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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-01-21 - Orange Coast PilotA THURSDAY . J ANUARY 21. 1982 Coast to get· sunny skies hack Rain to give troy to fair weather, warmer temperatures, some gu8ty winds The winter rainstorm that caused scattered auto accidents, reports of bail, power out.ages and traffic signal failures along the Orange Coast will give way to fair weather and warmer temperatures Friday, according to National Weather Service forecasters. A weather service spokesman said the probability of rain would drop to 10 percent tonight. Friday's forecast calls for clearer skies, some gusty winds a nd warmer temperatures peaking in the low 60s. The departing storm will leave in its wake a ras h o f inconveniences but few major damage reports. Cable television customers in the South County were without service for a time Wednesday night-when lightning struck an antenna in Laguna Niguel used by the Storer Cable Television. T he rain played havoc with tr affic, also. · ..... ~ • California Highway Patrol Officer Dick Van Cott said the C HP respon d e d to 11 raln·related accidents in the South County. He s aid most were fe nder-benders, and no major injuries were reported. Caltrans crews today were working to repair traffic signals that failed at Dover Drive and Pacific, Coast Highway and at Morning Canyon Road and Pacific Coast Highway, both in Newport Beach. Higher excise Rea • ID .an . I • Newport Harbor officials reported that winds gusted up to 50 mph alone the coastUne from 11 p.m. Wednesday to 3 a.m. today. No major wind damage was reported. In the Harbor View Hills area of Corona del Mar, bordered by the Corona del Mar Freeway on • the north a nd Pacific Coast Highway on the south, l,510 customers were affected by a storm·related power blackout (See llAIN, Page AZ > ------- tax sought budget ~Ian_ __ Deficit ~est .ever MAE WEST REVISITED -That's the old Orange County Courthouse in the background as movie crews film a scene from the TV ...,. ........... '--....... movie "Mae West ." Ann Jillian stars with James Brolin (right) as her lover. County Courthouse 'pri-son' Santa Ana edifice has role in TV movie, 'Mae West' By JEFF PAUER °' ....... ~--The Old County Courthouse in Santa Ana was changed into New York's Welfare Island Prison Wednesday l during a day's sbootlnc for the televilion movie, "Mae West." "It's the perfect buildin1t'-'- said assistant director Bill Beesley, lookin1 up at the stately structure. "We couldn't ut for more." The only change the movie company made in the appearance of the bulldlq - now a state monument -wu c0Yertn1 the name up wltb branches of a nearby plant. Tbat accomplished, the 82-year-old buildinc wu ready to double u the prilon where Mae West did Ume for her alle1edly obecme Broadway play, ''Sex." Ann Jillian la ataninl u llae ·west, aJont.wtth Jama BroUn as her lover, nmony. JUllaa paced by tbe courtboule llepl before tbe lint takes, lettinl bersell into cbaraeter oa tbe cbilly Sula Ana monalq. "I wu a UWe aeand about I the role at first," she said. "But as I found out more about Mae West. her character deli&bted me . Her wait, voice and mannerisms were so namboyant that I bad a lot to wort with." Miss JUlian paced acain. fine -rrir s the perfect building.'' lunin& tbe famed Mae Wei l swacaer for her entrance into the prison. ''This bas been an easy project in a lot of wa11," abe sald. "~enthusiasm 1a1·been very hip and it's a real clua act. We'rt! on a U1bt acbedule but we won't cut cornen. For tbe lut seven days we've bad 12 and 15 hour...,,,,.,.., acbMulea." Director Lee Pblllpa, a veteran or a dOaea televllion movlu lncludln1 "Tiie Red Badie of Coura1e," "Cra1y Times" and James lllcbener's • 'Dynuty,'' waited outalde tbe courtbome, beftwtntn1 tbe upt aebedule. . ''Tbele ldMMhllel an drawa up by production types. not c re•live ones," be said. "No matter how long they give you, you always need another day. We need 21. David Lean spent fiv e years on "Ryan 's Daughter" and said be needed an extra. day_ So. I cueu that kind of complaint is typical." This ls the eicbtb day of 1thootlnc for "Mae West." The courthouse will serve .. two settin1s in the movie -the courthouse where Miu West la sentenced for her sensaUonal play, and the prison where abe .. coes to do her time. Otber shoollnc will be done lo tbe Loa Anceles area, at Macie Castle, the Mayfa\r Theater and tbe Society for the PrevenUon of Variety Arts. "Thia isn't really a froliCIOllM kind ol story, even thouab we've cot aeven mU1lcal numben," said Philips. "It's a bQPJ atorJ, basically. JUUan coaUnum to amaae me. Sbe'a vel')' talellted. ver1 di.Id~ and •aa•. Bir I ODI and a-. aumben are -~·· ' WASHINGTON <AP> - President Reagan bas decided on a 1983 budget plan that calls for higher excise laxes, the transfer of dozens of social programs to the stales and the bicgest deficit ever sent to Congress, a dministra tion sources report. After m ~eti n g with bis ecunumi~ advisers ·Wednesday, the president settled on a budget that would seek approximately $15 billion in new taxes to keep lbe projected defic~l lo about $75 billion, according to the sources, who did n ot want l o be identified. One source said the president would propose higher taxes on cigarettes, liquor. wine and some "luxury" items, but not on beer. A higher tax on gasoline was under consideration, but no decision bas been made, the source said. The sources said the tax package would call for higher excise taxes on tobacco, alcohol and other consumer goods and t he narrowing of a number of tax "loopholes." The sources declined to be more specific about the tax <SeeTAXF.8, l»a1e A!) $1 million awarded boy in BB crash A Superior Court jury bas awarded a Riverside youth dearly Sl million in dama1es acalnlt Cessna Aircraft Core. for iJQurles tbe boy suffered in a 1m plane crub at Meadowlark Airport in Huntlqtoa Beach. The Oran1e County Jury returned with lta verdict Wednesday after a day of deUberatioaa in Judie Jerrold S. Oliver's Santa Ana courtroom."<) Awarded tll0,000 in damapd was Ronald Hertacb, 15, who ·WH seriously injured in the crash of a slqle-enstne Ceana aircraft that was approacbin1 lleadowlart for a landln1. The boy, a pu1ea1er In the plane, wu in a coma for 10 days. Lawyers for both the )'OUtb and bi.a father, Leroy Bybee, clallned tbeN were motor YeDt defeda In tbe small aircraft Utat caused tbe plane to craab. Attorneys for Ceuna cont.ended tUt tbe affklent wa1 tit NliDt -V")Dlt ll'rOr.llfbii was tbe pllet ol tbe craft. • m fire ' <See story below> ' YDUI lllllDll llllY l'IPll ' ......................... MAKfNG WAVES -Brian j'arfe of Newport Beach wu one of the unfortunate souls caugtlt in Wednesday's downpour. • Here he sloshes his motorcycle on Riverside Avenue-near-- Goast -Highway wher-e·-water i!t over the eurb -on both sides ~ • of the street. Cat sounds alarm Siamese saves man in Mesa blaze i BY JODI CADENHEAD °' .... Dllty " ... ,_ From now on Kacy the cat can ea.t all the steak she wants, says Gary Killcollins of Costa Mesa. T he five year-ol d black. Siamese is beinll credited with sa ving-Killcollins' life Tuesday night ~en a fire broke out at bis apartment al 2013 Charle Drive. Killcollins said he had fallen asleep on the living room couch and was awakened about 8 p.m. by the cat who pounced on his chest. The living room was filled with dense smoke and when be opened the bedroom door the windows blew out. ·'I know il was time to get out," said the 35-year-old truck driver. Luckily. KiHcolUns had flung bis blanket on top of the cal as he ran toward the bedroom. Otherwise, the cat might have died from smoke inhalation, he sald. A neighbor called Killcollins' wife, Teri, and she rushed home in time to see Costa Mesa firefighters spraying waler on ''I kept asking everybod)\ where's the cal, where's tbt cat?" she said. ~ Nobody knew that Kacy w .. still in the apartment, bi~ under the covers. As soon u bt heard Mri. KiUcolllDs' voice the cat crept out. All -the fi.remeD cheered, s~ said. Fire chiet Jim Richey said tb4t cat ma y have awatene4 Klllcollins just in time. Apparently the fire was started by a s molderint cigarette in the bedroom, said Richey. Damage is estimated at $20,000. For the time beinc. the couple will live in a mobile bome tbeJ had pl&Med to sell. ''A lot of people have ~ after their home CGe. S UJ?. lj flames," said Mrs. KillCOWlllj Anniver8ary ch~, BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) Buddhist monks chanted a.f offered blesslqs tt> cetelii'QI the 20th anniversary of the U.S Peace Corps procram l Thailand. ~~~~!!1:t.ed remains or their ORllGI COAST IUTlll Schmitz gets week delay • mcensure SACRAMENTO (AP) -A hearing on a resolution to· condemn Sen. Jobn Schmit•' remarks about abortion-ripta advocates and a mlUtary coup ls bein& delayed a weet. Senate President Pro Tem David Roberti, D·Loa Ancel•, said Wednesday the delay would live Sdun1t1 unW Jan. rr to prepatt tu tattmony. ''Senalor Scbmit1 bas requested tbat be be 1i•• one week to prepare bi.a poaitloD OD the matter. In ¥iew of tbe fact tbia la a bishJy controversial ..!U..ILe.~WL ..Sill 11'...&D'l. -1Jl.a request," Roberti aald in • alatelllil!Dt. P robability of sbowen decreasing to 10 percent tonight. Fair and sllptly " wprmer Friday. Highs IO ,. to 64. Lows tonight 4Z to 52. INSlll TIDY 801tot1'• ,,..,., .,.. .... renU of o ciHHa tos 11priri•. .. tllnot.... ,. ca n cel tllt o••••I · re-enoch•H"t of Poal • Revett'• ........,,., ride. PQf1e A10. . . 'AIY_ ..... Al ............ I LM..... All ...... ... ..... c-.. c.... Al c..n• .. OlllMl9 Gtl • c-lls 0 0 • 0 .... ._ D ...... All ...,, 0 ... ~ ...... ........ ....... _ ,,_.._ =~ --·--,.... - • t. • • • Orange Coast DAii.. Y PILOT!Thursday. January 21. 1982 a ' , • • unen1mous 1n Jury death verdict for Bonin. l..OS ANO&LD (AP> -The court Wedne1d1y. ·He ca.lied torture 11ay1n11 01 youn1 men •.• After Uatenln1 to thla t i &Ml ........ WUttam Bonht-"• ¥11')' el• ••o!'-ancl-bo)'I wboee nude bodlH--evidence, I tlltnk -you Ith a nln to die ln the fu":;.hamber B onln'~l aw~tr uid the were dumped near Southern moral Judlment. My Lord, what or 10 "f'rMway Ki .. spent 35 year-old defendant "bad Cali fornia freeways. Bonin aUll lMa man did!" f lon1 Ume ao&DI cw• ill notes prepared bhuelf for it" and wu races four murder char1es in The tury had convicted BonJn )ut d~kled on the aent.nte on a "emotion.lea" when the verdict Oranae County. of th~ 10 murders Jan. 6. He wu tll\anlmoul first vote. the panel's was pronounced Wedneaday. But Deputy District Attorney also convicted of 10 counta ol 'gC>r•man aays. The lawyer, William Charvet, Ste rlln1 Norris aaid Boni n robbery, and It was the speciaJ aald Bonin feels variqua leaaJ ·'stands a very 1ood cbanc. ol c I r c um a t an c e o I m u rd e r " "Nobody Ukn to Lake another nallna• ln the cue "wUI cauae havin1 Ulla verdict carried out." commlt\td durio1 a robbery maf\'s Ufe. But we dl4 what bad the Supreme Court to look atotbls "The crimes were so horrible, that the prosecution used in ~t\ be done," fonnaaa Jobn M. caae very clOMly" and orde( a so r epeat ed," said Norrl1. aeeklnl lhe death penalty. In wn1 ot TorrUIM s aid outaide new trial in the homosexual "Therewasnoolherjustverdict Callfornla , death c an be p;:::::.!....=.-!..=.=:.=:~~~~~~:.._.......:.::..:....:.;__~::.:......:.:..:.......:.::.:..:..-.:.:..:..=::..=..::.=.=:.=.=.:_ ____ ~_:_---------__:=-------- lmpaeed only wben murder la colDmllled under •P•clal clrcumataneee t.hat are clearly spelled out. Outalcle court, one vlcUm'1 mother, Barbara Biehn, said lhe was p&eued with .the outcome a nd hoped Bonin would be executed. "Whea tbey drop the pellet, then f'U be saUJfied," abe aald, referrinl to cyanide 1aa pelleta used in Callfornla eucuUona. "llAW be clran Ail lul..brut.h, I won't real." Bonin wa1 coavlct.ed ol ml&l'derinl ber MID, Steven Wood, 11, ot hllf&o..,.. Kt;ene ordered a Marine Peb. 24 at which Booln'• lawyer may ar1ue for modlllcatloe ol the sentence lo life without poa1l~Uty ol parole. In CAMI where death 11 tmpoaed, the appeal la automatic under California law. Fkrce storm hits liorth '(. ¥HE LAST LAUGH · Corona del Ma r High S'chool cheerleaders whoop it up at the e nd of Wednesday night's 40-35 basketball victory Jt. .. DMty;...... ,...."' -.110' ..... over Estancia High. The Eagles led most of the way. but the Sea Kings overcam e them in the final seconds . See details. Page Ct. Wind, hail, rain, snow, sleet; Bay area got it ~11 , By Tbe Auocla&ed Pren A storm that peJted Northern CaUf ornia with bursts of bail and steady. sometimes fierce rain dusted roads with snow below 1,000 feet elevation today, closed highways and bad police ferrying surprised residents up icy hillside streets in Oakland. The storm brought thunder, lightning, gusty winds, sleet and • even mome nts of sunshine Wednesday before temperatures dropped, plwigin1 the snow level to 1,000 teet or below in Northern California, the National Weather Se.r:v.lce.said toda :-:---.. Up to two inches of rain le.II in a 48·hour pe ri od in a reas devas tated by flooding a nd mudslides during a killer storm Jan. 3 to 5, the Weather Service said. The rainfall triggered no new s lides, according to sheriff's departments throughout the San Francisco Bay area. But six families were evacuated from a canyon near Inverness in western Marin County, said Dou1 ·Wentworth of the county Office of Emer1ency Services. Th e evacuation was a * * * r.recauu~ ordered by officlab o the ~. which was one of the artfl'I hardest hit in the storm tw weeks ago that killed at least 31 people In Nort.bem California. Another 25 fam1Ues left their homes volwitarily in Pacifica, a coaatal city just south of San Francisco, according lo Anita Garcia or the state Office of Emergency Services. Motorist s. on portions of Interstate 5, the majl . West Coast route between Canada and Mexico, were required to use c h-ainr-u ntit-1 ~30 a :-m .. the California Hig hway Patrol re ported. A bout S inches of s now blanketed foothills surrounding the Napa Valley wine cowitry, said sheriff's dispatcher Will Mays ; and 5 inches we re reported on lhe ground north of Redding today. Snow flurries swirled near sea level on the peninsula south of San Francisco along Hi1hway 101. a heavily traveled stretch that extends from California's * * * North Coast to Loi Anceles. aaid a patrol dispatcher in Sao Jote. Rout.es 9 and 3S and Mount Hamilton Road were clOMd weal of Saratoca, aout.h of Loi Altol JUlls and leadln1 to tbe Lick Observatory on Mount Hamilton east of San Jose, respectively, he said. · In the Sierra Nevada, a fool or mo re of snow was reported during back..t.o-back storms that b eg an Tuesday. Yosemite National Park was blanketed by 18 inches or snow, and Pollack Pin·es:-east o Placerville, got two feet. The twin storms from the Gulf or Alaska were expected to push out of the area by toniebt, weather service forecaster BiU Hackel said Wednesday. "It was a cold, moisture·laden series of storms, but the heavy amounts or rain and snow are over," he said. Showers will be iocreasinely light and scattered, perhaps with skies clearing tonight, he predicted. * * * Minnesota hit with record I 7 inches of snow ;, ne Auocla&ed rraa ~·A sn o w s torm soc k e d Minnesota's Twin Cities with a record 17 inches of dry powder northeast Wisconsin a nd the northern panhandle of West Virginia. Annapolis opened late r than usual. School districts in only two counties -Garrett and Alegany held classes as usual. Plains th{()Ugta the weekend, and it remained bitterly cold throughout the north-central states and into the Northeast. , and snarled traffic throughout fl ,Wisconsin as it moved east. _ · OtUr -&-no-w st-orm-s -were S n ow moved across the No rtheast today, wh.iteoing the m ounds or dirt-.eover ed snow l i ning N"t!"W orlc Cify-s sidewalks. Many commoters len their cars at home and packed into overcrowded trains as fo r ecasters predicted an accum.µlatioo or up to four inches. President Reagan canceled a trip to B~timon. where he was to visit an industrial park, d\le to the snow. pattern that will be hard to break,·· said Mike Morgan, a s pokesman for. lhe National Weather Service in Minneapolis. "This may be a record-breaking winlff." In Wisco n s in, s tate transportation offi cials advised motorists to stay home. wilb some roads reduced to one lane because or drifts. The s tate patrol said there had beeo one fatal accident and many reports o r c ar s in ditche s and semitr aile rs jackknifed on Miles City, Mont., had the natiQn's lowest temperature before dawn with J2 degrees below zero. i oving in today on parts of the astern Seaboard, the northern • real Plains, and northe rn "'Arizona, while 30-b e low lemperJlures were forecast for P,nigbt in MOntana. '·' Winter storm warnings were ir.osted for northe rn Arizona. ' ifortbwesl Montana, central -t>hao. southwest Pennsylvania, Twenty-three Maryland school district were forced to cancel or delay classes this mornin1. and ttle Navi"'l Academy at The surprise 17.2 inches of snow that fell in Minneapolis and St. Paul set a 24-hour record as the snow eased at 8 p.m. Wednesday. Forecasters, who originally predicted only 1·2 inches. expected more snow today. "We are now in a good snow The s ta'\e government and major corporations closed early to let workers go home, as did several schoo l syste m s and s hopping centers. Cars spun out or bogged down on streets and highways . The Hube rt Humphrey Metrodome . whic h deflated durin1 a heavy s nowfa ll in November. stayed up. roadways. 1 The 12-day record cold wave that left 'JJT1 people dead across the eastern half of the nation seemed to have eased its grip, but bone -chilling cold was predicted fo r Montana and some other arer of the Northern The weather service said the west ern s torm system was causine moist air to collide with arctic air, causing potentially heavy s now. Highs were not expected to reach 15·below zero in som e areas. with lo ws ex peeled to touch 30 below aear the Canadian border. \ I' .. * * * f.rom Page A 1 )lAIN ... NB Assemblywoman's tax measure clears . Senaie ·test Wednesday nig ht, Southern C a I i f o r n i a E d i.s o n C o . spokesman Jim Kennedy said. The outag.e_ wa.L..reported -at. &:44 p.m . Power was restored lo lllllf the customers by 7 p.m. and t.o all but 60 by 7 :35 p.m .. Kennedy said. The remaining 60 cpstomers had to wait till 4 a.m. s~ay for power, he said. ~ One or the unlucky 60 , a l#oman who lives in the Bay N i e w .(\ p·a rt m e n t s at Sa n ~oa<tuin Hill s Road and ,-argue rite Avenue, said she s__.forced to improvise during 'he ~lackout. ~1 "We had a battery-operated television with a 5-inch screen, JO we weren't too bad off," said 1he woman, who asked that her ~ame not be Uffd. ''We didn't .Want to miss 'Dynasty'." . -- SACRAMENTO <AP ) -An income tax indexing measure, s aid to be a less cos tly alternative lo Howard Jarvis' tax cut initiative. has cleared its first Senate test. The Senate Revenue and Taxation -Committee voted 6:1 Wedn esda y o n ACA34 by A ssemblywoman Ma ri an Bergeson, R·Newport Beach. The m easure has a lready passed the Assembly. But it * * * From Page Al mu s t c l ea r the Senate constitutional amendments and finance committees and the Senate floor by Jan. 28 to joi n the Jarvis initiative on the June ballot. Mrs. Ber geson s aid the Finance Committee will be the toughest test, probably next week. . Income tax indexing means a dj usting tax brackets and related deductions and credits to reflect inflat ion. so tha t a * * * TAXES ·To RISE? • • • proposals, saying some minor health, education and otner changes were possible over the s o c i a I a r e a.s t h a t l h e next few days. They said the administration wants to shirt to president'pJanned to disclose his slate control, sources said. cost -of-living raJse won •t push a taxpayer into a higher bracket. California bas had indexing since 1978. For 1978 and 1979 the brackets were adjusted for au but UO'ee perceata1e points ot the California Consumer Price index. For 1980 and 1981, they were indexed by the full CCPI,. but that expired this year and the syste m returns to all-but·three-points. The Jarvis initiative would restore full indexing, acCording to the CCPI. -~rs. Bergesoo's ACA34 would also restore full indexing. but accordin1 to a different lndex based on the avera1e trowtb in wages and salaries -the Wage and Salary Index. Jo recent years, the WSI has been lower than the CCPI, and thus would cost the state less. When the bill passed the Assembly, the le1islalors were told that repeal or the three pe rcentage .point trigger in either bill would cost the state $15 million to $230 million next year, depending on inflation. The Senate Revenue and Taxation Committee's analysis said the Department of Finance now estimates lhat ACA34 wou1d result in a revenue gain or $180 million in 1982-83, a revenue loss of $40 million in lhe following year, and a continuing revenue toss thereafter, because the WSJ wou Id be greater than the increase~ in the CCPI less lh~ percentage points. The lone committee vote against ACA.34 was cast by Sea. Dan Boatwriaht, D-Concord, who said be didn't believe the Legislature should approve a measure in competition with the Jarvia initiative because a half million people had s i1ned petitions to get the Jarvis meas ure on the ballot. Sen. Ruben Ayala, D·Chino, said be't.hougbt the voters should have the choice. Bowling outing end.sin death PACIFIC GROVE <AP> -A van c arryio1 a group of mentally retarded .1dults on a bowlina outing bit a tree and flipped over on a rainswept highway, killing one passen1er and inJurin1 the 11 other people aboard, officials said. The Wednesday accident was not bhmed on the rainy weather, and its cause was under investigation. said Ben Riffel of the California Hi1h•ay Patrol. tale money i still 'grim' major budget-proposals Tuesday __ In addition, Reagan will I in his S t at e ·o r t h e Union propose the wh~esale trans~r '---------------------------------~------------------------------~------------~ messag_e to Congress. or the giant welfare and food : .. SACRAMENTO CAP> -The Assembly Ways abd Means Committee heard U.e Brown administration's new1 lbrecast of a possible $100 million debt, then approved bills to spend millions more. At a hearing Wednesday, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's finance dire'ctor, Mary Ano Graves. said, "I want the committee to know how precarious the current year is and how important the next 5~ months are. These problems are not golne to go away. . . " After Ms. Graves' briefing, the committee considered about 80 billa, all leftovers from 1981. If not passed by the committee thia week, they die. Deputy Wh ite House press stamp programs lo the states in s ec r etar y L a rry S peakes exchange for a total federal conJirmed that Reagan "made a takeover of the burgeoning number of decisions yesterday" Medicaid program, which has on tax pla ns but would not been growing 15 percent a year elaborate. ' in costs for providing health Earlier tax proposals under care t o the nation's poor , d i s c u s s i o n w i t h i n t h e according to tt\e sources. administration cente red on Treasury Secretary Donald T. in c reased excise t axes on Regan disclosed Wednesday that cigarettes, liquo r , wine, o n e ."lo.op h ole" the long.distance telephone calls ad m inist~at1on would seek to and "luxury" items, s uch as narro"': involves tax-exempt jewelry. rurs and yachts. industrial development bonds Hi gher excise taxes on beer, t hat local .governments sell to gasoline and airline tickets aJso attract ~usaness. . . had been under re view, but Ad ministr ation orfacaals there was opposition within the declined lo identify the other tax adminJstration to increase taxes changes the president approved, on these items . although one proposal under Revenue from the federal active consideration called for excise taxes would be turned limiting deductions that can be over to the states to finance c lai m~d on une mploy ment some 40 federal programs in insurance. · · The excise tax proposals are -• 0 -,. .... -NGE--c-o_a_s_T ______ C_l __ lfl_led __ ....__, __ 1 __ 4 ______ ,. II k el y to provoke opposition I ·1 Pilat 819 ............. "9 71 ,...2•5171 from a number of Rea1an'1 II y Allottt.rdepertment•142-4321 Re publican s upporters in MAIN OFFICE Congress. This week , House• m wett a.. st., c.-,,._,CA. G 0 P W hi p Trent Lo tl of ~-.!~a1,8.!..-0111em ~u --., ... ,,...c .. '-~.CA . .,.. Mississippi and R~p. Jack Kemp Robert N. Weed ~:~'=' =~:.,c:.:.;:::i., ~ or New York complained lhat ,.,....._ _,._ ..,..,. M9f ~ ,..._.. hi(her excise taxes will hurt the TMmas A. Murptllnf> il'K1•1 puc::ol»ll9ftot~""'-'' 1 ''little guy" and risk poUUcaJ ~~hMI p Hervey ~~:=:~:;:i;i:=.=-:...~ defeat for Republicans . ......,.. a.-"' ...... tu• ,..,,...., . ..,...._., ... ,....,......,. R ea g an l s re I u ct ant I y l . 1(1y Schultz _ ...... __ ... _••-·---------------------supportin1 higher taxes aa the .__,.,~ ri. o • ..,. c.»e o.My ....... ..., ....,. .. _ only way to keep future deficit.I Kenne4h N. Goddtrd Jir. .._. • .._"""-'' ..-... "' • Or-.. from soari•ur beyond •too bUUon ~DMdlr c ............... ~ ............ -.... • Bernard Sc:hult'IW'I :::=-~ := =:v: a year. aides said. c..... trvlM, r~~ c-e. A ...... ~ A $75 billion den cit for fiscaJ 5=!:.=.Looa ~/~._.,,::::,=-.:-.-r.-:._--=r-~ 1983, which be1lna Oct. l, would ..,......,._ ------~~--~~c 11 • ...._ M the lar1est ever projected by a president .in h la budeet messa1e .~ ~1ren. I OilltlBBAJIOB SALB ltnill feel like celebrating when you pocket these savings! 10%-50%0FF • pnoiou= • .m••'• waMh•• • d•••oall Mre1r7 • la.U.' watoh• • hOtoaJMrelr7 • ,snwan 'b.ke adYt.ntaC• of t.heH ext.raordlnarY valuea by. 1hopp1nc now for Vt.lentine'a Da.,y, blrthda.,ya, &nnJVel'Ml'lee, wed4JnCI t.nd all t.he 1peclal ooet. .. 11bna &hHd. tJH one ot our oonveruent. obe.rge plt.n.a or Amertoa.n &:qnwe, VISA or MuterCa.rd. Many hem• are on9'0f & kind, ao come early fort.he belt eelec\lonl SLAVICK·s ""' ....... 5lra tt17 WMrr w best surprist.s begin. , ..... 1*'11(7t4tM4-t3IO·~ le-" MIO~IAl~·~C*ID•L.9-... • ' '-:-.... ............... . -·~~ MEETS nE COUNT-New J ersey's new governqThomas Kean, and Count Basie ham it up for photogphers at -lnauguraJ ball \his week in Edison. N.J . ··--------------------------l Tax protester pays visit only Tax protester Paul Bell paid ·a visit but no taxes to the Inte rnal R eve nue Service, an annual ritual that he s ay ~ prove s the government l<nows he's right about taxes being voluntary. Bell, who claims he hasn't paid "a penny of federal or state tax in more than 11 y ears," h e ld a news conference in the lobby of the Addressing a joint session of Cone~ •t~ ~ D. Roose.eat ctletrrailol( '*'" be the only rema ining New Dealers still in Congress - Sen . Jennings R andolph, D-W.Va .• and Claude Pepper, D-Fla. . During th e Rooseve lt y ears, Pepper was in the Senate and . .Randolph in the House. Randolph, 19, was f irst e lected in 1932, the year f e d e ral bu i lflg in Bakersfield after s'ping at the I RS office ~t ry to enga ge IRS r epr4f)tative Bruce Davis in a dete over the revenue systet which Be ll called "a joke. "He did come irJ Davis s aid. "I d.idn't gi~rim an opportunity to taJk it's a matter of policy." Roosevelt came t4lf>wer. Pepper. 81, was e~d to the Senate in 1936. t Both have be ek rong advocates of New j;i.style gov e rnme nt p r.rams through o ut h e ir congressional c~ers - although both lfe r ed defeats in the 1950s d spent s everal ye ars ut of government beforfunning again . Randolp~r the Senate this time arPepper for the House. Former rlnt lady BeUy l'•rd vlllt4d the Capitol ln Au1tln to thank Texaa for pau ln1 a blll requlrln1 health Insurance policies to cov•r al~'8m treatme-nt. Mrs. Ford called the 11111 ·'a tre m e ndo u s s tr id e 'P.WUd the reco1nitlon of ticohollam." ·•For a lonr t1me, there was a question whether alcohollam was a disease or merely a lack of will power," a a l d Mrs . Ford , who underwent treatment a few years aao for problems with alcohol and drug dependency. "Coverage or al c oholl11m a s far as Insurance Is concerned has varlced, but this type or l e gi s lat ion makes it mandatory." Former Se n . George McGovena, who was targeted for defeat by conservative groups and lost his 1980 re-election bid in South Dakota, is teaching a course on r eligion and politics in America . M c G o v e rn say s the religious right won a political "massacre" in 1980 because losing liberals, like hims elf, Sen. Frank Church of ldal\o a nd Sen. Birch Bayh of Indiana, we r e caught off guard. The 197 2 Democ rati c presidential nominee began te1.t@lni classes Monday a UC Santa Barbara. TEACHER NOW Forml·r Sen . Ceorge :\1C'Go\'ern of South Dakota . dcfl'iJt eo for r e ·e l e l'lion in 1980.· is tea<:hing a coursl' on rl'ligion and polit ics in Aml•rit"J al l'C Santa Ba rtw ra. Rain tipering off 11orm werfll1t9 IO< ,,,_.,tel,.. "' SOUIMrn Mono C:-ty •nd 0-. Ve lley tor ICY.el l'le•VY •M• - •1•°"9 ~y winch. Oeurtl c•n upec t ln"eHlft11 Sm•ll cr•ll .O•llory SoutMrly •IK>wers -i.olated tn-n~ wl-IS to JO l nou wltll Slr-r wit!> IO'J I hall -~ mOf1 wlflcll vints -• to I 1004 ''-°' ,.. •• tOO•y. LO-J I -.,,.,_,, -to be~omlnv IOUlhwest to #ftl 10 lo 30 J,SOO Itel In norlnern desert•. k11oh tOdey, de~renlno lonl9fll Nortntm*-1~3t to 0.1~ In Periods 01 ,...._.,, wlln l•ol•ttd io.. Seu9ltrn -t'n'9M to ss,-• llluflder-n drrNlll\9 t~ only J2 to '1. e cne11~eot~ttn19'>1. ' Tre vtltrl eclVlsory for snow 111 U.S. summary. Snow bl•n-ttt d mu•n ol tht nortnwe.i C.lilornle, Sh••l•·Slulyou •rta •nd Sierra. Showers 1-rtnv ofl tod•Y northern""''-"' on Wtdnt Ml•Y, Exte-J -d cnen9l119 to r•ln to Ille toutn, and I ULe ••111 covtrtd most 01 Ille Wn t Cout. with 11•11 reported In p •rts of '"'o •ecast Clltllorflle. J t •' A re-:ord 11i' Inc,., o4 \ftOW tell In _ t lgjll P1oun In MIMt-tll·St. P•11t, F•lr wllll • w•rmlnv trend. Rl9" Lal I.la -8 t-...,_IM rOOf Of e llOllW teml)tr.ic..,... In Ille •oeslel •re•• In Llllr In 1111 Los AllQtltS s11b11rb ol '°'encl lows mostly JTlo n ~ whn l o.ii He': .. nde Ht'91tt1, lnjurlnv • 13 YNI freerlnt.,ln IN~· valley~ Hi.M Mtm old boy. In tllt mouncetns rnosuv rlsln!I 1"'9 Ml• . S-rer:l'led from --n IN 40s •rel vtry c.ol<I nl9"tt wltn 1-. Mllwfe Pie Ins ttw~ mt.tell OI WIK-Ill. 11 to u. ""Pl•) •Cron ••stem ,.tbr•~ •nd 11110 H•~ nortf1.-:entr•I «..,ses. Tiit Sfl-Hew lent the lower 11811 ol Ille Mlnhsl"I emDPratures Ollie ·eu,...-to wldtly •• -... r•'" o ... T H-a \lellt., -lrl •'-pieces In IN T~ Om soutlMm Plelnt.. 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Sllowtr1 Oleftst11SC 14 " St S -re tJQltcttd ~ IN CaHlorflla Cllarl1t11 W\f 1t H coot Into se>11lllern Nev•d• end ~ 1t ll 1011tlltm Ariton•. ~ n 11 Snow wa s lort••U over Ille QI-:.,. :Jf JO 1011tlltrn Pl•au ltlroUOh Montene, at,,.,. 2' t• .,,., ''""I"' rein WH ••PKled "' ~ 36 11 .. lllt m ld·Atl•ntl< •out sl•lu. 1afl•P1Wtll ' ll St Sllowtrs •nd pou lbly • ltw O.over_ U JI ,,,_,,,_"' .. ,. pndkted from Dlt _,.. 23 " Mlu lulWI and,,. Te1W1tue. 11811.., OetrOll J• CM to tllt c .• ro11n.. ..._ 10 .u Tem-~ •round tht netlon at El Paoo u so mlOO.y ~Y rtft9td lrom " Falrbal'IU ·Ot ·12 _,_ ltrO In W•rroed, MIM • to '° lierttord u a. In M•Alltn, Ttu'-Htltna OS .01 -----------"""' 71 .. ...... toft ,, " Cali~omia ~~=-~ : '.J 1 ~ City )I 21 Perlodl of IMwen -IMlattCI tll1111dt ......... Ill c•••t•I .... mt1111l•I" •rt•• •I S o11thtr11 Cellfen'lle .... W.el IMll -......, •Inn. ~ W l"Htlfll ...... Va ri•"• c l•11dl11t11 flrld•J. ' Cafttlf'l..,.c-. Aalll ,,..._.llty 11'1 Or .... ~ •• ....,. lrom '° ,.,.. ... , ..,..., .. • ._,_,,..,. ..........._ HllM todey 111 IN mlf le~'°'• S1 to tJ l'rldey. L_.41w& c~.e "' ~ *°""" 10 IO ,.r~tfll 111 ll'llelld nlltYI tOflltflt, H ..... lfl llW-. leWl lfl lhe Q. HltflS Ill -ltlflt todey eM P'rldet • W 15, lewl 11 to tt. Wl ... er ..,,..w .. ~ ........... We're List •• ,. Merytvlllt •• ., .. H MoftfOVle Sl .. ., » """'"'"'' ... 0 S7 • Mt Wiiton l3 M 71 n HttdlH '° a ,. IS Ht WOOf'I llff<I\ St n u en O•l•lld .. 42 •• ,. Olllerlo s• .q a 'J 'P•lm $tlr1"9' 51 0 ,. 2• S6 IS .. • ,. D •s 40 J I t• u 01 .. • 01 CM ,. 21 4S u .. ,, n • :M 24 ,. St OS'°" u 7J 4) 10 » " POllNIA T.M._ ... '2 SJ 4$ ,. 4.1 46 • 30 :n " M '1 ., .. u ,, 50 0 40 46 40 )4 ti 46 aJ .. .. St • .............. ........ .., I 4 IW 1 • 1W J 4 w ' ' w p ....... SS 45 P•to Rotlln • ., Alvtn ldlt 52 41 llltd8111ff SJ n "tdWOOd City ., 0 S.~remtnto 0 40 S.llnes .. 41 Sen 8tr_.Olno •• ,, San G•brlel 56 .. $tn0199D St SJ Sen ,.,_.i.~o .. 42 SanJ ... ., 40 SenlaAne ,. • S.nl• Berber• SS 40 $efll•Merle n 42 Senl• Monl•.• ,. • Stockton .. 40 T•llot '1811tY 2' u Thtrmol ., • Torr•ft~• '° 41 Y11mt ., 4' PAN ANWAICAN TEMl'S At ..,Ul':O n 71 '""'"' .. 10 ,. C11receo IS 13 G11odeleJar• 11 4t G11edtl-IJ .. H•v•ne IS .. Merallefl ., S7 Mo ride t) .. Mtal•o City 1' .. Moflterrey .. .. NHYll 1' .. $tn J.,.,., P.R. IS 11 T...,..:l .. "'8 1' u Trl11lded 17 .. \ltra Crw 11 .. Ti~s TOOAY Flt1t I-U : 11 e.m. 2.) ""' "'?!'.. 6:J7 •.m. J.J Sec-1:16p.m. O.J Second llltfl l :Jlp.m. u Sllfl rlwt 6:S7 •.m. T""ncley, .. b S:IJ p.m . MMft rlMI 4:01 a.m. T .......... ,, MIU:ttp,m, What do you like a the Dally Pilot? What don't you like? Call -the number . fnd yow mn1a1e will be recorded. ' '· transcribed and delive the appropriate editor. The same 24·ho'l' a rtn1 service may be used to record let- ters to the editor o'i£ a c. Mailbox contributors muat Include their name and telep number ror veriflcatlon. No clrculatlon calls , pltase. Tell us what's on y 642•B088 .. !Thuraday, January 21 , 1982 s Edis_g n giv S equipmen~. County accepts emergen~ ~upplies f or San Onofre 8)' DAVID KVTZMANN nuclear lila!s. power plant are adequate ~ 0t .. ~,........,. The t . 80 percent owner handle a major accident, ' Oran1e Count1 hu accepted or San O.lr• alon1 with 20 Edi.on 1poku aaaa Dal as a gift more than '200,000 ln percentfo1er San Die10 Gas " Buron said his compan1 a1aq equipment from Southern Ele ctric o .• is currently about to donate about $100,000 CallfomJa Edlaon Co. to bollt.er await"-rd on a full.power equipment and funds to S emeraency preparednesa In the operalinl ~ense ror newly buUt Clemente to uparade emer1ency event f>( an accident al lhe San Units 2 a~. capablllties there. , ~l~~l~n~ Nucle ar Generatlna Tbe U. Atomic Safety and Much of the equlpm•n~ The Board or Supervisors Llcensi~& Bo~rd already has earmarked for the county bu voled to accept the ispeciatized au th on~ •.s suan ce o~ a been delivered already, Barron equipment Tuesday. low-power . st license ror Uml 2. said: I In. eluded In the various That dee ion was announced Their supplies are In a~ auppUes donated by Edlson _ earUer th month. to. another $&,500 In fundt which ls aeeldn1 f e deral In m~ that decision, the uUUty contributed to the 1 licensing for newly built Units 2 three-meqt>er board said it felt tre asury lut y~ar to ortaet ext.rt and 3 at San Onorre -are emergenq response plans were cost s assocaal.e ~ with a.I $139,000 in communications adequate enough to handle any emeraency lest dnll an May. equipment, $57,000 In radlaUon s ituat.i ns arisln& from Federal emergency olfiei~f measurement equipment and lo w-pow r operation! or the concluded al that time tb 1 $9,700 ln aupplemental supplies. plant. emergency response ~lana ti Edison otricials have been ffowevi', before rendering a all participating agencies w assisting local agencies by final d4':ialon on full-power "mlnimally adequate." ~· 1 either donating funds or opera.ti~ licenses, the board Localplannersha ve s ince equipment to e ns ure that must cletrmine that emergency that many problems indeqlifi emergency preparedness meets plans fc( communities within JO by federal officia ls have levels acceptable to fede ral miles ol the sprawling nuclear remedied. • Reward maY aid jeWel recovery Two Laguna Beach jewelry store owners are offering a $5,000 reward to anyone who can lead to the recovery or a safe and jewelry stolen during a day light robbery. The announcement follows the arrest of a 23-year-old StJSpect in the crime, which took place Jan. 13 inside GaJlery One or Laguna Beach on North Coast Highway. Owners Ken Uranga and Jerry Hall were beaten and slightly cut with a large knife wielded by two men who entered the shop in the late afternoon, saying they wanted to look at jewelry. The pair were hog-tied and the . thieves left with a s mall safe and ab>ut $54,000 in estate jewelry ranging from expensive rings tobracele.ts and brooches. And while Richard Lowell Higgins 23, who frequents the Dana lbint area , is still being he ld ir connection with the robber}. police s ay they are s eekin1 a t leas t o n e othe r suspect Hall :aid Wednesday anyone knowint the whereabouts of the one·of-akind jewelry should call detecti~ Gene Brooks of the Lagu1 a B e a c h Po li ce Departoent at 497 ·3311. Air crash killing coast man probed T he cause or a U.S. Coast Guard helicopter c ras h on Molokai Island that took lhe life or a Ne wport Beac h m a n remained under investigation today, according to a Coast Guard spokesman in Honolulu. Weapons site challenge rs a w ait h e aring Anti·nuclear activists in Seal Beach say they're encouraged a U.S. District Court judge has refused to dismiss their lawsuit against the Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station. The lawsuit alleges the Navy stores nuclear weapons at the b ase . It co nt e nd s a,n e nvironmental impact report with an emergency evacuation plan is needed for public safety. The Navy refuses to confirm or deny whe th e r nu c le ar weapons are stored at the base . located off Pac ifi c Coa s t Highway, south of Westminster Avenue. Judge A. Andrew Hauk denied the Navy's request Monday in Los Angeles to dismiss the suit and continued the hearinR to April 26. He instrucLed the Navy to file more information and arguments with the court. The Coast Guard had earlier annourced the d eath of Lt. Cmdr. Horton W. J ohnson, 33. whose amphibious helicopte r crashe4 in heavy we ather J an. 7. Also killed in the crash was Lt . O>lleen Cain . 