORE <AP> -A panel of
Ha rford County educators baa
recommended that a · school
• puperlntendent allow a student
performance of the play "lnberit the
tlind," the Baltimore Sun bas reported.
Roberty indicated last week that be
would probi.bit two ei1hth-1rade
teachers from 1ta1in1 a student
producUon of the play at the North
Harford Middle ScbooJ ln Pyieaville.
Roberty bad said be felt the play was
inappropriate for eltbth aradera and
indicated its performance could inject
the students ln a controversy over
creationism.
Proponents of creationism, which
holds that the Earth and moet We came
into existebce suddenly about 6,000
years a10, are aeetlnc to have the
theory taupt ln public schools aJont
with evolution, the-theory that Hfe
forms be·ean developin1 millions of
years ago.
The Maryland chapter of the
American Civil Liberties Union had
threatened a lawsuit lf Roberty banned
the student production.
Roberly, who appointed the panel to
study the issue, said be bad not been
informed of its recommendation. But be
said "if such a recommendation came
my way, I would accept it." ·
Classified advertising is your best
choice for help in selling the Items you
no longer need. It's Quick and
Inexpensive. and the Pilot reaches
Potential buyers who live In this area.
Call today. ·
111i1y Pilat
calssified ads
phone 642-5678
! The ne~paper quoted unide~Ufied
•ources 8$ saying a 23-member
~Jue-ribbon" panel recommended
IJarford County.Superintendent Alfonso
Joberly aJJow one perfermance of the
ptay, which depicts the 1925 "monkey
Vial" of Jobn Scopes .. The Tennessee
biology teacher was convicted of
dolatln1 a state law ·barring the
teacbint of evolution in public schools. The story was published in
Wednesday's editions. ·
Last week, U.S. District Judce
William Overton ruled ln Utile Rock
that an Arkansu law requlrln& scboola
to teach creationism lf they teach
evolution was unconstitutional. The
judge said the law was an effort to
introduce the biblical version of
creation into public school c~cula.
...-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~__.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Semi Annual
CLEARANCE SALE
Starts Thursday, January 14th
SPORTSWEAR
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
Newport Beach
$48-4121
HOURS : MON .. TUES .. WED .. FRI.. SAT. 10·-6
THURS .• 10 -9
.. f ~---------------------------------.....
THE PEANUT BlJTTER,
WINE AND POPCORN
MADE n TASTIER. • •
AND NOW
WEIGHT WAT-ac~a~E~as·
MAKES n EASIER!
Dn'llODVCllfO
GOLD CARD
from
~
WE WILL RBDUCB YOUR
WD1tL Y l'< TO ONLY Q.00
AVAILABLE ONLY UNTIL JAN. 31. 1982 •n•,.·aow
1. JOIN alfoRE JAN 31, 1Ml AT A RIOUCID RATI
OF ONLY t11 .00fwlth-.-....,,
2. ATI'END 12 CONllCUTIYI WlllU.Y MUTINGI
AT TME ftlout..M PU CW ONLY .. Pa Ma.
KRY LON
SPRAY
PAINT
Z BRICK
"DESIGN
IMAGES"
IT'SA
GREAT
SHELF
SHELF KITS
8Sims 25:,
RUFF·IT le:=~ DECORATOR
WALL TEXTURE
1£6.~ SAlf $1119
WD40
9 oz.
VISE
GRIP SET
N)l.U~S 2
#215-G
I
I
Mlue1
Cardigan
Sweaters
100% krvlic. Button Front
in Foll Cokn
Orig.
s10
long ()( Short Sleeves. ,.
Now
9.99
100% Cotton.
Hou11'1M1111
Kitchen
<:eramics
3 Patterns To
Chome from.
JUnlln.Ml ..... w_.•,
Wrangler9
Fashion Jeans
100% Cotton Denim in
. Naiy Great Styles.
CNef-200 Pair.
Ori . Now s~ 13.99
Jr.-tl Girl•'
T-Shirts
Screen-Printed.
Orig.
6.50
Mids leather
Jackets
Fashion loch
Ori s1l
'160
Now
89.99-
99.99
Boy•'
Vel°"r
Shirts
Pieced Cotton/Polyester
Juniors & Mil MI
Skirts
Foll Skirts in Assorted
Styles & Colors.
Broken Sizes.
Orig.
'24-
'28
Min'• Aannel
Shirts
Quilted Acrylic()(
Cotton Styies.
Min'•
Ski
Jacket
Assorted Colors.
Orig. Now
SS(). Oft
S6() • '19.i. 7~7
100% Worsted Wool
Orig. Now
s40 . 24.99 .
iiliiiilllii ...... ~ ....... ~p
lop'
Flannel
Shirts
Pre-School Sizes.
Orig.
4.44
Bath Shop
. Towels ·
Bath Sheet. . -.
Beige/Brown
...
Flannel
Shirts
~/Polyester.
~.
Lod. ,
18S . \ \
Knit Berets
Orig.
s4
,.Olid.
s.99-
7.99
Now
.2.99
'I
Now
4.99
Vorious Styles.
uilg.ri.
~'N Spicy
Ldiles' Bras
Slate Blue & Rose Only.
'I ;.·1"'9n'1
'Nylon
Ski Vests
Solid or Chest
Stripes.
41 Acce1Nffn
,. Ladi,s'
Outch Purse
Raintx>w Strow Wecrve. •
Orig. Now
4.99 sa
Mliln's
Golden Era
Sport Shirts
Polyester /Cotton" Blends.
eo,.·
Crew Neck
Svveaters
Assorted Stripes.
f;ll.Jewllry
l.adies'
Timex®
Mechanical Watch with Si~ C0se & Block Strap.
. --· -~--.. -
~raft slwws we/come
~ The Laguna Beach Crah
!Guitd has received City Council
1q:>proval to hold five shows in
t~82, providing a greater ~pportu.nity , for residents and
:tJut-of-town visitors to purchase
:frandmade articles.
For three of the shows Forest
jvenue will be closed to traffic.
allowing shoppers to browse
without having to compete with
cars.
For years the Craft Guild has
onsored .sales at various
cations ta· Laguna. all weU
ceived &f,the put>tMc. •
By apptOVing more shows. the
ity Council allows local
r .aftsmen to be(lefit from
creased sales. and also draws
visitors to the Art Colony who
will add to the city's economy.
In addition, the clty puts Its
best foot forward as being a
center ol the arts and a gathering
place for craftsmen . writers and
artists.
For Orange Coas~ residents
wishing to patronize the Craft
Guild's sales. here's the 1982 schedule:
-April 4, Forest Avenue.
Palm Sunday
-:-May 30, Forest A venue.
Memorial Day
-Nov. 28, Forest Avenue.
Thanksgiving
-Dec. 4 and 5, Village Fair, Christmas snow
ire safety devices UJOrk
' WycHffe Gardens senior was put out. The s prinkler and
tizen complex is the tallest nearby smoke detectors also set
ructure in Huntington Beach off a fire alarm that alerted
d bas been touted as the most firefighters to the blaze.
e safe b\lilding u well. Fire officials arri"ed live RA!centty, the ~ear-old high minutes later. They say even if
e was tested wben a grease the sprinkler had failed to
re started In an ejghth floor operate, the fire would have been
partment kitchen. cont'ained in the apartment
The building passed with because each room in the
ying colors. 14-story structure is a separate
The fire started when an unit with concrete walls. -year-old woman apparently f Id ft her electric stove on after fire o ficials say it wou have taken an hour for the door :ying potatoes for lunch. b d th r· t · th The grease caught fire. The. to urn to sprea e ire on o e
uatlon reportedly became ha llway carpet.
orse 'fter .. the woman threw a AU\ough most buildings
g on the blaze to smother it. don't have concrete walls. this
e rug caught fire and the blaze incident is further proof that
r ead to wooden kitchen built-in safety designs, such as
binets. sprinklers and smoke detectors,
However, the heat set off an are needed in a11 new structures
rerhead sprinkler, and the blaze • to save lives and property.
inions ~pressed In the space above a,.. those of the Daily Piiot. Other views ••· essed on this page are those ot their authors and artists. Reader comment is lnv1t-
. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box l560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714)
42·,32l. >
M. BO~d/Farewell message
Tbe Last Will and Testament of
ranci• a . Lord of Sydney,
atralla', -bequeathed: "To my
loved wlle, one Al1liJ1I for tram
e ID lhe can go IOmewbeM and
WJ1ibene1f.''
Q. ~:t .quarterbacks the beat
id toatwa.aayenT
A •. G...,rally. l•at laat year.
c-.O Bean runalilc back ';VJJter
ytoo .... t out the now a:etlred
tami Dolphins cpJarterbacl Bob
J'iese for tbe dbtlnctlc>n of belQI the
-ost biiblY pald ol tbem all. Payton
· ade $t7S,...,.
: Bob Hope'a TV ~Cl* uauiUy
about el1ht m1-.utea. To put me
same totett>er. be tapes at Jeut ,... oa ball i dolea dlffereet
bJec.1.1. loob tbea over ~
pla,JMCk. tbea .. out u. ...... •..;:a·'.bt one, ..., bll -.Mtea .............
threesome was fed up by boilday
commercialism. A stp on the tettte
read : "Take aome money."
Paatersby did so, too.
ID J'°°1don you can hire• plde for
the equi.alent of $2 to . lMd YOW'
CJ"OUP on a two-mile hl.te Uiroqb tbe
city, pauai:ng her~ aDd there to point
out placea of interest. Quite a
~araata Tbe Job title of such a
worthy i.a "atreet walker."
·~
Brown budget shows politics
As lf he bad performed some miracle,
Gov. Jerry Brown baa prepared a
budget which he says ii balanced and
will not require any new tues. "It ia,"
he declared, "a balanced budaet; it has
no new taxes on·general COQlumers; il
balances the sacrifices and builds for
the future."
Details leaked pre(iously by Brown
revealed that he bas provided an 8
perceQt cost of living increase for aged,
blind and disabled as well as welfare
payments for families with dependent
cbHdren.
HE SAID HIS budget is ,based upon an
upturn in the economy before the end of
1982 which would reduce earlier
estimates ol shortfalls in revenues and
on a speed® of coUecUons of laxe$
from businesses such as the sales and
. workmen compensation taxes.
So, once again. Brown emerses as the
"prudent, no-nonsense" budgeter who
abuns new taxes althougtl for moot.bl he
wa! anguishi~I over the need for them.
It is not surprising that be baa found a
way to avoid asking for new taxes.
Although he will step out as governor at
the year's end be hopes t.o wiD elecUon
as a U.S. Senator before that time
arrives. Whatever else be .lllay be
.
Brown remains the shrewd politician.
H e knows that raising taxes and
winning elections don't go together.
Whatever doubta be may have bad
about the wisdom of seeking new taxes
were resolved dW'ing the course of the
flll WATlll
·many radio talk shows he has hosted in
recent months. The people, be said,
have made it clear that they want more
cuta in government before they will
approve any tax increases.
Brown says be is making those cuts in
his new budget but they are hard to
find. Some stale agencies were reduced
5 percent but funding bas been
continued for many non-essenllal
agencies, most of them creatures of his
administration.
With only a slight reduction Brown
proposes to continue the bailout of local
governments without restrictions. The
irony or that ls that while be will refuse
s tate e mployees cost of living
adjustments equal to those to be given
welfare recipients , the local
governments will be free t.o grant their
employees whatever they wisb. ·
The same ls true in the case of the
schools which Brown says will be given
a full cost-of-living increase in their allocations.
AND THERE lS some legerdemain in
Brown's claim of no new taxes. Tbe
budget proposes lo meet the now
estimated shortfall of $2 billion by cuts
totalling Sl billion. The other billion will
come from th e s peedup of tax
collections and some new revenues
termed "fees" instead of taxes. These
include n e w c h a r ges to utility
companies purportedly to offset costs of
regulatory services provided by the
Public Utilities Commission. Brown
says s uc h fees a re part of the
movement to connect cost more closely to benefi ts.
Another irony in the budget plan is
that Brown, ln staking his program on
an upturn in the economy. is saying he
expects the econo mic program or
President Reagan, which be bas loudly
condemned, to prove itself before the
year's end.
Let pe~ple vote
To the F.d.itor :
I read in the media about Supervisor
Ralph Clark's various accomplishments
for the year 1981. They were a summary
of bis positions and beliefs, to which he
la entiUed. However, sleep will not
come euUy tonight ii I fail to challenge
b11 posiUoo oo John Wayne Airport.
For starters, be conveys the
impression that all of the county's air
transpbrtation probl~m ~ would
suddenJy be solved if only Uie C®nty
could expand John ·wayne AlrpQrt. For
the sake of discussion, let ua uaume
that we can wave a matte wand,
disregard the view of homeowners,
businessmen, the courts and a whole
UTay of otben who have oppoeed the
expansion Ol•Jobn Wayne-Airport and
auddenly re-create the airport u ii
proposed in tbe Mast.er Plan adopted by
the Supervilors February, 198L Based
on lbat plan the airport will ban a
capacity to handle 6 .1 million
paaseniers per year by the year 1980:
THAT'S l'INE, but bow ctOes ooe
reconcile the fact that everr. study
conducted by the county coocJUdes \hat
the requirement for air transportation
ln 1990 will be approximately ~ mJUion
p_.asengers per year? Some very •imple
arfthmetic indicates that some 14
million wUJ either have to stay home or,
perish the thought, drive. It just seems
utterly ridiculous that the county should
spend som~ $100 .milllon to expand an
airport· facility tbat simply will not do
the Job upon completion. ' ·
AnoUter item mentioned was a
complaint about the so-called "vocat .
minority." From my obMrvatlon polnt,
the vocal minority represents tbole who
are in favor of expansiolrotthe airport.
U •trikes -. ~at tboae wbo.-A•or
exJaDlloa fepr,eHD~ some 'Yt/q. narrow
lnleresta in a..·~ a¥ eoulea1t ear... leu what ~ to tbe ~ee of tti.f '
county so kin( as tllelr ~WI are
repr--.ct. Tiils doel DOt .... tM
riabt way to fO.
lt Mema·to ~that lf we really wSlh to determine ~r or-not UM ~
iD UM County ol Oran•• Wal &o .... ~
John Wayne Airport there la a almplt
way ot "'80lvtnc that qu"'6GD. AU UM
Board ot &apenilon peed • II_._
tbl• ''"" °" the ballot. 8tmPA1 .. ·• people at tbe ne~ 1e.....i tl..UU. ., .. ..._or not they wlab '6 --4 ti.GO
mllllDD to •pend Jolla w.,.. Alr1*'. _...,. ~d resolw a._,..~
-.Sforall.
eLARl!1'CS '· TU~R
"9
program for the past six years and I
have seen what growth and effect the
program has on the children and
families enrolled in Head Start. There
are so few social programs left that
have proved their worth so much as
Head Start.
The Head Start program is sWJ a
community based program needing
community sup]>Ort. There is within
your locaJ community a Head .start
program for anyone who is interested in
volunteering within the program or
helpine with famUy needs.
Thank you again for your concern for
the Head Start program and your commufllty support.
VIRGINIA HILL
Director
Re1titution worka ' To the F.d.itor:
I wa, pleased to see the coverage of
the Massachusetts reflitutioG program
and the Orange County probation and
victim-witness restitution efforts in tbe
Dec. 27 edition of the Daily Pilot. It
made me wonder if the residents of
Fountain Valley are aware of our own
Community Restitution Program. This
program has been in operation for four
years and works toward having a
youthful property crime offender take
r esponitiblUty for bis actions by
repaytna victims and completing h'ours
at a volunteer site provided by the
restitution specialist.
I HA VE BEEN on the Rettitution
Board as a S>rivate cltiaen for over three
years and feel this proaram ahould
oo scientific merit or educational
value."
• Creation science rightfully points out
the contrary evide n ce against
megaevolution. To suppress creation
science is notbinl less than censorship
and the stifling of contrary evidence.
CREATION SCIENCE accepts all
experimental results or microevolution
but r eject s all speculatio ns of
megaevolulion. It is intelligent and
cr eative des i gn -aptly called
microcreation, which pervades all
endeavors or human activity. whether it
be the arts or sciences. It predicts tbal
to increase complexity in information
or structure, intelligent and creative
design is required. It also predicts that
life only comes from life -a law better
known as the law of biogenesis.
Does teaching creation science
vioJate the separaUon of church and
state? The answer is no. Since some
churches literally have merged
evolution scJence into their religious
beliefs, then to teach evolution science
exclusively tends to violate the
separation of church and stale! Tbe
o nly alternative for the state is
neutrality, which guarantees all world
views on origins to be taught.
Therefore, creation science mu.st be
included whenever the views of
evolution science are presented ln
tax-supported schools.
CHRISTOPHER CHUI
Out of 'club'
To the FA.it.or:
'r~ceive some recognition. Thus far 97
percent ot the youngsters going tbroulb
this process have been succeasful in
completing their restltutlon· cmtracts
without further intervention from the
poUce or the courts. In addltion, over
$40,000 In restitution bu been turned
over to victims and the community.
When I became a member of the
Senator's Club, a JObn Schmitt support
organization, about a year ago, I bad no
ldea that I would later publicly tender
· my reaipatJon. .
However. aside from our supposedly
belnt fellow conservative Republicans,
I d.laeover I have absolutely notbln1 in
common with Senator ScbmiU. Haribl
seen him create the supreme penonal
and political error of 1upporUn1
biaotry, racls111, and anU-femiaiam
wblle displaytn1 a caJloua dilrecard for
the penonal beliefs and practices of
otbera, I now JoyfUUy and forever more
renounce my membenhlp lD tbe .. club''
and pray lb e boa lance of tbe
membenhlp will see fit to do litewtae.
I entbusiutically applaud restJtution
u a conaequence of crtmlnal behavior
and bope that when Pr'Oll'&IDI olfertn1
tbts service are di1cua1ed that tbe
Community Restitutlon Pro•ram ls
hailed u one ot tbe county's auceesaes.
SHIRLEY A. SYMONDS
Creation .•ci~nce
To the l'.dltol':
It ~ 1urpriaed tbe '18 percent
of 1U "Amerteane ( baHd on an •
Auoelated Pre11-NBC poll lut
Nowe!llbe!') dial "c,..tloD ld.enee bu
LELAND S. OUVBR
.,
• Orange Coalt DAILY PfLOT!Thursday, January 14, 1982 All
In Detroit proud people. turn tO :-~ar-s~•ll ~kitpli~n-
DSTl\OIT -I bave be.a In IOIDt um .. : they are tbt wont tl&Ma U.-auto At a United Auto Workll'I bu.Ucllq, I borrowed money from tome relaUvta to uHet than abodd)' .Ork DD tb•
Mrlt plaeea, bUt I doubt 1f many wlU lndu1try ever hu bad. It a.motive aat with lleveral douo of the buy toYtforUM di. a11embly 11nel that -u r•ponalble fa
mateb U.. mualvt room J wudtNd 0.trolt once stood for an American unemployed UAW mtn and women. ror de.creued auto aalee.
throup on a fri1ld wlnter aftemoOD eeonom.y that wu butllnc Md cocky 1ear1 they ..,.. uaed ·to bavlnc the uaaGHT 8£11'0&8 Chri1tma1, my .. ~, workers bave pride .. ·~ lut week. and full of bluat.er, today It II a falterinl Imai• of a t.ou•~• rleh ualon that 100 went out Cbriatmy c~. /\ltlJ N• ~· CooPer laid off ffCID .,Cauy...,.
Th• room bouaed an enctne auembly symbol of the American eeooomJ • tbe provided bet&1 benefit• for ltt when be came baek. ID, he 11ld .._.\ ~ •f~ i• yea~• "We've l&AY• bM
Une IOI' tbe Ford lilotoc' eo~ It w.tcbed rocks. Automotive Detl'i>&t waa not mtmben. NOw tMJ have DOjobl. had bou1ht my wife and me I ride It'• IO d~vutatini to -. )'OUI'
literally farther than the tytt eoukl tee; created to appear weak; and llOW, ult A man Dam.ct 1-au.l \VaUI tOld me Ctsrlstm11 present with hls carolln1 f:ob once you've t IO a;cb Into 1t But
I had nevt*' vlalted the muu&facturlq doe• to, It la ao wmatural a10l -u tbat be Md pe lO bttween 15 and eo money. Do YOH know what it ••' " ';&: '* ri
planu of Detroit'• Blt 'Ebree unaatw-al aa the emN r.;t:-.... D•troU•atea buble1H1, looldn1 for pack of~l•.,tte•. !l'hat'a ~ •• .;0~,i ~: .. ~·~tier :.'f: ~I
plant durtna the lblft tllal waaa•t dlian. work. "It'• Vtl'}' ~I to ao 1n and t•mily'a '-"DJ'latmaa cam\ to." anyone elle In tbe world 1f we're oven Earlier ln the day, I bad ... an even apply and lpplJ and apply,'' be aalcl. The workers I spoke with expreued a .. •
1toomler symbol of what t.be auto ''Becauae yQU know there aren't all)' fierce aenB!L~f prtde •bout their WO(ll. the cbaqce.
bualnea'a trouble• have done to the Jobi. But you keep looldn1, because you They Jal~ UMSf realbecl tba\ many ol Th~ wor'dl of tlae •\ltqll'Of"er.s wi city. I went to a soup kitee.. r.. bJ an havet.Owork." their ce>w>~m'n hpve accept,.t the fllh9d with sorrow aqd ~n1er a
order ol reUCloua brotben -a .. P Tim 1.ellk aald, "I tot laid off lut line that· Amerteao workers p~~ paiil0n. And •~ l walked atCiba 111111111 kltcbtn that bad been Mt up durlq OM Feb. 21. Cbriltmu waa the worst. I had Inferior prod\ldl c0mpared l9 fqfftp empty Ford usembly line, d&.U"lnc
Great Depreulon. Now, in im, people tried to pt any job I could -busboy, competitors. But they said thla la 1host shift of um, It waa almoet u
automakers before, and I was
unprepared for the sheer scope and alse
of the operation.
are linincupa1ain. security IUU'd, anythlna that mltht be wron1 ; they believe that It waa those words were echom,i ln the vut
open. Ana then lt ~· Cbrtltmaa. Wt misman~flMnt on the executlve le.el and solitary buildln1. fZ
'° All up and do•n tbe room, hu1e
half-completed en1ines hung from
metal roda. At each atop along the line,
separate parts were suppoeed to be
attached to the engines. The room was
made for action; it was sometbin1 out
of a 19508 newsreel, and it should have
bffn teenilng with swarms of busy men
and women ln work clothes.
''TBES.B AREN'T street people or
alcohollcs,n aatcr Lewis JDcboil, the
general manacer of tbe eoup kltcben,
commeotlaa"an Ille AllCrelllinl -ben
of laid-Oft 11_. Auto Won.. who
have been OOIDID1 lb. "TllMe _..people who art fadq bopeleanea, and who
are comlDJ here u a lpt resort. 'Ibey
have to eat, and we can feed them for
free."
You can't win playi:P.g 'someone else '~ g Qlhe ·2
I IC
But there was no one there.
I walked aloqe.
HERE, IN the winter of Detroit's
economic agony, was the ultimate
symbol of what ii happening to the U.S.
auto industry. The third shift should
have been in full swing In this Ford
plant, but because of the national
economy, and of faltering auto sales,
the shift bad been canceled indefinitely;
the workers had been lald off. Where
before there had been life, during tbls
shift there was only aUence. l walked up
and down the line and beard my own
footateps.
Ford's Detroit operation is awesome;
for those of ua who live elsewhere it is
difficult to imagine the sway that the
aiant automakers have over thla city.
Ford Detroit is a massive town in itself
-as is Chrysler Detroit, as is General
Motors Detroit. In good times, the Ford
Motor Co. employs 450,000 people
worldwide. Thlnk of that.
But these. of course, are not good
In the line walUnc for a meal I found
Donald Cowan, 31, laid off from hla job
with Chrysler. "lt'a mlaerable to bave
to come here," he said. "You wonder If
you're ever 101ng to get to work a1aln. I
cJon't want to have to come here for my
food, but it's the only t.blq l can clo."
Eatin1 at a tab.le wftla b1a YOUDI
daughter was BeQj,m1n Woods, laid off
from Ford. He 1ald tbat this wu bla
first week comina to tbe aoup kitchen.
·'I really think that I bad no other
choice," he aald. "A man baa to feed bl•
family, and so here I am."
The men and women in the soup
kitchen were probably the most
dramaUc examples of what tbe slwnp
in auto sales bu done to the people who
build those cars for a livin1. And most
out·of-work auto plant employees are
not· reduoed to that status. But over the
Christmas holidays, there were 211,229
U.S. autoworkers on incleflnlte layoff-
and the weight of those numbers atarta
to have a terrible effect on the life of a
city.
·--------------------------------, I I
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Down the a1e1 it haa been an honored
axiom amoo1 1amblers of all kincb that
you ca.b't win playln1 somebody else's
same. And, ln truth, one of the areat
traps for men of achievement and
lntelU1eoce bas been their confidence
min 111111
that tbey could pfay aom&one ~lse'1
game and come out ahdc:t...
You may be smartePt.Bln a whip lD
your own Une, but thta~does not mean
that your aptitude necessarily carries
over to aomethlng else. But the vanity
of success in one area deludes ua into
thinking that we are au.round bright
and can do u well even when we are
Ignorant.
Millionaire lnduatr{allsta Imagine
they have political savvy; pollUciana
assume they can flourish in their
private affairs; academics yearn for
administrative powers; film actors
want to be their own producers. Thia la lp 1arae part wb•t Mark
Twain meant 'fhen he rem~tked
ruefully, ''l haye be•n an author fbr122 years, and an ass tor 55." He kept
investing ln business ventures, and
losing his while suit as well as his shirt,
before he bad the sense to recognize he
was as much• ninny about money as he
was a genius in wriUng .
I THOUGHT about this re..un, a
recent news item about Carlo Ponti, the
Italian film mogul, better known aa the
husband of actress Sophia Loren, who
was charged W dae See?1Jrll4'• •
Excbanae Commission with •fraudl.n1
invest.on 1n connecUon with five movie
produotion ventures. . .
Along with two Chlca10 lawyers. he la
accused of bilking Investors out of some
$3.5 million, promising to return them
100 percent profit, plus a tax deduction
of $4 for f!very $1 Invested. I strongly
suspect that most of these people who
plunked down these large sums knew as
much about the movie business as I
know about proce.ssing yak milk.
They are no doubt shrewd In their
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own field, but intelllaence rarer;
carries over from one area to 8'M)the() ·
even Edison made rottea ~ices •be¥
his OWJl inventions, supportlnt losers
and alighting winners; and an Industrial
genius Uke the first Henry Ford wu li
unmitilated disaster when he V'enturW
into pultllc affairs. • ~
rr IS VANITY and greed that prom~
mos.t successes to plunge into fieili
they know litUe of. W.C. Fields m~_y
have gone too far in saying, ''You cad't
cheat an honest man." for honest men
have been cheated· by the mllUoi. Wf\al is truer )a that )'O\I cJl)'t f I
,to111epne who is ot greedy, whi> is
Infatuated with his own special sort of
intelligence.
One week durine the Depression,
Winston Churcbill sat In Bernaflt
Baruch's prlvilte office, speculatilla
wildly in stocks until be was flat b~f.
Baruch, knowine the stateama~· ineptitude In money. ordered his firm,
buy whatever Churchill .sold, and J
whatever he bought. sO, ln the end,' t
was a wash -but how many CburchiUs
have a Baruch to save them from \he
consequences of their own folly? c
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~~~ Sister' µ&tens in on Eolish pholle Calls
WA&sAW, Poland (AP> -811 atai.r lt d at UM becinninl ol marUal law, tbe lntrualon In a,n &MOunceme that teJtllbOM Mrvlc.
warnt.nc telephone callers tbelr CODVVUUou art waa oRea loconalltent. would be restortd wltbln the .natlon'a tq au., tbt
"beln1 eeatrolled" ln martial law Polaad. PeopJe t.1t1n1 tbe telepbonel found that aome authorltJee 11ld tht cal.14 would IN 8'&bject to
Slnee teltDbone aervlee 1D Poland'• me,Jor numben trtaered Bis SlM#. ou.ert cl1dn't. control and could be cut at MY time ll wt.oever
clUu WU neelored lut Sunday, IOlllt numbert Calli to the Romu caawe Church PN•• Wll 11.stenlnl deemed ttaem damaainl ao tM lll&t.
start a screechy voiced woman chlrplft•: offlce were 1.Sd to be....,. ocillrol by the vol~ The communique a1IO warned tMt teNpbaat
• ' R o Imo w a Kon tr o low an 1 , Ro 1 mow a 11 were calla to 10me otMn who ... couJd uaum~ cotiveraaUon.t could be subject to further check Ins Kon~rolowana." .. would be monitored. and anU-state acUvlty could be punilhed.
n Pollah that meana tbt call la belna It wu unclear later lf the voice wu trt11ered Some people reported calla were cut when controlled the call ls beln& controlled." • , • • Bll slater's voice chanc• IOIDetlmea hiab by the penon pl1cln1 Ule call, or tbe number such words as lnterneea were used In
1001eUmes 1 bit builder. But u-8 mt11a,e l•~lear; recelvt.na It. conversations about telled members of the
anytbln• said on the phone ~ be htard and Two days after the pboaet were back ln order, now-suspended lndependeat union SoUdarlty.
there aboutd be no doubt about It ever)' call from Tile Aaaodated Preas offtce phone Others uld mention of "Walesa," the
Foreilll journalist.a call the ~olce.81& Sister _ brou&bt the wamin1 "the call ii beln1 controlled," now-sequestered chief of the Independent union,
a variation on Bil Brother, tbe symbol of two or~ Umes. Then t:tie ~olce stopped and the and "Solidarity" cl1d not trtuer a cutoff.
dictatonhlp ln Geor1e Orwell's "llM." other party eltber clld or didn t pick up tbe phone. It l.s unfikely every call 11 monitored, but It la
On the fint day tbe t.elepbonel ca.-• a.c• It wu DOt tbe fact of the warnina, but only tt\e impossible l9 tell which are or aren't and the I
•Ince t.be.y were silenced juat before midnl&bt Dee. form It tOok thM•me as.a surprise. effect of the woman's reminder la clear.
Comics
fans
convene
SAN FRANCISCO
(AP) -A comic boQk
convention in the Hilton
Hotel drew 2,000 visitors
who faced enchantment
in a paper forest or
fantasy.
"Spider Man" creator
Stan Lee answered
questions from a
s tanding-room -only
crowd of fans and said
he was awe-stricken
when asked lo sign a
12-cent comic he once
authored. The work is
valued at $500.
Lee, who also created
.. Fantastic Four" for
Marvel Comics, said he
tossed out his old comics
one day after they got
wet.
"T his ls very
intense," said Edward
Co ppin, 28, of
Richmond, as he
wandered among a
cro wd of comic
enthusiast.a Sunday.
'
NIGATIYE -Actress
Cicely Tyson claims
A mertcan movies
project a negative
Image of blacks as
drug addicts and
I prostitutes.
c,..,., ........... c.o
''This condenses a
couple of weeks of
business in one day for
us," said Bob Beerbohm
or Berkeley, a dealer.
"This kind of event
attracts the cream of
the customers who have
some money to spend."
Another Berkeley
co mic dealer figured
that hard times means
more comic sales.
T h e shocking truth ts that
when U: comes to lOOs,
regular or menthol, Carlton
contains more than twice as
much tar as Now!
Now Box 1 OOs ls lower than
any other lOOmm.c.tgarette
anywhere. There's no question
about it. Now is the Ultra
Lowest Tar"' brand.
··When times get
tougher," explained Jim
Buser of Comics and
Co mix in Berkeley ,
"there is a greater need
to escape."
Priest
• resigns
FREMONT (AP) -A
70-year-old priest has
resigned his post rather
than race prosecution OD
, charges be molested at
least eight
pre-adolescent girls
attending his school's
church, the Alameda
C ounty district
at torne y 's office
reported.
Monsignor Vincent
Breen, at the Church of
the Holy Spirit for 29
years, agreed to le.ave
the area and seek
medical help, according
to District Attorney Bob
Chambers.
Chambers said the
incidents would have
been prosecuted as
misdemeanors and
occurred over an
18-month period.
The chart at the right
should make it very cle{J.r.
And when it comes to
1 ODs Box, Now ls lower by
far than Carlton. In fact,
So, if Lowest tar is what
you'd like in a lOOs
cigarette. theres also no
question about what you
should be smoking. Now.
NUMBERS DON'T LIE. NOW 100s
ARE LOWER THAN CARLTON 100s.
NOW 2mg 2mg
Less than
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r
TRAFF1C JAM Automobiles line up outside
Manhattan on ~ug . 7, l~. after the George
Washington Bridge was closed down when a
•cAVALCADE
BUSINESS
tanker truck began leaking its
cargo or explosive propane gas.
an
BJ Tiie A.uetta&ed .Preu
At 10 a .m . on Aug. 7, 11180, a
truck carrying 9,000 gallons of
propane gas from New Jersey to
New York sprung • leak OD &he
Geor1e Washington Bridie. The
dri\'er managed to get tbe
vehicle to an exit ramp and
tflere it stopped, attended by a
horde of emergency vehicles.
i'or el&ht. hours, u one of the
• worst traffic tieups in New York
City h.l.st.orY was tak'8ig place,
firemen pondered how to plua
the le!lk. • The bridge was closed ,
clogging traffic for 15 miles oo
both aides. 1'be entire West Side
of Manhattan was trapped in
gridlock, a boon only to the
vendors who hawked cold drinka
and Ice cream to drivers
snarling in the 00-degree heat.
Fears that the truck might
blow up in a fireball led
authorities to evacuate 2,000
people from nearby apartments
and to close 'l subway and bus
s tation. Four people were
hos pitalized after inhaling
noxious exhaust fumes and a
fireman burned his fingers when
he touched the sizzling truck
exhaust pipe of the parked
truck.
Finally a policeman who bad
once b ee n a plumber
approached perplexed officials.
The solution, be said, was at a
plumbing supply house, a plug
for less than $10 that would fit
the leak. End of crisis.
From that episode, New York
City's hazardous waste disposal
team was born. Many other
ciUes had aotten the message
much earlier.
For five years and more,
communities far smaller than
New York have had specialized
teams to deal with gas leaks,
chemical spills and otber
noxious byproducts of 20th
century science that defy
coaventional dis a s ter and
fireflahting tactics. A host of
private firms also specialize in
the dis posal of hazardous
wast.es.
A study by the Memphis,
Tenn., fire department found
that the city of more than 600,000
people stores 100 million gallons
of flammable and combustible
material ; 14 million tons of solid
poisons and 3.5 million gallons or
corrosive liquids. In addition,
100 mllllon gallons of fuel are
transported through Memphis
each month.
"Many cities have suffered
disastrous consequences
because they thought the
universal application of water
would take care of almost any
problem," says Seattle Fire
Chief Robert Swartout.
Sooner or lat.er, he says, all
fire departments recognize the
neeCi f<>f specialists to deal with
hazardous materials.
Most lncidenta are potential
rather than actual disasters.
But once ln a while, atanding
wastes, often dumped and left
by chemical firms, ignite
auddenly, as ln 1979 at the
Drexel Olemical Control Co. in MemP,his when 1buge drums of
toxic pesticides caught fire, or
at the Chemical Control Corp.
dump ln Elizabeth, N.J ., in
April 1980, when thousands of
unmarked drums of chemicals
burned. Hundreds of residents in
northern New Jersey and New
York City, in the paths of
noxiom doud.s, were evacuated.
Leu spectacular happenings
are frequent.
In Denver a while ago, 500
aallons of fuming white nitric
add seeped from a tank car into
the Rio Grande railroad yards.
In New York, the blade of a
forklift slashed open a drum of a
cauhlc material used in
halrdreaalftl and IOO cboklal,
coughla1 employees of tbe
frel1bt d~ were cbuecl from
the bulldlnl. •
TM 1eote of the ~ ii moa.-.at. In 1•. the U.S. Departmmt of Tr.-,ortaUon report.t lS, 725 sputa or other
iacldeats lavolvtn1 buardous
matertala ln transit. Tlte ftcure
ls down from a h11b of nearly
18,000 in 1'71, but DOT ottlfliall
,., tbe acddents are .....,
more Mlioul, lDYOlvt111 more
l.QJurl• and property damqe. omdall lD New ,,.,..y ..,
they receive about 1,510
complaints a year about toxic
wute. In Ohio, -••en to nine
lneldenu are report.. .Ur
iavo1,1a1 some klad of:
baaardaul mauirlala.
In Loul1lana, atate police
.... .., u .veraa• ol flYe ..
BALL OF FIRE ..,..... Bystanders watch last April as chemical
storage drums explode in Elizabeth. N J .. forcing the
evacuation of parts or northern New .J erse~· and New York
City .
hazardous waste calls a day
durina 1980. . In Memphis, the s pecial
hazardous waste disposal unit
answered more than 400 calls
last year and the team in
Jacksonville, Fla., has made
more than 1,100 calls in its four
years or operation.
Forty -four states a nd
territories from Maine to Guam
applied t o the r e derat
Environme ntal Protec t ion
Agency for help from the new
$1 .6 billlon supe:iund aimed at
cleaning up the worst chemical
dumps. And the lis t didn't
include Louisiana, which federal
officials believe is the fourth
largest producer of hazardous
waste in the nation.
Major cities with dense
populations like Boston and New
York, where ordinances prohibit
the dumping and transporting of
ll)any toxic materials, often
h ave f ewer problem s .
Communities like As bland,
Mass., Ottawa County, Okla.,
Epping, N.H., and Pitman, N.J.,
headed the EPA's list of the
nation's 114 worst dump sites.
But big-city officials whp
assumed for years that the
threat of calamity was too small
tank car standing innoceoUy on
a railroad track: a truck on a
bridge or highway, a coUection
or drums behind an abandoned
warehouse giving off a less than
fragrant odor.
The specialized units come
with a variety of equipment.
Some bring a truck filled with
san d th at can be dumped
i nstantly on t he s pill. The
armory includes gas masks,
chemical and heat-resistant
suits, chemical detectors. and,
often most important, a library
of chemical reference books.
The first order of business is
identify ing t he s ubstance
invol ved. The second is to
consult the reference books to
determine their volatility and
toxicity. to find the chemical or
sand, that will neutralize the
substance.
•·You rely on your common
sense and what the books say,"
says Capt. J erry West, who
heads Nashville's s quad.
"There's too much material to
keep In our heads and it's too
dangerous to try to. One letter of
a chemical changes and the
whole situation is different."
The most intensive training is
at the National Fire Academy in
"Many cities have
disastrous consequences. .
suffered
"
to tap strapped budgets for
funds to trajn and maintain a
s pecializ e d unit ar e
reconsidering.
"We were naive," says
Deputy Chief John J . O'Rourke,
who h ead s the haaardous
materials team formed in New
York. "After what happened up
on the bridge, we realized we
were in our infancy as far as
hazardous materials were
concerned."
Other areas crossed their
bridges long ago, particularly
road and. rail corridor states -
New Jersey, Pennsrlvanla,
Ohio, across the Midwest
throuch the South. ~ll in their
turn discovered that
conventionally trained firemen
were ill-equipped to deal with
haaatdoua materials.
The result is a new breed ~
i flreflpter. Fr-om Kanau City to
llempbls and Jackaonvllle, n..,
from Newark, N .J .. to
Pbilrdelpbta and Denver ,
specially traJnecl teams apply
knowledl• of cbemlatry and
Hl'Jtul11 prepared t.actlCI ln an)' tanariOU• wute emer1eney.
<*lo -Mlecml&D •ba.1 ... team• ln readllHlll, wtall• an ll·mu ute police forff I.I on
call lD Ladllana. U•"-111 J.bere I.I no flre, Just a ...
Emmitsburg. Md. It's classroom
work for the most part, the
equivalent of many college
chemical courses with a
co n ce nt ratio n o n what
fire-fighting substance to use
with which element. Will water
work in this situation or sand, or
foam? What che mical wtll
neutralize another chemlcal'?
Most departments send two or
three men there, then depend on
the graduates to teach otben
back home. Sorne s tates -
Tennessee, Ohlo, Wisconsin and
Colorado among them -han
started their own schools for
hazardous waste disposal.
The training pays off.
Memphis has one of the most
intensively trained haaardous
waste units in the countrJ -two
of its leaden, u . H.T. Sharp
and Robert McBride, bave bad
nearly 500 hours of lrainin&.
The wont accident in tbe dty
happened July 9, lt'7t, wben a
spark ipited a cbemlcal tbat
ha4 leaked from a drum at IM
Drex.el Cbemlcal Co.,
man.atacturer ol peaUclclel.""
offlclala said about S00,000
poodl of chemical.I ev•tually
burned as exptoalons sut
H ·taJlon drums 1oarln1 llke
• fOCkell .
,
•'
. • .
.. -
Orange Co•t DAJL Y PILOT!Thurlday, January 14, 1982
ANN LANDERS
• ERMA BOMBECK
CHAIN OF ICICLES -Chain and flora l
background in San Antonio are covered with
lee after a rare ice storm hit Tuesda •
LEASEHOLDERS
Any l•H•holder who•• I•••• com•• up for , .. ,..,... ......... 1112 .. •lllecl ........... ...., cont•..,...,. Young,,,.,, ..... C..s•u el
4000. Pew! ... 1031. We weM ID ,_. e ••ll ...
•• 41111.0UH everall ••••• •lr•l•IY ••• IN
development of lndepende"t appnlufe tllf 1M
appro ........ ly eo le•Mftolde dw '°be re111pr.i11d "''• , . .,.
Committee of 4000
~ Phone: 640-1031
• CATl!IUNG • COCKTAILS TO DIHNl!lt .. l"letflCS
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Conwlt us t.fo,. your nut 1ff1ir •••
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••E• .. EITA1E
~ IAYI? WE'IE mJ
.. , ... ,.191
A. HOUIS NORTON
~ ,,,... .. ~. ~ FltWtt:IW ElflMlf ettd
Author ol Ille .,._ lo
.,.,.._II WIN<t Ya.t•
c.M f'oor" lecllft .....
ROBERT O. ALLEN
111¥HIOt, C..Ctww Md Autlttx ol ,,,. ... , ....,,
"Hodlinfl Oolwl: • ,..._, ,..,._ lot .,,.. ,...,,
&-llillllt.Jt#eor.._
Ho~°""· -,.
,_ ~-.............. ~,...._..,.~~---....,.,..---....... r -~ 'I -
' . : , .-.,~ »' . ~ ... ' ,... . ~ .
. ...... · .. , ···-~·· ·'~-I, I F
k:'~\. .... ~--~ ~ ...... ~ ..... "-' ......... -....
leem the "NOTHING DOWN" methods In a short per1od o( time
and they can lead you to wealth
and financial secunty fot life.
Thousandl of peop6e ~ learned
thele methods Ind how to prosper
during • 1'8CMllon.
~··-~· • _...· -'I
' .
t • . ~<:,.~-; ...._,....,.......... ~.
Thent's NO coet, NO obHgatlon to
lwn ~the moet Ct910¥1, ute
Investment =of the Olntufy. "NOTHING " CM l'WYOtutlon-
lze your flrwlei.I p4alnt. You CM be turned from a doubting no¥tot Into
a confident expert Tniee pqctkllll,
down-to41rth methoda ,.. been
t11ted, tried and Drcwed by thou-
sands. Surveys ot "NOTHING
DOWN" cnduet• lllt CNet An*1ca PfOYe rT WORKS! TIM tt'9 *"9 to come to the FREE "NOTMNG
DOWN" eemlrw~ NO coet ot obllglltlon~ It .... ...,.ldc>ul
lwnlng expeMnoe, "°"""'*'1 lly • ·~"" ••aoollll9 ol,...,, AllM and Holl/1 Nonon.tt youw
EVEA ootF on the ad to flnlnCWI ldll-.tMun.to
•ta't .. w:NI
.. ,, ..
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Never before
have I written to an advice columnist. a
newspaper or a maaazlne, but I mus t
thank you for your article, "Giving Kids
'Tough' Love," in a re(ent luue of Family
Circle.
Our beautiful. gifted, manipulating.
screwed up 14-year-old daughter ran away
from home four weeks ago.. Sunday sh~
called collect and recited her demands . If
we met them, she would come home.
Basically, the idea was this: If we let her
do as she pleases . -no curfew and no
questioos asked abOut whether or not she is
seeing that 27-year-old jerk down the street
-she would honor us with her presence.
Thanks to the "experts' who have
been telling parents. "It's all your fault."
plus a healthy dose of guilt feelings. J was
ready to agree to Gina's terms .
Fortunately. my husband <her stepfather 1
intervened -with your Family Circle
ar.ticle in his hand. It told about a new
approach to re bellious . out-of-control
(often· drug-using> teen-agers called
Toughfove. Chapters are· springing up
everywhere.
Unfortunately, in California. it's not a
crime for a child to run away from home.
While it is a misdemeanor to harbor a
runaway, the law-enforcement agents do
not have time to bother. .....
. When I finish this letter. I am writing
to "Toughlove" for infor mation. If there is
no chapter nearby, I will start one. I'm
sure there are other parents in this area
who have the same problem. I hope we can
help one another get our children back into
the mainstream of life.
Your columns and that article have
giv~n me reinforcement, courage 8'1'ld
hope . Perhaps it isn't too late for Gina
after all. -YOURS GRATEFULLY. D.M.
DEAR D.M.: rm pleased to know I
ba ve betped. For those 11r.lto missed Ute
article, the address of Toug.blove la P.O.
Box 70, SeUersvlJle, Pa. t89M.
DEAR AN!j LANDERS: I was
delighted when you told that wife whose
husband wanted to buy her a mink coat to
say ''YES." They could afford it. and he
was eager to give her something special on
their 25th wedding anniversary. w
My question lo her is this: ··HOW DO
YOU GET A MAN TO WANT TO GIVE
YOU A LUXURY GIFT?" I am considered
··the practical type" and always wind up
with a breadbox. a corn-popper or an
assortment or "can't.fail" stain removers.
Any ideas? -PLAIN JANE
DEA.ft JANE : Are you talking
husbands or "mep?" !'here's a difference,
.)'OU know. Wltti ~uaballda, you tell 'em.
Wltb .. mee," a broad hint sbeuld 1afflce. If
It doesn't, resign yourself to the fact he's
not the luxury &lit type and never wUI be.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I read the
t estimcmial from the "Teen-ager in
Lubbock" who gave up 1>0t and feels like
he's been born again. Can you use another
one?
I started when I was 14 because it. was
the .. in" thing. Three years later my pals
got busted. I was scared and tried to quit.
but couldn't . Then I met a great girl who
was also t rying. We decided to quit
together. It's been seven months since
either of us has been stoned. Owr grades
have improved. we can really concentrate
now and get things done. Pot s mokers
don't realize how much time thev waste
when they are spaced-out. ·
We want to tell the world that life is
much better without it. -ELMIRA. N.Y.
DEAR EL: Welcome to the club. I've
bacl doRDS of lette rs from teen-agers who
said the same tblag. Terrific!!!
Do you feel awkward. self-conscioui -
lonely? Welcome to the club. There's help for
you in AM Landers· booklet. "The Key to
Popularity:· Send 50 cents wilh your request
and a long. stamped. self -addressed envelope to
Ann Landers. P.O. Box 11995. Chicago. 111
6-061 1.
Soaps fan forever
There was a time when there were so
many soap opera fans hiding in the closet.
you couldn't open the door without a couple
of them falling out.
Who wanted to admit they sat around .
and watched daytime serials all day? It
was like admitting you ate your kids '
Halloween candy or didn't use a fabric
sortener in your final rinse. It just wasn't
"professional."
Boy, times sure have changed. Fifteen
million Americans eat lunch with ··General
Hospital." Superstars work for scale for
walk-on pa rts. And rny own son took a
class in Convers ation al P e rrier last
sem ester because It was the only course he
could work in between .. All My Children"
and "Search for Tomorrow.··
THE0
iATrER ISN.'T at all surpris.ing:·
·While I carried him, every afternoon at l
p.m .• I'd sit down ln front of the TV set
with a plate of buttered noddle:t and
remain comatose until .. As the World
Turns" signed olf. In nine months. I gained
34 pounds and eight new words.
It has taken years for people lo
understand what the attraction is in sollps. f·~an't imagine what took 'em so long.
'fo me. soaps have always been the World
Series of Sex. the love-in·the-afternoon
Olympics, the perfect Ten of the Bored
Housewife.
I loved 'em beeau1e it was so terrific to
see .. a man hanging around the house. Oh
flMA IOMlfCI
ATWlrSENO
s ure . now you got Donahue. but back in my
time. we had nothing. I loved the way
husbands sat around the table and talked
lo their wives. They never worked.
I loved the way a woman was always
dressed for an affair. With me. some days
were better tha n others. but usually. I
would have had to borrow something.
I LOVED THE WAY THE heroines
were never happy . Ther'e ·s something
depressing ·about women· whose lives are
going well and they have no problems. You
could always count on the soaps. I could be
sitting there with $200 worth of bills and SS4
in the checking account. a baby due in
three months. a gain of eight pounds in one
month, a washer that walked. a f um ace
t hat groaned and a car that blacked out.
but at least I wasn't on trial for the murder
of my husband's boss like Joanne Tate.
Soaps are like a supermarket of our
emotions. They have role models. villains
to hate, new anxieties we haven't begun to
explore. fantasies that someone else plays
out for us . . . and' a re'8on for your kid to
stay in school. What more could you ask?
F.Wl circle
Q: I've read tlaat lnlri,S Bergman Is
earreatly ftlmla& tile Ufe ~ of Gelda
Mek. 1111& 1 1eem te te•e•ber • few year•
ago wlaea Ille ~ after oee of lier
movlet daat Ille "u Iola& &o re&,\re. Wlaat
••• tllat Rory!
-Let K., Pkt16v1ta
A: When ~l11s Bergman completed
"Autunm Sonata" in 1978, she dfflared: "I
think pet-hapa I should let 1hll tum bring
my career to a close. Internationally, it
be1an with 'Intermezzo,' in whldl I was
the Yount coatert pianist. ,In •Autumn
Sonata,' '' she said, ··1 play a planW near
the end ol her career, IM!I. ~ her family acain and .,aia ~her mule. I ~,'' though~ lnar14~ • t m~el Ute
clrele ol my fUma eomPJ~ ... S • ,, ,
.PllSOIAlln Q.&A.
fi'Y MARILYN AND HY GARONER '
~
~ ·~· ____ ;J?~1
·-IN,._.....,_ .......... ..,,._ 1·14-
"You're right. I did resolve to •too amoldq.
'lbanka ror remlndina me. You're fired."
r---------------T JOll lllAl JI:
OR. PETER J. STEJNCROHN .
Observations
on old age
DEAR DOCTOR: I know you must be
interested in the aging process .-and so
are your readers. I am enclosing some
observations I came across on a TV
program featuring Noel Co ward a few
months ago.
It was called "Don't Count The
Candles." I took down some notes which I
think throw some light on Age. Here they
are:
Twenty-seven million or our population
are 65 or over.
Different people react in different
ways to growing old . .l;lut all share one
thing in common: mortality.
Try to come to terms with old age with
grace.
Every man would like to Ii ve long but
not be old. •
The old home is the end of the road.
Next stop : the coffin or crematorium.
For the aged, the tempo of living is
tranquil and unhurried. There's all the
time in the world. But old age is loneliness.
Eat alone. Sleep alone. At 68 Noel Coward
said that the sadness of growing olcler is
contemporaries dying.
"If I could get out I wouldn't feel so
lonely. A bird is company when you have
no other company. Even a doll is compan~·.
Always has a smile on her face.''
Don't like being called "Sir." Don't
like being helped downstairs or off the
curb. Having to screw up eyes to read.
False teeth that click.
Don't let your brain slow down. Read a
lot . Think a lot.
"Save me. save me. Doctor. but let me
not be old."
Artists are fortunate. As they grow
older their capacity increases. Many
elders retire from life. Musicians and
conductors never.
I'm not one for thinking or the good old
days. The past isn't what you think it was .
We treat e minent pe rsons with
reve rence when they are old: but not
ordinary persons.
One longs to be looked after like a
child.
But all is not lost : here's a 75-year-old
man marrying a 78-year·old woman.
Dr Steincrohn welcomes questions from
readers. He cannot answer all individuaUy but
will include those of general interut in this
column. Send your questions to him in care of
the Daily Pilot. P.O. Bo:r 15()(). Costa Mesa.
Cali/. 92626.
' .
The tJeloved D~n Sherwood' son.
Greg, now a vice-pres. at the Jack Wyman
ad agency, 1 show"d up for tuncb at
Bardelll's h\·l au<1h untypically straigtlt
clothes•-blazm, slicks, even a necktie -
that a '°Pal inquired. ··Does Wyman have a•
dress code?" "Yeah. nodded Oreg.' .. we
can'tweardresses." ' 1
One crouton in the eye, to go: that
grabbing Sil. vice-pres. of a big bank had
hi s faee pus hed into his salad at
MacArthur Park by a decidedly unamused
waitress ... Will Steger of S.F ., <Visiting
N. Y., had his pedal habiliments lubricated
by a streetcorner s hoe-s hiner who
observed. "I'd like to live ln California but
I can't afford it. professionally. People
don't wear leather shoes out there. do
they?"
OTHER BIZNOTES:• At the opening of
the Zoftig boutlqu'e on California,
· ·zoftig" is -Yiddish for plump -free
pastries were served to all the "ldvel\'
large women" the place is catering to• .. ·.
My friend Joe Haspel Jr .. visiting from
New Orleans. tells me he is enjoying the
action from Perry's to Trader Vic's and
way stations. but absolutely draws the line
at the S4 one-ounce martinis at Stanford
Court and the Fairmont <this is taking care
of the tourist with ia vengeance 1. ,
In Eddie Bau~r on Postreet. Ken
Maley overheard a Santa Cruz-type hippie
say to a clerk : .. Now are these REALLY
hiking boots or just another affectation or
the San Francisco lifestv1e·1" 1 ' l . .
THE OTHER morning at
Embarc.aijero Plaz•. •two touril~· were
staring "11th the usual disbelief at Armand
Vaillancourt's hideous fountain when alon~
came that grand old-timer. Herb T. Potter
Sr. When they asked what it was. Herb
said. "All that's left of the 1906 fire and
earthquake." As he ambled on. Chey were
busily setting up tripods and cameras.
' REPRIEVE : Night Bird Game
Poultry, on Divizz. has informed its 80
restaurant cusJomers that it will no lon_jer
be supplying Aich exotic animal fare as
camel, hippo and lion . In a "Dear Chet·
letter. Owner Gerald E. Prolman explains
that "'l recently visited the S.F. Zoo and
was deepty moved ~Y, the magrnficepce or
the animals I saw. I no longer believe in
offering them as edible novelty." I No
me rcy, however . for pheasant. partridge.
goose. quail and duck. 1
Where the HipPQ wiU get its burgers
from now on is not known at this time. I
never tasted lion. but camel is qµite
appropriate for high tea. As l said to the
Vicar over the silver ser vice just the other
da~·. "One hump or two?" ·
POT SNOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
TME THINGS
I FEAR
. MAY ·AL.&. I J
&Ii
lMAGINAAV
so,
WHAT I
FEAR MOST tS
MY IMAGINATION.
.. e---~..,..•_, _ _,,~.,..
Pisces: Don't rnsh
Orange OOMt DAILY ptLOTfThureday, JanulfY 14, 1882
HELPING HOST -Actor Richard Thomas and
wife, Alma, are assisted in holding triplet
daughters by talk show host David Hartman
,, ........
during appearance on ABC-TV's "Good
Morning America" show. Triplets are (from
left Gwyneth, Barbara and Pilar .
ingvalues.
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.. Orange Co•t DAILY PILOT!Thuraday, January 1•. 1982
WASHlNGTON <AP> -Tbe
blbllcal Book of Prov•rb1,
pralatni "tbln11 •.. too
wonderful," looked to ''the way
of an e .. le 1n the air."
J ohn Keats hna1lned tbe
Spanlab explorer Cortes 1tarina
"wltb eqle eye1" at the vaat
Pacltlc. Charles Llndber1h, who
1n 1m became the tint mu to
fly the Atlantic alone, was
known u the "Lone Eagle."
The eagle.
While tbb rear is the 200tb anniversary o the bald eagle u
thtrcenterpiece in the Seat l1' the
United States -and has been
deaipated the Year of the Eagle
-the bird Is an endangered
species in most states.
The eagle has been an
enduring symbol throughout
time -of flight, freedom and
courace -but it has been by no
means universally loved.
Hunters shoot bald eagles,
sometimes accidentally since
the birds do not develop their
characte ristic white head
feathers until they are 4 or 5
years old. The birds also are
Protests allowed
WASHINGTON CAP> -Under
a revised VISTA regulation,
volunteers will be allowed to
participate in demonstrations
while on their free time. The
regulation, printed in the
Fedral Register, replaces one
issued in a July memorandum
which caused the American
Civil Liberties Union to sue
VISTA.
~ and 1tarved from t.beU
abltat-by •prawlln• dHelopment.
Some ranchel'9 kill ~ blrdl,
too, IDlltMlenly bellevlnf them
tbreata to Uvestock. Aetully,
bald Miles 1enerally eat lbb or
small animals, which they can
apot with thelr "eaale •yea" uJ)
tc;> a mile away.
Even Benjamln Franklln
objected that the bald ea1le wu
"a bird of bad moral character"
after the Continental Conlff88,
on June 20, 1782, adopted the
whlt•beaded bird, with lta 7~
foot wingspan, as the naUonal
symbol.
Now, 200 years later, bald
ea1les -unique to North
America -are protected by
federal law from birth to beyond
the crave. Killing a bald eagle is
punishable by up t.o a year In
prison and a $5,000 fine.
Anyone who flnds a dead bald
eagle is legally required td tum
it over t.o the government, which
ships the bodies lo a Fish and
Wilc:Uife Service la_boratory in
Madison, Wis. to be studied for a
cause of death.
The remains are either given
to museums lo be stuffed -a
special federa l permit is
required -or sblpped to a
national repository In PocateUo,
Idaho.
Indians may apply to the
repository to use the feathers
and other parts in religious
ceremonies, but it is illegal t.o
trade in them.
Last February, th e
government arrested more than
30 dealers in such objects as
Indian Kachina dolls containing
.. q
•ese...e & u..-5left
A Dining Tradition Since 1922
Serving Lunch & Dinner
Reservations Suggested
645-7077
PUBLIC AUCTION
HANDMADE ORIENT AL
CARPETS & RUGS
llll fea&.bera. and '1lh and W Ulli .,.at Btu ZimmM"man
... GDI man WU 1enteoced to nve yean reeentJy for •aUoc ln
1ucb objecta.
Zimmerman added, bowever,
tbat the number of 51e arrested for the actual Id of
ea1le1 ls small. "Tbe p em
with the Weaal sbootln• I.I the
fact that these tbln11 occur
where there aren't many
people," he said. "Unl... you
have a witness, it'• pretty bard
to track them down." •
Sheila Schmellfll. said that ol
tbe 780 bald eaales turned over
to the Fish and WlldWe lab in
' Madison ln tbe last five years, 11
percent had been shot.
Other than "blunt trauma" -
such as being hit by a car or
accidentally rty ing into
something -shootin1 was the
largest single cause of death.
The lab found about 9 percent
of the bald eag lea were
electrocuted, but Zimmerman
said the Fish and Wildlife
Servl'Ce has been successful in
forcing utilities t.o modify power
lines and transformers to make
that less likely.
Daniel James, a biologist with
the federal office of endangered
species, said the bigeest threat
to bald eaglQS and g91den eagles,
which also are protected by law,
is loss of habitat and a
consegue.nt loss of food. .
"They're not very tolerant,"
he said. "When you put a
roadway off a mile there's a
pretty good chance that nest
may be abandoned."
James said what mos t
decimated the eagle popalation
was DDT -which resulted In
e11• With thin shella In which
eaglets could not survive -but
the problem bas eased since the
pesticide wa1 banned in 1972.
The National Wildlife
Federation, in its latest
-nationwide attempt at spottin1
bald eagles last year, counted
13,709, an increase of S percent
over the number in 1980. The
federation estimated the 48
conttcuous states have a bald
eagle population of 4,SOO, with
the rest visitors from Canada or
Alaska.
Alaska ls the only state where
the birds are not listed as
threatened or -a more serious
classification -endangered.
They are threatened In Oregon,
• Wa1 hlngton, Minnesota,
Wlsconsln and Michigan, and
endan1ered In the other
continental states. Bald eaaJet
do not live ln ffawall.
Even where they do not live,
they are symbols. The crowded
streets of Manhattan contain
dozens of businesses named
Ea1le, lnctudtn1 both Eaale
Coin and Eagle Cone. PerbaPIJ
their owners saw in the national
bird what Pennsylvania state
game protector James Harakal
did.
"I don't know who you could
watch an ~agle and not really
feel tree," be said. "They just
ride those thermals and glide.
I'll tell you, they just make you
feel good."
CENTERPIECE -The bald
eagle has been the symbol of
the United States for 200
years and the anniversary is
being celebrated.
Army's new M-1 tank pr&ised
WASHINGTON CAP ) -The Army's weapons
director says he has "high confi~ence" most
problems have been solved with the new M-1
Abrams tanks being issued to combat divisions in
West Germany today.
Maj. Gen. James Maloney, in an interview,
said that the M-ls being turned over to an
armored unit in West Germany all have
"up-to-date fixes" correcting durability problems
in the power train, which includes its turbine
engine and transmission. Some design changes
have been made to correct deficiencies, be said.
Although Maloney acknowledged some
problems with the M·l remain, he described them
as minor.
The 58-ton M-1 is the first entirely new tank
fielded by the Army in nearly 20 years. It is also
the most expensive tank ever at $2.8 million each.
Gen. John Vessey Jr .. the Army's vice chief of
staff, claimed in November that the M·l is the
·'best tank in the world." However. some Army
experts have indicated they are uncertain whether
the M·l is superior to the newest Soviet tank, the
T -80.
Maloney said the Army has shipped 75 M-1
tanks to West Germany so far and has trained
officers, non·commiss ioned offi cers and
mechanics in preparation for issuing them t.o
troops.
The first unit to be armed with the new M-1
will be a battalion of the 3rd Armored Division.
642-4321
Direct or collect.
to sublcribe to your
hometown paper. the . Daily Pilat
~IZED BY U.S. CUSHJAS 81-333212·7
The above mentioned shipment was Hl;ted ·
by U.S Customs and has now been re-
leased by the importer for Immediate H·
quidation to raise urgently needed cash to
meet financial commitments. on
The selection will mclude exquisite
handmade rugs from all rug weaving
countnes and will be complemented with
other rug.s or equal quality and beauty
AUCTION WILL TAKE PLACE '
Saturday, Ja111ary 16 at 1 PM
Newporter
1107 Janboree
Newaort Beach
View 1 hour prior to Auction
fl~~
s..1-a-.1 SHOE
I -•TO Y3•F.-MOREI
JOYCE
PENALJO
AMAL Fl
SELBY
r s.
MJ7%APR for 60 months~
14.16% APR for 48 months. ..
Once agai-n, Heritage Bank
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to help the American econo~
vehicles not included) and is subject to credit approval.
This offer is good until March 31, 1982 for residents of
Orange and San Diego Counties only. Offer is cancellable
without notice, so see us now while millions of financing
dollars are available at these special rates. Stop in or call
your nearest Heritage Bank office for complete details:
ANAHEIM MAIN (714) 851-4100 •ANAHEIM
STADIUM (714) 851-4154 •SANTA ANA
(714) 851-4149 •COSTA MESA
(714) 8'1-4165 • AJRPORT (714) 851-400>
• WOODBRIDGB (714) 851-4141
• LAKE..FOR.EST (714) 851-4233
• NEwPoRI' BP.ACH (714) 8Sl-4161
• MISSION VALLEY (714) 299-9330:
•For 60 month ftnanclna. loen rnust be SI0,000
or more.
'82 prime Pate eyed
Volatile interest rates spawn varying theories •
By K&ITH TVBEa ..................
"One of the first rulea you
learn about maktne forecut.s on
tht prlme rate la to never> make
your predlctJon before the same
eroup two years runntnc." 11Jd
Bank ot America vice president
and senior economl1l Erle 1bor.
'•Another la to keep your resume
very current."
Thor's remarks at a breakfast
meeUng al tile.Balboa 8~ Club
Wednesday were made with
tongue only aliehUy lo cheek.
The voiatJle lnteresl rat.ea of
1981 were nilbb· unpredlcLable-
The year began wlth the prime
rate -the interest rate banks
charge their best customers -
at 20.5 percent, jQSt below the
record 21.S percent of December
1980. By spring, the prime bad
fallen to 17.S ~ercenl, and
rumors were widespread that by
summer the rate would fall
below 15 percent.