29 , o f Burli1gton. Iowa, the first womal aviator in the Coast G uarc. according to Public lnfornation Officer Bob Baetoo. Baepn safd investfi8fors -are exa0U1ing the wreckage of the Se a (;uard he licopter which went down in a rugged canyon area . He said officials would be listeting to recorded tapes of· in-Ui,ht convers ation preceding the crash today. Baeton s aid t h e downed he lioopter's flight r ecorder . similar to the recorders used on airlirers , had been recovered. Acmrding to Baeton. Johnson and Miss Cain were on a rescue flight to a fishing vessel which was 1n d istress with seven people on board when the crash occurred. He said a U.S. Army assault team used mountain climbing equipr.ient to recover the bodies Of the \WO fuers Jan. 10 . Johrson was a 1970 graduate of the Coast Guard Academy in New U>ndon, Conn. He had been a heli~opter pilot since 1972 Baetoo s aid J ohnson wa s marr hd and had two young child rm. Doubling of audits li/M y . LOS ANGELES (AP> -Twic@- as many taxpayers ~an expect to be audited in the comizll years as the Internal Reven&ft Ser vice gets more sophisticated computers Installed. the head of th e IRS says. Speaking to the Los Angeles chapter or the California Society or Certified Public Accountant.I on Tuesday, IRS Commissiooei' Roscoe Egger Jr. said: "In the next two years ~e should see the level of audits al least double." "' However . I RS spokesm~ Scott Waffle in Was hingtdn bac ked ore fr o m Egger\& prediction Wednesd ay, saying the increased number of auditt' was dependent on the agency's "m o r e e ff ec ti ve use Of, c ompute r s and computer technology.·· The IRS is getting ne.., co mpute rs for its s ervice ce n te r s n a tio nw i d e , an~ pre liminary tests have be4:\' conducted in the agency'-s Ka nsas City center. Waffle said'. . Ea rlier Wednesday. Roberl Giannangeli, IRS spokesman ln Los Ange les . h ad s aid lb' doubling in the number of audits referred only to people wit\l a dj ust ed g ro ss incomes or SS0,000 or more. But Waffle !au.- insisted the doubli ng "applied tb all taxpayers. regardless t¥ income bracket." ·: GiaMangeli said slightly more than 93 million lax returns we~ filed last year. and a bout 2.3 per cent or them or 2.119" m illion returns were audited. Egger s aid h e hoped th( increased audits would dissuade. tax cheaters arid ferret out mo.-., questionable tax shelters. Egger said t he t ax-sheltet problems surfaced mainly in the returns or people in the $50,000 ta x bracket and above. He s~ preliminary tests of people Ill th at bracket and al the Kansa City, Mo. center s howed 36 p e r cent s hould be a udit ed.,. Currently, he s a id, about •i percent or the people in that bracket are audited. . In a closing remark to °" CPAs Egger cautioned them \0 "think twice befor e signiD.f returns with questionable tu shelters" in tight of the changes. 40% Off~ _ill_ BAUME & MERC IER GEN EVE ~~.tf't~'re Raff Jewelf'y invites you to a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. A Liquidation of our entire stock of BAUME & MERCI ER men's and ladies• 14K & lBK Gold watches, some with diamonds . 32 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH, CALIF. 92660 (714) 644-2040 'Sizing of watchbands a ddltlonal charge > Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT/T\urtday, January 21 , 1982 AILROAD REGRETS -A blackboard al ndon's Kings Cross railway station carries ~~-~-of Bntish "Rail that all servk€.-; , are suspended. A two-d ay i.lrike by train ............... serv· e. Industria l action by the drivers win m ea there will be no trains th roughout B'l'tt ·n-today and posS'ible e-an"CeHaHon- thro h the weekend. drivers of the ASLEF union has halted • '. !Polish food price to zoom up -Oltdarity members fear gouge cduld trigger riots WARSAW, Poland (AP) - me Poles are afraid, some are signed and some say tlley on 't care about the bie crep. in rood prices that the ov91"Dment plans to put into feethb.1. "\Ve've been through so many hings that we are not reatened or afraid; there is no her way but to adjust," said e middle-aged woman in a ne outside a hardware store. "I'm too scared'to think more an two weeks ahead now," id another elderly housewife. I used to be able to make ends eet with diffic\llty. But this is t gQ_ing to continue since my arnings hardly lake me rough the month now.'' upheavals produced by~ttempts to raise pJices in 1970, 976 and in 19a>, when the in pendent labor union Solidarity was the result. The government ~ught to explain that steep p e hikes are now necessary s· ce food prices have been ~rtually frozen since 1970. In a report published rueSday, a cabinet committee ,dmitled the proposed iocreaies were "exceptionally lar•" and aroused "justified disqJiet." It cited the failure of ~revious attempts, due to publi1 protest and the capitulation or the government at the tine. and said, "This is precisely why the economic bill . . . is so huge today." The committee recommended reducing the proposed increases for electricity, natural gas. central heating and hot water. It said the size or the increases would be discussed further. But there was no suggestion or any re ductions in the proposed increases for food . ''I think we are heading for a round of food riots much worse than anyt h i ng we have experienced so far." said one Solidarity member. . Others said they would make the best or the situation. "By blissfully freezing food rices for the past decade, the rmer leadership team sowed e seeds, and now we will be aping a bitter harvest," said a cholarly looking man in his arly 40s. ··1s there any other way to sort l this mess?" asked a student t the Warsaw Institute of echnology who overheard him. We just have to grit our teeth nd plod on. hoping for an pturn in our fortunes in the ear future." V oluntriry worker saf ~ty plan eyed Qecause domestic production ' an 't meet the needs or the ublic, exports are far below hat is needed to pay for ports, and the imposition or artial law dried up aid xpected from the United States. he communist r egim e is tanning to double, triple and early quadruple the subsidized rices o( milk, butter, meat and her staple foods. . For the medium -income aroer who brings home the uivalent of $87.50 a month, -a-pound pork and $1-a-pound ausage will be a rare luxury. The proposed increases were nnounced in the first week of anuary . Since then the overnment bas waged a · gorous propaganda campaign, opin to head orr the public WASHINGTON (~P ) - Beca~ there are "on~ 1,200 inspectors to cover 3 tnillion workplaces." the OccuPltional Sa f ety and H ea lth Administration is plan•iog a pilot project i n ~hi c h participants would set up their o wn health a nd s afet y programs. .. Under the'OSHA program, the firms selected for the ysr-long trial might not be suiject to general inspections by agency personnel. OSHA was publis )ing a request-for-comment oatlining its plan in toda)"~S Federal Register. · Twenty-three states b~ve their own occupational saftty and health programs . The a>mment request sought r eaction by March 15 about whetter these states should be enco\l'aged to develop test programs 9milar to OSHA's. The comment request noted that OSHA would "rttain the If YoU'W pUt llide yQUr deoofeting drHms for a loveli~ living room until Yo\J find 1 real value ... here's the antwer to thoee dreams. all the finer auelity features J.ISUlillY tound In eofaa '99uWfv ... ling for H00.00 to H00.00 ... now onty s599oo11· ' 80" eof• In choice of atyt" and oovers in a . wide eelectlon of oolora. 2 Wffkt only. respons ibility for handling complaints alleging imminent danger" at job sites. A statement iss ued by the Labor Department agency said t h e propose d project is "designed to improve on-the-job protection for workers." P a rlici pants in the pilot project would operate their own health and sa fety program in one of three ways : Employee participation programs involving labor-management committees in gener al indu5try and the construction business. Managem e nt initiative programs, not requiring workea: participation. for firms which have good health and safety records. -"Private sector support for small business" under which tr ade associations. for example. could provide comprehensive health and safety standards for groups of small firms. Your_ Favorite Oeelgner Will Be Happy To Aaalat You H.J.GAl\RElT fU~NlllJRE HOU9'1: MOfl. ttwu Thun. 10 •·"'·tot .......... ~ .... - Reagan WASHINGTON CAP > - President Rea1an celebrai.d bll flut annivenaey ill olflce thla week with hla bl11eat 1•ffe and there was no trouble flnd1n1 someone to accept the blame. But by the president's own account, we shouldn't Judie hlm by hla mistakes. "I'm probably going lo m•ke more of them," he said. Rather, the president said, he should be judged by "how well we recover and solve the situation.·· The queslion Involved the policy or denying tax-exempt s tatu s to sc hool s that discriminate on racial ,arounds. The policy had been tn effect since the days or Richard M. Nixon's presidency, but Reacan threw it out because he said such decisions should be made by Coneress. not such agencies as the Internal Revenue Service. The president's decision. which hewed to the Republican Party platform, prompted an outcry and led his aides to worry that he was being perceived as a racist. It was f o llowe d by an announcement that he would s ubmit legislation to remedy the s ituation -to. deny the tax.exempt status bl!-law, tJlther than by administrative fiat. Then came the legislation itself. But in the wake, the top aides in the Reagan White House have spent their 52nd week in office pointing fingers at who bears responsibility for what Reagan sa id was "widespread" confusion over the matter. Publlcly, some have accepted the blame for themselves. Privately, it has been a different story. We :;tart with the president, who was as ked at his news conference Tuesday whether It was his staff who was to blame. Lowering his voice to a dramatic near-whisper. tbe president said: "No one put anything over on me. The~ s tops at my desk . I'm the originator of the whole thin&, and I 'm not going to deny that it wasn't handled as well as it could be." Next, we look at a series ol news stories that appeared lut weekend. They bore the imprlnt or leaks from within the White House aimed at placing Edwin Meese III. the president's counselor. at the center of the controversy. Administration insiders were s aid to have reported that it was Meese's handling of the entire matter, with little help from the other top members of the White House staff, that brought the problem on. It was Meese's behavior, these reports said, that brought a flash of anger d , the matter oould handled better. "J lir that way.' t he nQger al the White -and not at the Gergen said: "I aff work could have Ir there's blame. all -•f s ahtle f4llPfriilbWtf ''* In nlta.a4if.": . To a Wh6te Houle uff rui.c1 with lawy.a, "It aounded like.ft ,(aldy. nar,o.-t1101, a Je•al luue," he said. "I was not awaN 't the ti1"e that it wu a 12•)'~111' ~)'.I • Gergen, tihe director of coll\mu.a.lcationa, aatd he dkl DOt understand lhe1full lmplte.UOU of. Lhe initial d11el1lon and bJaroed himaelt f<W .not tuln1 thtitime to understand it. But a remedy may be in u1bt1; · The a.acan White HouH1 one year old,.is thinklq of fonniafl a Cabinet Councfl on Le1aJ Affairs. Thus, RMI• could 1et Cabiaet-level advice when he is contemplating a atep that· may again take him lnt.o auch &etal hot water. • .,.. __ ed ~i~~~~g~gat~. • m ves to new ·site <AP> -London's Billingsgate fish famous for ·strong n d--e~U4l I l y s t-r'°"ot has moved from the sit~ w fish has been tr~ on times to new $20.8 kland premises. not moving history, · g it with us -three the River Thames," Smithers, one of. tbe mbers or the London ebants' Association y th eir trade at te. As · prove the British love or co omlae -:-: conceding \he need odemize while clinelng to th st -trading bega.Q. • 5 : 30 . 'Wednesday in a &JU new building to the toll of th me bell rung by hand daRy tart business at the old mark The the Londo financial district, was built 18"15 on a site which histo s say has been a mark inee Saxon times or nrlie The dates O; when Saxon 'King J:thelr ssued what would now be cus s regulations for ships dock· "Blynsgate." Tbe e was mentioned in statu 1Z19 .and a 1698 Act of Parlia t granted Billingsgate a mo ly as a fi sh market In Lo;::e· profanities of fish porte ""'° the entry or the. word · ate (small b) i& the ditoary as a synonym for vitupelive language. • It w.as a tot of history to leave behind for. new premises Uaree miles <listant oo a 13-acre si~.at W~t India d<><:1'i in London's East End. The market was driven out by an antiquated bu.ilding and by cily center traffic congestiwi tbat Billingsgate's Cis h trucks have helped worsen ro'i a cen.tury -an 1883 report described ilJ s urroundings jammed with horse-drawn carts as a .. great scandal to London." .. • • I .. ,, . "' Fiery protest· kili8 widow ~:: ~ LANSif.lG. M.ich. <AP> -An e lderly \¥idf>w described by aut~orlties as ''too· prou9,$' tq accept help fl'ortl her children has died or injuries suffered in a fire she apparently set hersell in a protest over Social Security payments. Evelyn Leisure, 67, died Sundl!y of injuries sustained in thf ''D~. 11 f1re in her motor nom'e 'in 'Ute 'Pa'r'king lot of tJ;>e stat e Depart:rtte'nl of Social Services office in Lansing, a uthorities said Tuesday. Police arriving at the burning home said the woman screamed. "Let me go with it!" Authorities found a letter apparently written by Mrs. Leisure which said: "I ~ receive food stamps. I have no fu el or me<;ticine . . . So after you see 'Wha'l I have don~. maybe someone wi11 try not to let this happen to other people." .. sr~rs FRI • ~uARY 22nd ... ~o.~ i ENT '#INTER STOCK .. · .. L :"' OF DR SES' & SPORTSW~ ,,. .. 1 , ...... ,. ....... = ~S THAN 50\ Off! · ; '\ "r~ ...... ~ ~' ..... ., o.q, ~TUROAY 10-6, SUND~Y 12-~.' • American bpress ' • 1 Mr1· .. •I ' ........ ,. .. ,,.. & Fashion Island 714/759-~ ,fOft>CfCI• from the 8'ooc:tNCJI( r I • I t ""' ~ ' -. ·-. ·~-~--~----~~-~~-----. . Orange Coat.DAILY PILOT!fhuraday, January 21.. 1982 t ew bcittle with United Farm Workers LOS ANGELES (AP) - Hlth·ranldne Teamsier offtciala are meetln-1 this weelt in closed-door talks that may determine whether to end a four-year-old "peace treaty," tbat halted a aometlmea-violent battle with the United Farm Worken. , The a1reement between the two uniQOS, which called (or the Team$ters to pull out of the fields, expires in-M"8rch. - Main anta1oniat1 in the int-ernal Teamster stru11le . are union locals that would stand to 1ain ln size and po to expand back i flehls. "I waot to go ba bad I can taste j said Bart Curto, buslnea a1ent of Teamsters LocaL based ln Carpinteria, ab 80 miles northwest of Los eles. "But for now, I'm ju iting my nails, waiting for J .26." · .That's when Policy Committee of t powerful Western Conf ence of Teamsters is s duled to dt!cide whether new the aareement or I~ lt IApse. This .. week,' top Weti t ern Conference officials are at a closed-door i nte·rnat.ional · executive committee meeting in 1San Francisco that may help shape their decision. "I'm sure it (the UFW pact) is going to be kic,ked. around," said Ray Mendoza, who headed the Western Conference's farm labor local that administered about 200 contr'acts coverin1 55,000 worke•in California and Arizona before the truce. Aft.er ,l:_() coun ies .ad:d TOai·-a list -. t Loans to help homeowners d astated by rain storm SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Residents of 10 more Northern California counties -including San Francisco and Sacramento -are now eligible for federal help in fecoveting from the :t-~-uuastating...Ja~~ .rain stQnn, officials said today. and ~Monterey, Napa, San Joaquin, San Be nito, San Francisco, Santa Clara , Yol'o and Sacramento. Already eligible ror a wide variety of aid as disaster areas are Marin, Sonoma, Solano, ..,...__....,._,,._.,.......,,v~h...--~~Sant the trucei the Carm labor local wil dt._o ved. • Like Curt o, Mendoza \s eager to let the agreement lapse and feels UFW leader j.::eaar Chavez has failed to entrench his union in the fields. •'Chavez hasn't done that much," said Mendoza, a former civil rights worker who now heads a Teamster produce local that stretches from Salinas in Northern California to the Mnlcan border. "The media lte~t saying that Chavez was go1n1 to be the savior of Mexican farm workers, but It hasn't worked out that way." n.a recent interview with The As soc iated Pre ss in Sacramento, Chavez said he did not know what the Teamsters would decide, but he indicated he was r-eady for the worst. ''They will come after us, and we will go after them'• if the truce is .allowed to end. Chavez said. "We are in a better position to organize than before, so it will just go back and forth The Small Business Administration said residents of the counties, adjacent to those declared disaster areas by President Reagan, will be eligible for loans to replace or Cr u z , Contr a Costa a nd Humboldt counties. More than 6,600 people had applied for a variety of disaster aid services at f e deral emergency centers by Tuesday evening, Mullane said. and jam up the (Agricultural I:;-ai>or Retations ·Berard reve·--- more. · • !, ICY PELLETS -Kim Grant of Santa Barbara wipes hail off - her car following an unusual ear ly mornjng hail storm Wednes day. The ice pe ll ets destroyed the lop or .a nearby r convertible. ~ _ The union has frequently been critical of delays by 1he ALRB in processing elections and unfair-labor compraints and feels a new union feud would simply make the problem worse. Bills would aidrr accused police SACRAMENTO (AP) -A Senate committee wants to offer new legal weapons to police accused by citizens of misconduct -the ability to sue some false accusers, and more power to keep police files secret. Two bills sponsored by polfce groups were sent to the Senate floor by the Judiciary Commmff- over protest by the American Civil Liberties Union that they would hamper legitimate public complaints about police wrongdoing. ''This is another effort to stifle debate and chill free expression," ACLU lobbyist Beth Meador said of a bill to let police sue for false statements made in citizen complaints and official proceedings. But Al LeBas of the California Peace Officers Association, and other groops representing police chiefs and sheriffs, said the chief concern of working police is the ''almost constant harassment ,, ,. . from certain ~~gments of society" through the courts. That bill, SB1025 by Sen. Alan Robbins , D-Van Nuy~. was approved on a 5-1 vote. The second bill, . SB1065 by Seq. Ray Johnson, R-Chico. to limit the number of oase,s in which individual police files can be inspected, passed 5-3. Robbins' bill would remove the current legal immunity that applies to citizens who file complaints against police. Statements in those complaints, -'nd in . administrative hea;ri-ags an~department investigations that result, c~t-be used by police to sue for libel or slander even if they are · ·---deUberate·lies., _ -: State courts have granted an absolute "privilege" for such citizen complaints, the same immunity given to witnesses in trials or to legislators doing official work, so as not to inhibit the public's right to protest. The bill would allow police to sue for statements in complaints and hearings that are -deliberately Talse 'or made wittrthe knowledge th•t· they might be false. Norco slwotout testimony heard VISTA <AP> -A mechanic testified that when be heard shots in May 1980 outside Norco's. Security Pacific Bank branch, which was being robbed, he ran from his truck, climbed up on a building and saw an armed-man-COming-atJlim. "I jumped out and ran down the street between the cars. I s.caled a brick wall . . . and then got up on the roof of the, building,'' Michael Linville said this weelt. From the building he said he saw four men get in his yellow utility pickup ... rire their weapons as they ned. Prosecutors have cbaqed George W. Smith, 29; Christopher G. Harveo, 3o; and his brother, Russell A., 28, drove the truck to a remote spot in the San Gabriel Mountains where they killed pursuing Riverside County aberUf'a Deputy James B. Evans. The three men could be senJenced. to die if convicted. of killin8 Evans, 39. They are also charged with ~ o&ber crtD'les, includin& an armed robbery on Linville. Lights turned off •• 1n rate protest SAN DIEGO (AP) -lJpta blinked off across San Dlqo County tbil week ID a five-minute protest~ hlCb el9Ctric rates. Hou1~wife. Verna Murray or1aniaed the Tuesday prut.elt after settlnl • thne-montb, sz,a blll from San Diep Gas • EleetricCo. "We deftnltely felt the impact of the protest," said Alan Stewart, mana1er ol 1lant Hrvlces for tbe utlllty. In Poway, tbe City Counctl ...... lta 'I p.m. meetlnt ln near-datkne11 wltb candles and nashlllbta. The cwil p..-1 • ,......_ lut week demandlq • state lnvtll&lt~ of tbe uWlty ..Jll_d cancellation of a ~~~..J!!!._lllllllon rate . SWEAJERS ~-VE_R 10,000 'ENGLISH looL (ff.iavy· & Ughtweight sweaters in all sizes) • Shetland • Cardigans • Lambswool • Boat .Necks -~ • Pore-Wool --• Turtle Necks~ • Crew Necks • Stripes • v _Necks • Solids I ·Maior English Sweater Manufacturer.'s ,..-. " '. .. ANNUAL~ WIREHOUSE CLEARANCE · SllE Sa•e . 50% or more .off retail price• I:. Starb Saturday, Jan. 23. th111 Sunday, Jan. 31 ·. Open 10 am· 5 pm Daily / I, ;1895 Skypark -Circle, Suite C I o I I nine *".... l ~.-..... _.,..,....,c--_,...-.,, ' . Of8nge Cout OAtLY PILOT/Thuradey,_January 21, 1982 ------....... ~--""!"'""~ ~ .... --------~--~~ ........ ---------------- ,_Political donations IXPECTINO British TV h ost David Frost. 42. says 'he and his wife, Lynn Frederick, 27. a re expecting their first baby in Aqgust. •• I'! \ 1 OEAa PAT DUNN: An lire.re H.Y Y~ beaellta for coat.rlbutl•C •OMY &o a poU&leaJ candidate! _/j.F., Collta Meaa The (n'8rnat RevenH ~mce ]ierntlta a limited tax credit for conlrjbutlons made lo a · ·~1ndtda&e for election to a feeler-al, .11ta~ or local office ln a primary, 1eneral or 1~cta1 election, or lo a political committee 1. for such. pulfl>OSe. • Thia credit is limited lo 50 percent of your. total political conlrilMA&.ions up to a maximum of $50 ($100 for taxpayers filing jointly). It should be noted, however, that the cost of raffle, lottery or similar tickets to raise campaign funds does not qualify for this credit. Also, the c:redlt is not available to corporations. trusts or estates. Two basics ~ .• ., ,_ - DEAR PAT DUNN : Wlttll ty"91 •t Solidarity Day expeues caa I deduct oe my ta "fl .. a~. do I have &o l&eml1e m.y dea~t proclaimed w .G.,H .......... Beach The Internal Reven111e Service reports WASHINGTON <AP> that there are two basic types of deductions: -President Reagan , adjustments to income and il••ized de c I a ring J a n . 3 0 deductions. Adjustments to Income 'incaa. Solidarity Day, said that moving expenses, empl oy~e bu1ine1\ "by persecuting expense, payments to an Jn•ividval Solidarity, the Polish Retirement Account, payments to a· ICqb, military government interest penalty on earl):'._.withdrawal of lbe lRS. For item1zin1 to J>e..ot any belMIU l.O yo1.1, your total deductions should be more than $2.300 If you file as slnale or unmarried head of household, $$,.00 few married nuns tjolnt or qu8'11fylnc widow or widower or $1,700 if your filln1 status Is married fllln& separately. Charity deductioJJa ·· DEAR PAT DUNN: I recently doaa&ed a lot of bousebold Items to a Iota) charlty bul the receipt I received OD.ly staled what I donated and not tbe price or value ol my donations. How much can I deduct oa my lei return? L. P .. Hun~lngtoa Beach You may deduc:t the price at which property would chu1e ·-haods ,belWeeA t willing buyer and ~ Yillln1 seller. • lood au\de to follow Is to . deterailn• _at. •a..t a'blount the item-woQI, sell fa( at a 1ar..re sale. For addl~toaU inrorm..iloa op cbaril.able COD4ftbUtiQlla., publicatt. 531 ~ID be obtained bYphonin& Ute Internal Revenlte Service's forms number: <800> 242-4N'5· ' wages war against its •.• 1'avla1s, alimony paid and f188bility lnc9flle own people. f exclusion. '" . , Daily Pilot, P.O. Boz 156-0. Costa Me~a . CA 92626. A.! "There is a spirit of · • . Itemi1ed Cleductions lnclude medical and '"a"y Letters~ ~liblf 'Will ~wern(. bl't,phqntd Soliaan y a roaa In the --~.b ra1 --vx~s-e I taTe-r,-tntel''e-S t . 1nq141nes or letters "01 Incl . I~ rtaikr's full world today that no co~ribut.ions, casualty or t~ '~ssea and "amt. address and b~u 1toun · phone rwml>tr physic a I force can m ellaneOOs deductions.-J · -eaMot be co~~. Thl3 eolum" 0J"1'or1 dmly ez· c r u s h • • • h e s a i d temizin« deductions ts not required by c~ Sundays " Wednesday. Feesra¥ed LOS ANGELES <AP > -The various f~ to apay and neuter animals at county clini~s were raised by $3 to help offset the cost of the clinics. 414 WHITE FIR SITlOO(h 4 s1des 8' Long PEELER POLES 8' Long 112 FURRING STRIPS 8' Long \ s5&9 each 1 x &ROUGH ~REDWOOD FENCE BOARDS 6' LOOO s119 each f, "I l ) l I • , 7~%."0FF L WINTER ITEMS '. I SFA"s Final Winter Clearance ... Vi to 2/J Off Original Prices* ... on' Special Selections from Women's Men's, Children's and Fashion Accessory Collections. • 1n1e-rrnM1ate price reductiotls may ha~ been made prior to this sale. All sales • final >uth Coast Pl.i1rJ, JJJJ Brrstol rreet. (o~ta Mesa GOLD CARD from WEJGHT WATCHERS " WILL REDUCE YOUR -Y FEE TO ONLY SJ.GO A ILABLE ONLY UNTIL JAN. 31. 1982 Hm'•HOW 1. IN BEFORE JAN 31, 1112 AT A REDUCED RATE ONl Y t 11.00 (wf1h uupon below). ENO 12 CONSECUTIVE WEEKllY MEETINGS THE REOUl.AA FEE OF ONl Y H PER WEEK. JH1N ON YOU PAY ONl Y SJ PBt WHI( UN11l DK. l1. 1m AS lONG AS YOU AIN YOUlt-UME REGISTIATION NUMB. .. • \ YOU llAYS TO DO -NO CIOlftllAC'l8 TO-..--< NUS -IF YOU ACT NOW I Singer.- sues police MILWAUKEE <AP> -Punk rock singer Wendy 0 . Williams, saying she was a victim or a "pei-vasive cli,nate of brutality " b y Milwaukee police, riled a multimillion-dollar lawsuit against officers who arrested her for an allege dly obscene performance a year ago. The lead singer of the Plasmatics said she was beaten and sexually assaulted by officers outside the Palms nightclub Jan. 19, 1981. •'Today marks the firs t anniversary of a night in my life that I will never forget," Ms. Williams, 32, said. ; She was arrested for violating a city ordinance by making obscene motions while performing. The charge later was dropped , a s were charges or battery to an officer and resisting an officer. A jury found her manager, Rod Swenson, 36, innocent last June on a charge of resisting an officer. Attorney Peter Donohue, representing Ms . Williams, Swenson and two other members or the Plasmatlcs, said the suit seeks "about $4 million to $5 million" a n d names seve n officers, plus unknown officers involved in. the arrest. M!l. Williams wore ber familiar Mohawk haircut With blond sides and an orange stripe across her head. Tips as~ed on faulty rwzzles LOS ANGELES CAP> -The South Coast Air Quality Management District is u..i: g in g motorists to teport faulty gasoline vapor I recovery nouJes to help I its dozen inspectors enforce a new state law. T h e mandatory rubber nozzle enclosures are intended to trap gasoline fumes for recycling. The new law reQ\iires defective ones to be tagged for non-use until they're repaired and re-inspeded. Gas dealers who don't comply could have their operating permit revoked, AQMD Chairman Tom Heinsbeimer said. Conceding that AQMD inspectors couldn't cover tbe 8,000 stations ln the district, tte <asked motorists to rel)ort p r o b I ems 'w it h a n aaonymou• call to a.Ma-40a0. ... Or.nge CO.t DAILY PtLOT/Thuraday, January 21 , 1812 "ecru~ter sells _kids on Navy with video games ~ .. '. ·~" I' ::1 .. ~! I .. N ow is th1lowest tar lOOs. But it's easy to see why some people think the right answer'!s Carlton. Carlton s beep advertising itself as lowe.i;tfor a very long ttme. AT\'1, lnjact, at one ti.me it~. But ~ ' e is long gone. LoQk __ the cftart OJl the rtghtnnd seefor yourself. The truth is that today, Now lOOs Sq[t Pack, • •• 'I I l I I ,. ' I ' . .. flndln1 recruits are parents and the lrtends ot kidrt've already put in." Ms. Rted, whose pareata both served In lbe Navy, aald abe taket' advantage or the fact that most recruits are searchln1 either for a Job or "a chance to 1et out of\own." "The biggest thlna for the malet lt the travel," Ma. fteed ..... Mlott el -it::llllD them are about lt toll aftd tM)t-alk me rhrht away, 'Can I •el oa • slalp'?'T 1 But 20 or her recruits were women, most or whom were older and lookln1 tor careers they weren't fandinc In the private sector. Woman'• will bene/ita town at 2 mg, contains less than hall the tnr ol Carlton lOOs Sof1f'ack, at 5 mg .. (ls any cigarette with 5 mg of tar even seitously' comp~ttngjor the title oj"lowest?"J And Now lOOs Box is by jar and away lower in tar than any other lOOs whatsoever. Which is the lowest lOOs? No need to guess-Now. -•t ' NUMBEftS DON'T LIE. NOW lOOs ARE LOWER THAN CARLTON lOOs. NO ) • I L_.j 2 rn n <).<JI rn • CARLTON 5mg 5mg lmg All tar l'l.lntlers are <N per cigarette by FTC melhod p s - ... ' ... ,, • .. ~ .. . . ~~· ·. . . . { ' 80JC. BOX 100'ti ~tts "'9ft 0.01 mg. "tlf. 0.001 mg ..... SoFT PACit.•i ftlT-.· ... ~ MENTHOL 1 ll'lg. "ti(', O.l mg. nicotinl. SOFT Nett m'a FtlTfR. MENTtflt. ~ mg. 0.2 cnt. nicoinl. IN. I* a.-tt by "'......... • • ' b 2 . 2 n I/ 0 2 ,, q !) y 6 ., 0 !') I ) ·1 ) .. . - Or1n99 Cout DA&l. y PILOT tThUfldav. Jan"ary 21' 1812 -~-....... Actress warn.-~r li:iWJ FOnda decrees no drugs, no alcohol • NEW YORK <AP> -Aclretl Jane Fonda 1ay1t if her cbtldTtn ever experiment with dru11 or aJcobol, "l'U take them rl1ht down to the hoapllal. to the floor where all the burnt.out kids are" to show them lhe consequences. Accordlna to an article In Februart• Ladles' Home Journal, ber rule for Vane.ssa, 13, and Troy, 9, is: ··No dnaca and no alcohol at any time. Absolutely none." As for sex, Ma. Fonda said, "Both or the children know lhe physical part of It. But lately I've tried to tell Vanessa how beautitul sex can be if you love lhe person you're wilh." Ms . Fonda sai d she was determined that her children will not experience what she said was the alienation she felt as a child. "Telling lies and showing off to get attention are the mistakes I made that I wouldn't want my kids to llve up to his 1tand1rd1." She sa.ld her father "II a very taciturn, Int roverted, ahy, non·demonstn1tive kind of peraon. That kind or person isn't the eulest parent t.o have. But there's one thin& I feel now. and that is lhat he loved me very much. Very, very much." Animal cruelty charge• levied BRISTOL, Conn. (AP> A dalr)' farmer was charged with cruelty to animals after authorities round 23 Holstein cows dead or starvation and 87 others in the herd in poor condition. THAT'S FINAL Actress Jane Fonda make," she said. "I was terrified of my father." she said of her upbringing by actor Henry Fonda. "I was afraid ol doing something.to incur his disfavor. He was a powerful figure , a perfectionjst. God help us if we didn't The animals had been given no water and no food for at least rive days "and not much of anything for a long time before that," said Frank lnUno, chief or h•w enforcement for the Connecticut Humane Society in Newington. clowns a bit with her son Troy. 9. to reinforce her warning against use of drugs and alcohol. If they experiment. she said s he will take them to a hospital where all the burnt-out kids are. Warren S. Roberts, 45, described as the caretaker of his family's farm, was charged with 23 counts of cruelty to animals. Coffee said OK .for moms-to-he BOSTON <AP) -Pregnant women can drink coffee without harm to their u'nborn babi.es, even ~houg)\ the government has warned them 'W -avoid caffeine, Harvard researchers say. Althouah the three.year study found that women who dr1nk a lot of coffee are more likely to give birth prematurely and to deliver SR\all babies, the researchers said these problems were caused by smoking, a habtt common among heavy coffee drinkers. In September 1980, the Food and Drug Administration advised pregnant women to avoid caffeine, because the stimulant causes birth defects in rats. The agency had noted lhe effect of caffeine on infants was unknown, but advised expectant mothers to be cautious. .. While further evidence is beinc gathered on the possible relation of . caffeine and birth defects. a prudent and protective mother-to-be will want to put caffeine on her list of unnecessary s ubstances which she should avoid." FDA Administrator Jerry Goyan said at the time. In the new study, Harvard Medfcal Sc hool doctors surveyed the cotra-drlnkiftl tiablts orIZ.~women who gave birth at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston between 1977 and 1980. "'Our findings do not show adverse 9>..4 • DINNER 1.99 WHITE STONEWARE MARSELLA 8 '11 • SALAD 1.49 7• PASTRY 1.09 6Yt •CEREAL BOWL 1.19 CUP & SAUCER 2.29 DINNERWARE From Spain\ Charming white dinnerware has graceful, molded leaf·llke border. effects of coffee consumption but do add to the data indicating that smoking is associated with QQorer pregn.aocy outcomes," the researchers wrote in an article published in today's New England Journal of Medicine. "It may be more difficult to persuade women to quit smeldftg than to change their coffee-hablf!f, but the benefits from smoking ceuat.too programs are more likely t.o be reaJ," they said. · Of the women studied, 43 percent said they drank coffee during their pregnancies, but onlr s percent drank four or more cups a day. These heavy coffee drinkers were three times more likely to be s mokers than those who avoided coffee. CHOCOLATE TONES STONEWARE 1---A_PP_ro_x_. 1-2-· ><-1-2-· ------1 6 .. tall 10% oz. 1.59 CLEAF\ RUFFLED TEMPERED GLASSWARE From Spain Compliment the beauty of gourmet fare! g• DINNER • 79 1• SALAD .69 &•;.•SOUP DISH .79 DINNERWARE From Japan Border stripes go from the darkest to the lightest tan on a creamy oatmeal background. 1o v,· DINNER 2.99 7'12 •SALAD 1. 79 6 'I•• B&B 1.29 6'!. ·CEREAL BOWL 1.79 1.99 6oz. MUG CLEAR GLASS TUMBLER TRIO From France . For y~ favorile mlneral water, soft drink or shake. _ _.-..._,,.....,_ 't~~~ 12 oz. 5% • tall .79 8 oz. 3'11" tall .55 SPARKLING CLEAR STEMWARE FROM CHAMPAGNE TO SHERRY r.----1\a From Holland and France Gracious glasses for toasting or tasting. SHERRY •'I.· tall 5 oz. 1.39 BURGUNDY ...-.....~-.... CHAMPAGNE OR SHERBET PINOT NOIA 6V1 • tall 11 oz. 5 'I•· tall 7'/a oz. 1.49 5V> • tall 6 oz. /'9'.~11'1"• 1.89 HANDCRAFTED TEAK ACCESSORIES NAPKIN FrCfTI Thailand RING • Smoot'h~ flnl1hed 2• wide ~"" teak accesaorles 89 add natural • · · ei.gance to the ~ ., .... ,_, BOWLS eon· dla. 3'n" deet> 10.99 5V. • dla. 2" dMp 2.89 FUME BLANC 6" tall 8 oz. 1.89 1.89 COTTON BATIK PRINT TABLECLOTHS From Pakl1tan Spla1hy bold print• In aasorted color combination•. aa· dla. 19.99 54• >cao· 14.48 STAINLESS STEEL FLATWARE FROM NATURAL TO COLORFUL COLORED ENAMEL With full tines .nd bra11 riveted detailed handles. RED', BLUE, YELLOW, BROWN OR BLACK 1.49 each piece From Japan . DIR•CTL Y ACROSS P-ROM SOUTH COAST PLAZA OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK IUlttTLY WEIT OF llllTOL AT 1111 IUMFLDWEll (TAU lllllTOL EXIT Off 405 FllHWAY) YllA • •AITll ~ •TIUPllM II ...... • Allft.l FMI ....... ••• TO Fiii. 10 l.M.-1 , ••• IAT. 11 l.M.-I P.M. IUI. 12 llOOll-I P.M. • Whale watch Cruises WEEKDAYS 10AM WEEKENDS 9:30 AM & 1 :30 PM Leaving from the --MllLllll Adult~ SR. Children SS . (7 14) 673·5245 FREE! SAVE 25%-50%-d . 15% & MORE!. Oothlng, Jewelry I Accessories & Much Morel Now that the holidays are tver ... LOSING EIGHT AND KEEPING IT OFF • A free seminar featuring Lawrence T.P. Stifler, PH.D .