It didn't. The Federal Reserve
kept a tight rein on the money
supply ln its effort to combat
inflation, and when IL became
apparent the Fed would not
weaken, the prime drift.ed back
to 20.S percent in July and
remained there until September,
when it began falling.
·' 1981 was a monumental year
in interest rate movements,"
Thor said. "It was phenomenal,
with almost a 10-point swing in
every major interest rate.
··In 1979, we changed our
mortgage rate three times. Last
year, we changed It every two
weeks.
"In 1982," Thor continued,
"you have to look out for more volatility."
The Bank of America
economist cited three current
scboola of thou1ht on interest
rates. The flrat be called the
''Allee in Wonderland''
approach favored by John
Rutledge, president of the
Claremont Ecooomlca Institute.
Rutledge bas predicted the
inflation rate next year will drop
more than most anatysts
believe, causing-. consumers to
"You have to
look out for more
tJOlatilit1J."
shift hundreds of billions of
dollars to financial assets from
real assets. The resuJt would be
enough credit to fund the federal
deficit plus housing an~ capilal
expansion without putting
pressure on interest rates.
"Rutledge sees the inflation
rate at the end of '82 and going
into '83 of 4 to 5 percent," Thor
said. "He places the prime at
around 6 to 7 percent. He caUs
this rational expectations, but l
call it irrational. I don't think
inflation will be that low -I'd
say it wouJd be al 9 percent."
Thor sajd another theory,
which he called the "Hit the
Wall" approach favored by
Salomon Bros. economist Henry
Kaufman. also had weaknesses.
• Kaufman'• theory it one of
tupply and demand tor mooey .
Last week , Kaufman said
federal flnanch'll needs wlll put
a crush on other borrowers, such
as b~sl nesaes and even
consumers.
''A confrontation between the
c redlt needs of the U.S.
Treasury and those of bu.ineaa
corporaUoos is shapin1 up for
1982," Kaufman said. When the
demand for those Cunda rises, so
do interest rates. He predicted a
return next year to soaring, or
perhaps even record-matching
interest rates.
Thor said Kaufman's theory
fails to take Into account the
extent of foreign involvement in
the capital market.
In his own scenario Thor sees
the falling off of credit demand
in the business sector, resulting
in the Fed's easing of its
light-money policy.
•'Interest rates in 1982 will
remain \•olalile, and end up in
the 13-14 percent range in June,"
Thor said. ·'It may come up a
bit when the economy comes
back in the second half.
"We're not going back to the
good old days of single-digit
interest rates," Thor concluded:
An hour after Thor made bis
predictions, Joseph Munger.
president of Capistrano National
Bank, made his. Speaking at an
Economic Development Corp.
outlook conference at the Grand
Hotel 1n Anaheim , Munger
~ualified bis remarks by saying,
· Last year I projected a prime
rate of between 12 and 14
Orange Cout O~LY PILOTfThurlday, January 14, 1982 ••
Deltyl"IMe .........
FORECAST Economist
Eric Thor says there are
three current schools or
thought on interest rates for
1982.
percent. You might say I was a
little off."
Munger said the prime would
be stable, not volatile, this year.
"Flip a coin and hope we're
right," he said. "Most banks
have geared their budgets for an
average prime of 16 percent. I
think that's where it will be at
the end of the year, unless
government spenrung gets out or
control. Then it can go back up
to 20 percent." He said the
prime could fall lo 12 percent by
the end of March due to lack of
demand for funds by businesses.
Where will the prime be this
time next year? We'll just have
to wait and see
Military plans
links by satellite
By t•e Auoclat.ed Pre11 .
A 1tat·1tudded mllltary pan~I .
rel11hlD1 a new commitment to
enhance armed forces
communlcatlona, deacrlbed a
apace-bome system deslllled to
ensure jam-resistant llnka to
everyone from the While House
to aold!era In the field.
The MILSTAR system or
top-of-the-line satellilea and a
sophisticated variety of
permanent and mobile around
units "could mean the difference
between peace and war and, if
peace faHs, between victory and
defeat." said Air Focce Lt. Gen.
Richard C. Henry, commander
of the Los Angeles-based Space
Division.
Besides reliabl e,
instantaneous s trateg ic
communications among top
commanders, he said, with
MILSTAI\. "we will be getting
the beneftts of space down to
ships, squadrons and battalions
where they belong.··
The project, now little more
than a drawing.board concept
belng developed at Space
Division, should be operational
around 1990 and "should carry
us through the e nd of this
century."
The panel at an Armed Forces
Co mmuni ca t ions and
Electronics Assoc1ation
conference in Anaheim Tuesday
discussed few details or the
program and its cost was not
mentioned.
But Donald Latham, deputy
undersecretary of defense, said
MIL S TAR r e pres e nt s a
cost-eHective co mpro mise
among the comv •ling needs and
desires or the various military
services.
Noting the urmed forces'
assortment of communicuUons,
surveillance und navigation
satellites now orbiting the earth,
Latham said, "We've just got to
contain costi; ... W~ have to be
very careful about how much
we're going to put up there. We
just couldn't satisfy everybody's
needs ... and be able to afford
at.
"This new MILSTAR
system ... is going lo be a
multimission satellite Lo serve a
variety of users."
The conference was devoted to
a new military buzzword . C31,
pronouced three-cubed-eye and
standing for command, control,
com m unications an d
intelligence
Maj. Gen. Patrick J Halloran,
the Joint Chiefs of Staff's deputy
director for .C3, happily noted
that President Heagan, ara an
October speech on strategic
planning, gave C31 the same
importan<'e as new weapons
systems
"We have beC'n told. by the
pres ident, to 'rPbuild our
com municat1on a nd control
system' and we intend lo do just
that," Halloran said. "The C3
bus iness is looking pretty good."
Latham. contending the Soviet
Union has dramatacally outspent
the United States on C31 systems
in the past decade. said the
current budget commits Sl2.4
billion to such systems
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Callln& lt a .. ,•!>luUona~y" a .,_,ach holder would n t<r do ,net ~ lete.NOD uld that wbUe other alrUnet
to auh• Ucke.,JIRlet, A h11 ru1ht reeervatl cooftr•ed would ..-may be ofterlaf. uall.mlted 10.Ueaae
announced l new GWeL Ian to print his n e, orJi'••Unt clt.J, paaaes "nobody dolAI u)'C.hlAi llke
th•t wtll allow travelers and t vel destination and lJht h"mbet' oo Id-. tbla. '' 11encl~ LC?, buy "f.ounted ou!hnnk DA§~, Lehr aald. • He uld be expected, bOwever, that
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markelli\a ind b s pl said , 1 ~ven it ra,.., 10 . • P"as ID went OQ ta, ' WednesdlG'. ' u 1 J sak Wedne.d• '.ka~ unde? ~ 01ie , P•••· for example. wlll ~e
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• r • , ., a ,creater 94ac t tt~aq tt,e general resld~nll can telephone 752·1'98 or (800)
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101 ' , •'I .>'foll>f11 cf j \ 1 ,,._,,
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a seminar designed to put ~~J IUts ~Qff1t business ao,d busjne~s owne ·~ ., ~ '9.ri . tile;
"Pathway lo Sl.L~cess .' , T.!l i~
co-sponsored by ·~ervlce ., 'OT ;It 'r~'·
E.xecuUves, U.S. $~all Bus IK~l~~ioiJ~'
and Fountain Valley ·chambe ~. ·~· £0,
Set asid~ Tbur.sd'fi1' . Jan. ' . 'a. :·ill•
•:30 p.m. at the Fu'il,~ o~ Say 15,~ ~ .... ¥1,, 11,
Brookhunt ~ve., ·~R tam Vafl.~ltl ,.·11l I~•<· ti '''' ~
~
()(·t·anfron( '
Lots
T he final 30 ocean frofW •h0trtesltes,1~.
walled and ga\!ed priV1ife'1te!fidt>#lia l 1 c.ommunity ip1.S an C l~~~fi<l~~ ~t,~4~~
beach and pnivate S.wtm1 ~Ad 'foanis Club. ., .11i. ,, ,,.,
l •I ""11 ,..,, I I
t . . ' Coinpan e
(t df m~I Yfft,' . ·
1· 10 •.J
11 ·2;5
26-SO
5l ·1ool ~
101 ·2
' I 251..S
Re4ocation
, (fn percent)
l0.3
13.6
14.3
11.8
13.3
16.7
29:4
14.0
Toul
Firms Surveyed
I I Number No Percent
89.7 70 100.0
86.4 46 100.0
85.7 44 100.0
88..2 18 100.0
86.7 32 100.0
83.3 20 100.0
70.6 17 100.0
86.0 247 100.0
County firms eye move
Su rvey sa ys 29 .4o/o pondering r elocation • The Economic Development Corp.
of O rang"e County in a s urvey
released We dnu day said 29.4
pe rcent of the county's biggest
manufacturing firms are considering
relocating.
"Considering thal tbe county's 81
manufacturing firms that employ
over 500 av,rage 1,516 employees per
rlrm' the loas or almoSl 30 percent or
those companies or even a significant
s egment or those. could be a
de vastating blow lo the local
economy and to the thousands of
employees whose jobs would be los~
through such a move," the survey
said.
Overall, 14 percent of all county
manufaoforing firms r e ported
having considered moving. Among
the reasons given were the high coet
of housing and Living in general, local
s hortage of s killed workers,
excessive wage demands, bigb
interf:St rates, excessive locaJ taxes
and enviropmental regulations and
lack of pro~r child care facilities.
This is ltle third year the EDC bas
released 'its survey.· Conducted tut
l"aU. the i.nf<>rmallon was compiled
froD) the random selection of 247
manufacturing firms ranging in
employees from one to thousands.
Interest onl~'./inarl;:'£ilit.Ju/J..ilable · · · · t y
(714 1'498-28.30 01' 1 2!}"3')>2T'f.9~-ro. ,,, N. ~ ... .~. I • I 0 ER . THE tOUNJER. N~SD LISTINGS ~~iiiiiii;;:::=;=:=:::;;;=:===:!~~~~~!t!!!!'~~ _. COmpu ter. ~r, ~3:r~lttf,c'i ~~H:rr:A. ,:: :t:: ~ii~ ;~~~"' ~:=r~o ~""~'~UPS, ANO DOWNS
q
Only
Answer Page
offers you all th~:
• California's large~.P,oing ageq . 11 • ' ' • '' •. • Inexpensive·· le?!·ttran 75¢ ad !• '1 ~,. • 1 '
• Wide-area coverag~·· 15.000 square miles,
• A location near Yoll. plus field ~tadves at your
beck and call. " I I '' • 24·hour service. We never sleep1 • •1: 111 ..
• Free unlimited beepino,delivery andJ1.1ll ma101enanoe
• Quantity discounts.
Keep m touch with tfbme. ottice.·ans'#MngMtrvitle. •
school. kids. babysitter. etc. Save time, gas and money.
C1ll todly for llterajuJt i nd 1 lrte ftm!!!~..!!!!L . __
@~ fir.iWEW.ffl~: Yi~
731•7fj7 •. I 953;5112 ~'
talttoll-free HI00-252·9161 Of call mt~'°" "o;. Answer Paoe ottaneerest Will , ... t • • TJ AC ' l ~lodl~lO~COIOO'ICoOll • , ~ .. , ...
11(
. · • ·~ .-:':: °'~~:. 11 12
E r,u~~ir = ~f" OftF.::. 01":i. ":: ~=~r _ .. • ., ,,_,..., .. ol CIH ~ • ,,.,, •• .._ •v. ~ C)tte<-TP 17'4 I,_ StertS1 nit Via . t d d w ... Prlut do CtllllSM 15 " IM•I l '°"" 11 PCA '"' ~ s Slr••CI u~ u .... In ro nee ~::::."= rjll'IP!:I ~;: ::~':'' ~ ~ :~:: j;~ = =:~1 »""it~ HEW YORK CAP) -Tiie fol'-i.t llt4
' llaloft for _.,, db 17¥1 11 ln811'W... IJV. 12~ PeuleyP 1~!','r~ STY\'kll(en ,1 141A 10• ....,_, 11111 0ve< · Ille d C-' .. SIN.It • ., Alll rlMTr• 22"4 n •••SoUl 21 2111t P .. rMI v-n n 0 JI .. ~ ltOCkl ...... w•rrlltll:l l ... I 11.... --uP , AEL Ind ~ 10Z &clrP:d l _., 1\1, Mllb\' ISl<o I~ P.naEnt 1111\ U~ TIME DC ,.,. f\l't Ille mOll Md -11111 motl IN-.., ~ -Al'AProt Ill:'> •• . "'°" s Slit ffkO • I~ ·~ "9fttelr 1.-. ltlr'> T....... 32'k ,,_ paf"Ctftl Of (....... ,...,_, of ·-¥SI ta Corp. of Cost.a Mesa bas lntrodu~ AVM cP ~ M DH I ,, t.\/o lffyFd " "' P-l•P ""' ·~ T anllm •• ~ 2'V. •• Wed.
a new Jh dheld data entry computer called the ~r.,.i, m,. ~ = 1 !!'", ~ ~ ~ ~! .... :~ ::m~ t!.,.. ~"" ~:,u:_: t~ t~v. uC::. ~:'':: .:r-:r.:~~'!,~U:
MSJJ8$SrTbe self-contained, battery-powered, .~~"! 1: ~ o.ei~~t 2!i"' ~v. =~~, ~:_1 :;" ~r~~:t~ 1~\.,. ?l~ ~:1':: ! ~~111r ~..., gJ~1:~:--~~1!s"l9b1:r;,.~~ ''""'°
prografr:' ~ble terQ\inal b~ the largest memory. ~:1::,•: 2~1:1t 2:r. 8=:'~' J~ JY» :Ti~': . :,~ fA~ ::=ar. !~"" !l ... ~~~bTr 2~ 2!~ uPS
V · th "te · • f ~ A_..n It 1""' Oec11tl I ,._ Jefil lfft"811 IW. I .... Pnsl1 I"° '''° l'trlc.oPd n 2A N-LH1 0,. f'tl. ever a: /nto·an MSI deVJce, the comp~ said. ,All•• • ~ ei.. ottmen1 ., • wtt•• ~ Jt Ptuune 11 '"' fOYot• «M.~
6l'&l fO 6 COmJ>u t range In pnte tom ..,.,.. "'"'"" 4 "" OollrGft 16\lt I~ in91nt Ill~ ,._, PrHOM I' ~ I UFftGftt 41'> : " Up t•.I
lo S2.. · . ~ t ,, : ~=' • ~i ~= =~Pc~• ~ = ~=v ~v. 1 ~~" ~ 21~ i~~ 1
gi ' I ~ !~ • ~ 8: :U . * AMlcros ~ ~ DllMD l 13'41 I~ Kr•tn .... 10 PbS11NC 12 1"4 USC' •14 4 4 Oln'lsfca 114 + lr't Up 11.2
. • • AHtllnt u ""' Oufll'll I 11'!1 I~ IC11llcke 10.... 11 PwlBen 21"° ti U ' !Wt 1'~ S UTL cP t'4 • 1-Up 17.1 Tbe Bank o f lrvlae has received author11auon AOuau 11 11"' atnvnc 1sv. <• .,,, n 11o ~ Pu1oc 119 12 12"' us Tr<.. 11°" " • hrFtu 2.. • "' Up 111.1
f ... N Fed aJ "-"t lns •n e Corp A•HM9 • "" COftLH ·~ 1.-. UndRH '"' SI'> OtH .. rOI I ..... 17 ~~::"' J~ ~14 7 P•ll• wt s • "' Up U.a rOm .. e avy, eT ucpo!il ur--.C • =·· .. 11\:lt D PHEI ,._ IO'h O )I ~ R ... nPr :-,:::; \le..,"J 12\lt 12 .... : ti*' 2 + \It Up 1'.J
open' iQC'fJlt'nltfes .!A::u.a Marine ewp .(it ,.,.011 11w. nv. ,._:, ,. = t'"•t'' . 1~ !:fil ~ ~~"' ~ '"C::.: ,·1'~ ~~ 11 ' .~~· -• 111i v, · 1u
and cl~ni• &ate a.u~ commts1lon~r ~ ... 1tU 1..-er 1~ .'~ :!.'S'l~· .. Its ~~t"e r. 2414 't A SI• 51'4 10 'I-~~. ~ ~ ~; ;::i
Stano ( ), ~thl and Ma,;.be Corp Ait ~tlon. =~· lm'L =~'itw .. 1 .. ~~ re"' f1 21 .~lo\y 22 2311> Vtlcro Into""" u ApkiSoij "" "it. •• 1t 'trp a1
El To""'.1 .Bank or Irvine will provide full-service ,.,...Gp ,.. -E...... Ali 11-GFGO"t 1!:! 1~5"-.;;::'.°" •V. 4-~1~1
"' ... " kenc.op """ + '"' Up .... .,, AMKol• 45'fo.. £fltwlstl IY fir'> .... ,.~ --1.1~ 1"'1t. v~a.: .t~ I~ 11,s cE"pllRl• UV. + 114 Up 11.A banki~1 at both otw tacilities. Service was AttGtLt •M ,.,. E4WtSL w. 1M .. ,,.,P ~ .!.... ifi"1.!!•0• •"" -L w ... e,,, 1""' 11v. 11 KcAt:.• T~ 211> • "' up 11·' . b ~ rt Allan'-• I~ ~ EqtOff .... ~ ~ ....... .. --Weldtrn -4Yll ... " s + lr't Up II.I forme ri,proyaded y !bnk Ull Ame ca. •••rOCP ~ 1 vJPSC a-1•· l:l :: :A . ~ 45~ ~~:tcrd !.~~Ya WOHp Jt~ 2t\l't :i r11~V:..: ·~ ... : 1: ~= ::1 I * BallyPI> S S\4 FallrlTk S"' 6l /Mrlon 1 '"' ~ rloH s 1tV,. 20 W1101d J714i 3~ 20 HffllO.. J + v. Up ' 1 L. .. a. Coun 90ft9HE 10 IOV. FarmGp .._. *' MHILP ..... Jtlr'> Jf<w. 40v, WmorC 20 1014 21 Sta14Jklo l•Y> • 1 Up '·' V r.--Ballk of Or"1Ce ty has bf;cc>ole a _ ••lk• 11-J .... J 1-:i P:IMcw ~ :a.11> Maypt 20 JOv. •cM•r 1111<o 111\ wt....o n ""' n valyl.AD z4y, • 1 Up u
partici ating trustee of the California Community =~~ 111~ W: F::::~· = = ~w>,:: 1:t 1= ~' ' ~ = :'0~1:' is"-1;11> H ~~~ .! moiv. ~·uo v. ~= ~~
Founda . . Valencia jo~ slx other trustee banks =I~ 1 :.1y s .. :~~n.. •; 1m McF•rl !m a ...•. ::; : mi ~ =(01 ~ J;,,. u EltHucl 11\lo • "' Up ••• in han g inyest~nta ror the foundation which ••ul I tn. 2t Fl~Bkl 10'.r. .,_ :fJtt: r,~ 11\lo lllcon• fl M~ wr1~1w ,.,.. 71'1
has, d( i$26 million In ,160 different' funds. =· 1:: l1 ::~·~· ~ m: =.~ 'IYt .._ f.11r:!' U"' a~ ~~ ~~ ~.g: DOWNS
all • ...... ... ~ _ 'W ln ls • 11raon '"'. FIW«b , 1 114 " w-uut c~ CC.f: u y , UU»lr1ut.h.es ... nu on 1ran .. o 11r1c11r ,-. ,,.. .. ,o isv. ~ Mid••• 1
1t" 'tt:.Z \ 1 s ...... • 1~ 1
soTU' hurnan•service &Jencies in Oranae, Los := 1~"'1 :1 ~~l'' :~ ri' w1"°' 1.-11"' NASDAQ SUMMARY ~ ~L~:i.. '"" ' AHgetes Riverside -San Bernardino aqd Ventura •"'Tom z4 1~ ,,.,,..er 1111t 11~ ~~·v•o :~ ~~ 4 011ctvPI ~... ~ . •, ·•' • 911Cltlln M\ f FrHSG 2114 t7"' ,_.ex a ... -• S Gp:~~*' co ties ' f( " Blllfel• .. \It w1V. Fl'9mn1 • u U\4 ~s.o• t~ 1~ HEW YOl'IC (AP) -Motl .ell ... --• ·~dP. ~ : ·~ 9"'1Wll5 11--. 11~ P:ll!lrHB 29f't 24\lt ~p '"u ... •<-' ... llOdll -41" lly NASO 17 A;'°«Uf'I '"' '-
PJtot ogbook -I ·1 1·1 ' ~id commentor1's
: 1 %duiively "' th6 II J 111
~ . B•ch new year has
~cougbt us 'new drugs
w.blcb differ «reaUy from the guesswork. lnire·
JJtents ol past years. It Is id~ticult to realize that l~s than ;a hundred
~rs ago, you could
• nt on your linJera the • own dru11 .whlCh could
tlepended upon to &Jve
• poaltlve medical result.
Now the 1 mt.sll l ·
, ~~-redlent.t hope {hey
'P.ork.' mldur~a ate tlpkfly dlsappearln1. We "'9e slnale lo«redleaf medicines •wflic;h can
• ~iltively cauH a de·,
•'red reau.l~J We hot ~.aas wblcn rabe or •lo.,.er blooc\ pr,11Urt.
qt.her• pernalt • dl•betle
. l• llve 1 not.naJ life. fie
q11 nu an.Y Pr"Cft.,U..
1rOUR oocroa CAN I
noNB US wlleo JoV :.i.ecs a medl~ne. ~ arc.al
apny people enl.nlllf u.a
Wkh tbtlr pr~rtpOoba. •I!._. ··:~.:m?~ .. ~ I ~ ')"
~ ~
CHL F"ln 2 t\lt Aulm ~ 614 ....,_.Pd ~...,. "_. II-8ld Asked °'II
CPT • I~ 1~ o ... u 1... l ll4ert1Rltt .. ~ ···~ llllCIC . . • . m ,soo 17h 11 + ... 1: ~t~~ 1z: t ~., » 11 R•e•t ,. 11 Mann .n "" -J""'., "'100 1-. 1"-. . . . ' dt4 ~ ~ ovEP:n ..,. lO\lo ~tc111U11 S -~ ,,.,.,,.;·: 22,:300 1~ .,.,, ..•. p Pr 1 2;~ : ': ~ 9' GraSc11 t 14"' 14f't ,_t ff 1°" ... U,l!GrP ?It.JOO •lr't 4'-• f't 2 H ,.,... 14
• U\4 14\'t Gre ... M •not. 12'-HarrgC. I 2D 22 us ME• ltl,700 I 11-16 -M• II Slletdalll t~ : '-. AJr • .-. Of'eyAd• 11 n HOta • " 1114 faNJrll •. . • •• 1'00 1~ 1tl4 • II> " Aulolral ~ ""' t1V. Glllnllt .._ 11 HJHGe:l I.,_. 1._ Acllil.C . 1•.AOO "" 11 -~ IS ~!lo~ 8 l~ -1:: • ... ..,,.. Gyraclyft ~ 1\4o HYAlrl ~ 4\lo "ueme.i us $00 I ' 1·1' ~1..u " ~ ... a l~ 1116 HacTllP l ll HY> HkllOG I 16\lt 1Mli Saa ... l 15{ too Slr't s.. -I'll! 11 9"""91r' 2 -... w 1 '"' IN ... rllwlte .. \lo '"' Hkelel 10V. '°' flle.V<ln· 14til00 24V. 2'"' -14 11 G41Tac• um : _ ~ ~ " lS l4rpR-11'11 II :]•'""A 46 .. .,. '---~ =• ~u =-: !:l't H'lrPGp Mllt'M'4 ~:":JI, tt: ~ A..,anceel ·•·· ·· · · 'f' 21 ·un,..:;. e . ~ -= Ct..llce ._ 1 HertfNI '1£ ar-. Nw1NOs 11\'t II-v=, .... .,,... ... ' ........... • 2 ~~ 22 Y........ 2 -\It
CltlSoGa Mio HecMcl 1 !"-11'-MwslPS ~ I~ U "Old • • .... "' . . . J:.. H ArdlleEll 4V. -l'I
ClbVlA Ullo -Helmllftc ~ M Ne .. lf 4 32 hi ·-•• • .. -.. • • i! ~ ,.,. -"' ClbUt• _.,. D'ii HenrtlP: 21VI. NII< • M t llo Haw hi.,_. .. •. •........•. •. "I $(.tcJng 2~ -\lo ·· Ho--.. I S-l• I-Hut';fy a ,,_ 11 He• IO#I ...................... a 6 WalkG ..... -1
Muli 9d S..2' P:ldtll. , ....
GYI Sec LSI HllMO 7,ll
HI-Yid I.•
t.t ~ '"" Purltft t.11 Tllrllt UT
Trend 11 '1
Tot .. selas .................... ,11,161, --------
Pel. Off UI Ofl 11.J Off 11.A Off IS.I Off U.I Off 1U Off 1U Off IU Oft 1U
Off 1U Off 11.1 OH 1a.o
Off "" Off 11.S OH IU Off lU Off 11.1 OH U .1 on 11.1 Off 11.1 Ofl II.I
Off "·' Ofl 1U Off IU
Off 111.J Olf 10.S
~---------------------------------------------------------------......... ._.._. ... ~
8
Check
I
job off~rs
U you're d"'ftpal = ta lt9 -... ml!Moiu ot )'OU wiUb.V::~ • law •~rtlJ -.... tMa momat fOl'
u ---II tbt pltGltuel ol 10W' career. WbM )'OU '° I« a Jo' ""-• Mw riJ JOU reeoplae whether It'• .,..a• W .•
foryouf n Wbetllaer Ute l•b
JOU 're off ... ti "9 •"9
rHult of i••r ••• . u
Hareb or .-.... U ---· ---~7 Jutt com•• t• r•• •tum .... 1111
without 109r '""':tie ltep bac9', ..uy -.. •al• .... ....,.eta••...., :tltuatka IM .. a "I S eDM ~" • 7oar"wauld·be
emplo)w, Jull • *m& n•t• ...W make a ref~ cheek cm,_, 0.. ,_ u" ._. tMI, ,,a'U be amued al
the way tM WNlll •••I.., wW r• ud tM rtPt cme will leap C*t Wen '9Uf .,._ •
M0De7'1 Of cwrte it'I a JOHl'f\al IDOUYator, but by no meam tM tap OM < .. ....._ 10U'N llot ._,.,.ate for any
employment that,.,. .• .......,). Md moM1 la not tbe
only motivator if tie daMp ilwolftl NAoeaUoe.
Poteatial for MYUH ..... job utiafaetlGe, aeewity,
the attit~ ol JOS f~ ..!.. afi ta... faeton m.t rank bith la tJdl vttal cledaioa. And tbe beDefttt to you trantlate into penGGal taU.faetloD, a certaia mental "comfort
level" that dwarf• 1DC1De7 alone.
Here'• a cbedlJ1lt that you can UH to reeop.lJe how
1ood UM Job otter la for )'O\l, It'• extraordinarily revealing.
-Start with tbe company'• report, which ii, ln fact,
lta resume. What aceomplltbmalta does it emphasise?· ~ the style It pnJeeta match wb.llt you see u suited for
younelf? Uthe cotapuJ la publicly be1d, you euUy can
check lta Ul"81n9 on:r the put few years.
-Try to nna out ftntband from friends ln the lnduitry
or whatewr IOUlftl you cea locate (a atoek analyst lf y-OU
know one) bow tM compaa. " .. perceived amoac ... peers.
-Are JOU IMadlnt ta tbe same dlrectJon u the
company? A lileuth1 atock prtce and crowtb potential are
overall tood uam, but do tbe eompan.y't future plans
dovetail wtth JOW' quallfteatiou, lnteresta aad ultimate
objective.? (There are deep pltfalll here; think carefully).
-What ii tbe c.mpany's manqement pbiloeopby? Of
cruclal lmportaaee. empbubm Alan Scboober1. president
of llana1emeat aeerultera lntenatlonal Inc .. the
couotry's lar1est executive recruiter, la the individual to
whom you will report. Bow do you feel about tbat person?
Do respoulbWty and autbority 10 band in band in this
company? Cu Jeu really mate yoar mark? Ia the
company atruetured 10 that you wW be recoplzed for and
liven credit for your aceompliabmentl? . -nu. are lmprwatn. but wW you be responsible
for all that yours lmpU .. ? Bow man1 people actually will
be reportlq to yoa, lf any? How much decilk>n-making
authority will you have?
-la there room in upper manapmeot for you? Is the
company known f• fl'Olllodlll from witbln, or does it look
for "fresh blood" frem the outalde?
, -U you are taece11ful. what wW be your next step in
the company? Does each nma on the mana1ement ladder
involve relocatloo?
-If you are uked to relocate, what expenses abouki
your new employer cover? A.ceordln1 to Richard W. Wirth,
vice pnl(dellt ol matketlnC for. Homequity. a leading
relocatioe mafia1ement flnn, you lbcka1d uk for: one fully
paid boulebuntin1 trip, relmbunement for moving your
household aoodl, travel expemes to the new . location for
you and your family anl aa expeue allowance to cover
temporary llvtna coat.I (both food and sbelter> for up to 60
days. Frtnte beneO&a <healUl, dental and optical plana), club
memberabipl, partiq -all lbele "pub" are important.
The quallty ol tlte, lacludlq JMritbbOrtlooda and school
systems, will eihCt your entire family relationships.
Atainst all the above, cub in band u tbe .key factor
downerades itself, wtUch la what tbia checklist la designed
to do.
STOCKS IN TME SPOnlGHT
AMOIAllUJ'BS
I e '4
II!'!!~, ~!Pl~[~.
fer --.,JM. 11. HOC .. · • ft .,,._ ... ~.a·:~r~·~~
21 Tl'fl aa ~ MU1 M6.09-UI U Utl tlUt 105.'7 1•.zt 111.61-1~ .s la Ill. 11 *27 .,.,. 111 ....__ • 31 ~-=-............................................ s-::: :'ta ............................................. :~==
WHAT STtfCIS DID
NEW YORI< IAPI J1111. 11
==-& ........
WHA~MmlfCll)
N•W 'lfC*IC C~ Ja11. ti
'"""'· ~ -211 n1 , •
...........
VICTIM? -San Francisco Police Lt. George
E . LaBrash, 56, has filed suit against the city
after suffering a stroke while guarding the
golden mask of King Tutankhamun there
recently. He suggests he may be a victim ot
King Tut's curse .
.
Restaurant
knows A.BCs I • CLEWISTON, Fla. CAP> -Carroll Benson
bas been successful t.be last 20 years by knowin1
his ABCs -A fof antiques, B for ~rbecue and C
for customers.
And this industrial engineer -turned
, restaurateur -gives special attention to au thrffl'
at'the Old South Bar-B-Que Ranch he owns here at
the edge of J.ake Okeechobee.
The 64-year-old Benson is proud bis restaurant
has been ranked among the Top 500 in the country,
e.ven though he has no liquor license and there's
ortly ooe brand of beer in the place -and that
comes from a barrel.
''I guess people keep coming back because the
food ia good, there are plenty of antiques they can
look at and touch, and they are treated well ," said
the Ocean City, Md., native who bought the place
when it was in banJtruptcy in 1961.
He said there's no deep secret to preparing t.be
barbecued ribs, chicken, beef and pork his
..
Benson is proud his
restaurant is ranked among
top 500.
customers keep coming back for. But neither does
he allow a substitute or shortcut in his kitchen.
"I don't parboil the meat and I refuse to use
gas or electric stoves to make barbecue," be said.
"We have alWt\YS used open pits."
Benson explained that be burns a truckload of
oak every week that costs $900 and involves a
500-mile roundtrip lo obtain.
"And,'' be'sald, 'Tll keep using wood until the
price gets completely unreasonable."
Por meat, Benson said be· buys the best in
large quantities when the market is right, and then
stores It in West Palm Beach.
"We serve between two and four tons of meat
a week at Old South,'· he said. The fried catfish
served is freshly caug.bt at nearby La.ke
Okeec~.
Old South isn't the kind <>f place where you
have to be concerned about how you dress or
whether you sh~uld leave the kids at home.
The outside of the building is adorned with
1i1ns ~led in western "lingo." There also are
llfe·slze versions of the historic OK CoM"al shootout
and Judge Roy Bean's courthouse. The signs and
tl1urines were made by John Griffin, who bas
worked in the kitchen here for 2S years.
"Griffin has more seniority than I have,"
Benson said with a laugh. .
Inside, it's sturdy wooden tables and benches.
One takes little notice of the furniture, however,
because of the antiques that seem to be
everywhere. Jte estimated that more than l ,000 antiques
are in his restaurant, most secured lo shelves or
walls, but, be said, they can be touched and
operated by inquisitive.patrons.
"I have no idea what their worth is. I'd bale to
put a price on them bec•use many are
irreplaceable. Som• oTt~em you won't •ven fin<l)n
a museum," be said. ' 1 The only difficulty he's encountered with
having such rare pieces of American hi.story" in his
place is tbat "some people get lndlthanl because I
won '1 aeU aomethine."
' Waitresaes at Old South are a friendly buncb
and bAend ln with the place because of their
"unlfonns." .
Eacb ls dreued aa a cowlirl complete with boota, deaim shirt and skirt, cowboy bat. and a
we(l•wona bolater and slx·1hooter.
Benion and bia wife, Rev., live ln oae ol ~
o&dtet> boael in Clewiston. Built ln 1129 aa a
palaUal bolpltaUty bouae for l\ltltl of Bror G.
Dahlbereg, whose company eventuelly• beeame the
U.S.-. Corp., the home baa,a specious kitchea,
porcbel, lar1e bedrooms ud a liaa tower oo the
third floor. lt ii pleHHllY decorated with anUqlle
dinnerware, furniture aocl ~enalloa pieces. Mn . .._,..., collection ofAillticlue ftqer purses ls
pr~IJ dl.lplayed ln a8e l"OO'ift.
'l'be 8ensoDa enjoy traveUnc ln aeareb of
anuq ... and -awa1 d\lrtft8 tbtr t" •low•t moalM of the year -Jlay Md October, .. .,. n•••f 10 we1t of Arlranau aad
............ laid .... Oii, "bu&., 1taUoll .....
aetel'. 1•t1 put an antique 1tore wlt.boYt •'°Pllilll·.. ff
............ 124.95
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w.......-•• , ••. ..........
Sndce Alarm •SA78RR
Reg.21.~
Takes 9 volt batteries l 788
Sidi
Hblh Roblnaon or the Unlvenlty of Mtlboume
uld ·14 of tbe 21 women lakln1 part ln tbt
experiment became pre1nant.
Seven became preanant durln1 the first
monthly cycle of treatment, they 11id. lach
woman wu allowed to ao tbrou8 yp &o l1x eyci•
of treatmenl aeeklaC a auCffllf&ll pnlf MOJ.
01 t.be aeveo women •llO dad eat--.. ... ftv• Jater were lo.ad to bav. a _..._ tUl blotkecl
the tubes frim the ovari• &o UM ..,., That
made normal transit of Ute ... to Uae womb
impoaalble _.en ii ovll1atlon wu aeblevecl, UM
report aald. •
Dr. Warren Pearse of tbt Amertcu C0Uq1 ol
Obatet.rtclw and GyneeololiltarJ:•b'l1 he'l'I ol Ute
Journal, aald that In two-tbi ot &M cal••
lnvolvlnt ldlertUe coupln, tbe l)C'Oblem ll with tbt
female partner.
Up to ao perceal ot thole WOtJ1ea 1"'1tr from
ovulation disorders that may bt btl1M9t1 with
fertility drup, he added.
"The key element of UUa study wu the u.se of
\lltraMM&nel to tell when ovuJaUon bad occurred and
bow ~.,. wu d0in1," Peane aaid.
"uMrUound lt a noa·lnvaaive, IMxpemlve and clt'1y a«Urate .,,.., to foUow l*>l)ie with lbla
probleqi.'' be coatlmwtd, "and you don't bave to
resort C.O tbe very expemlve hormoae u11y1 now
uaed to conllrm ovuJaJJoa.•1
'Ptane aald the 4rup and ultrasound uaed ln
the exP.rlment art commonly available at
medical centers tfe4JtJna lnl.w.Ity.
Tbe researclle.._ used lbe dn&I c&oml~ to
lnduee ovuJ&Uoa. 'then, they Uled hip-frequency
ultr.-oolc wave1 tiO aet an lmaae of lbe fluld·flllecl
11c, or foUacae, Wciacb bolds UM untertill1ed e11 .
PARAMOUNT
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Lawson 30 gal.
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The Dellect-0 Air DellectOI' with
Circular Saw Trash Can Heavy oauoe galvanized
Reg 41 95
dust filter procects plants from
drafts. keeps warm aw lower 152 7-1/4" f574. Reg. 39.88
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tMM99. Reg. 22.19
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t400A. Reg. 7.59
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1288
Ugllt ,.... fire!
Pine MoUntcin
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Burne up to 3 hOurs _ 1 '7n ...
, with cokw. !I 1:_7
,.
r !f. JORN SEVANO • ~oat•~nce. ·TM T1ta111 .. Ut~'c:ach Bill M·~•u..i;..;.;.. '(l,e)·r-.taftla. i.ul!f>.~ .... __... Of caurse, .KtQuarn ~iltiiiii8lli'1' l1 nervous. But t~en •• he than Nbot.andh" to wore
quteldy points out, he s probably wt•a.. UCI. He alto bu t.0..-1111\ oot alone. ~· tonight (7: 30) marks the a way to shaw. dowa
opening of the Pacific Coaat. expa.lve Ant.Maera, w~::::;::::~
AUl)eUc Association seuen with . 1eorilUll avera1e rankl
UCl entertaining CaJ State · ~r:1~ld b~C«• the' •'!UM
Fullerton at Crawforct lfaU in a started that J lhMlbt lbeJ WtOialll
contest already announced u a wlD the confere11ee and 1 ~ se¥~~tAnteatera, 11_1 durlng the they've P,t,ayed better than I
preseason start from scratch expected, admits McQua.m. ' · "They shoot so well and we
On radio tonight
KWVE (108 FM) at 7:30
tonight agai n st the
Jekyll-and-Hyde Titans.
"I'm not really sure which
team is going to s how up
tonight," says MuJUgan . •·wm it
be the team tbal lost to
(nationally-ranked> Wic hita
Slate by three (70·67) or will it
be the one that lost lo
Pepperdine by 19 (95·76>?"
Cal State Fullerton Coach
George McQuarn probably
doesn't even know .
The key for the Titans this
season has been rebounding.
When they go to the boards well,
they're usually in the game.
Wh e n they don 't , well ,
Pepperdine can tell you what
happens.
To complicate matters .the
Titans (7·8) don't match up well
against the Anteaters. Fullerton
starts 6-4 Leon Wood and 6-3
Ricky Mlxon al guard, with 6-6
Tony Neal and 8-6 Mi chael
Anderson al forward and 6-10
George Hawthorne'at center.
don't have anyone w~o can
defend against Magee inside."
Magee comes into the came
with a 29-point averaie and a
shooting percentage of 70.6. As a
team the Anteaters are shooting
61.5 percent and have the four
top marksmen in the conference
in Whieldon (65.2). McDoaa&d (81 .9), Wulf (59.2) and Magee.
The Titans counter with a 46.6
s bootin,g percentage with Wood
as their leading scorer at 19,0.
Surprise
co-leaders .
at Classic
PALM SPRJNGS <AP> -Jet
Ozaki said he "was very lucky."
Rex Ca ldwell didn't use lb.al
word, but there was no question
that he was in the right place at
the right time.
"I'm a very poor cold-weather
player," Caldwell said aft.er bis
8-under:-par 64 bad given him a
tie with the Japanese rookie
Wednesday in the first round of
the Bob Ho'pe Desert Uolf
Classic.
WHAOOYA MEAN? -The J.;Sgurla Beach duo of 80b Short
I 25 > and Rudy Dvorak < 5> look at the official in disbelief
after a jump-ball call in Wednesday night·s game against
1 Laguna Hills. Ha'wis won South Coast League encounter.
68-61. Story. photo. Page C2.
The Anteaters counter with 6-3
Kevin Fuller and 6-5 Randy
Whieldon in the backcourt with
6-7 R ainer Wulf, 6 -8 Ben
McDonald and 8-8 Kevin Magee
up front. Magee < 12.4> and
McDonald (5.3) are two or the
lop 12 rebounders in the
''I hardly ever play &ood on
the West Coast, when it's c*d. 1
make most or my money .from
June 1 to September," Caldwell
said.
'Genius' tag doesn't sit well with 49ers' Walsh
Super Bowl -bound San Francisco coach would prefer to just be called an 'expert'
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Bill Walsh
isn 't very comfortable with the
"genius" label assigned to him for
leading the San Francisco 49ers to the
Super Bowl.
It's not that the National Football
League's Coach of the Year doe~n.·t
appreciate acknowledgm ent of hts
expertise or his team's s-uccess. He just
thinks he's too normal to be called a
genius.
"Usually genius is associated W1ttt a
certain figment of crackpot," Walsh
said Tuesday. "And the only true
gen iuses are deceased. No, I don't think
I should be called a genius. Besides, I
haven't beard the right people say
genius."
Walsh thinks or himself as a football
"expert" with an artistic touch.
"I've developed a system or football
tbat1 has been unique," Walsh said as
the National Conference champions
began preparations for their Jan. 24
meeting with AFC litlist Cincinnati in
Super Bowl XVI.
"Obviously, I've had success with.my
orrenslve formulations and tbe
development of quarterbacks.·· Walsh
conceded ... I think I'm as expert as
anyone coaching football today. Ptus I
may have an artistic ability that adds a
certain flair to what I do."
That flair was evident Sunday when
J oe Montana , Wal s h ·s latest
quarterback sensation, marched the
49ers 89 yards in four minutes and
threw a touchdown pass with 51 seconds
left to beat. the Dallas Cowboys,' 28-27.
Montana called some or the 13 plays in
the drive, but three times be came to
the sidelines to discuss the choice or
calls with Wal sh.
Walsh spent eight years coaching
quarterbacks and receivers for the
Bengals. He shaped the career or
CinciMati quarterback Ken Anderson,
the NFL's Most Valuable Player, tbe
man the 49ers must stop Jan. 3' in the
game al Pontiac, Mich.
Many previous Super Bowls have
been super bores when teams turned
conser vative unde r pressure. Walsh
doesn't think that will happen this Ume.
In fact, he's expecting an exc:ilinl
Chargers rec~ver
And so does Chang in Edison win • With Marina's Rick Smith 8 7 CVltT SEEDEN 'OI .. Delly ..... ,_,.
· Jt'a a lood thing Edison Hlgh·s
Richard Chang lets bls scoring
ipeak ror itself.
PlayiQa with tonsllltis, lhe 8-6
senior forward pumped home 24
~iota Wednesday nitbl and the
Cbar1ers shook off a stugish atart to overpower Marina, 75-53
lA the Sunset Lea1ue opener at
l:dison.
While Chang may not have
liad a lot to aay before, durina or
alter the aame, an awed •artna Coaeb St.ne Popoyte!a ~·t at
a Iota for WOl'da in praf1ln1 the
CU' 4·A No. 2 team. .. We played an excellent i.rn
Cbellbt. Tbey are ll)Udl blitter
~an Lakewood <the undefeated No. l CJF 4-A team>. They baye
more alfellllve weapon.a," DMed Popowtcb.
TbaM weapona -Cbaq, M
forward Rlct Dlleraardo, i--IWd J., ....... -:-•..-.~ Gclldp -.. ~ ..
, ... iia =lal Of ... = !!!'1r._~ .•
~.Ulllill .... '\ u .... *' ...,-,,,. Ille~.
workln4 hard underneath for six ,
points 111 the first quarter, tbe
Vikings jumped out to a quiet
12·4 lead, prompting Edison
Coach Barry Leich to call a
tlmeoul
By the end of the first
quarter, the VUdnp held only all
18-16 advantage which would be
lheir tut lead of tbe n.i1bt.
"We just chanted
everytbinl," Lelp explained of
the turnaround that followed the
timeout. ''Tbey <Ilaria) r._..
Ml' ...... rlCht at tbe 1tldl-so
we chaqed our defense and we ebu•• our o11--.. ''
aerial duel between Anderson and
Montana.
"I think it'll be a wide-open game,"
Walsh said ... we·re certainly not going
to lay back and wait for them to make P
mistake. I don't think there'll be many
surprises on either side. I don•t think
there'll be a lot or experimenting.
"On defense, our number one concern
is Ken'" Anderson running w'ilh the
football. He Is the greatest hl.Mer at
that position perhaps who's ever
played. He has great speed and nobody
but the backs can keep up with him. He
runs around everyone. He 's done It all
season. .•
··on offense our chief concern is their
blitzing. They blitz and blitz heavilv ··
Walsh is looking to fullback · Earl
Cooper to sting the Bengals on the
artificial turf of the Silverdome.
"Watch Earl Cooper," Walsh said. "I
expect him to play very well on that
surface. That surface is just what he
needs."
Ro~s new f oothall coach at Maryland
COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) -
Bobby Ross, an assistant coach with the
Kansas City Chiefs for the past four
seasons. was named head football coach
al the University or Maryland today.
The announcement at a morning news
conference omcailly ended the search
to replace Jerry Claiborne, who
reai1ned Dec. 16 to return to bis alma
mater. the University or Kentucky.
Ross coached Maryland linebackers
in 1972, the first of Claiborne's 18
seasons with the Terps.
Under Claiborne, Maryland soon
returned to the football prominence it
enjoyed in the late 1940's and early
1950's under the late Jim Tatum.
"I need a lot or heat. Don't let
it get cold on me.··
while most or the rest or the
nation was shivering from the
most severe cold snap of the
century, Caldwell and the other
128 pros playing in this unique
e vent round near -i deal
conditions in the desert of
Southern California. There was
very liUJe wind, a bright, warm
s un and temperatures were in
the low 70s.
Caldwell, a journeyman who
bas yet to win in seven full years
or tour activity, responded with
one or his better efforts. He,
didn't miss a green, didn't make.
a bogey, splashed three "!a"
across his card and playt!Cf the
par-5 holes four under.
"It was like a practice..row,d
day, not like a tournament day,"
he said. "I hit every greep, so it
was just a mat~ or bow eood I
was gotng to pu~, bow low I wu
1oing to score.''
Both Caldwell and Oraki
played before only a handfuJ of
fans at Indian Wells, while tt\ost
of the gallery swarmed to
Bermuda Dune's, a few nUlets
away, to watch the antics o(tbe1
show-business celebrities,• Ole
host comedian and fortner
<See HOPE, Pa«e CZ>
' t.
...
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, January 14, 1982
pol. ar-. Mil, •la ol Uiem by Hu1hea.
"lell 4Ud 4 reall1 tood Job," uld
Wlth •:•'7 left. Huntln•ton Beact> came
-lthln four point.I of tylnC th• acore u
Dane Shacka.llald bit on a S-footer. Fo-~da Dina Brown. "ID th• 'tie IOl IUt OI tbt ttow, and Ila m•"
aut iltD. "'= a:.:.r~u•> eame hMO ~J tG
But Fouataln Valley puUtd away and
taded anr Oiler threat by tcorln1 the next el~ Polnta, and puttlna th• came on lee.
"Glve them t.be eteclit," aaid Bl'OWll, 11 •t U'9 ,...,__ •. ,.,.., •t. Md the
Oilers cld, buUtltUott Ol~-''We _.. dowa Woo ~J ,.,&Dta in the fln& hall," N1d MUler .i.....-. were up b1
17 at halftlme. We J• ••Dt~ &Aem too
many."
•"They came back In tbe Hcood half. '• ~as llard for us to 1et back ln t.be aam.,
.. uuse we were up b1 JC> many PotlMll at
a.irume.''
Ken Harter scored 16 points Md crabbed
lf reboUnds ;or the Darou, wbUe Jto1t . Whitehair an John Kosty combined for 11
reb<>unds. The Olien were led by Lane
with 38 points and 11 rebounds, whUt
Shackleford toseed in l6 polnta.
Hunllnlton Beach outHored tbe Barona
in the UUrd quarter 20-9, u Jim Lane sot
hot. Lane scored 11 &*llta ln the quarter,
u1ln1 hi5 8-'7 frame ill lilaklftl all of his
abotatrom w1thln ~-With 5:03 left ln the lllird ciuarter, the
Olien were down 55·31, but reeled off 13 ot
tho neat 15 points to put the aame wlthln
reaeb.
.. Harter la a 1ood player," added
Brown. The 8·4 senior baa been an
AU·tQumament selection ln each of the
three tournaments that Fountain Valley
bas played in.
ltaj~r league teams
draft nine Pirates
After the dust bad setUed and all • 218 m.;c>r league baseball teams bad
completed Tuesday's winter tree
•tent draft, nine Orante Coast ·
Collete players found themselves selected by pro ball clubs.
Leading the list of draftees f.-om Coach
.Mike Kayne's squad are four sophomores who
saw plenty of action last sea8oo.
Leftfielder Kevin
Sliwinski, a .338 biller with
six homers and 30 RBI last
season, was pegged by
Houston ill the first round or
the secondary phase.
Pitcher Jack Reinholtz,
an Ocean View High
graduate, was piclced in the
10th roun4 ol the regular
phase by Oakland. Reinholtz
MAY•• was 6·0 last season.
Sophomore shortstop Scott Groot was
drafted by Kansas City in tbe fifth round of the
regular phaase. Groot bit .310 and started most
of OCC's games at shortstop.
Also chosen was Fred Delaine, a .306 batter
who was the Pirates' deslenated bitter. Delaine
was picked by Oakland in the 13tb round of the
re1uJar phase.
Quote of the day
Tennis player Vk&er Amaya to umpire
&od1er Smith during a doubles match in
England. "Not onJy are you a cheat, but
you're incompetent as well." (Amaya and
bis parter Hank Pfister were fined $500
each for their outburst.>
Moncrief's shots sinks 76ers
~y Moecrief'I IS.foot jump m
shot with 17 seconds left carried the
Milwaukee Bucks to a 111 -107 victory
over the Philadelphia 78ers to
bilhligbt Wednesday night 's Nationtl
Baaketbaii Association action . . . In other
games, Benard King and Wedel Free combined
for '73 points as Golden State whipped Denver,
143-128. Kiili bad a J(ame-hiRb 39 points ...
Gaa Wll.llama scored 12 of his
19 points in the first baJr as
SeatUe rolled past Indiana,
106·'6. SeaWe woo iLs fifth
game in a row and also
picked up its 12th win at
home in its last 13 games
. . . Rootie forward Kevill
~er-scored a career·hilb 1~ polnla, includin1 11 in the
lfinal quarter to lead Kansas
City to a 117-104 victory over
Cleveland Bria• Taylor sank two free
tbrows with 10 seconds left as San Diego
overcame a 1'7·point deficit and beat Dallas,
l0&-102 . . • Boeton scored 10 straight wlnta to
break open a close game, and Lari')' Blr4
seored 28 points as the Celtics scor'ed a 116-95
•lctory over Atlanta Milwaukee
prnhleat James Flt11erald was listed In i .. *7Y condition in intensive care after
-*MMlrgery.
Maruk'e goal. glv~ Caps tie .
A llO.& by .,..... Mank with lt. Iii aecon4a · remalolq, f0Uowio1 a
fac-eoff, cave lb• WasblnlJlOD
CapiUals a 6-6 tie wtth lbe F.dmontoD Oilers tn
Wednetday nlgbt's National Hockey League
actJon. F.dmonton's Wa~ Gretzky. the NHL's
runaway scorin& leader, notched blJ 55lb goal
. . . In other games. Buffalo's A8*e Savard
scored with less than two minutes gone, and the.
Sabres went on to score the next four goals en
route to a 6-2 win over Chicago . . . Blare
Tar_.,.1 tally with 9:51 left heped Quebe<! score
a 4-2 decision over St. Louis • . . Jelte
Aa4enon and Fred 8ol•l8'nlck scored 1oab
and goalie Mlcbel Larocque supplied a
near-perfect performance as Toronto topped
Colorado, 2·1 . . . Pat HJckey and &om
Duguay scored goals to lead the New York
Rangers to a 2-0 win over MiMesota . . . Dale
Hawerchuck scored two power-play goals to
lead Winnipeg to ta 6·1 victory over Pittsburgh
. . . Vancouver broke a five-game losing
streak with a 5-1 victory over Calgary.
Fairbanks plans no legal action
University of Colorado football • coach Qac* Fairbanks said be does
nQt plan any civil action against
Boulder, Colo. police following an
incident in which he was handcuffed and
detained after his car was stopped for a
suspected speeding violation. Police said
Fairbanks' car was mistakenly identified as a
stolen car when officers stopped the vehicle.
and that one patrolman
pulled his service revolver
and another handcuffed
Fairbanks after the coach
became abusive and refused
to obey commands to place
his bands b ehind his
head ... Danny Selta,
formerly or Corona del Mar
Higb, bas been ranked 20th in
the 19'2 pre-season teDJtis _.,.,..,.... aloglea rankings by the
lntercolle1iate Tennis Association . . . The
Antels adnouaced 'Wednesday they 'have
a11lped pitcber Dave FrO.t to the club's
Pacific Coast League affiliate in
Spokane . . . A meeting between the Dodgers
and pitcbing aenaation Feraaado Valensuela is
expected Ulla week or early next week to
continue dllcusaiona on a pay raise. Taljs were
receued th1a week when no agreemenv'could be
reached . . . Claarlle Tapp or St. Paul, Minn.,
bas tbe lead after three rounds or the pro
bowling tournament in Las Vegas . Ta.pp's
three-round total of 5,M5 is 52 pins better tban
secood·place James Miller of Mesa, Ariz.
Television. radio
Following are the top sports events on TV
tonight. Ratings are: / 1 " " excellent; / 1 " Worth watching;./ / fair ; / foroet it.
8 p.m., Channel 9 ./ ./ ./
COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Colorado State at
UNLV.
Announcers : Ch ick Hearn and Ralph
Readout.
Coach Jerry Tarkanian's Runnin' Rebels
continue their bid as an Independent to reach the
NCAA chempionshlps. Colorado State ls currently
6·7 overan and 1·2 In Western Athletic Conference
actlo". Tarkanlan's club will be joining the PCAA
next season but this year the overall record will be
the determining factor in post-season play.
RADIO
Basketball -Cal' State (Fullerton) at UC
lrvlne, 7:30 p.m., KWVE (108 FM) and KWRM (1370); UC Santa Barbara at Lono Beach State.
7:3S p.m ., KLON C88 FM>.
Hockey -Klnos at Calgary. 6:20 p.m., KPRZ
<11SO).
Ski Report -Snow conditions in Southern
California mountains, 9:43 a.m .• 12:~. 3:43, 7:43
p.m ., KNX (1070).
. From Page C1
EDISON • • •
Popovich didn't want to do.
·'I knew tbe same W0'1ld have
to be in the 40s or 50s if we were
going to win. We tried to fut
break with them. For every
basket we got, we lost one lat.er,
either by turnover or because of
their fine defense," Popovich
added.
Chana finished the first bait
witb 13 points and the Chargers
held a 37-28 advantage. While
DlBernardo add'ed 12 more in
the first 18 minutes, guard Mark
Goudie could bout just four
po iota.
But Goudge got bot in the
second half, scoring eight in the
third quarter and six more in the
final periOd. -ffls 18 points tied
him with DtBernardo.
With Chang shooting 77
percent from the floor ( 10 or 13)
and the Chargers as a team
shooting at a 51 percent clip,
Edison jumped out to a 64-43
advantage with 4:50 remaining
in the came.
Marina tried in vain to keep
the score interesting as John
Berry scored 15 or bis 19 points
in the second half, and . guard
Scott Filipek added 16.
Marina's 6-5 forward Smith
had 10 points 'in the first ball, but
the Chargers held him to· one
point in the final two quarters.
• ··Marina really lit up at the
start," admitted Leigh. "We
knew they were a good team.
But we had to change our
offense after that start."
Lei1h's idea of changing his
offense ls a simple one. Simply
improve the passing game and
f~nd t.h~ open ma". W,.tUl a~ 11 k e Chang, Goud'ge and
Di Bernardo. it's a minor
adjustment.
From PageC1
EAGLES • • •
high point honors ror Mesa with
Rishebarger (16 points), went to
the line.
Estancia hit 19 of 36 from the
field (52 .8 percent) and the
Mustangs hit half of their 58
shots after a disastrous 4-for-17
effort ln the first quarter.
Gardner also had 11 assists tor
the night, keeping pace with his
average of 10.2 per outing.
Estancia played its game -
with a baseline attack early and
the Eagles' zone didn't allow for
a lot of penetration.
So, the Eagles prepare for 3·1
University Friday. Mesa, now
1·3, can only hope to salvage the
first round with three straight
against 0-4 teams, then regroup
for a last chance.
Lack of prog..-ess
for Conigliaro
BOSTON (AP> -Tony
Cooigliaro'a doctors are "very
concerned" about "a
disappointing lack of prosress ln
his level of conaclousneaa" four
days after be suffered a severe
beut attack, accordinl to a
hos pit.al _statement Wednncky.
.............. ..,_..... ....
JUMPING JACK Neil Riddell of Laguna Beach leaves his
feet to try to block pass from Laguna Hills' Dan Blanck
during Wednesday's South Coast League contest.
Laguna Hills drops
rival Laguna Beach
Ramsey, Carter hot for.Hawks
By &ICllARD DUNN
Of ... .,...,,""',....
The Laguna' Hills High
buket.ball team evened its
South Coast League record at 1-1
as the. Hawks slipped past rival
Laguna Beach Wednesday night,
68·61 , al Laguna Hills.
Brett Olivier led the lfawl<s attack witb 18 points, as he and
6-3 forward Tom Ramsey, who
poured in 17, humbled the
Artists and dropped their league
record_to l·l.
The Hawks turned the ball
over 19 times and were guilty or
22 fouls, but the fine outside
shooting of Ramsey and
sophomore guard Robert Carter
helped the Hawks to their first
league victory.
"I wasn't really surprised at
how well they (Laguna Beach l
played tonight," said Laguna
HUis Coacb John Moore. "They
play aggressively and they are
going to give teams problems in
this leaKue.''
points) and John Mann, who
scored 19 points.
Riddell s tarted the eame
averaginj 22.2 points a game,
and his outside shooting proved
to be no different Wednesday
nii;tht.
The Hawks had trouble
working the ball in to Olivier in
the first half, as the Artists
double-tea~ the 6·9 senior and
the Hawks were forced to take
outside shots. Laguna Hills
responded b y s h ooting 65
percent from the floor in the
first half and took a 40-35 lead al
halftime.
The Hawks outscored Laguna
Beach 18-8 in the third quarter,
giving them their biggest lead of
the coolest at tbe end or the
period. "We attacked their
zone teal well tonight,·' Moore
said . "For a quarter an~ ball,
we really played lrke a
cha mpionsbip team."
At the s tart of the fourth
quarter. 'Laguna Hills was up by
15, SIHJ, but the Hawks found
themselves getting into foul
trouble.
With 5: 16 left in lhe third
quarter, Olivier committed bis
fourth foul and Moore bad to
rely on Ramsey and Todd Ullin
to pick up the slack under the
boards.
The Artists shot a weak 34
percent from the floor, but shot
70 percent from the free-throw
line, compared to the Hawks,
. who shot a dismal 52 percent I from the line.
Laguna Hills will travel to San
Clemente Friday night, and the
Artists will be at Capo Valley.
"We r e bounded well
offensively tonight," Moore
said. "We took a lot or good
shots and played our type of
gl'me."
Laguna Beach, 8· 7, was led by·
senior guard Neil Riddell (20
From Page C1
HOPE.
I
• •
Ocean View
survives stall
Sea l(ings, Sailors set up a showdown
. to beat Lions
SeDlor Scott Debrouwer
acond 10 of h1a 1ame·hllh 18
polnta Ill the second quarter to
belp Ol!9M View Hilb overcome
tbe slowdown tacttce of
Wettmla1ter and lead tbe
vt1ltlli luh .. ~kl to a 51-23
d ... ~ay nltht ln the SunHt Leaaue baaketbatl opeer lcir l*.b sebooll.
• 1'lle .UC-, 0-l la 1~,ue. 2-10
Oftrall, trW to keep µ.e score
eloee by llWD& on UM ball and oa11 tniledJO.U atU.. ball.
..
CdM, Newport stay undefeated with easy wins; Uni victorious, too
The IJ.howdown la set. Corona del Mar
and Newport Harbor hitba will break part
of the three-way ftnt place deadlock in the
Sea View Leatue race when the two aides
meet Friday nitbt (7 !30) at Corona del
.Mar High.
In Wednesday's basketball action, the
Sea KJq1 routed El Toro, while the
SaUon 41d the same to Irvine. University
stayed ln the ehue for tbe top by defeaUn1
Saddlebaclt.
Here's wbat happened:
Corona .. Mar IO, II Toro 37
The Sea Klqa, '"°· almott made it loolt too easy H they 1but out tbe
·Cbaraen, 11-0 in ~ llnt cauan. • route to ••paint balftll6e .... lty tbl Ume tbe "'1d CllfUW Nlled llWnd ...., of GM
ttarten found tbemHlftl OD tbe bench" •m., .,..,,_. •Hllmt CW.... aad
!&Rood aroaDd • " praiMd
El °*' ..,. ·~ "OW' ... Gally quAt ... ftr'll .. 11 ...
Tbe lea ltlqs bid l1 Stla1en reatb
ttie ..... column, lad~ tour ~ ..............
~ ilUard QM&.-. ....... "'
• . \:
with 15 points, while senior forward John
Uurboe added 1~ and junior tuard M1ke
Hess and senior forward Kurt Petersen 10
each.
For El Torq, 0-4, the aalr player tG
score in double t11urn was Jeff Arnold
with 10.
•
AA ~ atorY P9IMd bf ID11·c_tetk the other day ~ lbe U..uda ol CIDllan One
fartieular aid l'9IOri In 00lot9do lOHI ,.._ually due to Utt ticket forctrlu. n. Uticl• went • to aay that Winter P,n lotff "• aa amiuaJ bull 10 to ao percent ot -roa Uf\ U.et ....v•ue due to foqenff."
Tia• 1tor1 threw out aome t11urt1, too, tltl~atlna 25 lift Ucketa per day at an avera1e
ralue ot tu woutd cost a reeort tn ,000 a year
baaed on a ski seuon lutlna a modest 100 daya. 1
Well, I fttured ll that coUld happen lo Colorado,
lma1lne the fun con artlsta must be bavln1 in
Callfomla. 1
To aaUJTy my curloalty 1 decided to place a call
to Snow Summit at Bia Bear Late. But unlike
Colorado, wbicb is tryln1 to curtail for1erl!1•
Snow Summl\ bu its 1l1hta set on another concern
-ripoff artists.
"We've been bothered more by certain typa of
llft tick~ acama than we bave the printed up lift
Ucket," admits Snow Summit spokesman Chris
Riddle. ,
"Actually, there are a muober of ways .people do
It <run a scam>," adda Dave Lapierre, who
oversees lift ttctet operations at the resort.
"Sometimes people just puJl the wires apart, or
they use wire cutten and cut the wires low enough u to conceal the cut."
Laple.rre doesn't disguise the fact there are
probably' a number of skiers who perform such
treachery on a daily basis. Nor does be discount
the notion that such offenders are hard to catch.
"Our Utt ticket operators have been inatructed to
tug on tickets whenever possible," says Lapierre,
"but ii a newly attached ticket is not ciu1ht right
off, then it's easy for somebody to get away with
It."
Lapierre was hesitant to put an exact dollar
figure on the scams, but added the lou to \he
resort yearly, "must be in the thousands."
~ •'The way we deal with the public here on such a
large scale it's almost i,mpossible to check each
ud every ticket," says Lapierre. "Even lf we
tried to do that the J,ines would be too lone and so
·• would the wait. From a p.,_ic relations standpoint
it wouldn't work." ,
\\'hicn means your chances or getting away with
a particular scam are probably better than your
chances of being caught.
"I'm sure it's pretty extensive," Lapierre adds.
"If people think they can get away with it, they're
going to do it.''
Lapierre says one heavily performed practice is
the purchase of lift tickets in the park.int lot, after
skiers are through on the slopes foe the day.
"They usually ask the skier ii be wants to sell
his ticket for $5," Lapierre explains. "What they
don •t undentaod ls if we find someooe with a cut
wire, it's void at that point."
As for criminal charges, it's hard to prosecute
for a number of reasons. says Lapierre.
OCC s truggling,
.. but Gauchos win
Orange Coast and Saddleback colleges
continued their separate routes Wednesday night
as the Pirates dropped another South Coast
Conference outing, while the Gauchos stayed in the
Mi ssion Conference chase with a victory in
community college basketball action.
Here's what happened:
Cerritos 62, Orange Coeat 80
The score is somewhat deceiving in that the
Pirates. 0-3 in conference, 9-10 overall, weren't
able to get into the ball.game until the final 4:30 of
play.
The Falcons (2·1, 10-8) led by 12 at the half·
and maintained that margin until the Bucs made
a run for it al the end behind the shooting of
sophomore swingman Chris Beasley.
The Pirates cut the deficit to 58-57 with 4: 30
remaining and only trailed 62.a> with a minute lo
go.
Beasley then stole the ball but three Pirate
shot attempts failed to go down at the buzzer. OCC
was its own worst enemy as the Pirates shot :n
percent from the field on 29 of 78 from the floor.
Tbe Falcons, meanwhile, shot S3 percent on 25 of
47 shots.
Beasley rmished with a came-high 21 points,
while teammate Jim Baldwin added 12 points and
10 rebounds. Beas ley also had 12 rebounda and 4
steals.
George Yezbak led the Falcons with 19 points.
Saddlebeck 74, Sen Bernardino 59 ·
The Gaucbol, 2-1 In conference, 12·7 overall,
turned a close game into a rout in tbe second half
as George Turner scored 19 of bis game·hi&b 27
points during the rinal 20 minutes.
In fact it wu a Turner laytn with 7: 52 to play
that gave the Gauchos their bi11est bulge at 58-45.
The Indians never got closer than nine polnts after
that. ·
Sophomore Rick Doyle added 17 peinta and 6
rebounds to the Gauchos' cause, while Dave
Wisniewski added 14 points and 12 rebounds,
despite fouling out of the game with eight minutes
remalnin1.
Tbe Indians are now 2·1 and 11-8.
COLLEGE
BASKETBAlL
-BAND
"We'U liat.en to aom.,one's story ud if It doean't
Jibe wit.la what we believe lo, then we won't luue
them another &Jekel for thal day." be aaya.
In Colorado, the penalty wu somewhat more
severe. The forierer, who wu cau1ht, bad to pay
a $500 contribution to the Winter Park handicap
pro1ram, plus bad to •tree to appear at future
meeUnp of the Cotocado Sid County USA to
explaln bla scheme to other ski area operaton. _
And he actually got off easy. The maximum
sentence la a $10,000 fine and three years in jail.
* * * Another amusing part of the Colorado story wu
the adventures of one skier who, just to test th~
system, decided to put the picture of a 1orilla on
his seasonal pass.
The skier went throu1h lift ticket operators for
three days before it was noticed.
Mustangs stop
Eagles ' skein
All IOC>d tblngs must end as the Estancia High
gi.rls basketball team can attest.
The Eactes. unbeaten in Sea View Leacue pla.y
the last two years, suffered a toqh 47-46 defeat m
overtime at the bands of Costa Mesa Wednesday
night.
In another Sea View matchup, Irvine started
quJckly and posted a 57-40 victory over Newport
Harbor.
Mesa bad an uphill struggle in the fourth
WOMEN
period to force the overtime. Trailing by eight
entering the final stanza, the Mustangs outscored
Estancia, 14-3 to get even.
The tying hoop in regulation play came in
dramatic fashion, as Nora Seager followed up a
pair of misses with a basket as the clock licked
down to one second.
Then, in the OT, Vicky Lamar talHed all four
points as Mesa and Estancia each moved their league mark to 3-1.
"I told the girls before the start of the last
quarter to take it slow and try to chip away at the
lead,'' said Costa Mesa Coach Paul Kahn. "And
that's exacUy what they did.
·'The girls played with a lot of desire and
intensity. We missed some free throws which
would have made thln11 a lot easier."
Irvine evened its record at 2-2 in leaeue play
while banding Newport Harbor its fourth stral&bl
setback ..
The Vaqueros played their starters the first
and third quarters while using the reserves in the second and fourth.
. CdM t ops Sea View
By the narrowest of margins, the Corona del
Mar High soccer team rests atop the Sea View League.
The Sea Kings, 2·0.l in loop play, scored twice
in the first half Wednesday and held off
Saddleback, 2·1. Senior Jeff Kordic and junior
Scott McCrlmmon tallied in the first 20 minutes or
the game and the CdM defense did tbe rest.
In other Sea View acUon, Newport Harbor
shaded Estancia, 2·1, University woo by the same
score over El Toro and Irvine blanked Estancia,
3·0.
Tom Gotuuo scored with an asalat from Curt
Lohse and Johna Rosenkist followed witb another
goal to give Newport all it would need to beat
Mesa. The Sailors improved to 1·2 while the
Mustangs fell to l·l·l.
Meanwhile, Irvine and Estancia are each tied
for second at 2·1, and El Toro, SaddJeback and
University are all 1-2.
Rugby match set
The California Kiwis women's rugby team will
host tbe Lynwood Ru1by Club Crom New Zealand
Sunday (11 a .m.) at Golden West College.
Sunday is the flrat of a four-city tour for
Lynwood, wbicb will travel to San Diego next ud
wlnd up in San Francllco for a palr of 1ame1.
The California Kiwis is a United States
representative based in Oran1e County.
Admission to Sunday's game is free.
-@
ON YOUR MARK -Orange
County Supervisor To.m Riley
<left> is ready to kick off the Jan.
23 Run for Hoag and Walk for
Hoag 5 and IO-kilometer events
as part of Clambake Week. Judge ..
o.lty ......... ,....
Mark Soden. chairman of the
Walk for Hoag < right> apparently
can't convince Ralph Berke to
compete in his event. Berke is
the chairman of the Run for
Hoag.
Sailors hack • • 1n swing
Dinghies, keel boats top weekend schedule
Newport Harbor Yacht Club will be
host to dinghy and keel boat sailors
Saturday and Sunday. The small
dinghies will sail inside courses on
Saturday, and the keel boats will
navigate ocean courses on Sunday.
The NHYC regatta is the oo.ly one
scheduled in Orange County, but the
new Southern California Yachlin&
Association cale ndar indicates
racing sailors will be beck in fuU
swlng, many of them prepping for
the Midwinter Regatta. Feb. 13·14·15.
Loe AJlgeles·LonlC Beacb
Seal Beach Yacht Club -Frostbite
Regatta <Sabot> Saturday.
Alamitos Bay Yacht Club
Chapped Cheek Regatta, Saturday,
Sunday.
Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club -
Winter Series No. 2 Call classes)
Sunday ..
Long Beach Yacht Club -January--
1 n vi talional Point Fermin race,
Sunday.
Santa MonJca Bay
South Coast Corinthian Yacht Club
Les Storrs Series <keel boats>
Saturday.
South Bay Yacht Racing Club
Champagne Series No. 2 (keel boats>
Sunday.
Su Diego
San Diego Yacht Club -Bofinger
Series ( IOR) Saturday.
Mission Bay -Yac ht Club -
Frostbite Series (all classes) Sunday.
Oceanside Yacht Club -Shannon
Series (PHRF> Sunday.
San Diego Navy Sailing Club -
Opening Day, Sunday.
Southwestern Yacht Club -Fiore
Series ( PHRF> Sunday.
Nertll and laland
WesUalce Yacht Club -Brean 'n
Ice Regatta (din1hies) Saturday ..
Point Dume Yacht Club -Spnog
Series <Ventura Sabot) Sunday.
Umpire fired
for low r a tings
NEW YORK <AP> -Umpire Steve
Fields. hired in 1979 to work during
the major league umpires· strike,
has been fired by the National
League because of "low performance
ratings " and "failure to show
improvement,'' the league confirmed
Wednesday.
"We just decided not to bring him
back this year because his general
work was a little below our
standards," said Blue Cullen. the
NL's administrator-director of public
relations.
Cullen would not e laborate on
Fields' alleged deficiencies.
"I don 't feel it's fair lo discuss the
man's shortcomings in public," he
said.
Cullen also said the league was
trying to cut its 4mpiring staff.
.. We have 28 umpir~s under
contract." he explained. •1we need
only 24. We've been going with 28 the
last couple of seasons, but it's been a
little unwieldy.
College basketball
Tonlght'sgemes ....
Cat Slellt ,..llllenollel UC trvlfM
UC~ lertlere et l..Dfl9 Beecll SI. Peclllc ti ,..,_St.
Ut ... Sl •I SM J-. St.
Ctlet W~St.
SlMlonl et WnNfllten
ColOt-St. et N.,, .. Ult v ....
<Penuge .. u. Of $.el\ Ole9o
UTEPe04ewell New Mulco et s. Ole90 sl.
NOf'IMmM-el USIU
Pwtt411111 et St. Merv'• ........ OrtlleetTwtN
NE Lou ........ etHM~~Slm""°"'
Te•n·S..AllloftlOetTellff-Arll"9toft .....
E. KefllU(ky et Auall" .... ,
• • N.C.•Wll~ ti £"Mt CwollN
Nlcllolll St. et Jee"-SI.
Middle T-•I W. Kel'ttuclly M-$t. et Mt.Krey St.
"lcllfllONI •• v •• c.ni-.. 1t11 w.....,. et V~tliflle ....
O~etPttt
'•lrf1141181 Hoty CroM ,.....-..n .. St. l'Mer'•
~w~.,,_._..,....,.
T°"rtonSC etJ __ _
Le Selle el Ride<
Brock-1 St. et N.._.,e
"'tumpllon el NC1111We•m ......
New Mellko St. et •redleV
C"91,...... et WlcM\e Sf.
Florld9 St. et SI. i.-11
Otllo St .. llllMll
lo\1<1119911 •I I~
·-· •• lillnnftote McN-St .•• Wl1.·Per1t1i.
Mlchl9911 $4. et PunNe NOf'ltt-Wm et WIK-In
Frldey'a g ... nea ....
WyomltlQ el Nev-LAii V ....
USFet~M
Arl1-etUSC ._ .....
W...St.etSolwSI.
Ut9flettYU
ldeflO SL et I-I ...
C04\llnlll9 et~
()orl1911 et Han..-0
Ve,._ ti Melllt ........ ,.........., .. ~•-.tt11 ... LWll'-Tech et$. Mlt~ ..
Commu~i:r s...c...-•
CMYl"'962. ~ ..... CMsl 60
,_.ullerlorl U, Ml. s,,i ~to 41 s."u Ant 79, GrOMlllOnt 71 MUllMC~•
Secld-.. 7', See ~dlno H S...u..ntem U, P•tomer 56 R1_,..CC17,SM~q:14
.......... ~j
LA Plefu ff, P ....... S4
L°"9 8Mctl CC ts, LA Mis.-II
Lo• Angirtes Veller u. 88Qnlleld .. .............. ~.
OO'lenl to, -..Cti 61
HighllCMol s....u.-Edll0tl7S.-lll.IP
Fov11teln Vello II, H11"t11101011 BH<ll 72
Oceefl View SI, WMlml11sler U
SMVlewL.91m
Nt•-1H..-lt,lrwlfMSI Cor_a.t _IO, l!I Toro JP
U"lv.,..,ty •. ~k JS
E •IMKle •2. Coll.a "'"8 st ,_CM.et....-
1.•"""8 Hiii•"· L.-Buell •1
Ceplstr-Velley 111. o .... HlllS ••
Sen Cle..-e '2. Mlulon Viejo 41
a.,.....'--Metff Del ... SC. P .... St Servlte SI. BIVloll ,\met 47
'""""~ K Mlledy 57. CYfNWU fJ
I! I Dor-... Kelell• U Los A....,.IOISt, l!-.,.a u
Peclfke ... Loere • c.,.., .. ~::;,;:
SeeUI 4N ... II,.... S7
Footllltl n. Tllltlft •
S.11le AN Velley SS, 0•81191 ~
0..... °""' L.Nllme Lot~41,lillMeGf ..... 47
S.ntl-U. Gw-0.-U
L.e Olllftte ... R...cl'IO A .... lllts 4'
IJ-8fL.--
Su""Y Hlllt 7t. e-. Ptr117t
SOllOreU, FllllertOl\411
Le Hetlre ... T,,,, '1
Or ... .......
WHCltnl 10, ~le "4 •••• n. AMMlm S4 Sev_,. 5'. Vel...c:le 4'
Women
HION ICHOOI. Co••• MewO, Esten<•• 4' COii
INIM 57, Newpotl H8111or .0
Monarchs
roll, 66·59
Sophomore forws rd
M atl Beeuwsaert scored
13 of his game-hi 27
points in tbe t ird
quarter to lead ater
Del High· Jp a 6 ·59
victory over .a.smn St.
Paul in an Ang lus•
League basketball me
Wednesday nl&ht.
JOHNSON a: SON
Presents ...
NFL's
Picks Of .;'the~
U*er.
Stettlt ...... "'. Gotdt11.Slotle
Portland
SoftOlt ..
Soft AllloNo
Dtll~
Hovtton
KllllHCllY
Vt.II
0.11 ..
l ot ton
Pflll•dtlpf>t.
NtwVCH'll Wtshlngtan
HtwJtn.ty .... Nlllwavll .. A.1111111
ll\011118
Chl<lilO
Detroit
Cltvetarwl
.415 1\11 • .4n •
,tn. V .... y If, Htn. BHch 72
MUN~ .. -ns. a•ACM -TllOmpsari J,
AYrtt II, INaltfwd 16, S.laye 10, !Ant a , Mtllox 4 • .,. .... , n 1+n 7t. ·"' ~ .417 It
.171 IW.
COMMUNITY COLLEGE C.mto• 62, occ eo
O•AMGe COAST -Btulty 21, T.
Krollllfetctt •. G. Krohnlelcll 4, c .. ...._ t
Thomes 12, Hall.w> 2. N ........ 2. B•lclwlll 1i Totals: 1t 2..J 60
Cl.llBITOS -Kuyper 10, ~II IS,
Hobbe11slelktt1 •• YHbak 1', Marti" 10,
Rich l, ~ 2 Totals: u IM• n.
Hellllmt: Ctrrllos, 34·21.
.Tolel fouls· Orenge Coest tt. Cerrllcn I I
Seddlebectl 74, S. Bernardino •
SAOOL.lllACtt -T..,...... 21. Wl ........ I
14, Hiii 4, Oo\11• 17, Gr°""d t, FllSC,_ •.
Rtld 2. TOC..11: 1' lt-211•.
SAM eeaNAROINO -AmutronQ 11, L.to
12, H•wttlns •. FlrHlont •• Gree11 s. F1'""'9
•· Cl•rll IS. T-s· 24 ll·lt St
H•llllmo: s.CIOl-k. l+JO
Total loult: S•ddleba ck h , Se"
81r111rdlno 11; Wisniewski CS.dclltlleelll
Doyle IS•ddltbl c k). Armstrong CS.~ 8er11•rdl"°I. Technlceh Wls11ltwskl
(SHiii-•>. Sadolet>eck beneh.
South Coeat Conferenc. L.._ o-wll
W L W \.
S.nl• ,,.,,. J o u •
Fullerton l o 10 1 Ctrrltos 2 I 10 1
Ml. SM AntOlllo I I U S
Grossmon4 o 2 12 6
S.n 0 1990 Mot 0 2 1 U
Ore"ge Coesl 0 l. • 10
S--y'•G-17:•>
Mt S... Antonio •I Oranot Coest
Cerritos al Sentt An.t
G rournofll at Sen Oi990 Mew
Minion Conference
L.Ne• W L
Alvtrsl• cc l o
S-ltt>Kll J I
S.11 l.,.,,.rdlno 2 1
S.11 Oltgo CC I 1
Sovlflwesltrn 1 I
Cllru1 0 J
Pelomar 0 J
s-uy'1~C7:•> ~lttleek 11 SM Dltvo CC
R IYerlldt CC et Soutllwnlern
Petomera1 Cllnd
HIGH SCHOOL
U I
II I • • 7 • " . ' "
Eltande 62, Coeta MHa 5a
elTANCIA -Kreiss lO, Gardner 17, Tift
•• Meyclole 11, Mklltnd •. Toqfl: "1•·17 H.
COSTA MESA -B..-cblev 16, Pelk,,_I
t , C-10, AlslleOarger 16. Sire.,., •• J
Field 1, Ec19on 2 TOC..ls: 2' P,J H
k-w~ E1ta11Cle 16 17 14 1s-.2
Cott• Mew I 20 16 14-91
Tolel lout\. EIDncll I, Costa Mew lO
Foultd out· PeUcllowskl c C°'I• Me .. 1
Newport 81 , Irvine 51
IRVINE CtrVtr •. 8"1.,. •, Bt"OIDvlc:ll I. Neel J, Johns a. Ake,. 10, Uuery •
T""'I" 13 J..I SI. N•WPOttT NAR90A -8111 t, SHger tl,
Ll,,.r 10, Scldf'nore •. Pelletier s. Folk t•,
Selby a. 8renctl •. Enol•IWI 4, Wolle o.
Wa111asso Tottls; 34 l:J-ltll
1c-wo."'" Irvine 12 10 10 It-SI
HewPon H•rtior 23 1' 22 ~
Totel touts· lrvln.19, NtwPort H•rmr 10.
l'OUNTAIN VAU.aY -11111_,.. I
H\ltfltl '4. J .... t, K09tf '· Htr1er .. : llnllttl\Mr It, H ..... 2. T ...... : 141>-1111.
tc--.~
Hun4l11Qton ._.. 14 11 20 21-n ....... .,.,v-. u ti • U-11
T9tel fMll Hunt111otot1 ••ec" 14 •-'e1t1Yallnt4.. '
~View 11 , w ••• ,,,. .. ..., 2S ~ VllW -Oelrouwtr 11, W.-.. •·.::~• •. u .. vllcll •. Judtlt s. t t. ZWllllO J, C•ttoll 4, lerry ._
Te191tt ts1'2S1.
.. ITMINSnR -Eastin •. Gr...,. •.
0MM '· ,.._ 4. ~ 1. Nlcolt l 0, Pt ... O, • ........., 0, Shrtwsbury 0. Tot•lt: It 1-4 u. ~ ... °"""'" ~ V..... • H It IJ-.SI .. ..........., 2 « • ......,,
Tot .. lovb: OcHll View "· WHtntlft-••
Leg. Hiiis 68, Leg. BHch 61
LAGUNA Bl.ACM -Mani\ It, For1..,.. 1.
llllddtll 20 l>YCH'•k 13, Ho411" 7. $flort t Tottls: 22 17-201.
LAGUNA Miu.I -Ollvltr 11, lllwn_,, 17,
8...,0 4, C.ler u. Wllll•m• 2, Flores J, C-•, Lllfln 7. Toqfl: 2112·JUI.
sc-•~ l..-•8ooc:h • ,. • 1f-6t l89<1M Hiiis IS 1S 11 .._..
To111 -= Ulgiunt Btacll 1•. L...-Hlll• 22; FCMllN o..t: Rllldtll U;. .. UM
IH<ll). Short IL80llM BM(h). Wlllloms
CL•guM Hiiis). Rtm .. Y CL99une Hllt1);
Tee,_..:"--Btach-h.
....., Del 66, St. Peul 59
ST. PAU\, -lttmlrer 7, Fcn1 J, Cteme<1h a, Ovlro1 14, .$Urlkl-tc.r ••. Oomln1JU411 11 Tot.It: 23 l~Ut.
MAT•a 0«1-Cool! 2, Ttrtleff 4, Jeck_, u . .,_ 11, J-•. Mt-.Nr o.
Nettelh 4, Potnlfli •. Fielder I Tot•t" 21 u.u ... Sc•• •Y Oollll'Vrt SI. Ptul 14 16 11 11-St
Meler Otl 10 11 2:5 ,,_..
Tot•I louts; SC Peul 17. Meler Del 17;
Te<hftlUIS: C-CM.Iler Dell.
HIGH SCHOOL STANotNGS
SuneetL•~
Edi ton
Fou1111l11 v .. i.y
Oue11\/'°'* Hunll"gton BMcll
Merl"• Westml-
W L
I t
1 0
1 0 . ,
• 1
0 1
~·-OcNnVlew•ll.dl!AM
l'o""t.tn vauev at MwlM
WetlmlNW et H_.....,. 9Mcll
South Coelt .......
Legllf\I 8Ncll
~vrtlHllls
$1<1Cl.-t
c.lttr-v•1..,
0.NHlllt
........ W L
1 I
I I
I I
Mtulon vi.io 1
o-911 W L
.. 1
11 4 " . • • I 6
t "
0....
W L
• 1 u t
1J • ' . • s • • ""'-'•G-LIDUM 8Nc.h ti C-i>lllfM\O V•ll•Y
L•ouM Hiiis al Sell Clemente
MIHIOll Vlolo II o .... Hiiis
A"991u• L••ou•
Servll•
M•ltr Doi
lltllOCI N1wl.
8 11ftop MonlgDmtty
SI. Peut
u..-w L
t 0
t t
I 1
0 I
0 t ,,.,...,..o-
M•l•r Doi If 11"'°9 Monlgomt<y
SI P..,I •l Senile
Oftr•• W L
10 6
10 •
6 6
11 •
s '
W Sii REPORT W~
/
...
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Snow Sumnlit
Snow Valley
Mountain High
Holiday Hi.O
Mt. Baldy
Goldmine
Snow deptll/bacbes COlldJ&lou Llfts/Cllatn
FO lS.31 hp
12-15 FO
12-11 3C
Closed
6-15
24-36 hp
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
3L
4C
June Mountain
Mammoth Mountain
China Peak
Dodge Ridge
60
104
48..6()
60-84
pp
pp
4C
24L FO
FO
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
Mt. Reba
Kirkwood
Sierra Ski a.heh
Heavenly V-1Jey
Taboe Ski &owl
Northstar
60-123 pp 6L
120-204 9L
106 FO
84 21L
96-120 2C
4&-U4 8L
Ski Incl~.. '9-58 pp SC
Squaw VutV 4S.12S 9L
Donner Slr:tJlanch .. 1• pp ac
Alpine Meadows M·Mf -PO
Coadltiona: hp-\;d pack; pp -packed powder
Ll.l\a/(balrs: L -lifts; C -ehairs; FO -full opetatlon
,
.....
CMlllPM! .... ~,··•NCI ~Div,..
..... W L • • 11 t • • • • . ,
I It
• II
t 10
u-11111 "--C•toary
W L T
i1 10 • GI' G•"' 2SJ ,,, .,
Kl ...
Color.00
" 21 • u 20 10 I~ u •
10 n •
IS4 1U •
171 207 •
tn 211 31
114 102 ,.
St. Ltuts
Mi<lnosol•
CllkllJO
WIMl"f
TOf'OlllO
Oetroll
Nems04Yle.., to 20 4 1.a u u u 1n
11 17 • lt7
16 JO • 1111
ll 19 II 110
u " • 142 WAL.ES C°"'l!RaMca
Pwk*oM.-
NY 111-.-S 1S 11 S 171
Phlladtlllfllo 1S IS 1 IH NY R.....,_ 20 11 S ISi
PlltalMlrgll 1' 18 • 170 W11hl11Qlon U 2' s .. I
~DIY.._
17' ..
UI ...
117 4l
"' " 1'4 l1
Ill lO
140 u
IS4 " I .. 4S
170 ..
IM 1t
•llfl•le Bosto<I
MonlrHI
. ~=:i:~d
U 11 I 114 125 SI
U U S 177 1.W SS
12 10 ti 200 129 SS
24 IS S 101 176 U
10 " 9 142 1• " ....... .,.Sc_
EdfnOlllOft 6, WeJl>lllQIOll •
8u1111o •· CNu9o J T-102, CelorMo I
NY ._.. 2, MIMeool• 0
qtltbt< 4, St. Louil t
WIM IPtO 6, Pf~ I
VlflCOllVtr S, CM9try 1 .,...._,,G.,..n
....... Glleatl' HY h..-.S al 80SIOll
Edmonton•• PflltlclelPlll• Cotor-•I DttroU
Lo• Alemlto1
Wl!DHllOAY'S RESULTS cssa.,..._.....-........... ,
l'I R ST RACI.. 400 y.,.d•
Ltcly ~ CCM-11 S IO J 20 UIO
OonMrO I Frestonl l 10 t 40
Pllgrlm PIN~u ... I 81rd) J.60
Alto rectd: Deko.t C1Wr9or, C•QllM!Y. ~ling Oocll.t 5'\eppy Pettie Bar. Rnclf\CI,
Sllooll" lrttfl, Jennie L_.,
Tlmt ,JD.J4
U 11!..cTA <Ml_.... $14.00
laCCHIO RACI.. 400 yard\.
Ml u t:iy °"'Ve'
CTre41M!nl 77.20 11 fO s . .a ··~•P N Ery
C Pavll-1 7JO J.00 POiiey Bu11 I Br-•I 3 00
Also racod: Tuff 8w...u. Ki.berg 8ug.
Tl"Y Cr'fllll, a.Mr Ery TWlsl, • Mr E1y
Twl&I, C-On $1w .. y. Re-I A L•dy
• -COUPied.
Time: 20.tl.
TM tao RACI!. 3.IO Y ... cll
Sir lwtlt<Ty C\41(.aM I &Md I 14 10 S Ml UO
Finl CNtfl C Peullnel 4 20 l 20
Jantv• Jet CTl'W$urel 7 20
AIH rect<I Eesy Ch.,oe,, Mtn Eaty
MOiton, GofOr DouofMlrnt, •·H•ru Vent ......
My M's Fin. •·LA Pl"OC>le...-. Bold N Morr'Y
• -<Oljpled. Tlmt: 11.:n n •xACTA l~I !1'110 '61 80
FOURTH llACl!.170 y•rcll
FHt Jolllre I B«cll l IO 1 IO l 40
Go Oh Tory I Fto<ut 1 40 • 00
Weeke<ld-vtr (8ievlnsl J 411
Also •Klcl: Lupe• Top CN>lo, C•illom1•
kon, Full Time Cool, Tilun• C.cllll•<
Time .. 31
U E XACTA U-411 peld $.S) 60
""™ •ACl!. lOO varo" •·Mr COf'lli< CChevt1I
A1urt One C H•rtl
Top Mt NOi IMllchllll
ti.to ... 4.40
• .0 S.20
11.40
1982VW
OUAMTUM WAGON !> spd, trans, air cond.
leatherette seats, radial
,tires and morel (Stk
~) (004796)
U1t ftriu SI 2.065
Disco.it $1470
SALEPltlCE
s I 0 595
SClllOCCO
Coupe . 5 ·IP88d
ttansmlssion. met1lft~
paint, rear wlndowf
wlperfwHher. ell~
wheela. stereo cassette
Ind morel {Stk. 3236 l (OtnMl
SALi f'llCI . 5 10495
At .. r.cM1 • ..,., Jw.,, i..l(lf '" Key
Oil, • 'lerllllle Lltf\t, ""-,_• e -C,_...y,
J9'WI lw 0.. Ulla Tiii\' Oey
• •11•11-c-.ild Tlmt. IU2. o 1u.crA11 Jl ,.kuti.oo.
ltllTH aACI. &IO yer ..
All Actt Wlfl tMlklltOI I0,00 •M MO
Moneyed Or-tOle..,.ll S 00 1.<IO
Alllllffl'-tTrNtllrel a.a
.... '""' ~ 1111, 1-. 00-1 ...... P•t•l\'I, 0... "-i Mt IMY 0-11.
00 ~ -"· •IMwllllff .,... !114a<N aldl
""'• • »
llV&NTH uca. * yer ...
l'utlmloyCT•-'fl 7AO *·'° 1.00
JHIOftA-(L«kfYI >• UI < ... rttrO.lltCOllwell tAO
1 ,t.ltf recell; ,.~1119 Count, ••• on eve.
l•m•doO, '"'" N-. 01911•1. Mr. Mltll(Y WaHIOI', Olllttle.
Time· too t.J &XACTA CNI pekl ttt.20
tJ l'IC:K IUl IM .. 1.2.21 peld P•.mM •llh one wWtlng J_klltt hi• hOrlHI. U Ptell
Sl• con»l.ttlon peid U Jl.to with II wlMll\t ttclltlt Cllw ..--1.
l.IOMTM •Aca. U> Yl<ft Ll~tlt c;-y Ot<ll IHerll •.OO 1 00 UO
Hua Thi .... I C .. r1J1tl I .to •·OO
Htu IUtWW ITr••-tl a.to Alto rKtd: Erl111 l'llng, G-Oulell, MIH
Ottp Sn111y, A111te Oeulum. w ........
Tiny Gey .... ea ,Ion
Time 11.11.
U l.XACTA C+I• pekl UUO
MIMTM RA.Ca. JJO yerctl
Tidy• BttUllOI u• ... 111111 1.00 •• eo uo
hus Gellil-CAtmtttong) s .i uo
Sollie tt-.nu (Bard) •.OO
Alto rKtll· 1Jt!P9ftd on 11, 81yov OM T-. SwHI AUlll 51.s, GolllltWOlldtr, Gents Gom,
Loll•°"' Jve11 ~• Eocket. Tl"le: IUJ n l.XACTA IN> plld ... 7 • .0
A11t~e -s,om
Sent• Anlt•
.,.DMHOAY'S aUUL.TI C Hlhf......, _, ..... m ...... ,
'IRST RACI!. 6 llH'lonlJ>.
Grm•lll H .. A Win
flt1mlre11 10 60 • 00 • 60
A11olller Toy ( Asmuuent 11.10 •.OO
L•dY Ol.w.1 (Hawley) 4.IO·
Also rlCt<I tmpe.111 TrHsun, CentU<y's
L.ady, ~TOY, DI-8ttl, I W-
Ooclor Le FrMk. Chlbll\.
1 Time I It l/S.
5aCOHO •ACL 6 tur1ono1.
Holl O'Oro COllv1rn l 10.20 s .o s.10 Sl\1kt 11 810 CHawteyl UO l .60
Go Tell a-ie 181Kkl •..O
Alto f8Ctcl' PKJfk $torm, J-y.
Prlllct O•lldv. Llb•11011, Mulll. Muell
Tllought, l!Ht<I .... Prlval• Room, P""UllD· Time: 1:091/S.
U OAIL 'Y DOUeLI Ct ti pelcl S.SS 10
ttUaD tu.ea. 1 111' miles. Are~llU CHawleyl S.20 J 20 2 40 l•8egltrl~> 4 20 2.60 Alhtnpl CSlllhltl UO
Alao recod; l·KlllO Derlus. C.trcvmv...i,
Dhttlll C-. lronre GOO. Blc's Frtne:ltY •-C ....... Time. 1:45
l'OUBTM lllAC£. 6 furl-.
8•lltrlil1 CSIOlllel t.00 s oo J.40
S..lrttll IHttWnl I 20 4.10
8""tln PNI ,....,..,1 6..00
Aho raced: Oucheu Tina, Bou11< lllf
Netlve. -.e1 Hcntess, Natur•lly aooia,
Anna's PrlnceH, Prelly V.,vot f
Tim• I It •IS
""™ RACI. •YI lwtoneo on 1url CIW<k 0 Lvdl: C~I I to 4 60 JM
Out ..._., CVa1en1ue111 "oo •JO
L•rl• I Hawley) J 20
AIM> r.tced JtlHHn. FHturtno. Nnwe,
Wolt•n !>t•rlel. Soml.i. Anapemu, t Fell In
L.OYe, R .. I ....
Tim• t IH/S
U EXACTA I• 11 IM•d "443 SO
SIXTH RACE. I lfl6mlltt.
Durben°"P
I Otl•housMWI I 00 • 20 J 20
Lar1m1e IV•lenlue••I • oo •.AO
M•rc • Gt-.. C A•mu,,wnl l.IO
Al&e rec~: c..ct. Grem1>11no. Di.Mt,.,
L•nco Vt.on. SciHor Sharp. R•llY On, A
Look ol EIO/H
l'lme 1·0 llS
S6 V INTff a Ac.£. 011t mlle We~I"' (Gueo'T•I 4 40 2 10 J 60
8rltllenl Double (Ool-..Swye) • S oo •.OO
Corp0rale "-I Ht~n> 4.40
AIM> raclcl Cell Me Ml\ttr, f'oole Don.
Or Jemn. 0..1'91ftQ SI••
T1mt t JS ttS
U E XACTA 1+11 P4>1d .. l 00
n ""II( SIX Cl , 7 .. 10·•1 8•1d s1•.US.60 with •I• wlnnl1111 tl<k•ts Illa: llorws) U Pick
Si• <Ofttoi.tlon peid SUS 00 with ut wltw1l119
ll<lltls Hlw l'torltll l2 Pick SI• sotrtl<h
conM>l•llon ~id ~ 40 wllll -wltw1l110
llt ktl C four f'torWi, -Kr ate-hi
EIGNTN RAC£. 6furlonos
A Klu Ftw L..Cll
, Otl•hOIAWyel s 40 J 40 1 20
Oo"'t Ju09tf I Lillh.\m) 11 IO 1 60
Ecol• O'HU1TW111110 1 VllonruelaJ J.20 Al\o r.tclcl Unc:"-ln My Heart. She Won't hll
Time I Ot•IS
U EXACTA I• 61 pe1d \IS7 SO
Jtt OMlll
llnQHIMCt
YMyW-IN
"" CIH't ,.,..,...1, .. 1.
S.MlfrH,Cll ., •• ll'Y'f\1
'""''-JGIWICOllll o.vieo. ....... Cunlt St,.,...
.. N'I' HM'We41 ludAUln
Cll•rln CooO¥
J9tlfV!IM
0.lt~
T-ICtte
kttU4och
Ot«'t• Ced!• Wl yflt .......
TMllft'I' ,.,,,_ 111
S<o1t SI"'"°"
JI"' Collltr1
Cre!O Madler
Celvl11PMtt
IOl»OllW
J .C.SMM Lff Treotlnt
Ttn1Welllll\
lerryJeKllll
Ptltr Oottlrtlult
IC.allh FtrOV5
O.ry Hetrd
Mllltt ltrtaw
~lit S111th1<111
1JllMOr9M
D. A. WtlbrlnQ
Jot He99r
Georg• ""lier
Altdy 8•.n
Morris .,.., .. Mly
MIU Reid
Mlkt Ooneld
80l»by C1-'1
TtrrY"'-Y
f;d Flori
PetMcGow.n
Tom JellillM
Jerry Pt lt
B~ Bymtrt
J•ck Renner Vane• HHl-
Da11 Pof>I
All•Mllltr
8otlbyW-IM
MllleHollen.1
8N(t l'i.IU.r
Jollft M....iltv
HllOtrtGt ...
Al ... TNlt
FuuyZoei*
Dtfl POOlty
Stt vt Mel11Y11
~nCrtnlhaw Al\Oy N 04'1 h °""9 T 9-41
FrHCowlt'I
Tom~ ROii StrKk
Jeff S.1W11r1
Gtt1• Llhter
J tYH-
Vtctor Reoai-
MAlrk 0'-• 8111 Kr1tar1
Joi!" Sctwoect.r Oanny Edw.,.ca
TerryOlehl
JlmSlmonl
TIG'I Sll'lltllOft ~·•l'WlllY Jlm l -
Ed Sl\Hd Al Gelbtt99'
Gary Trlvl""'""
81118rlt1Gft Mel"kPfell
Hel Sut!Ofl
Tommy Al<Oll
8r'{<e DouQleu
Mike McCultouon
Oa"Hellctor'°" Lyn Lon
Jell Mltcrw41
A.H.Sllo.H
M•rk Ly•
0."• OvlQley ClllChl~-1
8n1u Llettll•
Scott WalklM Wally Armstrong
GrtgP~
Oofl Bl•
Oave EIGhelt.rQ*r
B-., Ntdlols
ROl\COfl"INM
Gery H•llbero
Fr•nlo. Con""
Nllh-i.y
Dav" Slodltan
A r"°ld P•lmtr
J Im T "°'1111
Oe•eEcl-
oa .. 8•rr
LouGra,..m
Gay8r-
Oouo s."*rs
Woocl y Fl tlllugll
Lerry Net...,
RlkMaH.n9at1 PeterJec-
Sle••J-Rog.; C•IYln
~rk Hlytt
R-rMaltlli•
&<lb ..... -. BOl»E .. 1-
Tlm Nl"""1
nn ..... »·» .... Mii~ "' ... ~ ...... »·n-t' ,..,,_., .... .,_., »-,._.,
M·D_.7 un ... 1 »·n_..
U·M ..
:iw.s-,.,. ...... »-» ...... ,..,. ...... ,,..,, ....
>HJ_.. u.u-..
~D-tf
JS.M49 ,,..,. .... "",....... t.S.M4' ... ._.. asw....,
J.S.,.....
~ ,...,,.....
»-» ..... "",....... ,.,,_.,
UM4'
J7D_..
»1'»-" '1·ll-10
»·M-70
>+M-70
"»-70 ,...,._70
3S.H-70
J.s.U-70
U.Jl-70
U ·U-70 J+»-10
>+:116-10
~ ,...,.._,o
J7~-70
Js.M-70 u.l6-70
>Wt-19 J>J1-7t
JS.IS-10
J>l1-1t
JHS-70 ,..,._70
3'-IJ-11
M47-71 »·»-11
•as.-11
J7·M-71
U.:116-71
•·»-71
'7·M -11 3'-IS-71 ,...,_"
U ·»-11
:Jl·JJ-71
31 M-71
»·JS-II u »-71 "•-11 ,,..,._71
,. U-71
•:u-n JS·11-n ,..,._,,
JMS-n .,,._,,
,. '6-n
U ·J1-n '1·U-n »-Jt-n
M·ll-11
:Jl.N -n ,. ...... n ,. ,._,, .. ,._,,
M•-n ,..,._,,
>J..»-n » »-n
JM7 n ,. ,._,,
U·•-n JI» n ,. J1-n
• JS 73
ll lS-13
ll·lS-n
JI '6-7'
:i.11-n
l7 l7 7• '° )4 ,. 3440-1' )7 37-7(
J7.:J7 -74 J7 ._,,
l7 •-IS
11 •-rs ,, .. _,,
»·Jt-7S
lHO-IS
JS-«>-7S ,. ,. ,,
JI JI IS
JI JI IS
40 JS IS
Jt.l7 ,.
JI. 16
"" 16 1'•-n •Jt-n
40 •-11
l1·0 -7t
•1 o -•
M&litetl tournem.nt
cetNewY-1 ............ .,.....
lven 1...-i -4 Vitti Ott..Ulllt, .... I). • t . Oulllff-v11 .. *' J-Lut. eten, t I, I S. J"'"'"'1r C.W-• .. , li!lltt Ttl!Klltf, 7 t. t •I , Jtfl#I MCE11t•.., lll~ot T.,_,,
• '· •·1 Women'• tournement
4 •• ClllCIMltll
~~ ...... llllt. JNft King._. l't m c ... tt. M , .,.,
ltllllll a..,. dltl. -ry Low P Pl11ot•. ~I • •..o1. •m Slltl-dtl. l.t• Antonopollt. •I,
•.O
Women
cou.1101.
UCl-t,c:..itttllt~A ... lttt ......
Kttll"CI <UCll ditl. ROC1rigw1 ICSl.AI, M ,
•J; llU. ~ IVCJI cltl. HUt¥ ICSL.AI, •1,
M , ,ClltdGe IUCll dtf, S4elntr ICSLAI. 4 t.
• t ; Me. My9rt IUCll ••Slncher CUI.Al.
• 1. t-1, HI-CUCO def 814tV <CSl.AI, Ml,
•I, Stu-CVCIJ def Lew CCSLAI, •.o, t4
I 0...• M yer 1·My1 rt fUCll def
ltodrl11.,.1•Sltlntr CCILAI, 7-S. •·1,
Ellldgt-Keellne CUCll .... Saft<MI Huey
~ CCSL.AI, t..I, ....... 1; 5'.-.,,59,,_ CVCI)
_,, 1 1.s.U. CCSU\I, M , 6-4.
Pro bowtlng
PU TOUR , ........ .., .... ,
n.tr"d RWM LA-n
C~rllt T-l,'2) Jt mes Mltltr ),:ltl
Merllllll Hol~ ),?f?
• S1tve Mef'lln s,• s Gery D1<111Mon ),tn
•· Sem ZIH'l<h S.2'6
1 Helt Burton s.n1
I Ernie Scflle9fl S.217
t. Stew u-.110 s.110
10. Geor9' P-• S, ltS
II Roy 8uckt•r s. 1t:1
U Oavlct Hulled 5.1"
tJ Peter W-r s. 170 u Sieve Cooti U60
IS Ille) M.i A<osi. ), ISO
Jeff 8*11...... ),ISO
17 ces.v ..,.,., s.u•
\~· ::~:.~:f'.nl S,UI
20 Kon Fern.nclH ~:::
Men'e volleyball
COLLIGI COACHES POLL p_._
I UCLA
1 use
l UC Santi 8arO.r•
• P9fll\Stett s Haw.ii
•.Peppe<d•ne 7 LOl\IQ 8eKh Stale
I S.h 0'-91> St•lt
t Rutgert C N•w•r~J tO SIWllWd
High school soccer
MEN
HO
200
t ..
IJJ
t11
IU
lOI
'° ..
IO
c.er--MM' l , S.ddl-d 1
Cdron• Mar "'orlno McCrlmmon
.... die.
S.cldt-k .cor1r19· c.,.,.,...
~ ... ,._ J, C..11 MtU 1
N•wporl Hert>or \Corino Rounkl\I,
Goh11.10.
Ullivtrtlty J, El Twe I
lrvl•l,l&IM<lat
W9dnelday's trenHctlons ..SEUU.
~LA..-ANGELS AM....., 0.ve Fr,.1. potc-
10 SPok-of,,. Pacflk Cotst L .. out
NllloMIL•-CtNCI NHATI REOS Sig-Or\lno Hill,
oull tolcler
I •
NINTH llAC£.Ontmllo
Lexington championship
Ill J-........ -II AlriUll
NL -Flr*CI Sieve FlfldS umpire
P'OOTM LL M•-l'--..il LH-PITTSBURGH STEELERS Announcoel Jutlenllt (H_l_,,I 17 10 t .IO HO Oenl• Wttion U tht retlremenl of S.m Oevt•, olftn•lve
ou•rd FHlher R ....... o I Toro) I 00 s.oo O••ld F-rty 64
Ktrl>lc I H.,,_,I It 00 Gr•Mm _..,.1111 64 COLLI GE AIM> •Kea· Miu L•url• LH, MttMrOVftd,
Hoon S-. Doon I l.a<IY. 1 .. 11e11e -rQ,.
lm•cornl~. MIH UCOllCIWI.
OonRooert..> t7
8111 ROIJ9A .,
G•r'Y Playtr ..
ADAMS STATE -N•med Joel Swl•-
lle.cl tootbolltt coech
ARIZONA STATE A"nounttd the Time: 1:17
UIXACTA CIMlpeldS201 SO
Attenaerw:e 20.u2
N~UJI
l'ICTITIOUS eUSIMISS
NAME UATl!M£MT
Tn• lollowtno person " doing
buslneu .. OELDAY, L l D., 11131
8erde•" Avenve, trvlM Cellfornlt
'271S Me.-n L a..,...n, H Tn11tee lor
Anll 8ormtrt ·F•-MI, 17117 Well Hine Mlle ROllCI, Suite ISlO, Soulhliekl,
Mlc11t11•" •1s.
Tiiis b!UiMSt It COndllCltd by t llmltecl pe,,,,.,tNp.
Menclell L. Berman, tl
Trus1ee lor An
Btrmen-Fr-
Thls •lot'-1 wes flltcl with 1t1t
County ci.rll of Or•n9t County
Otcemb« 1•, 1•1
"' Pvbll-Or ... Coast 0.lly Pilot.
Jan 7. u , 11, 21. 1"2 1~.
l'ICTITtOUSeUMM•u NAMa nAftM&NT
Tiit lollowlno Ptntn h dot"t
b\lllMMH:
AIKIOO FEDERATION 0,
1:.ALll'ORHIA. P.O .... 'MltQ,.C.. M .. 1 , Cellfofllll tU!7; IOS •A
Clt•r •rtoll L1111 , Cost• Mu•,
C•llforllle9Jlt,M
Da¥Mll A. °"9. "'5 eA Cl9~ UIM, C..-.a. 0. ...... _.
Tllll IMMeM .. """" ... tty "" ll\CllY.,., o.v .. o,.. Tlllt ~ _... ft!M wllfl W..
cou11ty c~ "' Ortfl8e C-ty ""
Dt<tml>tr tt. 1•1.
Oltowt: •PPC1lnlmont ol o ... OevlM •• uocullve dlrtclor of ,,,. 5"" Mgel Fourtd•llan, IN
tchool's ix-i.r or~nlr•llan
Tom Wel\llOPI
Hugh 8elocchl
iTATl.Ml.NT o~ AUMOOMMUn
O~USI
0, ~ICTITIOUI BUll MllS .. AM.
TM followtlll --11 .. -~ lhe UM of Ule llcllllous business ntmt •
MA I N PIPE & 5VPPl.Y
COMPANY, lt14 E. M<F-. S.mt
....... c.llfomla "~ The F lcllllo11s eu1lntu Hernt
rt .. l'Ttcl to --.... -llltcl In Ot'-COUlllY Oft Merell IJ, 1'11. •
JOHH IWO NOVeLLO, llUO
Gla4hl-Clrclt. F-t.111 lfelley c .... ..,..,.. '219 •
Tllll ....... -~-l>Y ... lndlvtou.I.
JClfw\ I-N-110
Ti.ls .....,,_.. -llltcl wtlfl Ille C-ly CMft of Oren91 Ctvnty ..,
OtcorMltr "· 1•1. ..... ,111
..... I .... Or .. Coal1 O•llY PllOt, Otc. JI,,.,,, J ... J, 14, JI, 1"2 '6Jt.41
10
10
'ICTlnous BUIUtU& M.._JTAftMaWT
Tiit lollowl11• .., .. n Is dol119
bvtlntSSH '
BLACK MOUNTAIN MINING
INVESTMINT, l:la Hetbor etv• ..
•F·l,Coa.tMHl.CA,..._ FRANK EOWA"O IAlllTOH, JOSI
Yukon Clr<le. Colll -. CA 92626. Tlllt bVslnHt It collduU•• t>y a
llmlt-4 ~lltf~. Fr .. £..,_
Tiiie ......,._, WM lllN •1111 ..
Cov"'y Clerll of 0r.,,.. Ceunty on
Otc.H, 1•1 "',,. Publlslted Or ...... Cont Dtlly l'I~
Dec. JI, 1•1. Jari.1, U , JI, 1"2 SS1U1
FICTITlbus aUSINHS
NANll STATIMl.NT
The followl119 Ptrson Is dolnt buSllleSI H
APPLAUSE CHARTERS. U21 Vie
Lido, N-1 llH<ll, C.lllor"I• •Ml
Melvln H S.110,y, 1m VI• Lido,
NtWPo•l llN<h, C•lllCH'llll ,,..,
Thlt bu'tneu I• conclu<tt<I by at1
lrwllvtou.I
Mel'fln H. S.llth
This slotl-1 WH filed wllll lho C~11ly c1 ... 11 of bf-ttnoe C-ty e11
J 1nu1ry S. 1'91 ,_
Publllhtcl ar.,,.. CO.JI Delly..., ...
Jell 7, 14, U. & • UlAo!,
FICTITIOUS BUSIMl!SS NAMl!STATEMENT
Tfl• followtno per son h ool no
Dt>sl11eu'" SO'NDIA DOWN SHOP -A Frenchlst ot Sc •nd l • Oown
Corporttlan, 27'6 E Coest Hloflw•y •
C•ona .. Miit, C11tlc1rnl• nus
Oorotlly G Moort, 427 Pebblt
8H<h Place, Futterlon, Ctlllornl•
~Sc
Thlt -lneH It <ondll<IM 1>Y Ml
111111¥1-1
Donl"'G -e This sllt-wn lllt<I wllfl ,,.
County Clerk ol Orange CoUl\IY on
Je11uerv 12, 1'12. ,,.,.
Publl-o-.,,.. Cotsl Oally Piiot.
JI" 14, 11 11. F.0-t. 1'111 J7l-12
l'ICTITIOU$ BUSIMeSS
NAMI STATIMaMT
Tll• lollowlng P•"°" IS dotno
buslnu• M
SHAlllOLSON NATIONAL. 1WO E.
Edinger, iulle A, Sa11h ""'· Calllornl• '2705
5"1ral F Olson.,..,"""· lnrlne. C.lllcM'lllt .,,,.
Tiiis .....,.,... I• tondll<led by Ill
lricll•l ... I.
SMNl'.OI'°" .,..,, ..._ ••s lllod with , ..
C-ly ,..,.. of 0r•l'l9t c-ty ... ,_,,n,1•.
. \
Princess Cruise to Acapulco
for two plus $1500 in
BankAmerica Travelers Cheques
Sony Betomox SL~
Video Cossette Recorder
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cn~totu pea.a ......
~ 11 lritllh ~ flri• doM not CO¥er 1'9ml of a ..,.,. .. "°""· Ottl2 MMC <1' AMINCAHTUA• •MBER FOIC
•Orange Cout OAIL.Y PtLOT/Thul"9day, January 14, 1112
..
...
IRA+
S H
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A luxurious Princess Cruise to
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Monthly drawings will be held in
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three trips will be given away~*
MORE PRIZES
In addition to the Princess Cruises,
we'll also be giving away over 1, 000
prizes in the drawings: 15 Sony
Betoma~ Video Cossette Recorders,
each with 24 blank tapes. 30 Zenith
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deluxe pictorial books, "The Beauty
of,Colifornia:' Stop by your neigh-
borhood Bank of America branch and
enter today; the sweepstakes ends
April 15, 1982.
Kodak Colorburst 250
Instant Camero
General Electric AM/FM Radio
Cassette Player/Recorder
. '
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~cheap....-..~Mapleceattlae mows.. Jut toe.tide lacmd kickback..
c ·~ hCOOL Wilt£ FL•atEllT
TUBES
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==cmddwable. Eoci.bow,la
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I woa'tmabJOU -..ch la
pcdaf:roaa ~.W,Job. Ko a..... not ... 1 woulda't do
that ......... 10".
SW.llCLllE ELEmUC .
IML GUI
Sa... you from hltt1D9
your thumb with a
ha-=1r.DrlYMcmd
~aJ,1/32"
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llghtw.lglat projedaor bobbl ... Won~.
tllts bwmd cmd &om right to left.
Double blnlatecl. trigger lodat at M1ected
...... ~BP. 01o llOOrpa. (Tips II..-1tl6
roucaMtewtthyoarrtghtbcmd. u .. a
tpOOD.)
30 GAL.
40 GAL. 12777
,
YOUR CHOICE
50 GAL. GAS ONLY
52 GAL. ELECTRIC 169?l
New deelgu to get moN out of the energy uHd. fully glaaa llned. choice
of gaa or electric mode la._ 5 Year warrcmteed. (I wrote tbla with my leg In a
caat. Sounda mON like my bead waa Ina caat. right.)
¥." CD PLYWOOD
SBElflilC
8!.7
Specrldng of marriage. My wade Herby II happily
IDCll'IWd. Of CCNne, lt' I ior tbe aJ.xth time. (Be' I
domg tt o....raad 099' tll be gets It rtpt.)
:
CIBOL QM,£ •osr.•OUI CUE
TIP EITEISlll CllM'
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9FT. 66• 20FT. I''
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~Go~
wltbyour~and
tpllt the cost.
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BEDWDBID.
177
Cot tat--any me you'll DMcl ID blown or
will ... Keepcm..tra oohand. Mftr lmow,
BLICK • DECKt:B
BIOL II OIE
Mc:CULLOCll PRO MIC ~ I &18 28'' CIS
~@i311m1"• CRiii SIW
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SIWBDBSE 11•-c• ... ,-,1-s
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S...1. toagh. c:beap, ltftly. bateUlgftt, articulate,
IDdedu ... tnattratecL cmx1ou. UDdec:lcMct
butbopehl.
SIF-T-DECI
6997
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Ei.ctro.ic lplticm. s. 7 aa. lDch . ·====:am 219 9~ olllag. Rlgbtaow JOU c:cm
gilt a 135 rebate ID tbe mall
tram McCWloda.
• -
BIREROR ·ROSES
•• 2 ECOl8 I 59
Oldicnorl ... ~.
..
237 .....
. •. • .... lfDT
Claryaler Imperial. Peac..
Qaeea EU.beth. andmon.
•.1 PIYDT 3•• lbag Cl'09br. Doable Delight.
Mister Llncoln and DION.
1>oa•t kid youneU by paying more. ExpenalYe or lnexpenalft mo•t all of
them come from the aam• place. I'•• gro'tlfD beauti•• right from here.
CONE EARLY FOR BEST SELECTION
-,··
4" COITlllEB
PllDIBOSE
3 II I STIDIRD
BllEBlm
FRDn TREE
49•
&" COITlllEB
CYCLlllEll 2••
, Healthy .tutf. I did th.rM
Cyclamen. they look great. tab
..,..complete shade.
IULIBU 4 LITE WILK SEr Wlfl
flMIEB OB
4 LITE PATIO/
GIBDEI SET
YOUR CHOICE
8888 lczt.JowYOltage, ecmytolayiD. DO
• permit DMded. Ear to add-ollor
' cutoametoyoarDMcla.
• /
888
ADUIL . RYEliRISS
SEED
What with all thla ram
I'll bet eomebody la
bcnlD9 bouWe with
mud getting tracbd
ID. right •
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1111.1 CBITE
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We hcne eDOUgh Wt for.thla
adandtbenwe'U .... ...,.
weCGDget a b'1DCh mon U
we're ludry. Llmlted quaDtltiH.
IELLEB ILUJlllUJI SLIDllG
Do It right al your
PITIO DOORS
lllLL FlllSI
5• x ..... 10997
OlfE OR
TWO STORY
100 ". lllK.
IM.n.
av• •••· bawblteorblowD ..,· .... ~ ...,. • .,..1ec1 cdamlaum.
LESS TllA1f
lOOnzT
50 "·MIN. prloes are b DOnDal
l"MldMatlal lnatallatloa. . l~n. Dowupouts are extra.
111111PSGi,S
WITEB SEIL
7!!
i>oe.'t dacmge U..color of wood. CODCNt• or
llDClllOmYGrother pollDU9 nrtac... Seala and
pot.eta.
BED DEflL
POL YUBETllllE SPRI Y
I 1 7
13oz.
Fora._...dmable smfacetbat
1"lsta alcolaol. manlag. CIDcl dalpplDg.
atierlmorbatedorget-aithl.-
•• wbcrt' a It c:aUed? •• ah..llt\aff.
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tocloee.tcde,~t. reliable.
• Wltll full y.ar warrcmty.
.11
.... ;ro.,.~ 30 WT. 84. QT.
~~ 964 lOW/40 WT. Q'J.
llTl'e It la the aabd-fouaototoll. <B• 1'1v . •
wllenyoageta daest cold and yoa·don'twaath to
• gotoyov head. tlea bot ID yoarneck.)
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. P.UBILITOB
IU'l'O PBIDUCIS ·
PCVV4J_VE •••
.. I ..
XSV OD. FD.YER .
XSV AIR m.m:·1 H
Tlala oldadag. still ........
"Ala CMIDI» oi pre1 I t1cm le
. wort1a·apouadofa&N".(Or
mpe.dc~aow..tea..a
lot latier.) ~
lllDOBFF-LLOYD
TllE CBlllS
~ AllEIUCM 1997 FORflO• CARS PB.
llOITlllALL 34•7 '~ TBUCD PB. • \
letter to buy the chaiDa here them up ID the
mountcdu. 1'ber charge you~ arm and a leg(gee
wlala. and rou· .. U.. with a pocbt full oi
cbcmge).
l
m1w111n:s 1
PGBTIBl,E J
~ Ill l
ClllPREI .. 1
1 ·1·!!,
a.wt thllag tor IDfJotlng tlrH. l'Kleatloaal atcdf.
• blOatable fanaltve, Wcd:a from yOllki ear'•
di;;wa• Dglder. 105 U.. p•w.._ >.
. I ·--.,....----~---------------------------------.-
-~M•_ -Wut bair)'·rtall'led 1DON ur ..... ,.. wit~ Omar SbatU aad Claev1
.... for Broedw.r m..aoall ... a • t tele~iaioa ... and ...... . °" aahDal ....... , No, It'• DO& JUn riD 1'ilurlA..... It'• ..._... canine lead ot b1I ewa comic atrtp,
evlam 1peela11 and fllma ...S u "Be._..l." •ror Ult Loft ot leGJI" and "Ob, Heavu!)' Doi."
Tbt loVable mutl'• e&Ner la maPS*I by loe
amp. U. foaDdlr ucl bead ot Mwberry Square rod~ U.. decade-old DaUu ltudlo beblnd eB..u&~--· Calllf 1 eompaay operalel leacw from t.be
AqeleloNew York u!a that eoetroll fllmdom,
Camp up be wnu.ldn't bavt It UY other way,
Letten ID cblldren'• handwritln1 pour Into llut~·· olllee dally. Sent In r«urn are pbotol. p1na,·anc1 lroo-oa transfers. Benji'• expN11ive face
adorDI puraes. lblrta, a mu&tltude ol merdl~e.
"People knew La11ie.'' Camp ••YI. .._,.t rle lovt Benji." Camp penned the story tor the
BeaJl picture la 1188. But tt wam•t unW 1914
t the picture WU completed and releufd. "I
pt tr)illc to aeU it," be aaya. "but tbe rl"aetion
s always, 'Ob, that's cute."'
That lint film now baa earned MS mlWon
orldwlde.
Tbe Benji phenomenon crew from a bisaeJ
m, whoM creator -Walt Disney -Camp says
would lite-to emulate.
"I saw a clip from 'The Lady and the Tram"'
d t.bouebt, 'I wonder if it wouJd be poulble to do
itb real clop what Disney did with animation?'
hen 1 tbougbt, 'No, our dog couJdn't talk.'
••1 _pl~ed .with our dog," Camp says, "and
ddetaly tllOUCht, 'You know, clop can talk to ua
with their eyes, their action.a.' " Naturally,
oji doesn't Interpolate areal bunlu of dlaJotue.
ut those wbo have aeeo his pictures swear that
. e dog out-acta b1a two-legged co-stars.
Critics bave dubbed the m\ltt lbe Laurence
p'Uvi4tr ol tbe dol worid and ea.lied bis emotln1
f*ml.nlscent ol such lileot-screeo stars aa Charles
baplln. ·
Camp QNe1 with the critics' rave.a. ~ "The people are props in a Benji movie," be
ys. "The 00. ls three-dimensional."
Collaring -the perfect Benji to 10 with bis
tial script almost stymied Camp in the early
Os.
1 "I tallced to ail the major animal tralners in
Hollywood. 'Ibey all said it was impossible," be
iays. Then Camp met veteran trainer Frank Inn,
rho happened to have a dog named HiUins who
as perfect -a dog be originally had picked up in
Burbank animal shelter.
The dog bad compiled quite a resume as a ~espiao, too, ~n lbe television show, "Petticoat
' .
I t I .
"Masterful"
-L.A. Times, Shella Benson
"Wonderful"
-NewswMk Magazine. Jack Kroll
~ :t CHARI-===::;=:ors====OF=FI==RE=
NOW PLAYING > l IPGI .
" L.AOO CXltillWfY AHO WMHEA ..a&. llllUAll ........... o.--•c --~ o ... _._ _..._.._c....,_ • ..,. __
STARTS
FRIDAY
ATSYUFY
CINEOO!WE
....... ,
PLANNING -Benji, the popular canine act-Or
(actually an actress> is planning a Broadway
musical and television show.
Junction." Hig&ina becan1e the flra~ Benji. He
retiri!d, then died, and bis dau&bter haa taken hi•
place. But she la called Berijl, and referred to as
"be." That's show biz.
Benji 'baa gone Hollywood only to the extent
that he lives with Inn in California, travel.I fint
class, prefers fllet mignon on the road and pockets
$10,000 per personal appearance.
His teieviaioo specials bave been nominated
for Emmya, and one of the movies' aonp -"I
Feel Love" -won a Golden Globe award and was
nominated for an Academy Award. He was the
second ioimal to be Inducted into the American
Humane Society's Animal Acton Hall of Fame -
right beb1od Lassie. He bu presented an Emmy,
wearing a formal black bow tie, of course. He and
Cam,p traveled to the Cannes Film Festival in
France.
Camp safeguards the Benji image, approvin1
all mercbaodiaiog contracts and overseetn& the
creative content of the comic strips and Benji
productions.
Mulberry now is expanding into every realm
of the entertainment business, with the Saturday
morning TV show set for fall 1982 and the
Broadway ahow in the works. The comic strip
kicked off in October 1181.
"There are feelin&s and emotions attached to
that litUe do1," Camp says. "When you make
contact -that emotional rapport of livint
someone's We with him -it's hard not to reel
somelbin1. That's what. they feel about Benji."
·~ ••I • ,'.
~
Metropolitan Opera
National. Council
Western Regional. Auditions
ORANGE GOUNTY. DIS11Uei'
NewpDrt Half>or Htgb Scbool
B1JAY~OLD ._ ..... ~ ....
HOLLYWOOD The national releaH of
"One From tbe Heart.'' rranel• Coppola'•
hof;.t11lonJ1tJe movte m&&aical lOQt bea•t by bu et problema and dela)'t, bu b9en poetponed
at Q, UM ftJm'•' d11tributor, Par11DOUDt Ploturea
Hid.
"We bave tnformed exblbltora that we are
temporarily poatponlq . . . the Feb. 10 releue
date ~IUH we do not have a final release print,"
Gord()Ci Weaver, Paramount senior vice president
worldwide marketing, said by telephone from hil
• New York olfice.
Aq otfic11l at Coppola 'a Zoetrope Studios
confirmed the delay, saytq it was because the
producer-cllrector did not want to ahow the film to
exbiblton -who were to bid on the ript to show
the tum betlanlnl Feb. 10 -before the public aees
the movie. Coppola last week announced plam to
preview UM nrm at New York'• Radio City lluaic
Hall Jan.~. ·
''The Feb. 10 date ia off because ... of
Ftancis' refusal to allow Paramount to abow the
film to exhlbiton before be allows the public to see
it. That LI the reason it is beilll opened at Radio
City Music Hall," Zoetrope President Robert
Spiotta said.
Spiotta said Coppola, who originally bad
planned a JuJy 4, 1181, release ror the film starring
Nataaaia Klnski and Frederic Forrest, was
incensed by ne1aUve comments from exhibiton
that were published following a screening of the
uncompleted film last summer in San Franciico.
"These people should be professional enough
to realiie that because of the time .requirements
this wasn't a finished film . It ls very
unprofessional to make comments or to draw
conclusions or make preu interviews the way the
e"hibiton did in San Franeiaco," Spiotta said. "If
the picture ls going to get reviewed we want it
reviewed when it is ready."
Spl~ta acknowledged that the ·mm still was
not totally complete, and that the picture portion
was beln& flown to New York from a Rome
proceaaina lab the night before the Radio Cily
screening. The sound portion would arrive frotn
California on the day of the screening, with the two
elements to be linked for the first Ume during the
actual public showin1.
Weaver said be did not know if Paramount
officials who had seen unfinished versions of the
film in the past few months had seen the picture to
be screened at Radio City.
"No one here in the marketing division bas
seen it," Weaver said.
Spiotta said Zoetrope's original agreement
with Paramount called for 1-oetrope to turn over 25
prints of the ftlm to the distributor on Jan. 4. A
total of TI4 release prints were to be struck, but
Spiotta said Coppola's refusal to provide prints
would mean the film ultimately would be ,..leued
In a smaller number of theaten .
He said he expected the Olm would co lnto
700-plua theaters by late Febn&ary.
Paramount, which prevlowlly bad dlatrtbuted
Coppola's successful "The Godfather" ftlm1, bad
averted bankruptcy for Zott1ope lut February by
extendioc Coppola a '*•000 penonal lou and
purchuinl aootber Zoetrope feature, "Interface,"
tor~.ooo.
Paramount later picked up distribution rltbta
on "One From the Heart" for whit repon.dly wu
far below the 30 percent dlatrtbuUoo fff major
studios usually demand 11 Coppola didn't uk the
studio for completion funds, accordJq to an
unnamed Paramount official quoted ln Tuesday's
New York Times.
"We wrote the agreement 10 Zoetrope would
1et no completion money for 'One From tbe Heart'
lrom Paramount," the unnamed olficial aaid. "We
decided we wouldn't 1et Involved to tbe tune ot a
nickel in the tllm's monetary problems.''
However, Spiotta on Tuesday rebutted the
Paramount ofticial's uaertion.
"The agreement obviously does re~uire
Paramount to have completion obligations, ' be
said, noting that the lack of final fundln1 from
Paramount, while not devastatin&, "baan't done
the mm any good."
FLIPPING OUT -Ice Follies and Holiday on
lee skater Doughdee Marie. a 30-year-old
daredevil on skates. goes up and over a
Toyota Corolla in a r ecent performance at
the Forum in L.A. The jump was a longtime
goal for the skater. who is the only female
skater to perform the difficult ""backflip"" on
ice.
,
JJ?estminater._ tMater;i
stages 'Seven Year Itch' .
By TOii ftTVS ..................