• director of Behavorial Medicine for the Institute for Health Maintemence, Boston. Thursday, January 28, 7:30 p.m. Loyola Marymount Auditorium 480 South Batavia, Orancie For reservations or further information. call the Orange County RFO Medical Group, (714) 776-7_777 . Timeless and perfectly timed HOWARD FOX ... Spectator Perfect for winter vocation -or and fashion adaptability this spring .. "Apron Spect.Wr" Navy or Spoftlng Brown Cett with W..... CaN Yamp elso Blade P ... ntwlth White C•" Vamp. AJi4IVI. •• 6 to 10 AAA. .. .5"'1 lo 10 M .. 5 lo 10 A .• 5\..c.i. to 9V2 .... 3V, to 10 . it'6 ~~--r~"'i~ SHOE~-.__, 99 Fashion I stand ... Newport Beach ... 759-9551 ' Capezlo's super Hollday Sate hos Just begunl Only twice yearly do we offer these very special price reductk:>ns on Items from out regular stock. These Include selecied Copezlo, Bal')dollno, Bass, Nino and other quoltty designer st\Oel, M excntng cooec11on tor you In 1982 ondlt'~~ I :::l , State drink· becomes sour issu &qr'!"lj,ght• 'iiri ' ,~sembly ~-.~~~ dnto1. Oh1o (AP> -A minister la fl1htln1 a pri to llOld IMtMr volunletr fireli1hters' NEW TRIAL -Cult deprogrammer Ted Patri c k will be released from San Diego jail thi s weekend and taken to Ci ncinnati, Ohl6, to s tand tria l on a charge of kidnapping an Ohio .. woman. His c urrent term is-f<H" kidna pping another woman. Bill would make le~onade Maryland's official beverage ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP> -A proposal to make peppermint le monade the s tate'• official drink Is a sour proapect for some legislators, but Its sponsor says lemonade can be "as sweet as you want." ·'Some people have asked, 'Frank. why don't you make bourbon the official drink.' I've said, I want everyone ... to be able to participate In the drink.'' Del. Ca\herine I. Rile suuested milk or apple ckter. I c~v on ~ereJbecauae he says he saw "sin ·and c on" durln1 th., la•t one, 1ncl11ttln1 drinkln1 a " lf.nak~ ladteil." r lftte Rev. James J.AwlJ ol the 260-member Harv~t Temple Church In Clyde said the last conve~Uon happened ~o :J.aU 09 hi• first day in town, ,-nd he vowed u.ari \n.& lf plans were ever· m•~e p> hold another bne in Clyde, he'd tt1ht it. 'J';ewis packed a Clyde city e<>uncil meetin1 at to.wi hall Tueadl)'• Di&ht with about 100 people i>i)"PosC!Cl to allowthg the Northwest Ohio Volunteer f'4li~·s Association to gather in this community of 1.~ij(j people ift t~er ol ~*· . r./'This ill U.hottes~thJDl'to hit Clyde since the p~le tried to•recall JI member of town council a !•~years back '-r don't remember who," Lewis l ewis led, memb~rs of his independent rut\ mentalist congregation to the town hall on a sn~ night to battle what he calls "three days of . sin add corruption.'' He. laced some foes, l~ by volunteer Fire Cllhtf1DOn Moyer. , · · ' ;'Moyer acknowledged that the tast firefighters' co~yw~on in Ol_xde -1n 1973 -gave the event a ba4f.f.ri"1e. Bur be said the 1athering earned $13,600 for new equipment.-·and that motels and camp&rounds profited. ; •""H•-acknowledged that the firefighters drank ~er and ran fire engines, sirens screaming, well i~to the night. · But he said the minister's other charges are hearsay. . ~ But Lewis said he saw enough on his first day i Clyde. - "I was coming to town for the first time with ray wife," he said, and found the convention under .,;ay. "lt was a Sunday morning and there were beer e'ahs all over, people drunk in the streets and "'111-nakect ladies with their arms draped across ~en in firetrucks. , ~ "I thought,' 'Man. this is r,eally a good place f,tr a church'," he said. "I told my wife right then, ii this convention ever returned to town, I'd fight ii. ~ "We've already had the convention here twice "1 20 years -that's enough," Lewis said. ~ Lewis told the five-member council he doesn't want a lot of drunks on the town's main street. f.a yor Patrick Wlld:>worth halted debate and said e council would ~ecide later about whether the refighters could COJ'lle to town. ; . The firefighters' meeting this year is theduled in Gibsord>urg tbe Ullrd weekend' in ne. Gibsonburg, another northwest Ohio city. s a populatio•M~f 2,5C)O, .. Gibsonburg Fire Chief Carl Paul says he doesn 't a nticipate a ny problems fr.om a n est'tm~ed S,000 to 7,000 firefighters and guests. Iainted water told "rr • t l ' · tw • -ATLANTA -Pul)O~ health officials say there r~ 50 outbreaks of disease associated with ~inking water in the United States in 1980, the largest number of cases since a surveillance program was launched a decade ago. -The increase, however, probably was the result of more complete reporting, rather than a e in the actual number or cases, the national nters for Disease Control ireported . ., ~q ResburMt Ir U.U-5tGft A Dining Tradition Since 1922 Serving Lunch & Dinner Reservations Suggested 645/1077 ,. Exhibit & Sale Directly :·.; -r Fr0m Peru 1---~·--~ ... (23 & 24;-l-04pm- Native Peruvian · Folk Art Weavings • Baskets ,. Carvings. • .. Oolls • Masks • Much. Much More! EBELL CLUB HOUSE 515 W. l•oam.cl.. llAaa. CA IOll l•o• r..-...a.1 17141 621·3214 ' If you don't want to drink- That's our business MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Call 642-2734 --=::iiii...."- Princess Cruise to Acapulco for two plus $1500 in BankAmerica Travelers Cheques Sony Betamax SL-5000 Video Cassette Recorder Zenith 19" Color Telr1ision ,Del. Frank Conaway, who offe red samples of his favorite recipe , told the H o use Enviro nmenta l M atte r s Committee he was serious abo\lt his bill. He said lemonade s hould be t he s tace drink because it was for everyone from chjldren to old folks. Other legislators weren't so sure. ''My biggest concern is that people would leave the state with a sour tas te in their m o uth," sai d Del. Paula Hollinger. And Judith C. Toth said it would be better to have a state drink der~ed fro111 Maryland products. "You have to select .pne, responded Conaway . "N matter wtuch one you pick someone will want somethln else." Duplexes includ LOS ANGELES (AP) -I three.judge Superior Court: pane l s{lys Los Angeles' 51, duplexes are covered by the (:ity ren t cont.rot l a w, settling contradictory Munielp4l Court rulings . IRA+ ___ ,_ ---~ ~-~J~ your Individual Retirement Account; ot Bank of America. While you're there, enter our IRA PLUS Nest Egg Sweepstakes. You could win $50,000 in cash.,Or a Princess Cruise to Mexico: Or a Sony Video Cossette Recorder. Or one of over 1,000 other prizes. WHY IRA PLUS? A lot of financial institutions offer IRA actounts, but only Bank of America offers IRA PLUS. With IRA PLUS you get a choice of high interest investments. --AA-exomple-of-ol'le-0!.0IH' investment options: 16 000/_ Current • / 0 Annual Rote 18 IV\on1hs Term Rote is subject to change but is fixed at time of account opening for the term of the invest· menl. Minimum deposit 5500. Substantial interest penalty for eorly withdrawal. NO FEES Unlike many IRA accounts, an IRA PLUS investment at Bonk of America is free. You'll pay no set-up or mainte- nance fees for IRA PLUS, so your earnings potential won't be reduced . And you'll hove the added security of knowing your retirement funds ore protected by the safety of California 's largest financial institution. FREE CONSUMER REPORT Stop by any Bank of America branch and sign up for the IRA PLUS Nest Egg Sw~l'~tpkes: Whil~ .Y.<?.u.'r.~. there, we'll give you our consumer report, "Understanding Individual Re- tirement Accounts:' It's yours free for the asking. WIN $50,0()0 That's the Grand Prize, $50,000 in cash. And it could be yours, so enter now. Imagine what a help that would be for your .retirement Nest Egg. The Grand Prize drawing will be held in April. WIN A CRUISE A luxurious Prihcess Cruise to Acapulco for two .. Seven enchonted- doys in the sunny tropics. Includes First Closs sta teroom, all meals and enter- tainment aboard ship. Plus $1 ,500 in BankAmerica Travelers Cheques. Monthly drawings wi ll be held in January, February and March, and three trips will 9e given away~* MORE PRIZES In additio n to the Princess Cruises, we'll also be giving away over 1,000 prizes in the drawings: 15 Sony Betamax Video Cassette Recorders, each with 24 blank tapes. 30 Zenith 19" Co lor Televisions. 45 Kodak Colorburst 250 Instant Cameras. 75 General Electric AM/FM Radio Cas- sette Player/Recorders. Plus 900 deluxe pictorial books, "The Beauty of California:· Stop by your neigh- borhood Bonk of Ame rica, branc'h and enter today; the sweepst~ ends April 15, 1982. "'-t BANKOF AMERICA "With certoin e11ceptlon1; withdtowols mode before · cg. 59112 ore subjectto to.11 penalties. · ••Ship it Bri tish registry. Prize does not cover ilen\• of o personal notvre. • I Sweepstakes runs from January -4, 1982 to ,.pril IS, 1982. Persons must be 18 years or'older to enter or win. You need not bt o Bonk of Ametlc:o custome r, nor open on account lo enter sweepstakes. See detoils Ol\d offic~I rules at any Bonk of America bfonch. Cl992 BANK OF AMefltlCA NT&SA • MEMl~R FDIC Kodak Colorburst 250 Instant Camera General Electric AM/FM Radio Cassette Player/Recorder Deluxe 'fttoriol Sook, "The Beauty of Califo(rio" Orange Co11t DAILY PILOTfThuraday, January 21, 1982 , (, • .,.~ CONTRABAND -Honolulu Zoo he rpetologist Sean McKeown shows off 13-foot Burmese python illegally brought into Hawaii last fall. Hawaiian law permits onJy two srtakes in the islands and both are res idents of the Honolulu Zoo. Snakes are not native to Hawaii. Midnight ride loses to budget BOSTON <AP) -Massachusetts' citizen tax uprising, called Proposition 2~, is threatening the annual re-enactment or Paul Revere's midnight rid e. · The North End Allied Veterans Council. which s p o ns ors the a nnual parade and ride commemorating Revere's midnight dash 207 years ago. has received word that the city can no longer afford the April 19 celebration. "'I hate to see this thing go down the drain for a few measly dolla rs," Philip D' Alessandro. adjutant or the veterans groYp, said Wednesday. The group wanted $4 ,000 to put on the event, including $600 to rent three horses and costume the riders . However , because or th e city's well-publicized budget squeeze, it cut its request to PA tJ L REVERE $2,000. D'AJ essandro says D ep ut y M ayor Ka therine Kane sent him a letter saying they would get nothing. ·"This is a PR thing by the mayor just ror drama." rume d City Councilor Frederick Langone, who is often a t odds with Mayor Kevin White. "It's too bad be has to pick on s u c h a n important event." D' Alessandro said that as long as anyone can remember, the city ha s picked up the expenses of the parade and ride on Patriots Day, which is a state holiday in Massachusetts. On April 18, 1775. Paul Revere left Boston to wa rn patriots that British troops were marching to Concord to destroy rebel weapons. William Dawes and Dr. Samuel Prescott made the ride by a diffe rent route. The next day, the British and the Minutemen traded shots at Lexington and Concord in the opening battle of the Revolution. The city says it cannot finance the re-enactment because or Proposition 21 2, a state law passed by the voters in November 1900 that severely limits the amount of money cities can collect through property taxes. So far Boston has dropped nearly 3,000 workers from its payroll -including police and fir efighters cut back on street cleaning and -Uu·~~~whol~t~ departments. ·'The Offi ce of Publi c Celebrations has Its budget a lmost entirely eli minated for the remainder or the fiscal year," said Mrs. Kane's l.eUer. "Financial sponsorship from the city of Boston for you r parade will no longer be possible." Langone said he would introduce a Ci ty Council resolution demanding restoration or the parade money. And if that doesn't work, he said he will try to get enough private donations to keep It going. "This is certainly not an economy that is going to resolve the fiscal crisis that exists in the city," Langone said. "This celebration is without doubt one of the most famous in our country." Each year. a parade starts at City Hall and wends its way past colonial graveyards, where members of the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company lay wreaths on the graves or Revolutionary patriots. It ends al a statue of Revere behind Old North Church, where a man in colonial garb rides off to retrace Reve re's route through the Boston suburbs -although Revere actually began his ride on the opposite side of Charles River, taking his cue from a lantern hung in the church tower. Meanwhile. the other riders leave from another part of the city. "If it's an election year, the mayor attends and gives the rider some scrolls," sending the city's greetings to com munities along the route. O'Alessandro said. Park revenue down LOS ANGELES (AP> -The new vehicle entrance fees at Grilfith Park will generate only half the revenue normally expected by J une 30, according to the Department or Recreation aftd Parks. In order to ortset planned layoffs and service cutbacks, the Department of Recreation a nd Parks on Oct. 1 impleme.nted a $1 fee to use the park on Saturdays, Sundays and holidays and a SO·cent fee during the weekdays. During the firat three months the fees wen! -~lle~ed r~Ymuea totaled $139,296 _and_shoulcL -reach-$800;000 by June: - $3 billion divorce suit filed M it chelson repr esenting ope of Saudi bi lli onaire's three wives •· LOS ANGELES (AP) -Attorney T~ey wero married when she was 15." has been "settled amicably," and part Marvin Mllchelson h11 riled wbat he Mrs. Al·Faasl, now 23, a 1trUlln1 of the a1reement Is that the terms not called the lar1esl divorce action In brunette with blue eyes, sat bealde be disclosed. history, seeking some $3 bllllon In Mitchelson In hi• office aa he announced .. Asked It the settlement n1ure was community pMperty from a Saudi the lawsuit. However, on his advice, she large, Mltchelson said, "I'm 1mllln1, Arabian sheik. declined comment. aren't I?" Al the same time Mlt.chelson, who Mltchelson said she ls probably a Khuholal's attorney, Joseph Ball, speclaUzes in celebrity divorce cases, citizen ot Saud' Arabia al this point, but reached by phone, als~declined to aay announced Wednesday that the divorce there was some confusion because she how much Mrs. KhashoHI will receive. which previously had been the largest was born in Bel1ium. She and AJ -Faasi "ll's nothJnt like what she was ukln& hae beensettledoutofcourt. have three sons and a daughter -two for," Ball said. "He bas made a Both cases involve Saudi Arabian adopted -who are now s, 4, 3 and 2 1ratultous payment to her. Ju.st because billionaires, and the new laws uit is years old. They are all currently with •he is the mother of his five children." against Sheik Mohammed Al-Fassi, their rather and his other two wives. Mrs. Khasboggi, who took the veil of who made headlines by painting wildly Victoria and ApUsam, at the Diplomat the Moslem faith when she manied - colored sexual details on statues in Hotel in Hollywood. Fla., Mitchelson Khashoggi as a teen-age~-. claimed her front of his Beverly Hills mansion. said. hus band obtained a proxy divorce The Superior Court suit on behalf of The lawye r noted the re are without her knowledge, cul her off Sheika Dena Al·Fassi, claiming that the similarities between the Al-Fassi case without sufficient Cunds and barred her 27 ·year-o ld sheik Imprisoned her and the other la rge d ivorce action he from seeing her children. Mitchelson repeatedly, s~eks to have his two other filed two years ago against Saudi said all that has been resolved, and marriages dissolved and to obtain half Arabian billionaire Adnan Khashoggi. Mrs . Khashoggi now sees the children ANOTHER SUIT - Marvin Mitc helson has filed a $3 billion divorce suit on behalf of Saudi sheika. of all communit¥ property, which In that case, Soraya Khashoggl, a regularly. Mitcbelson estimated at more than S6 British·born beauty who bore five ~;;.._--'----------------------- billion. children by the arms tycoon. sued for For complete ad copy and art ser vices "He is still married to all three $2.5 billion, half his fortune. After women," Mitcbelson said. "This is months of litigation. California courts advertisers all along the Orange Coast contrary to California law. They are refused lo accept the case, saying I •1 p•1at ... We feel Sheik a Dena is the only Mrs. Khashogei lived most of the time. rely On bigamist and polygamist marriages jurisdiction belonged In England, where II y I rightful wife. She was the first wife. However. Mitchelson said the case leMleetWewey o-llty ..., .... Ml. M~Cvt ..... c:-1 .. Cut ~178 • •2•• Boneless Roast '::::t::::' "'1" Fresh Beef Blisket ~~i:. • •11• Sliced Beef liver -"99' -Hen Turkeys --,..,..."..,. .. 79' ..... :::r Te Roasted & Salted Peanuts I .. '1" ... Tomatillos 0.•A .. . 69' *•<r~ Fresh Mushrooms •···· 'l.i '1" ·~· Alfalfa Sprouts ..:.:.. .... 69' Red Potatoes i::.1• " 45' California Ruby Grapefruit " 29' Fresh Cilantro _.29' I London Broll Steall ~.1•• Safeway Ham Patties C:.::. ~'1" Premium GrCllfld Beef -... !~ • •1at Beef Back Ribs ~..:~..:" • 88' ' little Juan Burritos ---:." ~35' Salmon Roast ~ ...... .__ , . .,. ......... "11u Green Cabbage ~.11· .... -;mo SunMald Raisins ""' 111t ... SunMald Apricots ... s22• ... Artichoke Hearts "•••_JlllH ~99' Safeway Grapefruit Juice ~ •1·~ Fresh Tofu t:; ... 7ge~ 4-lnch Primrose ·--, .. 89' Pom Pom Bouquets --· 122• ~139 Margar ne c ............ ..,3 I 0 1-ltt. Corten 1.-1.-0... ...... DAIRY AND FROZEN ':: 59' · •Lucerne Cottage Cheese _11 .. •0t-anoe Juice 5clll0 ........ 'f: 79' ~-1'1 •Danish Melt-Away .. -:;.. • ~ 89' •Grainbelt Dill Rye ... ~:; 89' •or• •Farmstyl1tRolls .. :\ 59' ..... •Duncan Hines ""' ....... 99' .... •Gallo Spanada • " 11" ·~ .... l• •Jacare Wines ·~--. .,....._ 2 ·~ 1700 ...... •TableWine ...... .......... ·-2 . 1700 . ... •Whitelaw Vodka ....... '" 15u -.... •otdCrow '*T,.':...,. .,~ '9" .... Almaden Wine •IMM•lv""""' •Vin ·-• O..ltllt •Lucerne Sour Cream °""' 111s ~Sunny Delight c ..... .... '1'' ·-"'"" ~Shoestring Potatoes ~ 1f.: 69' ~Chun King Egg Rolls ~ 99' •Chun King Dinners ·~ 11•• HEALTH 6 BIAUTY •ean Roll On Deodorant 2 ·s:.: 1211 •contac Capsules ;-,. •1n •Vicks Nyquil ""' !Ow •311 -... - • Vitamin C '°°"' '"'J:-.,--'2" • •ot •Safeway Vitamin 'E' --"' ..• 1411 ····------------... -•{\) _llf.IWil(OINll (\}-, __. = 1., .. 'AA' ar . I ·=-M ••• ·= . -I •ca..' ._ ...... ~ ... --........... fl\J• I \ ._, ...:., .... ..::s.":'i"'..:;. ';:.";;.. '-:'::.:" C:::... \ I ................... _ .................. lt.IJ, "" ......... c..Mooollo ,....,. ......................... Nim It ............... . .. '• lttt ..... DP .. ~IHdl • •U6M9.C..........,,L .......... ' .................... s...L,.... ............................ ..... L.M. Boyd inf 1 _onrtmhes 111.ly Pl.I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~:--~~~~--1 ----------.--..------·-·-·-··~s.. ....... -~ .... :::.:·~ ... ==:,_,~~~~~~~~~--~,--~ - --· •4fl1C..• .. •w......_.,., I ASSOtnD 'Amns ''KITCHEN SLICES''' PLUSH AREA RUGS 111"x30" half circle oreo 3-1 rugs by Alodd1t1. DuPont ~ n)'lon/Oocron8 blend, YOUR CHOICE rJI:,. , fOIMUC:M-.r SEBASTIAN I MOUNTAIN WINES REG. 4.19 2?'! CHOICE •CltHUS •Yltl IOll ...... , MEN'S HOODED ZIP FRONT SWIAT SHIRT llG. t .tt 7'' r-.......:..:.;.;.;.a-•__.11 Worm 011d 9ood looklng_ Slzu..S·Xl . •m•r• MAGI ·•u.a...•• • t! ....... ......,.._ ........... •11111 ............ Ora e Coast DAILY PILOT{Thuraday, Jenuery 21. 1982 All .. ~,., ''"'"'".. , •• , .. .-., ....... ""' ••Hltl\tttlll•91•CC ..... ..,cM}t ........... IUllW\l ... qlljf 0..lllllltllOll\le'M ""lllNll~•111_.••n•llltllll'i 11~1or11u..~1.-NtlM<1.dftll~~•"111Ckwlt,.iW.•wJf••l4tl"lil1111•tMle"""Nt11 1~1.,,.;1""" hu.c •• 111ss-e•~r CMI 1t.-.iri....ni 1or tie 11t111t llt"'°!Mtd" hu1t1111u......., ti-'~t 11111don1111 .ir ttcl•""'"''~ M Yle 01 I• tf«•ll oi;~ •• ••lift .. lllCl\U11lr INN ... IO \Mt'~ lliol_,t JEANNETIE GLASS MEN'S ,w OVER- ~THE-CALF TUBE SOCKS REG. 6.99 4!! ', ... MICIOWAVE & OVEN IAllWAIE Choice of 10" p•• plote or 1 •;, .quon deep loot pot1. Heat re1l1tol'll & eoty lo d eon. WHIU STOCIS LAST REG.-2 .1i 139 YOUR CHOICE MAGNIVISION READING GLASSES 4 stylet S mognifico hon.. Choice of fromH, scrotch re 1i1lont lentH REG. 12.00 699 TOUI CHOICE ·= 1 SUSUN BLUE SHAM,00 FOR DAMDIUff lfFERDENT DENTURE CUANSHS VICKS NYQUIL NIGHTTIME COLDS MEDICINE KERI THERAPEUTIC LOTION llG. 3s• S.64 11.01. SAU 21• "'° ... , llG. 3'' 5.3' 14·01. llG. 3'' 6.59 IJ·Ol. llG. 4.16 319 Gives your doe th• good nutrition Meded. .-TAI• YAlLO .,16MI ....... & ....... .. ,... .......... -. , ........... . ta f "· . . 2 ~A'2f 7 • 5 TIMEX ··~~~ TIMEX® DEPENDABLE ELECTRIC Al.AIM CLOCK Wlltteotytoreoddiol. 1 3'' Good voluel 17369, llG. •NII llAITI TUYll Wiii S • tt ... ,, .... 11, ...... " .. '"" COSTA MISA •W L IM -'"" .......... <-. ..119 ........ _ .... ...... <-- 30-GAL. PLASTIC TRASH CAN WllMSNAP-GNUD 5,, 9.49 Tough, durable trosh cons with molded cor rymg handles Sove. SNUGTREDS® PLUSH SLIPPERS Cush1ony upper & 299 non slip 1ole Choice ~E~:·l ~ ;~ PAIR CADBURY GIANT SIZE 5-0Z. 'CHOCOLATE BARS • 8roz1I N111 • Hazel Nvt 19. • Crilp • Frvit & Nvt C • Almond • Milk Chocolotf -TM IEG. 1.0t IA. -010tCt ..... ._ ....... WllTMllllTm .... , .................. . . ..,.... .. , \12 s Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, January 21 . 1982 It time for talks on leasehold issue <>11 lh1· 0111· hand \H' hiJ\T llw' I 1 '111,: t 'onwan). I undo\\ nl'J'. and 1111 t 111' oth(•1-. l h~· lea<l<•rs ol' Ttw Cotnm1lltw of 4000. who c laim t h1•\' rt'fH l'M'nl at h!a s t that man~ 1 t -.11h•11I'> wlw:-.t• hom1•:-. an• on l ,11HI h:u'>L'd l rom lhL· 1·ompan~ in ~,.,, 11(11 l Hl·ad1 ancl !n·11w f o1 ""ITil' \\ l't'I-. :-. no \\ I h L· I lllll l)illl\ ,llld l ht• ('lllnlnll ll'l' It .. \ r lit 'l'll lot'" t•<I in :1 \\a I' of \\ 01'.fh 0\ t'I' ll'iJ !->l' rt'IH'\\ al jtro' lt'tloth that urc t'om1ng dtw :'\1111wrous homl'O\\ nt-r~ ('I'\ l l1<1 l prnpo:-.<.>d llltl'l'<J~l·s in th.1• lan<I (to;i...,t•.., an· out ragl·nt1:--;.ind \\Il l furn· tlwrn out ol th1•11 hnnit·" po ...... 1111~ ut a ... 1i.:n1ltt.1nt 1111.l lll'till lu-.. .... ('on n•1·n ect <·itizc n s and c1v1c lt•adt•rs huvt• voltt•d hOPl' that the . issul' might bt• scttll•cf in somt' form of compromis t• tlwt would at least bc palu t ahll• to both ''des. That s ame urgi n g for 1·11mpromisl' ·trn:-. ht.•t.•11 l'XPl'l'~SC'<I Ill lhi_S S)H.ll'l' Yet to <latl'. mo:--l o l t h1• th ·c·laration:-. anct s µccl'he:-. or s t ;at C'ments of dews on the issue:-. h.' hol h sidci; aµpeur to h avt• bt'l'll (lirt:>ct cd to tht• t'itizcnry at lar¢e in both thl· <:itit•s of lrvi1w :ind '.'It•\\ port Heach. l n 1111' ( 'nn 1pan\ "Plll·a·-..nwn 1111 th1· 11tht·1· ha nd notl' that 11•1n.il It·•· in1·n•:1s1•'\ fnr th1• land 11·.1-..." .111· 111 co111'orm.1111·1· \\ 1lh ;1 t:111d ';iluc torm11Ja i11('hld1•<1 in t lw ongrn;il 11-;1:-.1• docttllll'llh and .1g11•1·d upon Ii~ ttw l1·a:--l'11oldl'r'- lt ";ill 1111 tlll' lip :111d lip Thcrt• woulrl SL't'm to hl' a l.1q.~l' mcas un• of log1l' to thl· -..ug).!est1011 that pcrhap ~ r l' p r l' ., l ' 11 I a t t \' l' .... o f T h l' Com mitt el' ol .lOOO ancl Tht.· I n ·i1w t 'om pan~ rl1 ~mount from tht•11· hi g h hors l'~. t•om1• o ut from behind the legal barn<:aclcs and .... 1t clown ..it a l<1bll•. fal'l' to fat·t'. t o Sl'l' ii the,· tall s1.·arth out irn ,· 1·om mon g 1"oun1b wh1.•11<.•in th~· "l'<:cl:-. of t•ompromist' mig ht lw pl :tntL'<I Decision risk t · .. n ts? p,,. l l!J ..... 11tl it had made its 1 , t• 1 1 .1rd11Jh w<.•1gh1ng the 1 !'ho"'' :ff(' t hl' \ cn h;1 .... tL 1":-.111·-.. B1·\ci11d that llll.'i·t· h;l\l' Ii l' c n a r g u m e n t s . t o u n t e r . argum l·nt:-. charJ!es a nd counter 1 harg(•o; and d etai l e d • mlwlll-..htnt•nh of th1· •~.,lie l'lt 1 011 t:h 11 a 11. 11 u nwr11u .... WL· think tl11 .... \\otilcl be .1 grand Hil-:.i ,\nd ii hoth s idt•:-. lcl'I the.' IH'ed ;J lll'Ull'al "Ill.'. \\ l' \\!Hiid tw h;q>p' to prm 111« that tahll• Terrorism hits home f ltll l'I ,I\• I-. .1 1111 11111 1(1•1 111'•1 .. 11 I I• It -.\ 111p.tl ll1t·-.. !._<I 11111 111 1111 • ,, \I p111 t l\1•.it !1 ..j.io..JI t'lll"' .111d -.111 t1I 11 1"111 t'h.11!1· ... !Lt \ Ill I , ... 1.1111 I ~ 1111l1l 1t\ tl I H It \\ lt11 \\ .t' Ill II tl1 I• t( I 111111 I I '1 'I 11 11 d I \ II II .1 I'. I I, , .. • t 1 l \\, l-.1111\1 t It.ti .ii I pt •t1pl1· 111 "II II.II 11111 111111 Ill lh.it '11111•\\ I 1·1 1.11111\: 1•1 \' ... 1d1•111 H ~:111 .(111 It~ 1•11·..;1d1·111 '.tlll th.11 ('111 I{ I\ I \ 1' Ill-, 11!1• Ill lhl llllt' llf dill\ I • , ... 1, , ... 11 111 It.id 1.tll1•11 Ill !111 Ii• "' h.11111· ,., , ... 1d1•111 1:1 ,1_.111 .1dd1" I lq 111',tl I II Piil Ill 111-. l,lfllf h I lw11 lw1 ... 1 \ •'1111'111 .111d 11!1 \'. 11111111 .11 I "' 111 ... 11111 1 d1•11•1 ... I 1 11\111 1 1•-.. 11111 dt•tt•l fllt:llltllll\ t1) I) lllJ• 11111 : 1111 I fl,ll l0t ".f.f l •I 1 ••11,l)I ,111d !JI'•'\ 1·1tl "lllld.11 1 •111 ol1••<.1111l11t11l1111 • ' ( • 11 •11tl1 Ill 11~11 1 111 lflt• I 1 I • ,1'111 ~ l t'I I 111 1-.111 ,11\cl .1 11 1.!'ll'l l'llll !It.ti fl.I' 1!1•1 11 , t'' l't'l'll'lll't•d Ill l't'('t'lll t lllll'!-> Oil ;1 '' 11r l1hnd1· h:1"'" 1t 1·ould h t· l.11rl\' Slll!).!l''ll•d I h:1t l'nl Ra~ d u! 111d 1·1·d f;1l l Ill hatllt• It 1:-. llw h.11t lt· ut :ill h11111:111 h1·111gs to h.I\ t' I ht• n c ht 111 ht• -.alt· I 1 nm t Ill' \ 111• .11·h 111 111 h1·r h11m:1n 1•1 vcl.11111·... 1'11 lw -..tit· •Ill th1• "I n·1·l-. .tlld t'\ I'll Ill I ht•ll t i\\ II 11111111·-. To h l· lr1·1· lr 11m I 1 ·I I 111' h Ill I 'nl U:I\ 111-.1 tu-.. 1111· t11 11w-.1· 11111 1 111 1•\ II \\ hH Ii lud ;I\ 1\1' t 111d Ill• 1'1'.l 'lll J.!I\ ,It 11\t' Ill 11111 '''Jllll'°'t'cll\ ('I\ ll111·d "'l'lt't \ It \\11tlld h1· 11111\ .1 -..m :dl 11\\',1-..1111• 11( 1·11111l11IL'lh'l' In I h11-..1· "h11 1111111111 hi-.. 1k:1t h hut 111 -.. (,,..., ... 111.1\ \\1·11 .... 1•n1·111 11111·11-..11 1 th1 • 1·rt i1 ·1-.. ol 11111• 1\\11 ion a nd :Ill h~1 ttnn:-. 1 o :--t ;imp 1111t ":1111011 :11•h ..uL ~'1'11r1:-.rn ~ "Stwh .wtion \\o\1 ld i11d1•1•d ,t•n·e a -, :i I 111 ing m~monal to Col. I{. I \ ... I 111. .111 d I 11 111-.. 11! t 1111.1 It. ,It 1 lflt'I' 11 S'o11t ll n r.1n~t· ('11unt' .... llo u:-.tnn. :"t'\\ Orl('ans. Ol'm't•r or 11'11 1.trtLJI and <·11m mt·rl'lal tw .... 1• S t•attlt· I•• 1 •111t11111v 111 l.!IO \\ llou:-.inj.! .it Htlt',\ dt.•1·larl'd tht• "eount~":-. \\ 1d1· r.111~·· •ti ('rt!'l'' 1111ht tw rn<'l us1nna1 ~ hou:-.m g progr<.1m . 1q11d1 •tl 1111 lht· \\fll'k torc·1• \\ht l'h rt•qu1n· .... dt'\'t'lopt•rs tn 1 •··ii• d 111 111.111 lh•· l''t>errHll'tl pn111d1• 25 pt•n ·t•nt of thC'tr unib • .11•.1111\ ·1n tht• .1l forclahll· rang1•. 1:-, a sl1·p. Are California's school ch1lclrcn h<.•111g s ubjected to unarccptabl'' nsk.., by reason of a recE>nt FBI d1•t'1'>1on" J ohn F Hrown. executive l>ecretan or lht· slute's teacher eerlif1ccH1'>n u~enn lh 1n k l> so. M a n y local i.choot superintendents acree. ! Their reaction tq the FBl's notice of a moratorium on lhe procesairuc of fingerprint ch ecks has be9ll an ancry one. Fingerprint checks by bpth the s tate 's B u reau of C riJn i n a l ld1•ntif1cution and the FBI have b<>1·n a routine requir<'d by state la" Hut in October the FBI. c1t111g ;1 27 day lug an Lh1s work, announn·ll 11 was suspending the service for one year d~rang which lime it hoped to devcl.op..a. s wifte r computerited read out. 1'he federal agency said it had notifl('rl Congress in its budget requests of 11.!S backlog and plan to rem dy it with lhe c urtailment or ser vices SCllOOl. OFFIC IALS ho\\cvcr. noting that the moratorium exceptPd · applicants for la-,v enforcement <1nd security guard jobrj: contended tha\ teacher &l>plicants li.Jetr.1&e shoaid,oa1e. been exempted: · , Brown sJlys he is worried about th~ d a m age that ceutd be done to the children during a wtrole veal' as a result or the decision. He said that more than To the Editor: The idea of the separ atlon or church a nd state does not appear in the Unitrd States Conslilution. nor an any or tl!- amendments. "The church shalt be separate from the state ... and the church '>Cpa rat1· Crom schools." "Congress s h a ll mAke. no l.tw r especting an csl<tblis hmcnl of rt•ltg1nn. MAILBOX or proh1b1ting the frel' l'XCr<"tst· t lwr••11t I h;i t -..1;1t1·nwnt \\,1:-. 11wcl1• hut not a t'lll'l'. for lht• an·a·., The first quote abcl\e t'i frnm th1 1 1 l n I I 1 h' :-1 1 h I~ t "I r 11· I housing nt'l'<b Sovi~l constitution'.. The second l!UOtL ,., ._.. __ ,.._. ... , ... 11 ... 1._,,_,.,,., .... , ... j_ ..... 1 ... ·• ... 11~·1 .. 1 _.R~il ... •.-:'?.__,; ... 11-· ... 1 ... 1 .. " ... 11..-u ... • ... 1----C:-il~(:>...,;tHl'-91 ... ! -:-.-111-4'··44tt--ttt~~~ __ _,""'ClfTf the-mtl -of• Rights·-' -m -t-'T1""ot 11-..1 11-.. .... 11111 -..pun:-.111 t•d h\ in the SOUlh tnunt~· tsn 't ·going ln Am endment to the rn1ted ~tatl':- "·•d cll1•l1:11·k ('ollL·gt.·..., S1:df dl'tl'rioralt' ""a n•sult of rapid Constitution I It•\ 1•lopml•llt I II ftC·t· <ll'\'l'lopml·nt . tnn1)\·atl\'t• methods This country wa:. rounnctl a ~ a ltili•\ :-.;url prott.'<·tion:--:--ho\\ a mu s t lw 11:-.t.'<I to ins ure th<il conslitultonal republic, with th<· c•onnpt I hous ing lll'C'cls arc met that its laws. rights, and privtl rg<'s p11t 1·1111a :!:.'i JH'l'<'t'nt tll('rl.':t~t' rn . . came from a higher powl'r 'Tht· I Ii• """' h r1n111l ~ s p o pulat 111n T h 1 s mt' H n s P h a s 1 n g Creator" God himself Man} 1·arl) 11,•l\\"t'll l'.IHll :111•1 1c.1c.1(l .·1--trans 1>0rtat1on. ho11 :--1n ., and · I I • -' , ,.., settlers, from the Pilgrims on. >c tl'vt•d 11pp11-...-d lo .111 l''>(pt:l'lt•c1 J:l!l mu n i<:i pal "l'l'\'l l'C~ \\ ith our country wa:. fo unded <1ccordmi:? to p1•11 ·1·11t pop11l;1t1on l'l"l' 1n till' indus tri a l a nd t·om mt•r<:i<.il God's divine plan. and they dc<lu•atNl 11111 t It 1·ou11l' tk\'elopmt·nl to Ill' ... urc one does themselv<.'s Lo helping 1l g row ac·c•tirrltng Th1'i ph.ennmen al gnm1h \\Ill not outslnp tlw other lo God's wi ll lw ;u·t·omp.m1C'd b~ i.1 11 tntTl'<t "<.' Cons 1<ll'nng the µreclieted of .itiou~ HI m1llton :--quart• f<.•et ul rale or gn)\\th clunng th<' m·xt 10 1111 wt.• a nd 1nclustnal s pa<'e in the ~ea rs. prov1:.1on:-. for ad<.·quale ....,,11th t·o11nt .' within lhe next JO hous ing wi ll hl' im p o:--s ible \ 1•;11·:--\\'tlhout C'On l.'l'rtcd. l'OOIH.'rat i\'C Rile) ... ~11<1 in 20 ~ <.«11·s. South l' ff o rt s b " a 11 I 1· v (.'I s of 1 lrangt• County 1dll h:t\'t' :i t raclt• g o\'er nm(•nt and t he• housing .1rt·t1 ~realer than l>.1lla:-. 11Hl11 o.;tr\· • Op1n1011<. Pxprr·<.sf'd 1n the '>P<lt f' dbOve are those of the Daily Pilot Other views ex- •,• • '1 on"' P"'-1' ''"' tflo .... 01 "''or dutflor., and arhsts Reaorr Lomment 1s mv11 ll Ac:ton·-. Tt1• ;,hltly PtlOI p 0 Hox l)b\) (O'>ld Me!>d, CA 91b'2b Phone U 14) r,.l/ IJ)I • LM. Boyd/Drinking water Sri v v9u ·re Jost 1 n.. a desert with n1)th0in~ but a <:antl!en or water. Should ,l7ou not sip it s paringly only .. ~ "1111 lll:ed 1l? Atl tales of fact a nd f1ctrnn ,,dicate Utat's the wax to go. In h <\nd. howe.-er. 1 s contrary counl>el Which s a(.f M . drink U <it>wn, lJcller lo carry\ it irt;-our bod~ than in u <'anll~ Cou d this be good advice? Mort• than 100.000 'villages in India uhou( 16 percent or them -have no 'inurcc of drinking water within a OR .. NGE COAST Daily Pilat m ile. So report. scholars who study the world's naturol r esources. Blame 1,1ncontrolled rloods and shirting water tables. Seem s incre dible . doesn'). it? . . In South Africa, the women of the ~mbo, the Fingo and the Nguni tribes are forbidde n to eat eggs. Belief is eggs a re so sexually stimulating to women that they who partake or same go mad, mad, mad for men. Thomas A. Murphlne Editor Barbera Kreibich Editorial Page Editor AS TO EDUCATION, th~ !Ir-;\ one-room schools were t augh l b~ God·rearing Christian tencherg 'Who used the Bible as a text. and later the almosl universal McGuffey Readers, fi lied with Biblical s torici; and morn I teaching. All of our firsl'instilul1on~ of hig her learning were founded by churches: Harvard. Yale, Princeton. •Wi lliam and Mary. Pomona. R<'dl~ndi. the list is endless You can bi! .,urc t he founden. be li eved , with Noah Webster. that ·· EduC'al1on w1thoul lhe Bible is worthlel's .. The American public has been stthlly "sold" a false doctrine . ll ls the USSR whose constitution decreos separation of churc h a nd state.. · • When our forefathers .referred ~ ihe s ubject . their mean ii:fg w as r,r different. They had observed thal in a country with a .nalional church. the co n centration o r pollt1clill a n d ecclesiastical i>ower is toe greail llence. they were vocal and adiu"t8J'lt tf1 t no single Umted States ehurch be foUDd.ed But it was understood th.al worsIDp °l}f God would undergird all actions or 'Officials In government. as well as tho!.e In every school and university You state < E4.llortal, Jan. 12) UWt tile Arkansas deelsion O\l~wlng ~•I Um for tcachina evoh.tlloa ·a.n~UC)h science was ". • , a proper ,. pf the Con1ttt0Uo n a~alnat. law "'\ ( Quote8 I "Llteratly, wh1\t no one know~ m thllr point is jusl how deep :a reccs<;lon we a r.e goin g lo be in." Treuury, Secretary Don~ld fte((an. l'n) "·" u n · J> i u ' "' I" tlt1 l.d1I 11 ,I I II' \\ 11 ' I I I • I l t •• , lt1•• • on : 111 • I• 1\ I • I, 111.1 '"' 1J11•1 11 I• I •• f I~ t ,. I •&1 t J J '~ ~ i t. I t !t • I f ' t: f I t ,.,;, fJ ~' tll ·!-., 1 ·, .. 111·1·1.., against the ) 11•1,1· •I 1111p1 ov1ng its service ) 111 ii t 1 111 l :JJ,!f'O('lt'l> l I " . ' ' \ I I I-\1 •• T t () de v e I 0 p 1111r1 , . ., for (' ec)ing • .q11.f11 .. 111i... thE> t1cef\siog 111 1 • d 111 ll11n1tltnl( req..,u~sts • . , , 1, "'' ,,, lh•· t1·,1t h('r ll<'ensing "' ••lt11 1 ,1;111·~ Hl':.pQnst· has • , 1111 I· 111 thcrrnurc. 'It was '• • ti 111.11 • ".1l ll()r111:i ts one of the •" · • 1 111111i• f1 ni,:t•rpnnt checks 11 f I •I lit , 111 I I• 1.1 .. 1 II it rntl LhC rt!l:.tt1vely few ,, 1111•1 '"" '' \1•.ir"ltu; question 1s • , l .1 ,,, ' >1• 1 h•·r t h<' Cafffornia 1 • 1 h• •\ "' 11·1 ct1ng Or 1s the • 'TT"""tr nm 1 tr:n 1 h r ofh C' r 'Slates ate ~ ... ,., : 11·-.~I • r1r11 1 1n protecting I j '1 '" lt•I • 1 h1• .in-;wer lo lhal is • 1 Ill .1111 have 1 ccommended tc 1111· tatt·'s t<'acher 11 h.1 ... 1nd1catt•d that tt I he '• .H ~ moratnnum '"'~' o1 ~· :! p•·r applicant •• th1~ charge ""ould •, J 1, • 11 11wn ,1.,t· 1n the fee~ 1t • l'I I• ;, ..... I; 1! I h•· r~t: {'Offi P<IOY IS Ir.; 11111 1 • 'offL·r ht:lp" to lhe l• 1 1 1111 ... 1·ommuntt) Could , 1•.1 , "'' 11 ain i.:u1I(? 'I•• 11• 111111<' Company 's " .111 •· 11 p .111 111 11u1 area may 1:.1tilt 111 them however. 111 l111 c1 t t hut they are 1 ~'•II ,. ... 1.11>lt'ohl·d. :.ptnled 1 111;11 ''ill wit ht· dttlated to ••I Ii• fnre1 gn run" Irvine • \\ \H fl EN JOHNSON ti JI Hll poliry 1•nl "'" ttl,tl tu, 111 •11 .. i. .,,.,} 11 · t.1 · ,,., 1. 1 Ji, I• J :.• t111I. .! j LJt.!Un.i CtllLl'n!> :ire so ... :.u!.t.t.:.!.....!b_lcl!.:..c...~it.. i'• , .....;~ __ ...;..;;....;.....:;-.......,.,,:'..:."-:-''..:;u'-_."""'..:.'..;.1.:..1. _h_..•l""f..;.'.;..;n""s.....;.to;;;_..;.;,o.:u_r_-tt 1n.n·l;1 1 11 .. • , lo•,, 1 l\ t111r•in~ Ii 11 1 • .,,., .1rC' makm~ no pro- h1 ... I • " I ',,,. I''""' lnlt 11111 Sl•C'rclJr\ Watt's 11 .. Id .111 ":-'I ,. .....i h'.1:-t·.., for oil 'and gas : I' .. fl I lr\I.!' .111d \111 ·1 1111•11 ll••l \\"I'll l.Ji;unu a nn Point 1 .. i...d 1•1l1f..1 I t1• · • 1 '11111 · 111 •·1n ,.,ions at least one W1111d f 11·1111 111 1 11..,11111 t• It""'' for t'alifofnia an· lht'tt •11• r.i • •,, . ' '\ 111•111i<•. \llL'rl~uscs :tre signed n·11 1 11 l'tl '" .J,, 11111<·h about averting . ~O HI \tit \•,11 \\1th 11·.1 l111lil I I .,. th II I 1\ ,. ,,. I'll II·" I t. •\• PUCI' .. h11111lri•1l<. 0111 'I ,, • "'•I ht'ltl~ lh1 f,ql llltll ht'I I'' It I "~ 1 hl' l1u ( 4 "" ''" II h .. 1 .. Hiii• I h. I h·· "I 111• I I!-> 110.\ ft• 1tlllllt' 1•1 1h• Pl {' .... Siil r pl 'I\ In It 1d 1s<.1w .fllltl Ir \111..: I 11 r • lh1• 1•11ftq1 Ill\ :qifu'll I" 111 l'llf t 1 I NhC'rs ·vhn ",. • tth'i• r '•• r I '" 111• • 1 ,, .. µ ... 11-"II .l)'.1111' I th· 1fl• I ho1n1·111\),,.,., '1111 '.111 '•I' •I/., 1 Jikc W11<>•l lr1 \\ ht111 I • 11 " l'roltt '" ()1?1 lh 111 ,. , ,1 " lh•·"o11l\111t (11111111, I• • l ...,, • •1 Co11r1'r11 la<·k i 11 µ Ttl tht• f,d1t 111 With iC~fll"CI fl lht• Ii\ tilt• I 11111p.111\ l("a~l'11<1ltll•r..,· ~1tu.1t w11, Jl \\llltlcl St• Ill to m f' th~11 uJ< th la~M.lll "'( thP (:"hmm1th:t.! of H'MlO~ j?t't" 1m1ler \.''a~. ,sptJ u ... t.wL'> Jncl llJ.?Ur•" •II thl 11 \ tni• C un1r>.tn" 11'1'. r>>\IPctl~I th~ j/1.,4 <i.111Hl ov••r.-11 l.11 k 1\f CUUcarn of (~1~ I l "'4~ lot Ith <"OmtrlUn•tv wiO ~ Plllr-hi.P" t l'lm1tl1 Of \()(\II Will plll\t' 1111 1\ th1• lqt or tit\' tCl•bt:l'J.? II) 11 \••I.ti 11111' IF 1'11 t: 1111nll•t1m1 nf th1 l r\llW C()°(n p1111.v '"'' 1· .1o,; 11,1•1111111(' ;ind sl'lf11 "" 1.16:lf10'-l' Ul lli1 ( 11m1111ll•'l' of •IOOO I r1111l • ti ,.:1 , l.111"11 of our l'Oastal re-' ' ...... . \\ 11 l I UYT a S:inta Barbara· I " I .1g 11n.1's bul>tness in" • f 11 11111 111.111 111· hfe the sea Ii• '''" llw ll{'lll'an·> To our : 111111.tl II• .11·hL''> the scuba "" • ,.._ th•· ,111 1 11dt·r~. !l\\1immers. even: II,•""'" 11• 111,l tlwrc to enjoy relax-' ''' rn 1111 1111" Or lht· ... cu view'! Will it, I• 1th.11wt ti h~ tm' 1·rini:? oil derricks on' )• , 11111, < 111 1111 hc·aches mi~ht be . p. ti 1p I 11t • lt'.1n1ng up tide pools is ' ,. J ,t' f \ ' 11~1, 111•1 H11 .. , \like Fisher. Ex -: 111 11 ,,., 111 .,f th(> California• .ft .t ' 1111i-1 ,,.,11111 . and Michael! 