11...UOO "The Seven Year ttcb" and tbe lmace
tbat '1luhea most readily to mlnd la tbat or Marilyn Monro. 1tandtn1 oc a subway 1rattq
tryin1 . to push her skirt back down over her 1hape1y le11.
That mental picture also eatabUthea a Ume
frame for George Axelrod'• comedy about a
mlddle-aaed publisher embarldnc on a "laat flint"
with the 22-yea~·old sexpot from tbe apartment
upstairs . It '1 In the
~~~~;o;oe':~~e :.; !~'-1_1_1_1 ________ 1_1_
clean and sex was dJrty.
The We stminster!'I. -......... ----CQmmunlty Theater has •
re•lved this pleasant little eomlc delicacy and,
though the program establishes no particular
period for the action, relerences to the Brooklyn
Dodgers and »-cent movies hJnt that th ls lsn 'l your hottest new Broadway release.
Director Clark Burson bas uUU1ed a number
of technical machinations, some of which work
better than others, to add a lilUe dp to what is, In
today's light, somewhat of a talky, innocuous play.
However, uneven performances ·10 the top ranks
tend to Impede its forward thrust.
· Chieny responsible for the sl•ckness of pace is
Alan Schneider, in the central role of the
publisher, who performs his stage business with
irritating deliberation. His approach to his
character Lacks substance and dJmenslon, even
during bis critical scenes with the girl when he
first fails, then succeeds at hi.a dttam seduction.
Laurie Sondag as the object of his affections
fare;; much better. creatlne a perky, sexy
character who, despite ber surface kookiness, is
very much in control. A bit of overplaying is
evident, but justified given her co-star's
propensity toward understatement.
Art Winslow, who assumed bis role of a
humorless psychiatrist-author in the last week of
rehearsal, will require a few more performances
for seasoning, after which he should effectively
steal his scenes .
Jody Jaress as Schneider's wife and Woody
Jones as Schneider's rival (in bis mind anyway)
'"l'Me HYI• Y ... ~ " ,_... . ....,..., ..... .. .... ..... ~°"", ..... ll«llt":Cll1 -~ ... ~ .... = ,, ............ •=• llw • .. wt ,,_..,., 1111 ....... •... --... ~ ~ T"ICAIT ""'--~,,. .......................................... ~ Tiie Olrl ... ,,,. .............. ,., ............... ,, ,, .. ·~w;::;:: :i!~·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:=.--T-Mc:IC..... ..... ............... .................... ..._ Ml .. lljl«rft .................... , ................... awte Ollf-llet~ ........................................ Lorr.,.. McWllllMit ....................................................... .._.."" .............. , ........................................ ~ .....
for her affections contribute some fine cameo
work. Tbe female lnhabltants of Schneider's
fantasy world are cutely enacted by Chris
Dufresne, Lorraine McWilltanu, Naomi Myers
and Claudia Holt.
The show) la played, lnexpllcably, acainat a
black-curtained ba~kdrop, perhaps to . clve
credence to its reaflty-fanta1y abuttJe format.
Technically, these transitions need sharper
definitJon for maximum effect.
''The Seven Year ltch0 (viewed on final dres• : 1
rehearsal> is potentially a sparkllq comedy which
will benefit by some artlstlc adrenalln1 particularly In the leading role. lt continues
Fridays and -Saturdays at 8:30 through Feb. 6 at
the Westminster Community The.ater, 7272 Maple
St., Westminster.
* CALLBOARD Auditions for the drama
"Ladies In· Retirement" will be held oext Tuesday
and Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. by the San Clemente
Community Theater ... director Mieque
Weinstein will be seeking six women 35 and ove,r
and one middle-aged man at the tryouts, set for
the community room of the Laguna Federal
building, 601 N. E.l Camino Real, Sao Clemente
Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse will bold
auditions for its next production, "South Pacific"
next week . . . Equity tryouts are Monday at 10
a.m. and 2 p.m. in the Masonic Tem.,le, 6840
Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, while noo-Equlty
readings are set for Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m. at
the rehearsal hall, 150 Ave. Pico, San Clemente
Moore's 'Ordinarjr People'
a hard act to foil ow
By 808 THOMAS
AIMcit• ~Ml Writer
LOS ANGELES -'"Ordinary People'
was hard to follow," Mary Tyler Moore reflected.
"It has been two years since we made the picture,
and it hasn't been an easy wait, because I love to
work."
She's working again. The new movie is "Six
Weeks," a Polygram film in which she is starrine
with Dudley Moore. Miss Moore plays the head or
a cos metics empire. mother of a talented
12·year-old daughter with an incurable disease.
The daughter, Katherine Healy. helps start a
rqmance between her mother and Dudley Moore, a
cbngressionaJ eandidate. Tbe film ia deacribed as
a comedy wtth lracic undertones.
The other day Tony BiU was dirttting a scene
with both Moores on a streetcomer in downtown Los Angeles. Even with the high-powered cast, the
location attracted little attention from passersby.
Film companies have become as common as
traffic accideJlls on the local streets.
Du.ring lhe lunch break Miss Moore ordered a
tuna sandwich al a lunch stand and retired to ber
land cruiser to talk about the events of the past
two years.
·'The temptation to return to work was
growing," she admitted. "I had a stack of scripts
about this high in my apartment In New York.
Some of them 1 Jiked, but l always found some
reason not to do them, say, a first-time director.
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
~ 0 BJ ~ li!J ALMS RECEIVE
TWE IEAI. 0# THE "40TIOH PICTUllli
COOE 0# UV llfGULATIOH
rol lerskates •
walkef~ .toys
*w"9ons••••
scooters*hot
rods*coupes•
trailers* hard
tops•convert-
ibles*motor
homes*lawn
mowers* limos
•corporate
headquarters
· •garden carts Model A's••••
• typlngtables
wheelbarrows•
recreational
v•hlcles•gotf
carts* model
tralns~btkes
If ti'i got Whffls
l ou'll move It
aster Ina
DetlyPilot
ctMlffled
ed. c.tt ' • Mf·5'71 Ind
afrteMI' .ch¥1ior'wlll
• M.IPYGUUll'il = ....... cne..
REDS (f'GI At
8 :00 No~~ NoP-.
~a~ HEAVDllPOI
Shows•t 7:16 9:20
N£IGl•~IRI Shows•• 7:00 9:00
NoP•-
II~ •mnrrOF llAUCE (PGI
Shows et 7 :00 9:20
WIAI
7~10 & 9 :30 !to Economy Sutine
"Tbe trouble is that 'Ordinary People' was a
tough act t.o follow . Yes, I realize that Bob Redlord
was a first-timer as director. But I knew that be
was a fine, sensitive, intelligent actor who would
make a great director. Bob is In the same situation
1 am: be can't fi.nd a picture good enough t.o follow 'Ordinary People.' ·'
Much has happened to Mary Tyler Moore in
the past two years. Sbe suffered the deaths of her
son and her sister and her marriage to Graot
Tinker dilsolved. She abandoned her CaJifomla
roots for Manhattan ti\ring. About the latter she
explained:
· · l felt the need for new lhin&s and new people. K~re we're so 18olai.d Jn our can, we ~ltt reifty
have ~tact wtth the outer wor&d. 111 We "as
prttty mueb )liuited to Bel /Jr, NaUbu and
Beverly Hills, and tbal is hardly a cro.s-1eetloo or
American livin1.
"New York is different. You can walk down
the street and see peoi;le in the 1utter or a man
carrying a huge snake. It's disgusting, but that's
New York. I like the d1versity, and r lite tnowing
there are 27 museums, four ballet companies and
an abundance of theater. l may not take
advantage of it, but l like knowing it's there ...
·•Hanna an analyst on a stead1 basil helped
me through (her son) Richie's death," 1be HM:t.
"This was the first time I was able to bave
analysis without interruption. I have aJwaya used
analyst.a as professional friends.''
i , i r µ () h ~ T Hr '"-' Hf'"
' ., >..,
Or~ eo.t P~L Y PfU>T/Tt\urtday, January 14, i 982
•BARG N MATINIES'•
Monday, ttaru S1turday ,
All Perform•nc .. befo .. 5100 PM
IElce,t Spsill £n11 .. ••t• Md lto!Waya)
l A Mill.Al.JI' MA•l M1rodo ot lo1ec10111
LA MIRADA WALIC ·IN 994·2400 ...,....,. . .,,...._ -c.-----"TAPS" -, ____ _
·--·UU.•-.O "A.HENCE Of< MALICF' "I ·-----
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALi< IN .......
"IHAUa't'I MACttl•" 1111 ·-·-----C . .-n·---"fA"" i-. , ........ _ ... f_
LAKEWOOD CFHTER
SOUTH w .. ,. "'
"IHAftKrl MACMNS" 411e· _,,. .... ,.llrl, __ --llrl· ...,.MUT~ .. --w:-. ... -.llrl .. --
"Mloeft. Of THE t..OIT ~K" ..... _ ........ . _.._. __ _
"NllGHeOM" 11111 ......... ...._ __ _
Miii'~• "lfCAfUCY'S MACHINE" 1111 ·--·-·--
......_.flOM • ..-AU..
1 ·:RAa .. aOff T .. LOST ARK" ,.,. ___ i_
JI
IMPORTANT MO~tCt1C .. JtnaH UNDlA 12 FRll!
.................... 'lllN ,,. .. :3j>_:y.i ' s.. ""' • 30, .. CM-'l .,.,_,.Ni' C# -.a~ 5'tMU
1f llO AM CM AAOI) \W!Tll IGilllTUN llCUSSOll'I l'O$l!10IO
_..., NI IOl!IMlLl•AU ONf.fl ~ llO Oii AM l\AOO
........ ,,,,.
ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN
, .. _,,, ti ot l*nlOft SI
179·9150 --·--" ''THE ,OUR SEASONS" i... -"(NOL.EIS LOVE" .. (Al
CIM fl 50UffO
e ~ t "'" ..... ". BUENA PARK [.I( ,, IH
UncOlfl ..... W•tl OI K"°" 121-4070
f\ It ~4 A f.. A.Pt.
LINCOLN ORIVE·IN
1""'0111 A•• .... OI •"°"
• 121-.070
... ~ "4 l.J
Hl·WAY 39 Ol!IVI IN
1 I
"ITIUPH"t111 -"ITlfl Cf'AZY" 1111
CM· Pl IOUllD
AMUllCAN ONCllNAL
"ZOOT IUIT" "' -"lttA"Krl MAO•UE" ~
Cllll·PllDlll>
' . '
LA HABRA {II/Id IN ....,._ . ...,,_ ..........
., ..... 2
. "
,,."" ........ ....,,,,f19i,.D
"ABSENCE O~MALI~" (POI
"STIR CRAZY" 1111
--·~·-..., ... NtAC l:'lk>N" 1111
"UVING NIQKTMARE" Oil
WIL f1~1jll
a.n-• "MOIMllM P,.c»LEMI ..... -•''NIN~ l'O "W" llll
,...,_ ..... CO.TOTD.L-TAIA
"OHOST IT°"Y" 111 -"THI C..ANOIEUNG" 4111
-
OJJANG F ·'DI\' I~
a
\
0 0
~eHALL NOW rua. wrrw
NEWSPAPERe>
•
Hank Ketchum
~
'·l'f
I've BEEN AT
IRMA'S BAKING
COOKIES
GORDO
FUNK~ wtlNKERBt:.\N
~,FRIEND5,AND ~GteSffi!
I l(~(){.Cf.O o.l ~
~ AT 3 A.M. ~1'5
MO«Jt'~ AMO ~t
~\M \XI.
I'M HAPPY
.BECAUSE
WE BURNED
THEM---
No, oo.&'1' \.tl~. ~e..\...
'fl4Af OION'1 ~"f. ~lft\
IN.0.
SO WHICH
SHOW WAS ON~
by Ernie Bushmiller
AND WE DIDN'T
HAVE10EAT
THEM
by Gus Arriola
T~ANl!W
All.DIE>Jee fail 'it:XJstOLO MATEICfAU
by Tom Batiuk
by Kevin Fagan
~~~~OIMP
~I OU.EOAN~~
UfUt 10 M>l.()(,,17€..
~
by Lynn Johnston
~ ~. ~~
~R\Se
---EWl••--1 ... • •• .. , .. ....
~~
l l'ilu•MMUNT
THIMUlllfll'f8
OU.:Ula ..... eHAWM~
.···-~ CllC*CAVWTT
Guelt .. dlNctor -
IWIOlr==2)
NIC.._
MOV9 * "Double Trouble"
(1941) Many Langdon,
...,, IM*I. A pair of
lmmlgfenm go to wor11 1n •
bell! lecitory and ~
....., lllllh • vllkMble
.,,___ In • cen of belll8. .MCMI
COMPETITION -Erica Gimpel as Coco
competes for a part in an off-Broadway
show on "Fame" at 8 tonight on KNBC
(4). See related story below.
••• ''t To 6" (1NOI
~ Fondtl, Dollr Pllton.
Tttr• woni1ne women
,.,.. egelrwt lhe6r "'*" ~ .,, • """'dtelNlnllt
bole. 'PO' a:aoe CW ITV ~
• ILCMIWCY
I tcmT ... UlllAT ··-NPORT ..... a~ ......
(ll)WNDM, THI
ILMIK~°' crt\.GM NOi cm ... .., ....
HMIP¥ DAVI AGAIN
I MC..w9
YOU MeCID '°" rT Feetured: "Cenllde'• u.
Semg Snow Dool" llld
"Gllbege .. My Buel· -·· I THI JC I L lllOMI
JOQJl'8 WILD °""' l!AIY "Long-Term Merrlege" au.u: former dllO 8tll
Bonita Orwwl .... Wr.UW
llld her llulbllnd Te ...
ollrNw'I Jeck Wrellter. (RI
it MAiCNEIL / LBtMR
MPORT
Cl) TIO TAC DOUGH 111 Bn&n'M .. IT
TONIGIKT
An .......... wlltl ~
awwtlll. •
!~AUYI
•• ''Thilt' (18911 ~
C-. TUMCMir Wiiii. A
fl'"Ol..ionel jewel thief
It-.. the Irle*• of the
Inda ~ In order to
be•-'R' 1:ao. I OH THE TOWN
Feetut9d: find out wtly
... lefllt-•IOI•
.. ..... Wloe Ange.
.......... Hencc>c*
Plllt NlgllbortlOod: "-
letlng .,...., ~
teleAelon ~ to
-•-lldl Cellomle'•
100,000 Aullll ..... Ing ,...,.,. ...
18,Nta..YA!UD
~Vlf!NR&--.EY
&00..lltt
i.-llld SNner come
to IN r-wtien l*1nY
end Sqt"9IW get '1ood up.
• EYEONL.4
~ured: Cl.Al tor beck
peln; • lltelt to Ille mud
bMhl • the o-t Ho4
Sp1nge; • profle of • Loe
Anoelee police depert·
-1'1 S.W.A.T. te11n.
I MATCH~
M0A0 1°H 8udden .,,,...,._ of ....
-In Ho4 Upe end In Col.
Potter'• l•~lt• mere
ceuee conoHn In the
40171f\.
I TICTAC DOUGH
MM:M!ll-1 LIHMR
~ ·~w.MZlta • YOU AllCID f'IQR rT
~; "c.n.M'• Life.
8M'll Snow Dool" and
''Gatbege .. Mr .... -·· (C)MO'lll
..... ''Tlte HOllM Of The
s..i ............ (1868) Aob-
'" T~. Linde°""**'· Wheft • p .... ..,.. .. found
deed on hie tillp, • Chllt•
boel lltlpper ~ •
..,..... mep ttlet laedt to
• hidden Neil~ (JI)...,. TMI NR.
.... Len 0.-and
Midi~ ~t
1tlg1tllgttt1 of crltlcel ow-. .,_,.. end pr-.
dlctione of upoomlng dM-"°'* c:onteet• In the NFL ~~ ** "WolfM" (111111 ~ FIMaly, Dleile v-
,.., ..,.,,, polOI ~
Oii/ end~ 119)'-ctdogy 9ttempt to 9'0CI en
lnvllllon of Hew YOfil City
.,, 11UPW-lntelllgenl IMer'8.
'R' e:GO. Cl} MAOHI ... PJ.
A computer tycoon ltlree
Megnum lo in-tlgllte tM
llteft of vlllueble codee. .. ,,.,.
Lydk and Coco ~
for tM -pert In an off·
Br~ltlOW. •wow "8'8(~ •O MOMNl/D ...cw
Wltlt Merth II away tor •
weelt, Mor1l deddee to
duzle Mlndr wlt)I •
Moroccan teat, complel•
w1ltl llelly --. eoo.·-M8KE1'MU
Colcwedo State vs. LM Vegee
• ,...._ tMGAZINI
A conl1NCtlon woB.-wflo
.. opera: • Flortde ..,....
""' peril celled "" . 'Olltc Continent": Or W.co on
. cu"lng ttoepltel c:oet1;
&w W111 ,._,on co6-
lectlng ltJtc:Nn gedgeta. e MOYIE "S....,.,.S .,_ .. (1873)
Jefte Fonda, Ooneld
Sutltel'land.
• ™-Clt.D "°'* Bot> V1lla .,.. r9n0Va-
llof.-on•~ trect
,_ In • 8oeton aiburtl.
., INEAK PMVle#I
Roger Ebw1 _. Berte
Sleltal 0-"'-wor'lt
lnO'<ll9l of 198 1.
(l)MCN"a
•••. 'The leland" (1980)
MlehHI Caln•, 01vlct w...... While lrwwtigel·
Ing • rah of et"P dlMp-
~ In the e.muct•
T rtenglle. ' joumelllt stum-
1>"9 _._ en leolet«I,
400-yeei~ coion, of
plr9tee. 'A' .MCN'a
··~ '"The tuird W.;'' ( 1M0) Patt1dl Mc:Goohen,
L• Van Cleef. A tilted
~ hee to melt• one
more hit befot9 fie cen
,..,.._'R'
a=-•111 IDTCWTHE waT
The nototloul ~
lite Celco Kid NllUrl'l8 to
Copper Ct..-to go to
edlool.
• AU .. THE 'Nlll.Y
After "' .,.., ~
. CHAflll LISTINGS
8 KNXT <CBSI •
9 KNBC INBC>
8 l<TLA (Ind I
e KABC IABC>
•KFMB ICBS>
0 KHJ·TV !Ind.I
•KCST IABCI
• t<TTV tlnd.I e I< COP-TV !Ind. l
e t<CET (PBSI
• KOC:E (PBSI
O On·TV
'l Z·T'll
H HBO
C ((1~1n.HI
1Tl CWOR) NY , NY
~JJ (WT8SJ
f l IESPN)
S (Showllme)
• Sooll•Q'1l
• <Cablf News Networlt)
News crews
to he bulletproof
WASHINGTON (AP> -CBS News said
Monday that it will purcbaae a handful of
bulletproof vests for calllera crewa,
correspondents aad ot.Mn •ho cover President
llea1an. The vests were requested by several camera
crew memben who pointed out that the Secret
service and ~ers clote lo tM 'Pfdlhllt wear
lbem occuloGally. \
Bill Headline, Ullltut.,... ~redor, 1al'9 the
la1ue arose la early Dece ... r before reporta
aurfaced that Llbyasa •h:•aa Moammar
&badafy bad sent "bit sq " le tbe Unlted
States.
CBS top1 Nielaeru
HICW YOtut <AP) -WiUt tM...,... Bowl 1UU
abead Ju. M. CBS eODtilM• to .,.., .. te prime
Um• wttb a eomblu&iOD ti ma ........ •.PON
Md tbl two tip.Nied eoetiaulac ..n. • TV -
edlool, ........ I*'"
"**"')ob·
• .-M .......
Roger Ebart end Gene
Siell.i ~ .. wont
movtae of 1M1.
-~ .. P"81'8.8 • .._ StM!doW''
(Jl)MDYm
••• " "The E.leptlenl
Men" (19'0) John HUrl,
AnOionr ~ A dacl-
cated pt!Jlkl• ttlr" "'*' ...... llonllfr ._,,_, """ ..._ ..
~..,bell!_.
"' .............. 'f#IO' (D)a::csac>N 9:00. Cl) ICNOTI LMDlte
~ ........ ~
OOll "*' 'llflO ...... to -~-I dllltterllllglne ~·.,.·~Intel •ad In !tie h4rlg e;·..,NENT
l'f'MJal
A ~ l«<e.-. dlld
dl!lltM "* ~. ONmmond
111111 ...... Q
•• MflNl'tt.aJ..M
Berne(• .-ge blldl Into
uniform tor • ., to Ill In
..,... ,,_. ol .. fon:e ..... ..,........_
it...v ......
<Jueec; Sanctr Duncan.
• SHOCK CW 1"S HEW
'"The Medleilk:el Pera-
dle9" ,....,. ~ tr• ..,... II-* to the ..._
m~ wtttl ltl VMl
.,,., of ln1191iClol ll tor •
IOdl II how "1 ~
tlte rao6dlr c:Nnglng ~·
; llUtlifU#Ee
THEATM
•'The AarN T.-Of Thl-
lta: Hrw!M Wll ~I Arrf-
!Nng'' The GrlMe ,.,...
t"9lr -I""""°°" I wflO ,_ ... .,......., "°"' Enc>-
lllM. (PwU)Q
(C)MOV9
............. (187t)
~ .-.-. Donn•
~A flMltc .. 9'op • ..-..e '° ._., • tootbel ...... "°"' winning .. ....... CD>..av.
• •• "filelntre9 County'
( 1867) Eltzeb9ttt T~.
~ Cllft. During
Iha a.I W•. • capCt.Mlti\j 8outtan ...... ...,_
mined to ,_ the "*' of
"" choloe IWll'f dli!9l of ""~ CZ)~
..... ..,.,..,.. (1871) ~
erd er-. Angle OlcltJn...
_,. A r9fonned ortli*W II
laced wltfl • '**Y tltl»-tlon ~ ,. ,.... quid! ._e;· ... A~
Jule, """' -not lle¥-lng • dilte tor "" pnllft,
...... out tor • Wllllt end
reeume ttoura "'" wtt11 "" "*'of lier~ In tow.
•• TA»
Bobby return• to
-tti'e landecl e TV ..,.,.,Q .MOYW **•* "l<r•-r Ve. Kr-" (1179) Oualln
Hoffmen, Meryl Streap. A
men betttee wltlt NI .,.
.... tor cw&ocfr of ""* ~_,..._ .......
out on tftem. 'PG'
•I
•. u.a.-• .,,....ow·.-~ .,,... ..... .,....,.
.. ....... ...... lftllll ........ ..., ..
Miii .._mu..,.,,
............. (9')
m>MTOGUJ19 ntl •NVm••• v....... ""' .. Mii--~.....,'° 111'"•••• t11t .. lllon1 ............ ~ .. ....... -pm:=
QMaiQ ...
IOIRML ·1MI~ Cotr..,o•uteflll Lind•
.. l'•lli• .,.. Ooelle
---..... ,... &'Mle for .. ................ ~
_.y of eoi,gt1H'O.'\el .......
n•eee<l>98 ... • M,,_...Y.-.r
HolC:Ted~
I MULHOeNI
TMl&DC•CIMI Geot9t end u.ille tMl¥I •
"""fWI' on fie 41r ttwy
W. IO be lmeMewed
"1lollt .. "petMat" Illar• .....
• ~NPON>AND80N 1Wo----to 19'1 I I I 11 I tfle l\lrllltur.
~'*...,...on U. ;r•::CAwn
cau.t: .. ~ -Wldlr. (hit 1 of 2) .....
WAll .... TCN CC>~ .... ,..... .. (1lt0),.,.
MMltlMI GIAMr, 8UNl'I
H09"'. A group of "*'tal
patient• .,. murdeNd
ac11••to--~ ........ R'
(Jl)TMI YUA lMAT WM:
"'' Plltrtdl O'NMI --WI
IOdl .. !tie ...... --· .,.. ......,.. of the pr9Wklue
~· Cl)~
• '"The CHlchn" (ttlOI ...,.....,,oa.....,..
A etrenoe radio.olive
c:loUd MN a group of
ec:flodc:Ndr•• ""° --.,__.....,bl-*
tlngemallL .... t1•(%)..av. **" ''Cloelly Wlllklhed T,.._ .. (1tel) OINded br
Jiff Men1i1i. Dw1ne Wortd
W11 I, a_,. r1o1Ne '°""' Cllldl ~ •
tr9llt 11111111• wtto for-
--... .,_,....... long -... to *-up • Qer.
""" .,,..,,..,.. tniln.
11:11. (I) QUICY
An .,.......,.11o11 Into the ...... °' • "*' lftlltl IMde ~to bellew
thllC the .,.,_, wflo COfl-
....., to 1he cr1me did not
COf!Wl'lll It. (R) e8TONGHT
Hoit: Jottnnr Carson.
OU.: ... C«W'j.
•9 MICNIWll ~
I lmf CWCMOUCHO
1"SOODCOWU
..... Feb'• knowtldgl
of opera ... '*" win •
cs In • r9dlo Cl'* --· 0.-~---,._ .... of"" prilil. .ROC*m
The'°" mnd ~of •
""" wtto died In prilon -deterl'lllned lo hell ,........
I IOOEJ t1•awn•H•l.IA'T
CAP'T'I099D MIC ....
•..av. •• ·-.......n And "-1!''
( 1MO) Paul lAMel, Jeeofl
RobeldL An ottterw!M
ilnlt"own gH 11et1on
enendenl ~ '° be "" ligMflA .. to Howard
Hughe•' bllllon dollar -....·R'
t2:GO. 8HA NA NA au.ea: Edger Bergen and
Oleiile~.
•• VlllaAS
Oen -ctlel for tM
ll-. of • dOM trt.nd.
wflO -the dlW of • loc:el lndlwl tr1tle. (RI
• MOYIR
• • • ..VIiie ...... (1"8)
"--u.-. ..loMthen
W1M1n. A 9"0U!P of Mn'-'*" ,....,. .. Alemo In
~--T-.
• WCE DOI lilllf.M
Cohollla: The ...,,...
~ Cll10l Monlo)'e.
~ Ollar, The a.-_., ._.,
• OONTIM OfWn'
HIALTH--
''Tlte Heeltll c-SytiMm:
Wlwl'• The Score?"
(Jl)..av. ..... MCelfomlll er-.
Ing'' 11g791 °""'* aw-.
toptw, ~ O'COnnor.
A ....... l'O'lftO ,_ lrom
CNc:eoo ~on 1he~
lbftlll beedl -end Moolnle ~ With the
..,,., of .,, eg.lng
beedl tuft. 'Ill'
12: ti CD> Dme lltCCll 77 'I ANDTHI 8C*.,...
Thie gr.a tromMnlet,
_..,_ end emrl9I'
.... "' 1lwougfl 8ft -,..,,. of .._... 8ldt ..
... •hNI•" ...... Dalla.'' IN .. OYINCI PAMI -Valerie Landabur1
I.NJ a. mkbl "l'ame" ii aimllar to what
abe wu Uke ln hltb 1chool.
Orange Co8lt DAILY PtLOT/Thurlday. January 14, 1912
TUBE TOPPERS
'•
KOOP• 8:00 -"Steelyard Blues."
A band of mi1lits ouempt to rejuyenate
an abandoned alrpl,ne. • t
KCOE 9 8:00 and K-CET D 8:30
"Sneak irevlewa." Worst movies of 1981
are s.elecled.
KNXT 9 9:00 -"Knots Landing."
Llllemae meets a conman who appears
to be interested ln her slnginl career.
KNBC 8 10 : 00 -"Hut ' Stre et
Blues ." Poli ce c o rruption i s
investigated. . r
"amoM Oet9 In Y0411
~.""MrMenW'end ......... Ofer-."
.-e8TOMOMOW
~.,.,..., ,_,.,,
Olympic gold medal·
Winner ...., Flaming end
''lele ~· ., Jo.Jo
81.nuck II*' CUny tor ...
~of lltledng lltfetty,_ ~ Oen Aoww'I and
Olcll Mettln; ~ ~ Ownbet. (A)
• MOWia
." "Deeeloy Al .......... (1119) l(ojWo Hongo. Toro T....._An ..... _
.-..~-... "'°""" 0--.'• -..,.._lnen~to
oonquw f.lntl. •... .,..,
NITWOMNIWI
CC>MCMI * * 14 ''Tiie Nlgflt Poner''
( 117 4) Dlrtt Bogwdl, Cflll •
""8~. Ablurte
i-.e~ .. ,_.ened
~ • former 88 olft·
oerand•*--
trellon C411nP prteoner ..... 111¥,,....,, dtMce
In e 110N1 a1tet the )WW, 'R'
(l)WCWCM ..,.,, eo..-.. lllMn
8r9M8ft and,,.,,_ T~
-~""~ .....
.....,..... In .,. "*"'· .,.-on llulldrd Clf
..... ... oondllc'8d .,,
jc.WNIM I ~ lludl
T8ftlel.
12:11 CZ) MOYIR * • "Wollen" (1111)
,,,,.., ~.Olene v-
,.., Modmm polOI tedlnot-
• end~pey
.._Mtentptto.eapen
ltWill8lon of ..._ YOl1t Ctty
~ ...,-ln18lllgent .....
'R' tl:AO. Cl) 1"S IMf1' sa-n...---. ~ .... drtwlll•reol OM.,. In e cnltl.
1:00e MCMI *** "A Song To AemM!ber'' (11M5) Paul
""""" Comal Wiide. Cllo-pln'• ,__, br..U -hie
low fer o-g. Send, .,.. .,...,....,--...
• MCMI **" ''The ~1111•" ( 18641) Ken~ Sehlle, Yuml
~A group of
,........, woMd ..... of """""°' lltt •c.e • try to .._ _ Ellltl to l*PMU-
... "'*1111bL
1:10• MCMI ** '1her ...,.,,. •• (Pitt
2) (1171) C1trl1tl•n• Kt"f", ..,,,., o-i.. Men
...... to Ear1tl lrCMn ..
pleftel MeduM wflete ....... "*.., _ .,., ..
tormmenlelt..u.
t:tll= * * ''The Al11c" ( 1971t
Cll"8 ~. "-Y ....
lend. A llbr ........ W-In Ule
llMl ... .,. --of
• !Owe wflO ~-· 'R'
t:IO•MCMI
• • "Mountain Men"
(1980) etwt.on Heeton,
Brief' Keltlt. T-1Ut .,..,._. ~ ........
dom of the • ...,.,_ In
"" ...... ~babe ... •1C1oecllment of a..
IMlon.. 'R'
1:11(HlMCMI
• ~ ''From The Ute Of The
MllloitenM" (1980) An
eppe;•ia, ~ •• ..,
bUlll-t;erl mwder'l the
proetftute whom he regu-1111' ....i .• R'
, •• NIWll HO 9fTBITMNMBIT
~
An ..,..,.... wttfl Julie
CMlllil. 1=CUMY'8 ..,..,,..
t:.ee MOVW • • ..,,.. Med Doctor Of
M811tet 81reet" (1841)
UOn11 Atwll, UN t.ttrkel.
A med eolentllt obt.ine
----of. tribe w.. blllllt en unc:Mllied lllend. ...~
• • iit "'Cloud• Over EUrocle'' (1t3t) ~
<»Mr, V ... le Ht-Oeon. A
... plot helpe 8ootlend
Y11d lofll9 ltll ~· "'°' of -bomberl. HO·= • * "c::.rr.Mt Of Orime'' pg141 JHn·Plerre
~t. Tonia C.rero. w..ia,.........-.·,
corpee .. .,,.., ~
.... lier ""'6end'• .,.,..
,... partner, llllllO --.0 lw lcww, cull I I to the
crtme.
(C)MOV9
• .... "Ttle .._ Of The
s.-i ....... (1MI) Aob-
"' T ..... Utlda avtltlen. Wtllll • p tg911 II found
died Oft "" ..... dWtll
boel lltlpper dleccMlrl •
_.,. mep tlYll leede to
• hidden Nal lor1uM.
(Z)MOVW
....... ,,.. Peral!••
vi.w'' (1t14),W..,... a..
'Y~ .P.. Pr....-. An
lftveetlg9'1H reporter
•n.mi>te to l#ICOV8I" •
nationwide network ol
1: ........
ll40 -.we
t:10 MCM1 ***" "The EX·Mre. 8r9dford" ( 19381 Wllllllm
Powell, ,,.... Mhur. An
_._ llellltl end "" for·
mer wife eolve • _... of ,_,.,lllllt mwden.
.. (JI) .... lMI NR.
... left~ llld
Midi ..... ,.. preetnt
tllgtlllgttt• of cl'ltlcel
0--. ~ _. pr-.
c9Ctiorl8 of ~ dM-
-----In 1he Nfl. HO(l)MMI • *... ''JoU/lfWI 8eclt To
Oz" ( 1972) Animated .
Votoee of Uza .........
Paul Lrnde. Ooro1ttr
retunie to ..,_ Und ol OI
end~"' ...
ol 1tll9 Wbed °' "" w.. •
'•MOll'a . ***.,. ·~ Lipe, Thome Ey98~) ,,... ~-.. O'Con-
n«.A~
•odl .... wflo ~
Of BnNldW.,. MAlldOlft, .... .. .._.~ .....
~~borend
~file rornence wttll
,,._;.~'A' '
•• 8'tMgeC..Of
Doctor "-'' ( 1Ni) Petrtc ~Nttte °"""8· A
--of murden oommft· led .,, • ....... doctor
lnvoNM -""° he¥e ~ IC:qUltted of murder
chergee.
4:GO CC> MO'lll
• • ''The Ledy v .......
(18711) mot! Gould, Cytlll
Sheptlerd. An inn-ti
menende~wom
en ---.it lrllo • deedly "'*"11111' ~ lbowd • EuropMn npreee tnlln
t'9Wllrlg ttlrougll .-.-..... °""""'' 'PG . d>®~
• • • "lftelde Mofte"
(fteo).Jotwl Sevege. Drtld
Mone. A 1~ tlo IN
JOHN DARLING
WE\....L, Wf-MIGHT J6 WELL
~ l"T IN ANO HEAP OH l!UO< "TO 'THE STAllON !
WE'VE 9EEN
~IMG~1'ME.
en''( }IU..
~l'CH#O 'HE ..WEN'T
~~": 9mt:ET~!
Frid••'• '1••••~1'1•.W•
M t~~ ~~
•
Oranpe Cout DAILY PtLOT!Thuraday, January 14, 1982
the I
An hJstortc agreement has been reached:
AT&T agreed to a consent order divesting
the company of all facilities used to provide local
telephone service. and the· Department of Justice
dropped I ts antitrust case agatnst the company.
The agreement Ls not a judgement and con-
tains no admission by AT&T of violation of
antitrust laws. It spells out the divestiture oflocal
services, which account for about two-thirds
of the assets of the company, and modifies the
1956 Consent Decree by recogntztng the in-
separability of current data process~ and tele-
communications technologies. The AT&T
company retains intercity services. terminal
equipment and manufacturtng. and research
Why ATH agreed
It Is your right to know how we reached this
decision. And why. And what the effects of tt will be.
We did n ot come to this decision easily.
What we and all the other parties sought was to
balance the tn terests of tens of millions of con-
sumers. three million share owners. one million
employees. and the national defense.
The Issues have been debated for over a
decade-in U}e executive. legislative. and judicial
branches of government; in the industry: in the
marketplace: In the company: and ln the press.
There has been no referendum. but the verdict
Is plain enough.
We agreed to the consent order because
we believe n expresses the consensus that. ln the
main, has been reached on the framework for
a new national telecommunications policy.
The coJIRlmer'a needs
The consumer has these requirements:
dependable local telephone service at affordable
rates. th e greatest possible choice among sup-
pliers of equipment and optional services (but
certainly not excluding Bell-the number one
brand name), less government ~atlon where
it tsn't needed. and the ~utck availabillty of new
kinds of services made possible by new technology.
8ening the national lnterat
The national Interest has these require-
ments of America's telecommuntcatlon Industry:
research and development to maintain world
leadership, gocxl jobs and secure employment. and
a strong competitive position ln world markets.
aeum, newteclmoJoOto marbt
Tu meet those ob~lve9. the Bell System
had to be restructund. That's why we accepted
divestiture. It was not the outcome we eougnt. It
was an accommodation to the consensus, and
It had to~ now, for neither the company nor the
lndustJy nor the consumer could tolerate further
delays in bringing new ~to market •
PrMe:vtaa,U.8. IMdumldp
A contest~ ~nttft'and defendarit
and development facilities.
Under the agreement share owners would
retain stock 1n AT&T and receive proportionate
value in the local exchange companies; they will
suffer no loss of assets.
The jobs. pensions. collective ~nlng agreements. and career opportunities ol employees
would not be compromiaed ln any way.
The high quality on~ and long distance
telephone service at affordable rates would be
maintatned.
Both AT&T and the local exchanges would
be financially and technically sound and posi-
tioned to grow with the expanding market for
telecommunications.
in an antitrust court ts no way to create new
and enduring national policy in matters of such
technical complexity and social and economic
signtflcance. Th continue the case would have
served only to delay the resolution of issues.
furtherwithholdtng the benefits of the Infor-
mation Age from America. even to cause Amert ca
to lose tts position of leadership In this new age.
How spec:Ulc objectives will be met
The decree provides for quick action.
Divestiture must be completed In 18 months. and
we must present a plan within six months on the
organization of the local companies. Even as
that plan Is being worked out. it is possible
to envision how the agreement will meet many
spectftc objectives:
• Local telephone service will be under the
sole jurisdiction of each state. assuring con-
s umers of good service under terms. conditions
and at rates authorized by the state public
utility commlsston.
• Local companies will devote all of their
ftnanc1al and technical resources to creating
all-purpoae local ~mmunicatlons delivery
systems. As new services and new systems become
available. consumers wtll have access to them
thrOugh the local aehange.
• The purchasing practices oflocal com-
panies wtll no longer 6C an issue in rate-making
proceedings, because supplies and equipment
would contlnue to be purchased tn a competitive market. with Western Electnc now at arm's length.
• The local companies wt1l be separated
from AT&:r in sound financial condition. They
are in a 0'0Wth industry. and they have the re-
sources 1o ~and prosper as new technQlogJes
continue to enlarge the uSefulnesa of communt-
cattons services.
•AT&T must tum over~ tlley need
to the local companies. and for .-ume.l>DoWtng
dtwstlture AT&T. inch.a.ding'\Vmtem Electric and
Bell Laboratories. wU1 be requited to~ prtortty
eervtoe to the local companies to ensure their
abillty to meet customer needs.
red.
• An integrated. centrally coordinated nation-
wide long distance system reg• dated by the Federal
Communtcattons Commission wtll be preserved.
It wtll meet national defense requirements.
•Competition in the intercity communica-
tions market wtll be encouraged. All of the many
oompantes will have equal access to local markets.
Bell wtlJ be but one of the competitors In a
free market
• Bell System employees wtlJ pursue their
Jobs with a renewed sense of purpose. They wtll be
able to plan. to manage their lives without fear of
sudden dlsruptton because of government con-
straints or the unexpected outcome ofltUgatton.
•Bell System scientists and engineers wtll
be free to challenge new frontiers and conceive
new applications of electronics technology. and
their efforts will be rewarded-or not-In a com -
petitive marketplace. worldwide.
Stgntficantly. the research Institution most
responstole for America's world leadership In
electronics-the Bell Laboratories -ts preserved
intact And we fully Intend that its resources
will continue to be directed toward an outpouring
of innovation that will find application in local
exchanges as well as tn the services offered by
AT&T in the competitive marketplace.
Sound bualnea in the public interest
Out of open debate came consens us . Out
of consensus came a new framework for telecom-
munications policy tn the Information Age. The
policy ts sound bus iness. and it meets every rele~
vant test of the public interest. We are glad that
the end of uncertainty is a t hand.
We are scientists, engineers. technicians.
businesspeople. We have served th e public for
more than a hundred years. we shall continue
to serve.
A Penonal Paspectlve
I would much prefer to talk to you person-
ally about the agreement and the circumstances
and events that led to tt. but it Is obviously im-
posslbJe for me to do so. Nonetheless. I owe you an
explanation. and this message ts the best means
to reach you promptly.
We11 keep you posted as this divestiture
goes foiwarcl. Meanwhile. I can tell you In all sin-
cerity that I believe we have chosen the right
course. the one that be.st serves the public interest
by enabling the telecommuntcatlons industry
to rnoYe ahead lnto a new age. with your company
eervtng in a major and proper role.
I•
Thursday, January t•, 1982 Furniture is bought and sold
every day With a classification
8050 ad .
. INDEX
'''-'•M.Cll 642-5671
IMD Fll SALf e:e.~. ==::' o..=: ·L.~.;.-.,
:.: lttdl
~ ..... t=C::.. ... v..,. e..~-::-1:::."-' == .......... We
. I
l: EQUAL HOUllNO I =-~PP~R_TUNITY ~
:: w .. ·•Motkr.
: All reel utale ad-
.... verllaed In this l: newspaper is subject lo
1.u I.ht Fedual Fair Hous-
:: ina Act ot 1168 which
-makes it illegal to ad -..... : vertist "any preference,
• hm1l1lion, or dh·
:: crimlnation based on
11• race, color, religion, umm ~-Solo
Nell&f.A HOtim
Remodeled, decorated 3 bdrm, 3 bath,
matr bdrm, ocean view $425,000.
West Bay bayfront. Slips for 2 boat&,
remodeled 3 bdrm. 3 bath $1,200,000.
Qglebout
Bay &Beach
Real Estate ..
Ocean & jetty views. Marine roo '1, 4 .
bdrm, 3 bath, 3700 sq.ft . $1.~.ooo. " !~L ESTATE EXCELJ,E.~CE SJNCE 114t.
UDO ISi.i HOMI
Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath + large
rec. rm. beam ceilings, $420,000.
LleA ISi.i IA YFIOMTS
Main channel view from 4 bdrm, 5
bath traditional home with pool.
$1,495,000.
COMI wmt US. •• TO HAMOI llML
Spectacular front row reservoir view .
. .also views of mountains and city
lights. Spacious three bedroom
"Renaissance" floor plan. First floor
master bedroom. Community pool and
tennis. $265,000 .assumable loan at
11~%. S.Sl0.000.
DUf'LIX
COIOMA DB. Mil
Spacious a bdrms, 2 bath
duplex ju1t 2 bfockl
from 1 hopp log .
Fireplaces, separate
aaraaea~private r.at101. deluxe hou . Beal
d"'lex buy n town al
$3111,000. Exrellenl tlrlanctna.
1714, '7M400
IJIJI 61Wl21
MARaOR
A DI YISIOll 0(
Harbor Investment CG.
WATCH THI OPEN HOUSE
SAT/SUN 1·5
Mtw c..dot I Oo/o h.
2600 Bllr Santa Ana Av.
IYOWNll ISLAND'S MOST
CHARMING SGL RES.
3 bdrm + loft, Frenrh
doon &. windows. Fineal
appointmenta thruout
2l4 Amethyst. Open Sat
12·5. Owner /a&t.
WHALIS 4iO IYI From this magnificent 4
Bdrm custom home.
You can have your own 'ront row seat on one or
nature's wonders. Tbis
borne hu all the charm
" Ll&Wta plus the COD· venience of being close
to Newport oo ocunaide
of hlJhway and only
aepsfobeach. $685,000.
Peppertree Heights
Features: 2 master
bdrms, cath wood beam
celtin1s. ceramic tJle In ~~~~~~~~~ 11.llch. 'bath, dbl 1hower
lo master bath, piloUesa
gu range, micro wave .
disbwuher, custom oak
ubinetl. auto aar drop nr, hvy shake roof, ron cr«e driveway ' walks. 2 car aar •2 car park·
ina. Extra lgeaw1m pool
and spa From $129,500
and payments from
Sl060p/mo P&I
c-.. ....... 1012 •••••••••••••••••••••••
3PIEMIUM
DUPLEXES
~!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Coorteay to Realtors =s .. ....... 1 • ~ tCfJjlU ~"'-"'' c' 'awa< °"""8•UoiU SW .. ................
sex, or national origin,
iae or an intention lo make '* any surh preference. l: hmilat1on . or dis ·
;: criminauon " Lagoon view from 6 bdrm, 5 bath,
playroom, dark rm, den. $1,350,000!
1611 WISTCU" DI. N.1. '11·7300
So. Coif. Rt alty 1------1 ~&~stkatto. 546-5605 631 -6194 in this impecrable j!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Sof&lass 3 Br, faro rm
2 Bd + 2 Bd. steps to
beacll. Assume 1210,000
tn loans. Asking $399,000
4 Bd + 2 Bd, newer bldt. So of Hw y Assume
134(),000 Aslung $4-49,000
3 Bd + 3 Bd, quality un·
1ls. Ass ume $290,000.
Askini $.189,000. Contact
Darrell Pash, agl for
rroredetalls. 631-1266 11'0
'-"-V ......... .,..._.,
1-... Wt
: This newspaper will not
• knowingly accept any = advertising ror rea 1
mo estate which ts In viola·
-tlonofthelaw.
CAINATIOM COVI
Spectacular bayfront view 4 bdrm, 4
bath, 2 boat slips $2.~.ooo.
SllPS TO RACH 10%Fllmc~A .. M GOC'geoua ' br eta11ec1 home. l blk from oeean
on FEE land only
$299,000. 759· 1501 or
752-7373.
CUSTOM W /YllW " t
with breathtak ing i..----------~ r-1 m>wit.ui and city light HAllOl llDGE
I 1 view. $549,000. Good An exquisite oUerlng .
terml. Elegant IJ spacious 3
R&"M~
, ~tt.wtTrl<Pnt ....... o.-t.Rnott ~~~ .. o..e1--.rr• . ._...,r ...... c,.. ..
t:l t::: ~~· . IOYALS
= 1·""'·""'·"'"·"""·"'"';;;;;;;;;;;;;;., ,,.. --
.................. lltl ........ ~ .. -tt-:-t:r,·~ = o a tllwUW w
1----fllr9 -,....._u., ._ ........... -~Ual -Alil»P\ot'a J1'0I
AIMIWWa -
BILL GRUNDY . Rf ALTOR
! . • ' • • . ! b:
\\ l>I l '1· \
One is euily capllvated J
by thi1 ocean Md bay vu . home atop the Bluffs In
lrvine Terr1ce. Ideal Cor active family Uvin1 or
gracious entertainln1,
the home bolll 4 Bdrm•. tlOD'9'" 3 Ba. pool, courmtt UMeUllM
0c .. & ta •lew Ii.itch en and has ultra THI ILUflFS
CLIFFHAVEA. Fan-modern appliances. Boma room• 4 BR, 2~ · 1 1 hi lb brick floor:s. oak ba. fplc, air cond., new lasllc v ew rom l 5 r cabinets and bay and clJl)el' paint. S275,000.
land! Perfect for enter-Price $975,000 and you UPlllK>tlf 11()~1
bdrm • family home. 1 --------lev. home wtpanoramil' tlVIMETBliCE
vista or h arbor . 41DIM ·FH f<Cl1ylorCn
• • 1'(1 coastline, ocean & night Sunny, light-n-bright
lights. i>rest1ge, com and new on the market ...... _____ .. , Cort, luxury & secunty. with brick front, side
Reduced, now $685,000. and . r e a r p a t i o s •
IOwutr f!Aanclng). Agt, hardwood parquet floor
.. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ 1ng throughout. Xlnt r-: location · less than 100
lcAoal.a.d 1006 paces from $1 ,000.000
••••••••••••••••••••••• homes Realistically
~,.,..u~ ::.1 ................ , .......... ~ . TAYLOR CO tainlng! $650,000 <ex-th 1--.. "--·u "'--""--.67<""""' I execuuve home on FEE sea vu breallfut area ·
elusive). 759·1501 or own e ..... v ... u:rwi ~ ,,._..., OWNER 'S PRIDE · _ I 752.7373, fin~. l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I Natural decorator wood
IEACH HOUSE pnced at $365,000 v. 1th
A Real Cwtie! rombtnnt1on ~f as!luma
ln perfect 'ihape Only ble and owner Cinant1n1t
home on lsl3nd under Call now -...... . .• ~.·------c...-.s 41.Jt == : e lf it'sgot
HI-.:\1.Tl>I\~ '", l'•·l1 : 'IOSll.S llAL TY NO DN, equity share. lit pmehng & mantel ma Ice 6'75-2311 tJ b lbd 1 b lhis3 Br + denoneoflhe ~
Walker & I ee
Reel f,,!ale
Dl0,000 644-721 J ............. ... ... _ .. •• .. _ e handles OlllnloMAI :.;.,..,a:=, :: 1 e you'll grab
t::.r...,. : • asale
ML. -~-~ fast-,. n --. -.... llSIES$, tmST· Daily Pilot
MOO, FIANCE e classified :::: ~=; : e ads. can
HillOI V1IW llOADMOOI
VACAMr -SB AMY TIMI ) ~. s J View of ocean, bay and Pavillion
lights from this prestigious home with '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
Find out about the high·
earning real estate sales·
career opportunities
with THE REAL
'"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!! me uy ers. , a . = only $94,000. prin. only rmst uruque to Old CdM
call 631-41MS KaLb.y agnt. t a l Bdrm rental. All
To place your me1saae
before the reading public,
pbooe
Daily Pilot
Clasaifaed, M2·M78
.... eds' 00,090
SPYGLASS
IYOWMEI
r or 1384.500
Hta LC:....Hw,. c-.. ...,
t6Z.1147 ~
~
...... f"Y'I • CDM DUPLEX
·I u ~· 700MARGUERITE
...._ .. a..1'1 IOU • L .. 2•5678 l::':'r..!..... :: ~ ... '" _____ _ ....,........ -
grand entry in Del Piso tile. 4 Br 2~
Ba ·Family Room, 2 Fireplaces,
Community Pool and Parks. Ideal
family home in a prime Corona del
Mar neighborhood . P riced to sell
$329,000 Leasehold. Owner will help
ESTATERS. Licensing I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! srhool fees sc>mpletely relundable lo school of
your choice. Extensive sales training. For in·
formation, call 751·6191
L<ie 1ometbln1 valua-
ble? Place an ad in our
<kcan View $575,000
6 brm'J ba. 4100 sq ft
SOUTHPORT MO DEL OWNER FINANCING
IDGHLY UPGRADED
OfferexplresJan 31 A75·55tt
LAGUNA HILLS
Nellie Gale Ranch 4 Br
4 Ba. custom l80 degree
view. Brighi & cheery,
New construc tion .
Med1t architecture,
3bdrm & 2bdrm .
$4111,000, f1nanc1og a\'U1I
Own e r 1 Bldr ~ ... 11>'• -AllOUNCDl£MTS, rm.us&
L8ST & FOUND
~ .... 1!11 C.vPaol ...... .._.
i..•r-,.._.
lllr1Ala.. ... Ttav.C•
S8YICES
Sontn """"., Otrt0nl£MT &
PlfPAUTION s.-.1-~ JotWui..!• iw.•-11ar
llEICNAHISE =--tr= .. ~
C-ru& Eltlo-• c.i. Olp. ,... .. v. ~ c. ... s.i. llorwe ,_~ =t ==-lllilttll-WIJ>lod 11 .... a1 1..vwn.1111 orri.. f'llm • t;qw p ""' =~:c ~ .. ooon Si<n.llntaw•nt.llu ~J!.i;..Hi P't,Slttto
BOATS & llUINE
ElllrM£MT
1100 mo = W3I -Miii --'1911
11• -· -IDU -----mu -----· em --... ... ~ D7 =· ----
.... -----.. --
OPPOITVNITY
k:nocb often when you
use result-getting Dally
Pilot Classified Ads to
reach the Orange Coast
D'llrket.
Phone 642-5678
finance.
WES&.EY M. TAYLOI CO .. UALTOH
2111S. ........ R ....
NEw.POIT C&n'll. M.I. 644-49 I 0
Lost and Found col-umm. That's where peo.
WANT ACTJON? pie look when they've
ON THE WA Ta -"""C1.:.::11111JiiedlA<ldlii642ii·567·····foundii an item of value. 3>'R down · seller wllJ
carry ~ AITD al 12%.
4 bdrm, 2"2 baths plu.s
murh rmre. INQ.trOBS
LAND! ms.ooo.
Make those aood holMehold items you 're
not using available lo
some other family by ad·
vertisln& them for sale
in Classified Ca Ill
IG-S6'18
..... lay Prop.
RHhn
*675-7060.
tlE
llDlll ILlllS CD.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
PANORAMIC VIEWS
Or Ocean, Nite Lites, Newport
Center. 3 BR Estate· Townhome.
Gate Guarded Comm. of Harbor
Ridge. Neutrally Decorated. Im~
mac. & Ready For lmmed. Oc-
cupancy. Assumable Financing.
Lease Or Lease/Option. $745,000 -S2.5000f onth.
® --...... 1 .... t l
1•11•
#2C...,.11t"-
M.wpoit~
YOUI OWM WOILO Awaits in this
Ivan Wells custom w/lusb
enclosed atrium w /retractable
roof. Lt 4 BR + + decorated in
style w/glamorous appeal in
Baycresl area. Seller will
consider trade for smaller
residence. $425,000 Fee Jane
Pacquin 642-823.5 (PS4)
IASTILUFF FOR Slt7,000 Yes,
that's the corred price! It is
indeed, a hard to beat bargain
guaranteed lo please. A ~ice
Lusk-built 3 BR residence in a
great neighborhood ma~ this
something special. $197,000 Coby
Ward 642-8235 (PSS)
UDO ISLE PRICE & TERMS
'-ft 40lt0 ft. st. to St. lee..._ wltlt s-r So. ...... 0.. .. ,... l Md. +
.._ ........ OWMr wll csry .. 12%
......... $369,500 ......... ~
Opett Fri I ~3 ,....
llQ VlaGaoa
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC, REAL ESTATE
S.., 1Wn1.i., f'l'-1Y M.Neln•••
2436 w COMl Hwy 315 Mer... fwe. ~ St.ch Bllbol Wind
6Jl-141t '7Mtte
l
' DOING BUSINESS.
' UNDER A f ICTlllOUS NAME? .
WANT ACTIONT
Clauiled Ads 642·M78
25 Bodega Bay
Call owner 759.0737
IY .1HI UY-IUY IAYsHousl -
We cordially invite you to preview
these exclusive listings, au with ex-.
cellent financing.
Open for a special preview Friday
January 15, from 10:00-2:00.
2715 B~yshore Dr.
2482 Baysbore Dr.
2661 Crestview Dr.
2515 Crestview Dr.
2502 Vista Dr.
$-285,000
$1,900,ooOFee
$298,500
$339,500
$495,000 Fee
Also please ca ll for appointment:
2552 Vista Dr. $275,000
2722 Circle Dr. $249,500
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
TEll
MORE
PEOPLE
ABOUT YOUR
loads o( Greek marble. Blllfs. Lease option 2 br, pool size yard. 4 l'ar
wide greenbelt. $139,500. garage. '650,000. Jensen
Birr. 644-01.34. &Co. 759-0706. 644-5742
Have JOmething to se.JJ? WANT ACTION?
Ouslfied ads do it well. C1Ullled Ada 642-5678
............. .-=....-.... .. ..-...._~---.........._-. R.LP.Z.:4.XLLJY.LA.LH.LAL!J.. . .; .
For• Ad ilt W-.'s Wortd
Lacy l:hlln! Must·Have Tops!
(714Jm .94J . ..:.=1.;... __ _
BY OWNER
CdMDtlplex Pride of ownership, xtra
wide lot. best loc Flex terms Priced under
market $35 9 ,SOO
l ·942·851kl
JUSTIB>UCB>
$200,000 Abandoned Spyg lass
Hill owe stra1ghl note
.00 2248
CottoMftG 1024
•••••••••••••••••••••••
GREAT ST ARTER Remodeled 2 Bd, lrg lot
$88,800. Btll Kenned)
FUIDOM HOUSE
3 Br. 1 Ba large yard ~.000 .. 641·0763. Agt.
MESA VERDE
3 bdrm, 2 bath. frpk. dbl
garage. A I cond
Sl.34.50C Owner will as
sist in financing
Roy McCGrdle, Rltr.
5,48-7729
llG2 STORY
Localed in the Mesa del
Mar area. close l o
schools and shopping
1lus 4 Bdrm beauty IS
Just nght for a large
ram1ly Co\'ered patio
and trees New on the
market al $165,000. Call
540-11.Sl
·,, • HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
POOL&SPA
Great e ntertainin g
home , RV storage.
Sl~.900. Bill Xennedy.
agt 631·12166 . -
R&"M~
----
H~W.Ce
At•-W.Lo• BeaUIJful one year new
farrulY home near South
Coast Plaza . 4
bedrooms, 2•'t baths,
formal din1n1 room. re· taxing family room.
warm • coiy fireplare Professionally lancbd~ lot ldul for
the young exe~ut1ve
Owner will consider
hei&l'nJ with financing.
S20UOO. Call for more
details today. 979·2390
mdit _
&sht!AJ~1~! • ea .
oU noon, rrpk' l car 1ar. Ir• lot. Ow'ftr will rin•itet Of VA ltrms Call Cwt Htrbtrts II. -
I
.J
•
GOSHEN (AP ) -"My blcdrwm lltode••lop aa a¥iaUGD muaewn ln tM Saa JuqW.D Valley
some.-.. betweeo T\llan and '*°°•" aaya Ty Sund1trom, a a•.year·old Vla~U• apartment
manaaer and alrcraft reatc>Nt'. And the undlaputed centerpiece of
Sundttrwn'a vlalon wo\lld bt a beUend bunk ·of
metal tublna that currenUy alu la an alr
warebouae lo tbl• amaH Tulare County
communlt)'. Sittlnl on a pair of metal 1pote wbeell, lbe ruatll\I lkeletorl ii all tbat'1 left of the OGl,y known
Ryan M-1 airmail plane 1tW In tx.lllMce, and
Sundstrom cooaidere It a priceleH p1ece of
avlauon history.
Wbeo be llrat discovered the trait on an
laolated San Luis Oblepo Count.y ranch, Sundstrom
admitted, "I didn't know wb.at it wu. I was sure
wbat ll wu before I made a second trlp."
SundtU:om'a lnitiai lot.ereat lo the ltae vintqe
aircraft wu primarily because of it.a raricy. But
much to bis dellgbt, further research revealed tbat
Charlef Undbergb new the plane wbUe buotina for
th' ''Spirit of St. Louis" to oarry b.lm acrou lbe
AUanUc. Sundstrom said the craft hu attracted the
attention of the Smithsonian tnsUtution, tbe San
Diego Aerospace Museum and the Pacific Mu.eum
of Fllgbt in Seattle. The last previous known Ryan
M·l was destroyed in a fire at the San Diego
museum. "The plane is priceless," Sundstrom said.
• 'Tbe Srnllhaooian ls not interested Just because
this ia an old airplane. They're interested because
thl1 ia the first production strut-braced monoplane
in the United S~ates."
As an aircraft restorer, Sundstrom ta always
on the watch for news of old planes. He traded a
set ot antique wings for a tip on a downed aircraft
that fwned out to be the loq lost Ryan .
• Direct.ions to the rind sat around for >ix to
eight months until Sundstrom planned a picnic lo
the vicinity -a coast range rancb about 20 miles
south of Sbandon in Bitt.erwater Valley.
He found the Ryan's twisted remains Just
where they fell from the sky more than bail a
century ago. The mangled metal fuselage and
tattered cloth-covered wings had served as a toy
for three generations or farm children.
Tbe manufacturer bas loaned Sundstrom the
blueprint of the original version to euide bis
reconstruction.
McCoaMN::IC MOITUAl•S
Laguna Beach
494·941S
Laguna Hills
768-0933
San Juan Capistrano
495-1776
KAa90I LAWN-MT. OU'll
Mortuary . cemetery
Crematory
1825 Gisler Ave .
Costa Mesa
s.40-5564
l,_Cl•OTHHS
t 1&&.110ADWAY WCHITUAIY
110 Broadway
Costa Meta
642·9150
IA&.ft ..... OM
MIN I 'Mtflll
MSTCUf!PCMAPll
427 E. 17th $1
COStaMesa
848-9371
---------
....... ~ .... 0r-.. CMtt Dellf "'""' .,__ U.llia...~~ ......£442
l'lCT1T10UI Mitt• .. MMe ITATaMellT Tiie followl1tt1 .,.,..,. 11 dol11t _, __ :
loJ COUNTltY MUNCH'N Of' I~
MUNCH'N COUNTltY, 1'"' ..... :.~·f Hwel,...._ 9"dl, COIHwftla
1011 Froflllll11 ••Ir•, Mto L"
Ar<•, Lone llMdl, Cellforlllo fOIU
Tiii.i IMnlflHI It c ..... c ... W, 01 ...,.,.,...,,,.....,... , ........ "' Tlli. .....,_.. •• rited wll11 ii.
C-ly Cl-of Oranto C,,.....y °" J-ryll,ltlt. ..,..,..
Pvbll ..... Or ... Coost Delly PllOI,
Ja11. u. 21,-. l'1lb. •. nm 27U2
... ~ U. STATUl9WT
T ... fefl-1119 .. r-la •1119 ---·: CHltll JON•S COAST
•l•CTltlC, mt A Se. Pair• .. • .......... Ml.C.........,,..
Oii 1 ¢1 AllMJ-._A ... .................... Ma.~ .,.. , .......... ~ ...
...... uaf
OWi I #I A.Jw TMI......_._..._.,. ..
c-..., Cllfil .. Or .... c..y -~11.""-P'I ... ,........ Or-.. c...e Dal4Y ......
Dec. M 11 "" Jtl!L 7, 1AJ .aff
..
..S1111l ' ........
s·
6
7
8
D
A
I
L y
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0
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A s s
I
F
I
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D
o,_. C0Mt DAILY PfL.OTfThurtdey, JMUlfY 1 .. , 1M2
Ii
" ..
R&~1'1~
-· ----
T,..orwy
SH.ati01t?7
FURNlSHED · Rent by
rronth or longer. Beaut
2 BR 2ba Newport Condo
w/view $12001 mo
Realtor 7~ 1877.
Specious studios. one
and two bedroom apart-
ments. FURNISHED
Ind UNFURNISHED.
Oakwood also olfers
• All Utllitlel Paid
• irnmectt.te
OccuPlncy . '1 Mlltlon In
Recre9tion
And Much More•
For a monlh. or a. IJte-
bme Models open daily
9am to 6(lm Adults only
no pets
Pocffic
Terroc•ADh 665 PARK DRI(/E CM
Bachelor and one bdrm
apts. All adults and no
pets. Pool, BBQ and
laundry room
"1:9tfield
_,.
-··----
•
· ·~..,.. ~w_..;..._, .. ,. '•1 H-...11 u1 -11&1n•i ,.;.; ,...... • ' .. ~~· ····~!!.."!••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• : •••••••••••••••••..................................................................... toeo.t'Jl my "vu,.,., nr !!Ntnpoo fl at.tam clu11. Crown mo I& Id lo & , OardtnJn¥wanted, by ell· PROFv•a•ON"L ~!Je ffoustk~pll\f ••I MOYIM6• PAJNT!fUlE!DS
aaa.Loard Color brl1htt11t11 wllt maQlltl , wall units. ecr hortlculturlat. HANDYMAN AT 81.tpplielfumlahed Top Quality. Special WOR.K 30yr1ri1p lot 7 -t'fllU · 10 min. bituh. cabin eta. lh rd wood SpecladUil'I In plants l ENSIBLt PRICES l'!'.u!t'l!t)(thY. !$~ c.,.. in handllna. zs yr• tat. Arouatlf t>tllln11a.
•by1ltUnc: fenced yd, Hall, llv/dln, tlM sa: aol*kiu to woocl pro-& !...!.. .. !.~ ... mv a et' nbtl . 919,228.S · WNlO>&•Ut.alntta1nee tip. Competltlvt rate.. l>avls P•ln!lnl f!!! SUlll 1~1~':.'rlctln~;~ =:/: Wr'-'.'11~:,,c~~ ~.&.1H52t ~~;'d:OT;;a-·0,:~id! : IWs>•lr • lnatall eler ~'1.ottlNewYrSpeclal Noovertlme. 730-lJ...53_ HOUSEPAlNTlNC
M -petodot ¢-.i i other uottc plants. plumb,ra~ntry' ' onHouaeCtHolftf! ARVJNGCOLLEOt: Collettstudent,exp'd ature women to care U • .,.rlf!ar. .. .................... 714-411.42'11 541*4;evea770-8177 131·28119/'40-8'1 STUDENTSMOVlf'JO Low..!.ate_! l>ana6461811l
ror your ch.lid. Mr home, Y 1 'Xf.· work DRYWALL/ACOUSTIC u-.. · WE"'""un/WEEKDAY CO Uc. IT12HM. P--'-l~lllllOftl 842·8012 _ Rea, ·0101 14yruiq> hllyllc'd6 -Dl.andkapdtalnt. .._.,Md....,. ~" " Insured &41-84%7 ..,........,
l&:kl'" C.....t~C09Cf'tft 1111\lttd. 532·MU Resid/Comm. Cltan·up. '"'"•••••••••. ........ HOUS~~~~NING WA'ICH US GROW I ...................... .