1 11 •• • 111 .. 1.:<•\ 1·rr11H' s Out.er Continen·· 1.d !-.)1111 l'1t1Jt'•I 1>11·1.•<.·tor . ull of whom • 011 ''I • 1.r1•1 1" Ph 11ppo!'t' t he oil ~xplora-: I"'"· h.1\1• heJt d lttllc oppos1tlonr to, :-0.1•1 1 1·1.11 \ \\ :•t t • s pl an from Orange, • "" .. ~ 1 ~ •·tt tl'l'ni. M 11yors Heather andl I'• tt1l111, •II '\ft\1 purl Bcuch and Laguna It.I\ •• • h.id Ill) .... fem).! ... upport for their orn '"I • 'p141 1t11111 prntc.,l:. \,~r11t1111o,; "h" rare. "e must let 1,11.,, I J-~clm1111d C Brnwn Jr and Other, ~ 01wt-1 w~Uwtt1I.,. know or our-oppost":t " 1111t1 11 th1:-ll<'~Jw11l11\1on or our coast. "" EVEl.YNGAYMAN .. ' I :--11 •1 N.m cv Rc:.1gtl~ does1f l +efive 1• nl'ht f[om 1.111 those desi1ner .., \1111, 1 you believe that . D.L. I Orange Cout DAILY PILOTfThuraday, January 21 , 1982 Ala Sm~ weekly pap~r. like a letter from home The Newton County Times In northwest Arkanaaa burned to the around the other nlaht. That la probably not the moet atirrlns Information in a medla·mad world, but It la lmpe>rtant nonetheless. J'he Newion County 1imea la a weekly newapaper with a clrculaUon ol 2,000. It la publlahed In J atper , Ark., in a na11ed part ol the Ozark Mountain ranee. The community is isolated ; It bu never even had a railroad run through it. So when the bujldin1 that houses the Newton County Times, an old Victorian atructure on School Street, burned down, d-.e to undetermined causes, the county had a potential problem. The paper generally runs to only I or 14 paaea. but it is the sole medium of communication that serves Newton County exclusively, and without It , the people of the county faced a news v*uum. IN A WORLD dominated by network newscuts and national newsmaguines and pe>werful metrope>lilan newspapers, it is often easy to lose sight of the services that papers like the Newton County Times perform. For people who live in areas that don't get coveri!d by the big media of communications, these weekly papers are a kind of lifeblood. The papers aren't sophisticated, and don't attempt t o solve g rave international problems. But for the people who live within their circulation ·-·· -·t 00 • • -------.-----ti ------- • I f •(in ik spen' siv) not high in price; reaeon· lible coet; clauified advertising. 642-5678 . . ' areaa, they are very much needed. .. We centrally cover no naU0nal news and no atate news unless it has a direct· bearina on our community," said John Hofheimer, 38, the.editor of the Newton County Times and Its sole full·Umti 111111111 editorial employee. "We leave that up to television and the daily papers In the bl11er cities." Thus, the front·page lead story in the Newton County Times miaht be an account, with photographs , of children trick·or·t,.unl on Halloween nlaht. Or It might ~ • report <Sn' the Western Grove and Mount Judy High School honor rolls. "One of our most popular features are tbe columns written by our community correspondents,'' Hofheimer said. "They write about who has had dinner where, who's sick and who's in the hospital, who has vislton from out of town. It's the closest thing you dn get to a letter from home.'' And that is precisely the kind of news that makes papers like the Newton County Times essential. We live In a society in which life has become so homogenized that we often lose sight or , .. the fact that America Is nol one faceless computer s urvey printout; It Is a land composed of communities, with each of those communities needing to fe •I s pecial and worthwhile. "IN OUR COMMUNITY calendar, we run every possible thlna that's eolna on In the county,'' Hofheimer said. "Benents, chili suppers, school sports, public speakers . . . it 's the one place where people can turn to learn about these thlnas. · • Hofheimer says that one of the most vital functions or his paper is one or the most obvious . ''In a small community like ours. there has to be a way to differentiate rumor from fact," he said. - "Because of that, our paper walks a verr ~traight and narro\V line. Often we don l even run an editorial page; we don't endorse candidates for office. We do not presume to tell people what's good for them olWlow to run their lives. We just tell the news." That's going to be difficult in the w eeks and months to come . The subscription list of the Newton County Ti m es , of cour se, wa s n ot computerized; it burned in the fi re. So now Hofheimer has to re·identify his readers. The paper has made a n arrangement with the Russellville Courier·Democrat. the nearest daily newspaper in Arkansas, to set type and print in the Courier·Democrat's offices untlJ the Ume a new home for the Times cun be round. "We don't want to miss even one wuck of publication," Hofheimer said. "Luckily for us, we got an edition out thti duy before the rire. So 'fC have a week to get a new one ready. We usually come out on Thursday. and this week we may have to come out on Friday.. but we'll gebthe paper out. Wicka "The King has decided to cut back his military spending. He only wants two musketeers.'' From sea·to shining sea, Republic flies you to more cities ttian any other airline. We serve more than 170 cities. Coast to coast. Canada to Mexico. That's almost twice as many cities as the next largest airline. Nobody serves you bett~ t~n Republ ic. With con- venient schedules to more cities. Special discount fores (just afew are listecfnere ).-Ana our fomouspersonai - ottention. That's the Republic spirit. So wherever in this big republ ic of ours you wont to go, come aboard Republic -the airline w ith a small town smile and a big city style. r From Burbank DENVER HOUSTON LAS VEGAS PHOEN IX . SALT LAKE CITY From Los Angeles International EUGENE SPOKANE TUCSON From Ontario, California LAS VEGAS PHOENIX TUCSON From Orange County DENVER LAS VEGAS PHOENIX SALT LAKE CITY "The aood Lord wlllln1. thia arrangement will keep us goina untll we can rebulld. We Just want to make aure t he people of our county have a newspaper.'' Hofheime r lis a man who, In a journaUslic world full of people trying to climb to the White House beat or the Supreme Court beat, seema content in 1tltempting to do a good job in his small part of Arkaruias. "l 'M NOT AN ambitious pert0n," he said. "I 'm not on my way anywhere .. I feel that we put out a good newspaper for a small weekly paper. I take pride in our workmanship. J cover my friends and neighbors, a nd J try to do it the best 1 can." Hofheimer usually works 80·hour weeks getting the Newton County Times ·ready for press, and now that the fire has leveled the building, thlt Is s ure to increase. In the days following the fire, h e wa s scramb ling to m a k e arrangements to get the paper published and deli vered to as many of his old subscribers as possible. In the midst of all that logistic~l maneuvering. he had· to worry about what news to cover in next week's edition. · · 1 guess the lead story will be the fire itself,'' he said He laughed. ··Either that or the Deer School honor roll." he said. TM 1239 Round Trip 1129 One.Way 143 One-Way 146 One.Way 165 One-Woy s 128 One.Woy 1282 Round Trip s 49 One.Way '40 One-Woy 142 One-Woy '193 Round Trip 1261 Round Trip '40 One.Way 142 One.Woy 197 One.Way t • • ... ... ___ , ) l ) ......... Fores ore sub1ect 10 chon9e and cond11tons moy include odvonce purchole, spec1f1c do~ of travel ond length of slOy requ1temen'5. Discount seats moy be lim11ed \ I ' I , n , n Al.C 2 'I q 2 • It ,, .. 0 Orange Cout DAILY PILOTfThuraday, January 21. 1982 \JOIN IN THE FtJN!- OF THE 4th ANNUAL • JAN.UARY 22-29 ' If -----...--------------------------------------------------------------------~ ..................... ~ .......... -----------------------------l! 2 ti ' ' "' u b s , 2 s • , b '( ,( e a J ~ " 0 n 9 , )( 'l , ii s Jl b 0 ,I b s e ~ 11 2' If n . .. ~ ~ s ! i 'l 9 , • l lf 1 I.! .Monday, January 25 Coed Fourth Annual ' . .. .• ,, ti I 1, .. Saturday, January 23 RUN FOR HOAG 10K RUN Join 2.500 runners on this fast, certified course, over 90% of it on the San Diego Creek Bike trail In Irvine. The runs start at 9:00 a.m., with check-in from 8:00 to 8:45 a.m. at the Fluor Corporation recreation center on Carlson between Campus and Michelson in Irvine. There are divisions for men. women, boys and girls -20 In all -with several trophies for each division. ENTRY FEES: $8 includes T-shirt. $4 without T-shirt DAY OF RACE ENTRY FEE: $10 with T-shirt, $5 without T-shirt. Late entries will be taken 8:00 a.m. on race day. For information call: John Blair, Race Director, (714) 966-0556 or {714) 760-5917. The Runs are sponsored by California First Bank and KEZY Saturday, January 23- Join the first-ever ~LKFORHOAG This newest Clambake Week event will be staged in con- junction with the Aun for Hoag. but in much less strenuous style. Strike a blow against over-exertion by en- joying a no-sweat 1.2 mile walk -just enough to whet your appetite for the special AWARDS BRUNCH for all Walk participants at the Irvine Coast Country Club. Check in at Irvine Coast Country Club 7: 15 a.m. sharp, Saturday, January 23. Buses will take you to the Walk site and return you to the country c lub for the special brunch. Good modest exercise -good fellowship -good cause. And prizes. toot ENTRY FEE (includes cocktails ·and brunc h): $50 per person $7'5 per couple For information and reservations call (714) 760-591 7 The Walk is sponsored by California First Bank ROAST /TOAST .~rri.ott Hotel , Newport Beach Fcfmer State Senator Dennis Carpenter wi ll have the =lt'*'-t>le pleasure of being crisp ly roasted -and ttf t.iQhtly toasted -by public figures from ~overn­ ment, politics. sports. the law and the community. Directing the laugh-packed affair will be Paul "Emcee" Salata. Salata's corps of sharp-to ngued critics and com- mentatOrs includes Joey Bishop. Justice Robert Gardner, ueon:iie Hoag II. Jim Fregosi, Supervisor To m Ailey, Mayor Jack Heather. Congressman Ro bert Badham Senator John hmitz, Dr. Tom Doan, Stuart Spencer' and Dr. sarnn•...ee. along with others. In addition to his service in the California Senate, Car has been active in local. state and national t , poll He was chairman of t~e Republican State Central Co and of the Repubhcan Central Committee of 1 Oralunty. Currently he is the legislative advocate for the of Orange. a lawyer and a cattle rancher. He is CARPENTER an F nt, a UCLA law school graduate and a self-styled "im t " from Minnesota. An added feature will includ e dedication of Hoag Hospital 's non-ex1stant 13th Floor to Ken and Sob, KABC radio lk show hosts. - Cooktaila10 :52 p.m. Dinner: 7:00 p.m. $15b per couple $75 per person Seating limited to 500 For information or reservations. call {71 4) 760-5917 Friday, January 22 at the hilarious One hundred brave and foolish fo lks will t ee otf in the wacky and frustrating 9-hole "golf tournament" to be played on the short course at the Newporter Inn. ftartlng at 1 p.m. All of the holes have been s"8cialty developed to produce hilarity and trouble as the would-be golfers try to tee off from mattresses. shoot with a sling shot, combine golf with frisbee. overcome some devilish devices and generally muddle through a harrowing but-happy afternoon. The field of participants is full. but you might want to look 1n on some lunacy undertaken in the name of golf and in the good cause of helping Hoag Hospital. --------------- Thursday, January 28 and Friday, January 29 8th Annual CROSBY SOUTHERN PRO-AM GOLF TOURNAMEN~ Irvine Coast Country-Club -Gallery Admission $2 T~ only Orange County tournament for touring PGA golfers in 1982! • Here's your chance to see and follow some of the players you'll be watching on your TV screen during the pro tour the next few months. You'll see some of the leading pro golf f!K'n8Y winners of tomorrow along with some of the tour veterans. Seventeen of the top 60 money winners in 1981 and 30 of the top 100 are alumni of the 552 Club's Crosby-Southern. Seventy-two pros will team with 72 amai.urs from Southern California clubs In this two-dlly event. The pros will be competing for a purse of $25,000. Former Crosby Southern players who ranked high In the official 1981 winnings list Included: Gil Morgan, Fuzzy Zoeller, Keith Fergus, Lon Hinkle, Tom Purtzer, Ed Flori and Peter Oosterhuls. Oosterhuis and Al Gelber.per played In last year's Crosby Southern. Others from past Crosby Southern• whO have made n1m• for themselves on the tour Include: Tommy Valentine, O. A. Weibrtng, Dan Halldoreon, Peter Jacobsen, Frank Conner. Greg Powers, Tom .~.fr.kins, M8rk Lye, Don Pooley, Vince Haefner, Bruce Fleieher. Bob Eastwood, Pet• .~rown, Dave Eichelberger, and Bobby Welzel. ... STARTING TIME: 7:30 a.m. GALLERY ADMISSION: $2 .. A special thanks from the 552 Club to our CROSBY SPUTHERN SPONSORS TOURNAMENT SPONSORS: George Argyros, Arnet Management Co. 0. J. Bentley, Bentley Laboratories John Curci, Curci-Turner Co. First lnt~tate Bank J. A. FIUOf', Fluor Corporation Bob Gray St. John Knits Barry Haliamore, San/Bar Corporation Charlel Hester. Hester Oevelos>ment George and Gloria Ryan and Mrs. Rose Delaney CORPORATE SPONI0"8: AirCal Airport BIJslness Center ·Allegan Pt\armaceutlcal~ The Alison Company American State Bank ~ ............ Amwest, Inc. , Arco Performance Chemicals Company, Inc. Armor-~11 Products Arthur Andersen & 'Company . , Avco Financial Services, Inc. Salt»a ~Club-, Bank of Newport Beckman lnsturments, Inc. Cat Fed Enterprises ' Cannell & Chaffin Commercial Interiors, Inc. Computer Automation Cummins & White Ernst & Whinney First A'merican Trust Company Maynard Franklin The Irvine Company John 0. Lusk & Son Mercury Savings and Loan Asso ciation Morgan. Olmstead, Kennedy & Gardner. Inc. Nabers Cadillac Wright Investors' Service National Education Corporation O'Melveny & Myers Pacific Mutual C. ·L. Peck Oontractors San Diego Federal Savi ngs and Loan Smith International Shur-lock Willamette K. Day Foundation Wisdom Import Sates Company, Inc. Arthur Young & Company SHCIAL PRIZE SPONSORS: t-tot•tn--ones: Smith Famlty Tate Cadillac Char'8s Fllhback This page is presented as a community service message by the Orange Coast Daily Pilot. , .. r I DlilJ Pilat THURSDAY, JAN. 21, 1982 CAVALCADE TELEVISION STOCKS 82-3 84 87 Economists predict slow recovery from recession See Page B6 . They strive tO open up the ocean depths to all SEA CREATURE A one -atmosphere diving suit containing Dr. Sylvia Earle s urfaces a fter her record descent to 1.250 feet off Hawaii recently . Dr. Earle. one of the world"s '"\ ........ fore mos t deep-sea explorers. plans to brave the ocean to new depths in another s ubmersible name d "Challenge r · · Colllrades remember a hero World War II vets gather to honor Ed Dyess' memory ABILENE, Texas (AP> -Ed Dyess was only 27 years old when he died in a righter plane cr ash in California nearly 40 years ago. ---The>se"·who hed the-ehance lo know him, fl y aerial combat with him against the J apanese, survive the Bataan death march a lon gside him or follow him in a daring escape from a prisoner or war camp consider themselves among the fortunate. -"He was the greatest man in my life." -"There's no way you can say anything but good about him." -"We all would have died for him." Those tributes were paid when two dozen World War II veterans who served with Oyess gathered in Abilene, at the Air Force Base lhal bears his name, to honor his memory. The men are member6 of The· American Defenders of Bataan and Corregidor and came to give Dyess Air Force Base officers two plaques honoring their comrade. Sa m Grashio ol Spokane. Was h., a retir ed Air Force colonel, fl ew with Dyess and escaped from the prison camp with him. "Ed Dyess was . . . a leader as a combat pilot and as a human being," said Grashio. "He was the greatest man in my life." Erosion of quality in education seen NEW HAVEN. Conn. CAP> - A promine nt ed u c ator is warning that America's intellectual future is in jeopardy because gifted teache rs are leaving for better paying jobs and new teachers rank near the bottom of their class. Ernest L. Boyer, president of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, said the quality of the nation 's schools "can rise no higher than the quality of leaching. "If public support continues to d ec line and if leac hing standards continue to go down, the intellectual and economic future of this nation will be threatened." Boyer, U.S. commissioner of edu cation from 1977 to 1979, .made the remuks-lna speechat Yale UnJversity. "Today's American crisis in educaUon is graver than t.be one conlronted 2S years 1101" when the Ruulana hurled Sputnik, the flnt satellite into apace, Boyer Hid. Sputnlk prompted tb•D·PrHldent Dwl1bl D. Elae,ibower to launch new federal pro1ram1 to Improve scien ce ins truction in t he nation's schools. but now the federal gove rnm e nt i s attempting to cut back on school aid, he said. T .H. Bell , the Reag an administration's secretary of education, also has criticized the fact that education majors rank near the bottom of their class in College eo·ard scores. And Bell, like Boyer, has said the nation pays its teachers too litUe. Boyer said the average teacher's salary of $17,264 In 1980 was less than that paid construction workers, $17 ,S09; firefighters, $17,800; policemen. $18,500, or sanitation workers, $19,000. "The teaching profession Is ca ught in a vicious cycle, spirali.(lg downward. Rewards are few, hio'rale is low, the best teachers are bailing out, and the s upply of good recruits is drying up." he said. H e called for rahln1 s tandards and eertUytn1 teachers only alter an apprenticeship In the cl .. room. He also 1u1gealed requlrln1 teachers to win recertiftcaUon e~ery five years. In April 1942, Bataan was being overrun by J apanese forces and Dyess, as a purs uit s quadron comma nder , was ordered to fly to safety. .-:-"His. U$pOOU w~.' I .won'&. leave my men,'·· Gr~shio said. In fact. Dyess ordered another fli er, 1.8. Donalson, lo leave in the only remaining aircraft . DonaJson. a retired Air Force colo nel from San Antonio, remembers that even in the race or certain capture Dyess remained concerned about the tactical situation. "Dyess told me to take off," he said, "go up the coast ... and, if the Japanese had broken through, bomb and strafe them, then come back and waggle my wings. I did it." Dyess and several thousand other Allied servicemen slogged so uthward ahead of the advan cing J apanese army. hoping for rescue before they were captured. There was no rescue. "There's no way you can say anything but good about him,'' r ecalled Dyess' former first sergeant, "Dizz" Houston of Dallas and Omar McGuire of Temple City, Calif. "I came all the way out here on short notice, but it's worth it lo me," said McGuire . "I wouldn't have come all the way out here for just anyone." Historian for The American De f e nde rs o f Bataan and Corregidor is retired Army Col. Jerome Mc Davitt. Ke has ~compiled "The Ed Dyess Story," which accompanied one of the plaques. :.. It tells or Dyess· final act of bravery. . That was Dec. 22, 1943, when his fighter pllne developed e ngine trouble on a training mission over Glendale. McDavitt's story says Dyess mltht have been able to save bi maelf had be been wllU.., to risk a dan1erou1, wheels-up landlna on a city au.et. ln1tad, the 1tory 1111. Dyess cboH to die u be had lived, deliberately cr11hln1 Into a vacant lot to expose only himMlf to the dancer. OA KLAND (AP > -In the · blllck ·ot~ah c1el)ths, a symphony of life plays a salt water sonata to an empty theater. In the wings, Sylvia Earle and Graham Hawkes wait for a chance to bring to the world a bit or the underwater waltz that no one hears. that few even know exists. Sylvia Earle : s cientist, ecblogist, one of t he world 's foremost deep-sea explorers . Gr aham Hawkes:-technician, entrepreneur, an engineer who has helped make the forbidding ocean depths more accessible to energy and military inte rests. They are an unlikely pair. the California conservationist and the British businessman. But they share a burning curiosity a bout the sea and a desire lo pull down the fence that surrounds Eartb.:s watery backyard. Their hopes are pinned on Haw kes' latest creation , C hall e ng e r , a compact s ubmersible designed to make the perilous dive lo 5,000 feel into a safe, comfortable, routme . excursion. T h e ve hi c le , s imple yet sophisticated in design, would be equipped with mechmcal arms rugged enough to lift 100 pounds yet dexterous enough lo make a prec ise, de licately de tailed drawing or a shrimp. The company is looking ror S3 million to develop their concept ~nd to c r e ate tw o usable prototy1>es of a submersible they say ultimately will drastically cut the tremendous expense of deep-sea exploration. The Challenger is named for the first ship equipped for ocean exploration. which sailed from England in 1872, with piano wire Together, they have seen thelrj passion -deep-sea exploraUoa from both sides, and lhey've1 hit a happy medium betweeo environment and economics. "Either or the two ext.reme1 a ren 't right," Hawkes H)'I . "The one being to carve it up and not worry about tomorrow's, generation . . . " •·or the rest ~I ours," Miss Earle interjecu. ~ · ·. . . Or the other extreme, ~ just leave It there and not touc~ 1t , to be terrified of dolni. a n y thing to it," Hawke~• continues. "There has to be I sensible e xploitation of lb~ resources there." The prevailing philosophy; Miss Earle says, has been ooe 1 "out of sight, out of mind. You 1 dump things in the ocean, and· until it comes rolling back on LbeJ be aches. put it out of you.rt mind." Together, they have formed Deep Ocean Technology, Inc., a company devoted to opening the world 's final frontie r to all, scientist and industrialist alike. ··A turning point has been reached in terms of where we 're going underwater," Miss Earle s ays. They are an unlikely pair but·'.· they share a burning curiosity about: the sea. . . · ··what we're seeing 1s an open door. We h aven 't wa lke d aboard to measure ocean depths through it yet, but 10 the next and heavy nets to cull plants and year, the next two years , we're animals from the seabed. going to take those first steps ··Hawkes hopes that a decade And within the next 10 years, from now. sea explorers will we'll look back on this time as look back on his Challenger - the threshold we crossed to step which he has described as "as into the sea for the first time.·· easy to drive as a sports car" Three hundred feet down, the as the Model Tor the oceans. atmosphere is eerie green. As .. We 're on the threshold or natural light fillers away, the being able to turn the whole instrument panel goes from red thing from be ing a big deal, to black. Sediment rises like whe re the brave dive rs go smoke. unde rwater and it's all a big A hand moves agains t the adventure , to a matter of roulin"," Hawkes says. "That's h eavy atmosphere, but no " telltale bubbles drift upward. A really what we wa nt to do, to n sh rtoats by ; its eyes, on stalks, take away the imagc that you've burn to stare at the intruder. got to be Superman to go down Al 2,000 feel, inky darkness. there ... Creatures dart past, fireflies of Neither Ha wk es nor Miss lhesea,flashesof hotblue-green Earle is a superman They light. are, rather, a study in contrasts. It is an awesome adventure, He's 33. a kind of unkempt and one that so far has been hulking Teddy bear or a man, a reserved for industry interested f o u n d e r o f 0 f f s h o r e in exploiting the ocean's rich Subme r sibles. Ltd .. and a resources , ·•to ca rve up lbe -former e mployee of Plessy golden eoose." Miss Earle says. Underwater Weapons Unit. Al 2,000 feel. there are large She's 13 years his senior. yet d e p osits of phosphorile, a appears younger, a lithe woman phosphate-la de n ore used in with an ageless, honey-colored making fertilizer. At 5,000 to beauty, c urrently c urator of 20,000 feet. there are manganese psychology and a. research nodules rich in copper , nickel biologis t at the Ca lifornia and cobalt. And. Mi ss Earle has Acade my or Scie nces. and a written. offshore oil wells. which trustee of the World Wildlife today supply almost one ·third Fund. In 25 years. she has spent the world's crude , could produce some 5,000 hours underwater. as much as half by 1990. They met two years ago in "More and more. the sense or Hawaii. She told him about her urgency has come about for l)olh frustration al being limited by or us lo try to couple use of the available equipment to diving technology not just (or the '2QO feel or less He told her obvious commercial purposes," about the Mantis-a one-person she says . "Let's have everybody sub he had created lo withstand win. Let 's make it available to the pressures of 2,000 feel. It the scient1f1c community as was the beginning of a beautiful "We~ _ ___;__ -- ----friemhhip._ -. -- CHALLENGERS Sy lvia Earle and her assodate Graham Hawkes inspect a model of a new compact diving device designed to help > .. Hawkes says the public seemt"i shocked to hear about evictence= of careless littering of the sea'. depths. Yogurt cartons, bffi! cans . old applia nces, junke4) cars. all carefully preserved ~ the ocean, greet divers at 2,000 1 10,000 -even 20,000 reel. : "It's disgusting, but what•· really frightening are the lbin we put into t he ocean we can see. things that have altered · chemical nature of the oce · that ultimately come back us,'' Mi ss Earle says. Hawkes · agrees. "Pull down' the fence, everybody sees the rubbish there: If Sylvia and her col leagues can bring back' stories and data abo ut the· creatures that live down there. then it helps to make us realize 1t 's part of this planet, not just a carpel we can sweep everyt.hina under." Businesses that waal to sift the profits from the seabed, arid scientists who want simply eo. profit from the study of the sea, a re beginning to understand they must work together for the benefit of all, Miss Earle says. -: • ··The philosophical questi~ that challenge human beinp seem to be an endpoint of mudl or where we 're going; the wbja of civilization. There's so mu~ to challenge us in the oceans IA th at regard. .. Look at the network or lifesi th e inte r relations hip a mon1 things, and recognize that we're part or that network, that we're de pendent upon the s ystemt shape d by those gelatinous c r e atures that pulse-in the oce a n s and generate the c haracteris ti cs tha t mate· Earth, Earth." ... .. Onange Cout DAILY PILOTffhurtday, January 21, 1982 •ANN LANDERS •HOROSCOPE 'ACKING THEM IN -Tom Broeker and Ponna Wilkerson. proprietors of Res t Assured ash dispersal iirm in Eugene; Ore .. ead for the high country on behalf of a Sammy Miller wishes to thank all his friends who atterded his 75th Birthday Party on January 12 at -Dillmaci's Restaurant in Balboa. All Gifts were deeply appreciated. ,., ....... depa rted client. Broeker and Miss Wilkerson will backpac k clients' cremated remains to the Oregon wilderness and scatter them over the earth for a fee of $70. A NOSTALGIC VALENTINE -·~~~. ~ This 14K Gold Heart Pin Custom engraved · Just for you Will make a big hit With your sweetie pool $135.• "fhis is CMa~r..:~ J:NtllWl~J~ (714) 631 -1152 881 Dover Drive, #14, Newport Beach BE AN ICE SKATING ~ ~n! at an / I ' ICE CAPADES CHALET ... DEAR ANN LANDERS: Every wt!ek I must turn in u no te to the l>t.'l'sonnel director or the firm I work for. verifyin~ the 1fa c t that I did not miss my appointment with my psychiat1·ist. If I miss even one . I am automatically fired. -f went to my union s teward and she said the company had a 1·i~ht to do this . I find this ha rct to belie\'e. I am a mani<.' depressive and have had two in<·i dents wit hln the pas t y(•u r . Pre\'ious to the in<:i,lents. I wo1·ked for the compan~· for thrt-e ~t·ars with no problt:•ms. The\· han• made mt.' ft>t'I like a timt-·bomh reach to cxplodt•. What can I do about s ut·h treatment'.' It ·s humiliatinl( Chet·k this out and let mt.' know "if tht.> compan~· is hrt.>ukin~ tht.> luw by intt-rferinJ,! with my pri\'at e lift>. TICKING AWAY IN CHICAGO DEAR Tl<'KING: According to Lowf'll SachnoH. a ('hlcago ittornf'~·. your emplo~·er could nre you Ir ~·ou did fH?l mf't>l the condition of brinJ(ing a note 'stating you ·kept your we-ekl~· appol•tmeat wi&h your psychiatrist. Apparentl~· thost• two "inclttf'nts" resultinJ( rrom ~·our mani<: df'pfes~ivt• condition interfered with ~·our Job performance. Although you did not say so. It sounds ver~· much as H tht company agreed tG keep ~·ou on, provided Y'"-$la~· in the rap~·. ••stead or rttling likf' a "time bomb ... ~·ou ~hould rttl shot rull of luck. Sot man~· companies would be so s~·mpathetic and coo~rative. OEAR A~~ l.:\:"llDERS: Our 17.,·ear·old son has alwa~ s Ol'l'n good at r~pairing things. Ht' learnt'<I from his fol her. al an early al-{e. how lo n•w11·t-. plas lt•r and hook up elt•t·troni<· ckvkes and so on. Sounds ).!ood ".' Wt•ll . it has posed a problem. Our nt•ighhor II\\ ns an u ppliant·c husm1:ss. Ill• think:-. .Jut•\" is a \dZ<tr<I und has nffl'l't'<.I tht.' ho~ ;1 1oh afkr st·hool and on wt•t•kt•ruls .Jot·~ would I><.· going into lht• homt•s of ull kind :-. o f \\'Offit•n t o fix appliann·s Tht• prohlt•m : T lw kid hus a gn.•at personallt~ a nd b n•r.'· all r·;u:tin•. lk <·o uld t•as il~ pass for lei. I han' ht•a1·0 somt• ht>i r ·raising storit•s uboul ho\\ ,n,,·on·t•cl an<I ,,·rctm\'t'CITaiTit•-, st•dtrt'<.' ,·mrng < elin·n· hoys. pUf)(.'rho~ s and so on. I m•t•d som~· ad\·in• <1hout thrs 1mmt•cl ia l t•I\ UH "IS\'11.1.E :\t.\MA . D•:AR )IA)IA: I assumt• \Our son is Wf'll·informt>d rt·~ardin~ the Wa~·~ of lhf' world. U not. ht> Nhould tw. II lw wants to lakf' tht• job. lN him . llt> is bound to mt•(•( all kinds of "omt•n ~oon t-r or lalt>r. .. : . ,,_ Hopefully. If be r•ns lnM t.Mm soont>r. It ma~· save Him som• trotable latt>r. DEAR ANN LANDERS: R ecent!~· somt•one wrott· anct as ked wh~· people keep plas tic· sheets ove r their rurniturt-and cellophane on their lampshades. even when company comes O\'e r You s aid ~·ou hac\,no, idea af)d then posecl 4.111o(he1· question that had you stumped : Why do women wear c urlt'rs in theil' h <lir \\'h en the~· go d owntown to shop·' I don't know ubout lhl' plastic i;het~s.OI' tellophane rovers. but I do know aboul the hair c urlt.>rs betausl' som t' of mv friends do it. These women are inSt'('llre and don't go out much. B~ appt•arinj! in public in hah· c urle rs they c·n•i.ltt' the imprt:'ssion the~· han• been invited to a vt·r~· s pecial arfair that evening. whi<'h. of cour~t'. rs a lot or balone,·. SEEN IT ALL IN GRANO FORKS. N. O. DEAR FORKS: 1\Vell! So muc h for those dollies in curlHs ! Now that tht" whole world koows what the\' are up to, I wondtt ir tht·~· will (•ontinu<'. Sta~ tun<'d. Wllaf"s pr11d1slt"' Wl1at"s () K "' It 11ou art'tt"I s11rt'. 11011 need ~Omt' ltelp ft"s ova1tahlt' m the hooldet ·· Neckmq 011d Pell mg -What A re t lie Limits:>·· Matt 11our request 111 Ann Landers. P .O. Rur J 1995 Cl11cayo . Ill . 61/lil J. e11cto,i11g 51J cents 01Uf a l1111y stampt'd sell-addrt's-c:tf! enrelopt•. ' ·por SHOTS BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT DYING. IS A PART OF LIVING, • NEW CLASSES STARTING • REGISTER NOW for internationally famous Ice Capades Chalet Ice Skating School. Whether you've ice skated before or never ice skated in your life, one of these classes is for you. • BEGINNERS WELCOME! • Gemini: Fall • ID love 2701 Harbor Blvd. Harbor & Adams Costa Mesa ENROLL NOW!! ·o ~ 979-8880 PUBLIC ICE SKATING EVERY DAY, LOTS OF FUN FOR YOUR MONEY, ONLY A BUS RIDE AWAY'.! . !l , HAVE JOU TAKEN A GOOD LOOK AT YOURSELF LATELY? .. OUR FACILITIES INCLUDE ~ Price Discount 9n Membership Fee During January 1 AMlltlCAM WAY FITNESS CENTER I ,.. Frida~-. Januar~· :!:! ARIES 'Man·h 21·Aµnl 19 1 fo'ocus on promotion. produt'lion. n·spon sihilit ~. authorit\· and ;ulditwnal funds . C.in•t•r acl\·ant:l'ml'nl 1s h1 g hl1 ghlt>cl . s omt• ambitions an• fulfillt•d and a rt•latinnshiµ is establisht•d on a mon· pl•rmarwnl has1s . Capnt·orn 1s ln\'C>ln•d TAURUS c:\pril 20 Ma~ l(ll Ct)angt• of sc·t'nc·r~ pron·s bl•nt•ri<:1al. You <:an rea('h beyonct <·urrent <'Xpt•c·talions . Longslancting legal <lis puh.• t·an bt• farnrahl~· s t•ltled Plans in du<il' tr;in·I. t•ciu<·ation and i mpron•d m t•t hods of <:ommun1eat 1<>11 . Walt'h .-\nes: GEMINI 1 Mu~ 21 ·June 2fl 1 • R~· digging bent•ath s urfat'l' indiral1ons. ~·ou get tn heart of matters Yo u t·..in <llso fall madl\· in love : Sc·t•nario highlights ri nan<·ial status of one dost• to ,·ou anct new start which brings arldect i"'°tt•penclenrt.'. Wakh Leo: C' A NC' E R t J u n t• 2 1 · J u I " 22 l : R t.• diS('l'l'et Others will n .>vt•a l ihei".· plans. ~·ou ·11 havt.' ('hanrt.' lo gain important knowledge. Emph.isis on publit' relations . partnership proposals. marital status ancl regaining of st•nse of direC'l1on . Lt'o. Aquarius and anothe r Cunt·er pla~· ke~ rolt•s. LEO 1July 23-Au~. 221 : Overcom e tendenry to scatter fortes attend to basic r hores. opt>n rlialogue with those who rel~ upon your St.>n ·ices . Keep resolutions ronc·erning diet. nutrition and medical appointmt>nls. Popularit~ increases anct you 'll 1·ereivl' in\'itation to pres liJ,!ious social affair. VIRGO <Aug. 23·Sept. 221 : Good moon aspect coincid~ with f mportant cha~e-.. involvement with member of opposite sex. dealings with children and a speculative venture. What appears to be lost or delayed is due to boomeranl'( in ~·our ravor. Watch Scorpio: ·LI BRA I Se pt . 23·0 ct. 22 1: Be anal)'tic~ll . check leases. interest rates and • BY SIDNEY OMARA be<·omt• mort• aw;in· of 111·11pt•rt~ ,·alUl·s. Y ou·IJ ht• in pos1t1on to disN•rn moliH•s. to makt• important t·hangt•s and to g1.11n Ot.'\\ allit·~. Gemini. \'1rj!n. Sagittarius persons fij!trr·t• promint•nt I~ · SCORPIO ct kl 2J·Nm· :!I 1 Emphasis on s hm1 trips. n•lati\'l'S and basi<· <iomt.>stk adjustment f"urnitun• tould be mo\'ed d u.ring p rot·t•ss of ht·~tutir~ ing home s urroundinJ;?s . Taurus. Libra and ;inolher S('orpio figure. promrnt•nt ly Good mone~· news is on tht• wa.\ St\GITTARll'S 1 :-.lo' 22 l>t·<· i t 1: f}(.•fine terms . <·heck <'osts. l>t1 a \\ill'l' of bud get. a ncl rt•alr7.t' that f1nandal prospects a rt.' hrightt•r than original!~· antidpalt..'<1. You t•a n perfo('t techniques anct .. -.u·t'amlint> prm·ectures. Change of lifes tylt• is immitll'nt. Watch Pisrl.•s'. ('APRICORN 1f>e(' 22·Jan. 191 : This <·ould be ~·oui· power·pla ~· da~·· You·11 be at the right plare 111 ri).!ht time. ~·ou'll gel bat lo nj? of lhosl' 111 a ut hont~· and your judgment . rnlu1twn will be o n t a rget. Cancer. Taurus and another Capricorn figur(• in cxdting scenario. AQliARlliS !Jan . 20-Feb. 18 1: Individual who badgered you wilt bt removed from scene. Restrictions fall b\• wayside. ~·ou·u be rid of burden and gree~ light will flash for Pn>l!ress. Aries. Libra natives figure prominent!~·. You 're on -~k.-ru s ignificant discovery. PISCES 1Fe b. 19-March 20 1: Morale soars emphasis on achievement and love. Moon posiliQO ~hi.ihllghls wishes lh8' come true, successful busi!»iess ventures and praise from member of opposite sex. Aries. Leo. Sagittuius J>,rsons figure prominentl~·. J I I , 1 1:1 I· !'.i I' 'I j'r ' . j . ii :1 11 I· ·' .. I! .. ii ll ., ii II I l I f I' ll I I I -- '1•11 ... ·~PHIL INJERLANOI of Laguna.S.ech -:pq--~· ~ 1-21 ·-..... --... -... _ . "YOU let out I bloodcurdUna 1eream ! .. Cleaning bill oll the house Hey, I've got a new face for Mt. Rushmore. It's Frances Gabe. a 67-vear-old woman from Oregon who, in 198l. uttered those immortal word s. "For God's..sake. why should wom en waste half their lives cleaning the house? .. This living legend has backed up her words with action by cr~l~g · 11.he · first seJf-cleaning house. a fea~ U~t a loi uf us tal~ about. but never really pull off .. ' ' MS. GABE HAS APPLIED for 68 patents on devices in her self -cleaning 'house. Her floors. doors. walls and ceilings are coated with a res in finish and her flMA IOMlfCI ATWIT'S ENO I ._, floor s are sloped to a ll four corners so that all s he has to do is spray 'em with s oap. water them down and blow the m dry. She has no carpets. · ~ ·,.f·I A.shes in the firepLJ\C',.e 11f~ ~ea ,,down a dram. ~ 1,C.\ \ <.. ( Pots and pans a l'e set~·~fning.1 1') And instead of wasting time loading a dis hwasher and unloa'ding it. she has a dishwasher cupbOard. She also has a laundry cupboard where the c lothes are washed and dried rig ht on the hangers. --. ._: . I don't know aboutr ?tl"'tau1ar you.,. but I 'd tre wi lling to conduct a telethon forthe- cure of Domestic Bondage. Or at leas t get som e research in motion . Ms. Gabe is a beginning, but we've got a long way to go. We need a communications s ,·stem bet ween every house in the country 'and a ~grocery s tore of their choice so that all we )lave to do is put our order into a compute r and a .conveyer belt will send. the.J99g _cight into our kitchens. We need drip-dry children. .