T , n·ovw LtHaulin 548·24119 __ ftARNVOOO fLOORS 5.,1..,._, ST•IDVING ACTORS HANGING 110/ROLL ..... •••••••••••••••••• u••••• ••••••••••••••• "' ALLTAPINO -..""if l Qu lit H l J "" Oi$C. Oil poptr Strip· For all you n* to know THOMPSON'S Alltextur114ra"ou1llc Clean·ups, Sprinkler ""'aut l.lllye eaned .a Y oustt ean na MOVING COMPANY J?..lllj...§tott84S932S aboutblMruptcy,calt CONCRETECONSTlt Frcitost. kevln&7S·to88 Systems. General Main· ~andw~. 832-4881 withaPertoaalTouch fast It Careful I.owes! 'l14/83S-9l82 Uc. #393313 M2·8482 talnance •00·7287• Btth556.0t56 · M C Custom Wullpaperln&. 1--~:..:.=~:.::::...---1-------.....-==---=;;..;;..;=-1DNftiltW.lc11 . A lHOUSECLEANJNQ Rata Law Allow1 I Satisfaction Quann
....................... •e()'perl(lft• E.M. oeslin ' Check ....................... HauJ,cleaoup,concrete ,..A11 · .. .,,,.~~· •-M 1150714 GaWICK I SOH Brlclc & Block 115·902T P a c k a c I n i I s H Tree Tr l m m I n a & rerooval Dump True II: -~ ~ ne. ---~ o•trt
~ • •••••••••••••••••••••• REPAIRS FOR LISS
Sbln1le1, flat 30 yra. ~ }'reent. 771>-1"125_
Roofln11 Fa.t Str\llcel
XJn1 Reta. frff Elt.
49'""
BALBOA ROOFIN(H."0
'J1w only tooflD& CO with
('On1truction tebatu
673-6'743, 613 8229
~ber Rooftnl(·•ll typu . New recoV'(lr decks.
I.fr 1411802_~ !@4
Sewlllg/~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• .....,_ CONCRETE ....................... ChMrttW.lcn ,....................... LADY XLNTREFS Visa.Ur/Ins 673,°"" teed. S I. Shdhn.
BuildmSincelNT an~1 PCB H arvey Removal at Reasonable ckserv.642-7638 COSTAMISA. •etc. 064 ~~~~.~~•••••••••
Dressmuker Al.Tl':RATIONS
<.:all548 0&00
Addllions . _...,.del'in, c.r..lc Tit Hardison 545·3701. Pmes. Haullna, Odd DUMP JOBS ..--lT llVl'"'I p~ BRYANT'S Tat ,~...., ••••••••••••••••••••••• Job Cl •-s 11u i Jb rwnr-v • " -...., • ·• Acc1..... Ooo,.., wlndowa pat o Hanseo'sCtramic Ttle lledric.. ~~ 673 ~ u P 5 · .. ma ... ov DI 0 1 Wonderful References .......... ~............. Wallcovenng Removul ..................... ..
........................ covers. Fret es\. Reu. Floan. Showers· Tube ........................ ' . Call MIKE§f6·1391 Call Sioux ~ Pa1nllilJ by Richard All 'l'ype!. 642-1.343 fif,tn~Wu~;:i~ed
P/R Qtrlies, WZa, Fin. Uc. 1310042 549·2170 Call anytime 972.4639 ELF.c'l'RICIAN priced Put a Worry to i:test ! HAULING' DUMP W ·9306 Sinor. Lie, ms. 13 yrs of Rers Juhll 891 1667 Stmts. Complete Set-up ROBTSTEINBRONER, right free estimate on Walce Up & Rem1oder JOB.5 ask for Randy ().&alit w k 0 d happylocal cu.stomers. ,...../ltpoir :t
Ii . Reas. S40·58.'M GEN'LCONTRACTOR CllldC... large'orsmallJobs. Calls! Morning After· '641·84Z7 ' bte. ~ef orC' u rn t Thank you. 631·4410 ...... , ........ ~........ <.:ustomt'eram1cT1le Uc 1399463 64.\ 6456 ....................... ti(' 139&621 673-0359 noon Evening. $26 00 Per e, s. a am CustoM P"""-a PLASTER PATCHING Prompt sen · free ei.t ~ • • lld Care, my home, · , Mo For Information Q.lAHUPYOUIACT Bob ht 673·?012. 2:\ rs e~ Lk. 403941 Restucros. Int/ext 30 ChlJ(k97$1108 ....................... Mtlld.g xlnl refs. inlanta tbru 4 20 RESID/C:M L Send Name Telephone TODAY ! Yard/garage HOUSECLEANING Bo~ed. fu Refs Color yn. Neat Paul~ 2977 Tree Servlc•
Driveways, parkb1g lot ....................... xrs.,C.M.645-61M8 wor\r\!~~ AJS:!s~n Number &c 'Request to rln·~~· etc. l lon lrudc Thoroughly done. Wuh ex .S63-0!UlDl.ck Neatpatehes &rtutures ..................... ..
repairs, sulcoattng, CabinetslCarpeotry Cluni Senlc , · P08ox289 HB 92647 ClS o.>l·lll93124hrs) &Iron Rers 1135-9042 'J·B~AINTING -fret.st. 193-1439 •E."<putTrtt Prunin11• rooli'!&repaln.Lic'd. Smalliobs&Repalrs •9 ti UCDELECTRICIAN v ---c II cJ SliSAs alt63Hl99 Free estimates. ~·2003 ....................... QuaJ work . Reas rates Hc.dylna11 HAULING Mauwy SPECIA ! INT/EXT. ED'SPLASTERIN~ .,,~1~:;"111 .arsN:fs~
AlJ.SJ'ATEPAVING .... 1uu.-.cu• "'TE Fteee111. 631·5072Tom ....................... Quick cleanup yd ....................... drywall. Larry645·938~ AllTypes Int or•.xt. ""---
Se ... ~ """ --Carpentry Masonry Fheesl.Kris631-0953, BRlCKWORJC Small l' S II M · 645-8258 ReatU('l'05 alcoating ·Striping ....................... cte•MJ Stnlc11 Frwlt Doon Roofing . Plumbing Rkk 631-1)865 jobs, Newport, Costa "' ma 'I prictJs ----Repain.Comm./Resld. FlNEFINISHWORK Homes6'1S:97SS0Hices •••••••• .. •• .. ••••••••• Orywall ·Stuao Tile Mesa. Irvine. Rers. are small ! CdM. Nlr. PLASTER&STUCCU Uc.J397362 ~8181 Remodeling/Doorshung •FRENCH DOORS • Remodel. J.B 646.9990 HauHng/rlean-up. dirt. 67s,3175 Exp'd.Ron673·6477 Repair.Nojobtoo~rnl
Oilld day care. uc·~1 hot R 720-1260CdM eo.r.t G al 10 panes Installed. 6' shrub/tree tram. ell' G.L. Mangun Paioltni 6454¥ 645 4199
••EXPERT ••
TREE SERVICE * •4'3·2220•,, ........ lunches, Costa Mesa G w. VANDERVORT on. tMr slider opening, S7SO com General Malntainanre JWlk, trash 848-49114 Custom Bnck Masone)' Cust work Llc 11362478 ~
area. Phone: 556-6884 CONST LOE/SMALL ....................... pl <wipa1nted1640-1065 Repairs & Decorating HAULING -Student has COmpl yard construr Ins. Fl'ee~ 731 8281 ....................... --------•
&M...--673-1745 "-l~r "~* . --• allt • Ray640.S144 !Jee lrll('k Lowest rate t1on. pool d eeks & All Painting. int 5450 ext Drams cleared Crom s10 JAYf; Tltf:f,C \II r. _.___,., -All phases, lie, bonded, --•g HOME IMPROVEl't.ENT l endosures. Local rers ..,.,.. N •-I Plumbm11 Reuairs Complett• !\t'lll1C't' :ind ........ ••••••••••••••• Strfice exper. Fl'ee est & advice •u•••••TR•••E•E••5••••••••• Repair Mainten';nce ProTuP:!J3 ~~~~~~ 00-8M2 ~es~a~ers ~~f292 _E!~~_h!1&M 642 9033 i.tump l!nndini: HI H~
AGGRESSIVE legal •"•••••••••••••••••••• AllenConst(Mike) Hl!atin~ rarpentry exp LH' In~ U409JOll representation, law or We Care Crpt Cleaners 497-5322/499-~ Topped/removed._ clean ele1: llle · ~"ree est No TREES/SHRUB TR IM Yoo save! Brick. blO<'k, CUSTOM INT I EXT Property MClltOCJemerit Window CleattlnCJ
fices, 24 hrs. 545·8422 St~~~!~~~1r· eor,oraHot1s =~~:~;~1~~~gired & job 'too sma II. 645:2811 ~~11!~ & Yd Cle5~~:~1 _;~~:e j~6. Jf~:fhr EXPi]~TR~\RE~1c Jo: ...... ;.0;·EATY.. .... ·~~i;~~1~;~·;~·h·1;1~ ... n .... ~ Woril"uar. "•c3716 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---CM NU·BROOK 545 1_175 ._. ... ,., ... G.,._.E ......
•• .. ••••••••••••••••••• !; ,,.,,. C O GardeningWanted ~ Hart Masonry Brick, ,_""' ""'"' C11ll&11\\h111t'WU1du" Babys1t, our qA homes. 1 No Steam/No Shampoo OIPOIA Tl MS MOWJng, edging, raking. I bid all Jobs. lge/sml ~~;;;;;;~;-.-;·~:......... Block, Concrete Rer NELSONS PA I NTING Orange Co area IS ) 1 s ~lt'a1u11g Ltd 5-18 11&3
yr & up, anytime. Stain Specialist. Fast & PARTNERSHIPS s wee p i n g Fr e e Quahl> ·ex per, he'd Want a REALLY Cl.EAN Lie li8294. 646-1597 Int/Ext Re) Id Comm experienre Call fo1 info • llESI IJ"·'iTI \ L • 642·8482, 646·5759 dry Fl'ee est. 839 1582 Formed by Attorneys estimates 645·4372 or Da' e 1 894·9798 HOUSE! Call Gingham ----Acoustic rethogs Reri>. and rates. .\\'g l ,1) SJO a\.: 2 ,1y
O.C.C AR EA Reas rates. 557·57oo 64.5-5737. European Cr11rtsma n All Girl Fret> est. 645·5123 ~•••••••••••• •••• .!!_c'd. fl'~..!_st 837 ~ _ _J_6J·I ~2 S;tS Chn~ l/57 8388
Loving mother will SEU. idle items with a SEU. idle Items with a WHY NOT ONE OF Jobs Rig or Small Call ROBIN'SCLEANING •ABC MOVING· Exp.. PaJnllng'stheGame.
babysit. f u 11t1 me Dally Pilot Classified Daily Pilot Classified TIIE BEST! Simmons 1.fter•IPM 964·523.l_ Servil'e a thoroughly prof . low rates Quick, Pedersen'b the Name!
546-8653 Ad. "2-5678. Ad. Gardening, 646·6684 Want Ads Call 642·5678 _rle11n house_. _ __54.Q:.08.l7 careful se.r_vice. 552-0410 I)~~~ 642·0862
REPAIRS OHLY!
_Al!]_n>es, 646 646:J
Wam Ad Result. 642-5678
Marucurist wanted with
Collowmg. busy HB shov
3 bl from pier. 536 1212 &
Orthodontir
X Ray lab. front vJr1\'t'
work, SOITI(• dental l').
per necessary N~"por1 ~.!£.b _Eea 7G0·25S4
PARKJNGATTNONTS Valet Women M t•n,
FTtPT . da\• or nite. for exciting ne~' opp<>rt~ 1r
0 C Must lie nt>at . dt·
l)l'lldable. rlt>x1ble Prel
person exp 1n h~111tah
t} 1nds Good pJ) &
gratwllea Wom~11 l.'n
couraged to appl)' For
uppt call 558·4822. hl•t
9-~. MQ!!.~U Fri
960-0746 ask foI_e_at rart time
MAltKETIMG MGI. Easy. pleasant work. tra1n1ng pro\ 1ded Tra('t sales. exper PhoneMr Walkerrorin
nttessa -962 ·6684 Io 968 0088 EH!~
MEAT CUTTER Or ---
Counte,man. Nfo:W PART/TIME
MEAT MARKET B11t I OHice glr~ .. sludent OK Jim's, 2000 Newport Hours Sam.noon. M·l'
l}lvd,C.M.646·39~ CMINl!_area 64584110
MECHANIC Margregor Yar hts.
1631 Pl~enlla, C M
Medt ral Assistant. front
& back. EKG. \'l•na
puncture. typing
645· 1720
PART TIME &-9pm Expandtnl! }OUlh
rounsehnie r1rm h11 -;
operunf!s for 3-5 sharv out(!OIQI: malure Pl'OPIC
lo mot1 \'ate amh1tious
t0.13uolds rall2·51lm
642·4:i21. ext 343 1\ sk for
Andrea.
PUILIC Rll.ATIOMS The A"rben C0Mp~n1u
on IA.do art mte.rvaewina
""'vld•i. wi-o want to Think • Grow Rlrh For ~l lntervlew,c•ll
'73 2902
CleHrV11·" W111dows
Xlnt St·r\ 111'. 11 t'l' l'~I Ken 673-9018
R1;-t·epl :,11 \I, I' \I t.
plt'a,ant Vl111n1• \ Ol<'l'
C:'ll iW 7305
RECEPTIONIST
necd\•d l or hu sy
Ophlhalmolo)!lsts' of
fice Somt' accounting & l~ pml! l''P•·r rl'Q.111 red !'t1Pd11·al expt>r pre·
fern'fl 1711)646 U1L
RK'\'IJl . <.ountl') C'lab in
:-\8 wi"kS rull time re r«pl flltht I><' articulate.
eheerlul & proft>~Monal
Ahillt\ to hanrllr sw1trh
board & !!flOcl t~ pin)!
sk ill~ ;1 re CS!><'nllJI
Some "l't•krnd hours
Calls.I~~ 01an1·
R1'f 1•111 i\ p1~t ;-.; II hrm
s1·• k' <>hJrp prol Ill
111\ 11!u,1I l'h·111t'. t' 11111)!
µ111 "'' 1 illl ~hJron al
11.51 l~l.11
Re<ept/Gtft Offlc~
ln\1,\m1•nl l11111k111i:
r1rm m ·, "l,,•fl H1-.11 Ii
n"'tl• 11•· 1,1, I" 1 '"" tu pt•rrorm J '.•nl'I\ of
dut11·) \\ 1111 h "111 1111 luclt·
dn!>"l"l llll! lcl1·t1ht•IU'
l(rt>tl1n 1 ht11h t' 1m1.i:. h~ht \ H :11111 \ I'. Iii
•Ill.! r;u..,I t •·lc•phnnc•
t1•1·h1111101• .1 nd pro r,.,.,,1111:.I .q1p1 .. 1r,1nrt
.11111 1l1·r·11·.111ur .1r1• ""'''h·"' .11t1d111l•·~
l,o1\tf, '"'"'':incl Ill\ J•.lll\ I I "Uf 1\1 I'
l'••mp<'l1t1\• -.11.1') nun
n1•·U~tlt d "1111 • \
·~·llt ll•. ·'"" -kith l'.ir mt 1•n I• \l .lj'f'l t 1 • 11
~l.111 I~ n t 1·d1'.\ %!1 '10(11.1
RECEPTIONIST
l•ol ii I Ill• 1111111•,
ll • 1 .1 .1n 1 I• h 11 11 •• p• 1~.111.1hf\ .11111 1'.1111d
I~ 1'•111! -~.lfh 11·4u111•d
l'Jll
R.E. IHVESTMEHT
fA1111 "hile ) nu lt>arn ll F.l!IT \G E
I:'\\ f ST ~I 1-: NT 11. 111
tt•a1 h 'ou c:reall\ e
f1nan11ni:. 1031 Ex
'hani:rs. 1n\ estor de-
wlupn11•n1 & tounsehn~
~.Xpl·r \'nunsclors re-
l'l't\l' 100'. romm This
1s an unUliual oPPlY for rtJ?ht person. Confiden-
11 at inlt'r\ 1 e w. Ca II
\Intl',~& $880
RESTAURANT Expem•m't'<I fish rook.
part time>. & da\'
hostl'ss •hook keeper.
Mon -i''r1 333 Bayside
Dnve, Nwpt Bch
Restaurant
Hostess. 20·2Sihrs week.
~t be able to work
days Also Bu~bo>. ex-perd. 3 night shirts
673-~
Retail
BULLOCKS
SOUTH COAST has the followinK per ma ·
neot openmgs
UCB'TIOMIST
BEAUTY SALON 32/hrs per week Book
BP,POintments. PIHSIOl
telei>hone voice, Must
hatt some nigllls ava.11.
COOK
48 /hrs per we~k
Previous Jrlil ('X Pfritn« req rtd.
MAIMTIHAMCI
40/hn pet Wttk. Buie
('arpentry & mlnlrqal
eltdrical b1ck11round
rtqlllrcd
Pie .... -.. reJUmt
qnhliMn-i. to: I, ' ... ._ .. ~wt· •• .:a loOz.
. o.IJ}' Pilot • to.ta Mesa. Ca.
Sales 111
MAKE MONEY selli~
life-saving devices.
Me.,.,.Mn o Da, wk, month 646~1
WA NTED: Slip, U ·
ttunge for use of Mttm•
magnlf. 47' cutter.
8S7-21194
-=-====.=..;'--~---i
Wanted : Unwanted pal'· rot. Reuonable trades. J.C. PO Box n Laguna ~
Balboa Covu. Power
boat sUp for rent to 38'. 6'7S-llS6 : ....
I060 ORANGE-WINGED ' •••u••••••¥•~•n••••• AMAZON;TAMt. 38' OfC.bor•~ mooring -="-==--'------iPortable corral. Santa '2SO. MS-6M6 w/270 '67 •Sportcraft
ACJa,fft!lghls area , •--&"'----• •IOt O \win eoaines, many
King Sile Box Spring &
=:...:;.::;==~-=-~"--l Mattress. S60 Ea . hame. $25. Fantastic
Cond. &42-1306 Wkdys,
~ .rr~a.. UI d ...-.-""1IJ'll"I xtras + 19' endboard. ac_, · S &1•· " e-••••••••••••••••••••••• 1"4,000 Terms 0 BO. liverl 1425. T·l83'7 Yamaha B·U elee. org•n ... ..,.
Pu re b r e d A r a b I a n walnut finish SlOOO. like 1"!!!67~5-!11!!911!!!!179~1!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1I newm~ 1~
MKtiiluy H71
Sohner Upndlt.
12S0008<l •536-'"5•
Organ. 2 keyboards.
······················•1.:::=:;::;,.:;;;,=--
AJICOMPUSSOI
l bp Binks. S250~BO.
S36·9832
Boat 1itiP for Rent-Will Take up to 6S ft. Shore
power & Water Avail.
$650 mo. 673-9'32 l
For Rent· Boat space up
lo UI' Newport Beach
@'/mo. 494-~~3
•Boat shp avail. ror
SG-7S' yacht Xlnt secun·
ty & loc. 673-7873.
~ ~~:!!!::~.=::~:::--
i 4 Dauun plcku~-good interior, xtras S2zvu best
oCfer. 492· 7640
'•'~ Osima.ndo. «c.3ik ml. 2 .-tltts. B . t V-6 Wtf. Gd eal30.
"'•"--llM . , .... ...,..
, "'4tMhr$4 .. f .. 7
T• Dollar ""Pid
For YourC~r !
JOtlifSOM & SOM
. U.CC MtrC9'J 2G5 bor Blvd: Costa .. ..,. 540-5630
Premium prices paid for any used car
.a~cn or domestic l In good concUtioo ..
Stt Us Firsll
CIEYIEI BMW
th &ciffllt 't2
IMW's An ft....t
A few remainini 'II
Models & Demos art still available! We
spec:iaJbe in : Europeu
delivery and flawiu1
.,,.ewned BMW's
Where Customer
Senict Comes lst ! ~ SaJ~iCe·LeuiJlt
2111 W. lJt, Slota Arla m•> m .3171 Closed Sunday
ltl2MODll.S
tel
MOWU!
Come See Us Today!
....
11'72 no. 1 ownet", zhlt
oond. $1IOO.
M»lOl!VCI
'77 110 Wafo!t. fully
equip., + AM/..-a CIU, nu radials, 4Slt m I,
14000/0BO 142-1711 g.-
..., '7Jt .......................
"II Xll. lood coad. Tiiie
C111er paymeDtl . ..., ...
'71 Spyder, 5 c::t stereo, .,., lood • nao. M74rtieves
•
llACMWCAll
.. Oo"9 Street. Newpelt ...._ Tll. 75HIDO. c.tt "'-
... ,. ..,. 1pec1.,.... tor Mt ~. PeuteoC.·IMb a. Maaerat t. ·
flOISALI '11' Plato batd•back,
daaa, 4 ..-ct. oew Urea
1•11•1• raek ,100~
lnllltportaUoD car. Sl200
OIO.
t0-ll10 Jett
Gl·Tmll...t•
Platoffatdlback. Waa .,..:;m~=------1 l• wr•ck. BOdy and ..,, rorct Fiesta, clHD, frama dama1e. All else
1111111 ~ New tires • c.·. VI. (4'7,000ori1 ml), Ida. .-.121.2. MW trUI • radlator.
17 r-111rtw, lood coad, f.~· v~ 1ood wb1tt • .. _ _.... ..... -or ..._, DO brc*en a1111.
·-· -...... l aterlor 1ood. Reds
beltaft•.M · avail. A 1reat deal '°" GFord8*aOoaWp, ~~0ttparts 11les.
Dlt,...,..CGlld. llllll Mil all toeetber. •f'JMOll 1190, mah otr. Call
-
US .. !.'J U.... tt --..n1::t0pm . ....... _;rr ,_ ......................... -..... . -......., • M ..... 'T7 Mart V 'Delip mclle s-_., llOD VI, aut.o, of NE • USED r .L.t,'topcOoci ... AM/Pll, aew tir es , <lillmllmt &vm• lilver •red, P/S. $1700.
~ ('\"'4Nf l ~
••f. RI '
·, 4 f I 1,
-· ... -·---·----4 -
JUK '75-157t. 675-0073
MATCH THI MUMIHS OM THI
MAP WITH THI MUMIRS IN THI 10115
MIWfOl'T DA TSUM
-Dov. SttMt, Newport a..c11. Tel. ~1300. At lN
.,...... of Jernbor99, MecArthur & Brtttol behind Vic·
tlfte llltion. a... s..ice. L.eet#\g a Pwta. A..e • ... '° ... public. .
•
• IOI LOM•t• POMRAC 13900 Beech BIYd .. w .. .,,._,. T•. -..e51. Orange
County'• oldmt encf"Targett Pontt.c ......,I~ a.tea,·
~.Plf1a. .
• IAILClmllOl.lr 800 IOUlh Collt Htgttwey UIUM.._,.
~ ......... ,....
8ALEB HOUM:.Man.-fn. •1, Ill H. 8"". 1CM
414-1131 . ~
COITA MISA •ATSUM 21141...., llMt., Calta Meea. Tef. 5404410. S.Vlng
Orange County for 11 ,_,... 1 Mlle So. <40CS.
• • MfSIT P09, IMC.
!tofM of w ... h White~ 5440 Gerden Grove Blvd., W..¥1--lft•lf'I.--. Tll. ,....10.
' '
~ . . ....
... I
•'
'
sest ·
~''
Harold A. Poling
Executive Vice President
North American Automotive Operations
Ford Motor Company
"Ford Escort and Mercury Lynx are two
of the world's most extraordinary cars.
The evidence is convincing.
Escort, atone, is o utselling every
import car line in America, based on
reported deliveries through November,
1981.
And both Escon and Lynx are
retaining the highest percentage of
original price of any compact cars,
according to NADA's most recent Used Car Guide.
An unprecedented offer.
Now, as proof of our confidence in t.ltese world-class cars, Ford is
making an unprecedented offer:
From now through March 13, 1982, Ford will give every buyer of a
new Escort or Lynx the following two-year, all-encompassing program:
Two years of rost-free maintenance.
For the first two years or 24,000 miles, Ford will pay for all .
scheduled maintenance. Including tune-ups. Including oil changes and
filters. Including parts. Including labor. At no cost to you. To reduce
the cost of ownership still further, Ford is also giving you:
Two years of workmanship coverage.
Our workmanshlp coverage includes virtually everything-for
two years or 24,000 miles, whichever comes first.
The only thin~ not covered by this limited warranty are tires,
fluids between scheduled intervals, abuse and accidents.
Everything else is covered. Everything.
A 5% cash bonus.
As additional help to the buyer, Ford is also offering a cash bonus
equal to 5 percent of the base vehicle sticker price of any 1982 Escort
or Lynx.
This can mean as much as S375 on the Escort Gl.X wagon and as
much as S405 on the Lynx l.S wagon. This cash bonus comes direct to
you from Ford and may be taken as a check, or used as part of the down
payment.
In total, this is the best offer on any small cars sold in America.
And it is the closest thing to cost-free driving."
1982 Mercury Lynx
1bc '% Cash Bonus is limJted to one car per customer. Take delivery
from your Ford 6r Uncoln-Mercury Dealer between January 13 and March 13, 1982.
'
TAKING A Fl.ING -Nothing like ·a good workout between
J anuary·s rainfalls. Nine-year-olds Jennifer Passage,
Genesee Swartwout, Erin Agren and Donna Colomby, all
.........................
from Laguna Beach Girls Club. play in Bluebird Canyon
·Park.
Four. youths linked to jailliouse. death·
Evidence reveals Laguna victim in fight outside Coast Highway bar
By STEVE MITCHELL QI .. DMty "'9t .....
New evidence in the jaUbouse.
death of Robert Gary Wardman
last stimmer in Laguna Beach
shows the victim was in a filht
with four Laguna teen-agers just
hours before he was discovered
dead ln bis cell.
But no criminal charges wiU
be sought against any of the four
youngsters as a result of a
four-month investigation that .
shows the boys left Wardman
lying on a sidewalk outside a bar
followtng a physica.l altercation.
, Wardman, a. 35-year-old ape
salesman was found
seqii-conscious outside the Main
St~eet bar on South Coast
HiChway last July 22.
J1ollce transported Wardman
to tbe city jail after paramedics
calJed to the scene determined
thei man was intoxicated.
Less than 12 hours aft.er be
wu booked into Laguna Beach
city jail, Wardman wu found
dead in bi.I cell.
Ap officer later admitted be
dropped Wardman OD bis bead
while helping him out of a patrol
car in the back of the police
station, but failed to notify
superiors about the fall.
That admission came alter an
autopsy performed on Wardman
showed he died of a severe skull
fracture suffered nine to 12
hours prior to his death.
But Dr. Peter Yatar of the
county's coroneu's offiee said
the skull fracture was of such
magnitude that It couldn't have
occurred by dropping fhe victim
from a Wpt of only three to 20
Inches from a patrol car. ,
Investigators spoke to t;o of
the boys who were identified as
having been involved in the
altercation, said police Lt. Terry
Temple.
·'Information from the boys
.was strongly indicative they and
two other boys had, lo fact,
gotten Involved in a physical
altercation with Mr. Wardman
on July 22." He said the four boys, aged 16
and 17, bad gone grunion
bunting oil Brooks Street beach
late on the night of July 21.
They were walking ,back_ to
"He (Wardman ) started yelling
incoherently, at them. . . ''
,, was not untlJ Sept, M tbat
police received informaUoo that
several boys bad been invoht,ed
in a fie.bl with Wardman on
South ~t Highway the Diehl
be was found unconscious on the
sidey.talk.
their car about midnight wben I
they saw Wardman on the inland
,side of South Coast Higbway, U .
Temple said.
"Wardman appeared to be
extremely intoxicated and was
suggertna," Te'mple said. He
said lbe youngsters were talking
·1oudly and Wardman apparently
thought they were yelling at
him. ••He (Wardman ) started
yelling incoherently at them,
then crossed over to the
ocean side of the highway and
. confronted the boys," he said.
The boys purportedly ignored
Wardman and in the middle of
the 1400 block, crossed to the
inland side of the highway.
TheJ were standing near the
Maio Street bar when Wardman
allegedly ran toward then a1aln, wnina his arms and attempting
to 1trilte one with bia ftlt.
The boy avoided the bl9w, and
Wardman reportedly sluued a
second youth in the face. 1ben
he tried to hit the first boy
again, at wbicb time the leeood
younister tackled Wardspan,
brlniinl blm down to the
sidewalk. When the boy stood up, be saw
Wardman lyln1 on bi1 back,
mumblinl and movlne t\a bead
from side to slde. <See JAIL. Pace A.2>
.. 1 cu MU· Death car pa~senger testi(ies
Sa11s-~we panicked' in Balboa hit-run tragedy
would dr:op 10 percent every three montbl.
Al AlrCal and Republic'•
.allocations dropped, fll1bt1
would be awarded to otller
carrlen on a competitive bull.
Tbose carriers usln1 · aircraft
producln1 the leut amountl ol
noise would be awarded the
·•new" fllabta, the offtclal said.
The PUl"pOMI of the county'•
plan are to maintain a lid of 41
jet departures per day from the
Divers ~eekmg
to recover air I '. I ...
\
crash victims
W ASHlNGTON (AP>
Divers in thermal suits chopped
through thick ice on the
Potomac River today in their
grim search for scores of bodies
entombed in the fuselage of a
-<:rasned jetliner. A police official
said "the slow, tedious task" ol
recovery may take three days.
Seventf ·four of the 79 people.
on the plane were killed in the
crash ol the Florida-bound jet
taking ott from National Airport
Wednesday and most sank with
tbe plane, still strapped in their
seats. District of Columbia
police said two other IM!C>Ple
were tilled wbeD'the Air Florida
plane broad.sided cars as et.ey
inched across the 1'tb Street
Bridie laden with rush-bour
traffic. The impact 1beaud the
tops off aome can.
Air '1orida tried to purchase
Air California laat year, and has
been trying to bU)J a contto1Un1
.share ol Westem Airlines.
~ -Jt.s f)uvy eq¥,P1Dett was
brought In tod9' to hoist the
aluminum crypt from beneath
the ice, the bodies or two victims
-an infant and an adult -were
spotted lo the river between lee
floes. A helicopter lifted lbem
out. The bodies were ftoieo
solid.
A crane was positioned on the
span. It lowered a cage bearing
two men to the water for a
closer look. Although a forecast
snowstorm bad not begun, the
midmorning temperature was 27
degrees and the sky was gray,
adding to the difficuJties of lbe
task.
The divers were making holes
in the ice for a platform from
wbicb to dive. The Army Corps
of Engineers brought a huge
plank to place in the river for
the same purpose.
Ira J . Furman, a spokesman
for the National Transportation
Safety Board, said there will be
parallel diving operations -one
set of divers trying to locate the
plane's flight data recorder; the
other surveying the fuselage to
see whether it can be lifted out
intact.
trancis McAdams, head ol the
NTSB team of investigators,
said, "They may have to llft the
wreckage before they get to the
bodies."
The airport, closed after the
crash Wednesday, reopened at 7
a . m. EST and was operating
normally. JeUinera flew ln a
steady stream over tbe site, less
than a mile from the end of the
runwar, as crew members on a
~\lery boat poked long poles
lnto the dark water.
Helicopters were flyini so low,
they almost touch~ the river.
"We expect the recovery lo be-. -,
a s low, tedious task, takin1
anywhere .from one to two to
<See JET, Page A.%)
* * Victims
of crash
listed
* f • I I i J • t
' J ,
~ •
WASHlNGTON (AP> -Aif
Florida bas released a list ol 12
passengers and five crew
members booked aboard the
Wasbingtoo-t.o-Miam.J ru11tt that
crashed Wednesday. In aclditioo,
the airline aald It believed there
were three infaoll on the plane.
The .airllne did not ideatily
survivors. Five · people are
known lo have sur•lved the
crash and are hospitalized in u.
Washington area. ~
Oi1trict of CoJumbla Mayci[
Marion Barry aa.id the five were
tbe only sllt'Vivors. ,
Here ar.e tbe five people
known to have survived:
1. FU1ht attendaat KeJJy
Duncan of Miami. '\I
2. Mr. Joe Stiley, Alexandria,
Va. "'
3 . Bert Hamilton ~ Gaithersburg, Md. ::
4. PrisciUa Tirado.
S. Patricia Felch, Herndon,~
Va.
Here are the others listed
aboard the plane by Air i'lorida.1: • 6. Gordolft .......,._,. r. ,_ e1111e. 1. rt lloer. t . J-llurM. IO. Mn. IC. ewu ... GordOft Celvln. 12. J. Cerlucci.. ta. Mr.
CN"'"9N-14. ElfoilNnl C.-. IS. Mn.. S. °"9. 16,. ,_ DI..,. 11. CM 0.......... 11. ~
Eltls. It.,_ Ertciu ... a . a. I!~. n . Mr, J. Fallo. n. Tom Fl ...... n. ,.,...... '"-· •
Suwn F~. u. Mlh GMi.M. 26. ~ Gii .......
2'. 0-.. °""-"'· 21. eet11 H-It . Htrm.n ..._, JO. Ralllll ....._. 11 ........ Hiii«. D. J. HeMla. D . Mr. I!. Hentft. 14...,.... ·-·JS. E. KlMI-. • il. Mt. T. ICla'llty. ». 0rM I(~ a
"'-•,... K~I. "·Mr. I!. IC,_._ .. It'. LeuNt\1. 41. ,,_.~le. tt. e. ~ 41. Or Wlltlent T. Uddle. 44. C. Mel ....... C MrL Lff MtMltly.
46. Ric..,. Miner. '1 ~ ~ & ..,._ Leon Mu'911 .... Mr. s. Pl.._. Jt. Mn: ·T$
l'IOM. SI. MMy ..._...SJ . ..,._. ~ •
1'tetKll ........ Sol ..... M. ~. SS. Or .... SIMMftlkl.
56. It. S...Wled. SI. Wllll.-i L Siiia & W
Srnoltlfl. "'sJ:te...L S..., ... Mn. '1 .......... '1. W•IW U. Ml. H. ,....._ U. ..,;
J. Tlr.-. 64. It. T,..... 6S.-'-V....._
"' Jedi~ '1. Mn.. c. ~ .. Mr. Wllll-.... SltW... ..... • Ml. S. Woooe+-11. 7t. Wllllem ZeMlef'. 11. 0-.,. Tlefl. 7S. O. HMIM'.
a.. 14. C-uny~ IS.MM'-!. 75. P'l,...Offtttr Rogw Pllttit,at~ 76. Stftlw Iii.tit •lteMMI ......... Mleml. n . ,.,..,...........,..._.Ytl,.ICMI........._
Jn addition, the airline lilted
three untlcketed Infants. One
(See VICl'IMS, Pace ·.u)
should face felony hit and run "thud .. and saw the BMW drive '11':i!.5=:;:;
and felony man1lau1bter pall.
cbarses In Oran1e County He testified that he saw Gibbs
Superior Court. behind the driver'• wheel but did
Tbe beart.nc wu eoetiDUed to not immediately .... Uae there
Ian. a at U.. request ol DIDuty bad beman accident.
Dl1trtet AttGrney I.ck SuO.a He also tHtifled tbat be
after Judie Donald l>ufu Mid waited neu1J lls weeu before
be fOUDd ta... a.t11MD1 of one 1 totns to tbe poUff and =•
Olbbl out ot • '*'° card . .
Glbbl did .. teltlf)t durlq
tbebeartq.
ft• dllwtet auorae1 laaa .........................
car wttb ltl laeldHAta OUt ....
... bit tbe ·~ • ..._. ead'*'abs ... llle.,lna ,., ........ .,.... ..... .
• ..., ..... .., WU-to
*"fr tMt .... HI' .._.. --out; a faet "I ld1 II • enMlll ID •t•Mi•M.111 "'"9lHr or lllll
01'.. -.. .... •'" ••• ,... ··=·-...... ... ..... , • ., .. ,.. ••• i--w' ,, •• ri11ili1···--~--i ..... ':'."im
.~ ' ............... ., . ..,.... .......
a:U81'1NS -James Gibbs <left> and att9rney Robert Keefe
bear courtroom testimony that Gibbs drove the car that
kilted a Newport Beach man last September. rt
b
.c bfrom Page A 1
~ ~CRASll TESTIMO,!n7.·.
'!tier the lncldent, Kelly was the
'ffrl-t person to identity Gibbs as
th11 driven.
f'I Passenger Blackburn, under
questioning from Sullens,
offered a sketchy scenario of
what happened Sept. 19.
1 He testified Ulat be and Gibb&
Hd gone to the Newport Pier
..-ea to "meet girls" and had
started home jµsl past midnight.
u "I saw him (Warner) sprint in
aront of tbe car, there was
oo n t a c t an d ( I ) f e It t h e a.rt eld breaking," said
lum. "That was it."
um tatified that Gibbs ~ the car over to the curb ~ the two of them sat for
NMraJ minutes before laking
oft lh1t another witness, Paul
LDCas, testified that the caT
never stopped and only slowed
briefly before speeding off.
Lucas said he bad been with
Warner that night and had run
across the street just ahead of \im.
' "I beard a loud crash and a shattering of glass." Lucas said,
5 r turned around and saw
(Warner) rolling off the
" ~ Blackburn said that when they
. J~t the scene, Warner was stUJ
Wini in the street, unattended. ''We knew he was .injured,"
Blackburn admitted under
~estioning. • • , u1 "I said something like ·Hey,
.. t's go bae.k' -he <Gibbs)
tlldn't say anytbing. He was in a
daze."
Blackburn said be and Gibbs
later abandoned the car in a
opping center and got a ride
e from a man and woman
o Ga>bl knew. : • •. :•t l'~s protectiA,1 him,'' tputn ~spon(led when
;.1'b1 be did ool contact . . ~ . ~
M•s-laler referred to Gibbs
animal" and suggested
llallh•m "is the kind or person
.Wd leave a human being
in the roadway without so
cb as spilling in their
tion.''
•
TESTIFIES -Jack
Blackbum testifies that "we
panicked" the night James
Gibbs' car reportedly killed
a man in Newport Beach.
Witness Kelly testified at ooe
Point during tbe bearing that be
did not go to Gibbs' house before
contacting police.
Under questioninc from
Robert Keefe, Gibbs• attorney,
Kelly admitted "I lied about
that" and confessed he bad cooe
to Gibbs' house.
"But 1 didn't see him," said
Kelly, "be wasn't home."
He said be , Lucas and
Warner's brother Greg drove to
.Orange "because Gres wanted
to coalront him -l tust went
along for the ride."
Attorney Keefe later told
Jud•e J)ungan that he; bell~~
Kelly's testimony "is complete
fabrtcalion, woven by himself."
Deputy District Attorney
Sullens wd Kelly's testimony is
crucial in establishing that
Gibbs was driving witb his lights
out.
Sullens f.Sked for the
continuance lo subpoena other
witnesses he said, could confirm ·
,Kelly 's testimony.
• 8J TM ~IOda&ed P,.... WU.ter ref~ lo rele.,. it.I
1rip on tbe South ~oday,
.. ,.. ... 1n °'' Gultnatea. · wldM tbe Eaal du1 out from a
storm that roar•d up the
Atlaatlc coaat clo11lo1
bl1bwaya and cloeln1 airpotta.
Six days o( ccMtl and IOOW ha" killed at leaat UM people.
· The IDOWfall Wednelday wu
a curloe{ty ln fhe Gulf states, but
lt became a severe problem as
lcy power llJ\ea snapped,
deprlvlnt n~arly a million
peopJe of electrical power and
•ending lboulands to shelters.
,,.. ltorm dropped a....,.,..
of aaow • It et.arced us» u.. Atlantic cout, and left u much
aa •llht lneua from Vlrliala to
Rbocleltlud. TIM National Weatber s.rvtce
aald 1now lt HJ>eeted •••In
today from Ule Appatachlana
and lower Gr•at Lak.. to tbe
mld·AtJanUc 1talet and lato New • Enfland. wttb ralb formtnc to
tbe South. Ylnoeaotans were
warned that the storm head.inc
their way wu •'potentially dangerou1."
Temper•ture1 were expected
to remain in the teens aod ~
sex off ender faces death: rap
Suspect indicted in slaying of ~naheim bby; 12 .
The Orange County Grand
Jury has IJMlic~ a 3S·y~ar-old
·convicted sex offender for the
August, 1981, kidnap-murder of
a 12-year -old An'aheiin
news.,aper delivery boy.
· Tbe four-count Indictment,
hapded down' Wednesday.
accused Robert Jackson
Thompson of murder, kidnap,
sodomy and sex perversion in
connection wi\b the death of B~nj.amin Lee Brenneman. ·
The jury also added a special
circumstance allegation of
murder committed during
FromPageA1
a kidnapping, a count tnat eould
lead to imposition of the death
penalty If Thompson ls
convicted.
The ~repneman , boy's body
was found an the Rancho Palos
Verdes area after be
disaooeared from an Anaheim apartment complex on Aug. 25,
1981. The youngster died of strangulation.
The indictment against
I Thompson WU aauaht by the
OtaQ1e Cou.nty Distl"lct
AUoraey's omee to move tbe
case Into 1uperior ecpurt. ..
JAIL DEATH.
The four boys went to their car
an<t drove back past the tavern
where they saicJ they saw two
people s tanding over
Wirdman's body.
. The . boys never reported the
incident to polic:e, aod, Temple
said, one parent a ctually
FromPageA1
JET ...
three days perhaps," said
Jatpe~ Shugart. a D.C. police
ins~r. "We want to make the
recofery as quickly as "'possible,
but you must keep in mind the
fact that weather cond~ions are
auch that they are not conducive
to rapid recovery."
The NtSB "go team" or
invesllgators set up shop at
nearby National Airport.
Transportation Secretary
Drew Lewis; Sen. John Warner,
R -Va .; and Virginia's
governor-elect, Charles Robb,
visited the crash site early in the
day.
The last major crash involving
an airliner was on Oct. 31, 1979,
when a Western Airlines OC.10
crashed in Mexico City.
At least five people were
plucked from the fragments of
the plane or from the river
water, cold enough to kill in
minutes.
The ~ '737. carrying 74
pas senger.s ,and five c~ew
members, took off fr.om
Nattwist Airport, bjt lhe·'Pal of
the Htb Street Bridge. brokl in
two, then toppled into the river
barely 100 yards from a second
splln crowded with commuters
headed home to Virginia in lbe
driving snow .
Furman said there was no hint
why Air Florida Flight 90 to
Tampa and Fort Lauderdaie
crashed.
Instructed bis child not to
discuss the fight.
Sheriff's coroner's officials
determined Wednesday that
Wardcnan's deatb cerliffoate
will remain classified as an
accidental de•th·
Thal was based on the findings
of the district attorney's
investigation ttiat revealed there
was no criminal intent on the
part of the four youths.
The investigation determined
the incident was ·'more of a
self-defense situation on their
part," U . Temple S;lid. .
The boys were oot identified
because of their ares.
Rock perils
23 families
CASTLE ROCK. Colo. <AP> -
Twenty.three families were
ordered lo spend a second nfgbt
at a motel because an 1,100-lon
rock slab is threatening lo craah
on their homes. police said.
The famiUes were evacuated
Tuesday after the ' U.S .
Geological Survey determined
that an enormous slab of rock
was splitting from a cliff above
their homes, creating a fissure
up to seven feet wide and 30 feet
long.
Most of the split occurred
Monday, when residents of this
east-central Colo~do town of
4,000 heard a loud boom and felt
the ground shake.
Shrimp boat held
.. Ao ladlclment "' a formal
char&• made aealnst a person
by a ,-rand. jury. It does not
est&tbl14h guilt or innocence.,
TtlQqipson alr~ady had been
arr~sted and charged with the
slayio1, but the start of his
preliminary bearing in North
Orange County Municipal Court
had been delayed by defense
lawyers.
Because of the indictment. the
defendant was now to be
arraigned today before Orange
County Superior Court Judge
Luis Cardenas.
·Orange Coast
to celebrate
King birthday
Many actJvlties are planned
along \.be Orange Coast Friday
to commemorate the birthday or
the late Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr.
Officially. a sia'te holiday,
publid s chools will not be
holdfnJ classes ''and court will
not be~ session.
Al the University of
California, Irvine. a full day of
commemorative acliY.iUes is
scheduled.
Jtt 10-a.m., 'members of lJCl's
third world gioups•will speak oo
ci vU rights at an assembly at
Irvine's Mason .Park. From
there. those assembled will
march to campus down Culver
Drive and Campus Road. The
marc'h will en4 at the campus'
Gatew•y Plaza. ,
There, a rally honoring the
slain c.ivU rifbt.s leader is slated
to t>egi.n at noon. The rally will
include speakers. dancers and
tape recordings or several King
speeches.
At 3 p. m. in the UCJ Campus
Village, the film, "Legacy of a
Dream'· will be presented
followed by a panel discussion
one half-hour later.
An evenin g program is
scheduled to begin at 7 p.m. in
Social Science Hall and will
include a performance by UCl 's
Black Student Union Gospel
Choir and a keynote address.
-Fullerton College is
sponsoring two films to mark
the day. The films "Liberty in
America" and "Black Thought"
will be shown between 10 a.m.
and 2 p.m. ln the student center .
The airport control tower
reported no distress calls from
the doomed plane during its rew
seconds or flight Wednesday.
cbnlcally, the pta;. will be'. Abortion ,. The' last crash-0f a commercial bmitted by Supervisor· plane at National, a s01a1lisb
PUERTO MADERO, Mexico
CAP > -Mexican patrol boats
captured a Guatemalan shrimp
boat, the Don Justo, near here
because l'l was fishing in
Mexican waters, port captain
Fausto Mario Camargo Vila said.
He said several tons of shrimp
and the boat's Cishing gear were
confiscated.
-Santa Ana College will
feature a speech al 11 a.m. in
the college amphitheater by Dr.
Paul Martin or the United
Presbyterian Church. At 8 p.m.
in the college's Phillips Hall,
Harry Edwards, a University or
California, Berkeley. sociology
professor, will speak ..
ALL BETS ARE IN •..
ot tbe ..aven1t1 lD .18 yHrt. The
anowfaU wH tbe tfOtlt for
Georlla ln a years .
Wltla lee anl anow
everywbt~. aome ,.aple bad
very UtUe ater .to drlnk a•
pipes fre>s and burat. Two
Mlasllalpp! ciUet declared #Iller
emerienel• and a water·abaln
break ln Elmwood Park, UI .
prompted offlcial1 to urce
people to boU thelr water.
Soow fell today from
Shreveport to New Orleane u
Loulelana Gov. D•ve Treen
advised state em9loyees to
report to work only "lf roads
permit.''
Georeia Gov. Georfe Buabee
declared a lltate ot emeraency ln
Atlan\8, which wu lmmobUtzed
by half a foot of anow, and
ordered NaUonal Guardsmen to
aid stranded motoriat.I and heJp
move abandoned cars,
The Red Cross qpened 25
dis~ster shelters in Georgia,
Alabama, Mississippi and South
Carolina.
* * *
Citrus tab
rises after
big freeze
LAKELAND, Fla. (AP) -
Florida citrus producers began
·aisiog the prices or the
>roduct.s makinJC their way to
~merica's breakfast tables u
they slapped an embarco oo tbe
sale and shipping of the fresh
fruit after this week's damaging
freeze.
Two major producers of
frozen juice concentrate, Ben
KUI Griffin and Lykes-Pasco
Packing Co., increased their
wholesale prices Wednesday by
30 cents to more than $4 I.or a
dozen sill-0unce cans.
Freezes often mean bieber
proffts lo crowet'S. Last year, for
instance, ~ Florida crop IOSI
was estimated at about $200
million but growers aqtuaUt
made more mon~y became they
were able lo sell t.belr -:educed
crop at higher prices.
Most Florida citrus ia pro~essed into juice and the
oranges and grapefruit attacked
by ice this week can sUIJ be
made into citrus products,
though· tbe "juice yield" from
dam aged fruit worries ttie
industry.
The sale and shipping of fresh
fruit iL<telf was put undec. the
lO·day embargo effective at 9
p.m . Friday by the Florida
Citrus Commission, based in
Lakeland. lo guarantee tbe
quality or the state's famous
product. agriculture officials
said.
But the fruit only makes up 10
percent or the slate's orange
crop and 2S pereent to 35 percent
of the grapefruit crop. The rest
leaves the state as citrus
products. Frozen fruit stlll on
trees and destined for
processing is not affected by the
embargo.
Nevertheless, producer Ben
Hill Griffin UJ , a member of the
powerful Florida Citru s
Commission and manager of the
company's juice plant in
Frostproof. Fla., said price
hikes for juice are justified.
"Our opinjon was our price
was not appropriate given the
condition ol the freeze. This
brings supply and demand into
harmody," be said.
Wbelber prices climb further
will depend on juice demand and
the strength of the Brazilian
citrus harvest , industry
specialists said.
omu Riley, whose district ~oe•_ 1.. ~~ke' d 40·,Year-old ail'port snuggled oh ludef the airport. It would J • 0 u...., the V'ir1inla "bank or tbe
e effect April 1. • · • Potomac, was in 1949. . .
Cabfe said suptr'trisors' SACRAM!;NTO <AP > 1'be blue and green airliner AND YOU'RE THE WINNER!
clded to move for'Mal'd witb ~ Students wb(> J)ppose abortion bad Just taken off from Nation-'
lion oo a new accefl '\>Ian i.n could lirtthho~d fees that.help pay ' .~irJJOrt, where. tt bad bee'n
t of.a rulln( by lb~ 0 .S. 9tb for abortion 1ervlCes at serv!ced by American Airlines.
cuit Court.Of Appeals which Callfornia"s ~Mic colleges. The airport bad been closed
Died both county and AirCaJ under a bill approved by the' temporarily to clear snow from
orta to stay Haller'• order. stale Self at e::-·E ducat ion the runway until about an hOW'
The airport manager said it no Committee. before the aircraft. took off.
acer was i.n the ,county's SB1523 by Sen. John Doolittle, Vi sibility was abo~t a halt
tereat to p\lrsue aet appeal. R-Sacramenlo, would apply to mile. c•95e t1> the minimum.
evef, AlrCa1 doesO't lDteod \M University of California, the Three inches of snow had fallen,
ab .. don lt1 legal action, 'CaUfornia State University apd and it was snowing heavily at
e or ctl n a to c 6 m pan y • commµnity col\~f ~· the lime of the crash. et= ~~k ~3°offlclals r sll0ond e~c:lud~·:n:tu~e~ * * *
le•et.batanyp!ande.tsnedto .rehfloir; terr-l'easbns of • From Page A1
ply•wlttl Hatter'• rullnc conaeleoce, to pay any part of
ould uMoubtedly lQjve us" • .the 1cb0ol'1 fees that subsidised VICTIMS reducla1 the number of abOrtiom, -abottlan counselinC •
to whidt the earrler ll or abortlbn :.reternJs provided
1 muu.d. 1 b':Y the scboOl. wa .. identified by funily
mef1'l~ aa. tbe child of· Mri.
Tirado, one of tb6survivors. Tbe
other lnfan~ wete not idenOlied.
Here ate two j>eople. boUt
from tbe District of Columbl•.
wbo were killed on the brid1e:
l ..... ,...,_ ......
,2;M ...... ~2>., ,.
when you g·ive your man that which he deserves.
You alone know what he likes and ·
we offer a wide selection of ·•
· the finest men's nng.s available.
There's no gamble as to
quality. Each ring Is hand crafted
14 Kt. gold and ftt to ca..w Uy
-~ ... ·--·-.. .-i:_·_~--~
----KING OF SWING -Benny Good't'an holds a caricature of
himself at awards ceremony in which Goodman received
stereo Review magazine's Certificate of Merit award for
"outstanding contributions to the qualrty of American
musical life."
Suter •ar• Bo can.'t act
Bo Derek may be
good·looJtinc, but she is bosay .
anc\, can't act, according to
her sister, model Kelly
• Colllu.
"She's dragged me down
the street by my hair," the
20-year·old Miss Cotuns said
in an interview published Ulla
week in the British magazine
Woman.
Mias Collins, a rising
actresa herself, and her more
famous 25-year·old sister
have been feuding since
Kelly got a job promoting
jeans. Her sister's husband,
The widow of Anwar Sad.at
says the slain Egyptian
leader had premonition,. or
his death but refused to take
precautions that might have
saved his Ufe.
In an interview with
Buban Wai&en for ABC's
'20-20," Je6aaa SHa& said her
husband believed bls mission
was ended and told her, "I'm
preparing to meet God."
The interview from Mrs.
Jolla Derek, accused her of
trying to cash in on Bo's
fame.
But the two slat.era have
never been very don, Miss
Collins said in the interview.
'·Bo was pretty bossy at
home," she said in London.
"She always told me what to
do, so we bad some real
screaming sessions in those
days."
Of her sister's talent, Mias
Collins said, "Bo is beauUful,
but I haven't seen an)'l.hin.c
in which she showed sbe
could act."
Sadat's home in Gila, Ecypt,
was the first t.be former first
lady of Egypt bas ara.nted
since Sadat's asaasslnatlon
last Oct. 6.
A 1·t-e r r u m o r s o f
assueinat.ion attempts last
fall, "I really belled him" to
wear a buUetpn>ot vest, Mrs.
Sadat said. "He refused.
'Don't think In thta way,
Jehan.' be said."
• a., ... 'Cs• .... ..,.. ......... lll•bud'"" Diot la.o1"4 ta PQIUla.
11 I'd Wtie lo baft Wm all to
m,Hlf, ·• ab• said ta an
Interview ln McLean, Va.
PoUUct "ii a very Jta.lo\9
ml1&r•1. I doa't Uke tbe
H••raUoD1. It la very
... UMllM.''
But lbe'll be ready for U..
"uapaid Job" ot nnt J..ty ..... Dtmouat Qarlel 8. &er.a. la IWOfD ID Al
Vlralnla'• 1overnor
Saturday.
M r:e . .Robb bu been
COQDeeted wltb pollUct fOl'
aJmOlt aU ot ber 81 years.
Her fatW former Pretld111& LJ••·· 1....... Wll • Texas coa1re11man when
abewubonl.
The Cap~ Town Soutb
Africa Supreme Court baa
1ranted a divorce to tbe
second wife of heart
transplant pioneer Dr. a.n.ua ............
aartNara Banlanl, Sl, wbo
married the aur1eon in 19'10,
la the dauahter of wealthy
lndu.trlalllt Fred f.oelJHr.
The couple baa two IOGI.
Grounds for divorce may
not be dlacloeed under South
African law. Tbe 58-year~d
Barnard was previously
married for 22 years to
Atletta' Banaanl.
SURVIVOR -Sierra crash
survivor Donnie Priest,
10, lost both feet to
frostbite suffered in the
five days he spent aboard
plane wreck. Amputation
was performed at
Stanford University
Medical Center.
Pat~hy fog looms
Exteruled
. Coaatal . fo_recaat
SOUTHl"N CALIFOltNIA
Pelr ~ ftrtNy except tor COASTAL AHO MOUNTAIN Altl.AS -"llfl CIWdl •t lltML Petdty -F•lr_.111_...,.~llut ... °' low cloucll -.,. c..-..,,, IKelly •Indy '" tM -"'•'"' ftrldey .._..."'· r.......,.""" '" s.twttey. SelN -'' ~ too ... Hulltl ........ N••llOU1 ..... to ......... clolm -.. C-l HltlN '"
lrom • low of 15 to• 1119'1 M "-coeafel .,_ .. to ,4, tows • to 4S.
· Et..-n: from .....,I c..c.-1on Moulltaln 111tN •to U , IOWI In -
to tM lilexk:M _.. --60 •2111 alld ... ml! ea: Llgf\t verl•l>le wino
llKUH'nl"I IOUltlWelt to _, I hi 1' ---------knot• wllll t lo 2 fMt _..,..., -"1 T ·
s.nw•oe-ow11w cMStat*.ws. emperatures
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What 'do you lille about dMI Dally PUot? What don't you Uke!
Call the number below aad ,our lftftla,. will be l'ftorded,
tranlmbed ud detl•erecl to the appnpriate editor. ne same.._..,. •llftertna ......_ ••1 be m.c1 to l'ffOl'd let·
&en to U. edllof oa anJ toplc. Mailbox contrtbuton mUll mcl•
lheir name Ind telephone number f« vertfteatlon. No meuJatlon calla, pleaM.
TeU m wtla& ·a oe JOUr IDlDd.
............ _... ________________________ ~_.,--------------~
..--
After wlnnln• u lnlt1al baW.
to· block conatructlOD of a •bootlnc ran,e nor their IOU&ll county bom11, a Lue FONlt
clttaena• '1'0UP lt plan.nllal to
step up lta campal1n aplaat
othu propoaed. police or
flreft1hter facilltlea.
Memben of tbe Lake Foreat ll
Mailer Homeowner•'
Anoclatlon are boplnl to collect
H many u 10,000 •lcnature9
from Saddleback Valley
re1ldent1 proteatlnl po11lble
expanakJn of the Oranae County
1ovemment'a James A. Mutlck
Faclllty.
Tiie t11u1 w'1eb 1parked
com•unlty l•tere1t wa1 a pro~al In Dff•mber from
Oraqe Cowatr lllerltf arad o-. for an "1"11meat wttll tM
MarlM Corps to ..... JO aa... ot ...... adjaoeat to u.. ...,
Pl'Ol*U, currmUY UM lite ot M hoMr flnD fM Jalf lnmatee.
In •dwac• tor tr.. UM ot U.. lud, .... COUDty,.... ........
ManDll Jo6M UM ot tall tliilil
rM1•· The Mal'iDee ....... a
deelakJn from the couaty BMnt
of Supervisors by ~da1.:.'to meet a deadline f« aul>latttlq
feder&l bud1et appllcatlom.
But the rnldbtl ~
Applications
/orseroice
horwn due
County said fr~e
of waste danger
Appllcat.lona to Dlaneyland'a
25th anniversary Community
Service Awards Procram m~t
be pollmarted or delivered to
Dlaneyland no later than
mldniCht Friday.
A spokesman for the pfOIJ'am
saJd $150,0CIO will be dlatrlbuted
this year ln 63 cash awards
which include one $25,080
outstanding award, two $12,500
special judges awards,. 10 ~.ooo
and 50 $1,000 category awards .
Cate.ones selected for the
1982 program are: cultural arta;
education; service for youth;
accomplishments by youth
groups; special health services;
accomplishments by support
groups; social community
service; civic community
service; service b.Y or for senior
citlzena. and environment.
ecology and energy.
Orance County organizations
winning awards will be selected
by a committee headed by
Norma Brandel Gibbs, Conner
mayor of Huntington Beach.
No dan1er of 1pread of
diseases from llle1al dumplns o(
lnhctloua human tlaaue
currently faces Orance County
reald~t county health officials reltera1ea Wednesday.
Dr. Rex Ehllng, assistant
director or the county's Health
Care Agency, told members of
the board of supervisors the
county bas "no major problems·
wlth t.be disposal of infectious
waste."
Tbe report from Eh11D1 and
several other top administrators
was ordered by the super-
visors, who claimed to be
· surprised earlier this week
about allegations that Orance
County might be affected by
alle1ed illegal dumpinc repor1ed
lo Los Anae!es County.
After hearing the reports,
however, board chairman Bruce
Neatande said he was aatlafied
that county rHidents are not
bein1 subjected to possible
Assembly hacks tax
indexing measure
An income tax indexing
measure authored by Newport
Beach Asaembl,YWoman )Carlan
Bergeson bu been forwarded to
the state Senate where lt must
be awroved by Jan. 28 to be
placed on the June ballot.
The indexing measure -
bLUed as •·a vote for the wortlng
class" -was approved Monday
by the slate Assembly on a 82·8
vote.
Indexing is the process of
adjusting income tax brackets
upward to reflect lnflaUon so
that a taxpayer receiving a
cost-of-living raise won't be
pushed into a hicher tax
bracket. ~
Gener,ally, the measure would
mean more money for taxpayers
and less money for the state.
If the Senate passes Mrs.
Bergeaon 's proposed
constltuUonal amendment, it
would join a Howard Jarvis
initiative, also deallnc with
income tax indextnc, on the
June ballot.
Jarvis' initiative is linked to
the state Consumer Price lnclex
and Mrs. Bergeaon'a la Ued in
with t.be state Wage and Salary
Index.
infectlo.1.&1 dlseeaes, auch
hepatitis, aalrnonella or ahlseUa,
that can be spread from
Improperly diapoHd waste.
' R a1 Rhoads , proaram
manager for the county's solid
waste management procraqi,
aaid Wednesday be is convinced
current surveillance procedur4!s
at the four county landfills
prevent almost any lllegit
dumpl.nc. He said Tuesday ':bit
no problems seemed to exist ffl
the county. u
"After further investigation
yesterday, I still feel we donll
have this problem," he said. o . If
Nestande said the issue:
described by . several speakenl
as "sensational," came u,
because of an investigatimt
started in Los Angeles County to
examine the practices of ti
Garden Grove-based fir
Security Environmentail
Services, which is licensed •
dispose or such waste. He said
the Orange County Distri ..
Attorney's Office also wiU
investigate the issue. ie
10
J Speech on
King slated ~
at SA Collegf!
fa
'" d
Santa Ana College wi~ commemorate Dr. Mart
Luther Klng Jr. 's birtbda ~
Friday when Dr. Han~ Edwards, sociology professor
UC Berkeley, asks, ,"la Jt
Dream Deferred?" a
Dr. Edwards' addresCl .
sponsored by the Black Student
Union, is scheduled for '8 p.ral
Friday ln Phillips Hall. Tilt
speech is free to the public. .b
'\(
Sofa, 01air & Ottoman
in Matching leathers
SOFA .... •201z.oo
SPICIAL
'I 195 CHAIR& .
OTTOMAN
.... llllUI leather
SPICIAL •••
5895
if you fall in love with this group
you have company, a lot of comp~
In YoUr choice of 8
top grain lelther
I COLORS: Clrmel. l.ugglge,
Marigold, Wedgewood,
Palomino, Snuff,
I Crlnbeny, F1egbiue
D ''" ~ASH DA'-1AGE SURVEYED -Car of
Jbbway ttairi'is surveyed by transit authority
............
official a(ter fatal accident near Smithsonian
station in Washin9ton. D C. .. -
Thatcher's son found safe
Helicopter dispatched to pick him up in Algeria
ALGIERS, Algeria <AP> -
The Algerian Press Service
reported that Mark Thatcher,
the son or British Prime
Minister Margaret. Thatcher,
was round unharmed today 250
mil es from Ta manrasset,
Algeria.
Mrs. Thatcher was told of the
report while attending a meeting
ln London, but her office said
"we are unable to confirm It. We
cannot comment until we have
official confirmation. There has
b een so much rumor a nd
apeculation in the pas t few
days."
The Algerian Press Service
said Thatcher, 28, waa found in
the late morning between the
towns or Timisouine and
'l'in zaoullne and that a
helicopter from the search base
ln Tamanrasset h~d been
dispatched to pie.It him "f ·
Poland 'f gi'fl'W
mulls farm p~as
WARSAW, Poland (AP )
Poland's martial law regime
s~s it is considering meetins
private farmers' demands t.o be
treated like those on stale farms ao they will increase food
production.
Meanwhile, Radio Warsaw
reported a bomb explosion ln a
Wars aw telephosae booth
Wednesday, the first violence
rt!J>Orted in the capital since the
first week of marli•I law.
Damage was said to be slight
and no casualties were reported.
Haig and Israeli
leaders con/ er .
JERUSALEM (AP)
Secretary of State Alexander M.
Haig Jr. met with IsraeR leaders
today t.o discuss chances for a
breakthrough in the deadlocked
Palestinian autonomy talks.
Haig had a two-hour talk with
Foreign Minister Yitzhak
Shamir which he said was
"valuable, extensive and
friendly." He then met Defense
Minister Ariel Sharon.
Marathon merger
draws opposition
By The Associated Press
Having overcome a rival bid
i n its s tormy courtship of
Marathon Oil Co., U.S. Steel
Corp. is now findlng that some
Marathon stockholders are
balking al the terms ot tbe
proposed merger of the two
companies.
U.S. Steel and Marathon have
been sued in New York and
Cincinnati by some Ma rathon
shareholders dissatisfied with
the amount they'd be getting
under Lhe mergel' proposal. The
nation's largest steelmaker
made an offer worth about 16.2
billion in cash and ootea for
Marathon, defeating a rival bid
from Mobil Corp. earlier this
month.
Poison laid out
for jackrabbits
BLACKFOOT, Idaho <AP>
Co.anty pest control workers
s pread strychnine at • farm
near here Wednesday. opening a
new front in the war on tiordes of
crop.munching jackrabbits in
eallern ldabo.
Worlcers mixed 32 pounds or
alfalfa with paste containing
four ounces or the powerful
poison, and the bait was then
s pread along mile-long trenches.
Haitian rebel
leader captured ..
PORT·AU·f>RlNCE, Kaili
(AP) -The leade r of the
Haitian exile 1n vasion is
believed to be lb tbe hands or the
DecoratiYe Hardware By
U S . Coast Guard after his
chartered motor sailboat broke
down and started leaking off the
northwest coast of Haili. ·
A Coast Guard s pokesman in
Miami said the cutter Gallatin
went to the aid of the 45 .. foot
Caicos Cfoud in the Windward
Passage. between Haili and
Cuba.
Hospital term
for Mafia's boss?
NEW ORLEANS <AP> -
Reputed Mafi a boss Carlos
Marcel lo ma y s erve hi s
seven-year Brilab cons piracy
conviction in a federal prison
hospital because of hi s advanced
age and poor health, a judge
says.
The 71·year-old mob chieftain
known as the "Little Man'' of
f.lew Orleans, was sentenced
Wednesday for conspiring to
ootain state insurance contracts
through bribery.
Boyce indicted
in bank robbery
BOiSE, Idaho <AP > -A
federal grand jury indicted
Christopher Boyce and two other
people Wednesday on charges of
robbing two Idaho banks after
the convicted spy escaped from
a California prison.
The grand jury also charged
the three with conspiring to rob
banks, and Boyce alone with six
violations of federal firearms
laws.
The other two people, Gloria
White of BoMers Ferry, Idaho,
and Calvin Robinson, identified
as a felldw prisoner of Boyce's
at a federal prison In Calilornia,
also were indicted on two counts
alleging they harbored Boyce
after he escaped from prlsop.
AMALF I Swings you into Spring
The fln .. t Italian craftsmanship
Sp«lallzlng In the ooordln11tlon of the
decorative hardware for your projecl.
Fialslled h•rdwatT .M-: .
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Wreck 'slow-moiion' terror
Subway passengers' panic related, 3 killed in piishap
~ WASHINGTON (AP> -What
started as a minor mlabap
turned into alow·motlon terror
when a subway operator backed a packed train that bad started
down the wron1 track into a
concrete dJvlder, kUUn1 three
people and lnJurtn1 two do~en
others.
The first fatal accident on the
capital's showcase subway
system occurred durln1 the
afternoon rush hour Wednesday,
less than 30 minutes after an Alr
Florida jet crashed Into a bridge
In a severe snowstorm and
plunged into the Potomac River,
killing 76 people.
Joe Sheard, direct.or of rail
operations for Washington
Metropolitan Area Transit
Authority -Metro -said It
started when a switch being
operated manually w~ set the
wrong way and headed 'the t.tain
down the wrong track near the
Smithsonian station.
When the operator slowly
.backed up the train, the lead car
moved diagonally because its
front wheels remained on the
wrong track while its rear
wheels were rolling down the
other track.
Thal skewing movement
caused Lhe car to impale itself
on a concrete divider separating
the two rails, ripping open a
15-root section of the car waJI,
buckling the roof and tearing up
about eighL s~ of seats .
Cody Pfenstiehl, a Metro
s pokesman, said 155 pe<?ple,
ERA. dealt
setbacks
by 2 slates
By The Associated Preas
The proposed Equal Rights
Amendment has been dealt
major setbacks by lawmaken in
Oklahoma and Illinois, and with
JUSt five months before the
ratification deadline some
opponents say the proposal is as
good as dead in those states.
Despite support for the ERA
from the governors of both
states, the Oklahoma Senate
refused lo ratify the amendment
Wednesday and Democratic
leaders In Illinois couldn't find
enough s upport for a rules
change critical to pa_ssage.
··For all practical purposes, it
is dead," said Glenda Mattoon.
a member of Oklahoma Stop
ERA. ''I don't think that it's
likely there are any more votes
around after they've already
gone on record."
Supporters of ERA, which
would ban discrimination on the
basis of sex, said they would try
again in both legislatures .
Eleanor Smeal, n ation al
pres ident of t he National
Organization for Women, said in
Oklahoma City that failure of
the measure in Oklahoma
wouldn't end its chances for
approval.
"Thjs is a key state," she said,
"but we've never said it's our
best chance."
The setbacks were the first
major tests of the amendment
since U.S. District Judge Marion
Callister in Idaho ruled in
December lhal Congress lacked
authority to ext\?nd the original
ratification deadline of 1979, and
that rive slates that rescinded
ERA a pproval acted
constitutionally. His ruling is
being appealed.
The ERA has been approved
by 35 states -including the five
that rescinded. The measure
would have to be approved by 38
s tates by June 30 for it to
become part of the U.S.
Constitution.
lncluciln1 up to 80 s tanOteJ,
could have been crowded into
the ear. The trail) had ahc can.
1t look tlretiaen ualn1 power toola a bait hoUr to cut throaalt
the car's walls to free aevtral
plnnecl-ln pQsen1ers and up to
two houri to evacuate everyone
throush the tunnell.
When Metro offlclala took
rePortert on a tour of the scene
Wednesday nt1ht, tbe only
remnants of the commuters
were a knitted scarf and a
paperback book . "The
Wlfderneaa Reader.'· lyin1
beside lhe car.
Pasaen1ers, many or them
federal workers sent home early
because of heavy snow, told ol
the panic lJl the crowded car.
The motorman said over an
Intercom, .. Let me know when
I'm cleared," said passen1er
Susan Larrick, 24, of Sliver
Spring, Md.
"It wa s impossible to
fall. ... Jt waa something ollt
of a slow.motion movie," said
Arthur Hastings of Bowie, Md.
"It split open Uke a can. People
were screaming, yelling."
··People were screaming when
they saw the car going in" to the
tall divider. said Mark Lysne,
28, of FaUs Church, Va . "There
was nothing wrong until they
started backing up."
Richard Pa1e, 1~ooral
man11er of t.tanalt autbo~ty,
uld an independent boa i>f
I nq ul ry composed of ur
subway experts from New VM,
Chlcaao and San Francisco wtll
investigate the crash lo "eum.lne our procedura Md
correct anythln1 tb t ml1ht
need correctlnal ''
Au t b or tt le a d l d ·' o t immediately releaM Ute ltlA·
lilies of the vlclima, two W09Ma
and a man.
Pauengera In other can Aid
they felt only a /ew Jol~1~
moat remained calm after u,snta
in the train went out. Some
riders in the last car .tere
unaware anyone had died.
The accident, coupled willl the
plane crash, severely taxed the
city's emergency aervieH.
Rescue teams from .tl)e
Maryland suburbs and BoW.nt
Air Force .Base were sun:unoned,
to lbe subway disaster.
The 39·mile, $4.2 billion
s ubway sys tem be I an
operations in 1976.
The crash brought two of Lhe
s ubway 's three lines to a
s tandstill. Limited service
resumed later al the ends of the
s ubway th at reach into
Maryland and Virginia. Officials
said they hope lo restore full
service by Monday
FDR, Nixon bugs
vastly different
NEW YORK (AP> -The
bueging of the Oval Office by
President Franklin D. Roosevelt
dirfered greatly from the bugs 30
years later that led to Richard
Nixon's downfall , a leading
historian says.
Nixon "was taping people in
incriminating situations without
telling them that they were
being taped. There's none of that
in the Roosevelt tapes," said
hi s torian and presidential
biographer Arthur M .
Schlesinger Jr.
Seblesinger spoke Wednes4ay
al a news conference in wblcb
Am,erican Herilagt magaaine
made the conversations PGbllc
and ouWned efforts that have
been made to make the crude
recordings audible.
Exerpts of transcripts made
from the tapes. which contain no
major revelations of historical
note, are being pubUshed In the
February.March ihue or the
ma1azine.
Roosevelt got angry about a
misquote. magazine officials
said, so in 1940 he had RCA
C orp. rig a recording
contraption for placement in the
White House basement, the
microphone bidden in his desk.
Tape recorders did not come
into wide use until years later.
The tape itselr was
motion·picture film , the
magazine said.
For 11 weeks, Roosevelt
recorded 14 news conferences.
which at the time were held in
the Oval Office.
Seven or eight random
con versations were picked.up as
well as the news conferences as
the device was being tested.
White House s tenographer
He nry Kannee said shortly
before his death last year.
FDR could have started the
machine from his desk drawer,
but Kannee generally turned it
on from ~e basement, said
R.J .C. But~w. a University of
Washington historian.
The recordings were
transferred to phonographic
discs in 1947 and stored at the
FDR Library at Hyde Park,
N. Y Butow found them in 1978
and their quality was improved
by acoustics expert Mark Weiss,
who assisted in the inquiry into
the 181".l·minulc gap discovered
on one of Nixon's Watergate
tapes
The device nel'er was used
again and President Ha rry
Truman had 1t removed from
the White House
Roosevelt. 1n a conversation
with the then-current and future
House speakers. Sam Rayburn
and John McCormack, discusses
an assertion by a Japanese
journalist that the United States
should demilitarize Wake and
Midway isJands and Pear l
Harbor.
"God! Thal 's the first lime
that any damn Jap has told us to
gel out of Hawaii, .. he said.
"The only thing that worries
me is that th~ Germans and the
Japs have eone along, and the
Italians for -oh, gosh -five.
six years without their foot
slipping -without their
misjudging foreign opinion ...
And the time may be coming
when the Germans and the Japs
wi ll do some fool thing that
would put us in. That's the only
real danger of our getting in -
is that their foot will slip."
In a conversation with aide
Low ell Mellett. Roosevelt
discusses the possibility that his
1940 presidential campaign
opponent. Republican Wendell
Willkie . would release
embarrassing letters written by
Roosevelt's running-mate,
Henry Wallace.
Roosevelt says he could use.
"people way, way down the
line" lo put out the word that
Willkie's marriage was a facade
and he was having an affair with
an "a wfuJly nice gal" prominent
in New York literary circles.
Neither Wallace's letters, nor
the allegations about Willkle,
ever were used in the campaign,
Schlesinger said. He said the
rumors of WHlkie's alleged
infidelity were common at tbe
time.
OCTDwill
planyour1Jus
triJ!for
/·. -Ct-J -
, No matter where you want to go
in Orange County, we'll make it easy for you to
get there on an OCTD bus. Just call us at
63&.RIDE. We11 tiell you the exact routes
and times. And if you need schedules and
Ride Guides, we'll send them free.
SQ give ua a call. You'll ftnd the bus is
your euy-to-uae tick.et to work, echool,
~-.-::::~ ehopping and entertainment in ~ Qranp County.
LOS!S FIGHT -Michelle
Triola Marvin has lost
chance to appeal the denial
of $104,000 awarded in Los
Angeles ·since the deadline
to U.S. Supreme Court has
expired.
SA<.:RAMENTO <AP) -Tbe
Sacramento Bee .. id today the
U.S. N•vy dumped acids and
rlnalnt 1oluUon1 into San
Francisco Bay ln 1946 while
decontamlnaunc ships uaed ln
South Paclflc nuclear test.I.
The story said the lntor{nalion
ls ln a secret report that has be~n declasalfled.
• At leaat six ships, ran11n1
from an aircraft carrier to a
.submarine, arrived at Mare
Island, Hunters Point and
Treasure Island after the
Operation Crossroads atomic
blast.I at Bikini, it said.
· Aasemblymm raps
Fonda radio ad
SACRAMENTO (AP ) -A
R epublican legislator is
criticizing a state-sponsored
radio advertisement that stars
Jane Fonda as propaganda for a
federal program.
Assemblyman Wi lliam
Leonard of San Bernardino said
Wednesday the state shouJdn 't
be encoura.ging parents to put
tbelr children tn the S800 million
pro1ram for the handicapped,
which overspent lts bud1et by
more than $100 million last year.
Schoou chief
denies 'wast~'
SACRAMENTO CAP> -State
schools chief Wilson Riles, under
fire from the Little Hoover
Commission, denied that the
sch ools are wasting large
amounts of money.
At a bearing Wednesday. Riles
also resisted suggestions that he
cut off state payments to some
school districts.
Commission members pushed
Riles to do something about the
refusal of some districts to close
half ·empty schools, and to
accept budget cuts because of
the state's money shortage.
Deadline passes
in palinw ny case
LOS ANGELES <AP) -A
decade later, the revolutionary
. ..-.. -_,___ ... ___________ _
----------~-
Orange Cout DAILY ptLOTtrhuf'lday, January 14, 1812
Marvin vs. Marvln palimony
case has ended because the
deadline to flle an appeal to the
U.S. Supreme Court expired.
Actor Lee. Marvin never did
have to give his live·in
roommate Michelle Triola
Marvin the $104,000 awarded to
her by a Loa An1eles County
Supreme Court Judie because a
state· Court of Appeals reversed
the lower court's award.
Boxing promoter
face• 265 years
LOS ANC>ELES (AP> -A
j ury that convicted former
boxing promoter Harold
Rossfield.a Smith in the nation's
lariest bank embenlement, the
diversion of $21.3 million from
Wells Fargo Bank , had
"overwhelming evidence" of his
involvement, the jury foreman
says.
Smith, who once apparently
sought to gain control of the
boxing-promotion field, faces up
to 265 years in prison.
He wa s found guilty
Wednesday on 29 of 32 counts.
Dolphin re•cue
ahip under way
SAN PEDRO <AP> -The Sl'i
Sbepberd ll and It.I crew ol II
conaervaUoniats are finally on
their way to the Far BHt.
following tbe temporary
settlement of a dlapute over
dock fees.
The mluion to save thousands
of dolphins from Japanese
fishermen got under way
Wednesday. It would bave
started earlier but tor b•Qlln1
with the Loa An1elu Port
Warden's office over wapaid'
dock fees of $4, 1•. .
Victim~' kin
seeking help
COLUSA <AP> -Tbt
anguished families of two duck
hunters missing and presu.med
drowned near the confluence of
the Sacramento and Feather
rivers on the Colusa Gun Cl ub
private reserve say they are
being frustrated by the Sutter
Paroli ref~~
teeft..age killer
NORWALK <AP> -Afte
seoven boun behind cloeed doors
state parole officials bav
refused to free a Nortbridt
teen-ager coqvleted o
. stranaJ.in& a tem.ie elaema
2~ years ago. :t
Family and friends of t
16·year-old victim. 1tmtt
Gable, bad pleaded for help in
convincing juvenile authoriti9!)
not to release Stephen Deinariitc
who confessed to the killlnc.
Robinsons
SALE. HOW TO HANG IT UP
AND SAVE 200/o TO 45°/o w
m
A
•
A. Extra storage closet from Lee/Rowan. will
be $40 after Jan. 31 , introductory sale S29.99.
B. Set of 3 Adda·Hangers for suits
from Lee/Rowan, reg. $4.75,
sale $3.79.
C. Vinyl hangers from Lee/Rowan 1n
jade, rose. ivory, light blue, lavender
and white. reg. $.35 ea .. sale 12.11 doL,
6 doz .. case pack, one color. S15.89.
D. Bag of 5 sce.nted satin hangers
by Ashland In beige, light blue,
peach, dusty rose, gold, pink or
cognac, reg. $12, sale II.II.
F. Champagne vinyl hamper bag by
K·C Products, reg. $16. sale $12.79.
G. K-C Products' champagne vinyl
jumbo dress bag, reg. $16,
sale 11~71.
H. Set of 6 Crystal Cuts plastic
dress hangers by Bogene. reg
$4.50, sale Sl.59. .
I
' ... . \I .
J. Champagne vinyl stow·all bo)( by
K·C Products. reg. $19, sale S15.19.
K. K-C Products' champagne vinyl
multi·purpose organizer chest, reg.
$25, sale S11.lf.
I .. '' '
M. Champagne vinyl 10-shelf
shoe/utility bag by K-C Products,
reg. $19, sale S15.11.
N. Men's hardwood suit hanger by
Spiegel Bogene. reg. $7, sale 15.51.
P. Set of ~ ~arc:JwOod skirt !'angers by SpleQef Bogene, reo. ss. sale ••
I • I
,. , . . .. . .. , ..
All of these closet organizers are In
Robinson's Notions, 14, except
Mission Viejo, Palm Springs, Santa
Monica and Sherman Oaks. To
order, call toll·frM 1.aoo.MMI01 .
L. LH/Rowan'a swing out 1l1ck rack, reg. $6,
aate2'1L•.
a. Set of 3 hardwood trouser
hangers by Spiegel Bogene, reg. S5, .. , .....
......_-~~~~~ ......... -..-~~~~...-----IHOfl THURIDAY AND MIDAY 10-I.
NEWPORT FASHION llLAND • WllTMl .. lftA MALL
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M For the fifth Ume in 12 yean.
l e Huntlnaton Beach City
ouncU recently conaldered
1kla1 voters to eliminate
ecUOna for city attorney. city
1' erk and city treasurer.
''' The theory amona put and aome present counclf members
_has been that these positions are
'"Detter filled by appointment, with
office holden serving as advisers
to the elected City Council.
However, each time the
voters have ref used to change the
'ttity charter to eliminate
~lections for the positions.
Ju The most controversial of the
i opO&ed changes bas involved
e cjty attorney. Past City
ouncil members have
complained that elected city
~tt or n e y s b a v e n ' t be en ~sponsive to policies of the City
ouncil.
t'n It's been argued that the city
111ttorney shouldn't be a political
mficial, somewhat dependent on
l~a m paign supporters and
•tion tributors because politics
lfCould compromise the objectivity Nl legal advice.
0 The present city attorney is ~Gail Hutton. Elected in 1978, Mrs. ~utton argues that an elected
.eaity attorney is objective becaJ,Jse
,)the City Council can't threaten
lls· "
Jc .
the ofnce hokier wttb dismlual.
She believes the potltlon
should remain elective to aerve
as a balance of power in city
government.
In the past, thJs balance of
power has often led to open
conflicts and lack of cooperation
between tbe City Council and the
city attorney's office.
The majority of the present
City COWlcil membera have gone
on record u in favor of making
the city attorney 's job ·
appointive.
However, the City Councll
recently decided to reject a move
to put the measure before voters.
Mayor Ruth Finley sa(d that
without widespread voter
suppert, the baUot measure most
likely would fail for the sixth
time. The City Council agreed in
a 4 to3 vole.
Mrs. Finley said she would
support putting the measure on
the ballot if a citizen group
voiced support tor the concept
and was willing to promote it.
It makes little sense.
however, to repeatedly place a
proposal before voters that has
been unquestionably rejected in
the past and appear:; to have
little support in the community
today.
Vnwelcome neighbor?
Fountain Valley City officials
are learning that when it comes
the police department, you
an 't please everyone.
In late 1980, when the
ountain Valley Police Officers
ssociation was engaged in bitter
ontract negotiations. many
esiden~ told the City Council
at public safety is a top priority
d officen should receive the
ighest compensation possible.
This month some Fountain
alley homeowners had a new
essage for the council: Don't
lid a new police station in our
ck yard.
These residents, who live off
os Alamos Street directly
hind the Civtc Center property
'at includes City Hall and the
urrent police station. complain
hat a new larger station near
heir tract would create noise
nd safety problems and lower
heir property values.
Another possible site for a
ew police station, the City Yard
roperty off Ward Street at the
_an Die~o Freeway. also has
stirred concern. Some residents
point out that the project would
displace athletic fields at the City
Yard. The concerns over these two
locations were raised at a public
study session on t~e proposed
station. The council took no
action, and Mayor Ben Nielsen
indicated more public hearings
may be necessary.
The council now is faced with
resolving these residents·
concerns and deciding what size
police station the city needs -
and can afford. Initial estimates
are that the project could cost as
much as $5 million.
In addition, city officials
might consider whether tbey CYWe
local taxpayers an explanation
why such a new police station is
needed only a dozen years after.
the initial structure was built. It
is a bit '11\Settling to relllize that
Fountain Valley, which prides
itself on being a master-planned
city. is today saddled with what
is described as a ··grossly
inadequate'' police station.
ire safety devices work
Wycliffe Gardens senior
tizen complex is the tallest
· ucture ill Huntington Beach
d has been touted as the most
te safe building as well.
l Recently, the 3-year·old h.lgh
ise was tested when a grease
ire started in an eighth floor
partment kitchen.
The building passed with
lying colors.
The fire started when an
4-year-old woman apparently
ft her electric stove on after
ylng potatoes for lunch.
The grease caught fire. The
'tuation reportedly became
rse after the woman threw a
I on the blaze to smother it.
be rue caught fire and the blaze
r~ad to wooden kitchen
binets.
However. the heat set off an
erhead sprinkler and the blaze
•
was put out. The sprinkler and
nearby smoke detectors also set
off a fire alarm that alerted
firefighters to the blaze.
Fire officials arrived five
minutes later. They say even if
the sprinkler had failed to
operate, the fire would have been
contained in the apartment
because each room in the
14-story structure is a sepaT&t~
unit with concrete walls.
Fire officials say it would
have taken an hour for the ·door
to bum to spread the fire onto the
hallway carpet.
Although most buildings
don't have concrete walls, this
incident is further proof that
built-in safety designs, such as
sprinklers and smoke detectors,
are needed in all new structures
to save lives and property.
In Ions expressed In the space •t»ove are thole of the Dally Pilot. Other views ex-essed on tnis page are those ot tne1r autNors ~ art11ts. Reader comment Is invlt· . Address TM Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1S6(), Co\ta ~sa, CA 92626. Ph°"9 (714)
2·4321 .
M. &):d/ F areweU mea•age
tbreetome wu fed up by bollday
commerdaliam. A .a.. oa the kettle
read : "Take some mon•J. •• p..,..by 61 ao, too.
1D ......, JOU cua b&n a iDlcle frw
tll• ......... of • •",19'11 ~ ..,,.. oe a._two-mlle ~ .._.. tbe
ctty. p 'DI here ad ........ tD DIAat
out .iac., of laterHt. Q91\• a
b•r•ala. Tbe Job tlllt "of ••ell a
wortllJ la "street ..tk•.''
.
Brown budget shows politics
As if he bad performed some mlraele,
Gov. Jerry Brown baa prepared a
budget which be says ii balanced and will not require any new taxes. "It ls,"
he declared, "a balanced budget: it bas
no new taxea on general consumers: it
balances the sacrifices and builds for
the future."
Details leaked previously by Brown
revealed that he has provided an 8
percent cost of living increase for aged,
blind and disabled as well as welfare
payments for families witlr dependent
children.
HE SAID HIS budget is based upon an
upturn in the economy before the end or
1982 which would reduce earlier
estimates of shortfalls in revenues and
on a speedup of collections of laxes
from businesses such as the sales and
workmen compensation taxes.
So, once again, Brown emerges u the
"prudent, no-nonsense" budgeter who
shuns new taxes althougtt for mor>lhs he
was anguiahln.i over the need for them.
It is not surprising that he bu found a
way to avoid asking for new taxes.
Although be will step out as governor at
the year's end be hopes to win election
as a U.S. Senator before that time
arrives. Whatever else be may be ....
Brown remains the shrewd politician.
He knows that raising taxes and
winning elections don't go together.
What.ever doubts he may have had
about the wisdom of seeking new ta.xes
were resolved during the course of the
IAll IATIRS
many radio talk shows he has hos led in
recent months. The people, he said.
have made it clear that they want more
cuts in government before they will
approve any tax increas es.
Brown says he is making those cuts in
his new budget but they are hard to
find. Some state agencies were reduced
S perce nt but funding has been
continued ror many non-essential
agencies, most of them creatures or his
administration.
With onJy a slight reduction Brown
proposes to continue the bailout of local
governm~ without restrictions. The
irony or that is that while he will refuse
s tat e employees cost of living
Let people vote
To the Editor:
I read in the media about Supervisor
Ralph Clark's varioua accomplishments
for tbe year 1981. They were a summary
of his positions and beliefs, lo which he
is enUUed. However, sleep will not
come easlly tonight if J fail to challenge
bis position on John Wayne Airport.
For starters, he conveys lbe
Impression that all or the county's air
transportation problems would
suddenly be solved if only the county
MAILBOX
could expand John Wayne Airport. For
the sake of discussion, let us assume
that we can wave a magic wand,
disregard the view of homeowners,
businessmen, the courts and a whole
array of others who have opposed the e~aosion of John Wayne Airport and
sudden.ly re-create the airport as is
proposed in t.be Master Piao adopted by
the Supervisors February, 1981. Based
on that plan the airport wiU bave a
capacity to handle 6 .1 million
passengers per .year by the year 1990.
THAT'S FINE, but bow does Olle
reconcile the fact tbal every study
conducted by the county concludes that
the requirement for· air transportation
in 1990 will be approximateJy-20 million
passenaert per; year? Some very slmple
arithmetic indicates lhat some 14
mllllon will either have to st.ay home or,
perish the thought, drive. It just seems
utterly ridiculous that the county should
spend some $100 m.ilUon to expand an
airport faclllly thal simply will not do
the job upon completion.
Another item mentioned was a
complaint about the so-called "vocal
minority." From my obHrvaUoa point,
the vocal minority represents thole wbo
are lo favor of expansion ol tbe airport.
It strikes me that those wbo favor
,xpanaion represent some very narrow
lnteresta lll lbe county and eoulda't cate
less What blPIMtftl' to the baluoe of UM
county so · fon1 aa their viewa a\"e
represented. This doe• not seem the rllllt way to 10. lt seems to me tbat If we rully wish
to determine wb«her or not UM peofle
la the County ol Orance w.t to ex:pad
John WaJM AifPOl"l dlcre la a ••1•
way of r..alviAI that queetlon. A.Uthe
Board ol Supervilort need do ll place
WI luue OD the ballot. Slmply ak tbe
people at the neat 1eneral eleet.19
wbeUJer or not tbe)' wllb to apend •• mlllloa t4 uparid JobD WQM ~. Surely UU. would retolve die ..._ GMe
ud for au.
program for the past six years and I
have seen what growth and effect the
program has on the children and
families enrolled in Head Start. There
are so rew social pro&rams left that
have proved their worth so much as
Head Start.
The Head start program is still a
community based program needing
community support. There ii within
your local community a Head Start
program for anyone who is interested in
volunteering within the program or
helping with family needs.
Thank you again for your concern for
the Read Start program and your
community support.
VIRGINIA HILL
Director
Restitution worb
To the FA.itor:
I was pleased to see the coverage of
the Massachusetts restitution program
and the Orange Count)' probation and
victlm-witness restitution efforts ln the
Dec. Z1 edition of the Daily Pilot. It
made me wonder Ir the residents of
Fountain Valley are aware of our own
Community Restitution Program. This
program has been in operation for four
years and works toward havtn1 a
youthful property crime offender take
responsibllity for his actions by
repayi.q victims and completinl hours
at a volunteer site provided by the
restitution specialist.
I BA VE BEEN on the Restitution
Board u a private ciUseo fcw over three
years and feel this profram s~d
r~eive some recognltloa. Tbua far 97
percent ol the yoW\gstera loins t.brouth
this process have been su~ul in
completing their restitution contracts
without further inlerventiOD from tbe
police or the courts. In addition, over
$40,000 1n restitution has been turned
over to victims and the community.
I enthuslutlcally applaud reaUtutlon
as a cawequence ol crlmiDal bebavior
and hope tbat when procrama olfertq
· tbls service are diacu11~ \bat the
Community Restitution Pro1ram la
balled .. one ol the COUDty's 1ueceues.
SHIRLEY A . SYMONDS
Creation acience • To.Edltm-: It Hrta1D1J aUrprlMd UM 'II percent
of all Amerlcana <baaed OQ an
A11oelated Preu·NBC poll Jaat
NOvtlllblr) tbat "creaUoa adenee ...
• udn1 /rom Mldn• a,.. .-al'Rf T'-'
rifltf to ~ wUn• to fM. •t or ~•mtMtt ht.I " rfltrwd lAtltr• of .JOO
Wordl M ltt.• IUIJI t. ffUftl ,,,.,ftttt. AU
Jfttm _, IRCludf ftpahttt aM ..,......
oddte• .... RCHUI mar ,,. ..,.,,...... • ,....
•qutsl II •utJtctnl rHIOll •• ~me.
Pot#¥.,_ tit~· IAtm MCIJ IM
INgrlN' la .._ NGfffl _, ,,._
"""'..., flW ~blilor Md bf fl/tlfW )tit, !.'f~---~
adjustments equal to those to be given
welfare recipients , the local
governments will be free lo grant their
employees whatever they wish.
The same ls true in the case of the
schools which Brown says will be given
a rull cost·of·living increase in their
allocations.
AND THERE IS some legerdemain in
Brown's claim of no new taxes. The
budget proposes to meet the now
estimated shortfall of $2 billion by cuts
totalling $1 billion. The other billion will
c o m e from the spe edup of tax
collc <:tions a nd some new revenues
termed "feet>'' instead of taxes. These
include n e w charges to utility
companies purportedly to offset costs of
regulatory services provided by the
Public Utilities Commission. Brown
s ays s ue h fees are part or the·
movement to connect cost more closely
to benefits.
Another irony in the budget plan is
that Brown, in staking his program on
an upturn in the e<:onomy. i.s saying be
expe cts the economic program or
President Reagan, which be has loudly
condemned, to prove itself before the
year's end.
no scientific merit or educational
value."
Creation science rightfully points out
the contrary evidence against
megaevolution. To suppress creation
science is nothing less than censorship
and the sWling or contrary eviden~e.
CREATION SCIENCE accepts all
experimental results of microevolution
but rejects all speculations of
megaevolution. It is Intelligent and
creative design -aptly called
micro.creation, which pervades all
endeavors or human activity, whether it
be the arts or sciences. It predicts that
to increase complexity in information
or structure, intelligent and creative
design is required. It also predicts that
life only comes from life -a law better
known as the law or biogenesis.
Does teaching creation science
violate the separation of church and
state? The answer is no. Since some
churches li,terally have merged
evolution science into their reU1iou.s
beliefs, then to teach evolution science
exclusively lends to violate the
separation of church and state! The
only alternative for the stete is
neutrality, which guarantees all world
views oo origins to be tau1ht.
·Therefore, creation science mu.st be
Included whenever the views or
evolution science are presented in
tax-supported schools.
CHRJSTOPHER CHUI
Out of 'club'
To the EdJtor:
·When I became a member or the
Senator's Club, a John Schmitz support
organiiation, about a year ago, l bad no
idea that I would later publicly tender
my resignaUon.
J{owettr, aside IN>m our suPPCJMdly
beln& fellow coaHrvaUve Re.,Ubllcans,
I discover l have absolutely notbial lo
common with Senator Scbmiu. Havtna
seen him cre•te the supreme penonal
and political error of supportinc
bifotry, racism, and antt-feminiam
while dlaplayiq a callous cUarecard fOf'
the penooal beliefs and practices of
otbers, 1 now joyfully and fore-termore
renounce my membenhlp la the "dub"
and pray tbe balasace of tbe
membe:nblp will see flt to do WtewiM.
LELAND E. OLJVll:R
Two· die
in llB
smashup·
Two Huntington Beach
realdenta were fataUy iQjured.ln
a two-vehicle cotlhlon
Wednesday, becoming the city's
first two traffic deaths of 1882,
police reported today.
Dead are Chriatioe Yulja ·
Nakamura, 28, of 18331 Oxboro
Lane and Douglas John Ell, 21,
of 5092 Blue Jay Circle.
Police said the accident
occurred at 10 :40 a .m .
Wednes day when lfra .
Nakamura, northbound on
Edwards Street with her two
small children, railed lo stop for
a red light at Hell Avenue.
Her 1977 Audi was bit
broadside by an eastbound van
driven by Larry John Schretl,
26, or Anaheim, police said.
Eli, a passenger in the van,
• was ejected during the colllsion
and was pinned beneath the
truck when it rolled over.
He was freed and rushed to
Fountain Valley Community
Hospital, where he died al noon,
a hospital spokeswoman said.
CAVALCADE /
BUSINESS
Mr-s. Nakamura also was
tben lo the hospital, where she
died at 1 :23 p.m ., the
spokeswoman said.
Her two children, •who were
passengers in the auto, Carolyn
Nakamura, 2, and Brian
Nakamura, 6 weeks, were
treated at the hospital and
released.
LAST PICTURE -Huntington Beach parents
Richard and Robin Barada look at the last
photograph of their daughter Lani. 8. A
Delly "91 ...... " •ic...... ......
poster child for Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.
the.girl died Monday.
Girl's life short hut happy
Scbrett, the driver of the van,
was not injured, police said. Death claims Huntington's Cystic Fibrosis poster child
HBChamber
women plan
installation
New officers in the Huntington
Beach Chamber of Commerce
Women's Division will be ·
installed Friday during a dinner
at Sam's Seafood Restaurant.
The cocktail hour will begin at
· 6:30 p.m .• followed by a buffet
dinner at 7:30.
Orange County Supervisor
Harriett Wieder \vill install the
1982 executive board members.
OHicers include E laine A.
C rart, president ; Nannette
Linder, first vice president;
Shirley Hanley, second vlce
president; Anne Peterson, third
vice president ; Cor rie
Broussard, recording secretary;
Elma Walters, corresponding
seccretary; and Cathy KJrko,
treasurer.
By PATRICK KENNEDY 6t .. Diiiy """ ,...,
Eight-year-old Lani Anderson
of Huntington Beach spent
happy moments as poster child
fo r Ua e Cystic Fibrosis
Foundation. meeting celebrities
and having her picture taken.
The blonde·ba1red girl was
selected to a two-year stint as
poster representative when she
was 6.
When her life ended Monday,
it wasn't unexpected. There's no
known cure for her disease, say
her parents. But death sWJ was
a shock to her parents and
friends.
"If you'd have seen her a
month ago, you wouldn't have
believed she was going to die,"
said her stepfather Richard
Baratta. "Just Friday she beat
m e in three games of
backgammon in the hospital."
The girl's healthy appearance
disguised her illness, sajd her
mother Robin. Lani wasn't
emaciated and pale like many
victims of the hereditary lung
and digestive tract disease, she
said.
"She was a little girl wbo liked ---.F.Jf-Library
f rieruls plan
celebration
·-·· ·-·t«rride--her·bicycle wtierr·she-fell
good, and roller skate, and color
pictures. All those things ·normal
girls do. But her UtUe body just
got tired. She'd spent a rough
year."
The Friends of the Fountain
Valley Llbrary ·will celebrate the
group's 17t.b year and help kick
off the city's 25th birthday
ct>lebration at a reception
fo'riday, Feb. 15, at the library,
17565 L<>s Alamos St.
The event is open to the
public, and refreshments will be
provided. Tbe two-hour progTam
will befin at 5:30 p.m .
The library support. group will
be the first organization to mark
the city's 25th birthday. Other
events are planned during the
coming ~nths.
A third grade student al'
Bushard School, Lani spent moet
of tbe paJt year In Childrens
Children's movies
set in Huntington
Color feature·leogth movies
for children will be presented
during a winter film series
beginning Saturday a-t the
Huntington Beach Library, 7111
Talbert Ave.
Hospital in Orange. The hospital
has a special floor and medical
staff for the young victims of the
disease.
As poster child, Lani posed at
fund-raisers with television star Tom Bosley of ··Happy Days,'·
comedienne Phyllis Diller, and
Angeles baseball player Don
Baylor.
·'She and Don Baylor really
became close. He would alt her
in his lap and they'd talk for a
long time. There was nothing
shy about Lani, she was very
happy,:.• her mother said.
At 5, Lani won "LltUe Miss
Entertainment " tor a son¥. and
dance routine to the tune ' Good
Ship Lollipop" at the Cystic
Fibrosis s ummer camp
sponsored by Childrens Hos·
pita I.
But in the past year , four of
Lani's young friends from the
hospital died before they
reached 12.
"She told her baby sitter ~t
all hei rrieDds were dying and
she k.new she wasn't going to
live J'llUCh k>nger either," her
mother said.
"Jt was always hard for the
two of us lo taut about it. I just
trted to make her life as happy
and full as possible."
·'It's so tremendously sad that
she's ione, but I'm relieved it's
over for her. She was trustrateo
and sad that she was too weak to
play anymore. I just feel sorry
for her friends at the hospital
she left behind."
Valley students
• win court contest
Thirteen students of Los
Amigos High School in Fownain
Valley won fir s t place
Wednesday in the First Annual
Orange County Mock Trial
Competition.
During the thr ee days of
competition at Orange Cowtty
Superior Court. in Santa Ana. the
senior students presented both
sides or a hypothetical armed
robbery and assault case.
Stud ents from 24 schools
competed.
The mock trial preantations
were beard by Superior Court
Judges who volunteered their
time, according to a spokesman
for the Garden Grove Uolfied
School District.
The Loa Amigos team
defeated El Modena Hip School
of the Orange UnUled. School
District to win first place.
Presiding Orange County
Superior Court Judie Robert
Rjckles beard the case.
The Fountain Valley students
will travel lo Sacramento next
month tor the rinal state
competition involving students
f rom 10 counties, a district
spokesman said.
The competition was fwtded
by a state grant and the
program was sponsored by t.be
Co n stitutional Rights
Foundation of Loa Angeles.
Los Aml101 participants
included students John Wbara,
Crals Yoq, Ke&in Hayuihida,
Mlke Atkinloo, Bob Gnewucb,
Steve Haefner, Kim Harriagton,
Mary Hutb, Usa Litteral, Joe Lu.m, Jool Ong, Hien Tang,
Anne Wabl, Julie Yamamoto
and Cral1 Youns. ·
Sludeota from Un1versity High
School in Irvine, finished third in
the competition and students
from Westminster High School
finished fourth.
A witness called by 'the
prosecution in Willie Ray
Wlsely'a murder trial was
ordered jailed Wednesday by
Oran&P Cowtty Superior Court
Judte Kenneth E. Lae wbe'n be
refu*8d repeatedly lo answer
Wayne
sculpture
' banned
\ ,
A city·commissiOIMd bronze
relief aeu!pture of t_tJe late actor
Jolm Waywie has bee• banned -fr~ lbe Newport Beach City
City council members said t.be
a~on is not meant to be a slap
at Wayne , regard ed as
Newport's IOOSt fam°"'citnen. Tbe condition was imposed by
council i:neaabers this week after
they a'1'Md lo lend $13,000 to the
Newport Harbor Jaycees to
help pay off artist Chris Matson.
Several council members said
the City Hall ban came as a
result of c ircums tances
s urrowtding the art work.
Matson, who now has the
bronze work in his garage, was
given permission in 1979 to
create a bas relief of Wayne 'for
$17 ,500. Jaycees were siocled
out as the service group lor
raising money to pay fe>f il.
But the size and price o( the
artwork ballooned •during the
two years it took to complete it.
Tbe cost now is expected lo be
$32 ,000 and the artwork now
includes a stagecoach, six
horses and the likenesses of
A n d y D • v i n e ,a o d J o h n
Carradine in addition to Wayne
himself.
The Jaycees do not have
enough money to pay artist
Matson.
To a person, city officials
acknowledge the finished piece
is handsome and likely worth
more than the asking price.
But Councilman Don Strauss
said he made the motion to keep
it out of city hall because "I'm
less than enthused with it at this
point."
The sculpture was lo have
been wtveiled in city hall this
month.
City orficials, who suggest the
bronze work eventuaJly 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.
Valley rec
classes slated
Registration for more than 95
Fountain Valley Parks and
Recreation classes is under way
at the Recreation Center, 16400
Brookhurst St.
The signup period is from 9
a.m. to S p.m. weekdays through
Jan. 22.
Winter classes will Include
aerobics, acrylic painting,
dancing, cake decorating,
gymnastics, ice skating, karate,
modeling and guitar.
questions relating t.o tb~cau.
Told by Judge Lae that be
would remain in Orange County
J all until be agTeed to answer
the questions, Phillip A.
Thompson respbnded:
"That's when hell freezes
over."
Thompson, 36, a former San
Quentin inmate, was then,
immediately taJcen into cuatody
by sheriff's deputies on Lae's
contempt of court. citation.
The unusual episode occurred
Wednesday lo the presenee of
the eigbt·man, four·woman jury
hearing the murder caH. A
s im ilar inciden t occurred
Tuesday outside the presence of
the jury when Thompson
originally refused to answer
questions put to him by
prosecutor Ed Freeman.
Th.ompson had been given an
offer of immunity by the court in
return for his testimony.
And Lae , at Tuesday 's
hearing, had ordered the
Northern California man to
answer any questions put to him
regarding the case. Wisely, 29, is
charged with first-degree
murder and specia l
circumstances in the suffocation
death of his ste pfather last
March. Wisely could face the
death penalty.
According to prosecutors, the
victim, Hwttington Beach trudt
driver Robert Bray, was k.ilJed
when he threatened t-o 10 ·to
police and expose his 1t.epson'a
a lleged drug traffhking
activities. Bray was found
suffocated beneath the
2,000·pOund, tillaway cab of his
tractor·trailer rig.
During Wednesday's court
proceedings, Thompson took the
witness stand and almost
immediately told Lae. "I'm not
giving up my rights arid I'm
prepared to go to jail. So let's
gel this farce over with fast."
Thompson sai d be bad
consulted with his Los Angeles
I aw yer by phone a od was
advised that the offer of
immunity by the court wasn't
any good.
He then invoked the Fifth
Amendment to protect himself
from self-incrimination and was
held in cont~mpt
Cello, vocal
recital set
f~r Saturday .
Donna Jill Mosher of Fountain
Valley will perform a free cello
and vocal concert Saturday,
at the Unitarian Universallst
Church, 5450 Atherton St., Lons
Beach, at 8 p.m. It is open to the
public.
The recital wW feature ~
by Charles, Martin, Prot.beroe,
Valentini and Dvorak.
Ms. Mosher ia a membet ol
the Pacific Sym pbo111
Orch_estra, baaed ln ~
She has performed with the
Long Beach Syn\J>hony
Orchestra and with various
chamber groups.
Guest speakers at Friday'.s
reception 1lrill be Dorice Jesto,
Marlaret Krukel!berg, Dlddy
Lammers, Betty Mignanelll and
Jamea Dick.
The films will be shown on six
Saturdays, all beginning at 1
p. m. Some will be repeated at 3
p .m . Admission is $1 , and
refreshments will be sold by the
Friends of the Children's
Library.
Impressionism Set
for Laguna mUseum
Basketball,
kickball
leagues open
0il fight strategy expected'
"lmpreaalonlam, the
California View," an exh.lbiUon
ol 103 oil patnUn11 clone ln tbe
California lmpreaalonilt atJle,
•will-..,_ Friday-al the IAcuu
Beaeb lfuleum of Art.
• The allow waa curated ~,
Oak.land lfuaeum curator
Raney JCIMI, who bu selected aome u Caltornla artil'f to be
f'.9Pnllll&td. Al~ CaWornla paim.t , ....... llOt, colorful ., .. of
imp,..lOllfam later Ulaa tM
..... tantonla'• landteapaa .... lbllllar ....... tbe ., ..
....... to loilal .......... . ................
TM ..... •111111 ...-bJ Mti NOrtMta ........ ... ··=· ..... ,,.,.." .... .,.... Mile .... ti
11 &M -••n •die •
The Boys Club of Fountain
VaUey ls cooductJ.nc registration
for youth kickball an d
basketball lea1\ies.
The kJcltball pmea &re for
boys ind flrl1 In 1rades one Ulroucb ala. Game. wUJ belin tn
late lanuary and co•Unue
tiarouClt March.
The emt for this 1 ... m la $2
per p&a~:I •bll:h ee.en the awarda awardl eeremoay.
Gamet wUl ,M,played T-4an
and TbW'ldap at I :• p.m. at
tbt 9o)'I Qub.
TbrH·O•·three -11ketball
1ama for ,__. ld1ll and b1Cb
acbool .,. ro-pten wiU take
plaee WedWclay and Friday
afterDOGlll M tbe chlb. loeae.d at
l9to Talblrt Ave.
Cott r.. tlala 1 .. 1ue 11 •· wlUell ...,. tbe uattorm ...,. .......
2'i• el•ti alH I• plan•lDI
olulil aa "'fat Uftlal, k-.. IDdlaMGl~Jllllltuee.
·Laguna, Newport to pr~JXJre argument against drilling.
Laguna Beach and Newport
Beach officials will be planntn1
a atrat .. y to coavlace the
federal IOYernment ·that oil
well• aren't needed ln tbe
coastal wat_.. off the two:;;i .
Lal\lb& Blech Cit1 m r
• Kn ...... ialdW ... , t f~ a meeuna fl clall of tM fwo beach COIDmunlUet
Tue1da7, • dele1aUon of
Newport and La1una oftJclala
will p~ a aummary of the
laaues lmobed.
Tbe federal 1overnm .. a. 11
.. ~ l"ebnWy ....
wbethet tt> leaH So•th.-..
California off1bore watera. lncludlDC ateaa u tloae u tine• mu .. to LlaUDa ·alld Newport
for drUlinl and producUoa of Oil
and ...
SarHerW.~
Beub lfa1or Sally -......
flred off • letter to tb• Depa.--'of bterl« ....... a 1 ' • l •• •ff 'c l • • t • ' a•
' environmental impact report. on
a proposed offshore oll lease.
The letter, endorsed by the
City Council, aoucht deletion of
possible sale next month of
tracts directly off the coast of
La1una Beacfi .
• Jn her letter, Mrs. Bellerue
sald tbe departm ent's
environmental impact report
"1ave lnauttlclent eonalderattoo
to the aenalUve and atpUlcant
nature of tbe L•auna Beach
shoreline."
Sbe warned of the poqlble
adnrH impact an oil apUI
woulc' bave on the clty'a
intertidal IOM, not onJ1 CID the
clty•a UdaJ pooll, but on lw
tourtat .s reenaUoa IDeoml .
Slaee L•I••• '• ecoaom1 NfttijtllMli••l'· Oii ...... • ·mm· :Mi.:-:=·~:=
IMl'clml&i .. _~ the dQ ..... .......ac ........
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~ob offers ·
U )'OU're'Clttt .. ~ in Jm -ud Mllllcw! ol )'OU
will vol...,U, • la~J -"'8e Ua&I momeftt tor
Af a.GDiii ••••• of tbt prtotttlle of your career. ...... JOU de .. • job offer. law wtU JOU reeop1ae L~tt·......... a
Wbttlter tit• Job .
JOU'rt off ... II tbt • ~
result ·of roar ••• • · • a
1earcb w ..... , It II• --~~., h•t co••• so o• r991m~,~ wltbeut ,_.. , • .
tlep Mc*.~ Ute ul• of~ prospective new :lltu.U. _...-.a .. ..,.,._._., •your wOuld·be
-·~ • • tW......,,..,.... .-. • r•w-e ._ • ..._ OlleeJ99Uft .... -. Jtu'U be alllUld at. u.e .., •:"""I ,,_,_, wW t• ...S UM rilbt OM wmaw•w..yow.,.. . .
....,., Of eaur.-tt'• a PG'l•tul motlvator, but b7-,
·-meaM tM Mp .. ( ... ...., JC*'N Mt delperate for u:;
emp=u.& ,.,. .• :··..a.ry). ~ ..-.y II not tlle
oa.l)' ti till ...... taYOlwt reloe•~· roe.-fot•••e•••· Job ldlfaetioa, aecurt•.1. Ute aWt.._ of,_ fUltlr -ia8 U.. factor. must rut "8 lD ti* Jlt8I teda'-. And tM .,_.... to you traD1late
tale ~· aaUafadJon, a cerWa meni.l "comfort
linel' tbllt harfl money alone.
Here'• a cbeeklllt that you can UH to recognbe bow. aood tbe •offer ts for you. lt'a extraordinarlly revealing. -9L.-t with tbe company'l refOl't, wblcb ia, ln fact,
ltl AllDM. Wbll& accomplilhmenta does it empbaaiae?
Does the at.Jje it ~ match what you aee as suited for
yourself? Uthe com-pany ii publicly beld, you easily can
check 1tl eamlnp over the put (ew yean.
-Try to ftad out flratband from friends in the lndustry
or wbatner IOW'eet JOU eaa loea&e <a l&ock analyst if you
know one) bow the COlllpml)' .. pereelftd amonc lta peen. •
-Are you bead.in& In the s._ direction u . lbe
company? A healthy ltOet price and srowth potential are
over&ll iood alflDI, but do the company's future plans
dovetail witll yow qua.llfkatlom, interests aqd ultimate
objectives? <'l'here are deep piUalls bere; think carefully).
-What ls the company'• manaeement pbilosopby? or
crucial importanee, empbbttea Alan SdM>nberg, president
of Management Recruiters International Inc .. the
COUl)try's largest executive recruiter, is the inmvidual to
whom you will report. How do you feel about that penon?
Do respoaaibiJity and authority io band in -band in this
company? Cu you really make your mark? Is the' '. I
company stru~ ao that you will be recocnized for ahd
given credit for yo..-accompUabmenta? -nuea are impreuive, but will you be responsible
for all that yours .. plies? How many people actually will •
be reporti.q to you, if any? How much declsion:maklng :
authority will you have? . l
-ls then ~ ID upper management for you? Is the :
company lm8wa for promottnc from wilhin, or does it look 4
for "frelb IWoocl" from the outaide? ; -U YIU are aucceuful, what will be your next step in J
the company? Does each nmc on the mana1emenl ladder ~
involve relocatioA? · ,
.. y'0urnew ~l,QJiiOyer COYM? Accorclinc to Richard w. Wirth, ; ' -Jf ~ ~ M~M ~.~aw, wt..t nPCDAeS should.. i l
.tee presJ'dl91 of marketi.DC for . llomequlty, a leading J.
relecatlon mana••ment firm. )'OU abcMlld uk for: one fully ~
paid houl8lunUn1 lftt, tellabursement for moving your t
household CCJOda, travel expenaes to the new location for ~
you and your family ud an expeme allowance to cover ;
temporary Uviq coeta (both food and shelter> for up to 60 ;
days. Friqe benellta (health, dental and optical plans), club
memberJhipe, parkln• -all these "perks" are important. •
The quality of life, inctudint netc:bborbooda and school f
systems, will affect your entire famUy relation.ships. ~
Alai.mt all lhe above, cub in band u the key factor t
downsrades itself, "#lllch ls what this checklist is designed i
f. to4o.
STlllS IN THE SNRIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
NRW YOtlKCA'"l "'Ml Oow.J-·~ :loc:'r"• JM. 1 . i
r.-·,·.;.; · ·· ~-·~; ·ii~a:·:i.~ .. ~ ·
• T"' M 15'.U MUI M ,09-UI f lt ~ m:n 115.97 IOe.20 ltlJ.41-U6 ~ ..... ~~-~.~.~~~.~,-r.~ i~ ::::::::::::·::::::::. ,-.: ! '5.. ....................... ,.,., ...
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW VOttK CA.., J ... 1f
.........
~ -111 m t •
.
I
;
Major le ague t eams
· draft nine Pirates
After the dust had settled and fll • 28 major league baseball teams !lad
completed Tuesday's winter free
aeent drart, ·ni~e Orange Coast
College players iz:d themselves selected by pro bell clubs.
Leading the st of draftees from Coach
b Mike Mayne's squad are four sophomores who
saw plenty of action last season.
Leftfl~lder Kevin
Sliwinski, -_ .338 hitte'° with
si' homm and 30 RBI last
stason, was peeged by
Houston in the first round or
the secondary phase.
Pitcher Jack Reinholtz,
an Ocean View High
graduate, was picked in lb~
lPth rouod of the regular
phase by OakJand. Relnholtz
1¥Y'911 was 6--0 last season.
Sophomore shortstop Scott Groot was
drafted by Kansas City in the fifth round of the
regular pbaase. Groot bit .310 and started most
of OCC's.games at shortstop.
Also chosen was Fred Del~. a ·* baUer
who was the PiritJes' designated hitter. Delaine
was picked by Oakland in the l3lb round of the
reguJar phase.
Quote of the day
Tennis player Victor Amaya to umpire
Rod1er Smllb during a doubles rpatch in
England. "Not only are you a cheat, but
,you're incompeteat as well." (Amaya and
.bis parter Hank Pfister were fined $500
each for their outbursL)
Moncrief's shots sinks 76ers . .
Slca!y Mon~rs 15·foot jump
shot with 17 seconds left carried the
Milwaukee Bucks to a 111-107 Victory
over the Philadelphia 76ers to
l highlight Wednes day night's National
b Basketball Association action . . . In other
1~ games, Ben ard King and World Free combined
for 73 points as Golden State whipPed Denver,
· 143·128. King bad a iame-bilh 39 points ...
OH WWlaas scot'ed 12 of his
19 points in the first half as
iSeattle rolled past tndiana,
106-86. Seattle won its fifth
1game in a row and also
picked up its 12th win al
home in ~ .Jast 13 .eames
. . . Rookie. torwaa;d-Keyta
r scored .)l .,career-blgh
points, including 11 in the
qua.rt.er to lead Kansas
,..... y to a 117-104 victory over
Clneland . . . Brlaa Taylor slµlk two free.
ovacame a 17-pelnt deficit and beat Dallas,
1 105-lOI • . . Bolton scored 10 straight points to
break Open a c&Ose game, and Larry Bird
scored J8 points as the Celtics scored a 116-95
vlet~ry over Atlanta . . . Mllwa.uk~e
president J ames Fitsgerald was Hated in
aatiafactory condition in intensive care after
heart surgery.
ean Vie w
...... ,_.,... ve s stall
beat h ions
With •:47 ten, H"'ntJnatoc\ Beach came ~ilb1n four point.I of tyht1 tbe acore as
Dane 81aackleford hit OD a Mooter.
But J'ountaln Valley puJled away and
ended lllY OUer threat by 1cortn1 the uxt
six DOUta. and putUna the 1ame on lee.
"Cive them lbe credit," laid Brown.
• 'TbQ eame ~ack ln the aecond ball. It
wu ~ tor us to 'Pt back 1n the , ....
t>eea• we we11 up by 10 many pobatl at · ~~.. .
K• ltarter scored 18 points and 1rabbed
U rebclands for the Barona, whl1'9 Rob
Whitehair aod John l(ost,y cdmblned '4r-11
rebomlds. The OUen we,. led by Laa.
with •. !i. polnts and 11 reboundJ, "'tbile
Sllactumord t<l!Ssed In \6 polnta.
"Harter is a gooCl player." added
8rown. The 6-.t se~ior bas been an
AU-tournament selection 1n each of the
three tournaments that FountaJn V.aUey
has played in.
Maruk's goal glv,. caps tie I
A llOll1 'by Dellllll .. ,. wAtb 10. • seconds remalni•&. ·f0Uowi111 a
faceoff, 1•ve the WHlllnfton .
Capitals a 8-8 tit with tbe Edmonton Oilers in
Wednesday night's NaU•al Hockey Leaaue
action. F.dmontoo's Wa7ae Gret*y, the NHL's
runaway scoring leac:hr, notched his SSth goal
. . . ln other games, Buffalo's A1H1re Sevar\I.
scored with less than two minutes gone, and the.
Sabres went on to acore tbe next four goaJ1 en
route to a S-2 win over Cbicaao . . . Matt
Tardif'• tally witb 9:51 left heped Quebec score
.a 4·2 decision over St. Louis . . . l ob•
Andenoa and Fred Bolmlstraell scored toals
and goalie Mlcltel Larocque supplied a
near-perfect performance as Toronto topped
ColQrado, 2·1 . . . Pat Hlclley and Ron
Duguay scored goals to lead tbe New York
Rangers to a 2·0 win over Minnesota . . . Dale
Hawetthack scored two power.play goals to
lead Winnipeg to a 6-1 victory over Pittsburgh
. . . Vancouver broke a five-game losing
streak with a 5·1 victory over Calgary ..
Fairbanks plans no legal action
Unlv,ersity of Colorado football • coach ~ll F~Qks said be does
not plan any civil action again.st
Boulder, Colo. pqliee rollowing an
incident in which he was handcuffed and
detained after his car was stopped for a
suspected speeding violation. Police said
Fairbanks' car was mistakenly identified u a
stolen car when officers st91>ped the vehicle,
I and that one patrolman
pulled his service revolver
and another handc uffed
Fairbanks after the coach
became abus,ive and refused
to obey commands to place
his hand& behind bis
.bea,d ... Danny Salls,
formerly of Corona del Mar
High, has been ranked 20th in
the 1982 pre-season tennis
f'AIHAllU Sfn,les rankings by, lhe
Intenollegia(e Tennis As sociation ... The
Angels announced Wedpe,sday they have
assigned pitcher Dave Frost to the club's
Pacific Coast L e ague affiliate in
Spokane ... A meeticg between tbe Dodgers
and pitching sensation Feraando Valemaela is
expected this week or early next week to
continue discussions on a pay raise. TaJb were
recessed this week when no aareement could be
reached . . . Charlie Tapp of St. PauJ, Minn.,
has the lead after three rounds of the pro
bowline tournament in Las Vegas. Tapp's
three-round total of S,345 is 52 pins better than
second-place James Miller of Mesa, Ariz.
Television. radio
Following are the top SPortS events on TV
tonight. Ratings are: " " " " excellent; " " " Worth watching;" I fair;" forget It.
8 p.m., Ct.annet 9 .f ./ ./
COl,.LEGE BASKETBALL: Colorado Stale al
UNLV. Announcers: Chic k Hearn and Ralph
Readout.
Coach Jerry Tarl<an lan's Runnln' Rebels continue their bid as an independent to reach the
NCAA ch~ionshlps. Colontdb State is currently
b·7 overall and 1 ·2 In Western Athletic Conference action. Tarkanian's club will be Joining the PCAA
next season but this year the overall record will be
the determining lactor ln post-season play.
RADIO Basketball -Cal State <Fullerton) at UC
Irvine, 7:30 p.m., KWVE (108 FM l and KWRM ( 1370); UC Santa Barbara at Long Beach State, 7:3S p.m.1 KLON (88 FM).
Hockey -Kings at Calgary, 6:20 p.m .. KPRZ (1150).
Ski Report -Snow conditions In Southern
Calirornla mountains. 9:•3 a.m .. 12:43, 3:43, 7:0 p.m., KNX (1070). "
From Page Ct
EDISON • • •
Popovich didn't want to do.
"I knew the game would have
to be iJ1 the 40s or ~ if we were
goin& U> win. We tried to fut
break with them. For evet')'
basket we got, we lost one later,
either by turnover or because of
their fine defense," Popovicb
added.
Chang fin!sbed the first half
with 13 points and the Chareers
held a 37·28 advantage. While
DiBernardo added 12 more in
the first 16 minutes, guard Mark
Goudge could bo•st just four
points.
But Goµdge got hot in the
second half, scoring eight in the
third quart~r_and oix more in .~e
·final period. lfis 18 points tied
him with DiBernardo.
With Chang s hooting 77
percent from the floor ( 10 of ~)
and the Chargers as a team
shootlng al a 51 percent clip,
Edison jumped out lo a 64-43
advantage with 4:50 remaining
In lhe game.
Marina tried in vain lo keep
Lhe score Interesting as John
Berry scored 15 of bis 19 points
in the second hair, and . guard
Scott Filipek added 16.
Marina's 6-5 forward Smith
had 10 points io the first half, but
the Chargers held him to one
point in the finaJ two quarters.
"Marina really lit up al. t.be
sta rt," admitted Leigh. "We
lcnew they were a good team.
B~i w~ had \o change our
offense after that start."
Leigh's idea of changing bis
offense i4 a $.imple one. SiflJlply 1 i~rove the passing game apd
find the open man. With guys
Ii lee ChaJ\g , Goudge and
Qi8ernardo, it's a minor
adjustment.
From PageC1
EAGLES •••
high point honors for Mesa with
Rishebarger (16 points). went to
the Line. Est{lncia hit 19 of 36 from the
fleld (52.8 perce nt) and the
Mustangs hit hair of their 58
shqts after a disastrous 4-for-17
effort in the first quarter.
Gardner also had 11 assists for
the nlghl, keeping pace with his
average of 10.2 per outing.
Estancia played 'its eame -
with 1 bllseline attack early and
the Eagl6' ~one didn't allow for
a lot of pent!tration.
So, the Eagles prepare for 3-1
University Friday. Mesa, now
1·3 can onlr hope to salvage the
first round with three straight
against 0-4 teams. then regroup
for a last chance.
Lack o f progre88
for Co niglia r o
BOSTON <AP ) -Tony
ConiglJm-o's doctors are "very
concerned " abQUt "a
disappointing lack of p~gress in
his level of consc-iou.sness'' four
days aft.er be suffered a se\'ere
heart attack, accordin1 to a
hospita.l •~tement Wednesday.
Dlllty .... ,....,, ·----ll-. JUMPING JACK -Neil Riddell of Laguna l;Jeactl leaves his f~et to try to block pass from Laguna Hills' Dan Blanck durfn~ Wednesday's South Coast League contest.
I .
Laguna Hills 4J-ops
'rival Laguna Beach
Rafhsey, ~arter hot for.Hawks
By BICIVlto DUNN °' .. _..., ...... SUff 'l'be Laguna Hills High
bas ketball team e vened its
South Coast League record at l·l
as the Hawks slipped past rivaJ
Laguna Beach Wednesday night,
68·61 , al Laguna Hills.
Brett Olivier led the EfawlCs attack with 18 points, as he and
6-3 forward Tom Ramsey, who
poured in 17, humble d the
Artists and dropped their league
record lo l·l.
The Hawks turned the ball
over 19 times and were guilt,y of
22 fouls, but the fine outside
s h ooting of Ram s e y and
sophomore guard Robert Carter
helped the Hawks to their first
league Victory.
''I wasn't reaJly surprised al
how well they <Laguna Beach>
played tonight," said Laguna
Hills Coach John Moore. "They
play aggressively and they are
going to give teams problems in
thi& lei.we."
At the start of the fourth
quarter, Laguna Hills was up by
15, 5843, but the Hawks found
themselves getting into roul
trouble. .
With 5: 16 left In the third
quarter, Olivier committed his
fourth foul and Moore bad to
rely. on Ramsey and Todd Utfin
lo p•~k up the slack under the
boards.
"We rebounded well
offensively tonight," Moore
said. "We look a lot of good
shots and played our type of
g11me."
Laguna Beach, 8-7, was led by'
senior guard Neil Riddell (20
points> and John Mann, who
scored 19 points.
Riddell started -the game ,.
averaging 22.2 points a game,
and bis outside shooting proved
to be no different Wednesday
night.
The Hawks had trouble
working the baJl°ln to Olivier in
the first half, as the Artists
double-teamed the S-9 senior and
the Hawks were for<!ed to take
o uts ide s hots. Laguna Hills
r es ponded by shooting 65
percent from the floor in the
first half and took a 40-35 lead at
halftime.
The Hawks outscored Laguna
Be ach 18-8 in the third quarter,
giving them their biggest lead of
the contest al the end of the_
pe riod. •·We attacked their
zone real well tonight,•· Moore
said. "For a quarter and a half,
w e r e ally played like a
championship team."
The Artists shot a weak 34
· percent from the. floor. but shot
70 percent from the free-throw
line. compared to the Hawks,
who shot a dismal 52 percent
from the line.
Laguna Hills will travel to San
Clemente Friday night, and tbe
Artists will be at Capo Valley.
From PageC1
HOPE. • •
GOSH.EN CAP) -"My blC dreatn la to devetop
u avladoft mu.eum ln ta. Su Joaquln Valley
10.mewMt-e betw"n Tular• and Fttt.oo." aaya Ty Suadalrom. a 2•-year-old Vlsalla apartment
man acer and aircraft .... iorer. •
And lhe undisputed centerpiece ot
Suedllrom'I vlalon would be a blu...d hunk of
met1t t.ubln1 tbat curti9ntly 1lt1 In J D airy
warehouse ln thl• emaH Tulare County
community.
.. tenT._ ..... .. .......... ., .... .,
, ... follew1111 "'"" ti ••••• MIMuOI C'-AlllC WtCK •lt, to•~ alow•trt lowlevor•, C .. to MeM, tlllr.t!N f'IU1
11111~ wi11..,,. c.,,_, ~
New.-rt .. lllev•r•, C .. te Moe,
Colflwnlo ftW
flllt Mlttett It COlllllC'°4 111¥ • IMMw.t.
Mlc!IMIW.C#ltM
Tiii• • .....,,,.,.. -,.... ....... ...
QWlllY "°'" .. 0r....-~., .. J•11...,,s,1•
PIUlllll ~.,.... ...... .... ..,,,......,
Sfttine on a palr ot met.! a~e wheels, tbe
ruatina akeleton 1' all that's left Ol the only known
R~.an M.·1 airmail pJane aUO ln existence. and
SW\dstrom cool)ders it a~rlcelets piece of
l't(Tt1'10UI ......... MMMrnATaMaNT Tll• ......... IWf'_lt .. lllt -·----..a: .........
.... U.,11 .. 08COlt, IUt·i.-----------
avlaUOfl history. •
WJlen he flnt discovered th craft on an
isolated San Luis Obispo County· ranch, Sundatrom
admitted, "I didn't know what it wu. I was •ure
wbal it was ~fore I made • second trtp.' •
Sundstrom·a initial interest ln the 1• vintage
alrcrllf't wu primarily because of its rarity. !Jut
much to bis delight. further research revealed that
Chari~ Lindbergh flew Ute plane while bontins for
tbe "Spirit of St. l,.ouls" to carry him across lhe
Atlantic.