~ · We need a wri~dic~ ~tall where you step into il 'wld {yCiur efothes on. pus h a button and com e out wrinkle.free WE NEED A HAND -WA S H m achine ... a couple of little hands that gently squeeze sweate rs and hose and roll the m in a towel for drying. H ow 'abou t a 1.eflover that self-destructs, with a timer on it you can set for JO days. 60 days or a lifetime:--: - I'd like to see a food detector that would beep and lig ht up every iiµie your kids took food in a room where it 'wasn 't supposed to be. I think we'r e onto something. folks. Let 's a ll get behind this cause a nd perpetuate the ideals and principles set down by Frances Gabe. I tell you I haven't been so excited since I put a sign over my ~veQ : "THANK YOU FO R NOT SMOKING.' . · . • It was Stan in the flesh • > ... HE G SSIPE~t{uth : The ru. o · ~f r ~r~ urph -"'iM. 'i o *16e l'lrd 10 a ne laAn McGoon's, doWn at Pier 39 around May 1. The , old McGoon'.s. on the Embarcadero. folds afwr. what he call s "a two-week grand closing," beginning last week .... One reason for the move: •a Canadian group ·has bought his bldg. ·a nd .th-e adj'tiNf\fJtone .aod wants Everybody Out by Feb,, 1.. Do. you get the feeling , •t he Canpdians and the J apanese are buying up San Francisco'! ... Add vita! statistics: a boy, n~med Alexander. for the J eff~rson Star.s hip's Paul Kantqer and Cynthia BowmC\n at Marin General. WHAT HAS STAN got that getze m: ff \1ou've' Hankered to see Stan Getz in t he nude. you just missed your chance. A few morqings' ago. the1 king of the t enor sax was showerln~ in his T 'graph Hill flat wherihe heard his ~olden retriever. Jani~s . .t I He.19 MEN ' I Ot,JR ,tMN IN SAN FRANCISCO I , • 1111 ' I I in' 'a1Jd0gfigttl ' 6otside. Eschewing •even ·~ tot.iel. 'he llin oUts)de to find JAmes•-be1tig attacked I by 1 a ' German shepherd. Traffic c-amti to a halt • as •jaybird•naked Getz bravely fought off the Ge rman at great risk to life and uh limb. He then dashed inside. dialed 9p. a nd snapped. ·'This is Stan Getz there's a vicious Ge rman s hepherd on the loose her e. and -... •16tan Getz !" interrupted the 911 wom;;tn. "In the flesh?" "As a matter of fact. ~·es:· chattered Stanle~-. •I· C~EN FETII : The Tahitian Hut. that art drecko mas t e rpiece at Geary and Hy de. ha s closed a ft e r 42 years (rent increase' a nd Owne r Lee Tortolera is movif'\g it to China Bas in ... Le t us now praise fam o us m e n . I ml:an Merv Good~·an. the Shriner who proposed. on Oct. , 1925. that the East-West Game be pla.ve for the Shriners ' Hosp. for Crippte"d Childr~n. Mel'v. now 77. is the last survivor of the group that got t his great event off the gro und. and looks quite c hipper. despite hanging around the Press Club. I GtMMIX: It 'd idn't make hrm an "inst'lmt' wli 1'4orrtliH~" ·Hot it ...-as• d~;-111 me arr 1the•·Pet"'Rot'k. 't'oncei\'e'd aS' j:l' 'ga-g ho\tda~1 ~irt ' \'ta 1975 b~' Gary Dahl. then' a San J ose advertising t~·pe The Rock. or jus t pl;iin rock. nicely boxed along with a clever spoof on dog obedient'~. was ,priced at $4. ~ ~re tba n 1.200.000 were s old tn a three -month burst. making Garv a million. a nd ever s ince, people have be~n trying' to duplicate his feat. It hasn't wor~( even for him. His follow-up. a Sand Breeding Kit . was a flop. and so was a vial of dirt from R('CI China !two weeks later. the U.S. r ecognizing China. spoiling the fun i. "'fhe Pet Rock created and destroved its own market. .. Oahl once explained. 'but people still keep searching for; .U'lt] tytag i~ Gimrttltk. Last vea r·s was a r'<lal Medfl\' s~a l~.hnt-0 a -pl astic· 011tmge to be 1.1sed-tts ii--~ t ree b"rnament. but it didn't make a"'· instant millionaire · BILL CUMMINGS found these ads one atop the other in the Re4ding Searchlig ht: · · I m m ed i a t e C re m a t i o n ~3 7 5 · · a t McDonald's, "Crem ation $297.50" at Allen & Da~ tis this a, p rice war" 1 and an ad for "Your Fireplace Specialists'" Could do-it-yourseJf ashes be the successor to P et Rocks'! Sorry J,askcd. , .. GOllN ON BllD'E · BY CHARLES H. GOREN AND !OMAR SHARff Neither vulnerable. North deals. NORTH • 1060 'V QJ 0 It105 •AQJ8 WEST EAST >I' +au +Jtn I:;) 4 ~ 985 0 AQJtl72 0 4 •ti • K 10754 SOU TB +AQ 1::1 AK107U2 OU .. f •u I The bidding: • ' Nertlt Eut &..ti. We•t t• P ... I ~ 3 0 ' P ... P ... 4·~ P ... ' , ... , ... . Opening lead: Ace or 0 . South, declarer at four hearts. found 1 deft avoidance play to brinr home his four heart contract. Study only the North and South ~ tlien decide whethw. ;;t~d ..... ... t~ .&. w. ~ •.•• tt.ai •"' trould~ .. .,.... U.. N.W '8Dd. Qweu and an .. '• slightly overvafoed by the point count, and the queen· jack doubleton combination could have been wortKless. Not that it made 'a'rlf1 dif· ference lo the final ~tract. Note that South jurllyMd to fdur hurls 1t hia second lurn -he was afraid t h.at a bid of three he1rt11 migbt. .sound like he wu only com· pet.ing for t he part score. West led t he,, ,c~, of diamonds and conti9µed, with , the queen. The. thoug~less PJlllY ia to cover: ~itb~~' 'ng, for watch wh,tt 1• f'I' P.'·, East ruffs ind , sl)i h ~p • spade. Whethe'r · or ' not' ~~larer .finesses. he must. , ev'ent.ually lose 1 tric.k to eacb black kinr for down one: 1 I t I t Fortunately, declarer made allowance fc;r the poalbility t.hat Wea niliht have preempted on a MY•n· card suit. He eount.ered nut.- I)' b7 pl11ins a &ow diamond ~ cl~::'~d».~~ r:~~~ belpleM. ~;,a. 1he bnL 'ffll c'1t >d6'~ ~ldft to • ehlb. llowwer. declarer lakes the dub finesse, and lhe king of clubs will be lhe lasl trick for the de rense. {If West c.'onliitues with a diamond, Soutll ovet· ruHs, draws trumps and lakes a club finesse. East wiu ind shifts to a spade. but declarer rilff with the ace and discards his queen o( . spades on a high club.I ll might seem that East can defeat the ~~\ by ruffing the aecor.d , diamo11d and shifting to a spAde, B~t declarer can rise 'with th~ ace 1 or !ipades, draw ttl/ro i>s: I crbs~ tb' the ice or clLb~ ind discard a black loser o'n tl\e king or diamond• io maka his contract. . :• H : I Orange Cout DAILY PJLOT/Thursday, January 21, 1982 ... SOUTH, INDEED Snow a nd .low C'louds closed Inters tate 15 through California ·s Cajon Pass Wednesday. This on-ramp Ts at Oak HHI Road in Cajon· Summit. 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IDT M TH! WUT Pwktr Tlllmtll '1 greedy ~ 10 open~ Creek'• ftrwt ba111t Nclc· "'--... ht 11 tallan ._.. !!119 by rot>bef'1. • AU. IN TH! 'AMILY Archie'• quick thlnltlftO .. -.-· ..... .WI(,..... ··1 WM A TMn-Aot McMe: ~ ,..,.. "°Ill' Ebef'1 -Oer'9 8ltlltl eurnlne the ,....,,. wlly the teon-.oe audllnce II ,_ O...n••ie Holly· woocra _... IWts. IA> -~ .. ltAITIU ''Thi Sea cepteln" 9 THE """'1. IUNOAY: ..... 90Wl)M John 8r0dlt hotta lklPtr 8owt XVI ~ be6119 pleyed .. the Slwrdome Stadium In Ponllec, Mldll- gan on Janullry 24, F- tured -Int~ wfltl p1ayer1 end 111m tootaee lrom HHon playoff ®MOYie •••• ,."My ~d" (1979) CMI Miik~. Adam Baldwln. Thi '*" kid at I ClllctoO high IChool ITllll• trieftdl """ Ille IGftOOI OUIGMt and 109fll* they etend up 10 the "'* gang wtllctt had ptrMCUt~ lhem bo1ii:"° 'PG' HO. Cl) KNOTI l.ANDNl Vm, Kinn. ~. GirlOar and~tallean-­ night tr1p wtth lAura to ~•filmoullWllMd .._.. e8DIPIP'WT ,,_ W..llllle.dllrlllllll"-. lrtlnd.Q • ,.. ..... °' LNIG Don Cnlo and Kinn !<-. ..... .._ ...... ~ c:en ~of .. 'IOa ._ to .... oonttd of ----4!!. ....... of....,.__ •9 MMIYaa.&a 'e.ne(1 ~ ~ 11191 the ,..,.., llMnd .,,.. on,_.,_, ..._..,Ill lnnwt• Mrfy ---°' owr«owded conc1111on1. i. MPV GNf'AN • IHOCK C:W TH! NEW .,The POWWI Thal lie" Aobef't Huot-lxamlnel 1111 lfnpaet of WMd Wfll 1'1 dlvMlatlon on "1 end the reletlorwlllp '*-1 .,, and polltlcel ~ In the 20th oentuty. (R) e MAllUWllCE "The FlMle Tr ... Of Thl- k1: Happy New Ye., .. Ellc>lth IS*ldl I "*'lora- 1111 Hew y..,·, Dey with 1111 conearvett..e Mr1 Nlon- mo. (Plfl 3)Q t:06 (%) MOYie .CllAllll. LISTINGS • • • • .. Altered Statel" (IMO) Wllllfllll ""'1. 111e1r Brown. A Herv•d ~ tllt'• oer*iC ltNGture II ....,Id "'*' ht conduCIU mlnd .. JIPMdlftO lllperi- mentl with lloletlon ..,., e KNXT !CBS! D KNBC !NBCI • KTLA (Ind.I eKABC (ABC) e KFNIB IC8Sl e KHJ-TV (Ind.) e KCST IP.BC! e KTT V (Ind I e KCOP·TV (ln<!.I e KCET (PBS) e KOCE (PBS) 0 On TV l Z TV H HBO C fC1oemd•I 1JJ !WORI NY , N.Y nTJ (WTBSl r !ESPNI s 1snow11me1 • Sl>otllglll e 1Cable Newi. Network I end ~ halluelno-t:IO~~AlfllAI( Jule lllk• Kelle'• college ldmilllon ..... for lier. •di TA>CI A pretty new c abbl• 11tempt1 to lure Al9ll into r-.Q t:40 (II) "ANIC .... (1) NUMI A....,,.,..., •· aoto91Mt' .. •on ,......, of w.ry'1 lnlllll on Mii °"' '* ,..,. •• -.in w own ~ ... ••ttU."'-' .... ~ """° OOl'lllWt '*ine Illa own ~ IO 9"C16d beoOlftine I -.,,. ,..,. ~-. end Hll -""*° '*°""' llftdlt· 00"9' ...... ICe~ ........,... 11 ••• NIWI .,. WHATI ~fl' THI ~ David ICll0tnbr11n ......... e ..... ..... lion IOollJng ...... "" ..,...._b .......... .-v. ............... IMPOJ. ..... ond .... "" llflllt ...... of'INl*lmnd OftO---. ~MOYIE •• "MtMn And~\· ( 1MO) ~ lAMM. JMorl Aobatde. An ~ unknown 1111 1tatlon llttandanl OIMRI to be the f10htM heir to How8'd Huot1e1' billion dollar ........... (D)MOYIE * * "Improper ~ .. c 1N 1) Alar'I Al1lln, ....,... Htf'tleV. A _. 01 ~ dtt9tendln0t -• IOdlll wcwtl• lo .,..,.:1 Vie ~-Old deugf1W OI a ..,.._ COllClle II the victim OI cNld abuM. 'PO'- (J) taANW John 8yn., lflOwl you thinOI stranoar 111an !Nth. •ger ltlln lite, end :ranl« than anything you·w --· .MOV!e * * "New YWI M " (1910) Ao1 Kelly. Kip Niven. Thi dleo Ioctl~ •t • SIU'* rack <*lb r---• _.. OI phOne Gelle prom- ltlnO IMt IOft'l90RI .. ~ murdered In hit honor ~. "°"' ~ t :OO Md mlcfnlot\t °" New Yw1Eve. 'R' 10:11 (8) ITANm«I N>OM ONLY "An E-*'9 Al The Moulin Route" 0-V-Hamiton hotta "' lllCdting -*Ill '""" the Mouln "°'IOI In Perte tMlur1nQ lftllfl oo.- ~ prCM>C91M dano- .,.. and topnote:fl .,,.,,.. "°'* vwtety ac:ta. 10:ao. IND9 BtDINT NETWOMNIWI • THE LAMWCEM CorrHpond1nt1 Linda Wertllelrn« and Cot! II Robert• join P• ~lot an up-to-~ eum- mary of Congr.M!Onal ac1Mt .... ()) w.-A-THON A eomedian l'tOlt and tour comic conl•tan11 Wl10 compel• 1g11n11 one anothet are IMt\Kld In thll UllC*iaored comedy game lflOW. 11:00•••C1>«18" .... • IA~Y*IHT Holt: Clcely Ty1on. 0111111: The Ttlkln9 ...... • ICo.w< Kotek .. "-1ed by the FBI In .. effor1t to nab the _,.,. rrudarar OI a II Ilk I rntn. • T'Hl41040NI ~---tot.. rW.0..,NIDION wt.l~lndllll'1· -fUll of money, he pue. It In ...., .... unll the polcll antve. • OQt CAVITT au.I: comic actor Phil a.--.. (Plfl 2 Of 3) ..... WAIHNITON ~MOYll * * "8-t Suoar" A young girt, toroid to wen on I )UllOll planllllOn. mak• pi.. to ..-her r-. agalnlt the men In charge. 'R' (l)WCW. •• "flold Gamet" (1941) si.c;y i<.edl, Jemie Let euni.. "" ecc.n1r1c trudl. tr, I ~ llltcMiMr and.~..., -~genlltfor ... and dlelh. 'PO' , 1:ao. (I) QUWCY Thi ~ murder Ol lfl ~ meQ.Jly • ,..,_.. t.,,....,_ h ....._ OI • -*" cftllllnl.,.._.. prOfld. (R) •• THE..,.C:W CAMON au.ti: Luc:9I .... ~ Montelttl. Olea Enbef'9, Ff'landlNP, (R) •• ~--°"" Ted Koppll ~ an lllMllndon of IN .,..i )Wt'• oowr ... of the Pfeeldlncy end ... ~ to wlllctl ttie OCMl'lll ._ beerltelr ... --. • THI ODO CCU'LI F•• It lnephd by Olea"• ,_ Olrlfrtend lo Mtll an or101na1 tont tot hit nigMdllOtc1. 'Narcs' tense d~timentary 87 TOM JO&Y after 5"11 years. and will join Roger Mudd in April • _..,..,_....., as co·ancbor of the network'• "Nightly News.·• NBW YORK -There is a measure of "The Narcs" ia an entertaininl hour of lmmecl11e7 -often urgency -lo "Tbe Narcs" on television -occasionally dramatic -and Brokaw NBC, an unconventional look at a half·doaen is appropriately awed as the enormity ot lhe drua undercover Cops ft1hUng a lonely war against the. smuga.Ung problem becomes apparent. drug trade In south Florida. He recites the ttatiatica -13,000 tons of The tense action in the hour-long marijuana, 44 tons ol cocaine, consumed in this doeumentary, to be broadcut at 10 p.m. Friday country tut year. most of it 1mu11led tbrouah KNBC (4), comes laraely from vidaltape footqe south Florida, with only 300 federal, state and of ~ activ1tlea of the Dade County Narcotics local cops battllna the t.ramc full Ume. ~~arcotlcs offtcert on the bullett beat in "They face overwhelming odds," the correspondent says, "and they wonder, 'Does America," Tom Brokaw. the COM'elpondent, says anyone care?' " · over tape showlnl tbe cop1 about to mate a bull, The policemen de), It's clear. Jn one raid, they "exclllna · · · fruatrattna · · · dangerous · · · conftscate '282,000 ln caab, but no dope. "It's a sometimes borln1 . . . but there ia never a disappointment,., says Sgt. Jim Rider, the cop in abortaaeof work. · · ·" c harge of the narco,tlcs squad, "but It It's the ftnt proaram Jn a planned "American happens .... " hO~ritl_on NBC. lb roUw ~ -!!11Lla·---,Brokaw wonden w~ the eope-e¥W-• betw.., Jobi r11bt now -u eorreapondeat. tbtmselvea, "Wall a minute, what am I doln1 on Tbe NBC Newa production clitten 1lplftcantly tbJa side of the money?·· from CU' recently introduced "lllke Wallace "No, not,. really," Rider 1'9PUet. "I want to PrGft,_,, Hriel, wbJcb f~ on celebritl• and take tbele people down to J&U and have tbe doon OU.. tmportaat JMOPl• no _,... Uvial. Both hJt beblnd 'em. I'll jutt lake my tala'7 every ,.....,._ wtJJ b9 broldcat lmtCUlarly. Wallace week, and be salilfted." hM 4klDI two• far, ud lrc*a•'• MCODd, on a The offlcen are remarkably uncolnplalniq, hip ldlool principal, bu not been aebedaled. even tboqb it often seems the sntem -lneludiq Im*•• left NBC'• •"TodaJ" in December, tbe courta -work.I a1a1nlt them. TUBE TOPPERS KNX1' 9 8 :00 .. Walt Disney World's 10th Annive r sary." Salute lo Dis ney World In Florida. • KNBC e 8:00 "Fame." Leroy tries lo get rid or u gun brought home from prison by his brother. KOCE 9 8:00 and KCET 0 8:30 "I W)ls a Teen.age Movie: Hollywood 1981 ." Examination of reasons why l een ·age audience is de t ermining Hollywoo<t's biggest hlu. KNBC ~ 10 : 00 "Hill Street Blues ." Captain Furlllo considers hiring a lawyer to avoid becoming the department scapegoat. • "°'*8 • Movll A)tler In~ a pro-*'Ai "NIO"f"*'e In Weic" **°" racllet 1n tfll ~ c 1 ... ) cemeron ~. bomoocl. Anne Helm. An actor bedly • U.a. CHIOCl.I ~ed by bU1l*'9 WU "WM! ftr1ol ..., ... ,.. Niki r-. ~ 1111 Jin\ L.atvar repone lrom ....-by °'**'II • wu- Mlnnllota -the httlth ~ lldliblt. car.. caplttl OI the nation -(8) MOYie to ftnO M " Atnerica can • ••it .. Th• Oul.idll' .. llford todeY 1 hloh leCfl.. I 11171) Sterllnll HIYdlfl, ~ medlCel mlr~ Crllg W_,. A young (A} ld.-i t,...,... to Hotthetn • CoV'nONB> MC lrlllfld to join the 1t"'11Q11 NIWI lor ~ldlptlldelioe. ·R' ® MOYll (%) MOYI! * "Blood Btmtr" (1980) **** "Altered Stat•" Tally SanlH, Eddi• (IMO) w-.m Hurt, 8lalr Albert. A border patrolman Brown. A Hll'Yltd IClen- lriel IO bring ltndowner'I lilt' I oeneUc etNCture II wflO lramo In Illegal lllln lltarld wl*1 he c;.onducU WOf11WI to juetlel. mlnd .. xpondlng ••P«I· (II) MOYie manta with llolttlon tank• **'Ao .. Thi Ood1tnd" end ~I halluclno- (IMO) -Cyd Heyman. Mii- 1 _ ~~ colrn Stodderd. The frou-_, llJ ...,..,,.. Ille II )ult beginning lor I *. "Blood And Gutt" An rur• Enolllll OOUc>ll wtllfl aglllg -11tr 111611 hll • myetarlOus woman drope mllllon-t~ lhOt for ft»- by, ~ birth 10 an mblno ce11 In life, WOf1I end tow. baby OWi and ~. 'PO' 1MY1nO tfll Inf• llltllt>d. • LOU MWU .. de<l)MC)¥11 ......... n. ....... · c , .. ,, Jmi ,...,.. JoM ferry. All .. *ltl#'OW ~-.,_..,_..., OI I Mftd of wwnor1 to flg!l4 ,. ~ unoll, the OWftofd wflO lclltd Ille ,...., end II llOldWIO an Ibo-tot ftnlOm, 4:t0 (I[) MOVW * * ..... °"' ~ .. ( 1M IJ Alan Mlln, ....,.. .. HWUey. A ..... of ....,,... deflllftdlnge ~ • IOCltil won-to bllll'Ye thet the ........... dalaOh- ltr OI a NC*Med OOUple II Ille YICtMwl of c:Nld .a-.. 'PO' • ._. YO'tMll TO~ 80TTOM Ol'THI llA Admlral NMon 11 ~Id by • °"" of -NUii lnttnt on oe.troytng the u.a. anc1 ""'*-(C) MOVll * *.,. "Siient ScrtMI" I IMO) ReOecc. &lldWig, Yvonne D1Cw1o. 8-"m colleo-11uoent1 take roome In • f«ebodlng Old ~ wtlefe I gtlely and ltllt UlllOIYed murder w11 cornmlt1~ l'M'• ..... 'R' .MOVll ***'" "l..a Caoe AWi Follll" (111711) Uoo TQO- naul, Mk:NI a.r.utt. A nlgillldub owww lrlel 10 prtCMl(I hit 11_,ttl IO\IW lor • vtllt by hll eon· 1 ll1nt11'1 tether, the mor• convnltllollfll of France. 'A' (})MOW **~ "PaparlMlck Haro" I 1973 I Keir Du11M. Ellu- t>etti AllWy. A hoctcey pll)'lr ....,, • '**'-'· carelrle llte ""'" he flndl genuine llftc11on COmlng lrOll'\.. ·OOod..nalwld 118'. maid. 'R' 'R' CONC:8tT eMOVW 1:408 MOYie f'rida8'• * * "Thi Htgfl COuntry" * *'Ao "Ganeeil II" ( 1972) (1N1) Tlmolfty BoC1omt, Allx Cord. Marl9tta Hart-Daffi·-~ n • ., .... Linda Purl. All eeclPld ~ 1:00 (BJ * • '" "The M"1ldl COfMGI and ,. htnC#--1· ..W. Wo<ker" (1979) Petty Ouk• CIPtled Olrlfrtend, llMlrig 1:90 NP#8 Astin, M11!1u Gll.,_,I to the mountlllnl ll'om 2:00 INT!RTAIMolEHT Dedicated teacher Ann11 IOdlty, muet daddl " they TONIGHT Sullivan trltl every PoUI· MYe 8 ... toOathtt l>efore Henle Vlu.chtl:ie tallce b1e aoptoach IO c;ommun.. .,..no ca119111 by the tl>Out hit rnarrltOI. ca•• with,,., 11u0en1 -thl _ .......... .__ 'PG' !.-MOYie --·-._..... deal. blond and 12:00. IHA NA NA alrongwtlled Helen Kelllt au..t: All• Moreno. • •• .,. "I.Mt Tmngo In .. ** .. Thi Last Time I • MOYll Parta" (1973) Marlon Bran-s-Patts" I 19S4) Eliza· *** "Thi Ohoet And do. Merla SCllneldar. beth Taylc>f. Van Johnson .... Muir'' ( 1947) Au Hfll· D1r9Ct1d by 8arMrdo 8ar· Bu.d on 1 ttory t>y F 11eon. V-llfown. toluecl. A ~IQICI Scott Fittge<ald BrOll.,. • MIKE DOUGl.AI men whoM unfalthlul wltl romtll08ll end Shall•.0 Colloal: Atay 8alley. r_,tly committed~ 1no1vldual5 popu1111 Pat11 0ueew Roger & Roger, end lfl unlnhlbll.O young 11 lhl end ol WOfk! W1r II Pat11 l..a8ale, Fred Wlllal'd. women mMt and blglrl 1 t:OO fC) • * * 'h "Dey foi Thi PllnMcolt Cflolt. compllc1110 1ff1lr Night" ( 1972) J~uellne e ~ throughout which they 8lsse1. vetenlina Cortese H!Al TH ~ r*"8ln n..,,..... to .-:ti The lives and IOVll or lllm "Thi Future Of Haelth" other. 'R' per'lorm41fa .,, studied In 11 CC) MOVll 2:2t • MOVIE movie-withln4-movte. **"' "Hec>PY Blfthelay, **'~ "Limbo" .(1972) 0••• .. lnlldlMovea" a.mini" (1M0) Madellne Kall Jecktoo, l<athlrlnl ( 1980) JOhn S1veoe. Oavld l<Mln. Alta ~-A H8'· Juellcl. WI-~ Morse A newcomer lo lhl vflld ltudlnt'• blrthdty dlltur1>1d Wllill ..itlng for group of regulan al an party at Illa tamll)''• South their hulbend• to return Oakland bit may hold lhl Phllldelphl• home lrom POW carnpe In VIit· key 10 making 1111 b1r11n· ~ an ~ nam. de.·s dr61m ot ti.coming• ~ for 1111 vllltlng _ t:ao I ~ p<o baslcetbaH pl1yer 1 dlllrrnltel. 'R' ...., .. ,.. rNHly ·po· 12:.ao e II TOMOMOW * * "Thi LMt RocJ\M" e:ao e * • "Hold Thal 8aby Oueet•: lormer ltnllor ( 1972) Orlon w ..... ~ I 1949) Bowery 8oyl. LIO George McGo¥arn; Sletar ranoe Htnll)' GO<~ The 8oyl atep In SledOI: ec:tr-Hey!ey • f110V1! 10 prollCt 111 lnllfll they Me.a: bMltlal pleyer w-. •• "Night Of ni. Blood lound abandoned tn • S~(f\) Monet«" (111721 CMlto. ltundry • MOW °'* Let. Maril Sdlel. 10:00(R) **'""Bon voyeoe. *••it ''The T,., Wfll" • MOVIE Charlie 8town" ( 1979) Anl· I IM 1) 8._ "--.. Jonn *•IA "Serial" I lMOl Mfll· ma1ed 00flC1.0 t>y 8!11 Dr-Benymore. tin Mui. Tueeday Weld. A Mei.noez Snoopy and e 9 YmAI happily married Mtrln Woodstoclt follow A -bf1dl '*-Din 10 County couple .,1 IC>Uffld ellcilenge 11udlnts Chatl .. find her hulbend, who by "*' trendy nelgtlborl B<own. P191>1<mllll P11ty . myeter'loulfy ~~ Into 111p1or1ng altemtllve Linus and M11CH1 on an .,._ gifting '8ftglld up .....,._,'A' adventure-lolled tour ol w1ti11 ~ oo--nment 2:4I Cl) MOVll Enotand In<! Frence ·G !Pfttl. (A) * * "Improper Ctlannlll" ($} * * * * 'R~rrec· • INOEPINO!Hf lion" (19801 Ellen Burslyn, NITWOMNIWS (1911) Alan Attcln, Marlette Sim Shepard •Alter 1 ,..., Hlfl~. A_ ... OI ~ (J)WHArl Ult NlfVlfC/( d•nllndlng• c.-1 tetll 1uto 1CClden1. a wom· Featured: • vWI to lhr• of IOClll worker to llllP9Ct an ltnda that the hall thl Amerio•'• blg·bu1lne11 the 6-,..er..(lld dlUQhtar of et>lllly to heal olh9rs t>ul 11 ~·)' Mione end I tool! • eeparll.O couple In Ille perMCUted blcauM of her •I the ,_t IC>Of'(I cran victim Of Chlld lbuM. 'PG. refusal lo clllm a divine iiCiJ ~·---influence 'PG' .. __ a:0e • MOYie t2:40 (I) THE MINT * * * "Pendulum" ( l9e0) 11:00 (CJ • • · The lldy Van- A -di lor 1 murderer George Peppard, .1ean 19hll" ( 1979) Elllo11 Gould, lladl 8lmon to • Poe> ""II-Sablrll. Cybill Shepherd An tnno- ., , • meditative guru end I : 10 • HBWI cent man and a bllullful the guru'• mtnlpuiatlYI (Ji) ..... TH! HF1.. womeo ere 1-.pt Into • .-..ant. deadly esp!Onage ""* ~~~--~-..,Hoethi2i~~~n=end:::r+-~ca-E.u.top_...,. ''The~.. lllp<lll tr I.In lrl•lllng 1:00• MOYIE hlgfllgl'ttl of the AFC end through p<•war Natl Gar· ***'Ao "Pm Joey':(1957) NFC~~ many 'PG' Fr-* Sinatra. Alta Hll)'· end 1 ,..,._ of prevtous 11:30 (}fl * * * * "Blckel .. -'fl. SuperBowla. (I~) R.IChatO Burton Peter O'f006e, King Henry llOf~----­llll~OfC...· llllfr durtne tt1e tllll -. lury tlM •• * ~ "BMc:lll lell" I IN&) fdO 8yrMI. Clvll Nott •*•"~OfTlll t.teonltoa ,, .._, .. 11te11) 0-,...~. • •• )' "lfloht ...., .. ""°'Gary Coopet, ~ ren iaac ... •**"The~ Shrtnklng Woman" I 1llO) LIIV Ttfl*I. Cl\tfltt Gro- din A ~ llr>dt It herd to cope wtlltl .,.. llllddlnly lhrlnkl In ...., 'PO' (%) • • "The Aaturn Of Tiie SecM>cu• S.Ven" (IMO) a;ttlt ArftOtt, Oor• don Clapp. The tftll'llW. Of • group of COlllet .,.. danta K1M In 1M prot•t -1 Outing tfll 'IOt g.thlt IOI I --end reunlof\. 'R' 1:00 ~ ... "flold Gamel" ( 19' 1) Slecy ICMCh. J.,.,. LM Curtte An eccentric trucker, 1 b11utllul hltdll'*tr end • ~ pelNc ...... lrhlilne the ..,... route ire pleylng gem. for llte Ind death. ·PQ· (I)* e * "The L.Mt Timi I s-Patll" (1954) EMD- belh Tlyiot. Ven Jol\nlOn. BIM<I on 1 llory t>y F. Sc:oll Fltzgerlld Btol<en romanciea end .......,_, lnOMcMll populate ,.,. at Ille end Of Wortd W• II, 1:*1. * • "The Altwf\" 2:00 (%) * * . 'Mllvin' Anet How• 1rd" C1lllO) P-.t UMM, JllOn Aot>fl/I01. An ..... MM unknown llM llltlon 1ttendant c111m1 IO be 1119 rlghttul heir to Howard Hugh11' bllljo'I-d gllar n1at1.1R' Sal C1I * * * "JOhmy Guller" (19S3) Join Crawford . Stetling Hayden A gultar- pl1ylng ••-9"-., ... to prove Ille IOVI IO IN - of • gambling l'IOUM. CC) * * * "Huclcltbtrry Ftnn" ( t974) Jeff E.HI, Paul Wlnlleld. Saeed on lhl atory l)y Matk Twain A young t>oy Ind 1 rvnaway 11a111 become lnVOIYed 1n a -ill Of ldYlt'ihKIS while n-ng down the Mlsalsalp- pi River on a rail * * '"' ··TM Miracle Worket" ( 19711) Patty Dulle Aatln. Melian Gilbert Dedicated tHChlr AMII Su.lhvan Ir-~ poa»- ble approach 10 communi- cate W11h hi< student -1111 de11. t>llnd 1nd llr.ongwltled Helen Keller 3:30 ($) * * 'H1wl< Thi Slayer" ( 1981) J1ck P1lance. JOhn Tarry. An adventurous young m1t1 enllsll the aid OI • band OI warriors to light nl& evll uncle, the overtord whO k1llec:t his lither and IC hOldong an et>t>eu for ran- som 0 • • * • 'S.yonata" ( 1957) Marlon 8'ando, Red Bu11ons An American 1411 ace has 1 poignant attalt W11h the "" perlorm41f 01 • lamed J~ llC11ng C0tn9any S:45 (_I, * * "Thi aetu<n Ot The Sec1~4.11 Seven· ( 1980) Marlc Atnotf Gar>~ don CllPi> Thi "'*"'ber'a OI I group Of cOllege Slu- denls actf\11 In lhl protest ~t during the '60s gllhlt t0< • WMl<end reun.on 'R 5:30 CCJ • • • .,, "8an1t1as" (1971) Woody Allen. lOUIM l asMr A produc1 tester, t>ored w11n hos everyd1y roultne. goes to a 1m111 Latin American country and t>ecomes 1 dte1a1or during a polmc•I u!>'l41avlll 'PG' r $) e * * •,; ··The Elephant M1<1" ( 1980) JOhn Hurt . Anthony Hoplcons A Oedl· calld phy11clan takea under his wong a horribly det0<mecl man wnoee lite llU lhln hid l>Mn !iplnl In chell) lrNk lllhiblltonS 'PG' J (t) 1'.'"' "Nothing But The Billl" iJWJ Nal> -----t ·-Denholm EIMott. A r.,._ 111811 m11n II 11PM11 10 lllrn I hit 1 mU<der hi cornmm.o 11 abou1 Lo be dllCOlllted JOHN DARLING by Annstrong & Batluk WHICH WAY 10 IHf; PLAYERS' IN'TER\JIEW ROOM°' 'Captain' is schedule victim WASHlNG'rON (AP> -"Captain Kanaaroo" may have bopped across lhe leleviaion time schedule once loo often. Thanks to the latest shill in lhe Captain's starting time -. to 6:30 a.m. -local CBS attiliales In some of the nation's largest cities are dropping the longest runnlnt children's profram al~gelher. From New Orleans to Tucson and Sall Lake City to Miami, Baltimore and Denver. local CBS affiliates say the CBS network has changed the Captain's startjng time once too often . "This is a slap In the face by CBS lo American families," says Peg1Y Cbarren. the founder and president of Action for Chlldren 's Television <ACT ). "The network keePI putting out these great press releases about how they're keeping the Captain on the air. But it's Just not true." CBS wants t~ expand evening neim tp an hour WASHINGTON (AP> -CBS wants to expand its even.int news proaram from 30 minute!! to an hour by starting the newscut early enough so ita local amllatet won't have to give up any prime time. The first solid lndlcaUon of how the network · mtpt-elfer-ea-hout .. lon1 news prosram was revealed In a petition rued wtth the Federal Communk:aUona Commlssion last Friday. It •UUetta the l'etwork will betin otterin1 an expanded newscast "In the ftnt quarter of HU'' that would air from 8 to 7 p.m. ln the Paclftc time aone. . · ABC, CBS and NBC all bave broacbed the idea ol expancMn1 their neniftt newscuta but have Men comttalned by the fCC11 prime time acceu rule and by outritht opposlUon from local staUons lo the Idea of surrendering any more prime time to the networks. ' Adopted In 1970. the FCC rule s~tfies t.bat local affiliates In the top ~ markets cannot carry more than three hours ot network Pl"Olrammln1 during prim~Ume -the period fn>m-f p.m. ton p.m. 'Shakespeare on T_V' host dies I I• I SAN MARINO, Calif. <AP >-Or. Ji~rank Baxter. a Unlvtrelty of Southern California h1lllh proltllOf who broutht a new dimension to network procrammln1 with ''Shakespeare on TV" and a bolt ol science and art shows, has died or heart failure at a1e 86. "Shakapeare on TV." launched on CBS in 1963, waa the first educaUooal procram In the naUon ror which c0Ue1e credit waa elven. • "I've been a teacher for 3S years, and to lhink of rising one morning and speaJdni to more people than I've evel' spoken to ln my llfe!" Baxter once said of hia first TV pro1ram, which won him seven Emmy Awarda and a Peabody Award. Baxter and CBS executive once estimated the 45·m lnute Saturday morning program drew millions of viewers. · In 1954 Baxtet conducled "Now and Then," a program devoted to the world's' great literature, and followed It with "Renaissance on TV" in 1956. Baxter later appeared as "Dr. Research" on the NBC Bell Telephone Serles, "Our Mr. Sun," directed by Frank Capra. Jn 1~7 he was host and narrator or ABC's "Telephone Time," a weekly dramat1zalion of _ _fMJ'.'Q~J>eOl)le past and present. The stout teacher with wire-rimmed glasses once said he lhought criticism or television-ea rly television, at least-was unfair. ~ ~ .._. - when life is al ils finest. .. when love is at 11~ fullest. .. ) Uill!J lolWl[ ~Ill• All ITI r11m, 11'1 r1l10• liloducoon A IWlJ>. tnlJ£U. l'rlm KATHARINE HEPBURN HE~RY FONDA JANE t'UNU.\ "ON G()U)P,N POND" ....::.: OOUi ~[ft\ IWl\ll l lll.£.IU.\ \llfUJ\\I LA\Tt\I IM\t1.R1 ~1\ -.. BRHE ColU!ERT :-• .:.. BIU.l lllUJi\\I\.,.. · ER.\t:.'iT m1\l~l~ _,,. --\ltjl~ln11f.U. ~.:.==.::.:; START FRIDAY, JANUARY 22 In a Boston hospital a love affair ends, a new one begins, a Doctor battles his patient, and a man learm the true meaning of courage. · ''l'herc is a tendency too orten to critic lie something on the uir not tor what it Is, but it hi not what l'IOtneone expectt.'<1 it to be.'l.he said ln a 1957 interview. .. As for people who bout they dosa't• look 1tl television that's like 11yln1 the1 won't 10 to see 'lhamlet' because the theater aao includes things llke1 strip·teasu," Baxter said wllh char::acleristlc Irony. But de11pite his a/finjty for the airwaves. Baxter said TV can never substitute for a book. Tel~vision. he ·once said. "is not a yending machin~ tor higher le~rning, and the coaxial cable will not pump culture into anyone's vel'ns. Bul on televison l can remind agaJn of the Cun and delight and-profit of reading'." Baxter, who was born Ln New Jersey and received his doctorate from Trinity College, Cambridge, di~onday. He spent a year as a medical corpsman with the ArQerican Expeditionary 'Force In France in World War I and began leaching in 1930. He brought to his programs a wry sense or humor. Lecturing on "King Lear," he once sized up Lear's daughter Regan : "Sadistic. isn't she? Softly, she turns lo her husband, and speaks in a voice that would give diabetes to a water buffalo." Che¥\j has the ,_.,. to make "'-HoHdafl Season the ,._.It ftel'! ~00~\l~ (ltJa~/li~t:lo 7 GOLDEN GLOBE NOMINATIONS 1nc1u<11119 BEST PICTURE aUT DlflmCTOA-MHM PohMft ... T ~ ACTOA-MowllN L AoUlne ... T euflPORTINQ ACTMU-llllry llH,._..,. ~ "THE EARL'S Pt.i-IHO·IC411HO Sol., ••••• t-4••h"• ,. ' 11'ft"-" .... ~'• r 1"""'«"1Mh.it1V1"" r• • ''•' c.1.11r """'1•....,•tilv'AJti.e1 con .c ."'641·1289 t ' ~., ·I I I ' l AEJil(PGJ At - 8:00 No EainomvS-.. No,._ CMARIOTSOF RRE IPGI At 7:009:20 I ·a.DRS 1R1 Shows •t 7:159:15 NoP-rnEOf ll'GI Showsac 7:009:20 W cRI 7:10. t :IC)• JDfln BefUsfl i _.,.,.,.(RI Tim• aandth CNJ •111 c:~a;r l\ ,,.. A (PGI Nine To Pilwlf C.-01 =~~) ~Jr: ~ .. ,d ... CNJ • . ----------------- . . - Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, January 21, 1982 • B~TPICtURE OF THE YEAR -N•w Ton rum cnt1a1 Award -National loald cd lntew Awasd 7 GOLDEN Gl.OBE NOMINATIONS Thia wHtl you c:en '" REOS 11 theae the1trH : • lDWAAOS llPW'OAT lDWAllDI V'llJO TWI• • Ct•lOOMl Ml!"'l)Oll Buch 60 07b0 Ml\'WC)ll Vie;o 830 6990 ()r.}nge b34 2$~3 £0WAllDS Ct•UllA WlST UA MOWl(S ..., •• , .. ,..,.,.,.. Westm1Mlet M l 393\ 8•ed 990 4022 .... ,_._, ..... ~MV M(M8(fl\ Y(>vt<""°•1M..,,..,OV•nd yOUt~\ft,IO :itl'tY ortn•~• ._.,lf"O•f '~'W•r .. , ,,. '"*-''•• 1not1i.•tN *""~ - - ----------------------- •BARGAIN MATINEES• Monday thru Saturday All Perform1nces belore 5:00 PM (bctpt Special EngageNnls 1nd Holld1ys) m!lt·ij':IR la ~~°4-2:oo'a"'] -c -TT.--"""°" I --·---AAIOfAI OF THf LOST AJlllt" "TAPS" -,,.., ..... , ....... ... ---l .... ,,_ .. 1:81. ..... ,... .... ~--w.-~u.oe···--......-. ............ ~ .. -'*.!::!!.=== OA&f 'N£10"9QM" O'I --· "°----·-.uo. .......... __ ,._ '""'OS" u•.•••• ---- ""' {!!! ........ ···--·- '"""-'"""''~ "A8SfNCE OF MALICE" -·--.·-.-- LAKEWOOD CENTER WALIC·IN MMT•--· "SHAAKY'S MACHINE" 1•1 .... ~···••,1•• -----,, •. -. ... 1::-.a:•&.••• -c. -". -"""°" "TAPS"'"' tt:e.•-.Ht.Ul,U41 -----''CHAJNOTS Of' ARE" -'"'-"'"-""' . LAGUNA ---· "~l(Y'I MACHINE" fll .............. ,.. .... faculty 01 Candt•wood 213/531·9510 ..,. ___ ,.... ... I _ .. _......,__.., ... _ ___ ... ___ _ ,-'AIEDS"1001 ,, ....... . --·--........ "AAIOfM 0 , TH! LOST AAlt" ..... ~, .. ·-, .... ,. --· ...... -"EVILSKAK" 11111 .............. -.. -.- SO. COAST WALK ·IN S01Jlh Coat! Hrway ot lfoao woy 494.151.4 . --· "MOOEAN ,A08l.ElllS" '"' -·--Mr ... I U., t 1 .. •.1tt.•t .. tettt ... ,\.ACM ....... .....,.. 'ATLANTIC CITY" 1111 __ ,.. ...... Ml.-UI.---·- ... 8 15 #' • •• , 6:00 ...... , \t ... ,.9~45 IMPOR TAN f NOT I Cl' Clltt OIUN UNOIR 12 FRU! "41roo, .,,. Wj!M I ... ,. lritrv r,. 6 30. s,, ''" .... , 4.30,. Cl~HI M>ll'IO • IOu~ AM !'.NI MOIO IS t!MI UUIUJi or ..0 AOI CAA 11.<00f) ""1• iGNflOI ACQ$$Olll l'IJ$ITOi -lllNG AM l'Olll*l 1•~ ~ DIWf.lNS DI Oii ._ IW*> AHAHllM ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN hee.,.oy '1 Ol l•mOf\ St 17HMO ___ ...... _ "£VILSP£AK" 1•1 -"THf FINAL CONR.ICT" 1111 I II SOt/110 ~JI NA 'A Ill BUENA PARK ORIVf IN l-•"' ••• ••II OI •noH 121·4070 8Vl"A P4 111 LINCOLN DRIVl·IN ~~ ........ ..,. ...... "AUENC£ OF MAL.ICE" --"MANIAC MANSION" ""' eo-• "FANTAS4€5'" 1111 -"PRETTY 8A8Y" 11111 Clllt I I Ml\llti.l --· "MOOOtN~·--''Ml .. T0'1W"flt ... ._ __ ,......_ ... ,ALI "GHOST STORY" 1111 -\1nco1n "•• W•\I 01 •non "AL~!O STAT~&" 1111 121·4070 ), 81.Iiiilfi.)f ii .. ~c:~~n:.-~ , 5'\" o .. ,Q ,,..,. 01 11oo~nv111 (So > HI: CANNONllAU. RUlf fNI 962•2411 CINf 11 SOt/110 w l ',l M1NSlf~ HI -WAY 39 DRIVE IN , .. , • lo' .. ~" ... lA HABRA ORIVf Iii 171-1162 "AN1 .f .. ocn 9,.4 $o OI CMClellGl00oe .__ 891·3693 -C.MOTT·---"T~"INt -"THLCANNOMAU. MINw .. O~ANGE ORIV I IN '°"'o ""° ,,..... • l•o,.Co•,. .. 558·7022 ' .. ~.. \I • • I M ISS ION 001·11 N . . ~ ·. .. • ... WARNl:R CH~IVt IN ..,_A.,.'llletlOl .... 11 ..... M7·Htl .,...,-~­·•U...UTMlllW' -"""'°8Dl,_ .. ~ I ' I r •if 1 > < > 11 r 1 1 f r. r 11 ' •ttumorand tl'Olicilm Y'i • tinder -~work': .. f ' ' • I I • Orange CO•l DAILY PILOT{fhuraday, January 21, I 982 I ........ I ... t • ... I I ·--. Eeon'o mlsts f O:rrecast slow recovery 8y K F.11'H TUBER . btHlll'ICS~'n'\eh at the Sheraton &NM., NII...._ • ._ NewJ>C)rt Hotel Wednesday th(tt On U.e he.ls of news the U.S. the • economic ra t1lollt will eqonorpy plun1ed et an &Mual cbnttnue through the fir11t rate of 5.2' percent In the final qulu rle'r •or t 982, • · u l,lho-'gh tt\ree months o f 1981 , t wo pos,lblyat•u slowerrate/' ec;:onomlsts speakln& tn Oranae Pari'y sajd Orange Co~nty will Cbunty have predicted the' be tess ' sus'Ceptible t'O the rece11ion ls likely to continue for dow nturn than the r est1 or at least several months. California and the nation as a .'rhe prediction is consistent whote, but des pite ~os itive with that o f state Finance oharacterisl lC8 9f Ule County's Director·Mary Ann Graves, who economr , "It i's not entirely Wednesd ay reported a 2. 7· immune to what happens in the percent drop or the California rest of the state and nationally." Index of Leadin g Economic Parry eal l e d Pr ~s ident Indicltan te 146 in October , Its Reagan's program for e~onomic lowest point "1 nearly a year. recovery the most rar-r,eaching Dr. Robert Parry, ch ief change In poi.icy since the New economist for Security PacitJ\" Deal. A mild recovery will occur National Bank . told looaJ '1; after the July I tax cllt takes effect, Parry s3ld, although that rec overy will be modest in ~o mparl ao n with past recoveries. Parry pr e di c ted une mployment will increase during the next fe w montM , perhaps advancing to record highs. In Orange County, the economist said the jobless rate will probably exceed 6 percent, In comparison to the state and national level of 8.9 percenL Interest rates, he said, will fall from the current 15~ percent lo 13 percent during the next few months. with mortgage rates falling from 16-18 percent to 14 percent. ··That's Kn improvement," Parry said, .. but it's still high for interest rates " The prime rate could climb lo back to 15 percent by year ·end due to renewed demand for credit once the turnaround occurs In the second haH or the year. Parry explained. Speaking at the South Coast Plaza Hotel In Irvine, Professor Larry J . Kimbell, director of the UCLA Business Forecasting Project, said Wednesday that "we race some real problems, and the only thing I can tell you is to stick it out." Kimbell presented a number of possible economic scenarios, with the most positive aspect or each being that or inflation control. The immediate outlook is grlrn.,.1 Kimbell said , and he added that th e pain o f "disinflation" will not be e1tsed b e fore 1984 beca use the economic recov e r y which follow,; the current recession Is likely to lx! relAltively slow. Ttw Commerce Department r c po t e d We dn esday the lnflatl9Jl·aaJusted gross national produet the broadest measure o r Uu.1 country's econo mic activl~y -declined in the fin al quarter of last year at the fastest rate since the record 9.9 percent quarterly downturn or spring l~. For the entire year, real GNP rose 1.9 percent. In 1980, it declined 0.2 percent. RECOVERY SLOW -Sank ofClci al Robert T. Parry has to Id Newport ,B e a ch audience economy will show turnaround this year N ewport-based Gdlden west cuts commuter flights C o1DD1enl on· AT&T urged Lingering effects of the air traffic controlle rs' strike c o m ·bi n e d w it h s 1 u g g i s h e~on o.mic conditions have caused Ne wport Beach-based Golden West Airlines to cut back some ser yice to Los Angeles ll')ternational Airport. But airline President Henry Voss said the commuter airline is trying to pick up the slack by lengthening the flight distances ror what was once strictly a short·hop'operation. Voss is a member or the board of directors for the Regional Airline Associat ion , which recently ·hosted Drew Lewis. s ecretary of t h-e U .S Tr ansportation Department, al its New Orleans.convention. The key question posed to Lewis by t h e s h orl ·ha ul o erators was whether rederaJ. I a llocations fo r daily arrivals end departures would remain in effect at major airports, he said. Those a llocationJ wer e imposed for safety reasops after m embers oC the P rofessional Air Traffic Co ntro l l e r s Or· g anization we nt on s trike. Lewis reiterated a sl'ror\g stand against rehiring the conf rollers. Voss said, meaning r urrent a llocatio ns are expeCted to remain intact at least through the winter, when poor tveather conditions make sare~y pre- cautions more critical. • . Golden West currently rhes an average 42 weekday flights into Los Angeles Inte rnational, which VOS$ said is sil fewer t.nan before the Augus t 1981 strike. Twelve daily round trips link it with John Wayne Airport. ··By mid-1983 I wo'11d s a FIXED KATE things should be pretty much hack to normal." said Voss, who expl ain e d the a llocation s probably wi ll be gr adually expanded until then. However, Voss obser ved, even without the PATCO strike, daily fli ghts into LAX and other major airports would hav e been voluntarily reduced by airlines because of slackening passenger demand. For Golden West. the regular $35 one-way ticket price (there is a lso a $25 midweek discount price ) from John Wayne Airport to LAX is "inconvenient" for many passengers, and traffic isn·t as high for the short·hop flight as previously "although it will never disappear:· said Voss. Also. direct flights on Jet American from Long Beach C9\.L.ECTQ•n CO•NEll MIMI GeN C-s.Jn.51 511 .. ~ Cl. t1 .t1 l•Y 1941 ltru9'1<r""'°' $112.