Sundsttom said the craft haa attracted the
attention of the Smithsonian Institution. the San
Diego Aerospace Museum and the Pacific Museum
or Flight in SeatUe. The last previous known Ryan
M · 1 was destroyed in a fire at the San Diego
museum.
·•The plane is priceless," Suridstrom said. •'Tb~-Sinlth.sonlan Is not interested• just because
lhie is an old airplane. They're interested because
this is the first production strut-braced monoplane
in the United Stateei."
As an aircraft restorer, Sundstrom is always
on the watch for news of old planes. He traded a
set of antique wings for a tip on a downed aircraft
tbat turned out to be the long lost Ryan.
STATEMllNTOf'AaANDOtlM•NT OPUHOI' l'ICTITIOUS llUSINIU NAMI Tllo IOllOwl119 P.,SOllt .......
obonclOnoct tllo uu of thO lieut~ llutlneu,_: RAL. INVESTING COMPANY,
10454 Lo. Oespenao, Fowrrteln Veltoy, Colllornl• t?JGI Tll• Fl<lltlous 8usl,.ou Hem• reforr9«1 to _.,. ,...., rited In Oronoo
COUftlY °" O<I, 2J, 1'181.
Alc ... rlt H HOUltOft, 1004 l• Oo-nso, Founl•ln v •11•1', C..lltornle '17• Shlrloy D. Houston, IO•J4 L.1 0o.....-, "'-lloln Voll•f, C1ll"11'11lo .,,.
Lowe ll Aalnw•I••, 1004 L• Oo-nso, "-itol" Volley, Celltornl• .,,.
Tiiis llUSinetJ Wot <onclucled by • _ ................ Ip
Al<llOrcl H. H°"ston
Tiit followl11t "'"" It Otlftt ........... , nl!l!P l'"<>PlltTlft UMlflO, I ISi Oo¥9 !tmt • ..,... ..., ,,._..,t ... ell.Col........... . Sltpf\011 C11e .. , U •otlltU, lnl.._, Cel.,.,.,....JN 11111 ...,.,,.., It ,..,.,_,._. .,_, o
lll'&llOll ... ,~ ,......<Miit
Tiiis ,....,.... wot fllolt wlltl "-C-ty CIWll of Orente C-y on Oe<•m-•,ltel
PICTl1'1CIUS MISIN1$1
HAMa ST ATaMlwr
T "• 1011owl119 person It 1tot111 blllllleHOI: Ol'J DISTRIBUTING, 710 l•lorove Av•nu•, Gor1te11 Gro¥e, C.Olltor11to n.41
Soro l(otllryn .J«dllrto, 1111 "-Y Clrclo, CO.to MtM. Collfornlo ti.•
Tiiis Mlneu ts <IHIClu<tolt by •n lndl•l-1. Sare K. J41r1tlne
Tiiis sto•-,,.., lllod wl~" ttie County Clerk of 'Or•ntt C-y on Oocomllor 10, tte1. .. ,,,..
l>oiblllfled °'°"" C6es1 Dolly ..iiot, Jon. 14, 21. 21. 1'141..4, ttG 2'H2
PtCTITIOUS auSHtUI NUMISTATa.MlllfT
Ooltel• ••••••· C••te M•••· c;.....,.,..-
RMef't Cettelt llmN1, HJI Oe ltete A•11111e, C•111 #010, c ........ ... , ............. ~ .... ..........
-..rte.~
TMt ......... -"ltf W1111 ... (-ty Qoftl ., Or .... CeulllY ..
Dtc.ef!IMt M. ""
ITA,...wrWWtTIN>tlAWAL , ... .......,.. ..... ,,
OP911ATl ... U•M• "'CTlnout Ml ....... .._ , .............................. _
Directions to the find sat around for six to
eicbt months until Sundstrom planned a picnic in
the vicinlty -a coast range ranch about 20 miles
south o!-shandon in Bitlerwater Valley.
This 1-1 was 111..i wltll tM County Ci.re. of Oronoe County on J onuory6, 1..n
TllO lollowlnt l>e'MM oro ......
llutlllftlos: ----....-----..,...---SUNDA Y HMINAltS WITH MN I07tf
He found the Ryan's twisted remains just
where they fell from the sky more tban baJf a
.century ago. The mangled metal fuselage and
tattered cloth·covered wings had serve<l as a toy
for three generations of farm children.
The manufacturer has loaned Sundstrom the
blueprint of the original version to guide bis
recon.sll'Uction.
FIJml Pullllslled ~ ... CoHt Oolly Piiot, Jo" r. u. 21, 2', ttl2 1•s.et
PllUC •TU
'ICTITIOUS aUSINIU
•AMaSTATIMINT Tll• l•llowln1 pu1on 11 ll•ln1
~u ... .JJG A$SOCJATES, MIO E.11._r AWlll!e, •tJIM. Huntln9ton hlKll,
Colllorl'la._.,
.J"°'11' J-G!Men, MIO....,., A'fen ... , •ZlCM. Huntl119ton le~ll, -------------------,------! CollfornlatMJ
TllH "°""'"' Is <Ollductocl bV on Ind Iv~.
MONA COATES, 177 " ......... ,4'-OTI OF DE ·TH 0.,. Orio, .._,..., Buell, Collfor11lo N CE "" r .-.. PAUL EDWARD
S110<ry p.,_, 2117 c..,, .... ...,,.,....,_•••w AL KER AND 0 F
,._,, •-1 a.di. CMHomio '*" P E T I T I 0 H T 0 MONC...S, ................ Hu11t..._,,9Ndl.Co1Non11o,... ADMINISTER ESTATE
T1111 lluSI""' b <OllductH by • NO. A111746. -0·~~. T o a I I f'I e I r s , SMfTv"-. T111s .....,._, "'"filed.,., .. benefl~larles, creditors Cow11ty OH11 ef 0r..,.. C-ty on 0oulftW22.1"1.
P1n191
Pvblhhtd Or .... (Miil o.lly Piiot,
Oec ,,, JI. tttl, .JM. 1, 14, 1ttl UU.t
TlllS !.~~w~~~ wlltl Ille PICTIT10US MISl•ISS -._ MAMISTATIMINT
DllTH llTICIS
STRONG 11 l W 1 n bi g I er Fam 1 I y CtMOnty Ci.re. of ~.,. County on Tiie totlowlnt per-so•" ere 1101111
Oe<omti.r ID, "" AMAlness es: o E L c 1 A s TR ON c . Mortuary. Funeral services P17"0 AO TECH,"• w. Sto..n'-Sonto
residenl or Costa M••sa. Ca will be held on Thursday Pulllls-~ ... Coast Dolly Pilot, AllO C•llfornl•"1o7 ., 14 982 2 JOPM O.C. 31· 1'll.JM 7• 14• n. ltl2 ~1 'D•nlol Hormoo A .. M , 21J W. Passed away on J anuary 11. January , l al :
W · b • I F · I SteveM, Santo AllO, Collfor-1110 tl'107 1982 al the age of 69. Beloved In 'n t g er am 1 Y P11UC ~ Doniel......_.. AefttJr., s1u
mother of Marie Moody of Mortuary Chapel wilh Dr ---.,......---=-----.,....--! Helt Avenue, Apt. 4t, Hu11t1n11on Costa M esa, C a and Gerald Bas h orricialing. l'ICTITIOUs'aUSINISS 8HCll,QlffonllotaM9
P l . NAMa STATIMINT Tiiis llusfnets h <OlldU<ted by • La Verne Strong of Santa r vale • n I er m e n l Tllo 1011ow1n9 "'"on 1.a 1to1,,1 OONrol .,.-t,.,.,.p.
Ana . Ca .. also s urvived by 2 Wmb1gler Family Mortuary 11us1neues: Dlilllet H. ~
s i st ers, Cynthia Fales n( directors. 542~713. GRAYSCALE lAB, 11tt1 Skyperk Tlllt .iot-t -111911 •lltl ,,.
r· Clrci.. S..... H, fr..._, ColHornlo 97714 C-lf Cl-of ~-C-y °" Battle Creek. Michigan and POSTER Ak hOr-d E. Kem .. r. t0 L.-o J_,., 12, ita
Glenna Rose of Coldwater. ALLEN A. FOSTER. JR . Eost.1rv1ne,eo111orn1.m1•. •1_,..
M lchlgan. 2 brothers, Lis ton 8 prominent Newport Beach 1,.:1~1:,..."':"""" '' co-.cto1t 111¥ on ,.,..,..,.. or-. eoott o.11y Pltol
Church and DeWitt Church bus iness man. age 68. a ~f\MdF K•jft\ .. , W a 1'3 11,M.r•t,• 24rHI
b ot'tt o r Battle C r eek , 16-year resident of Newport Tiiis sc.tMw111-"'"•I"' tM -..Cllta
M i c h 1 g a n il n d 7 Beach, Ca., passed away on Cou11IY Clerk °' Or-c-ty °" d h Id P I J ...... ,,i. tta gran c 1 ren unera January 11. 1982 or a heart p_,,.
services will be held o n attack Mr . Foster was the Pvbllllled or.,.. C:O.st Doily 1>11ot
FTldoy, January 15, 1982 a t o wner and pioneer of 2 Jon. 7, 14,21, 21.1• 1uc
2:00PM al Pierce Brothers h 1 g h I y s uc c ess f u I ,
Bell Broadway Chapel~w1lh bus 1nessl's, Alle n · l ei
Rev. Dougla!:i M McKenzie Products or Santa Ana. Ca.. l'IC'TITIOUIMISINIU
o r H arbor C hri s t 1 an s u p p 1 i e r 0 r IUM9 ITATIM8HT
Fellowsh i p o rf1cla t ing Tel ecommunica tion s ~~°!.~1"' ,..,_, ••• c1oln1
Interment al Rose ll1lfs equipment o n a d<¥Jlestic EXCLUSIVELY L.tMtTEDcSHOE
Me m orial Park. Wh1ll1N, and internat ional scale. AEPA1A1 , 11M Wnt ""'Stroot. co.to
C1', Friends may ~all at t he 1nrluded in products he "'°":t.~!:"'.:.:::' ..... 7054 M•y.,
mortuary o n T h urs day. innovated atid desilfhed are Ploco,c.toMKo,Coillorm~om
JanuaTy 14 . 1982 from armored cables as used on Amolcl a.. BrOClto<"lt, _. _.,.,
4 · OOPM lo 9:00PM Pierce pay station telephones, used P10<9, eosto Mno, Co111om1om21
Brothers Bell Rroadway •ind seen in our everyday T111s lluslMu •• co,,ouct•d lly o < teMrol POrW<Slllp. Mo rtua ry directors 642 9150 life. and telephone headsets. Arnold B. Broctfelr(I COK~ w hic h arc s een ,in many T111s stot-• wa\ 111..i w1111 '"'
LEAH VIRGINIA COKE. athletic cootl'sl s. He :ilso County Clerk 01 °'""tto countv 0"
Age 70, resident of Sant;, rounded and d evel1)ped Jo,,wofyS. l1'1 "'"m
Ana , Ca , passed away on• American Kleane>r, loc . or Pu1M1111oct0ra,,....cout 0.11., Pl1o1. J a n uary 11, 1982 Survi Vl,'d p I c 0 R I v e r a , c a . Jan. 1. 14, 21, 21, ,.., nw2
by her husband Ralph I I manufacturers or industrial
Coke, of Santa Ana. Ca . a steani cleaning equipment
so.n Thomas H Coke. or used by private. governme nt PtCT1T1ousau11N1u
Tus lln. Ca., a daughter a nd military establishments NMl«STATIMCNT
Marilyn Bender of Arizona, on ao internation a l scale . .,..!1':s.tol~~1"11 _ _,, .,.. "°'"'
a brothe r Kenneth Kirker o r Mr Foster wa s born in PUMPER PICKLE . 111u
Nevada. her s isters llelen Mars hall, Texas. and was ~r!;::_o::.. H1111t1n11ton 1u<11,
Ingle of Tulare. Ca. Mane f o rme rl y a P asade na . GAAV LEw .atNGAMAN •11.,.
Schleicher. of Tustin, Ca . a rest dent , al l endi n g 1ttrlt099 ctrclt, Dewftey. c..ioorn10
daugMer·tn·law. Karen L Pasadena Q ty College He '0241
Coke of Arroyo Grande. Ca was a member of the Shark circ:W-o.!:'t;'°"~;~•
and JO erandchildren She 1 s I a n d Y a c h t C I u b . n1i ...,,,,.;s '' <oncN<IH by o
was preceded in de ath by U.S.l.T.A .. C.l.T A . and the toner••~
be r s on Donald Cake. In lieu c E.M.A. Association. He is Tiit ~~-'"' .,,.
o r flo we r s the fa m 1 l y sur vived by h is wire Wilma c_:., 'ci."'., ~°!,. c.:n..,...,
requests donations be made o r Newport Bea c h . Ca .. o.cemi.tt,1tet. Pl,,,..
to .the Diabetes Foundation daughters Nancv Kiger 0 ""bl1s1wc10r-. CMM Dolly Pttot, Vi~i,atlon will b e o n Newport Reach: Ca., and 0e<.it,l"1,Jon.7.••.J1.•t12 5ttU•
Wedneeday, J anuary 13. 1982 Betty 8oy~e of Costa Mesa, flllUC 1911(
from B:OOPM to s ·OOPM a nd Ca • sons Norman Foster of --~=~=,.,...,,==--
on IJ'hul'!lday, Junuary 14, Hacienda Height-s Ca. a nd l'1CTIT1ou1au11Nass
1982 tra 8:00AM to 1 :OOPM Garey Foster of 'su".erton: Th• ,:~!.~!A::,~:nN~, 401,,0
McCORMtaC MOaTUA•IES
Laguna Beach
494-941 5
Laguna Hills
768-0933
San Juan Capistrano
495·1776 .
Oregon . 10 grandchildren busl""us:
a nd 1 great..grandct)ild, also: J.1. DREAM Ml"O., 9'IO A~.
a brother Tom Foster of San. C05t• Mesa, C.lllornlo ••11
. C d . t JoM H. Boot11•. ~ Arllor, Coste Bernardmo. a. an a s is ter i.w ... Collloml• ttu1
Beulahbe l N<'whot.t se of Thli !MIMS\ 11 con11uc1..i bv en
Solana Beach. Ca. Memorial 1nc11v111.,.1
services will be held at the This ,~e:-:;'~ 111..i wllfl 111t
Harbor Lawn Chapel at cowntv Clefll or Or•ntto cowntr 011
2 ·00PM on Fnda)'. January J•"uorys, tta Pletm
PICT1Tt0US llUSIHllSS
MAMa ST ATSMllNT Tll• IOllOWlftt "'SOii ,, ltolllt
llutl-•: C.D.K. ENTEttPlllSES, 11'2
L.o"'llort °"'"'· _,,... ... 9eo<ll, Cotllof'lllO t2M1
D•1111lt O..rl.s Wlltollon, 1142
L.omll9rt on .... H"""""°" ho<ll, CellforNo t2MI ~-.
Tiiis buslnffl It <-lolt II\' on lndlvllluol.
Ooml1 Cllortn Wlllotion
T'hl1 sl~t -flied wllll tllt Cowftly Clerk of Orontt C°"'"' on Jonuory 12, ltll, .
P1W11 Pu1111.-Oronoe Cont o.lly Pli.t. Jon. u. 21. a . Fet>. 4, 1ta *42
NS-flGI l'ICTI nous MISIN•ss
NAMI STATIMl•T Tiit lollowlnt per'°"s or• llolllll bvSlftHSA. C AO VINE LIMITED PAATNEASHIP·ll, t7U1 Fllcll Avenuo, 1rv1,., "-'llornle '2714 CllOW llC EAST, 17t41 Fltcll Avenuo, trvtne, ColllW'lllot2714 CONNECTICU'T GENERAL. LIFE I HSUAANCE CO M,PAN Y, o Cor111octtcu1 <llr!IOrelloll, Hortfort.
C-Ctl<ut °'"~ Tiiis -•Mn 11 conltuct9d by •
llmlted ~.
CROW llC EAST.
l'ICTIT'IOUS BUllHIU
NAM& ITAT811M .. T
The loltowlnt ... ,....., ••• dol119
blillntt• es: AA Y ·JAY SEARCH CONSULTANTS, US22 El 1'oro ltood,
HAalo. UW~MT. OLIVE
Monuary • C.met~
Crema1ory
. ( fl Publlll'*I or-COHI Do1t1 Piiot. 15, 1982. Jn heu o owers Jon. 1 14,21 M.1"2 in .. , -• mWllr
the rarntl y re quest s ;;.;..;....;•:........;~·--------~-·~
I
1825 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
540-555'
,_C.UOTHHS
MU.UOAOWAY
wo.TUMY
110 8r0Mtw1y
Costa Mew
642·9150
t ..._n .... o ..
l tt INltManmeu
•• 'ftlTCUflf CMPll 427 E t7thSt
Costa Mesa
6 .. 6-9371
contributions be made to the 1 ..i Illa 1----------
American Canoer Sodety or tllfTSNTtONtTOSILL. P~~=~· tbe American Heart 'Fund . ATfUBUCAU<T1oee Th ••llow1111 '""""' Is •01111 Services under the direction NOTICe II H!ll£8Y GIVEN , ... llllSIMS••:
or Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive .,, T ....... ""' ""' ., ., JlftlloOrY, THI~-2111 ~·· ,,_
Mortua..., of Cost a Mesa. 1112. • t1:111 "-' ., 1t11 ... ,..... ~, ... No. c. c.a Mtt4 ~ • o1 Orlwo, c.r-•t Mer, C.tlf~ftlo, ,_,.
540•55$4. ~ ta ttorw .,,, NetttM14111 l'r011Cl1 L.. ScNet, mt -.,o1.Pefnl
'~""SON a....,_.,,,.~.,.~·•.,.~'"·,.... c. c.... MeMw c:allfwMe ~ c:-11' f4 Or .... win Mil ot ~IC thll • WILUAM H. JOHNSON, --~ .... lltthe" "4Nltr for <-1111 Tiiis NllloM It ~Oii w •
resident of Co.ta Mesa, Ca. "' 1..tM """"Ill '"' u111i.t Me4et, """'"..,.1• .... ~· . flrMCIS Scll!OI P .. ed .. way on Jahuary 14, 811,11,,, ·c11r1s cr111. Hwtt Ti-ts.......,. -fllol _.,. • rm.. SerriC'e$ are pending a' """'•°": OOJI' ~••oar Nv"'••r· '-'' c:1.n ef Oronte ~ • P ierce Brotber!I Bell NON . .....,ar....., """*': c" 1011 _,_,.,1,H•. c.l /llW,NMM ........ ._... ,.,_ 8 r C> a"' way M or l u a r '1 . • .... , ... .., -...C•1ti11• •i• 11.M., ~""" or.,. C1N1t o.lty ..._ 642-$"4. ~ • .... o4 ..... ...,. H, tt, a,,.._.., "'9 .... PAOOATl.S, 8T&ATl'ON S..llltl'l'<O" ... _,. DAVID W. STRA'M'ON.• c-itYflf0t-..c.i11--. ree1d• of Newport Beach, It u . twr; Gett
d ._ ... I'. T~IMI, Ca. Pen• aw•., on ..,...... Jaftuary \3, tll2. Som May ............,°'.,.. c:-.4 o.ew ,...., &. lll4 ln O~. MonUna. Jell,,._,_
Ser.lved bJ bi• wlfe Nina,
d .. thtAtrt Naoty Cazier and I••••• Alton . alto 3 1randchUdrea and • brotlwr Jobn Pf . Straiton . A ~em--1 lbu ct C.rtttlan
artal ~ w ~7,riday,
tn•irt.;J 11. lHI ll St
Joadlftl'I Qd.hdlie CMarelt,
Qilla ~~~· lit a·•PM .
..... fir...., ~lill.-•v
... _
....... wna 'f'Oett••TeM ---·--, .............
~c.9) C1> A_v_... .. _.__
Plm79 Publlsl\011 Or•"IO C•u11ty O•llY Piiot, Jon. 7, 14, 21, 1-. lttl t...a
j
I
PICTl'nOUI BUll•aM ...... ITAT9 ... NT
TllO 1 .. 1 .. 1119 --• •r• ...... ll<nl-ot: AVP DEVlELOPMENT
COMPANY, 2411 Mo<Artllur
.... , ... orcl, ~ ...... c.tl'-nl•
92'60 A,... OWM!f, no v1e Totwco,
Sen c ........... Collfornl• t»n
PICTITtoUI Mllfliau • ..... ITATaMllwr
Tit• folt .. lq "'Mii le •t119 ~-.. , CAMEO HOUSli OP PINli PHOTOOltAPHV, 170 Wulclllf Orlvo, 111ow...,1 8•0C'll, Cellfor11i• .,...
lletlet't J. WMllM, 2176 S-. A.llO ~-. COIU MMo, Colltontle fM21 T"'' ....,._ ''<-.ct.,.,.,, IMlwlctwel. 11'*"'1J.W41!1kM TlllS ......._. WA fllod .,..,, ...
C-1Y Ci.re. of Or..,.. c.inty .. Oocom41ef'!t. Itel. Victor Htlo, UOO Wlltlllre S.Ul.vorlt, .... '°°• a. ... rty Hiiis, Coll ....... 9CllZ11 Fr•• Sllro9ol, ltlM Victory P•ltlled 0r-.. Coetl Oolty PtlotJ B•wtowor•, ""Floor, Nortll, Doc.J1.lte1.JM.1,",11,1ta ""411
...... ,...,, Qllt10nlllt ....
..... CNW'f
TMI ....,,._, -Ill• wit" CM Co1111ty Cleo of Oro11te co11111y -~17,1"1.
McH8 & PAUL, llllC. A--.. .. ~ "I I ~-w1a.-a-.. s....-.... 0.. ....... "9cl ...... ,. ............... ~-PlnMIJ
..... ISllWI Or-C-M o.lly PllOt, 0.C.JA.Sl,1"1,Jon 7,14.1• ff6W1
ORANGI! COUNTY SU"l!lllOtt C0411tT
"'Ci¥1c OtooMr Dr. w S-0 ....... Co. ft7't1 PLAINTll'F· SHARON I( YOUNG DEFENDANT. AOBEAT P L.UNOGflEN IAVINE SEllVICE CO RPOR ATIO N. o C•lllornlo
cor-•Uon: IAVINE SAVINGS AND LOAN AS5C>CIATION, • Collfornl• uirp0ro11on; 011 ,..,._ u,,.,,_,, -
...... Of OOlm Olly 1 ..... 9', In or LIWI _, thO AMI "'-'1Y 0.SCrl-In
IN Gomplolllt; -OOEI I lllfougill X, 11\Clllslve. SUMMQCllS .... c:..o .... ..,,. NOTICll Y911 ........... _., TM
c.wt _, llKI* ...-. -• ....,. y_..,.._......__,......
.. ,..... ... y ........ ~ .....
If you Wisll lo -k tht olt'fk• of°" ett-y !ft !Ns ,,.,., .. ,. yOW r.houlcl Ito
10 promptly '° tllol your wrll .. n
f'OPCM\M, If ony. "¥Y lie 111..i on time.
AVISOI U.... Ila .... -...... l!t ..---,_.. eecMW t•tro u•.
ste •••le•CJ• o "'••H ••• Ut.
PKTITIOUS •UMH•U
NAMI STAT9MaNT
T"• loll-Int --· •r-o dolllll 1Mi6lllessos: MEGOA TEC HHOL.OG~. L.IMITl!D, IMSA "'-• A.._, Cotto Melo, CA '2627.
I( l!NSINGTON ASSOCIATES,
INC., o ~ ~Mlon, 1-PllK•"llo A-. C:O.to ....... CA 92617
Tiiis bwl,,..• It c--lly a llml19d ,,.,-tlllp. • KENSINGTON ASSOCIATES. INC.
A~R.R..-n. Pr~
TllK ..,..,,,_ •• fllelt •"" .. f;°"11ty Cler\. Of Or ..... C-ty .,
o.c. "· '"'· DAVID MAotLAVY . ..._, .. .....
... s.. ..... °""'°· s.-. •• ,.___~,C.A-Pt,.._
~J...., or..,.. CMM ~y P-,
Otc. JI, 1"1, Jon. 7, 14.11, t• "'7.fl
r
4
Tbe Laguna Beach City
'1ouncll la aa•ln making ~reateqJn1 sound• about the
ftlmber of ille1al rental units in
Wle city, and hU: asked plannlng
Wficlai. to make a atudy ot the
bitotleg apartments.
Some council members claim
.the unibt ·place 1l strain Ott city
ser.vices, and owners of the units
avol<:l }>aying business license.
parkiftt and sewer fees.
The question of what to do
about the so -called 't~other-in-law" apartments in
Jdflguna Beach has been knocking
.wound the City Council rostrum
~r years.
tu. At leas t once a year. it
seems, someone in the city gets
hot and bothered about illegal J\!pits, makes an exaggerated
.gJ.aim, and demands a study be
1Dade to expose outlaw
~cupants. In fact, many of the
!\fnits probably qualify as
.Non-conformmg uses, dating
~ftom the days of less stringent ,~ilding rules.
l Last w~k the City Council
· Rrdered planning officials to
i.roake a study to determine the
l}n
hrn;,act of Ulegal units and what
should be done about them.
Privately . plannin1
persormel say ll\tre i1 virtuaJJy
no way to enforce clty ordln&noes
against the units, which often
house a single, elderly individual.
whose options in the housing
market are extremely limited.
Un!ortunately for many low
and moderate income residents
in Laguna. the city has no
affordable rental units. and the
illegal units provide the only
option they have in the housing
market if they want to remain in
the city. . Ari all-out drive to flush out
so·caUed illegal units could really
only hurt many longtime
inhabitants of the Art Colony.
who have found themselves
unable to pay the astronomical
costs for "legal" apartments or
house payments.
In addition, the California
Legislature has authorized local
governments to allow "granny
units" in residential areas. This
is what Laguna Beach should be
considering.
;f,raf ~ slwws welcome
ti .. 11 The Laguna Beach Craft
Muild has received City Council
approval to hold five s hows in
1"982 , providing a greater
opportunity ror residents and
out-of-town visitors to purchase
ndmade articles.
For three of the shows Forest
venue will be closed to traffic,
llowing shoppers to browse
ithout having to compete with
rs.
For years the Crart Guild has
ponsored sales at various
cations in Laguna, all well
ceived by the public.
By approving more shows. the
't y Coun c il allows local
aftsmen to b e n efit from
creased saJes. and also draws
visitors to the Art Colony who
will add to the city'.s economy.
In addition, the city puts its
best foot forward as being a
center or the arts and a gathering
place for craftsmen. writers and
artists.
For Orange Coast residents
wishing to patronize the Craft
Guild's sales. here's the 1982
schedule:
-April 4. Fores t Avenue.
Palm Sunday
-May 30, Forest Avenue.
Memorial Day
-Nov. 28, Forest Avenue.
Thanksgiving
-Dec. 4 and 5, Village
Fair, Christmas snow
lassroom delay costly
For the second year, Gov.
erry Brown has included as a
p priority item in his budget ror
mmunity colleges funding for a
O ,000-square-foot classroom
uilding at Saddleback College's
uth Campus in Mission Viejo.
College officials say it will
ke at least $8.6 million in 1982
ices to construct an adequate
ilding. mor.e than $1 million
ore than last year's estimate or
.5 million for the same design.
Last June. ;lfter being
proved for funding by the State
·nance Department and the
vernor. construction of the
assroom building was taken out
the budget duritig last-minute
gotiatioos in the Legislature.
In light of current financial
onstraints and projected state
udget deficits. Saddleback
fficials say they may not
eceive full funding for the
roject. leaving the district to
aise the rest.
That won't be easy because
the d istrict· s own budget
oblems and inability to raise
•
funds since Proposition 13 and
the Serrano-Priest State Supreme
Court decision.
For the past four years.
en roll men ts in the SaddJeback
Community College District have
grown at a rate or about 15
percent a year , leaving officials
hard pressed to find room for
new students in already crowded
classrooms.
The so called "temporary"
s tructures brought in t o
accommodate the s welling
s tudent body h ave become
permanent fixtures on the
campus.
In addition, enrollments are
expected to continue to rise at
nearly the current rate well into
the ne~l decade as south Orange
County rapidly develops.
Clearly Saddleback's South
Campus needs a new classroom
building. Wailing another year
will only delay the inevitable and
mean higher costs because of
inflation. Nothing will be gained
by another detay.
In Ions ex.pressed in the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views ex-
essed on tnls page are those ot their authors ano artists. Reader tomment Is mvlt·
ci. Address The Daily Pilot, p.o. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. PhOl'le (7141
2·4321.
M. Boyd/Farewell message
The Lut Will and Testament ol
r ancl• R. Lord or Sydney, ~ atralia, bequeatbed: "To my
· loved wUe, one lhlllinl for tram e ao abe can co aomewbere and.
WD berlelf. ''
tbre'e.ome wu fed up by holiday
eommerctalism. A alcn on the kettle
read: "Take some money."
PUHnby did so, too.
J •cob. the IOftl of Sovi.t Dictator
Joaef Stalin, died In a German
priloDer of war camp cturtn. World
Wsr D after bll father ret\IMd to
ne1odat.e the ~ man'• treeclom
in 1 prt8aDer' uchus• deal.
Bob Hope's TV monoaoc-utuallJ naa about e1,aat ml_... To JMt ..
ol .... t.otether. be --llt a.at
100 .... OD balf a dOMft ---1ubjecta, &oob them O¥S ~
OD jl.,._, t.bm 9dita out tbe ._,
l.lDel GM by OM, UDW bis .... .teta
tell• him tbat'a enoup,
~ .
Brown budget shows politics·
As if be had performed some miracle,
Gov. Jerry Brown has prepared a
budget which be says la balanced and
will1not require any new taxes. ''It ts,"
be declared, "a balanced bud1et; it has
no new taxes on general con.sumers; it
balances the sacrifices and i>ulld.s for
the future."
Details leaked previously by Brown
revealed that be has provided an 8
percent cost of living Increase for aged,
blind and disabled as well as wellare
payments for famiUes witlr dependent
children .
HE SAID HIS budget is ba.sed upon an
upturn in the economy before the end of
1982 which would reduce earlier
estimates of sborUalls in revenues and
on a speedup of collections of taxes
from businesses such as the sales and
workmen compensation taxes.
So, once a1ain, Brown emeries as the
"prudent, no-nonsense" budgeter who
shuns new taxes although for months be
was angulahipg over the need for them.
It is not surpO.ing that be bas found a
way to avoid uklng for new taxes.
Although be will step out as gov~rnoc at
·the year's end he hopes to win election
a s a U.S. Senator before that lime
arrives. Whatever else be may be
Brown remains the shrewd politician.
He knows that raising taxes and
wlnning elections don't go together.
Whatever doubts he may have had
about the wisdom of seeking new taxes
were resolved during the course of the
llll llTIRS
many radio talk shows he has hosted in
recent months. The people, he said,
have made it clear that they want more
cuts in government before they will
approve any lax increases.
Brown says he is making those cuts in
his new budget but they are bard to
find . Some state agencies were. reduced
5 percent but funding has · been
continued for many non-essential
agencies, most of them creatures of bis
administration.
With only a slight reduction Brown
proposes to continue the bailout of local
governments without restrictions. Tbe
irony of that is that while he will refuse
stat e employees cost of living
Let people vote
To the FAitor:
J read in the media about Supervisor
Ralph Clark's various accomplishments
for the year 1981. They were a summary
of his positions and beliefs, to which he
is entitled. However. sleep will not
come easily tonight if I faiJ to challenge
his position on John Wayne Airport.
For starters, he conveys the
impression that aJl of tbe county's air
transportation problems would
suddenly be solved if only the county .
MAILBOX
could expand John Wayne Airport. For
the sake or discussion, let us assume
that we can wave a magic wand,
disregard the view of homeowners,
businessmen, the courts and a whole
array of others who have opposed the
expansion of John Wayne Airport and
suddenly re-create the airport as is
proposed in the Master Plan adopted by
the Supervisors February. 1981. Bued
on that plan the airport will have a
capacity to handle 6 .1 million
passengers per year by the year 1990.
THAT'S FINE, but bow does one
reconcile Lhe fact tbal every study
conducted by the county concludes that
the requirement for-air transportaUon
in 1990 will be approximately 20 million
passengers per yea:-? Some very simple
arithmetic indicates that some 14
million will either have to slay home or,
perish the thought, drive. It just seems
utterly ridiculous that the county should
spend some $100 million lo expand an
airport faclllty tbat simply will not do
the job upon completion.
Another item mentioned was a
complaint about the so-caUed "vocal
minority." From my observation point,
the vocal minority represents t.boee who
are in favor of expan.tlon ol the airport.
1l strikes me that those wbo favor
expansion represent some very narrow
interests in the county and couldn't care
leas what happens to the balance of the
county so lon1 as their views are
represented. T6is does not seem the
rl1ht way to go. ·
It seema to me that ii we really wlati
to determine whether or not the people
in the County ol Oranse wut to expand
John Wayne Airport there IA a simple
way ol resolvin1 that question. AU tbe
Board of Supenttora need do 11 plae.
lbll luue on the ballot. stmply uac dae
people at lbe next 1e•eral eJeeUon
whether or not they wlab to apend '100 mlWon to expand Jobn w.,.. Airplrt.
Surely um would rtlOlve ..... -.:e
ud for.al.
CLARENCE J. 1'URNl:R
direction of Secretary of the Interior.
James Watt, in Washington, D.C ..
Lease Stfte f68, if sold, will be the
beginning of a parade of oil platforms
on the Laguna horizon.
The platforms will be as close as
three miles out in the ocean and 190 feet
high. Laguna will be a sitting duck for
an ugly view that will change lhls com-
munity for the worse, forever. Built on
a hillside, Laguna resembles a naturaJ
amphitheater, and all our bay windows
will be looking at offshore oil derricks.
Al night, they light up, they never
move, looming on our horizon like huge
oil refineries and bring the danger of an
oil spill very close to home.
And, yet , no one hardly knows about
it! Well, I know about it, and I know we
can stop it from happening. And I know
bow because I helped to stop the
Northern California Lease Sale t53.
The cumulative impacts for Laguna
are horrendous.
NOW, HERE'S how we can stop it in
two easy steps:
1. Call everyone you know and tell
everyone you see about it. Talk about it,
and you'll be informing oU.ers about
something that is slipping by rapidly,
unnoticed and unfougbt. Gossip about it.
Write your Congressman, your Senator,
James Watt. President Reagan and call ·
City Hall. Make a big deaJ about lt. Call
the Bureau of Land Management ln
L.A. and ask for informatioo about it .
2. Keep doing it. This is the most im·
portant step. Persistence and sincerity.
Keep it up.
Delete the Laguna Basins from lease
sale #68!
BETH SPARKLE LEEDS
TELEPHONE YOUR
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
See instructions below
A bad year
To the Editor:
For the ciUaena of Lapna Beach tbe
traiedles of 1981 have been denatallna.
Thia happened beeaue U.11 City CouneU
( meanlq all five eouncU memben> hu
done abeolutely nolb.ln1 to help our
needy IMlora and addreu the «Mr
llnpo~l people l11ue1. The Bellerue
adml.U.tl'attoa" bu tbua earned UM
dublout cllltincllon and JcOed otber
'PUt dt7 eomdJa lD beiq laMnlltl.,., lncompetenl, anotant, aDd counter
produailve to tbe need• of La1una
haeb iDd ID ellJ.lenl. TM leUetue ed!ablillr.._ Qi lor,.U tlaat about --
adjustments equal to those to be given
welfare recipients , the local
governments will be free to grant their
employees what.ever they wish.
The same is true in lhe case of the
schools which Brown says will be given
a full cost-of·living increase in their
allocations.
AND 111ERE IS some legerdemain in
Brown's claim of no new taxes. The
budget proposes to meet the qow
estimated shortlall of $2 billion by cuts
totalling $1 billion. The other billion will
come frotn the speedup of tax
collections and some new revenues
termed "fees .. instead of taxes. These
include new charges lo utility
companies purportedly to offset costa ol
regulatory services provided by tbe
Public Utilities Commission. Brown
says s uch fees are part of the
movement to connect cost more closely
to benefits.
Another irony in tbe budget plan is
that Brown, in staking his program on
an upturn in the economy, i.s saying he
expects the economic program of
President Reagan, which he has loudly
condemned, to prove itself before the
year's end.
26 percent of the Laguna Beach area, or
more than 5,000 people, are seniors.
THIS NEGLECT by the City CounciJ
is responsible for the following
problems:
1. No affordable bousinf pl~ to dale.
(They are just continuing to exile our
needy seniors and others out of Laguna
Beach).
2. They continue t o ignore the
r ecommendations of the Housing
Committee and the Land Use/Noise
Committee by not using the city-owned
sewerage plant property as soon as
possible for affordable housing, a total
community center, day care center,
teen-age center, a town haJl (a new
source of income), and much needed
parking, etc.
3 . They removed Public
Co mmunications Cone of the most
important parts of the Council Agenda)
from about 6:30 p.m. to about midnight.
This mortally wounded Public
Communications as we know it.
4. They also removed the consent part
of the calendar to about midnight. This
permits this City Council to ramrod
controversiaJ items down the throats of
the citizens of Laguna Beach.
5. The diesel engine bus scandal
starring council member Howard
Dawson may result ID. wasting at least
another $350,000 of taxpayers' money.
Propane buses give Laguna Beach
clean air. Let's keep propane buses.
ALANE. ADAMS
Out of 'club'
To the Editor:
When J became a member of the
Senator's Club, a John Schmits support
organisation, about a year ago, I bad no
idea that I would later publicly tender
my resignation.
However, aside from our supposedly
beiDI fel!Ow conservative Republicans.
I discover 1 have absolutely nothinl in
common with Senator Schmits. Havina
seen hlm create the supreme penonaJ
and political err.or of supporttn1
blcotry, racism, and anu-remlni•m
while diapla)'inl a callous dtsrecard for
tbe penonal beliefs and praetlcea of
others, l now joyfully and forevermore
renounce my membenbip ta tbe "dub''
and pray the balanee of tlae
membenblp will see ftt to do ll.tewt.M.
LELAND E. OLIVO
lAllU 1111:1/lllTll l:lllT
llllJ. Piiat
THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1992
CAVALCADE
BUSINESS
82-3
SS-7
The eagle though an
enduring · patrotic symbol
is by no means universally
loved ... BS
SOuth .L~gtina· annexation attempt f~ short
It will be alx more moat.bl
before proponents 1et a 1eeond
chance to annex part of ~
Laruna into Laguna Beach after
an attempt Wednesday came
one vote abort of auccesa.
Members of the county's LocaJ
A1ency Formation Commlsak>n
voted 2·2 with one abstention on
whether tbe area between the
Cops get
pistol
scare
A Newport Beach woman was
being beld today at Laguna
Beach police headquarters after
aUeged1y pointing a · .22 caliber
snub nose revolver at two police
officers at 6 :30 a.m. today.
Lt. Terry Temple said police
Sgt. Don Barney and Officer
Mark Fields were responding to
a public assistance call at a
home owned by Al Du Pont at
1858 S. Coast Highway when the
incident occurred.
Temple said Du Pont called
police because he bad been
locked out of bis house by
Elizabeth Klein, 45, of 1785 S.
Dover Drive in Newport.
When Barney and Fields
knocked on the door, Ms. Klein
stepped into the doorway and
pointed a short-barrel pistol at
them and threatened to kill
them, Temple said.
He said the two officers drew
their guns, but didn't fire.
Temple said the officers
engaged Ms . Klein in
conversation and managed to
talJc her int<>, surrendering her
gun.
Temple said she was then
arrested and taken. to Laguna
Beach Jail.
No day off
rankles
teachers
Members of the Capistrano
Unified Education Association.
which represents Capistrano
Unified School District teachers,
have expressed their
displeasure with the decision to
deny them a day off Friday, in
honor of Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr.'s birthday.
Association President Tom
Youngerman said the district
trustees "chose to require
teachers lo work on King's
birthday even though more than
90 percent of tbe districts in
Orange County are granting the
holiday to their teachers."
He said that since the contract
agreement be tween the
association and the district
already bad been signed , the
status of King's birthday had to
be negotiated as a separate
issue.
"The district wanted the
teachers' association to give up
many of the bard-earned and
needed working conditions in the
granting of the day. Few if any
other district teachers' groups
were required to give up
anything," said Dan Sali~g.
executive director for South
Orange County Educators, or
which the Capistrano teachers'
association ls a part.
-~OJapanese
1tuthnta due
in Niguel
Thirty Japanese college
students are scheduled to arrive
ln Lasuna Niguel Feb. 19 for a
two-week 1tay aa part of an
educational travel pro1ram
called lntent~y.
Jeanne Gormlct, croup·
coordinator, uya ao boat
f amUlea from South Oraec•
County are needed to pronde a
place to stay for the 1tudent.1.
Student.a, wblle llvtnc m local
bom•, 1pend t.beilr momiAll lD
En•llab and cultural enrlclu:IMDt
clHH•. Alteraoon acbedwea.
llaelude lWd trtp1 t.o plae11 ol
inter•t, plcnlct, b.lku, local
aebooll 8Dil amutemal ...,tm.
lDtentady baa arraqed for
more U.. 1'.000 lt.ad..U from
for•lp eouatrl• to Ylllt tM
UDW8talel•Cu8da.Pw·
I ~ f? bUI a boll, call
city boundary and Aliso Creek
sbould ~me part of Laauna
Beach.
The vote WU • defeat of SOIU
for thoee South La1una retidenta
who hoped to join the city
because they claimed they'd
receive better services.
An underlying issue ls whether
the city's more restrictive
planning pollclea would tone
down proposed South Laauna
development projects, lncludlna
a ••O -unit time -share
condominium project at the alte
of the Treasure Island mobile
homel>U'k. •
So.uth Laguna is
unincorporated and under
county government jurisdiction.
La1una Beach offlclal1, who
were lnlUally sollcUed by the
South Lasuna reeldenta, applied
U> the C?mmiulon for authority
to annex the area . Tbe commlaalon bas final say on
a1tnexaUons.
To conclude thelr tbree·bour
hearing, PbiUp Scbwarll, San
Juan CapJatrano city
LAST PICTURE -Huntington Beach parents
Richard and Robin Barada look at the last
photo~raph of their daughter Lani. 8. A
DMftr ......... ., •lc.llllN --
poster chtld for Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.
the girl died Monday.
Girl's life short but happy
Death claims Huntington's Cystic Fibrosis poster child
By PAT&IC& KENNEDY 6'•..., .......
Eilht-year-old Lani ADdenoo
of Huntin1ton Bdcb spent happy momenta u poster child
for the Cystic Fibrosis
Foundation, meetinc celebrities
and having her picture taken.
The blonde-haired girl was
selected to a two-year stint as
poster representative when she
was 6.
When her life ended Monday,
it wasn't unexpected. There's no
known cure for her disease, say
her parents. But death still was
a shock to her parents and
friends.
"If you'd have seen her a
month ago, you wouldn't have
believed she was going to die,·'
s aid her stepfather Richard
Barada. "Just Friday she beat
me in three games of
backgammon in the hospital."
Tbe girl's healthy appearance
disguised her Illness, said her
mother Robin. Lani wasn't
emaciated ancl paJe lite many
victims ol the hereditary lung
and digestive tract disease, she
said. •'She was a litUe girl who liked
to ride her bicycle when she felt
good, and roller skate, and coJor
pictures. All those things normal
girls do. But ber little body just
got tired. She'd spent a rough
year ."
A third grade student at
Bushard School, Lani spent most
of the past year in Childrens
Hospital in Orange. The hospital
bas a special floor and medical
staff for the young victims of the
disease.
As pos~r child, Lani posed at
fund-raisers with television star
Tom Bosley of "Happy Days,"
comedieMe Phyllis Diller, and
Angeles baseball player Don
Baylor.
''She and Don Baylor really
. became close. He would sit ber
in his lap and they'd talk for a
long time. There was nothing
shy about Lani, she was very
happy," her mother said.
At 5, Lani won "'Little Miss
Entertainment" for a son~ and
dance routine to the tune · Good
Ship Lollipop" at the Cystic
Fibrosis s umm e r camp
sponsored by Childrens Hos·
pita I.
But in the past year, four of
Lani's young friends from the
hospital died before they
reached 12.
"She told her baby sitter that
all her friends were dying and
she knew she wasn't going to
Ii ve much longer either... her
mother said.
"It was always bard for the
two of us to talk about it. l just
tried to maJce her life as happy
and full as possible."
"It's so tremendously s ad that
s he's gone, but I'm relieved it's over for her. She was trustrate<i
and sad that she was too weaJc to
play anymore. I just feel sorry
for her friends at the hospital
she left behind."
Witness jailed • in murder trial
...
Ex-inmate cited for contempt for refusal to testify
A witness called by the
prosecution in Willie Ray
Wisely's murder trial was
ordered jailed Wednesday by
Orange County Superior Court
Judge Kenneth E. Lae when he
refused repeatedly to answer
questions relating to the case.
Told by Judge Lae that he
would r~main ln Orange County
Jail unW he agreed to answer
the questions, Phillip A.
Thompson responded :
"That's when bell freezes
over."
Thompson, 36, a former San
Quentin inmate, was then
Immediately taken lDto cUltody
by 1betitf's depuUea on Lae'a
contempt ol court cit~tton.
The UD\Mua.l epbode OCcurrM
Wednelday in the pr•eaee o1
the eipt-man, four-woman Jury
bearln• the murder case. A
1tmtlar lncld6Dt occurred
TuetdQ' out.aide tbe preHDce ol
tb• Jury when Thompson
orlalnally reruaed to a.uwtr
(lu•1UoD1 put to blm b1
pl'OMCUtor Ed rr.tman.
Tbol'DplC)n had been liven an.
otter of Immunity by u.e court lD
return fw bb t.Umoay.
And Lae, at Tue1da7'1
bearln•, bad ordered tb•
Nortbern Callfornla ma• to www 11a1qurlttom pu& toldm•
....,aidbal Uie fue. Wl.MlJ, •.I.I
charged with first-degree
murd er and special
circumstances in the suffocation
death of his stepfather last
March. Wisely could face tbe
death penalty.
Accordinl to prosecutors, the
·rtctlm, Huntington Beach truck
Class slated
in finance
A class on •toeka, bonds and
lnvestmenta wiU be ottered by
Saddleback Colles•'• Emeritus
1naUwte beglnnln1 Jan. 19 at
Paclftc'bland Village In Laguna
Nl1uet. ' Tbe cla11 wUI cover all
upecta of moqey mana1ement,
financial pla.onhia and varloua
typea of lnve.tmeat, lnctudi.na
at.ockl. boads, mutual fund&,
real eat.ate limited partn•l'lhiJB
and lnveatment tru.ta. The
coune will allo covv new tu
law•.
Tb• cl ... me.ta from 10 a.m.
uatll noon on Tueaday1. R•r= ii now Wlder way at k eou ... ln lllaaklft
• Viejo. Jtftiltrat.lom will a1lo be
tall• -t1te• ftnt DlPl of d-If 1eata .,. 1tlU anllabl•. J'or
more lnfonnllkm eall a1..-.. •
driver Robert Bray, was killed
when he threatened to go to
-police and expose bis stepson's
alleged drug trafficking
activities. Bray was found
s uffocated b e neath the
2,000-pound, Ultaway cab of bis
tractor-trailer rig.
During Wednesday's court
proceedings, Thompson took the
witness stand and almost
. immediately told Lae, "I'm not
glvioi up my rights and I'm
prepared to go to Jail. So let's
get th.la farce over with fut."
T bompson said be bad
couulted wtth his Lal Ante&es
I a wyer by phon' and was
advhed that the offer of
immunity by the court wun't
any •ood. He theu lnvoted tbe Fifth
Amendment to protect blmaell
from Mlf·incrimlnation and wu
held iD coatempt.
I ' Fitneu claaa
for seniors set ",
Yo1a la1truct<>r Rutb
Gluck1on will offer a fitae11-~a elUI for Lacuu
8Hdl or cltlaeu ~
Jan. zz at the aentor ctnter, •
Le1ion St7 r
councilman, and James Jarrell,
councUman in Buena Park,
voted ln ravor of the annexation.
Opposln1 lt were county
Sueervtaor Harriett Wieder and
Robert Dwyer, the "public
member" from Laguna Niguel.
Supervisor Roger Stanton
abstalned from the discussion
and from voting, claiming he
had missed an earlier beartn1
on the s ubject and waa not
prepared to vote.
According to Richard Tw-ner,
the commission's executive
director, the tie vote means the
a pplication is still alive.
Members said they will con.sider
the application again In six
m onths, proba bly the flrat
meeting in January, he said.
Newport bans
Wayne statue
A city-commissioned bronze
relief sculpture of the late actor
John Wayne bas been banned
Jrom the Newport Beach City
Hall. ·
City councll members said the
action is not meant to be a slap
at Wayne , r ega rded as
Newport's most fa mous citizen.
Tbe condition was imposed by
council members this week after
they agreed to lend $13,000 to the
Newport Harbor Jaycees to
belp pay off artist Chris Malson.
Several council members said
the City Hall ban came as a
result 01· circumstances
surrounding the art work.
Matson, who now has the
bronze work in his garage, was
given permission in 1979 to
create a bas relier or Wayne for
$17 ,500. Jaycees were singled
out as the service group for
raising money to pay for it.
But the size and price of the
art work f ballooned during the
two years it took to complete it.
The cost now is expected to be
$32,000 and the artwork now
includes a stagecoach, six
horses and the likenesses of
And y Devine a nd J o hn
Carradine in addition to Wayne
himself.
The Jaycees do not have
enough money to pay a rtist
Matson.
To a person, city officials
acknowledge the fmished piece
is handsome and likely worth
more than the asking price.
But Councilman Don Strauss
said he made the motion to keep
it out of city hall because "I'm
less than enthused with it at this
point."
hnpressionism set
for Laguna museum
"lmpressi<>nism, the
California View," an exhibition
of 103 oil paintings done in the
Califdtnia Impressionist style,
will open Friday at the Laguna
Beach Museum or Art.
The show was curated by
Oakland Museum curat or
Harvey Jones, who has selected
some 41 California artists to be
represented.
Although California painters
found the light, colorful style of
impressionism later than the
French, California's landscapes
and similar light made the style
appealing to local painters. a
museum spokesman said.
The show includes work by
both Northern and Southern
Californians, the diffe r ence
visible in the cool blue hues of
the Northern painters and the
lighter , sunnier colors of their
Southern C alifornia
counterparts.
Artists included in the show
are Clark Hobart, Bruce Nelson,
William Wendt a nd Franz
Bischoff. A catalog with critical
essays and artists' biographies,
and color and black and white
reproductions of the exhibited
works will be available in the
museum s tore during the
exhibit.
The show is set to run through
Feb. 21. In the lower gallery,
works by Scott Moore and
Linda L. Stevens will be shown
concurrently with the California
lmpressiortists exhibit.
LBMA hours are 11 :30 a.m. to
4: 30 p m. daily except Mondays.
For more information call
494 -6531.
Three sclwol buses
involved in wrecks
School buses were involved in
three minor traffic accidents
Wednesday in Orange County.
including one in Costa Mesa. but
there were no serious injuries,
according to the California
Highway Patrol.
In Costa Mesa, a 79-passenger
Newport-Mesa Unified School
Dis trict bus carrying nine
pre-schoolers sideswiped a car
al Newport Boulevard and Bay
Street at 12:35 p.m., accordin1
to a CHP spokesman.
No injuries and virtually no
damage to either vehlcle were
reported, a district spokesman
said.
Al that sa me time , a
13-passenger van with one
5-year·old student on board
struck the rear end of a car on
the Santa Ana Freeway just
north of Crown Valley Parkway,
said officer Ralph Wood. The
van deflected into aaotber lane
and was struck by a third car,
and both burst into flames. be
said. .
Four people were treated for
minor injuries at Miuion
Community Hospital In Mtu1oo
Viejo, he said. The va•,
operated by Taylor Bus Service,
was under contract wltb the
Santa Ana Unified School
District 's Tart Hearing
Impaired School.
A second Santa Ana school bus
cafrying 46 sttidents collided at
1: 15 p.m. with a car at 15th and
Towner streets in Santa Ana,
causing nine pec>ple to be tee.led
for cuts and bruises al UC Irvine
Medical Center. said Officer
Steve Thompson.
Arm.ed thugs beal,
rob two LB jewelers
Two men armed with
tevolven and kn.Ives beat and
·robbed tho owners ol Gallery
One of La1una Wednesday,
makina off with an e1Umated
SM,000 worth ol Jewelry lte1n1,
ICCOrdinl to police.
A poUce •eok•man 1ald tbe
robbers entered the C•liery,
located at 1220 North Coast
Kl1bway, at about •:ao p.m.,
pre....,..lnC to be lntereat.d ln
mak!ftl a purdlue.
tute.d, otm.n Jerry Hall. ~1 aad It• Uraqa, -. botb oc wsuaBuda,were ............
tll• f &oor and Ued ¥P;' lit• .......... aaAcl.
Aa tM ,..._.. ramacbd tM
•tore, UM). ldck" uut puncbld
HaU and Uran•• and aiaahed
their clothes with a tlllfe ,
accordJ.na to ~ 1pote1maa.
The robbers carrled oat a
small safe cont.a.lnlq molt of
the Jewelry items, lea.mt t.be
1aUery owners bottled on tbe
floor.
'l'be •PQk•mu 1ald Hall md
Uran•• maaaaed to fne
tbemMlV91 .... call f!llloe,tlt
which time ~ eJteMt• ....-cb
wa1 conducted fOf' tM u.i.ev..
llOwHer, no auapecta were •P~·u. ... a .... ._
MrlCMllllJ .......... ID &M 9: tbel ............. ...
L.flelr peuoaal doctoi or
anMJcal~. 1
. ,,.1 ...
,,
I J
"1 • ..
l
'
Ii
I l
11
J
I
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11
t;
II
'-J
TI ·' '>
II
ti
l1
I)
ll
.,
froxic spill stti.dies
I Ji
Could ease emerge~
ll'rine pollce offtciaJ1 are to
tie conaratulated for looldna
ttlto how to handle the potential ~er1ency of a toxic splll In the
~tty. The posslblllty for such a
spill, and Its consequent impact
-vn public health, certainly exis6
fn Irvine.
Irvine police recently took
part in a workshop on toxic spills.
Other participants included
...Authorities from Newport Beach.
tosta Mesa, Tustin, Orange
!County and the state Department
<Of Fish and Game.
•11 Apart from the workshop,
:Irvine police officials have
1tndertaken a broad effort to
educate officers in how to
:~espond in the event of such a
'§i>ill .
!/· This educational effort is ',~ell -advised since there is a
large number of firms in , the
Irvine area that use and store
toxic chemicals. The dan1eroua
substances are transported
throu1h Irvine by truck and
railroad car.
Pharmaceutical companies.
plastics manufacturers, and
electronic firms in the Irvine
Industrial Complex use such
chemicals.
In addition to the Impact a
toxic chemical aplll can have on
public health, there is often a
large cost involved with the
handling of such an emergency.
For example, a recent
chemical leak at a factory in
Tustin near Irvine cost Tustin
$88,000 to clean up.
Where toxic spills are
concerned, it is best to have done
your homework on the subject
before one occurs.
i'f'olice pay moves up
ti•
1, 1 Agreement has been reached
1'111 a new labor contract for the
ll'vine city police force, calling
for an immediate 12.15 percent
Jt.f ke in compensation.
• f; Tbe contract for the Irvine
;molice Officers Association, the
hly collective bargaining unit in
' e municipal work force. makes
lhe Irvine Police Department the
eighth-highest paid department
tn the county. Next year. the
ntract calls for the officers to
et pay hikes sufficient to make
eirs the sixth-highest paid
epartment.
The Irvine Police
epartment has an admirable
ecord and deserves just
compensation.
It can be noted however. that
the contract is more attractive
for police employees than many
comparable wage and benefit
packages in the private sector.
In addition to the police
contract, the Irvine City Council
has routinely approved more
than $1 million in pay raises for
the res t or the municipal
employees.
One facet of pay negotiations
that can be observed is that they
seem to be carried on at a very
professional level in Irvine.
which so far has avoided some of
the labor problems and job
actions seen elsewhere.
lassroom delay costly
For the second year. Gov.
erry Brown has included as a
p priority item in his budget for
mmunity colleges funding for a
. ,000-square-foot classroom
ilding at SaddJeback College's
uth Campus in Mission Viejo.
Colle&e officials say it will
ake at least $8.6 million in 1982
rices to construct an adequate
. uilding, more than St million
ore than last year's estimate of
.5 million for the same design.
Last June, after being
pp roved for funding by the State
inance Department and the
overnor, construction of the
assroom building was taken out
the budget during last-minute
egotiations in the Legislature.
In light of current financial
nstraints and projected state
udget deficits. Saddleback
fficials say they may not
eceive full funding for the
roject. leaving the district to
aise the rest.
That won't be easy because
f the district's own budget
roblems and inability to raise
•
funds since Proposition 13 and
the Serrano-Priest State Supreme
Court decision.
For the past four years,
enrollments in the SaddJeback
Community College District have
grown at a rate of about 15
percent a year. leaving officials
hard pressed to fand room for
new students in already crowded
classrooms.
The so called "temporary"
structures brought in to
accommodate the swelling
student body have become
permanent fixtures on the
campus.
In addition. enrollments are
expected to continue to rise at
nearly the current rate well into
the next decade as south Orange
County rapidly develops.
Clearly Saddleback's South
Campus needs a new classroom
building. Waiting another year
will only delay the inevitable and
mean higher costs because of
inflation. Nothing will be gained
by another delay.
plnlOM expressed In the space above are those of the Oailv Pilot. Other'vlews eic-
ressed on tnls page are those ot lhe1r autnors and arl 1sts. Reader comment is 1nv11-
d. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa MeScl, CA 92626. Phone (714)
42-4321.
M. Boyd/Farewell message
The Last WlU and Testament of
rancis R . Lord of Sydney,
uatraJla, ltequeatbed: "To my
loved Wlfe, one •bll.linc for tram
e 10 abe can co somewhere and
rown herself."
In London you can hire a guide for
be eqwvalent of S2 to lead your
oup on a two-mUe bike tbroulh the
ty, pauaina here and there to polnt
t places of interest. Quite a
araaln. The Job title of such a
orthy ls "street walker."
Q. Aren't quarterbackl the best
ald football playert?
A. Ge.,erally. But last year,
hicaeo Bean nmnln1 baa Watt.
ayton beat out Ule now r.Und
laml Dolpillbl quarterback Bob rteee few t.be distlDetioa of ....., tbe
. otl bilblJ pakt of t.bem all. Paytcm
~ade "11,000.
threesome waa fed up by holiday
commerclaliJm. A al1n on the kettle read : ''Take some money.••
Passersby did so, too.
Jacob, the IOG of Soviet Dictator
Josef Stalin, died in a German
prllOGer of war camp durlnl World
War U alter bis father refUled to
ne1oti1te the youn1 man's freedom
ln a~ excbaoae deal.
Tbole wbo refuse to have banclCUILI
ln tbelr homes say the best defensive
weapon you can keep by your bed la a pool cue.
Q. Wbllt pt'OpOl1.ion of the married
rape Yictlma wind up divorced from
their bulbandll?
A. lla!f.
Bob llope'1 TV ........ uaually
run about ellbt mlautel. To put one
of .... toptbet, ... ta .. at lust
100 •• oe ball a .... dllltnat ·~· ...... u.. °"' anfdJ OD pl.,...., lMn elllta oat tbl '-' lb*~ ... b1 one, uaut bla .....,.teta
tell• blm that'• eftOUlb.
.... _ .... __ di
Bro~ budget shows politics
As if he had performed some miracle,
Gov. Jerry Brown bas prepand a
budget which he says is balanced and
will not require any new taxes. "It la,"
be declared, "a balanced bud1et; it bas
no new t.axes on 1eneral coosumers; it
balances the sacrifices and build$ for
the future.''
Details leaked previously by Brown
reveaJed that he has provided 1an 8
percent cost of liviD1 iDcreue for•a1ed •
bUnd and disabled u well u welfare
payments for families wiUt dependent
children.
8 E SA.ID HIS budget is based upon an
upturn in the economy before the end of
1982 which would reduce earlier
estimates of shortfalls in revenues and
on a speedup of collections of taxes
from businesses such as the sales and workmen compensation taxes.
So, once again, Brown emerges as the
"prudent, no-nonsense" budgeter who
shuns new taxe.s altbougb for months be
was anguishing over the need for them.
lt is not surprisinc that he bas found a
way to avoid asking for new laxes.
Although be will step out as 1ovemor at
the year's end be bopes to win election
as a U.S. Senator before that lime
arrives. Whatever else be may be
Brown remains the shrewd politician.
He knows that raising laxes and
winning elections don't go together.
Whatever doubt.a he may have bad
about the wisdom of seeking new taxes
were resolved during lbe course of the
llll WITIRS
many radio talk shows he has hosted in
recent months. The people. be said,
baye made it clear that they want more
cuts in government before they will
approve any tax increases.
Brown says he is making those cuts in
his new budget but they are hard to
find. Some state agencies were reduced
5 percent but funding bas been
continued for many non-essential
agencies, most of them creatures of his
administration.
With only a slight reduction Brown
proposes to continue the bailout oC. local
governments without restrictions. The
irony of that is that while he will refuse
s tate employees cost of living
adjustments equal to those to be given
welfare recipients, the local
governments wiU be free to grant their
employees whatever they wish.
The same is true in the case or the
schools which Brown says will be given
a full cost-of-Living increase in their
allocations.
AND mE&E IS some legerdemain in
Brown's claim of no new laxes. The
budget proposes lo meet the now
estimated shortfall of $2 bilUon by cuts
totalling $1 billion. The other billion wiJI
come from the speedup of tax
collections and some new revenues
termed "rees" instead of taxes. These
include ne w charges to utility
companies purportedly to offset cost.a of
regulatory services provided by the
Public Utilities Commission. Brown
s ays s uch fees are part of the
movement to connect cost more closely
to benefits.
Another irony in the budget plan is
that Brown, in staking his program on
an upturn in the economy, is saying be
expects the economic program of
President Reagan, which he has loudly
condemned. to prove it.self before the
year's end.
Let people 'vote • • on a•ri>ort expansion
To the Editor:
1 read in the medJa about Supervisor
Ralph Clark's various accomplishment.a
for the year 1981. They were a summary
of his positions and beliefs, lo which be
ia entitled. However, sleep will not
come easily tonight 111 fail to cbaJlenge
bis position on John Wayne Airport.
For starters, he conveys the
impression that all of the county's air
transportation problems would
suddenly be solved if only the county
MAILBOX
could expand John Wayne Airport. For
the sake of discussion, let u.s assume
that we can wave a magic wand.
disregard the view of homeowners,
businessmen, the courts and a whole
array of others who have opposed the
expansion of John Wayne Airport and
suddenly re-create the airport u is
proposed in the Master Plan adopted by
the Supervisors February, 1981. Bued
on that plan the airport wiJI have a
capacity to handle 6 .1 million
passengers per year by the year 1990.
TBA.T'S FINE, but bow does one
reconcile the fact that every study
conducted by the county concludes that
the requirement for air transportation
In 1990 will be approdmately 20 milUon
passengers per year? Some very simple
arithmetic indicates that some 14
million wlU either have to stay home or,
perish the thought, drive. It just seems
utterly ridiculous that tbe county should
spend some $100 million Lo expand an
airport facility that simply wm not do
the job upon completion.
Another item ment.ioned was a
complaint about the so-called "vocal
minority." From my observatlon Point.
the vocal minority represents tboee who
are in favor ol expanalon of the airport.
It 1trike1 me that those. wbo favor
expanalon represeat some ft!'Y narrow
interest.a int.be eounty and coukln't care
less what happens to the balance of the
county 10 •Joni ai their vlewa are
represented. T\lil does not seem the
rltbt way lo 10.
It aeema to me that lt we really .tab
Lo determine 1wb~r or tot the &*>Pl•
In the County of Oran1e want to expand
John Wayne A1rpott there la a almple
way of nilOlvinc that queaUon. AU tM
Board ol SUpervilorl need do it flaee
tlUa llsue on the ballot. 8'mply ask IM
people at the next 1eneraJ eleet&on wbetber ~ not they wllb to apend SlOO mtlllon to eapand Joha w.,_. Airport. surety tbll would reeolft tile llaue oace
and for all.
program for the past six years and I
have seen what growth and effect the
program has on the children and
families enrolled in Head Start. There
are so few social programs left that
have proved thel.r worth so much as
Head Start.