• U t1M Maple l.Hh "'2-• ...... . $0 PeMX MSl.7S ... t.11 1ffORT.GAG~S FULLY AMORTIZED SECOND TRUST DEEDS fO'o Sliver 8"9' '71•.• S7t5t.• ~CentP'lauYI ..... . (7141J~ : •Ht I f 'IAtSECtl,. '8& LN-7 CJ:'\ S.\LE \\'ITll TI llS .\D "207 .91. mo. I CA LL (71 4)754--1'801 FOR CURRENT R A TES .4SI\ FOR: J ENNI FER H EBNER 1 LOAN OPER ATI ONS MAoNAGEK Tt>e Allanee to SaYe Energy 1W fYf!(»re<I ~ lYOcnu~ that CUlliJlfl1 I 2 simplO /06•f'9'1'1M! ~res to tal<e w/licfl C8n CVI down )'OUt nome energy IJW or 261'. T flat lfl '"'" I can wt doWn me amoulll °'money JikJ qiJr lpt llOme energy (Fo1 e11~ Ord you know 111a1 ttMC1r~ ovtieis ~~ neat., The oroc11111e, "'(II r(VI )Oii how 10 P<eveni •I and save / The f>tf}CllUfO will aiso 1eU )IOCJ about "1' r 11111'19$ to /10 IQ c;fl<lflfl&yS'i)l'ld //fJfJS IO~ • 111)(J tJut:ls /O SflOWfJI ~s 10 Pieell'JCiJ/ Oul letS. IQ waSlllllQ mnchines to ooars end mil dO~ to waler llfHllOll Do them tJH 8f'l<1 c111 root t'(ll!rgy v~ Oy 25~ 111(> 0<nctt11m 1 7 00 ADAMS A VE. COSTA MESA, CA ~contain~ .JcCl;rate ~ <Jrid e.:isy 10 tohew Olfectons Ta~e ovr adv1Ce Sflllo to; ou1 frf.¥> oroctivre Tl>P ?511o Sblvt1on II ~"" \il"t' ~' (llenty of~ The Alllt#tc• to s... f'""'1 llox !1200, W.tlhJngfdtl D.C. 200IT ,,..,, •. ,........,,~ • .,.IJJP*"'fotq)•et\ 4IO ,.,,,", \.l11tf9/1fDf'''<" ·~ --_.__._ ---- ~-f 'W} . -. .. . --- A THE ALLIAftCETos;.;E ENEeY 1 .. '-·· . •• .. . , \I'M :,!11:1:1 I II I\\' l'\\'ll~'ltf '1:11.'l:I. ·~· \lll,11 ' (' "'11:'1:°1' 11t.:ll)OCl.ll l'ICJI I IU :!4Hl-I I \.'II l'ltll I 1171'4 7 911 ti" I 111~-~ I'-'· 111 .~ lll!ll 1•11 IH1 •111'1:lll . NANY cnwEilli Oii s.u.E UI ·y ott I.EASE A I .1011~so~ & so.~ I ;\1 llJ \ \II~· f,"\ :;40 -.=it i:m NEW POSITIVE DRUGS A~PlACING Ol.OTIMEAS ~: , R. Ph. l::u eh rlC\\ YCiJf has brou8J1!_..,us new drugs wfi1ch -diTrei=greaOYTrOm the guess"'ork ingre· dicnti. of past years It is c11fftcult to reahie that less than a hundred years ago. you could count on your fingers the ICnown drugs which could be depended upon to ~1ve e positive medical result N o w the multi : ingred1en(. hope they work , mixtures are rapidly d1sappeanng. We have single ingredient medicines wh ich can posit I vely cause a de· sired result. We have drugs which raise or •lower blood pressure. Others permit a diabetic • to live a normal lire. We con fill any prescript.ion. VOUH DOCTOR CAN 'PHONE US when you r\eed a med1nne /\ great many people entrust us wit~ their prescriptions. PAii UDOPMAIMACY ,,........, ,,, ........... ,....,... .... .a.1• -- If it 's got wheels l ou'll move it· aster in a , Dally Pilot classified •d.Clll 642·5671and .......... friendly ad-vlsorwm ll•IP you turn your wtlMIJ Into calla • Municipal Airport to Chicago and AirCal from J ohn Wayne to Phoe nix have attrac t ed travelers who otherwise might have taken a commuter flight to LAX for later connections. he said. California. And the fl eet of a dozen 17 -passenger twin-engine Otters is gradually being phased out, he said .. Golden West recently began direct round-trip ser vice to Monterey and Fresno and also is ser~ing Santa Maria , San J ose, Bakersfield and San Francisco, he said. W ASHLNGTON (AP> -l n the view of attorneys general from 24 st~tes. U.S. District J udge Harold H. Greene must solicit publi c comment on tl~e government's l ~ndma rk antitrust settlement with the A m e ri can T e l e phone & Telegraph Co. To co unt er thos e less-than-optimistic pressures, Golden West is adjusting its priorities, he said , switching from a short-hop to more or a bop-s kip-a nd-j ump type of service. Five new 48·passenger DeHaviUand Dash·7s have been acquired in the past year to Oy longer t rips into Northern One o f the airline 's advantages is its continuing status as a commuter, which means its flights from J ohn Wayne aren't counted among the 41 average daily departures a llowed by county officials. Their court filing suggested Gr eene must adhere to t he Tunney Act in reviewing the proposed settlement. That 19'74 la w sets out strict procedures, in c lud ing a 60-d ay p ublic comment period, for judges to fo llow in reviewing major antitrust settlements. OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS NEW YORI( (API Cl.,kJl 14'4 n ... I*" i S.1' 1\o. ~:.<_Y,M JI Jiii> ~dMl<<o .. ,. HASOAO QUOCetlGM ClowCp ·~ s Hoover t\4 t:O. .es '""40 ~:~.w 34 M"'-UPS AND DOWNS ihowlftll llltflHI bkls COlrTlo 11¥. ""' Horii Rs ~ .. .,. Oflforn> '"' 1~ JO JI •nd to-I Ofltn by ColoGes V. II lJ ~r:~~I 1411> u v. Otl~TP ""' "" Ster ISi 1\oo 1\o< m•rUI ,,.....,s es Of ComCIH ~ .. Vi 11 ,,.,. PCA Int 4''11 ~\'\ SlrewC1 1411> ""' w.... Priu• oo not CmlShr u .. lnfralnd . ..., •V. Pab\L8 1111> ,, ... S..be<u • . .,, ln<luderel .. lmerllup Cmwhl ,, IJ\lo Inlet n ?JI/• PcG•R 70 '°~ ~rEI ,~, , .. H E.W YORK IAPI -Tl'lt IOllOWlftll 119 m•rkOown ar comm. Con Pep 1SV. u lnlrcEnr 4l4 s ~~:xr 111. ' sl) •• • J6 UV. lulon '"' w~ Cor~t '°"' 20\'> 1n1m10• ..... ~ 11 1111) T I( t )4" """ Ww> IN o .. r · IM · ~- Stoo Bid A\k Cro• re '°'"' l'OE ln811Wtfl 11\oo I) "-'•Enl ""• 12 TIME 0C , .. 111, llOCU -warr ... I\ 1MI M •e -.... AEL Ind ... "' Cutlrfd ' \,; "'· lwaSoUI ,. 21\o Pentelr 10 20\!t ~:~·. n v. ll\oo • ... tn~I --..... tn01il -.. . AFAProl "'" 13 5l!~':" • s Sit. J•msbv ·~ .. .,. PeopEap n. 10 27 21\!t l:'te"I ol chaft9t re9o1rdltts Of vofumt AVM Cp 4\'\ 4'11 U'll U._ Jerlce • 11 .... 17 .. Petri! l 31 ... )21/. TecumP t1V1 U I'> Of w..s .. :~~~~ ,... • O•ylM s 1)''< IJ~ ~.,':ie, \It " Pet11b0n IS IS .... TolcmA 19\<. 20 No -u.lllH l•eci;::,. belOw '1 ••• 11\cl· 10V, 11 08"' H HV1 PTlll•Hal )1\oo )111> hneftl • 17 .... ""' t*d Het and -< -CMnQllS ••e V.. ActvRoss >'I• >" • t).l2 • 1s..n lce ltSI pl 11~1.T~ PlerceSS 1tV. ,,__.. TexAB • JJll. >H• olllerenu belw--prevl-<loll"' AllBSll • ~~ m: g:~~' ,~~ n~ l(el••• Plftkr1n Sl''> SSll> ~~fat 10 J0•1_. bid P<IU -W.0 '\ latl bid P<I<•. ............. l(•m.n • \~ 17'4 PIOnHl8 .... ( ... 'h Allcolnc 4J 4-llh OeweyEI JV. ,.,.., l(e7iw "' ~ .,,,, Pl.stint I I'll 4 1·16.4 S·1• Allex 3\oo >"> 0 1.crv• n'll 13\'> l(e 'TtSv 4J''> 4S PcK~ll s•to •Y· To~OI• 4'1',1, ... .,, Ul'S Am•r•• 11v. llV.. OlanCru JS • l(wfel ,..,. 19"'-PresOM 2P> ,.,, '"•lcoPo nvi 14'" ,..,... U\I .°'\. PCI. AF um )~ 4W Oocull • nv. ,, ..... l(lmb.sll ''"'11/ P~trtn 1Poo ,µi. ~~~ ,.,, Up ,.,o AOreet It 1t•1, OollrOn 1"-"" l(lne1n1 l'Jlt "' Proo•P , ... I+. TnonFo I)"' 12'1. , .... . " Up 11.1 AlnGp > ~ .. ~ ~r~,~~ , ~~: ~ Kl~G ,..,., ll PbSvNC ., l)\o, UnMcGll zo ZO\. Ela nPll 10 . '"" Up 21.2 AMIC<O\ ~~:f:v 15' ... IS:\!o Pur18en 11 2111> US En< 4~ s c:riu"" J'-... Up 10.1 ANallM 14 u w OunkO 1 Ullo Ul'O tiff ~ ~~f~ 12'. 12'1. US Syr .. l•IJ. ltw .SK un 4\oo "" Up 10.1 AO...v 10 1ov. Ourtm ' IP4 14 KYllCllt 12 12'4 11'1. ,, USTrO ............ Boe<onP ) . .,, Up 10.0 A RH MO ..,. """ EetnVnc U llt U'll L.M><eln 2.. J4V_, ReoenP• .,,.. ,, ... UVe8il\ lY• » Hl510¥ un • I Up zo.o ·AWeld > It 20 Econl•b , ... 11\'0 L.•ndRH s ~ Ra~<11m S3'h 54.,, ~~:,~:B ""' • SpecS~I J "' Up 20.0 ANdllt '" .... E1Pe1EI I0'.-1 ICM!. l •neCo Q V. l4 Re mnd ~241. 11•. ""' • 01•-) . .... Up lt.O A1>9SA ""' "'"' Ekler8t ~ •~ Lflnn ,..,. ,. .• RteVe s JO'h J0'4 VMIR ~ V'" SI 10 J•<ll.flllll 4 . .. Up 11.S AnoAGd .,. .,.., EleHucl 11 11\oo l ldSIO< 14\4 1411> Ro..iEa l2\I• 12"-V.iHll \ JI 111• " Wllltmn JV. . .,, Up 11.2 !:fc:•C 701• 10\oo EIMOOI I 11 .... n l.lneut UVt »~ Robl>MY n Ulh V•Out 100'> II ., HIS4o'I ~ . " Utt 1'-1 M > 14'• 1•1'> Efl<Oe" 10\6 II ~'" RowlOl'I 4'.t. ·~ v .. c;ro I~ 14~• 1J Int-... . ... Up Mo7 Arden GP ,.,, J" l!nrMetlld c ~~ .. ttovse Ill~ 11 .. VlctraSI '"' ' " ltllUJ.: ,. .. • I Up ,.., Aw!Cole 41 4S'> I IS. It 1 M• :f~3E' ~ l lo Sedlltr ,.,, 4 VkMoCp '"' ~ 'l Hw l'-. " Up MO AllGtt.I IS IS\o l!"R>• -... t~ IS~ !lef«o ~ ,,.. VeHBsh 111. ""' 1 c.tSlv 9 , . " UP'' N,J All..,R1 I~ 10<.. l!nlwltll IP4t WI ~·Pl ~ ...... 5"'t1Gd J61h ~. W'sl\E,nr 11 U\oo " Pall\tOf' , "' Up ti'.)• :::~:~~ ~~ ~:: ~Qr6l1l = :v. ::rp •S"I "" StPeu1 -·"-Weldtr" J.\, 4 11 i~ 14'-'t . '"" Up 14.1 RI s::w. s~-. !>crlpH > ll V. 11\. wo .. p 1" ... ~ " S\oo . " UP IU Ber19HE ''°' 10"• !),~SC ).It '• Mellr\' 4s:\ot .. Sen-" 41111 WH91d ~ 1'lh IO l11tTot• iv. . " Up 110 ll*'l<R \ eb<lh Merion • • .... Svc Mer 111/o 12 Wm ore 20 20\At 11 Monalltfl 1J ....... Up IJ.t • 1• l I 1•1' Sh S IS.It MeullP 11 1"'> Swm'1 • ,..,, """ w; .. ,o' u ,, n A(fvc-.p , ... . .,. Up IH BenlFr 11'-nv. FarmGp JD'll JO"-Mey Pl 11 ..... ''"' 51\Med 34• .. ,..~. WolvAlu .. ,, .... n ~~r!o' 11 . J Up ILJ 8•'11\Mll 10'1> 10\oo Fldltor n•-. 74 ::i::?.:: '"' ~ Sllwmut s ,. •• 11'11 Womtl fir, • ,. 4\h . .,., Up IJ.S e .. 11,.. s Sii'> Ft8k5v> n n "' ,...,. 1tv. SlereR> 1 111. 11 Woodlot )l 341, u Gd Te<o un •II> . .,., Up 12.S B ... 1PI F18osln lt ...... M<F•fl IOI• 10\'I Siiicon a n •1o n•11 Wrl9"1W ,.,.. ,.,, n,~':t" =~~f~n I~~ •r• McO...y """ ,, SC.elWI< 1111) II~ ZionUI \ 21' 1 21 8fltl ' Mld>aW ,,..., 11'4 SwEISv 11'· 11v. n e · HOI ••ll<eDle DOWNS 8•¥"'91 ""'° 1411> Fla\8k\ 211V> ~ MelldC•P ... '"" St.tncl'tn J4>1o JS""1 H-LH4 o:i. PC"t. .81bl>Co I~ 11''° Fll< ~' 11 1"-MldlRtt 1••• "" I ........... , Pio ()ft tS,f 81rdSOn IV, ' FlaH le 24 24V> Mldl8tl s Jll<t ,, ' TRCC.O JV. ... Oft 11.t 8111<11• s s .... Fturocll "9 1 Mlll~, =·~i NASDAO SUMMARY • litT CP 2\oo -.,, °'' U.4 81yvoor ~ ' ~Of"HIO Ullo J.SVi MIM IG • Jellft un 110 JO Off U.t Bonan1 1Yt 1 S.16 FO<"m~ll 111. 2~ Mole• I ""' n ~ ~nNIOM J ..... -"' Off IU 8rwTom 10 20''> Fr•nk p 11 ll'h Mon!Col 5"' • HEW YORI( IAPI -""4>)1 4Ktlw o .. , • mpHn 21<. "' Oii IU Bueti-t~7 '"' Frant1E1 11v. 17~ =1d ""' 17 "':;!~u;t .. ·~~·1f~lecl ... !~ H~~ 1 Gent•• , v. Off II.I Buff•I• 1111> 2' FrHSG ~ 19\1, 251h M • Sc11Wt18 , •4 Off 11.1 Burn~ 121'o UV. Fremn1 • ••v. ,.._ MorQRH Aoo '"" EnRsv . . J00.000 •"' •'lO • hml•• 4 "' Off II. I CHl. In 2 ,,,. FullrH8 n-. n~ Mo,,,. In Fott • MCIC •.. "4,IOO ""' ,. .. ... 10 Cllerlol o 414 "' Off 10.S CPT s '~'" """ GnAutm ,~... '''· MolClub Siio &rwTom 1'7.IOO 20 20lolo " F IFOICOl'ln •'4 "' Off 10.S CelWIS• » 11 GnO•vo ,,,.. l -11 ... 11 n Nucrp •· 219.000 ,.,, ,.,. . ' ., ConFlbt JV1 ~ 0 11 " O n<edH 1\t, Jw VflRIE.\I .. 11 1terroCP s 1t 2IVt us~ 2n.ooo .. ,.v. .. ''· ll Am Pyr.,,. 1h v. Off '·' CepEn IS1' I GovEFn -•o H 0te 1 It Jt '4 ~~~ .. ••.eoo , .... '"" ..... 14 GnShete '"' -It. Oil ••• ~SW S 13 ,.v, GraSCn • ISll> IS•• HJNGH 1:1-!0t 1414 132.000 4·~ -.... IS GlbrSv 101'> I Off .., Cp nAlr J4'o w. GreenM ""' nv. =~:~b • ~~ 1;"" Summ~ llJ1~.~ I~~ II.-• l-l1 .. Lily A 11 2 Off 1.7 ~~~v .. 15 " Orey Adv " ,, Appi.<; .. -... 11 CmfM<• ~ .,. Off .., ,,,,., ..... Glllnl\I 11 .. HlcOlel -I McR•O . •s,.ao I~ ,,... t I .. Govt SL 2~ '"' Off Ll ClwmS s 11 11 .. ~:~o:ir, ~ IV. ltltlll\ " 4S\'>~ M 5'atwEI Slh ,,., Oft .., ClvlHou > 11v. 11 .. ..... '"" NlelSll II .,,,. fi"' AdVencm ,.., 111 Artdlv ..... .. Off 1.J CllmLH 13•1'> ""' Harctwk• 4 • .,. NoC.,G> 11\h th !>Kiined .. J1 c_......,, ,..., .. Off 1.1 CllHUll 11 ,,.,, HrpR-ltl't IJV. H""NG' 11.., 1'-unc11~ .. ••• • • • 2.17' n a· J "' Off ,, -~~ 4S~-. 4~ nrrft'ifr ~ ,. .. \ll'.S-Jt-14 Jt::~-..... ~-•L-·-.J..JU r. J " ~·"' ~Ofl-L Noaell ..,., JJ -hlllflS . . . • • • • • • • • n • " . _ ,.,, ~ 1.2 ClltS.G• '"' ·~ =~'ll'sc' 1;~ 1~"' =~f.fv 's 11o1o ,.., -lows .. "125 Comt• s . .,, -... 1.1 CllrUIA l4 3411> """ I~ Totet wt.. • 1'.S.t.lOD 16 TrlaclSor n -, ... Off 1.\ Cll1Ut8 »"-J3\lo H•nrdF 7711> :It Ocuner ........ ,. I I ~ J - ........ ,.. 4 ..,... . ....... .JO 1 -...sctl ... 4 ·-"'"" Mil ....... 1 ... 11 e11nl .. e1eOO .1610 (TMI u tlt.e /OtH'flt pof1 of ca JO..port ...V• °" "-lo fGVC on pr l•I ifle'OfM faul.) A woman who owned a 2~·carat diamond rin1 that bad coat $10,500 wu writln1 a check at a supermarket when the cuhier noticed the atone was not in the rin1. The owner had last noticed the diamond ln the rina about an hour earlier while ahe was flllna her nails. She had the rint checked after dlscoverln1 the 1088 and.found that two pronas were misaina and two on the opposite aide were forced upward u If a stronc blow had struck one side or the ring. She claimed a casualty deduction for loa1 or the dJamond. The lnternaJ Revenue Service disallowed the deduction beca"'5e she couldn't name any sudden event that might have jolted the diamood. The Tax Court disagreed with the ~ IRS and allowed the casualty · l oss deduction. It isn't • ie necessary Cor th e -r;enne:if~0 ~e~bl~h~ Rllll Plml i::"7Z happened. since it must have happened between the time she did her nails and wrote the check. The IRS is almost certain to bar a non·buslness casualty·loss deduction arising from droucht conditions. However, in a 1981 decision, the Tu Court showed it will uphold such a deduction where the damage occurs in a short time . Thia case Involved the 1977·78 drought in Marin County. In· February '77, strict water·rationlng rules prevented the taxpayer from watering his lawn, plant.a and shrubs, and by June they had aJI died. The taxpayer claimed thi.s reduced the value of bis property by $2,000, which he took as a casualty loss. The Tax Court upheld the deduct.ion beuuse the death ot the greenery "resulted swiftly and directly from an extraordinary calamitous drought." An unfavorable Tax Court decision agrees with alr-ear1ier 6th Ci rcuit case that a loss caused by a tree disease -as distinct from an attack by insects -cannot be a casualty loss. The fa ct that Dutch elm disease is spread by beetles Is not an attack by beetles and the resulting damage is not a casualty loss. Another '81 Tax Court case he.lps you measure a casuaJty·loss deduction. The tax regulations say that you CM> measure a loss as either the decrease in fair market value of the property that results from the casualty or as the cost of the repairs. One appraiser arrived at th~ amount of decrease in value of a damaged building by subtracting the estimated cost of repairs' from the value or the building even though the repairs hadn't been made and the IRS rejected the appraiser's valuation of the building after it was damaged. The Tax Court held there was no reason why an appr aiser couldn't take into account the anticipated costs of repair in arriving at his post·casualty valuation of the property. The IRS says you can't deduct a casualty for which you are entitled to ins ura nce that you voluntarily decide not to claim Cthe same attitude the IRS takes toward insured medical expenses). A district court and the 6th Circuit have upheld the lRS. But in 1981 , the Tax Court disagreed with the IRS and the other courts in a case where the taxpayer had burglary insurance on which he had alre~dy collected three tjmes. On his fourth bur1Jary within eight years, he filed no claim but took a casuaJty-loss deduction. The IRS barred the deduction; the Tax.Qourt upheld the taxpayer's claim. My advice: File y<Sur insurance claim if at all possible and thus avoid an IRS dispute. But if this jeopardizes you:r continued insurance coverage. remember the Tax Court is on your side if you deduct a casualty loss without ftling an insurance claim. Tomorrow: Educatloe expe•ses and barter clubs. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT :J• YORk IAPl·S.IH, Wed. p~lce ........ 'v~s.':!::'9 ~~·,= lredlnt _._11, •• more ...., ll llM I 1.~.200 ""°' • \.'t I•-I I 1, IOS.-1"' -" T-y \ I N,eoo D -.. """llPSf'et I 102.->fl,.. -1" :::.c.1:1'-·-' ...,,~ •111 -·- C:oc•CoM I ,..... --1-. Meblt • / m.• n-. -"' C-Pld I u1.-.._. -2- hUCo Inc I W.J90 --" StdOlllnd I S..JtlO .. 14 -_, Mart" Fleld I -.-1714 + 1" ~Ac:: ~ ~H! = = = f'N'i.mwt I I tii,'ii 4Mt -" AMERICAN LEADEIS. NEW YO"I( (Af'I· Sel"• WM. ,.-ke _, Mt< .... el .,. ... -9 ectM "-1<• ~ lac..._ 11-. ~ .... ._. . ., .............. ,. 0....~ s I .,... ;: -.... ""' .. I n..-_,..., ~I I 9'tM _..., ~IE .. s I --JI + ~ CIY....ail I ·1 ta-. -1-Ctrc•« I 119, *' -'4 DeleAcc I t• 1'• ---. OUlfCeft t I ,._ ~ -• ·-F• I s I .... *' -.. Alelll• Alrt I 14,.. ._ -\'I WHAT STOCKS DID HEW YOAI( IAPI Jf/fl. JO -MICed Oe<llMcl UllC ........ Totet l- -llltN H.-1- ~AMUDI> r_, I 541 , .. ; 41t , ... I • I i., NEW YO.I( !Af'I Jf/fl ie TMI= I I I 4 I DI I Ht I t I .. MOALS ..IHllHDAY c-.f'•t 11'-·" conh • """• u. dfftlftel..,._ • LeM ~"""'. _,., 1111<0~-·---·...--. T•lf.d1Ml4elilWW41c ......... -. • ....._,..nce11tt e,.... ... ..,. Mwc_,...._._, ...... ~UM.atroyoi ,H.'f . ..... ,..,_ ......... ,.... ..... u..--.------.............. 9" ....... .... • ..... ntlll f ft'I -....... et .... ·====·==·--. ......... _. ...,.._ . ............ = ..... .......... 111 .,.......11...-. ' , " i ~:.::.;:----............ ... ..... ...................... ... Wit ·-..... -.tD ... -........ ,, ., , __ =UW41tNJ& ............. , .. ..... , ..................... n. --· -· 1,t'"" .......... .. .. ,., ....... ,_.-........ ~ ......... ...... = .............. .... "--r:----.............. , .... _. .................... --. -· 12*•~ .......... _ ......... ~---...... -...... ~---~......_ ___ , 'Ti'= ct_.. ............... ---"! .. . ----·~ .............. _ -----..,----.... (, Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfThuraday, January 21 , 1982 Shareholders approve pact to merge Eldo~ado Bancorp~ Shareholders of Tult~n ·based Eldorado Bancorp. have approved an atl'teD\tnl to rnerae i Bank ol Indio wlth Eldorado Bank, a whOlly ned aubeldl_,-y of Eldorado Bancorp. Under terms or the a1reement, each share or nk of Indio common islock will be exchanged for 1i45 shares or Eldorado Bancorp. common stock. Mlk ol Indio has 225, 293 aha.res oulstandin1 and ldoudo Bancorp. nearly 3 million s hares outstandlns. ShireholderJ of Bank of Indio OK' d the a.ireemenl at a s pecial meed-ng Tuesday . OompleUon of the merger, expected by.March 1, is s~bjecl to approval by all necessary regulatory authorities. * Newport Corp. or Fountain Valley has filed a registration statement with the Securities & l:xcbance Commission regiaterine 155,483 shares of its common stock for sale by the estate of Donald Wales. Before bis death in 1980, Wales was ~e chairman of the board of Newport. * 1 American Paclflc: Corp. of Irvine and Pacific Bngineering & Production Co. of Nevada said they have signed an agreement for the merger of ~acific Engineering into a recently formed unit of 1 merican Pacirlc. * Executives of Santa Ana-based Emulex Corp, said the company expects revenues for its second fiscal quarter ended Dec. 28 to be approximately $3.S million, with earnings for the quarter to reach approximately $475,000. The results, if achieved, wol.lld represent a record increase in revenues· of The final 30 ocean front 'homf'sitcs. A I walled and gated private n•sidc.•ntial community in San (;le mcntt'. Private beacb and private.• Swim and Tennis t Club. Interest only fina11 ci ng ava if able 1714 I 498-~830 or !~1 31 277-9470. The Best Paper Needs the Best Account Executives •.. for Real Estate financings including private placements, syndications, J-V investments, tax shelters, blind pool syndications, first and second trust deeds. Condtdotes must be ltcensed reel estote professionals bondoble, ond woth proven trock recoo:is Those selec1ed wiN en1oy the hoghesl compensotoOl'l pockoges on this mor- ketploce ond will work 1n ptestige lcxJ111es Whoo1e we1 The f1nonct0I 0H1lt0te of o well·estobl•shed •eol estate de· velopment compony We en1ov f1nonc1ol stobo~ly ond o superb monogemenr repulotoon We pro111de o lull ronge of real estole l1nonc1ng services including 1hose losred obo11e, ond obsolvrely superior product The Best Poper Mr. Grohom Gill or Mr. Jomes Clork (714) 859·8561 25200 Lo Po~ Rood Suile 111 Logvno Hills, Colrforn10 92653 construction money available at Heritage Bank . . Residenllal • C'AJAuRtwElal BuildlRgs: Takeou1 Commilmenl requ ired along wilh leases. COnliM't: ·Jdf Johnson South Orange COunfyllrvlne 7141851·"°50 An Answer Page befper is l•e punmo the ptiooe In your podlet Yoo II never miss an mportant pholle call ao11n1 • WOfld's largest computennd P•Otno aoent • lnexpens!Yt-less 11110 a <lotlar a day • Wide-area OOYerage -15, 000 square miles • Direct d11I access • A locilion near you, plus held representa11ves at your bedl and call • 24•hour seMC:e We never sleep -· ffw ~ ""'°· deMry andMfNllllWllCe -' • OuantllY dl9c:ouMs • CMf lodlly lot littfllllre and 1 ,,.. dflmonstratloll' Wittl AnlWtf Plot. you may be eut of reach, bllt you ·11 nMt be out of toliCfl I .. ~ flr.iSl\JER PR(jE . 731· nn • 153.5112 c-... ,.1\l•••' g,,.., .......... ,.. .. .... ,.,.......... . .............. ~ about l2 percent from the first quarter or fiscal \18! and more than 34 percent from the prior year's s~ond quurtfr. Net Income results would DC 11111111 represenl an increase of approximately 37 percent from the second quarter last year. * Fluor Canada Ltd .. u subsidiary of the Fluor Corp., has been awarded a contract by Alberta Gas Ethylene Co. Ltd. representing the Nova/Shell joint venture. ENESCO Chem. Ltd. for project ,ai.anagement, engineering, procurement and cO.struction of a $210 million, world·scale 11499 ............ 124.95 ............ 164.95 J>Olycthylene plant. Value or the award lo Fluor was not disclosed. * Beckman lostramentl Int. r e ported 11econd·quartcr net Income of $8.67 mllllon, or 41 centu a share, on revenues or $172.8 million. Net income for the like period a year ago was $8.95 million, or 43 cents a share. on sales of $151.2 million. * Cent'-lr)' Data Sya&em1 I.e. of Anaheim has signed a $1 million pact to provide Trident removable pack disk drives to P.C. Product~ Pty., Ltd. of Australia. * Anaconda·Erlcsson Inc., a maker and manufacturer of wire. cable and communications equipment, is moving its Information Systems Olvlslon headquarters rrom Woodbury, N.Y. to' Garden Grove. The company also laid It la c&olln1 its building wlre 1>lant in Orange • San Diego Gas Ii Electrtc: Co. Is hopln1 to raise $37.9 million through the sale or 3 million shares of, common stock. The proceeds of the s.ale will be' used lo supplement construction costs of two unit.a at the San Onofre nuclear power station and a $300 million power transmission line to Arizona. * Casco l nduatrlea, Century Clty·baaed di versified holding company for Colt Sy1tem1 • Agency, Une Management Co. and Bookkeepers Unlimited Agency/Account·On-Ua, bu unounced the establishment of a reeional office in lrvl.ne. Further expansion into Huntington Beach and Riverside is planned. . QUARTZ HEATER .... dolll 9x 12 plastic drop cloth #50 1~ • The most efficient reflector avarlable . Deliver s the greatest amount of radiated energy in the most useful pattern . tHP750 reg. 99.00 Sale 7995 \ folding st" ltlol bllle abNnl 1 stowaway Stowaway Step Stool that's as versatile as ll's handy Fits In 1" space to store eastty Made of sturdy steel and tested uP. to 800 pounds. Convenient handle for 1988 carrying and opening. Almond color Reg. 24.95. #1 500 reg. 129.00 Sale 9995 faster than a speeding bullet Secure boards. upholstery. etc with !hrs hght duty trigger achoo stapler by Arrow "JT 21 Reg 1099 7aa ll8g up yout 1rou°b)es CJ""llMl_.llM .. I a useful tool for atound thOft1>sonS water seal a real Cllf. black & decker arass trimmer ... and your leaves, lawn debris, trah and morel Package ol 25 32 gallon 91.ze liners. ~tow.cit 349 leviton clmmer switch Pulh ont1'uth off dimmer. Single pole. ln1talls in minutes. the home or shop stanley taoe measure wiltf i>Ower1ock 1 "x25' 1 Q99 t3:M45 reg. 15 49 11 ..... nll I trill Big 1·gallon container of Thompson's Water Seal tor Water Proofing masonry and .other products. gallon. reg 15 75 1099 For any wan or~ ScnJb. beble Low Lustre finish. Easy to 13" clean up with fuel watar. A~. 15.99 tl'ght & easy lo use #8204 reg. 29 99 !.,~'"mount TV stand a real space ....,.r 13207 reg. 5-4.95 2488 SU,ER FAN -N e wport B-ach's Paul Sala ta hasn't missed a Super Bowl. and since he 's a forme r 49er . guess where he 'll be Sunday. I..akers avoid letdown Prem APdlspaklllea l~GLEWOOD -An emotional defeat the previous night to the Deaver Nuggets didn't seem to put a damper on the Los Angeles Lak e r s ' p e rfo r manc e Wednesday night al the Forum. With forward J amaal Wilkes scoring 30 points and guard No rm Nixon adding 28, the Lakers rolled to an easy 132-113 · NBA victory ove r the New Jersey Nets. · , In jumping out to a 33-18 lead late in the first quarter, the La kers went on to ruin Nets coach and for mer UCLA coach Larry Brown's r e turn t o Southern California. LOS ANGELES led 66-46 at halftime and outdistanced New J e,.ey by as many as 25 points in the third quarter. • • The Laker attack included 20 poin ts b y cent e r Kareem Abdul-Jabba r, 16 by reserve guard Michael Cooper and a career-high 11 by Kurt Rambis. The Nets were paced by rookie forward Albert King with 19 p oints , and Buck a nd Ray Williams had 18 each . La'ten Coach Pal Riley said although the Lakers ' 140-139 loss to Denver on Tuesday was disappointing, their comeback Wednesday was encouraging. "I have to give the players a lot of credit for 'them to come back," be said. "Last night was very emotional. That loss was one of the most disappointing, because of tbe effort we put in, Tonight we had 53 raslbreaks. Our guys were constantly going. I was delighted." BROWN SAID the loss was unfortunate but he said the Nets would bounce back. "The Lakers were great. They shot the ball well and they did everything they wanted," Brown said. "We made a run for it in the second quarter and that was it. You can't let the Lakers dictate the tempo or the game. We missed a lot or s hots early and then bst our confidence." Los Angeles shot 57 .3 percent from floor, connectiD& on 51 f:A • attempts, while New Je rsey made 46.2 percent or its field goal attempts, sinking 48 out of 104. Nixon made bis first 11 field goal attempts and ended 11 for 15 from the floor while Wilkes made 12 of 15 attempts. RAMBIS MADE all five ol bis attempg from the field and led the Laken with nine rebounds. Loa Angeles outrebounded New Jersey 50-39. Buck Williams was the Nets' leadin1 rebounder with nine pd scored' eight or bis 12 fi e ld goal attempts. GenWlitis fined a reeord t 15,000 NEW YORK (AP)-Tennia player Vi~ GeruJaiUa hu been fined a record JU,000 by the JI e n ' 1 I n t e r n. a t i 01n a 1 Proleulanal Tenn.is Council for lwo major olfeues. The P'OQP slapped the tennis pro from Kini• .PolDt, L.1., with a $5,000 levy for two incldenta durlDJ the United States ()pen last Slptember ud $10,000 for bavln1 walked out .or the llellaourne Indoor Raal In :4U.. tralla IMl October. u.:=~~tat· Football fanatics make COMICS CLASSIFIED C6 C8 Super Sunday a special occasion for restaurateur. C2 . -. Guess who ' ·sftlata will root for i ·: \ Ex-49er hasn't missed a Super Bowl yet. ~ • .and that's relevant By llM McCUJtDIE cN ... o-.Y Nit..... • Excu.e Paul Salata ii a.. •ms to f hOw Symptoms of th'-l~reu1D1ly eom moo virus known as .., fever. He didn't contract at two weeis ap: wlaeD he traveled to tiMt bay UN lo watch San Francisco beat Dall•, •27, to ~Jaim the NFC cha8Plonsbap and earp the right to meet .. CiaeinnaU Ben1us in Sunday's Super Bowl ~VI. .. NO, THIS AFFl!:Cl'IONNIE arructlon 1oe,s way back. Back "9. 19'9 to be exact. That's the year the Newport Beach sewer contractor ·broke into professional footba ll with the San F r an cisco 49e r s , then o f the All-America Conference. This was San Francisco's pre-NFL era , when it was competing against teams like the Los Angeles Dons and New York Yankees. The foUowing year , the 49ers moved into the National Football Leaeue and Salata was a member of thal team. A genuine orlglriaJ,' It therefore comet as no surprise to hear Salata say he's pulling for the 49erS Sund av. n •s AL80 NOT •wt>risin& to bear that Salata arrived in PonUac, Mich., We dnesday night aod will be in attendance Sunda y . He's attended every Super Bowl s ince the game's inception ln 1967. He's not about to miss the 49ers' first appearance In pro football'a pl'emier event, even. if it means venturing Into the deep rreeze or the Midwest. T his is being la beled the "Great Experiment of the North," the first Supe r Bowl to be played in a location not known for its comfortable winter c lim a t e or ent e rta ini ng t ouris t attractions. "Even In the springtime, there's not a heckuva lot to do in Detroit," Salata says . "They have to make up things to do. In a place llke New Orleans, it (entertainment) is automatic." &TIU.. SALATA Is looking forward lo seeing his NFL aJma mater compe:.e in Sunday's claaaic. 49er fever has taken hold. "You should have seen 'em In CandlesUck lut week," he said. "I left a half·tM>ur .tier the game and I could drive right out of the parking lot because no one eJae was leaving." met the Miami Oolphicl.s in Super Bowl VU . ,The teams were headquartered in Orange County aoc;l the center of festivites was the Newport.er Jnn. The involvement from the Newport Beach community and all the extra-cunicular a ctivities in the days leading up lo the ga m e mad e this Salala's moat mem orable Super Bowl. lt's that type of carnlval atmosphere that has attracted Salata to every Super Bo wl game. The game itself serves as a climax to a week or celebration that Sa lata claims is unmatched for plain good times. .. IT WAS AN all-timer," he aald. ··Half of my friends and towna~e _ were involved. For lbe CommiulOQU I · Party, we took over the whofe Queen Mary. It was a blast." Salata bu earned a reputalim for being a run-loving sort. He's credited with being the founder of Irrelevant Week, a week-long salute to tbe 1ut player selected in the annual NPL draft. • ' According to Salata, the party was never more' in full swing thin ln 1973, when the Washington Redskins •'The press ii contla•o•al)' eulogizing the superstars an(I No~ l draft picks," Salata said. Bayasi offers Yanks a player That is, if Angels sign Reggie From AP dlspakhes An gels Ex ec uti ve Vice President Buuie Bavasi says he will give the New York Yankees a player if the Angels sign Reggie Jackson. Ba vasi said Wednesday that although the rules don't require such a ~esture, his conscience dictates 1t. 0 1 DON'T even know if it's ethical," he s aid. "but it's something I feel I have to do ln good conscience since I've said all along that we weren 't going into the free agent market this year. If I send the Yankees a player, it's the same as tr ading for J aclcson." A rt e r negotia tion s with Jackson all day Wednesday in Phoenix, Bavas i said he is "m ore optimistic than ever" that the Angels will sign the 35-year-old outfielder-designated biller. Bavasl said he and Yankee owner George Steinbrenner have qreed on the player to be traded, but he would not name the man. He would say the player is not a front liner. The Angels' executive said he bas been in contact with Stein br enner , and "he still seems to have some interest in Jackson, I don't believe it's as great as ours ." J ac k son 's age n t , Gar y W.alker , says be has agreed to provide Steinbrenner an equal chance at the player after all the bids are in. ANAHEIM·BOUND'? -The Angels and Reggie J ackson m a y b e n eari n g a n agr eem e nt wh ich would bring t he s lugger We st . Anoth e r sess i o n o f n egotiations be tween the two s ides is planned. The Baltimore Or ioles, the Atlanta Braves a nd the Yankees are still in the ruMing to obtain Jackson. CORNERED -Estan~ia 's Randy Tift I 44 > is pressured by Corona del Mar 's Mike Hess c 30 I and gua rd Chris Lynch ( 15 > .,...., "'-' _..., ~ ...... O'._. during Wednesday 's Sea ·vie w League crucial in the Eagles· gym . Sea Kings won. 40-35. WALKER SAID he is "very encouraged" by the talks with Bavasi, "but that doesn't mean anyone else is out of it . Jl would be premature to say one club or another is tbe favorite.·' But Braves owner Ted Turner reportedly said that Walker and Jackson hadn't been returniJll his calls this week, a nd Orioles General Manager Hank Peters indicated he hasn't talked with Jackson recently. "I'd hue to think that's not a very good sign at this time," said Turner. CdM's marksmanship fOils Eagle zone Sea Kings make .their shots count and move into first in Sea View League By &OGIER CARLSON Of .... Detty ...... s...i There's something about Corona del Mar High basketball that stands the Sea Kings out from a fi eld -and it's not just their effective man-to-man defense. The Sea Kings or Coach Jack Errion ha ve a lot of things goln1 for them - tradition, fundam entals, boards, that unyielding defense and smarts. They've also got an item called shooting ability and they used it Wednesday nJ1ht to power their way lo their 11th atrai&ht victory and sixth in Sea View Lea1ue play in s topping host Estancia, 40-l:i, to t.Ue sole possession of first place In tbe championship race. CdM is now 6-0 In league, 11-2 overall, Est,-D* Calla to S·l and 13·3. . Hilling 18 or 30 from the fJel4 (80 pe rcent> and all of their four shot.a from the free throw line, the Sea Kines once • .. aiA.prov. ed superim'-.. ... dlf ..... l>oWn by as many 10 "'1W-ftnt _r.arter (36·6 1 the Sea Klqa took comm la &.be f quarter wtUi ball .... yes tram Cllrla LYM tDC1 Mike Hesa to.ty~ &itmela wlU. 2:t4 left (N·M). ·u.en ...... • la ...a.er cat-and-m~ lltuae:,~iela fo.d1 Ollrona del .. • nl~kwar. sa K1np llit II o 11,,_ tM d••• ptrimeter, ..W.lll Glllll' t .. bucket. an an inaldl eftort by Hank Ooebel after an otfenaive H~.Ud a ::re inalde ~··by G.,. Olloa Mb u at • from Lynch. "I don't care.'' aald &h1oe ... W~re J--*t' IOiftl to keep L':l°'DI ~~ from oabllle, l1norl Ua lm~OfJ uatU IOID~ Pl'"• ' The game was everything it was billed to be with Estancia's Eagles controlling the iuue until the fourth period, then the Sea KiDp cominc 'back, their defense 1imiUq the Easies lb 3-of·ll from the field and but nine second hatr polnts. EstaDci.a had a sbol with 2: 32 left, but Brian Midland's second free throw missed and Corona del Mar held a 3&-35 lead, then the two teams scrambled back and forth until Hess hit a pair wlLb nine seconds left to get CdM ·a 38-35 lead and with one Uck left Olson added two more free throws for the rlnaJ margin. ··I told our kids tbat even if Hess misses we still have the lead," said Errion about the sit.talion with nine HCOnds left. ••But Mike looked at rn e with an. astonlahed look> and said, 'Hey coach, I'm not going to miss il.' C..valiers owner 'backs his co.,~h CLEVELAND (AP> -Clenland Cav1Uers owner Ted J . Stepien Wed~deaied: a.t Coach Chuck was lD Im~ ........ ol l01lnlllll T.._. hid beea IDtllll•tklla early in the "* th.t Dalt ••• hl• llt boun aa co•ch of the 1tru11Hns NaUoaal ''Chiac~D a Our tolldl and BaakeUMlliA~---· he wlU :~ b," =• aald. "I expect ~ DalJ• to UM thne , .... ., .... ~, ,But StsJl•s • , ........ frcm ......... . ' "He's a pressure player, as if no one else is in the gym. "T h ese k id s don 't have the outward-look, it's aU internal. They keep th e ir po i se. I thought Hess was outstandin g defensively and offensively and with Petersen drilling them (he led all scores with 14 points, 10 in the first half) . . . we needed all or it. •'Then down the stretch they just played as hard u they could." Lynch and Heu added 10 points apleee to the winner's totals, while Esta.eia failed to get a player in double figures. "I lhoueht they'd try to 10 inside mo,..," said Eltftia Coa~ Larry Sundermaa. •·But the way they were shootint from outside who'a to argue! "Petersen really hurt us. We were so concerned about Lynch and Hess. Maybe we should have made an adjustment a little sooner." ''Conu 4111 llAr pU a lot of help from tts guards and put.a a lot of pnuure m the ball. We don't have any excusea." The Eall• hit 14 of 27 fra:n the field (51.lr percent), but those out.Ide ahota of Corona del llar'a Juat lrept fallln1, and eventu.all1 It tot Ulem the lead .t aM. Earli• tM lu ltlqa went up b7 a 12·21 count, l>ut Rub Tift retunMd ln the fourth quutet, alter alttiDI out 11:4'r ol playtac time wtt1t tane ,_.a foull, and hit a pair ol buek.U to Ue lt at la, tbeD Jtlf GanlDll' bat two~ Ulrowl with 5:11 to· 1ife 1:1taneta 1t'1 lMt l•d <M-•>. Tben'a no real for l!atanela -~· &a1l• muat travel 1-1 to Newport Harber !!