The Head Start program iB still a
community based program needing
community support. There is within
your local community a Head Start
program for anyone who is interested in
volunteering within the program or
helping with family needs.
Thank you again for your concern for
the Head Start program and your
community support.
VIRGINIA HILL
Director
Faith misplaced
To the Editor:
"If a soul sln . . ., and be unto bis
neighbor as that which was delivered
him to keep ... and lieth conceminJ it
. . . then it shall be because he has
sinned, and is guilty, tbal he shall
restore that which he took violently
away or the thing he had deceitfully
gotten ... "Leviticus 6 : 1-4.
Yes, the Irvine Company has lied to
its neighbors, the 4,000 leaseholders,
who delivered their good faith by
leasing their land. This land the Irvine
Company ls violently tryin1 to take
away by means of the ridicwous sums
of money being asked for the
continuance of the leases ot the sale
prices of the land.
DECEIT MIGHT also be aptly
app'ied to the initial prices of the
leaseholds, what wftb the lmpllcatioa
that the r~ would remain reasonable;
hardly a 6,000 percent increase in the
landlease or saJe price.
If the Irvine Company continues in it.a
present policy , what are the
leaseholders to do?-They camot afford
to buy the land or pay the lmpoulble
new leases. No one will even buy the
homes should they decide to sell.
la it the Irvine Company's idea to
force these 4,000 famllles out ao they
wltl feel Justified in cbaralnl what they
want foe the prol)Oled conatnac:tioa next
to Cameo Shores and Cameo
Hi1blancb? Wboknowt7
The least the Committee ol 4,000 la attt.-nptlnc to make some semblance of
order out of _,,. deceit and Ui.falth
beta1 prllCtlced by the Jl'Yibe-Oompany
at the PftM!lll time.
BRUCE 0 . SAVIU..E, M.D.
If my lease were readjusted today
based on Irvine Company figures my
current rent would be increased to
$242 .39 per day. My scheduled
readjustment is for 1989. U the rates
continue to escalate based on lbe
previous five years I may expect to pay
$524.20 per day ground rent.
GllOUND &ENT is not tax
deductible. Al a SO percent income tax
rate I would have to earn $400,000 per
year just to pay the Irvine Company
ground rent. I have tried to buy my
property since I acquired the leasehold.
However, in the six years since its
acquisition I have been unable to find
any lender who would finance the Irvine
Company's purchase price. I have told
my family we wiJI probably have to
move before the lease is adjusted.
However. I am uncertain as Lo whether
there ili a market for my home ~ause
of the Irvine leasehold policy.
ROBERT R. LONGPRE
Out of 'club'
To the Editor :
When I became a member of the
Senator's Club, a John Sebmiu support
organization, about a year ago, I bad no
idea lhal I wouJd later publicly tender
my resignation.
However, aside from our supposedly
being fellow conservative Republicans,
J discover I have absolutely oothinl in
common with Senltor Schmitz. Havin1
seen him create the supreme personal
and political error of supportin1
bigotry, racism, and anti-feminJsm
while displaying. a caUous disre1ard for
the personal beliefs and practices of
others, I now joyfully and forevermore
renounce my membership in the "club"
and pray the balance of tbe
membership will see flt to do likewise.
LELAND E. OLIVER
Brave!
To The F.dltor:
Brave John Schmits! Even tbouP
he's never been In combat and never
baa served in a combat aone, 'be wants
tAt ficbl poor presnant women wbo doa•t
want to have any more children,
homosexual women and Jewllb women.
The M.,t.ne Corps mwal be ao proud of
blm.
llARYWAONER
I
I
...,,..
THURSDAY,JANUAAY 14, 1992
CAVALCADE
BUSINESS
The eagle, though an
enduring p(Ltriotic symbol,
is by no means universally
loved ... 85
0
{
D
Escalatefl battle eyed by Committee of 4,000
Leaden of tbe Committee ol
4,000 report they may double up
OJ\ their fi1ht with the lrvtne
Company by workl.nc to defqt,
the development firm's plan for
expaodinl Newport Center.
''The idea would be to put the
Irvine Company completely on
bold until It deals with tbe
teuehold issue," said Barbara
Young, leader of the committee.
The committee claims to
represent 4,000 Newport Beach
and Irvine homeowners unhappy
with skyrocketing land leaae
fees they must pay t.o the Irvine Company.
T.he Irvine Company and
committee members bave
traded threats in ~ent weeks.
Irvine
sclwol
rolls up
Enrollment in the Irvine
Unified School District grew by
5.9 percent la.st year, malting the
district the onJy one along the
Orange Coast with an increase.
in enrollment, according to a
report given to school trustees Wednesday.
The percentage increase,
however, was the smallest since
such statistics began to be
collected for the district iD l9ii9
the report said. '
A totaJ of 866 new students
were enrolled last faJI, boosting
the enrollment to lS,462.
At the same timet enrollment
continues to decrease in school
districts in Huntington Beach,
Fountain Valley, Newport
Beach, Costa Mesa and Laguna
Beach.
Increases in Irvine 's
enrollment have been attributed
to the population growth.
The report notes, however,
that "due to a sluggish economy,
resullinc in a slowing of
residential development," the
city's growth rate slowed last
year.
The average annual increase
in enrollment for the school
district since 1969 is 1,072.
Irvine Unified School District
bas escaped some of the more
pressing financial problems
facing other districts by virtue
of Its rising enrollment and the
fact that many of its teachers
are young and haven't yet
reached top salary ranges, say
district administrators.
The report concluded that the ·
district's growth rate will
continue to slow as long as tbe
financial climate remains
unchanged.
Impressionist
works to
be exhibited
''Impressionism , the
California View," an exhibition
of 103 oil paintings done In the
California Impressionist style,
will open Friday at the Laguna
Beach Museum of Art.
The show was curated by
Oakland Museum curator
Harvey Jones, who bas selected
some U California artists to be
represented. .
Although California painters
found tbe light, colorful style of
impressionism later than tbe
French. California's landscapes
and similar llght made the style
et)pea.Unc to local painters, a
museum 1pok~~a~ said.
The 1bow includes work by
botb Northern and Southern
Callfornlans, the difference
visible in the cool blue hues ol
Lbe Northern palnten and the
U,bter, sunnier colors of tbelr
Southern California
counterparts.
Art.lab included lo the abow are Clan Hobart, Bnaee Nellem,
WlUlam Wendt and Frau
81.cboft. A cataJoa wlt.b critical
ea11y1 IDd uUata' bio1r...-•. ud cob-aDd black and wblt.
reproOcUoaa of the elllbited
works wW be available in tbe
11uueum 1tore tharin1 the
exblblt.
Tbe lbow ii Mt to run Uuwlb-
Peb. 21. la th!~ plMry,
~orb by Scott Moore aad Llacl• L. ....... wUI be ....... eoncUl'NlllJ .,... tM ~
lmprwt. tP'll mt~
!.IN.A liom'I a. u :• a.a. to
4:IO p.a dlllJ 9SClllt NoadQI. rer more laformltloa call
·~·
Irvine Company officials aaid
UM coa:unittee "threat" to work
aaatnat the Newf.ort Center expuwkla pJan la 'a nameful
proposition to make."
expansion plan should b6 Judeed
on its own merits.
"It would be very
small·mlnded and pretty damed
selfish for anyone to support or
oppose it on any other buis,"
said Jerry Collins, an Irvine_
aetUe th8 diapute.
The .lrv1ne Company. in tum,
lar1ely reJeeted the demands and added that it wouJd nol
negotiate with any flomeowner
who beeomea part of a lawsuit
•&•inst tbe development firm.
A.1uccesaful referendum drive
atainst the Newport Center
project wu launched late lut
year and the fate ol the $123
mllllon plan la to be decided by
voters in June.
Ms. Young said ber croup may
actively work to cet out the "no
vote" on the expansion project.
Threat to oppose Center
~x~nsion 'shameful proposition'
Irvine Company officials
responded that their expansion
project "shouldn't be made
hostage to the demands of any
special interest group,"
Company officials said the
Company spokesman.
The committee has threatened
to sue the Irvine Company over
the &rowing land lease dispute.
It also has unveUed a Ust of
demands that it said the lrvi.oe
Company could meet in order to
• 'Tbat '• un-American, • ·
responded Ms. Young. "Wbeo
any two part.Jes dlaaaree on the
Interpretation of a contract, they
have the right to go to court. ~he charged that the Irvine
Comp.any. bas re~used to
LAST PICTURE -Huntington Beach parents
Richard and Robin Barada look at the last
photoiraph of their daughter Lani. 8 .. A
OelW ,_ "--~·~IC...._
poster child for Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.
the girl died Monday.
Girl's life short hut -happy
. -
Death claims Hun~ington's Cystic 'Fibrosis poster child
By eATRICK KENNEDY °' ... Deity "91 ,_
Eight-year-old Lani Anderson
of Huntington Beach spent
happy moments as poster child
for the Cystic Fibrosis
Foundation, meeting celebrities
and having her picture taken.
The blonde-haired girl was
selected to a two-year stint as
poster representative when she
was 6.
When her life ended Monday,
it wasn't unexpected. There's no
known cure for her disease, say
her parents. But death sW1 was
a shock to her parents and
friends.
"If you'd have seen her a
month ago, you wouldn't have
believed she was going to die,"
said her stepfather Richard
Barada. "Just Friday she beat
me In three games of
backgammon in tbe hospital."
The girl's healthy appearance
disguised her iJlness, sald her
mother Robin. Lani wasn't
emaciated and pale llke many
victims of the hereditary lUQC
and digestive tract disease, she
said.
•'She was a little girl who liked
to ride her bicycle when she foll
· good, and roller skate, and color
pictures. AU those things normal
girls do. But her lltUe body just
got tired. She'd spent a rough
year ." .
A third grade s tudent at
Bushard School, Lani spent most
of the past year in Chlldrens
"Her little body
just got tired.''
Hospiiai in Orange. Th~ hospital
bas a special floor and medical
stall for the young vlctima of tbe
disease.
As poster child, Lani poeed at
fund·rfi,sers with television star Tom Bosley of "Happy Days,"
comedienne Phyllis DUler, and
'Angeles baseball player Do!l
Baylor.
"She and Don Baylor really
became close. He would lit ber
in his lap and they'd talk ror a
long time. There was nothing
sby about Lani, she was ver1
happy," her mother said.
At 5, Lani won "Little Miss
Entertainment" for a son'-and
dance routine to tbe tune ' Good
Ship Lollipop" at the Cystic
Fibrosis summer camp sponsored by Childrens Hoa·
pita I.
But in the past year, four of
Lani's young friends from the
hospital died before they
reached 12.
"She told her baby sitter that
all ber friends weN! dyi.Dg and
sbe knew she wasn't going to
live much longer either," her
mother said.
"It was always bard for tbe
two of us to talk about it. I just
tried to mate ber life aa bappy
· and full as possible."
"It's IO tremendouall sad that
she's sone. but I'm reileved lt's
over IM her. Sbe was frustrated
and sad that she was too weak to
play anymore. I just fet'I sorry
for her friends at .tbe hospital
she left behind."
Oil fight st.-ategy expected.
:Laguna, Newport to prepare argument against drilling,
Lasuna Beacb and Newport
Beacli officials will be plannlq
a 1trateey to convince the
federal 1overnment that oil
wells aren't needed ln the
coutal waters off tbe t"o ciU•.
Lasuna Beach Qty minaler
Ken Frank said Wedlleadu tfaat
followiftl a meetlQI ol olftet•
of tM two beach eommualtlel
Tu11day, 1 dele1aUoa of
Newport and La1•• oftktala
wW prepare a 1umm1ey ot the
luuea iDYOlved. ·,
Tbe f ecleral 1overnmnt i•
expect«l lD February to dedde
wbetber to leaH Soutbra
Callforala offabore ••tera,
lacl..._.,... u dole 11 tbree•
mU11 to 1AIUD8 and Newport.
I« drWial and productJoa OI od ...... .
· &artier tbl1 moatb ._.,_.
BHcll lla1or Sally Bellenae
fired off a letter to tlle
Dttutmeat of ......... ...... a1 .. lD1ufflcleat'' an
I
environmental impact report on
a proposed offshore oU lease.
. The letter, endorsed 1 by the
City Council, IOUlbt deletion of
possible sale next month of
tracts directly oll lbe coast ol
La1una Beacb.
Ia ber letter, Mn. Bellerue
1afd tbe department 's
envlronmllltal impact report
"1ave lnlutncieat comlcleretion
to t.be aemltJve and 1Jplllcant
nature of the La1un1 Beach
abonllae."
Sb• warned of Use poulble
advtr11 Impact an oll 1plll
would ba•• on tbe clty'1
latertklal ... , not only Oil t.be
ctt1'1 UcW pools, but oo lta
tomilt and rwr9ation Income.
Slaee La1un1 '• eeoaomy relln beavUy oe .. rvlcn to
vl1lton, Jira. B•lltrue 11ld otta.._. drtUJ.a1 .eoald ca ....
mereUDll .S tM eltJ --.. ffODOlllU urm.
Newport. Beach Mayor Jackie
Heather bu proposed that ber
city back an effort to cut lts
yearly eaer11 conaumpUon
equal to lbe amount of oil and
gas that la expected to be
derived aanuallf from lta p~ oil and ... ,, .....
SW Hid if tbe eaecJY savtna
pro1ram were succeasful, it
would demoutnte tio federal
otflelals tbe Oew oil wella aren't
ntCUfU')'.
Lapna '• city mana1er aald
clty =el ln both Newport
and WOUid be~ tlO
prepan written lnfol'matlcm "* the _public on tbe PfOpOMd leMel
durtnc U.. tant two w..U.
"By dolAa tlall we~ to I« the public lavol .. d ,' Frank
H!d. ''We'n puWa1 e ma ........ wW ft ..
1ltuaU. and wbat la
wlUl a IMI of baW., tM
deleted bY tbe laUrlor ~.·,
( t
teco8'J)Ue c.ne committee u a
bar1a!nin1 agent for affected
homeowners because "they
want to splinter us, frighten us
and take away our homes.
"Once we go to court," she
added, "t.be lrvlne Company will
have to recognize us."
Irvine Company officials aJso
have taken aim at the
committee's llsl of demands, a
slx-polnt package titled
"Leaseholders' Bill of Rights'·'
\hat is set ln Old English type.
"You get through all the Old
English lettering and Roman
numerals ln their proposals and
you wind up with two major
demands.•• Collins commented.
· He charged the commi~tee is
aaldq& that bis firm "sell tbem
their rented land at half lU
value and then lend them 80
percent of the money to tN,y It,
over a long term at no interest."
He also said "that if they want
to sell their residential property,
but can't after It's been on the
market for six mont.b.s , then w~
should be compelled to buy lt
from them, including the land -
which we already own."
Collins called the demand.I
"startling" and added, "some
people might even regard them
as arrogant.•'
Ms. Young said the committee
doesn't feel the list of demands
is "unreasonable.'·
-By STEVE MARBLE
Pair arrested
in UCI class
gun scare
A UC Irvine student and
another Man were' arrested
Wednesday after they allegedly
brought a phony submachine
gun and a real pistol into the
Administration Building and
pulled the fake weapon on an
;assistant dean, UCI police said
today.
Booked into Orange County
Jail on suspicion of assault with
a deadly weapon, possession or a
concealed w eapon a nd
threatening a school official
were Majid Foroozandeh, 19,
Irvine, the student, and Douglas
Ernest Smith, 29, who gave
authorities a New Jersey
address, according to campus
police.
The incident in the office or
Ron Wilson, assistant dean of
students and ombudsman for
student affall'S, took place about
2 p.m . when Foroozande h
approached Wilson about a
problem concerning his student
stat u s , sai d a UC I
spokeswoman.
Foroozandeh, a native of Iran
who is a physics major. was last
enrolled for the summer quarter
as a sophomore, said the
spokeswoman.
Foroozandeh's student status
was placed in jeopardy by
allegations that he cheated on a
match test, according to UCI
police.
No one was injured ln the
incident.
The fake machine gun, which
was incapable of firing, was a
replica of tbe lsraeli·made Uzi
machine gun, said university
police. Police said the student,
s ay ing he felt threatened,
showed the assistant dean the
fak e submachine gun and
shoved a clip or real ammunition
into it.
Assistant Dean Wilson gave an
order to put the fake gun back
into the canvas bag from which
it was drawn, UCI police said.
Police said the student
complied.
Wilson then told the students
to stand by while he went into
hi s outer office, police sald.
Wilson then called university
police who arrived shortly and
took the two men into custody
without incident.
Investigators said they found
a real .22-caliber handgun in an
attache case that was in tbe
possession of tbe men. However.
Wilson told police be never saw
the real weapon.
. Campus police sa id
Foroozandeh told them that
Smith was bis bodyguard.
Newport City Hall
bans Wayne bronze
A city-commissioned bronze
relief sculpture of the late actor
John Wayne has been banned
from the Newport Beach City
Hall.
City council members said the
action Is not meant to be a slap
at Wayne , regarded as
Newport's most famous citizen.
The condiUoo was imposed by
councU members this week after
they agreed to lend $13,000 to tbe
Newport Harbor Jaycees to
help pay off artist Chris Matson.
Several council members said
the City Hall ban came as a r e s u It o f c i r c u m s t a n c e.s
surrounding the art wort.
Matson, wbo now has the
bronze work in bis garage, wu
given permission in 1979 to
create a bas relief of Wayne for
$17 ,500. Jaycees were singled
out as the service group for
raising money to pay for it.
But the size and price of tbe
artwork ballooned durine the
two years it took to complete It.
The CQfl now ts expected to be
$32,000 and tbe artwork now
Sign language
classes set
includes a stagecoach, six
horses and the likenesses or
Andy Devine and John
Carradine in addition to Wayne
himself.
The Jaycees do not have
e nough money to pay artist
Matson.
To a person, city officials
acknowledge the finished piece
is handsome and likely worth
more than the asking price.
But Councilman Don Straus
s aid be made the motion to keep
it out of city ball because "I'm
less than enthused with it at tbl.s
point."
Jail ordered
for witness at
killing trial
A witness caJled by t .. e
prosecution lo Wi llle Ray
Wisely's murder trial · was
ordered Jailed Wedneada~y Orange County Superior
Judge Kenneth E. Lae Wll..a
refused repeatedly to antwer
questions ~i.tlq to the c ....
Told by .J...,e La• that be
would remain In Oraqe CouliltY
Jill unW M qreed to 1D11ter
the questloaa, PhllUp A.
Tbolhpson responded;
•'That's when bell ltHIH
over."
·~ t
IJ
' b
}
l
)'
It
>.
I
I
, ..
"'
"•
•, ,.
...
.. •
I,
I.
,,
'
'" ·i
n Many Costa Mesa retldenls
iobably were puzzled last week
how the city of San Joee aot
v_ o Ive d i n Cos ta Mes a • s
Slnesl.
la. This involved the northern
t,.ialifornia city's decision to
petition the state Supreme Court
over a 1978 initiative that stopped
the development of more than 650
homes and apartments near
South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa.
San Jose City Attorney
Robert Logan filed the appeal
fllst Friday, two days after the
C.Osta Mesa City Council voted
N>t to challenge the appellate
f'O.u~t ~uling invalidating the 1978
Mut1at1ve. ·
b· Logan said he doesn't really
care whether the initiative is
_MPheld or not His concern is that
yie Dec. 1 ruling by the lower
~ourt could set a precedent
lhroughout the state.
,,~. Where does San Jose's
~lion leave Costa Mesa·! ~ According to City Attorney
:Tum Wood . Costa Mesa could end
l6p footing the legal bills if the
%tale &_upreme Court agrees to
ifl,ear the case. ao Meanwhile. the initiative
rezoning the property owned by
11
---* -
Arnel and South Coast Plaza to
slngle·famlly development wlll
remain in effect unlll a final
decision is made.
Wood says he's concerned
that the city's position in regard
to a $10 mUUon lawsuit filed by
Arnel could be weakened if the
case continues much longer.
We're concerned too. tr the
cit y of Costa Mesa e nds up
paying millions of dollars
because of delayed legal
wrangling. will San Jose offer to
j ump in again'!
It would seem most
unfortunate if Costa Mesa's case.
where a high court decision could
have very narrow local
application. became muddled
or expensive -because or
statewide concerns.
San Jose legal advisers
apparently raise no specific issue
in their city that might be
adversely affected by the Costa
Mesa case. The~· apparently have
a broad view concern over zoning
by initiative.
Unless a substanti al
s tatewid e application i s
demonstrated. it would seem that
Costa Mesa z'>ning should stand
or fall on its own specific merits.
'Noiifreation missing
)If
The Costa Mesa City Council
acted unwise ly when it failed to
notify interested parties before
ting Jan. 5 not to challenge the
pellate court ruling that
validated the 1978 initiative
zoning 68 acres in the c ity .
The council deadlocked 2 to 2
d had to wpit until Jan.'7 when
ouncilman Ed M cFarland
turned. At that time the full
uncil voted not to challenge a
I wer court ruJing to the state
upre me Court.
Both homeowners who led an
i itiative to stop the development
I more than 650 homes and
partments and the propetty
)vners were caught off guard.
They thought the matter was
ished after the City Council
ad voted in closed session Dec.
21 not to c ha llenge the Dec. 1
ruling b~· the 4th District Court of
Appeal.
But the issue came up again
on Jan. 5 when Mayor Arlene
Schafer told the council. that she
had received a letter on behalf of
the North Costa M esa
Homeowners Association. urging
the council to continue fighting
the case.
Dave Leighton. pr~sident of
tht! homeowners association. said
he could have marshalled more
s upport had he known the vote
was coming up.
It was a poor call on the
council's part. As things turned
out. the split decision forced a
re-vote two days later. enabling
the community to find out about
it.
elay lease decision
The Newport Mesa Unified
chool District would be well
vi~ed to put off making any
cision regarding the lease of 47
res of s urplus property until
mmer.
Although trustees took no
lion earlier this week on the
operty at J amboree Boulevard
d Bristol Street. former Irvine
pmpany president Ray Watson
dvised them to wait until the
unty completes plans to rezone
e site.
Watson. who helped engineer
e sale of 36 or the acres in 1965
r $972,000. pointed out that the
ntire parcel could be worth $60
illion today if rezoned for
ommercial deve lopment.
Included in the property is 11
cres used by the now-closed Bay
•
View Elementary School.
Although we can understand
the district·s desire to close a
d ea l quickly during these
financially h ard times. the~·
would be wise to wait.
It would be onlv fair to the
taxpayers who helped pay for the
property that was purchased for
the construction of a high school
that was never built because of
declining enrollments.
Now the district finds itself
with no need for a new school and
47 acres of valuable property .
The best thing would be for the
district to wait for the best
possible deal.
That way more s tudents
cou ld bene fit rrom better
financial support.
pinions expressed IA th'e space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex-
essed On ll"lis page are tnose ot tl"le1r authors and artists. Reader comment is 1nv1t-
. Address T~ Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone <7Hl
2-4321.
M. Boyd/Farewell message
The Last Will and Testamebl of rancis R. Lord of Sydney,
'ustralia, bequeathed : "To my
loved wife, one sJ\illlng for tram
re so she can go somewhere and
wn herself."
In Loadon you can hire a pide for
e equivalent of SZ to lead your
up on a two-mile bllte t.btouP the
ty. 91W1ing heire aad there to point
t places of hrtereat. Quite a
r1atn. The Job title of such a n.bJ la "atreet walker,••
Q. Wlult ~ ot the married
pe riet1ml Wind UJ» cllv~.&om ,....._.,
A. Half.
It W81 in SU Pr~ u you
l1bt 1111*1 •• ._. ~-laat riltlMI .......... Ud .. twin
,. ......,.. on a ttNlt comer with
·a ketUe hanaing under a tripod. This
threesome was fed up by holiday
commercialism. A sign on the ketUe
re ad : "Take some money."
Paasenby did so, too.
Q. Area't quarterbacks the best
paid football players?
A. Generally. But last year,
CbiealO Bean runni.n1 back Walter
Payton beat out the now retired
Miami Dolphins quarterback Bob
Griese for tfie distinction of beinl tbe
ma.t hiably paid of them aJl. Payton macs. 'f'S,000.
Bob Hope's TV moook>tuea uauaJty
run aboUt eltbt mteut•. To put one
of 11me IOlether, H &..,.. at leut
100 .... Oil half • doetD ---lllbjed9, looks them onr carefblly
OG pla,bld, then ed.l&I out tbe .......
Un", one by one. untU bit atopwateh
tells blm that'• enough.
---.
Brown budget shows politics
As if he had performed some miracle.
Gov. Jerry Brown has prepared a
budget which he says is balanced and
will not require any new taxes. "It is,"
he declared, "a ba.lanced budget; it has
no new taxes on general consumers; It
balances Ute sacrifices and builds for
the future."
Details leaked previously by Brown
revealed that he has provided an 8
percent cost of living increase for aged,
blind and disabled as well as welfare
payments ror families with dependent
children.
HE SA.JD HIS budget is based upon an
upturn in the economy before the end of
1982 which would reduce earlier
estimates of shortfalls in revenues and
on a speedup of collections or taxes
from businesses such as the sales and
workmen compensation taxes.
So, once again, Brown emerges as the
"prudent. no-nonsense" budgeter who
shuns new taxes although for months he
was anguishing over the need for them.
It is not surprising that he bas found a
way to avoid asking for new taxes.
Although he will step out as governor al
the year's end he hopes to win election
as a U.S. Senator before that . t•me
arrives. Whatever else he m'ay be /
Brown remains the shrewd politician.
He knows that raising taxes and
winning elections don't go together.
Whatever doubts he may bave had
about the wisdom of seeking new laxes
were resolved during the course of the
llll WITIRS
many radio talk shows he has hosted in
recent months. The people. he said,
have made it clear that they want more
cuts in government before they will
approve any tax increases.
Brown says he is making those cuts in
his new budget but they are hard to
find . Some state agencies were reduced
5 percent but funding has been
continued for many non-essential
agencies. most of them creatures of his
administration.
With only a s light reduction Brown
proposes to continue the bailout of local
governments without restrictions. The
irony of that is that while he will refuse
state employees cos t of living
Let people vote
To the F..ditor:
1 read In the media about Supervisor
Ralph Clark's various accomplishments
for the year 1981. They were a summary
of bis positions and beliefs, t.o which he
Is entitled. However. s leep will not
come easily tonight if I fail to challenge
his posiUon on John Wayne Airport.
For starter s, he conveys the
impression that all or the county's air
transportation problems would
suddenl y be solved if only the county
MAILBOX
could expaad John Wayne Airport. For
the sake of discussion, let .us assume
that we can wave a magic wand,
disregard the view or homeowners,
businessmen, the courts and a whole
array of others who have opposed the
exvanslon of John Wayne Airport .and
suddenly re-create the airport as is
proposed in the Masler Plan.adopted by
the Supervisors February, 1981. Based
on that plan the airport will have a
capacity to handle 6.1 million
passengers per year by the year 1990.
THAT'S FINE, but how does one
reconcile the fact that every study
conducted by the county concludes that
the requirement for air transportation
in )990 will be approximately 20 million
passengers per year? Some very simple
arithmetic indicates that some 14
miUion will either have to stay home or.
perish lbe thought. <lrive. It just seems
utterly ridicuJou.9 that the county should
spend some $100 million to expand an
airport facility that simply wHI not do
the job upon completion. •
Another ite m mentioned was a
complaint about the so-called "vocal
minority." From my observation point,
the vocal minority represents those who
are in ravor of expansion or the airport.
It strikes me that those wbo ravor
expanai.on represent some very narrow
interests in the county and c:ouldn't care
less what happens t.o the balance of the
county so Iona as their views are
represented. Thl• does not seem the
ri1bt way to go, It seems to me that lf we really wtsh
to determine whether or not the people
in the County or Oranae want to expand
John Wayne Airport there ii a almple
way of resolvlDc that quesUon. AU the
Board of Superviton need do la place
this issue on Uie ballot. SJmply ask tM
people at the next 1eneral eleetlOft
wbether or not they wlab to spend $100 111tllion to expand Joam Wayne Airport.
Surely this would resolve I.be lalue one.
and for aU. .
CLARENCEJ.TORNER
program for the past six years and I
have seen what growth and effect the
program has on the children and
families enrolled in Head Start. There
are so few social programs left that
have proved their worth so much as
Head Start.
The Head Start program is still a
community based program needing
. community support. There is within
your local community a Head Start
program for anyone who is interested in
volunteering within the program or
helping with family needs.
Thank you again for your concern for
the Head Start program a nd your
community support.
VIRGINIA HILL
Director
Bureaucracy rules
To the Editor:
. How we a s individual
citizen·taxpayers could possibly affect
what happens in Washington or the
world when we cannot even gain control
or what happens locally is beyond me.
Friends, who was it recently said
government at all levels Is out or
control? He was so right!
When the $4 million Costa Mesa
Neighborhood Center was building no
protection was made for library patrons
on Park Street, many or whom were
elderly. I fell but no member or the city
had even the courtesy to apolo1l1e for
the inconvenience and possible injury.
Interestingly enough, the county pays
the city for these motheaten, antiquated
facilities. and the county reps did
nothing to Insure the city provide safety
measures during this bulldinl period -
and neither did the county reply to my
letter or complaint -not even out or
pure courtesy. You see how little one
little taxpayer means to a member of
the elite bureaucracy! They have
forgotten the purpose of government.
We didn't, or course. ask for the
so-called Neighborhood Center. What's
neighborhood about it? The word
implies warm friendship groups. If you
want to use the ele1anl f•cillty which
appears to have • Ml-time staff (al
what cost?> you mutt pay some sUlf
prices -allhoulb how far these support
upkeep ls anybody's auess.
BUaEAUC&ATS point lli-.1era at
Propoaitioft l3 u an excuse for cutUn1
"e11enUal" services Uke fire. police
and library -• form of blackmail,
really -while non·etaentlal Wnt• u
the Neighborhood Center keep 1rowln1
apace. Colt• Mesa la not only Into ·
re~aUoa but lnt.o C:bUlbiq booklet. · to ad"'11M It. Now lft't t.bat aiee?
SomeUIAnl bu to be In tbe wlall about
the Pull,.,_ Lilwary fadlit.1. TM
buUdlq leab, top and bottom: It baa
adjustments equal to those to be given
welfare r ec ipients . the local
governments will be free to grant their
employees whatever they wish.
The same is true in the case of the
schools which Brown says will be given
a full cost-or-living increase in their
allocations.
ANO THERE IS some legerdemain in
Brown's claim of no n\?w taxes. The
budget proposes to meet the now
estimated shortfall or $2 billion by cuts
totalling $1 billion. The other billion will
com e from the s peedup of tax
collections and some new revenues
termed "fees" instead of taxes. These
inc lude new c harges to utility
companies purportedly lo offset costs of
regulatory services provided by the
Public Utilities Commission. Brown
says s uc h fees are part or the
movement to connect cost more closely
to benefits.
Another irony in the budget plan is
that Brown. in staking his program on
an upturn in the economy. is saying he
expects the economic program of
President Reagan, which he has loudly
condemned. to prove itself before the
year's end.
no a 1 r conditioning: no carpet to buffet
tht> noise. and certainly is put to shame
by the elegance or the new Historical
Orf ices. (whatever they are. and
whoever commissioned them and uses
them ): the new fire station. and the new
Neighborhood Center where the elite
meet lo eat.
Because the library h.as supported
many a pleasurable hour of reading for
my family, from curiosity I attended a
Friends of the Library meeting at the
Center . J was shocked ! I round a
handful of people, attempting in ·their
innocence to meet the implacable
obstinacy or the gigantic bureaucracy
of city and county. The Center, waa m.
well lit. attendants on duty (reading>.
was being denied to a service
organization of a joint city-county
lax -supported library facility . ll
boggles the mind. In a letter containing
misspellings, grammatical e rrors.
Charles Carr and Keith V~n Holt.
bearing elegant titles-or Recreation
Supervisor and Director or Leisure
Services, assured the librarr 'support
group. they just couldn't allow the use
of the Center without a fee. Typical
bureaucratic mind!
GENE ELEANOR BIRKELAND
Stop copters
To the Editor:
The Costa Mesa City Council
approved a heliport atop the new
Pacific Federal Savings corporate
headquarters at 19th Street and
Newport Blvd. That one got by me!
Now on Jan. 18, the City Council is
about t.o approve a heliport atop the
Downey Savings building on Bristol
Street, What next. the roof tops of South
Coast Plaza? The COSta Mesa City Council simply
does not realize the tremendous amount
or noise that helicopters generate. One
cannot yell and be heard in his or her
own backyard when a helicopter goes
over head. Now there is talk or
16-passenger helicopters landing in
Costa Mesa.
The City of Newport Beach forbids
private or commercial }!elicopten from
landin1 within city Umtls. Pleue,
Costa Mesa City Council, 1ive our
eardrums the same protection!
DON CRIPPEN
-·
..., ....
THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1912
CAVALCADE
BUSINESS
82-3
85-7
The eagle though an
enduring ·patrotic symbol
is by no means universally
loved ... BS
0
0
Es~'!llated battle eyed by Conimiftee of 4,000
Leaden ol tbe Commlttet of
4,000 report they may double up
on their n1ht with lbe lrvta. Comp~ by worldna to defeat. lbe development firm '1 plan for
exp~ Newport Ce. nter.
''Tbe idea WQUld bt to pµt t.be
I.nine Company completely on
bold until lt deals with the
leasehold l.Nue," said Barbara
Young, leader ot the committee.
The committee claims to
represent 4,000 Newport Beach
and Irvine homeownen unhappy
with skyrocketing land lease
fees they muat pay to the Irvine
Company.
The Irvine-Company and
committee members have
traded threats in n!cent weekJ.
Cops get
pistol
scare
A Newport Beach woman was
being held today at Laguna
Beach police headquarters aft.er
allegedly pointing a .22 caliber
snub nose revolver at two police
officers at6:30 a.m. today.
Lt. Terry Temple said police
Sgt. Don Barney and Officer
Mark FieJds were responding to
a public assistance call at a
home owned by Al Du Pont at
1858 S. Coast Highway when the
incident occurred.
Temple said Du Pont called
police because be had been
locked out of his house by
Elitabeth Klein, 45, of 1785 S.
Dover Drive in Newport.
When Barney and Fields
knocked oo the door, Ms. Klein
stepped into the doorway and
pointed a short-barrel pistol at
lb-em and threatened to kill
them, Temple said.
He said the two officers drew
their guns, but didn't fire.
Temple said the officers
engaged Ms . Klein In
conversation and managed to
talk her into surrendering her
gun.
Temple said she was then
arrested and lakel'\ to Laguna
Beach Jail.
Impressionist
works to
he exhibited
"Impr essio ni s m , the
California View," an exhibition
or 103 oil paintings done in tbe
California Impressionist style,
will open Friday at the Laguna
Beach Museum or Art.
The show was curated by
Oak land Museum curator
Harvey Jones, who bu selected
.some 41 CaWornla artists to be
represented.
Although California paint.era
found the Ugbt, colorful style of
impressionism later tban the
French, callfornia's landscapes
and similar light dlade the style
appealin1 to local painters, a
museum. spok~m~ said.
Tbe sbow includes work by
botb Northern and Southern
Californians, the difference
vlslble in the cool blue hues of
the Northern painters and the
lighter, sunnier colors of thelr
Southern California
counterparts._
Artists Included in the sbow
are Clark Hobart, Bruce Nelson,
William Wendt and Frans
Bischoff. A catalog with critical
essays and artists' biographies;
and color and black and white
reproductiona of the e~blted
worlra wlU be available in tbe
museum store durln1 the
exhlbll
Tbe show ii set to run t.brou&b
Feb .. ~· ID lb! lo~er 1allery,
J!Orks by Scott Moore and
I Lln4a L. 8*eveu will be &bown concurrently with t.be California
lmpreu~ts uhlbit.
C.BllA 6oura an u : ao a.m. t.o
4:30 p.m. dally except MondQI:
For more information call
4N..e511.
Newport Center
race announced~ ' . A ·101t run around Ne~ Ceater hill been Mt for Sulida1.
atl a.m.
Batey la the race. 1pomared
by tbe Newport Beacll Pub,
BeacbH and Recreation
~ eOIU ... Dlla.U
caa re1later at ti•• clt1
reerHtloe department, ... ,
Newport Bl•d. Por furtlaer
\~'~811~2171 ...
. Irvine Coll\Pan.Y offtclala said
lb• committee "threat'' to wort
a11lnst. tbe Newf.ort Center expul&on plan ll •a 1bameful
propoeWoa to make."
exp&nlion plan should be Judeed· on it. own merits.
· "It would be very
amlll·mh>ded and pretty damed
aelflab for anyone to support or
oppoae it on any other baail,' ..
sald Jerry Colllns, an Irvin!_
setUe the dispute.
The Irvine Company. ln tum,
lar1ely rejeeted the demanda
and added that lt would not
neaotiat.e with any homeowner who becomes part of a lawsuit
a1a.lnat the deveJopmenl !!!!n· A successful referendum drtv~
a1aiD1t the Newport Center
project wu launched late lut •
year and the fate of tbe S123
mllllon plan_ ls to be decided by
voters in June.
Ms. Young said her 1roup may
actively work to cet out tbe "no
vote" oo the expanalon project.
Threat to oppose Center
~x~nsion 'shameful proposition'
Irvine Company offidals
reapooded that their expanalon .
,project "shouldn't be made
hostage to the demands or any
special interest group.••
Company officials aaid lbe
ICompany spokesQlan. ,
the committee has threatened
to sue the Irvine Company over
the growing land leue dispute.
It also bu unveiled a list of
demands that it said the Irvine
.Company could meet in order to
''That's un-Americao,''
responded Ma. Young. ''When
any two parties diaaaree oo the
interpretation of a contract, they
have the right to go to court. ~he charl(ed that the Irvine
Comp.an~. has refused to
LAST PICTURE -Huntington Beach parents
Richard and Robin Barada look at the last
photoirapb of their daughter Lani, 8. A
.,.., ,..."--.. ·~ .......
poster child for Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.
the girl died Monday.
Girl's life short but happy
Death claims Huntington's Cystic Fibrosis poster child
By PATRICK K ENNEDY
Of tlle o.lty NM·-
Eight-year-Old Lani Anderson
or Huntington Beac h spent
happy moments as poster child
ror the Cystic Fibrosis
Foundatioo, meeting celebrities
and having her picture taken.
The blonde-haired girl was
seJeded to a two,year stint u
. poster representative when she
was 6.
Wtien her lite ended Monday,
it wasn't unexpected. There's no
known cure for her disease, say
her parents. But death still was
a shock to her parents and
friends.
"If you'd have seen her a
month ago, you wouldn't have
believed she was going to die,"
said her stepfather Richard
Barada. "Just Friday she beat
me in three games or
backgammon in the hospital."
The girl's healthy appearance
disguised her illness, said her
mother Robin. Lani wasn't
emaciated and pale like many
victims or the hereditary lung
and digestive tract disease, she
said. ·
"She was a little girl who liked
to ride her bicycle when she felt
good, and roller skate. and color
pictures. AU those things normal
girls do. But her Uttle body just
got tired. She'd s,ent a rough
year."
A third· grade stu"clent at
Bushard School, Lani spent most
of the past year in Cbildrens
''Her little body
just got tired.''
HospiW 1n Orange. The hospital
bas a special noor and medical
stalr for the young victims of the
disease.
As poster child, Lani posed at
rund·r.tsers with television star Tom Bosley of "Happ;y Daya,"
comedienne Phyllis Diller, and
'Angeles baseball player Don
Baylor. -
... She and Don Baylor really
became close. He would sit her
Three schD.ol buses
involved in wrecks
School buses were involved in
three mlnor traffic accldenta
Wedneeday in Qrule CoantJ ..
includlq one in Coeta 11 .. , but
Ulere were oo aedoul llUtaiel,
accorcllDI to tbe Callforala
H.l1bwQ Patrol. .
1n Cotta ...... a 19-pul•r
Newport-Me1a Unified Sebool
Dl1trlct bus ear~r ID nJne pre·aeboolen llde1Wi1 a ear
at Newport 8cMalH and 8Q
Strfft at ii:• p.m., • ......_
t.o a CH.P •P*•maa.
No 1DJwi11 and ~ DO
dam• to eltber fetUele ._..
reported, a d'8trkt ....... said. ·.
north ot ~wn Va11e;y Parkway,
said officer Ralpb Wood. The van deflected lntO anotber lane
and w• .truck by a third car, ud batb bunt into na .... be
•aid. roar people were treated for
minor lnJurlH at IU11lon
Commait.J lb'6tal la Mlaelon
VleJo, be uld. Tb• •an, e>per•c.d by T17lcw ._ Service, waa under contract wlth tbe
Santa Ana Unlfl•d Sebool
Dhtrlct'a Taft lharlDI
lmpillnd SdlDol. , 'A.__...._ ba tehooil bua
c.i'rJtnl 41 ll'*'itl eoWded at
'1:11 P·•· ,.. a ear at JM ud
Al t ta at s a•• U • e, a Towaer 1tnets lD Suta Ana 1l·1>• .... 1er •an wltb oae; caualDI DIM people to be tnai*'
l·1ear..W atudeat 09 board b am ....... at UC 1ntae
Mr1ld U. NU' tlid of a ear • Me•lcal c.tw, Hid Omnr
tlae Saata AU PnriQ J~ ... , ~.
' . r
in bis lap and they'd talk for a
·long time. There was nothing
shy about Lani, she was ver1
happy," her mother said.
At 5, Lani won "Little Miss
Entertainment" for a son'-and
dance routine to the tune ' Good
Ship Lollipop" at the Cystic
Fibrosis summer c amp
sponsorea by · Cblldrena Hos-
pital.
But in the past year, four or
Lani's young friends rrom the
hospital died before they
reached 12.
"She told her baby sitter that
all ber friends were dyiq and
she knew she wun't So(ng to
live much longer either," her
mother said.
''It wu always ~ for the
two ol w to talk about it. I just
tried to make her Ufe as happy
and ruU u possible."
"It's so tremendousll_ u d that
she's gone, but I'm relleved ll's over for her. Sbe was frustrated
and sad that she was too weak to
play anymore. I Just reel sorry
for ber friends at the hospital
ahe left behind."
President's
daughier
speaks in NB
Maureen Reaaan wW be tlM
featured 1peaker Friday
enalnl at the Newport Harbor
Area Chamber of Commerce's
?tb anau•J ln1tallatlon and.
mecnlllenblp banc)uet. • llf 1 . bqu ta u ..-OUOced
can•ldat• for U.. Republican
nomination for U.S. Seoate.
Tb• t :• p.m. eerem.., WW
be held at tile Marriott Hot11 t11
Newport Bia~ aad UeUla an
$25. Relerv..uoDI can be made
by callin« 8"-all.
.Tbe aianua.l "CitlHD ol tbe
Viar .. award wlll be c••t11 1
ancl .... aftken -tae *"-' ... cbamber'1 flrat woaaa
pre1lt111, Carol Smltb -will be
..wan-.~
re~OlftlM tne committee u a
bar.aln1n1 agent for a(fect.ed
homeownera becaus~ "they
want to splinter ua, frithten ua
aad take away our homes.
"Once we go to court," she
added, ~e Irvine Company will
have to recognize us."
Irvine Company officials also
have taken aim at the
committee's list of demands, a
six -point package titled
"Leaseholders' Bill of Rights"
that ls set ln Old English type.
"You get through all the Old
English lettering and Roman
numerals In their proposals and
you wind up with two major·
demanda,'' Collins commented.
· He char1ed the conunittee la
aslclnl that biJ firm "Hll them
their rented land at balf lta
value and then lend them to
percent of the money to buy It,
over a lon1 term at no interest." He also sald ·'that if they want
lo sell tbelr residential property,
but can't aft.er lt's been on I.be
market for six months, then we
sbould be compelled to buy it
from them, including the land -
which we already own."
Collins called the demand.I
"startllng" and added, "some
people mieht even regard them
as arrogant."
Ms. Young said the committee
doesn't feel the list or demr.nds
is "unreasonable."
-By STEVE MARBLE
Pair arrested
in UCI class
gun scare
A UC Irvine s tudent and
another m-en were arrested
Wednesday after they allegedly
broucht a phony submachine
gun and a real pistol into the
Administration Building and
pulled the fake weapon on an
:assistant dean, UCI police said
today.
Booked into Orange County
Jail on suspicion or assault with
a deadly weapon, possession or a
concealed weapon and
threatening a school official
were Majid Foroozandeb, 19,
Irvine, the student, and Douglas
Ernest Smith, 29, who gave
authorities a New Jersey
address, accordil\I to campus
police.
The incident in the office of
Ron Wilson, assistant dean of
students and ombudsman for
student affairs, took place about
2 p . m. when Foroozandeh
approached Wilson about a
problem concerning bis student
status , said a UCI
spokeswoman.
Foroozandeh, a native of Iran
who is a physics major, was last
enrolled for the summer quarter
as a sophomore, said the
spokeswoman.
Foroozandeh's student status
was placed in jeopardy by
allegations that he cheated on a
match test, according to UC I
police.
No one was injured in the
incident. The fake machine gun, which
was incapable or firing, was a
replica of the Israeli-made Uri
machine gun, said university
police. Police said the student,
saying he' relt threatened,
showed the assistant dean the
fake submachi ne gun and
shoved a clip of reaJ ammunition
into it.
Assistant Dean Wilson gave an
order to put the fake gun back
into the canvas bag from which
it was drawn, UCI police said.
P o lice sa id the stud ent
complied.
Wilson then told the students
to stand by while he went into
his outer omce, police said.
Wilson then called univenlty
police who arrived shortly and
took the two men into custody
without incident.
Investigators said they found
a real .22-caliber handgun in an
attache case that was in the
possession of the men. However,
Wilson told police he never saw
the reaJ weapon.
Ca mpu s police said
Foroozandeh told them that
Smith was his bodyguard.
Kurlander named
to Newport panel
John Kurlander, a retired
59-year-old Southern California
Edison supervisor, has been
appointed to the Newport Beach
Planning Commission.
Kurlander, a nine -year
Newport resident, wm replace
former commissioner Hal
Thomas who stepped down late
last year after moving out or the
city.
Funeral set
for Coast's .
Allen Foster
Funeral service s are
scheduled for 2 p.m. Friday at.
Harbor Lawn Chapel for
Newport Beach businessman
Allen A. Foster Jr .. who died
Jan. 11, foUowine a heart attack.
Foster, 681 was the foundel'
and owner of Allen-tel Product.a,
of Santa Ana, and American
Kleaner, Inc., ol Pico Rivera.
He bad been a Newport Beach
resident for the paat 18 yean.
A native ol Marshall, Texu,
Foster was a oae-Ume Pasadena
resident and attended Puadena.
City Collese.
The new comm1ss1oner will
complete Thomas' term, which
expires in June, 1983.
Kurlander, a licensed real
estate broker and land surveyor,
said be has never served on a
Newport Beach committee or
board but was a member ot an
advis ory board to the Los
Angele s City Board of
Education.
·'I applied because I wanted w
get involved io local affairs,"
Kurlander explained, "and w
orrer what expertise I baye ,with
land-related matters."
He said be does not come to
the commission with either a
pro-growth or s&ow-growtb point
of view.
Cable blamed
for power cut
inCostaMfBG
Authorities are blalnlq a
m alfunctionia,. uoder1roud
cable on a power fall.re
WednesclQ nllflt that left eome
Costa MeH rqlde,Dtl witholll
electricity until e: 10 tf•I•
mornJq.
A spokesman for Seutlllern
California !'Allon .aid tM power
outa1e at 10: 10 p.m. affected
about 1,m C\lltomen UYinl in
II•• Verde between UM saa&a
Ana RIYW, Adaina A••• ud Barbor BoWeverd.
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. ~ewport Beach City CouncU
fRlembera are debating whether
~ aslt voters for the second Ume iia a .year to approve a hike in
•otet and motel bed talf.
Jt A baJiot question last
November to raise the city's
..so·called transient occupancy tax
from 6 to 8 percent was defeated.
Had it passed, the increase
would have meant an
approximate annual increase in
~ity income of $660,000.
'\ A majority of the . voters
!ctu~ly voted in favor or the tax
ike bµt because of provisions in
1 oward Jarvis' Proposition 13. a
iti.wo-thlrds margin was needed for
!passage.
The concern foil owing the
1tleclion was that supporters of
.. (he tax increase. particularly
~embers of the City Council. did
•ltttle campaigning to bolster the
·rtneasure's chances.
.: Now the council is debating ~~hether it should try again and
lo
place the bed ta" question on the
June 8 ballot.
We think they should.
Des~tte claims that an
increased bed \ax would drive
tourists and other hotel and
motel guests to neighboring
cities. the increased tax appears
to be a good vehicle for bringing
needed revenue into Newport
Beach.
We doubt it would drive
guests out of Newport.
The original theory behind
the increase was that if the
council permitted development of
hotels. gu~sts or these hotels
should be expected lo carry some
of the costs that increased traffic
and congestion would bring.
The council proposed the tax
increase after approving the Koll
Company's plan for a 400·room
hotel last year .
The idea was sound then and
it still is.
~~egal wrangle costly
•• , Many Costa Mesa residents ~probably were puzzled last week
·ion how the city of San Jose got
11involved in Costa Mesa 's
~•usiness.
·•" This involved the northern
~a lifornia city's decision to
petition the state Supreme Court
over a 1978 initiative that stopped
e development of more than 650
ome~ and apartments near
uth Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa.
San Jose City Attorney
obert Logan filed the appeal
ast Friday. two days after the
osta Mesa City Council voted
pot to challenge the appellate
f
ourt ruling invalidating the 1978
nitialive.
Logan said he doesn't really
are whether the initiative is
~.pheld or not. His concern is that
pie Dec. 1 ruling by the lower
f.Ourt could set a precedent
Jhroughout the state.
r Where does San Jose's
ction leave Costa Mesa?
According to City Attorney
om Wood. Costa Mesa could end
p rooting the legal bills if the
late Supreme Court agrees to
ear the case.
Meanwhile, the initiative
ezoning the property owned by
Ar11el and South Coast Plaza to
single·family deve'°pment will
remain in effect until a final
decision is made.
Wood says he's . concerned
that the city's position in regard
to a $10 million lawsuit riled by
Arnel could be weakened if the
case continues much longer.
We're concerned too. tr the
city of Costa Mesa ends up
pa y ing millions or dollars
because of delayed legal
wrangling, will San Jose offer to
jump in again·?
It would seem mo st
unfortunate if Costa Mesa's case.
where a high court decision could
have very narrow local
application, became muddled
or expensive because of
statewide concerns.
San Jose legal advisers
apparenU y raise no specific issue
in their city that might be
adversely affected by the Costa
Mesa case. They apparently have
a broad view concern 'over zoning
by initiative.
Unless a s ubstantial
statewide application is
demonstrated. it would seem that
Costa Mesa zoning should stand
or fall on its own specific merits.
elay kase decision
The Newport Mesa Unified
hool District would be well
dvised to put off making any
cision regarding the lease of 47
cres of surplus property until
um mer.
Although trustees took no
ction earlier this week on the
roperty at Jamboree Boulevard
nd Bristol Street, former Irvine
mpany president Ray Watson
dvised them to wait until the
ounty completes plans to rezone
he site.
Watson, who helped engineer
he sale or 36 of the acres ln 1965
or $972,000, pointed out that the
ntire parcel could be worth $60
illlon today if rezoned for
om mercial development.
Included in the property is 11
cres used by the now-closed Bay
•
View Elementary School.
Although we can understand
the district's desire to close a
deal quickly during these
financially hard times . they
would be wise to wait.
It would be only fair to the
taxpayers who helped pay for the
property that was purchased for
the construction of a high school
that was never built because or
declining enroUments.
Now the district finds itself
wlth no need for a new school and
47 acres of valuable property.
The best thing would be for the
district to wait for the , best
possible deal.
That way more students
could benefit from better
financial support.
pinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views u -ressed on tnis Pdge are thbse ot tne1r authors and art 1sts. Reader comment 1s 1nv1I· . Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box lS60. Costa Mesa, CA 9262b. Phone (7141 2·•321. •
M. Boyd/Farewell -,,.e11age
The Lut Will aod Te1wneot ol
rancl1 R. Lord of Sydney,
uatralla, bequeathed : "To mJ
loved wtfe, one 1billin1 ror tram
are ao sbe can co IOmewbere md
rown benelf."
~ In London you can blre a &ulde for
e equlvaaeot ol $1 to .... JOUr
roup on a two-mile bike tlaroalb the
tit)'. peu1ln1 here aad Ulen to patnt
ul plaeH of lDterett. Quite a
ar1alD. The job UUe of 1ucb a
worUay II "street walker."
• kettle banlinc under a tripod. Thia
tbreelome wu fed up by boUday
commerdalllm. A alp on the kettle
read : "Take aome money.''
Pauenbt did so, too.
Q. What ~ or the married
rape Yldlms wtlld \\P divorced from tbelr hmbadl?
A. Half.
•
Brown budget shows politics·
As if be had performed some miracle,
Gov. Jerry Brown bas prepared a
budget which he says is balanced and
will not require any new taxes. "It ls."
be declared. "a balanced budget; It has
no new taxes on general consumers; it
balances the sacrifices and builds for
the future."
Details leaked previously by Brown
re vealed that he bas provided an 8
percent cost or living increase for aged,
blind and disabled as weU as welfare
payments for families with dependent
children.
HE SAID HIS budget is based upon an
upturn in the economy before the end or
1982 which would reduce earlier
estimates of shortfalls in revenues and
on a speedup or collections or taxes
from businesses such as the sales and
-workmen compensation laxes.
So, once again, Brown emerges as the
"prudent, no-nonsense'' budgeter who
shuns new taxes although for months he
was anguishing over the need for them.
It is not surprisinl that he bas found a
way to avoid asking for new taxes.
Although he wiU step out as governor al
the year's end he hopes to win election
as a U.S. Senator before that time
arrives. Whatever else be may be
Brown remains the shrewd politician.
He knows that raising taxes and
winning elections don't go together.
Whatever doubts he may have had
about the wisdom or seeking new taxes
were resolved during the course or the
IARl IATIRS
r, o -., ....
~
many radio talk s hows be bas hosted in
recent months. The people. he said,
have made it clear that they want more
cuts in government before they will
approve any tax increases.
Brown says be is making those cuts in
his new budget but they are hard to
find. Some stat~ agencies were reduced
5 percent but funding has been
continued for many non-essential
agencies, most or them creatures or his
ad m inislration.
With only a slight reduction Brown
proposes to continue the bailout or local
governments without restrictions. The
irony or that is that while be will reruse
slate employees cost or living
adjustments equal to those to be given
welfare recipients , the local
governments will be rree to grant their
employees whatever they wish.
The same is true in the case of the
schools which Brown says will be given
a full cost·Of·llving increase in their
allocations.
AND THERE IS some legerdemain in
Brown's claim or no new taxes. The
budget proposes to meet the now
estimated shortfall of $2 billion by cuts
totalling Sl billion. The other billion will
come from the speedup o r tax
collections and some new revenues
termed "fees" instead of taxes. These
Include new charges to utility
companies purportedly to offset costs or
regulatory services provided by the
Public Utilities Commission. Brown
says s uch fees are part of the
movement to connect cost more closely
to benefits.
Another irony in the budget plan is
that Brown, in staking his program on
an upturn in the economy. is saying he
expects the economic program of
President Reagan, which be has loudly
condemned, to prove itself before the
year 's end.
Let people vote • • on airport expansion
To the Editor:
I read in the medJa about Superviit0r
Ralph Clark's various accompllshmrits
for the year 1981. They were a summary
or his positions and beliefs, to which be
Is entitled. However. sleep. will not
come easily tonight if I fail to challenge
his position on John Wayne Airport.
For starter s , he conveys the
impression that all of the county's air
transportation problems would
suddenly be solved if only the county
MAILBOX
could expand John Wayne Airport. For
the sake or discussion, let us assume
that we can wave a maaic wand.
disregard the view of homeowners,
businessmen, the courts and a whole
array of others who have opposed the
expansion of John Wayue Airport and
suddenly re-create Ule airport as is
proposed in the Muter Plan adopted by
the Supervisors February. 1981. Based
on that plan the airport will have a
'Capacity to handle 6 .1 million
passengers per year by the year 1990.
THAT'S FINE, but how does one
reconcile the fact that every study
conducted by the county concludes that
the requirepient for air transportation
In 1990 will be approximately 20 mmion
passengers per year? Some very simple
arithmetic indicates that some 14
million will either have to stay home or.
perish the thought, drive. It just seems
utterly ridiculous that the COWllY s hould
spend some $100 mllllon to expand an
airport racillty that simply wUl not do
the job upon compleUon.
Another item mentioned was a
complalnl about tbe so-called "vocaJ
minority." From spy observation point,
the vocal minority reJ)resenta lboee who
are in ravor of e,q>auioe of the airport.
It strikes me tbat thole wbo favor
expansion repretaent tc>me very narrow
lnteresta in the.county and eou.ldn'l care
less what happens to lbe bal...ce ol the
county ao lon1 as their views are
r,pre1eated. Thia dot1 not a.em lbe
rlcht way to co. . It seems to me that If we really wtlh
to determine whether or not lbe ~
ln tbe County or Oranae want to e~
John Wayne Airport there ia a 8'mple
way ol raolvln1 tbal quMtbl. Al &be
Board ol Supervtaon n9'd do 11 Diaee
tbta luue on UM ballot. Slmp&y ask tM
people al the ntxt 1•nenl elffUola
wbetW ar 80l they wllb to IPiilDll ..
mllboft to expand J• w.,_ ~·
,.,lurely d'1I ~ r-.. tM .IAili -Md for all.
CLARltNClt J. TUllNSa
program for the past six years and I
have seen what growth and efrect the
program has on the children and
families enrolled in Head Start. There
are so few social programs left that
have proved their worth so much as
Head Start.
The Head Start program is still a
community based pt'ogram needing
community support. There is within
your local community a Head Start
program ror anyone who Is in~resled in
volunteering within the prog,ram or
helping with family needs.
Thank you again for your concern for
the Read Start program and your
community support.
VIRGINIA HILL
Director
Faith misplaced
To the Editor:
"U a soul sin . . . and be unto bis
neighbor as that which was delivered
him to keep ... and lieth concerning it
. . . then it shall be because he has
s inned, and is guilty. that he shall
restore that which he took violently
away or the thing he had deceitfully
gotten ... "Leviticus 6:1-4.
Yes, the Irvine Company has lied to
its neighbors, the 4,000 leaseholders,
who delivered their good raltb by
leaslng their land. thl~ land the Irvine
Company is violently trying to take
away by means or the rldJcuJous sums
of money being asked for the
continuance of the leases or the sale
prices of the land.
DECEIT MIGHT also be aptly
applied to the initial prices or the
leaaeholdt, what with the impUcatJon
tbat the fees would remain reasonable;
hardly a 6,000 percent increase ln the
-4andlease or sate price.
If, the lrvtne Company contlbueJ lo Its
present policy, w h at are the
leaseholden to do? They cannot afford
to buy the land or pay the impoalble
new leases. No one wlll even ~Y the
homes shoukl they decide to sell.
la lt the lrvine Compuay'1 Idea to
force these 4,000 famllld out IO they
wlll feel Juatifted lft cbarllal what tbey
want for the propoled constnaetloa next
to Cameo Sborea and Cameo
Kilhlandl1 Who kllowl?
.fhe lealt the CommlttM ol 4,000 ll
altenaptbaa to make tome aembla.nee of
order out. ol tbe deceit aDd ill-faith belal prldited by the lmne Company
at lt•• l.ll'ellDl Ume. aaucs G. SAVILLS, M.D.
H my lease were readjusted today
based on Irvine Company figures my
current rent would be increased to
$242 .39 per day. My scheduled
readjustment is for 1989. If the rates
continue lo escalate based on the
previous five years I may expect to pay
$524.20 per day ground rent.
GROUND RENT is not lax
deductible. At a 50 percent income tax
rate I would have lo earn $400,000 per
year just to pay the Irvine Company
ground rent. I have tried to buy my
property since I acquired the leasehold.
However, in the six years since its
acquisition I have been unable to find
any lender who would finance the Irvine
Company's purchase price. I have told
my family we will probably have to
move before the lease is adjusted.
However. l am uncertain as to whether
there is a market for my home because
of the Irvine leasehold policy.
ROBERT R. LONGPRE
Out of 'club'
To the Editor:
When I became a member of the
Senator's Club, a John Schmitz support
organization, about a year ago, I had no
idea that I would later publicly tender
my resignation.
However, aside from our supposedly
being fellow conservative Republicans,
I discover f have absolutely nothing in
common with Senator Schmitz. Having
seen him create the supreme personal
and political error or supporting
bigotry, racism, and anti-feminism
while. displaying a callous disregard for
the penonal beliefs and practices or
others, l now joyfully and foN!vermore
renounce my membership in the "club"
and pra y the balance of the
membership will see fit &CJ do llkewtae.
LELAND E. OLIVER
Brove/
To The Editor:
Brave John Scbmital Even thou&b
he's never been In combat and never baa lerved in a combat.,., be wlllla to nitit poor prepant womm who cba't
want to\_!?•" an.y more children,
homoaexuaJ women and J..tlh womm.
The Marlnt Corp1 m¥1t be IO proud of
him.
llARY VIAON&R
u YGU·n......., Joa. lD um-Uil ....... ot JOU
wUl, vol..urtly or lnYol......U,--liliit ... momm for
an bcmelt ....,meat of tM pdorlllll fl ,_, caner.
When rou do 1et a job offer, bow Will JOU nc:opt•
whether tt'a fOod or bad -•
for Y;a,;etber the job ~
you're ottered la tbe ·~ .;,.
result of your own ~
aearcb or whether it m111---s~ just comes to you lrWmllll.1~
without your looklnc,
step back, fully appralae tbe nlue ol U.. ~e new
:situation and make a "reference check"• '9Uf would·be
employer, just u that compan.y would make a reference
check oa you. Once you bHe done tbil, )'OQ'll be a'mued at
the way the wroac company will fade ud the rt&bt one
will leep out belOft your eyes.
Money! Of course it'a a powerful motlntor, but by no
meana the top one (aaaumLnc you're not desperate for any
employment that pays a aalary). Aqd moMJ la not the
only motivator lf the cbuc• involves reloeatlon.
PoteaU&I for advancement, job aatidaetioa, aeeu:rtty,
the attitudes ol your family -all theM fact.on must rank
hiih in Uda vltal declaioo. And the benetltt to you tranalat.
into pel"IODal aatlafacUon, a certain IMDtal "comfort
level" that dwarfs 111ooey alone.
Here's a cbeckliat tbat you can ~ to reeopbe bow
good tbe job otter la tor you. It'• extnordlnarllJ reveallnc.
-Start with the company'• report, wbleb Is, ln fact,
its resume. Wb~ accompllabmentt doel k empbuile!
Does the atyleit projecta match what JOU ... u suited for
yourself? U the company ii publicly beld, JOU euUy can
check ill eamlnp over the put few y~.
· -Try to find out.firsthand from tl1mdl ID the industry
or wbate1'81' sources you can locate <a ltOek analyst lf you
know one) bow the company la pereelved amoq ltt peen.
-Are you head.ln1 in the same direetioD u tbe
company! A healthy stock price and crowtb potentlal are
overall eood sips, but do the companr• ruture plans
dovetail with your quallflcationa, lntereata and ultimate
objectives? (There are deep pttfalla hen; UdU uref\llly).
-What la the company's manacemtnt ==' Of crucial Importance, empbulles Alan SebaiC~l"elident
of Mana1ement Recruiters International Inc., the
country's larsest executive recruiter, la the individual to
whom you will report. How do you feel about that person?
Do respomibllity and authority to band lit band ln this
company?. Can you really make your mark! la tbe
company stnactured so that you will be reeopbed for and
given crecltt for your accompllabmentt?
-ntles are lmpreaaive, but will you be responsible
for all that yours implies? How many people actually will
be re~ to you, lf any? How much declaloa·mating
authority will you have? .
-la there room lD upper manacement for you! Ia the
company known for promotlnc from wttbin, or does It look
for "freeb blood" from the outaideT
-U you are aucceufui, what wtu be your nezt •lei> in
the company! ~ each rune oo tbe manqet:Qellt ladder
involve relocation! -U you are asked to relocate, what expemea abould.
your new employer cover! A.ccordiq to IUebard W. Wirth,
vice president ol marketln& for Homeqult)', a leadi.nc
rel~atioo manacement firm, you should ult for: one fully
paid bouaebtmtlnl trip, reimbursement for moriq your
household eooda, travel expenses to UM new location for
you and your family and an eQ>enM allowance to cover
temporary livlnC costs (both food and •better> for up to 80
days. Frtnae beDellta (health, dental and optical pJana>. club
membenblps, parld.D1 -all tbele "perb" are important.
The quality ol life, lncludinc nelebbol'taoodl ud school
1vstem1, will affect your entire family relaUonablps.