~ ~ bU• Coroaa del Mar ~ • eourt to duel Bavasi earlier had implied that the Angels would not try to s i g n th e 35 -y e ar -o ld outrielder-desisnated hitter if New York intended to try to keep him in a Yankee uniform. IT HAS be en r e po rted., however, that Walker planned to liste n to offers from other teams, then give the Yankees a final chance lo negotiate. Although most details or the bargaining between the Angels and Jackson haven't been made public, Ba vasi did say the Ame ric an Le ague club had made an offer that would tie Jatkson's salary to attendance at An1ets' games. Wednesday's meet1n1. waa held in Phoenix because that is where Walker lives. Bavasi did not Indicate when or where the next session would be hdcl. GRETZKY SIGNS . RICH CONTRACT EDMONTON, Alberta <AP) - Wayne Gretsky, the Edmentoa Oilers sensational hith·•*1nl center, and the club'• of.Et Peter PoctllqtOll. ban a to renew a 21·Jeat contract. • i II ma It e Gr• t& k 1 tl!:at hilbelt·pald plQ• ln Na Hoeller Leape-., at_.. tau '1 mlW• a,...-. At a ...... CODf.,...ce prior to lclmoMGD'I ., .... .,alut 8t1 Le.all Wed,etda1 al,bt; Pocklln1toa aald lie .. ~dMllllater11111fll ..... u and ala yean. ' l I ' Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thuraday. January 21, 1882 .Ocean ·View gives it that little ~nrB ~ By JORN 8EV ANO -................. After Ocean View Hlth lost t.o EdJaon last Friday, marklna the Seahawka • second loss In their last three ouUnaa. Coach Jim Harris made It a point to find out what waa wrona wlth bis tel.Ol. 22 -"which ls 10 more than w•'ve beea 1ettina." Harris added. "We've-bad protalems with that all year lon1." admitte• Coach Dave Brown u he watctaed hf• team shoot 10 percent (12 of 17) from. the neld ln the second half and 1UU ,:ome up short. "We have to leam to take care of the ball." sot ict pohltl and l2 reboundl from Mm Uaevltch and u polota from Mlke /ud1e. ~ hi.I hl1hest outlUl fJI the season. The Seahawks (2·1 ln leape, 11·8 overall> led from the etart and except · · 1 told my players that they bad t.o be willing t.o play to the point ~ peln ... llDd then kffp 701.nC.'' explalDld Harri&. "1 told them I they needed a rwt. we had people on the bench who l'OUld llH them one. •'I had us worklol on a lot of little thloas durln1 practice, thlnklna that was ll, and lt turned out to be one bia thing,'' explained Harris followiq the Sea hawks' 55·53 Sunset League basketball victory over visiting Fountain Valley Wednesday nl1bt. BASKETBALL Fountain Valley finlahed with 17 turnovers. for one brief moment when the Barona knotted the score at '4·all in the fourth quarter. Ocean View was able lo keep its distance. .. Loll"IJ to Mart.. siade this one a little bit bigger,'1 added Brown. "This was a big game, no doubt about it." Jeff HU&hes certainly did his best lo tryin1 to overcome any problem. the Barons had. The 6-3 senior even outahot his own teammates In scoring 28 of the team's 53 points. ·' 1 told them that they needed to 10 out and get after lt. I had to demand lt from them because nobody knew It wu missing. What Harris discovered wu that bis Seahawks were pacing themselves; that they weren't putting forth that little Actually, the Barons C1·2, 11·8) could have won the game If their own turnovers hadn't been so destructive. "Mentally , e motionally aad ph ysically I think they reel tbe dlrference now." HOT HAND -Fountain Valley's Jeff Hughes netted a game-high 28 points for the Barons. but it was in a losing cause as Ocean View prevailed. 55·53. extra it takes t.o be a winner. "Usually, my teams know they.heed to go after It. Thia one ls just starUng to realize that. I ... never done so much talking t.o a t~am in my whole ure than I have this one this week," said Harris. Fountain Valley, which trailed by as many as nine in the fint half, slowly whittled away at the deficit unUJ a Jeff Hughes jumper tied the score at 4-4 with, 5:50 lo play. · Hughes, creatin1 many of his own shots, hit on 12 of 21 attempts from the floor. His teammates, meanwhile, were 11 of 21. Teammate Keo Harter was the only other Baron in double figures with 15. Althou1h Wednesday ni1ht'1 1ame was the first league meetlDC between the two school.I. it was actually tbelr second confrontation this MUOD, wtt.b Ocean View winning that by a butet. too, "61·59. The Seahawks didn't exactly give their coach 32 minutes or basketbaJI against the Barons, but they gave him But every time the Barons had a chance t.o Ue or go ab'ead after that. a turnover would place the ball back Into the.Seahawks' hands. The Seahawks, who connected on only 41 percent (19 ol 46) of their attemJ?ts. Noting the two scores, Harris put a s mile on his face. and with hLI toeiue planted rirmly ln cheek, quipped: "I· guess we're soundly a tJucket better.'• Super Bowl XVI reason for a party From AP dlspatclies Head Coach Richard Fralc, no Ell relatioo t.o Frick and Frack of ice f. t comedy fame, will call the signals for a sellout crowd of football fanatics Sunday durlng Super Bowl XVI. 'Fralc bas no connection with the San 1''ranc1sco 49ers or tbe Cincinnati Ben~als, principals in the Silverdome in Pontiac, Mich. who will be the featured performers in the game. Super Bowl Sunday brings on a rash or parties across the nation and Fr ale, the manager of Camino O'Brien's Mexican restaurant in Diamond Bar, has sold 256 seats for his bub al $5 a throw. Each fan is promised a seat in front of one or five big screen television sets for the show. And that's only the beginning. The Ram cheerleaders, the Walnut High School marching band, the Cuckoo Camino Chicken, a Dixieland pep band, the Cal Poly (Pomona) cheerleaders and a host of other extras a.re atso scheduled for appearances. Quote of the day San Francisco's Dwi1ht Clark, whose leaping catch of Joe Montana's pass with just 51 seconds to play gave the 49ers the winning touchdown in their 28·27 triumph over Dallas in the NFC championship game: "It was a high throw, just like it bad t.o.J>e. I didn't think I could get it. I'm not ~uch or a leaper. But I guess I can go as high as I need to in a championship game." No. 2 Missouri shakes off Kansas Ric.Icy Frader sank six crucial m free throws in the final minute as unbeaten, second-ranked Missouri survived an upset bid by archrival Kansas turning back the Jayhawks, 41-35 in a Big Eight bask et ball game W ed ne sday night . . . Elsewhere, Otbeil WUIGll and Ralpb Samp1oa both scor ed 18 points to lead third-ranked Virginia lo an M>-54 thrashing of George Washington University . . . Sophomore g!Jard Jim Master tallied 22 points to lead run~-rated -Kentucky to a 91·76 victory ov~r Florida, whic h l ost its 10th strai~hl game. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA I Sherrill wants 'integrity' at A&M JackJe Sherrill, in his first news Ell conference as Texas A&M 's head ••• football coach, said repeatedly Wednesday that he plans to "bring some. integrity" to A&M 's footbaJI program. The former University or Rittsburgh coach, who declined to specify the terms of his contract, washed his hands of the firing or former A&M Coach Tom Wilson, an action which cleared the way for Sherrill to take the dual post of athletic direct.or and'head coach . . . Owner Ge•e Klein of the San Diego Chargers denied a report Wednesday tha\ the Chargers were interested in obtaining quarterback Bert Jones from Baltimore. Dick Saymauld, Colts' general manager, told the San Diego Tribune that Jolua Sanden, general manager ol the Chargers, had called and exp r e~sed interest in Jones ... Alfonso Gardner, a three-year defensive lineman al Florida A&M, has been arrested on charges of using stolen credit cards, Tallahassee police said. Sixers snap losing streak Bobby Jones scored six of his 21 m points in the final 2: 24 to rally Philadelphia t.o a 115-110 victory over . Portland Wednesday night in the · · National Basketball Association. The victory snapped a three-game 10sing streak for the 76ers, who avoided losing four straight for the first time since 1974 ... Larry Bird kept up his hot scorini touch by pouring in 32 points to lead Boston to a 112-103 triumph ove r India na ... Greg Baltard scored 29 points as • Washington defeated SeatUe. 106 ·95 to s nap the Supersonics' eight -game winning streak. It was the fourt.h straigbt win for the Bullets ... Rolaado Blackman's 12 fourth-quarter .10..n points helped Dallas erase a 15-poinl deficit and beat Milwaukee, 109-104 . . . Pbll Smith scored seven points in the final 3'h minutes and finished with 23 points, leading San Diego to a 108-99 triumph ovet Golden State. Monge signs pact with Indians Sid Moage, a fr ee-agent Ill left-hander who has pitched for the Cleveland Indians the past 4 ~ seasons, signed a three-year contract with the American League club Wednesday. Monge moved from the minor leagues to the Angels in 1975 and joined the Indians in May. 1977 and has compiled a 29-35 record with a lifetime 3.46 earned run average and 47 saves in the major leagues ... Veteran right-handed relier pitcher Ron Reed signed a new three-year contract with Philadelphia. Phils General Manager PaurO'w81 wOUldn't confirm any financial figures but did say that two or the three years were guaranteed." Saow ~-ha Coedltlou Ufts/cltaln Mountain High Ml. Baldy Snow Summit Snow Valley Goldmine 20-24 pow/pp 3L 8·12 pow 24·48 pow I pp SL 18-24 pow/pp 4C 30-42 pow/pp 3L CENTRAL CAUFOltNIA June Mountain 64-88 pow/pp 4C Mammoth Mountain 118 pow/pp nc China Peale 57-73 pow/pp FO Dodge Ridge 60-84 pow/pp FO NORTHERN CAUFORNIA Mt. Reba 78-138 pow/pp 6L Kirkwood 132·216 pow/pp FO Heavenly VaJley 87 pow/pp 21L Tahoe Ski Bowl 84-1.24 pow/pp 4C North.star 48·1.24 pow/pp FO Squaw Valley 54-132 pow/pp lOL Donner Sid Ranch • 120-14-4 pow/pp 2L Alpine Meadows 95-192 pow/pp 9L Su1ar Bowl 168-JtO pow/pp SL 8oreaJ 144·1• pow/pp 4L Homewood Ski Area 72·120 pow/pp 3C Caildttions: ho -bardpaek; pp -packed powder; pow - powder. Lifts/chain: L -lift.a; C -chalrl; FO -ru11 operation. scaocco c-·o' u p •. 5 a p • e d tr•namlulon. met•lllc P•lnt. reu window w I per/wHh•r, •lltfy wh ... s, st«eo C8SMttlt •nd morel (Stk. 3235) (017785) ---.SAU r_s , 5 10 495 Gretzky has own celebration Wayne Grebky celebrated the ~· signing or bis new contract by scoring a three-goal hat trick and rookie center Tom llMlstoa figured in two goals 20 seconds apart late in the third period a5 the Edmonton Oilers spurted t.o an 8·6 triumph over St. Louis Wednesday rugbl in the National H~key League. C:relz.ky now has 60 goals this Aeasoµ ... New York Rangers defenseman Andre Dore broke a l ·l lie with a backhand ab.gt, then Nick Fotiu clinched his . .team 'a 3·2 victory over the rival New York Islanders ... Doag Sulllman's goal with two minutes left gave Hartford its first win over an Adams Division roe this season -a 4 • 2 c o n q u e s t o ., oHTUT Quebec ... Rick Kehoe scored three goals, two in the final period, t.o pace Pitts burgh to a 5·4 victorJ over Boston . . . Dave Babyela scored bis lttb goal of the season and set up Mwda. IAbeldl for another, while goaltender Do•I Seetaert notched his first s hutout of the season in Winnipeg 's 3 ·0 blanki•g of Washington ... Vaclav Nedemauky set up Dauy Gare, Willie Haber and Gree kltmldt with perfectly executed passes to help Detroit secure a 5-4 victory over Chic.aeo . . . &Jek Valve tallied two goals in a 25-~nd 1pan t.o help Toronto wipe out a lhree-goaJICaJlfry lead and tie the Flames, 4-4 . . . Neal .,... seclftd one goal and one assist In Minnesota's 3·1 win at Colorado. UCI coach named to Olympic post UC Irvine track and field eoacb • Ke.la McNalr has been appointed t.o a n Olympic d evelopment post . McNair, 33, has been selected as the Western Regional Coordinator for the (llympic development of 400-meter hurdlers. Tbe region includes California, Washington, Ore1on and Arizona . as well as Montana and Idaho ... Joeepb W. LaCnb, 60, prominent horse owner and breeder. was pronounced dead by doctors at Arcadia Methodist Hospital late -Wediiesday following his collapse at the· winner's ci r c le just after bis horse, Unpredictable, won the San Miguel Stakes. the eighth· race at Santa Anita Park ..... Bob Addle, a former reporter and sports columnist for The Washington Post, died Monday oigbl at Suburban Hospital in Bethesda, Md. He was 71. Television. radio TV: No events scheduled. RADIO: Basketball -Long Beach State at Utah State, 6:35 p.m .. KWN (88 FM>; UC Irvine at Pacific, 8:05 p.m .. KWVE 008 FM); San Jose Stale at Cal Stale Fullerton, 7:30 p.m .. KWRM (1370). Hockey -Minnesota 1t Kings, 7:20 p.m .. KPRZ (1150). Edison romps.; Marina beaten It wa.s an easy night ror the Edison Charters basketball team Wednesday as the Char1era breezed to a 67·39 victory over host Westmlnater lo Sunset League action. Huntington Beach's Oilers posted a 55-50 win over the host Marina Vikings in another leaaue outing. At Westminster . Coach Barry Leith used bis entire roster of 11 players in a game that found Edison jumping out t.o a commandini lead in the first quarter and increasing the margin t.o 38-H at halftime. "We played everybody tonight and it wu a team effort," Leigh said . "Jeff Stephens and Richard Chang got us golnt offensively and Rick DiBemardo hit the boards for us but 11 1u.ys divided up the playing time." The Chal'gers used a full-court man-~man defense to force IS turnovers by the Uons. Edison made nine miscues but it made little difference in the final outcome. HuntinQton Beach 55, Marina 50 A cOld shooting Marina t.eam fell behind in the second quarter and never recovered. At halftime, the Oilers held a 25-23 ed1e and improved by one point in the third period in a game that SflW them hit 15 of 25 free throw attempts compared fo 8 or 9 for the Vikings. Huntington Beach increased its lead t.o as much as 10 points in the fourth quarter but Marina battled back to within five at conclusion or play. The win ties Huntington Beach with Ocean View for second place in the Sunset League standinls with 2·1 records. Marina drops to 1·2 t.o· tie with Fountain Valley for fourth place with Edison the leader at 3-0. OCC /alls, 79-70 EL CAJON -Chris Beasley had a 30-poi.at performance but it didn't bring about a victory for the Orange Coast College Pirates here Wed.Jlelday night as host Grossmont posted a 79-70 SOi.i£h Coast Conference basketball victory. Beasley, the Pirates' leading scorer as well as the top man in the conference, moved into ninth place on the all-time OCC scoring list with 816 in two years. He passed Mike Woods who had 809 points during the 1957-58 seasons. Grossmont jumped into an early lead and increased the margin to 20 early in the second half al 46-26. The Pirates batUed bacl! to close tbe 1ap to eight with 2: 31 left to play but never got any closer. The los$ was the fifth straigtit for the Pirates in conference play this season while Groumont posted its second victory. Beasley. in addition to his 30 points, puJled down 11 rebounds and had three steals. His conference average is 26.8 and his season overall mark is"2:2.3 . . College basketball JOHNSON Ir SON Presents ... llilet!'llflisSt ... Tul-Tonight'• v•me• ... UC l"'lnt•t P.:lfk Ftnno SI. .. UC s.nt• .._,. S.n J-SI. et C4ll Stet. Ful .. rton M•tcff at NE L .. lslen• Murray 5t. M ,..._. T-- W•h P:-•t N«ttl CMoll,.. StetMt1•Htw0r1e-...... LOflt 8Nc:I\ 5t. lit UWI $1 "'' ,,_ ... evu ln•tl-5t ... -Me•tco SI. Nev ... I.as 11..-S 81 UI ... Sen Ol99D st. • Wyomlno ~ W. IC8"4\lelly 81 """"' lr.-...V•Drelw Cl_..., Sl. .. Y-.VSlown SI. I N....it St. lit C....,,._, SI. Loulsllt Oeyt., E. llllMlt•tN.1-lllCllMw lit llllflolt •-•et ltw1,_.,..m ,..,,....,.St. .. Mklll98" PurM lit Ofllo St. TulM 8t S. llllNlt .__.. Wlcllll•Sl.lltW. Te.11nSt. H•,....."""-et .._..,. ...... . ,_ Auttlll ....... M T-Tedl Arll·Llttle "9ctl 81 ~ l".wm91111il O'--' L.ulli-Tecll •t SW Loultt.M Soloffl c--.. s. ""'"'"'"" llMI .. w. c.roti... .... H•ml"°" M Co1981it U Uu et Felrleltfl Dlclllns.on HolyCl'0981Meft "oMft Mwrlt lit SNN Frtd•r~me• UK el (8flfOnlN UCLA lit S4Mfonl 1 '#Hll""'°" Sl. lit 0.-...,. SI. Port•-· s..u ci .... SI. M•l'Y't .. ~ntlN U. ol Sir! DtewD et Lo'l'04• o.n ...... ""' ..... Nev ... "-M WtWr St .. hlMSt.M...,,._ H-ell et c.111ir ... St. ·-.. -----$1. NCW1llenl,.,.... .. IMM St ... F•lrllitldet Y ... LOflt ..,_ U. lit LoQ Md, J8Cll_l ... lt~A...._ -..... Pete the "Gftek" NFL's Picks Of :ne Week Pm PICIS SAN FUlllSCI ··AU m WAY! New Partspepartmenf Roan Now Open :8:® am -1:00 ·pm Saturday• • • I 'I Whai temp,o ,awaits UCI? ·Pacific may try to run STOCKTON -Coach BlU Mulliaan la hopln& hill UC Jrvlne basketball te_.Q'\ aets a break the • next couple of days. After two •lowdown.1 by Cal State Fullerton and UC Santa Barbara last week, aulllaan haa his , rtn1ers croaaed tfiat the University of Paclfic - 1 tonlgt}t's opponent -and Utah State <Saturday t. night) will run with bla Anteaters. "I'd like to think they'd run with us," says l Mulligan, "but l don't know what's aoing to 1 happeo." Mulligan thought Cal State F~llertoo was ., going to run, but quickly found out differently and .n had to settle for a 50·49 nail-biting outcome. UCSB , ran --. but at the Gauchos' pace and the result was 11 another close contest. 65·62. , "I don't think Paclric is very patient ," adds c On radfo tonight .~ KWVE (108 FM) at 7:30 Mulligan. "I think they'd have trouble trying to slow it up." The Tigers come into the game with an 0·2 · PCAA record, 4·10 overall. They lost al Fresno 1 Stale, 74-40, last week and then blew a 22-poinl lead in losing at San J ose State, 57-56. The Tigers ar-e led by 6·7 forward Mall I _Wald.ton. The senior is averaging 18.7 points and 1 7 .6 rebounds a game. Last year he aver aged 16.9 points and 6.4 rebounds and scored a season-hlgh " 32 points against the Anteaters in a 90·82 loss. t The only other starter averaging in double t' figures for the Tigers is 6-8 junior center Steve Howard. He's scoring at an 11.1 clip. n Guard J eff Andrade, an Ocean View High ., product, has a 10-point average but is scheduled to come off.the bench. Forward Laurence Held (6-6) and guards John b Leidenheimer (6-1) and Rick Paulsen (6-6 ) round ' out the starting lineup. Leidenheim er, who ' prepped at Servile High, comes in with a 1.9 scoring av.erage. _ • The Anteaters <2-0, 13·1) are 3·6 over all in the ii series between the teams, having swept both ,, meetings last year. " After last week's low-scor ing a ffairs, the Anteaters dropped to No. 7 nationally with an 82.4 r. team scoring average. They're still No. 1 in field r goal pereenlage, however, at 61 .. 4. 1• Kevin Magee, m eanwhile, is thlrd in the nation 1 in scoring (27.4) a nd second in fi eld goal percentage (70.2>. "I don't think we 're playing badly," says Mulligan. "We're just not winning very easily." ~Basketball scoree EHi Vlr9lnl• IO, a.or.,. WHlll"Vton S• WH I VlrQlni. IS. O~sne 6S Piii ... SI. 8-,,..,luro S. Of'_u.,.,. Bru-011,.,.11. Wtttern 62 Aneiwlm st. V•fenct• n Sevenne 61, Me9noll• ll (oil ~~ Sent• A,.. 0 , SA V•ffey 0 f'oolllfff 1•. VIII• Peril,, 0 ••"9960, El"'-MSl Tustin 49, C.,yon '3 I• N•YY "· Ul•y•ll•,. Rutg...-s62. MaiW'llU$elU S2 St. JolWfs 7J, Syrr1n4 62 Nl~V• .. ,~onU.61 MerylMld '1, C11nlslus 11 Conne-:tl•ut u. 0-11tlown S7 Am ... l'.MI U. H , Oel•w•re st e....,..u..,.. CyPf'US ... P ... lll<e ... E'"r...uft. El Oor-.0 LCK Al...,;tCll 62. K.......ty S9 K•tell• U Loer• st ........... St. B•r,,.,d> IO. S.rvlle .. r; Di-tka has plaru 1 • C HICAGO (AP ) -With the fo rm,a l announcement Wednesday that Mike Oitka would ' become.bead coach, Chicago Bears owner George Halas said "the game plan I had been working on is now complete." 1j1Uia, 42, rejoins the Bears aJ\er rune years as a n assista nt to Dallas Cowboys Coach Tom 1 Landry. Alter being drafted in the first round in 1961 out of Pitt, where he earned All-America honors his senior year , DiUta achieved instant success in Chicago. .. I NO DEALER SALES' AD STARTS 'nf'URS. STANLEY DECORATIVE TUYERSE RODS ··..URll IDllSlllCE D . 9•'J 28" to '8" .a'"•o 84" I 7 9 " 84" to 156" 2 9 97 It' a curtaiAa for you.M guya. The Woodlawn baa a walnut finlah or maybe you'd like the Renalaaanc:e D with a braaa flnlah-;' - • CLEO-UP CADDY .......... LDEB • llDlllG OBCllllZP YOUR CHOICE Organlaatlon ia ao wonderful. Juata1kthe UAW. theAFL-CIO. the Royal Order of Mooae. the Elka. They mu1t lmow aomething . PIOIOTE 24" ROUND WOODGRlll LAMDllTED TDLE TOP ~~___,_~ 6 99 wuom 1B011 PEDESTAL TULE USE 1399 Thb It a clOM·Out. folka. we· .. got good price• but the 1uppllea are limited (hey. what la thla, the bum'• ruab ?). In Butcher Block or Marcoro. BIBI ASSORTED SCISSORS 69~ I'll akip tb•cuttlng remaru and get right lo the meat of thl•matt•r. NowwbeN waa I? (Don't bite your nall1. "peclally if you'N a carpenter.) Solid unflnlahed bardwood atrlp paneling. ID 7116" x 3" random lengtht ln 20 aq. ft. paclta. Toag¥. and groo•ed (hey. like wow) and end matcbed. NEW! TROJAlf BOARD "It is a situation that was meant for me," said BLICK & DECKER Ditka. "Everybody has their destiny and mine is ' In Chicago." "Ditka S'llid' he wuutd-not-have taken-ttn:1ot> _..,------..Uftp-61f S11D---- unless he was offered a three-year contract and added that while be will install much of the Dallas WITI REE multiple-set offense in Chicago's game plan, "we're not going to do everything that Coach lllLL 1i111E Landry did. I can't be all things to au people." DiUta said be plans lo meet with the coaching staff in the next week a nd "will coach the players and coaches until they learn the Dallas system. IMIOU.MOW c ......... •oW• ...... ""-,,..,_ SAN .JOA9UIN GOLF COURSE FREE LESSoMS ~ffh l PURCHASE OF 'ZOOO DISCOJ1MT · ' RANG! CARD rf'reient this acf and rice1ve·3 Fr Lee Trevino Balls when you enrotj, UM your Vt' oro/a" clrlll with tbla to alunpen. eand. ahape. and flnleh. WoruonedHon. 1m1 .... mow.r bladee, and IDON. Orange Coast DAIL y PILOT{fhursdoy. Jon11. 'Y .. I H•S • MANVILLE FIREGLASS Ill FIBERGLASS SHINGLES Can't aayenoughabout thla 1tuff. Quality. Iota of colors. and 20year warr<rnly lo boot . 3 bundlea equals 100 aq. ft. ROLLED ROOFING Covera 100 aq. ft. Availoble lo Green Neptune. Brown Bark. Shalcewood Tan or White. CUMBERLAND BAY GLASS FIREPLACE DOORS YOUR CHOICE 17997 Umitedquanliti••· Hey. it'• eaay. Flt• right over the outside of your flNplace with juat two adjuatable clam pa. In the aummer you can make it into a greenhouae. NEW! COVER-TUFF TARPS Won't crack or l.aY e ven lo aub-a:ero temperature •. u .. ·emtoco•er furniture. motorcycle, or whatever. H.avyduty rope lnhema. 5'8" x '1·r 3 99 7'8" x 9'8" 666 9·9 .. x 11 '6" a•• McCULLOCH WOODMATE I ' ELECTRIC HYDRAULIC LOG SPLl'M'ER 33333 Thia babv.put1 out 10 tona of force. That'• enough to crack moat any log. Adjust a to aplit log• to 28" long. 8 FOOT 3 x 4 'ROUGH REDWOOD POST SHELL FIR ALL SEASO IOW 40 Wl Such ad1i.playw 111•1~~ there 1011ad : wt. t , haaocaatyuu.,.01.111 t MARVEL MYST£P. PT QT G11l . The marvel abcl" added to yo<J qa pretty mys• .. r• L'" CRC HEAVY DU. SILICONE SPR Prevents 11llclC11 q or d .,., and 1q•..1awlunq or rt t• • leather. INTERDYNA AIR COMPRES OR 1 1.!7 Limited Quontihh l.nJlatee your llreit. r~n • inflatable tu101ti;re.-:Ho. Ea11ly fita tn thto tn<ok ol • ' 277_. ROEBIC . What nma a.round the ya rd but never movee? Comeon. tbJ1 l1anea1yone. Okay. okay. it's a fence. Thia 1tuJf makea good po at a. JOBE'S ROSES OR AZALEAS, CAMELLIAS &!IL, • RBOl)pDENDRONS FERTILIZER SPIKES I ~!or10 U your plant a haven't bad many bloom a, you might try th"e thlng1. Ju1t one application laata the a.aaon. RUBBERMAID TAPERED DESIGN PLAITERS , .. lt'1notoo1ywr tmg .,p• talking phonN1 r•nq1n9 INSI RADr;l · I I HP MODfJ 333 • 1 HI' 0 ! ; IHtl"' ·• r Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT /Thur1dav. January 21 . 1982 Tars, Mesa, Vaqs ·win Newport Harbor keeps pace; Artists fall to Dana Hills Newport Ha rbor HJgh'11 Sailors kept pace with the leaders lo the Sea View Learue while Irvine poasted its first vlctory of the season in prep basketball action ~nesday night. . • • The Tans handed host Univeril(f a SS-•S defeat. while Costa Mesa won euUy. 1n South Coast League play Laguna Beach found Dana HUis too mut h to handle. He re's how It went: Newport Harbor 56, University 45 • 'l didn't think the gam e was that well played," wmning coach J erry DeBusk s aid after t he gam e. "The weather was bad outside and there w~ren't many people there. It just wasn't a real gdod effort for either team ." The score was tied at ha lftime. 24.24 with the Tar s moving in front in the third stanza. 41·37 and never looking back. "We dldn't have a very good second half." University Coach J eff Cunningham admitted. "We sat on 37 points for quite awhile a nd they picked up 10 points to pul it away. We just bad a cold spt!ll with a lot or turnovers ... Newport picked up more than enough at lhe free throw line lo make lhe difference. The Tars hit 14 of 21 while University was c anning only 1 or 3 att empts. DeBusk praised the play or Steve Pelletier who hit 16 points for the SaHors . Grey Selby also played well, especially in lhe second per iod when he hit all seven of his points and made 7 or 10 for t he Tars in that period. reserves Jeff l"1eld ind Paul Edson and their de fe nsive abilities and ovcrcdl noor game, turned It around quickly to 1ui11ume 1t 21·point bulge In the thlrd Quarter and CQach Tjm Parsel turned to his ben ch for the r em ainder of lhe game. K~ Barll,sley, Who went over tbe l .OOO·point career mark for Costa Mesa last Friday, scored 20 points on 9 of 18 from the rield (he's now at the 1.025 plateau) and J ohn Rlshebarger pumped in 16 points. hitting 5 or 9 after entering with a 62 perce nt shooting average for the season. J ohn Strayer I 11) and Jim PeUchow¥i (9) led u rebounding assuult that s mothered El Toro, 44-20. "El Toro played real aggressively," said ,l'arsel, "but they just didn't have it. Our press bothered them and F ie ld and Edson belped us d e fe nsively, especially with Steve Cook ill and Dave Palmblade still out <knee injury)." Palmblade doesn 't figure to return to the lineup until Jan 29 <against Corona del Mar) Irvine 50, Saddleback 42 The Vaqueros found the night they had been seeking for a long time Wednesday. snapping a 13·game losing s treak dating back to the 1980·81 campaign. Rob Akers led t he way, hilting 10 of 23 from the fi eld for 23 points, 'iYhile Doug Brozovich added 11 points and seven rebounds . Bernie Ussery helped out with nine rebounds ror the winners, whose zone defense ID lhe second half seemed to turn the tide. The Vaqs hit 20 of 51 from the field for the evening as opposed to 19 of 41 for SaddJebaclt. in a game which found Saddleback on the tr ailing end of a 4·6 point margin most or the way. INTENTIONAL FOUL -E s tanr1a's J eff Gardner llcfU wraps his arms around the bod~· of Mike Hess of Corona dcl Mar Dally ..... ....._..,,,_, 0'0-11 during Sea View League tussle a l Estancia. Sea Kings took a 40-35 decision to grab.sole possession of first place. Brad yuess, University's leading scor er. ran into foul trouble in the second ha lf b ut finished with 16 points a nd 11 rebounds . Ron Ratcliffe had s ix assists. Coate Meae 62, El T-oro 45 El Toro was up by seven points after the first q uarter , but the Mustangs. with the he lp of Dana Hiits 74, Laguna Beach 58 The Artists stayed with the Dolphins for the first half, trailing 31-29 at intermission . "They broke it ope n in the third period," Laguna Beach Coach J erome Karp said. "Dave Rhorer hit 8 of his 16 points in that quarter and we missed a lot of shots and that was the game. Euromarc he rated second in race Yachters plan a busy weekend "Before the third quarter , 1t was a tight game and we were right ID there with them ." Dana Hills hit 9 of 10 free throw attempts in the finul period as the Artists tried to get the ball Neil Riddell ~cored 20 points for the Artist s while Nick Tepper cam e off tht bench to score five MAR DEL PLATA Argentina By ALMON LOCKABEY Friday, Saturday, Sunday. Coro n ado' Cays Yac h t C lub I A P >-The · French Yacht 0 1111e o•lly ...... s1ilt1 Navy Yacht Club of Long Beach -Claire Faris Soyther Belle Series. Euromarche, commanded by A busy weekend· is in store for Commodore's Invitational <all Saturdav. Eric T1abarly, comple ted the sailboat racer s this weekend , c lasses> Saturday . Santa Clar a Racing Association third leg or the Wh1tbr.ead s tarting Friday with the first races or Mission Series, Saturday . Round-The -World Yacht Race Long Beach Yacht Club's Pacific BO' ~TlNG -~ · "We did a ~ood job on the boards but they made a lot of first attempts from lhe noor." Karp added Wednesday and was r anked in Coa st M atch racing Series. The ,,.. San Diego Cruiser Association second place on the basis of three-day regatta will determine the Silver Gate YC invitational predicted corrected time final entry in the Congressional Cup log race. Saturday Only three yachts in the rtcet match races in March Santa Monica Bay Southwestern Yacht Club Fiore Mason among racers of 22-Flyer of Holland. Cer amco Local e ntry in the PC Series is South Coast Cor inthian Yacht Club Series !PHR F ) Saturday. o f N e w Z ea I a n d a nd Les Storrs Series, Saturday. Oceanside Yacht Club Winter Scott Mason of Newport Harbor Yacht Club will represent the Newport-Balboa area in Lon g Beach Yucht Club's Pacific Coast match racing c hampionhip which gets under way Friday in the ocean off the Long Beach breakwater. Euromarche have completed Scott Mason of Newport Harbor South Bay Yacht Racing Club Dinghy Series. Saturday. t h e 6 . 100· mi I e I eg from Yacht Club. Champagne Series. Sunday. Auckland, New Zealand, to this In o the r Southern Californ ia R ed ondo Beach Yacht Club North and Inland Atlantic seaside resort. Yachting Association areas. Winter Wine Serles, Sunday Pierpoint Bay Yacht Club - Race officials pointed out that Sitn Diego Winter Series ( PllRFI Saturday, ranking on the basis of corrected Los Ange les-Long Beach Coron ado Yac h t CI u b Sunday. Mason will be among seven match-racing skippers contending for a berth tn Long Beach Yacht Club's prestigious Congressional Cup match racing series points. times was likely to change as Long Beach Yacht Club -Pacific Woodworth Series (handicap) Ventura Yactit Club Soring other yachts arrived. Coast Match Racing Championship, Saturday. Series No. 2 CPHRF> Sunday. ~--_:_--------------..---------------------.-__;::....... ____ .:.._ __ _:. ____ _,, ____ __:; ______________ ,_ ________ ~ PUIUC MOOCE STATEMENT 0,-WITMOltAWAL ,-llOM PAaTNllt5HIP on•ATINO UHDE• l'ICTITIOUS •USINISS NAME Tiie lollowfr19 """'on llH •llllOrAwn •l • oentr•I P•rtntr from the o•rtner'"IP oo•r•tlnv und•r th• li<llllOui l>utllltti n•-01 F ~ H MACHINERY COMPANY •I 71S W 11111 Strttt. A. COllA Mew CAlltorno• ,,.,, Tll• tlcllllou1 bu>1nu1 n•m• •••temenl for the PA'1norV11p wH 111td 011 June 23, 1"1 1n tht Count\' ot Or•no• l'ICTITtOUS M>"NalS MNIOIE STATIMaNT T l>t foll owing per\on 11 doing bU$1MU •~ JJG -'SSOCIATES, Mii ldln9ff A••nuo. •Z104, Hunllno..., ll•A<ll, Calllornl• .,.., Juclflll JUIW GltcMn, MOO E"'- A-.en"e* • Z2CM Hunttn910f'I 8••"· C•lltornl• n.-1 Tiii\ bv\IM">• I\ concluclH ~y .., lndtvld~I JuOllll J-Giiden Tiii• •t•lemenl ••• 11...i •llfl IN Coulllv Cl"'k ol O••noe Counly °" Ooomtwr JO 1 .. 1 Full H•m• •110 AdOttU ol Ill• Po .. on Wllhcl<-•"9 ,.,",.I JAmH M H•m lllon .. SI Ill• P1ibll"""1 Ortrv , .. "Dally Piiot, LlnctA Cv~. C•lll0<n1e 0.< ll ''" JWt 1, u 11, t"2 ,.,,_., J..,,.,.HetnlllDll Otua! FrM>Co Fl-Publl•l>t<I Or-co .. : DAiiy Piiot, Ooc 31, t'lll, Jan 1, ••. 11 1991 S!MICMI NIUC MOTtC "1CTITIOUS 8Ui!NUS NAME STATIMI NT Tt>t lot1owln9 pot\on I• c101no b\lllnH\ .. : E. M. PHILATELIC. LTD , 370 L• Perle Place. Cost• M«u , Collfornl• '2611; P.O. !k>• 111S, H-pof1 Be.ell. Calltor11la '*3 Ec!gor p Mine•. llO La Peri. 01~e. C...U MHA, c.ur...-ni. '1•11 T·1111 l>USIMSS ,, c-uclecl DY •n lncllvio....I. Ed90rP.Mlllt!t Tiii• sto,..,._t wH lllecl wltll Ille Counly Clerk of Or•noe Counly on Oe<ember ?t. l'llt · Fl7tW Publl\MO Or-C.,.tl~Ally Pllol, O.c JI, 1'111.JAO\.l,~4 11.1"2 HY•ll PHUC MOTICE FICTIT IOUS 8USlllESS NAME STATEMENT f ht to1tow1n9 Pft\On\ •re 001no bV\tnf'\C. ii\ R-'L INVES TMENT COMPANY IO<S. L .. ~""11 FounlAtn V•ll•Y C•hror111• 91108 Rocllatd H HoutlDll, IO•S• L• 0.\Pf'nW FOUt1l••rt VtJllfy C•tUornl1 t170ll Sl>lrlty 0 Hou•lon, 100• lf Oe\penw. Founl•ln V~lley, Calllotnla "'°' Lowell Ralnw•I ••. IO•S. L• 0.1~nw "°""''•'" ll•llty Celllornoe "'°' T Ill' llu.,nen " <OnclllCltO by • OttMr•t P¥1nH'\h•O Rk .... rO H Houllon Tiii\ \UIJ.,,.._I wn llled wltll Ille County Clerk of O••r>Oe County on Jan 6. ltU ,.1 ... Publl•l>t<I °'""91' (.o,nt Delly Piiot. JAn 7. u. n . 711. "'2 144.eJ Ml.IC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS •USINIH "'CTITMIUI •~Neu MAMalTATa ... •T T ... i.llOw .... --· ore tlel"8 '""'""'"' MEGOa TE CHNOLOGY . LIMITED, 1'454 l"i.c-1• ·-· C91taMtM.CA...,,. KENSINGTON ASSOCI ATES, INC .. •~~ ..... ~ Pleontl• A-. c ... a -· CA n.21. Tlllt buSIM>t Is <-led h • llmlled~. KE NSINGTON ASSOCI ATES, tHC. II oll9f1 II. R09t". PrtKldltnt Tiiis st--.t we filed wltll ... Counlv Cieri< of Ounoe Counly °" 0.< "· 1"1. DAVID MAGILAV Y ......... , .. Law J6' St1t ,...._. Orlve, ,_ IU Me•11tr1 llMdl, CA., ... ,-17.,.. Publl\heel 0r•"91' CN\I D•lly Piiot. On JI 1 .. 1. Jan '· 14, n t91l ,.,, .. , llS-tHJ!I ,-ICTITIOUS 8UllNISS NAME STA Tl MINT Tiie tollowlnq perM>nS Art cloln9 b•Ollll"' .n CROlll HE LI MITED PARTNERSHIP 81. IJtot Flltl\ Avenue. lrvi,,., C..lll0<nl• '2710 CROW llC EAST, 17'41 Fllcl\ Av•nut, ltvl,_, c.:110tnlA tllU CONNECTICUT GENERAL LIFE IHSUR.t.NCE COMPANY ,• Connectlcul corpor•llon, Ha•llO•cl. CDllntClotut O&ISJ Tiii> butintU I\ <Dflclu<ltcl by a llmllt O Pll'l,,.rVllP CROW 1LC. EAST. • Teul"llm1if!d partner\llop BY II'• Gfl*AI Partne< Tiii\ \lal.,,.._I we\ lllecl wllll Ille County Clerk of Or•noe County on J•n STATIM&llTO,.Ae.ANOONM&NT ~UMOI' PICTITIOUS •UstNaSS MAME Tiie followlng persons llAve INndoned IM in. Of Ille 11cllllovs buSl"41H-: ltAL INVESTING COMPANY, 1 .. S4 U ~. FountAlll VAiiey, ca111 .. n1a '219 Tiie Fl<llllou• 81nlntu Heme , ... rred 10 -••• flle<I In Or•r>Q« coun1y on Oct. n. 1•t Rlcllord H. Houtlon. 104~ La 0.ICMnW, F-.!Jlln V•ll•Y. Colllomla '270ll Slllrlev 0 . Hounon. 104S• L• Oete>enw F-.1J11n Venev. Cellloml• '27!11 Lowe ll Raln•eter 100• L• Ot\PfnW, F-t•on VAiiey, C•llf0<11la •170ll lllll bu>l...S\ w•\ CondllClecl by • 9tHM rttl partMr\hlp Rl<. .... rcl H HO<J>lon T 111, U•••,,_,I w•• riled wllll IN! County C1~r11 ot Or•noe County on JAnu•rv • 1'191 • "ICTITIOUS •ustNU.S N_. ITATIMl!NT Tltt loll-1"9 pertoftl er• doing ..... ,,,..,.,., EM811010E AY UNLIMI TED, llff·O Alr-1 Loop Otlve. C0>la ,_.,., Ctlltontla t»» O.rrwtl I" McKinley, .... o.nve< Drive, c....-... Calltoml• ~ Svson A. McKlnley, t44 O...vtt Ori••· c.i.-...c.111om1o m» ~""' 11..-. •• ..._s B•Y. Cott• lltltY. c.tlfomlo mJl Tt>I• 1>uslnes1 h cOfldu<l•d by a gener •I par11Wf'SNc>. o..-..11 F Mc K lnlt y Tlllt do......,,I was Iii.<! wilt\ .,,. Covnlf C1tri. of Or•-County °" Oe<em-1'. t'll1 • 1'17'Me Publl-0r-.. CN•I Delly Pllol 0.< JI, 1'11, JWt 7, 14, JI, 1"2 SSIMt l'ICTITIOUS IUSIHIU NAME STATEMENT l'ICTITIOUS 8USlll~H NAME STATIMl!HT Tiie rolfowln9 per\On 11 c!OlnQ 111111neu '" C 0 K E/HERPRISES. 110 Lembtrl Drive, Hunllnglon 8 .. <11. C•lllornl• '1W 01n1111 CllUIH WlllAllAn 110 L•mbtrt Or•ve. t-tu-nun9tort 8t•ch. CAlllornl•.,._.7 l "'' OU\1nitU is <ondlictf'O by •n indlvldUAI Demi• CN•IH Wlll•'>All fllh \IAlemenl was riled wllll llw Counly Cltt-ol Or•noe CounlY on Jen .... ry 17 t~ ,.,•n• Publl lt>tcl Or-C...•I Delly Pilot. J•n 1•. n. n, Fe«> • 1"2 1.e.11 "ICTITIOUS •U .. NISS NAMI STATIMaNT PUIUC NOTICE ,-ICTITIOUS 8USIHESS ,-ICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATEMENT NAME STATEMENT fh• toflo•lng p~r1on\ •r~ OolnQ fhf' IOHO•f,_O perSOf'I\ •rt Oo•no bv'\tnf'u 4 , tw~1nen 4\ THE 6 AHO M COMPANY SA• AO TECH, 713 W .SI•-.~• S.111• V1c tor1• (O\la MeY C•Htornltt •1•11 An.a C•litcrnt• .,101 Ra ll Ge"I Mla.cnrt cn. ••• O•nl•• He•m•n Ru" 21J w Victor••. CO\ta a.MW. C•lltOtno• •1u1 Steven•. Sant• A<W C..11roml• 97101 R on•IO Gt'I'~ lh-tr l '7SO D•rw•I ~man llettt Jr , SISJ Crntr•ll• Street l ••ttwooo H••' A.vtnuf Apt •• Hunt•n9tof' Calltorni• -.OllS B••<ll Calorornta •1M' Thi\ bus.Inn\ ·~ conch.1<teo D• • fh1\ t>U\IM\\•I\ <.ondu<.tfd OY • 9~n•r•t partnt1stup CJPMttfal PMtMr\.h1p A•U M ihChrtch Dttnttl H Aee\tt ll\1., "'"''~' w.-\ h lf'd w ith th~ r,,., it•lf"T'M!nt ••'!l fllf'd 'llWllh ,,. Counly Clerk of Oranoe County ""' Counly Cltt• 01 OranQt' Co.,nay on J•nu•rv •. t"2 J•nu•ro; 11 lqe) • l'lltl1' Ftltll• Pvl)llU•~O D••noe CounlY D•••v PubhtntO Or-,.,." DAlh PtlOI Piiot JAn 1 14, 11 29, 1'-7 t"0-11 Jt11 U , 11 21 Ftb •. 19'2 I .. 11 • ruauc MOTICE ruauc MOocr T ,,. lollowlno P•"on " clotno ,.CTITIOUS 8USINESS l'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATEMENT IKlllM11H NAMI STATEMENT C 6 L IHT ERNATIOHAL, II \110 IOllO•.,nq C>t•\on '' cloonq 1 hp lollow 1 nq Pf'' \On '' oo•t'f) DU~1ntH d\ ,-11:ies1 T llt lollowlnq ~·•on• •rt c101no Wllllt<loull. '"'Irle. C•lltoml• '171• bu\ln~•~ / Pubh~ Oran<Je CoHI DAoly Polol, bullneu _. CIOvll -. Jr., 11 Wl\lle<-, f Al COVNl RY MUNCH N or C bl • APPlAUSE Ct<+lllEllS )JMVoA ltOo N.,.-port B"'•ch, C•lllo<n•••l6f>l M ttlvH'I H 84th\lt.V ))11 'V•• l •OO Nt-.POrl 8e4'tr.. (tlhfof'nta 9166) '"" 1. I• 21.18, 1'191 I•~ E >CCLUSIVELY LIMITEO (SHOE Irvin.. CellfomlA'771• MUNCH H COUNTl~Y. •17•• Bu<ll _ ·-REP"IRI, Q4 ~•• "'" SlrHI, Cost• Tiii• bu\lneu ti' condue1.o by .,. Blvd , Hunhnolon llH<ll. C.1t1tornla Mtu, Calll0<nla 91•11 lndlvlc1 .... 1 9'16•7 ~ l9T1C( R TOCl<I HAll1lont1, 70S• Meyer ClovlsJ-.Jr Ian Ft•nklln Baird, •OOO Lo> -------------1 Pl•<t. Ccn1• MHA. C•lll0<n•• .,.,, Tiii• ,...,_,,. -lllecl wllll -Arcos. Lono BHCll C..lllO<nl• '°'IS T"'' bU\IM~\ •i <onoucte<t t>y •n ind1v10u•I l'ICTITIOUS •USIMIH NAME STATIMINT Tf\• followu\Q per\ons •r• doin9 1>111lneu '' C ~ W PAINT 6 800V SHOPS, IHC , 1'SS Cllurcll SI . CoslA Mew. C" ,,.,, C 6 W PAINT 6 BOOY SHOPS, I NC , A C•lllotnlA corporAllon. l9SS Cllute ll SI., Ccn!JI Mt .. , CA t2U7 Tllll l>usi,_ss I\ btlnQ Conduc:lf<I by • corpor•tiioti Peler WOCl\-11> President fllls ll411Hnent lllecl wllll lhe Counly Clerk of Or-Covnlv on Oe< JI, t9111 Arnold B Brodf«d, 10~ _,er Co11111y Clerk of Or.,,.. Cou.,IY on Tiii• b"'IMU II condllcl.O DY • PIA<t. Ccnle MH.11, Celllo-nl• ,,.,, 0.cem-lll. 1'11t ~tAI part,,.~lp T t>h bu,IM .. I\ conou<1ec1 by • "1"712 ,.,. F ee1tc1 9f"41r•I perttw~lp. Pue.llllWCI Or-CNJt Delly Pllol, Tiiis •IA•-· w.-lllecl .,,,. ,,. Arnold e. BrOClford O.c. )I, t'lll,JWt.1. t•. 21, 1911~1 Counly Clt"° ol Oran9" County on Thi• \IMMWnl wH Ill.cl wllll lhe • JAn .... ry 12. 1987 ~Ivon H 84lllky lllh \IAl""'"'I w.n hi.ct will> Ille County Cl~r~ ot O•anqe CounlY on l•nu•rv S ,_, ,, __ Publo""'° Orenqe Co.hi Delly Pltol, J•n 1 14, "· n tW7 1•1-12 County Clerll ol Oren9f Counly on ~ llTI( '11'7M ------------JanuA•Y s. 1'112 1,....-----------.,....,I PubtlslWd 0r•"9P c.,.,, Dolov Pilot. 1 PUILJC NOTICE ,.,_,,. l'ICTITIOUS •USlNISS JAii t•. n. 1'. F.o. •. t .. , JTS l2 Publl"'"4 Or-c ..... DAiiy Pllol. NAMI STATIM«NT ,------------Jon I, 1•, 11. 21. I_, 12._11 Tt>t tollowln9 Pttl.,. Is dotr1o "CTITIOUS •USINISS t>u•l"41U K . NlltC NOTICE NAME STATllMlllY ... CTITIOUI •u11wass NAM« STATIMllMT 1.)o~OBHHECITROLHIC D.,!E tEI HGI ., 1.---,.-ICT_l_T-IOU_S_8_U_S_l_N_l_S_S __ ov~:;,:,~:lowlno P•"on u Oolnq o w• er • .,., ~11n no on SC•H DI" DOWN SHOP A 8HCll, Cellfoollo~ llAMI STATIMl!llT Anl!Wly Rovllcll, ttJOt 8•¥• .. lrr Tiit lollOwl"O P•tlOll It c!Oln9 FranclliH OI St•ncl la Do wn ,.IMS4t ,.IMUt Publl!.llt'a Orat>90 , ..... DAiiy Pllol. Publlltw<I Or-c .... DAiiy Pllol. •. 1•11 "'CTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATIMlllT NAME STATEMENT Tiie lollowlnq per>on• ... dolno Tiie tollowl"O per>on Is dolno t>uslnns •t: L•ne, Hunllnoton 1111•<11. c.11ro•11I• l>UllMU ... Cotpor8llon, ZIS6 E. ,.,.,, HIOft••v. •U46 SAN DCASTLE GI FTS, H' 1-Coron•oel-.C•llrornlA '1US Tllll bu\I~• ,, tOndllCltO llY an Swift C-1 .... ......,., BHC.11, CA '2"3 OorolllV G MOO<e, .,, Ptb4>1t Tl>• ro11owin9 per\on\ Art doln9 busl.,esses· t>u\lnHS AS p u Mp E II p I c IC LE. I S2 Is JAn I•. ll H, Feb •. l"1 16..,2 Jon U, 21. 21. Ftl> •. ltl2 2Sl-12 BLACK MOUNTAIN MIHIHG IHV£$TMtNT. J30I Harbor lll•d . •F·l,c .... -..,CAm26. lndl•idllAI L E CL A 1•11 E II p II I H C E . Bue II PIA<e, Fuller Ion. CAlllor11la AMl!Gny 11 ... 11c11 NO.e-sw1t1 c-t. ~ BN<ll, CA nus " A y J A y s E " R c H Sptlnod•lt, H11nt1nolon 8••<11. COHSULTAHTS. usn El Toro RoOCI. Call~~~~~w BINGAMAN. nm Suitt Jill, El Toro, CelllotniA'1'J0 Herll•~ C'rcle. Oo•MY. C~llf0<nle MUNICIPAL COURT 0,-Oa"NGIE Arnold II. Hof\16 JetnM R. Holl, t020 COUNTY HAll9011 1o•t Vttdt. El Toro. C•lltornlo ,,.JO OoflN Due LAndOn, um Heril-... t J•"'-" -••onl Thh t>uslnen I• tondut ltd by • Clt<le. o->ev, C•lllor11I• 'CD•I "''""'""' ... c11, CA., ... Ot"'"1Pllrtrtllnlllp, 6 Tiii• l>llslntH •• (ondu<l•d by. l'LAINTIF,. TOK AI 8ANK 0,. Arnold II HOii g•"41••1 Ptfl ......... lo c A L I ,. 0 It HI A. • c •II .. r It I A J-R Holl cer••ull.,, fllh stel,.,_I Wa\ 111«1 will\ Ille Tiii> =..~l~ecl with Ille DE F IE N 0 AH f ST IE VEN K Couney Cltrlt or Or•nQt' County 011 '°""'' Cieri< of Or•-c°""'' on KEATLEY ...... s K Kl!ATLEY, .... Jtnu•ryl2,l"1 Oecemtw•?t.1'•t ""-STEVEN KIEAT LIY, •k• s. "1•1" Pvbll.,,..OrAnOt (OHi Dally Pllol. t(EATLEY, •RITT It KE ATLIY . Publllhed OrAn!lf Co.nl Dally Piiot. Ot< JI. , .... J .. I, 14,71.1"2 SStWI .... II R KEATLIV ..... •••TT tin. 14. n , 21. Ftb 4, , .. , ,.~., KEATLEY, ...... KEATLEY; DOES ---------1--------------1-?"1,.-...... ~-· - l'ICTITIOUS •USINISS NAMI ST A TI MI NT The rollowlnO Dtt1on Is doln9 liu,lntSSOS: THINOuOrlum, 1'12 ROYAi Palm Drive Ho C. Cosio Me ... C•lllornl• tHH , Frencls L. Sclllel, 1'n Roy•I Polm Drive. No. C. ~IA _,., Collrornl• .,.,. Tiiis DUllMH It conOucte<I &., •n lndlvlcNlll. Franch Sc:lll•I Thi• statement ••• llllJCI will\ IM c°""'"' Clerk ot Oronoe Co..nlv on JallVOrv 7, 1"2. .. , ... l'..-lllNll Or ..... COHI o.tly PllOt, Ja11 u, t1.,., FOfl,. •. 1"1 uo-t2 PUlllC NOTICE NOTICE! .,S~-::!N:.... ·-· Tiie ,-ICTITIOUS IUSIMIUS MAME STATIMINT Tiie lollowtn9 IM••on' ••• oo•no 1>111lnen u · THE MAIL ROOM. noo Eol Cool Hlvt>w•v. Bo• 2000, COt'on.t del M•r. Calltot'llla Joan •rid Slltnnon JA<ll•on. ,, Luurnt. Newport BNCll, Colltornle .,..., T'>h busl,,.n I• condueleo b't All tllcllvlclutl J_,JoOton Tiiis •IAlttNnl WM 111• wlllt the County <l••k ol Oro,,.. County on J•.,uary s. 1"2 l'tlltll 1 Publlsned Or11t19t GNlt O•lly "llol, ~~· l•.21,ft. 1"1 ~ ... ? c ... rt .... ,, ........ IMI ye" Wil-f , ... , """' ....... ""'"' , ... ,_. •ltlllll • ,.,.. • ... "" 1 .......... i... ··-If vou w1\h 10 \ff" ow ~hlce.ot .n ~11ornty In lnil m•t1tr. you \llOUld dO \D promptly so thal vour wrlttt"n tupon\O, or any m•v be lllecl on lime AYISOI Us._ M sl• -....-... 11 lrl-........ etc!* <•lrA UC 1IA AeilltA<la • tftt1t•t ~·· Uil. ..._. .......... ·-~· .. lllt .. llUK ... _ ..... . $1 VOtcl dtW• \(lll(llar el Con Mio Cllf un tbo.,_ en ••I• -•o. Ottwrla '>AUrlo lmmtOlelamtnlt, d• ula tnA""re, \II rftC)Ut>tA HCrllA, \l l\tV •l-0. "'*" ., , ... ,.,_ .......... t TO THE l>EFEHOAHT • 1' Civil comolelrtl 110 "•" llled by llto plAlnlill ......... VW II .,... wl~ lo Otlfftel 111-S •-II, you m1111, wlllllfl • d••• '"" lfll• wrnm°'" 1, ~"" Oii you, rMe wltll 19"t cout1 A wrlllon rt•oonw lo Ille complalnl. Vnl•n V911 dO •o, 1-.-1..,11 will .,. .,.,., .. on •OPll<•tlofl OI Ille ptalnttn. -'"'' (OIOr1 m<IV tnltf a l~I .... .,,1 '°" ... .... rtlltf """.,..,.. lfl ... <Otftllltllll, wllltll <0111• ,.tlllt Ill gernltllmtnt ol ., .. ,, le-1119 ti mtf'lty or t>t-••Y ., tl!Mr t•li.f '"""'" 111 tllt ,.,... ..... l>A TE 0 Jtlly H. •• J PET IE ltSON CIM_ ., "'~A MAll.l\IWOOO Dtelify waLtCNl & ... TM 80YOeM, eoo&.ua11 8 NAUHa =t::.":'&"a ,...,... ... '"II W-1"1 "'*''""" OrOlllt ONtl Otlly ""°' ..11111. t•, II, a. F .... •, UIJ HI~ l'ltANK EOWAltO 9AltTON, JOSI Y11-0ft Circle, Co.IJI Mesa, CA t?U.. Tiii\ ., .. _, •es llle<I wftll Ille fMl Tl\o\ buslfwu '' conclu<le<I &y en Coullly Cl-of 0'°''09 Counly on Tiii\ -"'"• II c-1.0 by .,, tncllvlcluAI SUPl•IO• cou •T 0,. CAL l,.OaNIA, COUN TY 01' oaANGI Tlllt -lnftS II COndu<ltcl by e llmlled per1Mnlllp. JenUAry 1', 1"2. lndlvlekNI. Thi• .~:::::,.~ ::::'rT1.o with , .. "1M7.. i.ECLAIRE B PRINCE • • Fr-E.B-Publl-Oronot Coos! Oally Pllol. ' Tlllt , .. ,_, wos Ill.CS w1111 Ille County Cl-ol Orenoe Countv on JAn. I•, JI, 21, F .... 4, 1"2 2'7·11 County Cler• or Or-Counlv on January 17, , .. ,. '1M"9 1• CIVIC CINTlll oa1v1 WIST P.O.M>X .. T11i. .....,,_, -fll.., with 1"" County Clerk of 0rllfl99 County Oft I De<. tt, 1"1. ~ O.c. Jt, 1'111. "'""' Publl-OrlM9 CoHI Dally ,., .... Publl-0r-.. c .... Delly Pllcl, J•n u 11, n . Fwt>-4, ,.., t,,.., o.c. J1. "''· JWt. 1, u. 11. 19':7 snw1 .., -------~- SANTA AMA, CA n712 PLA IMrl,I': WOOD•ltlOGI Pt"9 Vt LL AGE ASSOC I A TIOM , a PulMltNd Or .. Cont D•llY Pllol, -·J11i ~11 .. nlla-.nfll ,.._..... De<. JI, lttl, J-1, I•, 21, 1911 SS7WI "ICTITIOUS •uStMISS oa .. u•OAllT: DOUGLAS •. JONIS ~ STATIMENY & ltMITA a. JONIS, oM ooas t I _.,. -Tiit rollowlno person 11 doing "'""'tll ICX, le......,., ,._ ,..,~ t>u1lneu es: -·-_..suMMOML ____ jc:::;-:::::;!;s.:::;::::;,;;;:;:;;ar::=-=~=1--R•NCHO MISSION-~--c.u•NuMa•• JS1111 Plc;TtTtOUS •U.•N•SS Ort• .. HI ... ..,, s.n Juen c ... 111r-. NOTIClr T ............ -n.I ..... ITATUillaNT Qlllorlll•'161S cMrt lfttY .... ...,.., -~ Tiie followlno P•rton Is dol"g Antllony II. Meho, General ·-.................... -llullMH .. : Ptflntr -The s... Juen COm-Y •• wlalll » ...,._ ..... ... -.. ltAHKLIN ltEALTV, JJSO E. limit"' ~p, No. J Locll,,_r ..... • COHI Hllftway, CorOfl• d•I M••. ~. N-1 llM<ll. C.lltornl• n.$1 II vou wflf> to _. Ille ..,k• of a Cell!Grnloflt:IS Tt>ll bullnen Is COllclll<l•d by a allornev I" this mel .. r, VOii "'°"Id CllrlttOllMr Earl HoMc>.,, 20 1 llmll"' porlnen Np. , 10 promptly so 11\ol your wrlll•" Mu• l>flw, Some AN, Colllorllla Mlllony II. Mol>o ••-... 11....,,mov .. 111•°""me. n101 coso1uwa,c1tAMl1t AVllOI UllM 11111 ... ..-.. c ¢1, Owls~ I . HclllMft atNM• a MllNUM at 11'1._.. ...... ettlter , ..... U'-Tiiis ~ ... fllot wllll the ................. ._. .. ti. 1111 H_.H<ll I 111e11H ... UC. C-ly Cltftt Of Or...-C-y Oii Lat ........ c.M11w1U _,, ,._.. .......... » 11M. LH le J-ryl2,1'1l. • ,.,..,.. ........ ... -...... ..,.,.. "'*411Md DrMtO Coetl 0.lly Piiot. SI U>led ..... M4l<ltar •I <Wt•Jo... l'llllllftd Or ... Coell Delly Pli... .IOfl. 1•. JI, a, F.O. 4, 1ta 27 ... 2 un •botMO Ml ette •-to, -•I• Jin. U, ti, .. ,.. •. tta .... 111e.,10 1mmedl1teme1111, d• .. , .. mentfa, IMI ,_.a tterlt•. ti...., PlaJC 1111( a1....,a,.,..._,..., ...... ''-· , ____________ _ TO THE OEFINOANT: A clvll 1'1CTITIOUI MllN•ll ~-compl•IM "°' llHll flled by Ille NAMalTAT•MllMT l'ICTITIOUlllUSf ... U ptellllltl .....,. .,_., II yow •1111 te Tiit follewl"I __ , ore ffllll MAMS ITAT•MmNT ... , ..... 11111 tewwlt, ..... mutt, ........ _,.,,.., e : Tll• 191'-"'t t1er-1 are delq • .. ,, .._, INt -It .. ,_ M A It 8 0 U a L I 0 H TI ll!MIMUA: Oii you, flle wftfl 11111 COUft e -ltlt11 Al'AaTMaNTt, 1619 ..,.,_. IAM, "0)( HILLS ASSOCIATES. C/O '""" .. to .. ,.,,.._,, u111 .. 1 .,.. ttllftll,..• IMdl. Ol4llwlll•..., Cllrluo.-r W M<Or•11tll•n, uoe lllO IO, your •l..itt wtll M "'""*'., "'"''I' A. f"redrltU , 1412 MlclltlMll Orlv1, lrvlnt, C1lllonll• .... 11,.11 .... "" "'"'""· -1111• M•rt llltOI• Plan . ''"'' All•, "11' COllrt mey tM9r I ~ ~ c.lltwlllo tt105 Mettt,.Cltell Litt 1111 .. tefltt yOll fer t11e rtlltf -...... 111 1M lt11tMll A. e.ttier, I .. Mir-er CMI.....,, • .... V"11 ~•Itel\, <•M,1•1111, •lllCll C .... f ,., .... Ill Drive, ,.llllttllll. c..i ........ ..., ,. .. c.-... 0.1., •• "'" ,.. •• ff. •••111•11-• ........ iu1111 •f '"*"• .. ,..,...._..., t (lfllelllry c;.i':';t,~ ......_ • c.....,.,_.. lfttllty .. ,,..,tr .. ttllff ................... ~-......... -...... -..... -,..... ........ c....... *· H ....... -ft,I , HfMll Oft,,. ---.. ·-..__,_, OATID->-1,"". Co• ....... ••l•rl ... ltlHC, Tiiie·=-.~~:.,". Lia A, ... ANCH. --~=·" -tel ......... C-. 1 Tlltl II C...-..0 " el! _.... ,.... -8Y:LIHOAMOftl"I M, ___ .............. ._. .... ,L ... ~ •IM'tllll.. '--""'-"" NICKI!.! ... UL.UeO, f"HOD & ......... ~. ........ ...... 11 ... Vf" (OU.CTTA Tilft ........ -llltt ""91 911 TMt .........., -Ill .. """ ... ..... ~--..,..... c-1y °'*" " 0r-.. c.-, • c_., '""' " ar-.. c..-Y • l'-.""8,CA.. DK.....,,11,"'1. ~ ....... c,..,,.,.. ..,,.. ~ .._, ... Ot .... C... DM"........ ....... .... or .. Cliatt Daffy ...... ,....._. 0...... C.-Deity""-"81l. \•,11 ... flti. .. '-.,,... •. , .. ., ........ ,,. ........... , ......... .-~ ....... ' I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Jonuory 21 . 1982 Cl NBA ••n••N CONr•••Nc• ~ .... S..111• PllOenla Golden Stet• P0tll•nd s.n Dl•90 Pedtk01v16* W L 1'I 11 u 11 23 .. l1 ti 11 17 11 11 MWw9st Ol•ISleol l'<t. o• ns ... 1 •11 41'> S» I »l 1 fJOl 1'1'1 Sen Antonio Denvtr Ho;i11on kenu1 City Ul•ll 14 u .... ?I It .SU 4\'t 11 21 .. 1 1 14 u n• 11 13 14 .JSI 11 DellH 10 1t .UJ 14\'t EASTEllN CONFllllNCE Atl•tkOMsleol eotton Plllledelotll• W•slllnoton N•w VOtk .... J., .. ., JO • 21 ., 19 11 1• .. 11 23 ~BIOl•l•l-Mllweuk.M Allent• lndtel\a ~~·;:or. Cl•••••no 1• IJ II ,. ie n 1• n 16 ,. I JI .......... ., •• Sc_ Uk9" 111. N-Jerwy 113 Boston 111, tndl•n• 103 Pllll•dtlpflle 1 IS, Portlend I 10 WHhl"91on 106, Seettlo U OellH IOt, MllWeul<H 100 Sen Dl990 IOI, Golden Slot• 99 , .......... ~ Allerrte •I New VO<'k Utell et S4ln Attlonlo Delles et k-Cily Detroit •I Sen Diego .1 .. - •t2 J 500 IOYt .. , ,, 410 14 ... 1 500 •I'> •50 '"' .410 10 •10 10 .114 ,,.,., Lakera 132, Nets 113 Nl W Jll•SEY Klnv It. B Wlltlem' 18, Elmore 10, W•lktr 3, R Wlltl•m• 11, O'Kor•n 16, c-•. B•iley 1. L••o s. Gmlnskl 11. lot•t•" t 1·111 U LOI ANOIELlS R1mbls ti, WllkH 30. Abdut·J•l>ber 20, Johnson 10, Nl•on It, COOIMr 1'. McAdoo •. Landsberger •. Joroen 0, Brewer l. McGee 4. M<Konna 1 Totels St 1 .. 3' 131. Sc .... lly Qu.ert•" New J erso 11 u :i.. " 113 LO> Anvtl~ )J 33 33 ll-1)7 T llrH·PDlnl QC>lls B•-•r Fouled out nOf\e To111 touis -N"' Jtno 21. ~ Anoeln u Tt<llnlUI• LOS AnvtlH ,,_ defenw I A tl,:113. COMMUNITY COLLEGE Grossmont 79. Or•nge CoHt 70 O•ANGE COAST -Bus>o 30, T KroMf•IOI •· G. KrOhnlelOI •. Celhoun •. ThomH J. M<IU\1-.. 4. Henson 3, Beldwln 11 Olm111nle 0 Toleis• ll 1·16 10 G•OSSMONT Bonner >. Lew11 I. CereclonN a. Meler l, w"''" 14, Jones 10, TIK>mPSDn 4, Whllmarstl 10. Le1wMl"9 1 Toi ell: n IS.10 19. Helllimo Grossmonl, 40.24. Tola! fouls Oranvo Coest 20. Grou..-1 It, Techn1•a1 rou1 Calhoun t0ran9e Coesu South Co•st Conference C-e Oftnl W t. W L Fulltrton • 0 I I • S.,,la Al\a • I 16 1 Ml Sen Antonio ) I " s Cerritos 1 1 10 9 GroumOM 1 2 u 6 Sen Diego Mo.. o 4 1 1s o •• ,,,,,e ,,..,, 0 s • 17 S.-y'• G-O:•> Ml. $111 Antonio el S<lnte Al\a Fullerton et S-O•eslO Mo .. Grou,,_t at Ct•rito\, MIHion Conference c-. W L Alversloo CC s o Seddlebe•k l t Sen Bernardino 1 1 Sen Ole90 CC 1 2 Soulhwe.tern 1 1 C•ln•S l Petomer 0 S Selwdor'• Ga-. ti.•> P•lomer at 5-1-·k Cltru• at S-BornarO•r>O Southweslern al Sen Oie90 cc Ow.,eM W L JI ) 13 1 .. ' • • • 10 11 • s ., w-"' Oooerten c;.,.,.. •t M¥ 10 12 10 - Ell.,,•la 16 tO 1 1 41 Toter '°"" c~-clef Mer •• 1 ......... . Irvine 50, Saddlebactc 42 tAODl.ll9AClt L~·k •, 0 MH 0, Devenl>O'I 12, Welmen 0, MtAllhler 1, OtPrl"I 4, Moncrief S, Cett la. N-0, TOlell. 1'4·1142, t•v1Na -Cervtr o. 8Mttr a. 8101.o•kh ti, NHI 0, JollM 6, Alle<l U , U•-Y t Totel1 1010.'1 !IC>. Sc-•• Qololrten Seddllllll'k t 11 11 11~ lf¥1M t 16 U n -IO Total fouls· 5"ddlellll'k II, Irvine 16 Co••• MeH 82, El Toro 45 COSTA MESA 9ar osley 10, PeWIK>-11, Rl-.oe• 16, $1reyer J, J Field ), G. Field 1, Edton 1, MOiino 1, Ltltvre 1.C-0, Tote ls 10 22•1' U lL TOtlO-Rl-hler 1, lnotehert 11, ~­ •• T r1cket1 4, Arnold >. Lewlt 2, MerllnMn 4, Himmel I, Peru s. Tote IS. 's IS.II 0 ~"' 0..rt9" CO\te Ml.. 6 JI 11 11 "1 Et Toro U S t ti ~s Tote! fouls: Cost• -.. It. Et Toro 17. FoultO out Arnold IEI Torol. Trl•l<ett IEI Toro) NewPOr1 58, Unlverelty 45 NIEW"°"T HAll80• B•ll U . Seeoor •• Llntr 6, Pelletier 1•. Folk •· Selby I, S•lomoreO. TOlats 11 u .21 s. UNIVE•SITY Gueu "· •ouM 10, Myer• 10. Aetcllfle o, Sloltolf 3, Chol 4, Larsen 1 Totals. U •·> o Sc-"' °"',,." Nt•oort H1n:ior u . 10 11 IS s. University 10 14 13 1-45 Total touis N-port Her11or •· Unlverslly 16; Tecl\ni•al tout· Route (Unl•erl•lfl D•n• Hiiis 74, Laguna Beech 58 DANA HILLS RentrOI> ._ Stapttton S, Rhorer 16. SwNltbe\19h 12, S-:hweno ti, H.,ri• •. 5".hrey 10. Tote11: JO 14·1114. LAGUNA eEACH -A._11 10, lnort 10, O•or•k I. ~ tO, McGr•I" ·t, ~n t, W1ldrup l, Tepper S, F0<lune o. Wlllerd o ro1a11 11 , .. ,, se. so ... "' 0-rte" Oane Hills U 1• 10 1J 14 L•oun• Bte<:ll IJ 1' It t !Ml Total loulS 0.-e Hills n. L•9-Bee-II t1 Fouled °"' Aentroo !Oe n• HlllU. Tepper lt.avune 8evh) Te•,,nlOI foul Geyer ( Ll9lftl BH'lll Edison 67, Weslmln11er 39 lOISOH Slop!>ens 10, GoudVt I Smit" s. C"•nv 11 Bine~I '· Lo .. ey ], DIBtrl\arOO It, Major •. Millerd 2. F•blen I. Moore O To1e1s 31 S·I0'7. WESTMINSTE• Ea\lln IS, Peto.a /, Down• •. Nl•o1a1 •. P•tel 2, BIO esto l. Ondlcs 0. Gr•ms 0, Shrtw•bury 0. T otels II s.>• 3' S<-llY au.nan E011on 18 20 10 It 61 WHlmiMler I 6 11 14 3' Total loul>: Ea11on II, Westmlnsier 10 Ocun View SS, Ftn. V•lley 53 FOUNTAIN VALLEY Herter IS. J••ob> 4, Vlll.,,...va 0, HuVNS lt, Wtlllehelr •.Kubo 0, JOf>n E0-1ler 0, Kosty 0, MIUf'91 0 TotelS· 131·t SJ. OCEAN VIEW -OeBrou-r 11, Wtrner >. Antoropou!OS o. U1e•wn 10, Cerroll 6, Ju<19e IS. CMISon 0, Berry 0 Tolels It 11·]1 SS k .... ll'lau.enen Fountain Valley t 14 1• IS-SJ Ocoen View 1' • 14 16-SS Tote! fouls: Fountain Vellov 11. 0-een View •. Fouled OUI Wtlil•Mlr IFa..nt11n Vattol Hunt. Be•ch 55, Merine SO HUNTINGTON eEACH Lene ll, Tllomp>0n 11, AYrH 6, Sll•Oletord •.Se•••• IS, Ffff1Slra o. Harrl91ft o. Mills 0 TOI••• 10 IS·2S SS MA•tNA -FillPO« 11, Be<"' 11, Smitll IS, Ktuumen 4. Cl!Om1k •. Tenoy 7. Biel o Total\ n .. ,io. Sc-"' O..rten HunllngtonBHcll U 17 tJ 11 SS Marin• u I 17 16-50 Tol•I lour\. Huntington Bev" IJ, Merlna 10, Foulell out: Kluum.n (Merll\al "*"lk !Marina). HIGH SCHOOL STANDINGS South CoHt league O-e• W L L-W L CtPl\lraro Vallo > 1 Minion VM!to l I Oan• Hiiis 2 1 San C •emontt 1 1 L19une IM~" I 3 La<;1una Hiiis t l friclay'•G-f7:•1 Minion Viti<> at L~ Bea•" Oane H Ill• el Sen Cle,.,..,le CaPl\lreno Valley at L•vuna Hiii• II 6 10 ' 10 • u s • • I] .. •View Le1911e ...... W L c. ...... Otl Mel • 0 ltlall,.. l I N•w'9r1 llM'llOr t 1 C.ttle#NW J J u .. 1 .. "hv s p lrvlnt I • El Tvto ) SHOlet>e•li. 0 6 ......... 0-..11·•1 f.11-.1e a1 ... ...,.., .......... Unl••rsllv et Ccw1illle Gel NI•• trvlna ti CO.I•-. Saoot-11. •'fl Toro SunMt L•-u• 'L-• t. Edi>O<> ) 0 , O<H n Vlew 2 I HU11ll119lon liM<ll t I Founteln Velley I 1 Mer In• ' WttlmlM... 0 ) ,...., •• 0-11:•1 Sdlson•t Hunlif194"'1 Be•'l'I M•rlna•IO-HnVlew Wellmln•l•r •t Fount•ln Vall•Y wo,,,.n'• top 20 0-ett W L tt I II ) 10 J t I . , II II It <>-•• W L It I 11 6 • • " 1 t I ' ,, I. Lo;i!Slel\a lf(I\ l•S> I• O 1,JOO 1 USC n 0 t,ru J Rul9ff\ • t I.ISi • CIWtyney St e 1 1,021 S Nori" c ... otlnt St u 1 '191 6 Meryl-11 7 '10 I Old Dominion 10.. MO I Ktnlueky U J 100 t South C•roun.. 10 3 110 10 Lono BHC:h SI 1 l J 1..0 It Oregon 10 J 611 v. Toes us )911 ll. Geor9'• IO·J W 14. Penn St. 14 I 4Sl IS Vlllanov• It I N i. Color..,.. i. 3 2'2 11 Memplll~SI IS 1 111 II Stephen F Auu1n a s l'it " Arizon.t St It • 111 10 Auburn 10·1 M (tit) ONo SI tO 1 M Other tt•m' re<•lvtnQ YO\e1 on •t i.e.,. 10 ballol\ talpllabell<•J oroer t t 111no11 Kans•s St•W. Northwe\l•rn 'Y1ro1n1• wo,,,.n HIGH SCltOOL •ANKINOS Cll' 4·A I Al•e"kte Poly t 11-01. 1 ln91ewooa 11'·JI: J. Glflr 11>.JI, 4 Sen Geb<lel 11).11, S. JOiin W. North IU·ll, 6, Buen• 1 .. 11. 1 . E.iH11 (1).JI; I Newbury Park 11l·JI, • Lynwood ( 11·11 , 10 FO<\tana 1 u JI ""' J.A t. ESC>eren.re 111·31; 1 Alameny (11-01. J Alt• Lome 1 .. 21. 4 Lcwra IU·SI, S FOOITllll (ll·l l; 6 -l•Otllo llS.21, 1 Le Serna 111·31. I. Le Qulnle 112·11, • Welnut 111·31. IO.Or•nQl!l111) Cll' l·A t Minion Vle)o ( 1'-1> 1 Artesle 11 .. 1), J Chino ll·S). • Bree·Ollnae 116 1 I S verencle llJ·J>. • Cepislr-Vellev 11~1. 1 Mor•ro Valley I 11 41, I S<llurr 111 .. 1. 9 Glond•lt I 1>-4. 1' Sur.nv Hlll1t11 .. 1. NHL CANIPelLL CONFEllENCE tdmonton C.at9ary V•ncc>u•er ICl"tl Color•Oo Minnrsote St. LOU" Wlnnlpeo Chlca90 Toronto Oetroh SmyU,. Dl•lsl.., W L T GF GA Pb 11 11 ' 1'1 rt7 •S II 10 II "0 111 0 IS 1l 10 ltA 11• 40 1) 26 I 111 123 33 10 l1 I IJJ 711 11 Norri• Ol•lsl.., 11 14 U 111 ISi ~ n 11 • 111 191 .. 17 11 10 11? 109 ... II 10 • 102 101 43 IS 10 11 lt'I 109 '1 u 1S I •S• "~ l6 WALES CONFE•ENCE PlllleCl•ton•• NYhle-s NV Aa~r\ PllllburQll Washlnqton Patric-OIYltllWI 18 IS 1 I .. 1S IJ 6 ltt 11 " • 1•1 10 .. 171 1t ,, , .. ........ 0 1.111 ... 16J SI 150 s. 111 .. Ill 41 , .. )t Bulralo Bos Ion Quebo• Montr .. 1 l4ertfO<O 11 11 • "' uo 63 16 14 6 I., 16J SI 1S 11 • lit 1'1 S6 11 II 11 104 t:i.. S6 t I t• 10 ISi -:12 w-uy'tS<or .. PlthOUrgh S, Bo\lon • Heriford•, Out-1 NV Aanvt~ 3. NY "'•nOtt\ 1 Ce19ery 4. TO<'onlO • Oetroll S. C"''-VO • ., Winni-3, Was111no1on O _ .. -!~=~:~~=~ y..-.-·.o ...... Ml~ al >Clf>91 Toronto at ~•ort C:•ltl'lrv et O.tr0tt P11tsburQh ., NY'"-" MO<llrHI al Phll-lpnle lllJttnte Anita WIONllOAY'S •HUI.Tl ., .... ., ........................ . l'l•tT •UI. • fllf~• IMjMtrlel frN•ure t~lt>fwlml I 20 4 '6 1 IO e"•' Tov 1C.at11~1 \ 00 • .0 NOOle MelOOY I Me•ll,,. 1 I 4 00 AltO •""90 c..n1ury • laclv. Pe•tl' ~ 4a IMiHeulve, 0"'"'°"" IH\I I ii Mii 8•111• K11noov. Pf'omlna.rt. Mir"°" Tlmt t 1111' t•COftO llACI . • lurlonQ• Eest•• Glow t Toro I 10 00 • oo 2 • Chablis tSllllllel l 00 2.40 Donette (Del-..u•ve> t IO Al•O re<tO I W.,,.,. Doc tor. 0. t . lie..,, Pelllt Power, F•nt•lll< Lit, R11C1n9 0.11~. Court 01 .. \l•r, Got A Honey flmt I It t/S U DAILY DOUeLE II II P<lid ~1 80 U lGnWl•llon 0.lly OouOle I I 111 llild U fJO THt•O llACE. • lu•lonq\ O••n BeOlli'I\ (Fer-ti 1140 • 40 SOO lrm• 0 '9ol "'""""'>enl 1 00 S 10 AmerlCMl HOfWY llW(•rrOft) s 00 Aft.o r•'" Str•'*oerrv Str-111.. Ou'M\~ Potrone, N•llve AM. Hoel hi•. Ml\\ B"""I' R•l>llll, Wiid Willi• Jem Crt\I AQlll•tl• rime 1 "o FOU•TH •Ace .• lurlonq\ Cn•I•'• led (f'er,...no.11 11 40 u oo 6.40 El Traplto IHdMtnl " •O •O 10 MIUltllo'• Dream tGutrr•I "'3 00 AllM> r<Ktcl' 01\tanl Guy. Two 5104!•. SM>d\ of V•9n PArly's Ov•r. BriQlit l\le l'lfTH llACE I rur!GnQ\ Grhlle IGuorra> 14 00 8 10 J Ml Quantum LUC> IMcCarronl •IO l I() Answ•r to Miu\~ 4 Avnunen) 1 00 Al•o r<Ked PomCMll C.a..rl FoY1 \ A<lo. Time I lH s U l llACTA I) SI IM•O Ull 00 SIXTH llACE 6' 1 lurlOnQ• Gr1n90 Jim IM<Carron1 t1 IO A IOllK> ISlblllel A Sir Pflo IGuerr•I A COUPleo entr' 660 llO u o )4() 310 J«> AliO rMtd FuMy Cium , M a.QI( FOHtr !>O •lt ProYf. t-th Par.td~ snovun Prine.,. I 1me I "2 S SEVENTH llACE. 1 '• ""'""'" turl Potter ISIOHlol > 411 > 00 1 Ml Bron1e Liiy IM<Carronl • 00 1 40 Velwel 0.ttH.ttn IA\.nlU\"t1nt 1 f)I) Al\O t •'..0 ICAtwr• N, .. ,. l ime 1 SJ O U EllACTA II ll !MIO ~·~ U "'CK Sill 11 •I JS 11 Pct•d \I• 117 00 wrwitr\ """"'••"'""'<II t1<,•n t"""' "°'w't l1 Ptc k s .. con\Ol .. 1on pa1<1 \J.1.1 ?O •••fl •1 wlnn1n9 h<•et\ Uour horv\t U Pt<• S•.1 \Cr•l<ti con\Ol•lton o.1d \91 70 w1tn )~ ••nninQ llClt.Pt\ fll'Hf'it r.c)I\~ on~ '\Cr•tc.ru EIGHTH •ACE.• lurlonq, Unpredl•tablt IOelahouuayPI Genflr•I Jimmy 1-,1b1llt) Helen' 0.•v fAWTlu\\e-n• 10 00 )IO H O 10 "° \ 40 8 )() Oul e;I A.ho r•<fd 1,...,,., ~PUIV('dil, HO( k G•I• Aruy H•~ Flob NINTHllACE 111&m11t\ Prov1cttnt1•I CMcC•rront ,. to S bO '10 On The Prowl IC."an..t•I ) ,,0 • 10 Early Tom.IOI'\ tC'Hlhtanol S 10 A l\O r•fll~d l l"l \ Br .... POV AP•CN-~a..t Raw• Ch·~· 0 f00\4' M•Q"I• F~•·· 8•<' 8.tllf"f M1\tf'f' BfflJ•m•n F '"""' Rulf'I l 1"1~ t u' ~ U EllACTA ''lit Pd•O l tlO 10 Attencwno lb >'I< Hollywood Park Wl!ONESOAY'S •fSULTS 111\d of ,.,..,1..,1 h•rneu mfflln9I Fl llST llACE One mil• P~<• G•n 'Gu .. I IM.tdlind' IS 00 9 00 o 80 Hu"''" Hunter t!>IP•lnt 17 10 •<Cl Country Jan•<• tlooa II I 1 00 Alw ,.,,.d P1-.1r\ W•r Ch1t'f M r )Of' 8 Ano.,, S"df'npe• 8••"'• fur.-'\I 8ol•ro '"'"' Loyet Hunte< Time 1 Do I I SECOND •ACE Ono milt pec,t Tep On Wooa IAcH rm•nl n toll '10 I> 80 8r11111nl O ~ IGoud•••ur • 10 J 00 SyOn<ty OW tGrundyl •.cl Al"' rreo 0.-Commana 8,.Q<tllo (•Im YOUt'Wlf Ttm.r Tt&c.Pt f;_I Atr R1'0 Grendpa RO'Uy Time 1 Ot I I U DAILY DOUeLE It II P•id 'ISS 40 THlllO llACl. One mile P•<t Sh•lltr P•lnltr IGoudrUul • 00 • 40 1.cl Wlnlt•haWk IM.tltrl 9 40 J 10 Th• Punk l~rl J 10 Alioa r•'~d SM\ Andre•!. 0u1" k l.a,.,.., Sabrtn• l•\'I" f"f' Comt"dw Aw•r«I Stren9• M.tql• T1mt J 0t I S SJ E llACTA "II Nici,., Ml FOUllTH llACE. Ono m•I• lrot Ru•li< Venlteo IGouoruul 110 I (. P I OuntH!lln I •40 )411) soo •00 HO 00-R E TOOcl Allry Brul\<'r IHolll 41\o r••tO Hlon Cllm0tr Lucas can play during rehabilitation NEW YORK !AP> -Washington Bullets g ua rd Jobn Lucas will be permitted to play with the National Bas ketball Association team while undergoing a rehabilitation program for using cocaine, NBA Commissioner Larry O'Brien announced Wednesday. However, during a meeting which lasted several hours, O'Brien told the 28·year-old Lucas that any recurrence or his involvement with drugs would result in an immediate suspension. Institute. a national health organization which adminjsters a program jointly sponsored by the NBA and the National Basketball Association Pl ayers Association . O'Brien ordered Lucas to und e r go reh abil ita tion un der the direction or the institute. take punitive action at this time I have accepted his statement that he 1s not now using drugs and his comm1troent that he will not resume such usage." The NBA said Lucas was advised of O'Brien's d ecision and said· "I'm thankful for this chance lo prove that I have beaten my problem and will do everything necessary to complete this rehabilitation program. I know that if I rail , the next step is suspension ... IH'•"' i..W, <Awnt )-d~ IW ,., 1.,.., QO Ulv....-111·"'1 trr.m llUrCI I~ 111111 ""'. t 091) _,,,H lilAC 0... '"ii• 1>•<• 9 10 5Pt1nQ IAt.tb<lll 11 U0 ¥tu UO Wln!lv lillflQt tlodO 111 II 40 .. o ()ypsy \ ... ,, I Wl•ll•"ll 4 10 Alto '"''° 6t•v """" K"'""" H-r ArmbrHllt. l 11•• '•••· l h4"f0fl 11anovt1, Mf "'~'&tu. W•t-ou .. hno • tmt f fl tit 0lllACTe 1, 1101"0 ~j0 'IO N.ulo 0.... lo m•ll""' '"'n "' '"" llljf\Hflt ,y,t•m •• tt0t1woea •'•'• t"t unet U1t1t ,, •.• , o" w .. n"•'""• ' proQH•m ""'"'• V JU\('fltf>d U l'ICK "ll lt'l~••ll .. 111 °""' i 1.u 1Jfj with ,.,. wtnnHl4,I h<.k .. , Uour N>t\19\ two <Oll~l•llOll>I ll Pl"> '>I• ''"""''"""" .,.,., \I• 40 '"''" JUwlnnl"ll II<"*'' llllr•• "'"""· two tOll\OlftlOll\I, " Pl•~ , .. ,. r•l<h •onwt•llon 1>tld \AS IO will\ )I wlnnl~O ll<U" tlloO norM .. On•, ...... Ill Womon s tournamenl ,., ~.ttuel 1'1nt ll°"ll4 SI" ... ' Anorr• Jof'Qf'r ll•t !(al~ L.im•m. • • • 1 ll•lt•n• 8Y"99 ""' l:lrtn Norlun, I ). 3 6, • 1 V1rotn1d Rutlrt dttf 'fwif)(I~ Verrrl••k t1 • J ~)'IY14 HAntklt dftf Wflllrldy Wl'\ll•1 i1 I• Anne \m11n OM f(OO\y Jorei•n l t. r. l • • Wtndv lurnouH 0-f ~ftl\Y N•tJ"'"'' 6 I ~ 7 WCT tournament l•I Meaoco City) Flrsl A°"fl4 Su••tt• luhn .... .,,. °"'' Ill'• UtQW• .. , 6 J. I. 9•taltl'I f tHO" IV ~f ~1·-. M•-Y•' •) •I I s I om•~ 5'1110 .,.., ,.,,..,. ~ .. ~, I 6 • I Hollywood Classic Ill Cv•Nja, lrnlll Fl"I A°"nd ~1n9lu V11n W1nlhky n..-1 Pio!Olo Atr41yfl r o & 7 t.•rlO\ A lbflrlo K 1rt'f'l4''(f ,, ... li>ll•O K"n•ri .. v. et "· & l l .,,t .. ,.,.,, ~'"'Of''""" M t 0111m1•n Kf!rf'"lu r. J r. I 11f'11I tJfll\1 Jtt• t11otn Ou '-'•"'~ r t. / ,, • , Int NouM O°"bl•\ I •I h1i1t1t• ~d"'' A-1 '' 11 / t.hl ''•ft t t 11411 tt tttO f)\101" b I '• ,,,., C1.-ol 1(1•n W AfWitlf !It I)_.... Patilo A.rr1ty.t IJ tm1An ~t-•f'l1C • f ,, I Brewenes Masters tournament l~t C•cwto•"' \ou'tf\ Atrtt•l N•Qt t Our· n ti MAH M cNulh ~ Ct u 'I Pt_...,,. .... ,." ~, ,, TPA stat1SllCS tT~nJ.1n 111 SCORIHC LEAOE Ii~ II II I t '" jl( 1h f>(H.J(I 7 f •J • •Jn II r' • 11~ t 1ur;it1n lt\Qfffi""" '>• "" •• r ""'·•""' L ,.,,. "8 Qt AVE RACE DRIVING OIHAHCE Ch1tr1,1• c,1n r1n I H\ t '""" Oouqld\\ 184 t • 'Jth• ,., •• 1 /K' • • Mt~• \;Qt1 ,,.., '~''"Ill·•· 1o •''"' OR IVING P[ll(f HTACF IN FAIRWAY I t '' r. "41 1-.£1• X ~I "Aro'1 t• ,_,.,, ~1.M • 11.,r 11 ·h ~fl \"'. N1 ¥..\t.tlt1.., 'H GAE(HS FN l>EGULATION I [l<i)•uO r,,An·i' OU f ~ 'ott1i>VW J .tr M.tM .. lht 1 on• I u rl1t·r h'4•' • 1 • !Ill AVCRAC£ Puns PEI! ROUH..1 ~ loUry A,,_. ... , 16\JO '"'" l/tt tom ~1lt n ,,., • lft t .,,. f 11t •t [lAv1c.1 Htll ?•) l PERCENTAGE OF SUB· PAR HOLE~ I lYm -.itf' wa.,r.-.• ,.y JJI J l.ttM 01.flkt ln, • tu·, ,,.11inn J•,," ..,ctt«" 7/R EAGLE LEADEN~ •n•• rtnQ{·f, \W'f-'t''~' H• •IHI ""'''''' J•1 ub,••n '.lt1>¥r< Matnvt-. JriU ~ ,,,..,., \ \•nit \1n1f) ... •.Jn . J1tl'I lnQ,.p~ {.,d," J ''"'\''""" fomn1yA1nlOUr 111 2 )111,._,~ • ., t 81AOIE LEAOEAS 1 S•ott uoc"' •1 , f-d ..-m, r,, .. q Po~t" .. , • J•n h ,, >\ • ) Jottn M,1h.tftt\o 14 "RllE MOHEVlEAOEllS f-, r ,,, ,,,. 'tOO 1 c '"'a \t•o•,., l ,4 00 1 "' • .... \1• '• _. Jorin M .. n.tth y \ 4M \ v.,,., • ._.,..tnirr \/( 400 ~ rot.' I Ak1'#\>• 1 HI •.-) I \(Oii ... ,.. h ,, ,.,, • • •• .,. ...... ' \,1\ ~·; " • ''" \••lftft \l\(X" l{J ,.. ,,, .. ,, JU• \l<C J&A -.__ • t Men'• soccer Ml~ICHOOL ,__.~.c:...~-... \all<ll-·• \•Clflf>Q lien \II•• Super Bowl odd• ~"" fuwtrt\<O P·1ov1" Clntlf\Mh "••m H~rv•ll'\ •eM llac• & 5M'U ••> Super Bowl 1e1ulll Utt\\ilthof p,-,.i.;1ou, \~, UOWI O•Mlll\ \uper Bcw.I I C,r•4'n n•y ,,,. •• ,. INI I.I • ll IC~n'.I' (•ly f 11 .. I\ IAl l J IU \u ... r Sowl 11 c,r...., lltY l'e<>•H INl"I I JJ 0d~l•M M•id<'r\ I Al I. I 16 \u""r Bowl Ill "•w 'l'O<• J•I\ IA•~I I. K•lttMOff (OU\ tNJ' I I \uHr bowl IV .......... (,,, (,9'1rh •••LI 11_ Mtnt\4'\,QI.~ V1~ tf\Q\ I H( l I I '>u1•4'r llU¥.I V b.a.IUMO'P (Clll\ I A I " 16, O•lla. { (lwllOy\ IN I Cl 1) ~u .... r Bowl VI P<1ll<1\ (Owtiov• INFC"I 14 M l tml Dotpnin\ f Ar-( t ' 'Jvo~r tv1w t VII M 1onU UOll-)tHf\\ IA,.(.) " Wtf\hi™'ttoo ~· d-.«m\ I Nf (I I \up~· 110 .. 1 VIII MIO nl Oolptun• IAl'(J 1 .. 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"-' '*'-'' ti ;,.tt'MAtt1n•1l, 1/ h 'tM·.1"" 1J M ••P f)\a1~1 I• I l'ht l µ1,.t OQn 'Jnn• .n Wednesday's transactions BASE8AlL Amt'rit•" l e4qw l It VfLAN O INC'•AI•'> S•9n•d S1C1 Mnt\-Qf 01tch4:'-t' le.. d Uu,._. ,t4' f O"ft«.1 !i.1Qn .. I b ff '4.t'· J' r1n; f 4'f( htr anO ._., '>''i J nun t <1 ( t.,1rt~qon of ,,, ... nt rr1Jf•ooa L•6Q1> NihONI l••ow P .. 11 AOfl P .. IA P"ll l If\ 'ilQ"tCI Rott J;f'f!'f1 p.I<...,., t' • fht_..., , ... , <O'\tr~t IASKE T8ALL H•11on.a1 8•.sk•'Ntt Anoc1•h• AlLANlA HA.WI( lt lCM"d Al Woad fC,t W•rD •tld c ~' 11• (r1\\ gu•ro , to tn. SM\ 01•00 < •ior ... , .. •er I rttm&" W 11t1a m\ QU1HO PhllAOH PHIA 1•£ R~ Pur~M"•d "" ontra<t 01 M 1k,.. Rant'>"' ttu ¥taro, trom lhf' tnd1dnct Pd-'"4 r S F ATT1 ~ ~!Pf W'>O•"C ~ Pla<•a Atm['ln(J H II QlJ•UO O"\ ,,, .. H"l11Hflt<I '""""''"" '"' ,-OOTBAlL H•h~I Footo.11 LHG"" (H ICA(;l.l BE~"!. ''tnmflt1 M ilt.,. Oit-.A hf'dO (OM'.h ST 1ou1~rA~OI NAlS A~nounuat .... '''-•Qno:tltfJf'l C'"+ J0t-'> 1t11,_ .. 1n "•tf" prfi'\10#"n°t ot OOflratUJn'\ HOCKEY Hill1orwf Hoe: lit• l t•ttH 'PtHLAO(t.PHtA J.LVfQ\ lt•Oe<I q, .. " CO\tt•uo t-nt.,.., lnO a ...... OftCS rouno '"1 dr4'H '"°''" ftJ th• T ,, ...nln Mctp1.-L~Mt fl)t Odrt'f'I \.,..,..,_ f"nt,., The meeting was called by O'Brien after Lucas admitted in an interview published in Tuesday's Washington Post that his use of cocaine had caused him to miss several games and practices over the past two years. .. John Lucas assured me that he is not now involved with drugs and Dr. Du vall . who met privately with Lucas lo evaluate the situation. confirmed to me that in hi s professional judgment such is the case," O'Brien sajd. "While under no circumstances do I condone his past actions. I do sympathize with his problem. one which is not unusual in today's society. Lucas, who scored two points and handed orr six assists during his 11-minute stint in the second quarter of Wednesday night's game against th~ Sea ttle Supe rsonics. refused lo comment on his situation. S ,\\'I ~GS l 'J> TO Also present at the session was .Dr. Steven Duvall of the Life Extension "Therefore, taking into account the unique circumstance or his voluntary public disclosure, I have decided not to "I did the article," he said of the Washington Post story ··1t was a one-time deal and that's it." COLLEGE BASKETBALL • UC Irvine vs. PACIFIC TONIGHT 7:25 p.m . K~WAVE .. FM-108 ,,.tented h : Anheuser-lutch, T~o. ~,·~d~lonlc. ~ t;oliert, Tiny Noytots, Irvine on it 1n9 ond Injury ten .. r ._ __ ,,,,,. ... ,.~··· c.m,.ny ,,..... .... __ .. .llCJl(IT) .O!ALL!llDIS In the larl(spur, find a new classic chic and the tradi- tional quality and Warranty unique to The North Face .• - 3650 S. BRJSTOL ST. SANT A ANA, CA 9'2704 MON-FRlr10-9 SAT 1o-6 (714) 549-8541. SUN 12-5 YOUR WILDERNESS OUTF~TTER SINCE 1946 5()<fo OFF SUITS R q.c 1 • p I 0 ~aHF> . ,'\<m· From ~99 SPOl~1' COATS Reg. l 'p to ~:!H.=;. .\ow Fro111 ~59 TR()t:SERS Hi.:g. I . p to ~H.:1 .\ow Fro 111 ~29 SIIIRl'S !<cg. l' p I Cl ~4 0 . . :'\o\\' From 814 TIE Reg. l 'p to ~~2.50 . . Now Fro m 89 __!_ -- (4 Orenge Collt DAILY PILOT/Thul'ld1y, January 21 , 1112 r----~ .... "Those are 1\ttle bits of shell, Jeffy -not egg bones." ·~ • . 816 G--Gm· by Virgil Rartch (VIP) I ' . ,.. . "" .. ~ .... t "It's not the squeaky rolltJS that bug me; It's that blood·curdllng gasping of yours." by Sr.ad.Anderson DENNIS THE MEN Hank Ketchum ~ /-2/ "We_'re playing beautician ... " 1'11 ACA()SS 1Studlel (OWi'} 8Almol1 11 (;olw9yenc:t 14 "WNt - HEV, GARl='IE.U:~. MOW ARE V00 GOIN& TO GET OUT Of iMAT TRE.E? . 48 S«vent 49 Fremewotll 50 Stoel! tprlng 52RllW 51 Aedtlerl 57 Symbollnd eoenzyme 11 Mwnture 82 OledMI S3 Through 14VPCMt111 G.- ISHumetlc PN111 . 11 W~, 8V 051N<S MV HEA'7 ••• ANC' JON'5, ANt' Ot'IE'5 'I PE.tN ' I Nr\NC'' -,,.... ---- DR.SMOCK i I ~ c OIJ\.O 'fO\) et so ~ l-S 1'0 <?911 •• l. Al.\.. 1' .. t WAU.~~R ~1E,~"Q 1'~ .... &t-~~l C••-,-~.,. 1-1./ 'f'HIS Wl.t,..t.. e>e ' ON~Y SIMUL.A-r'E!P SURSE!.RY, s-ruPE!N"f'S, SG> ~E!f!!P IN MINP 'f.Hose SNIPPING, SQUISH ING, CRACK-IN6, SWl!ARIN<9 ANP S"f'l-rCHINS SOUNPS W9"8! AW.. PRl!!-A9COR Pe!P .' na•ETTE••••••••••E ~ ABEAO'tlf\J\. fLAC!E - AID A ~~\tW-. ~ ePO we'RE NOr'lfE =~s by Ernie Bushm1pef '' 1 AH---THERES ™E QUARTER I LOSf . . by Gus Arriola A • - • Orange C09lt DAILY PtLOT/Thund1y, January 21. 1982 ~~ehall's pressing dilemma l I •NU lllll flU ... ~r.e writers capable uoters for the the Hall of Fame? .ay WIUGUIUL&Y Wla.v not? It'• thelr prlvile1e. lt 111110 patently auc;, r 1 untatr· ro1' the baseball writers to reveal the WU I ruttle la the lm,pertat laUroom or tdatllles thd votes or lta 400·plua membfrt who the Sberatoa Centre when Commltatoner Bowle aMnlaUy caat-ballot8. K .. "n lttpped to tbt roatrum to p~lalm that bo"'e MU\ kln1 Hank Aaron and tlfted Frank Roblnaon were the latest to be voted into bateball't Hall ot Fame. .. Aaron recejved .oe of a passible 41$ votes ror th• hltheat percenta1e since Ty Cobb's 98.2 percent In 1938," Kuhn Intoned. A NEWSMAN IN the second row was heard to 1rowl: ''How can nlne 1uys not vote ror Aaron? - They're Idiots." "Schmoet," added another. "If Aar,on shouldn't be voted '"unanimously, who the ANALYSIS devb abould?" complained another. "We ought to see It these guys deserve to be ln th~ Baseball WrlW.u AuodaUo~· · cam• the a ripe Crom another side or the aisle . It baa been suggested that the names of those who did not vote for Aaron be made public. There are those who want the culprits unmasked. exPoaed and hung up on the line ror national ridicule. That would be flagrant injustice. WHAT PLAYER, great or near great, holds the God-given ript to be the unanimous choice? 1t hasn't been so in the past. It won't be so in the ruture, insists Joe Reichler, former Associated Press baseball writer, a uthor, a member of the wr:iters' section of the Hall of Fame and longtime aide to the commissioner. "Someone wanted to bet me that Pete Rose would be a. unanimous pick when he become eligible five years after retirement," Reichler said Wednesday at the ceremonies. "I quickly offered to take it. lt'll never happen. There always will be some people down the line who, ror perhaps a variety of personal reasons, will not go with the mob." IF IT BE ttue thal there are 1lanta -Babe Ruth. Ty Cobb. Willie Mays and Hank Aaron - who!Se deeds leave no question about their r11ht to a niche ln Cooperstown, N.V ., why Mrd""an elect'°'1? fut them In •uiomatically every yeer hold a vote only ror the fringe players. tr th~ BBWAA writers want this to be a democratic proce86 -,u it should be -then every member has \.he privilege to vote his conscience without fear or retaliation. 'l.'hat vote should never be publicly disclosed and questioned, no mwe than a~y democratic ballot for president or other orrice. Its not our system. Sports writer Jack Lane put the first m.trh to the impending grass tire when he wrote In the Wednesday morning New York Dally Ne ws that Ir Aaron weren't elected ununlmously, there would be controversy. AS LANG POINTED out, it wasn·~ until the dynamii: Willie Mays was ele(ted in 1979, ianored by 23 writers, that the storm over uoanimity broke. Lang said the 23 were referr ed to as "schm®s." "People will say that if Hank Aaron is not qualified ror the Hall of Fame, who is?" said Lang, w~o wears a second hat as liecretary of the BBWAA ' and counts the votes. "and if he is qualitioo; why doesn't every man eligible to vole check his name on the ballot'!" The answer to that ~simple : This ls the land of free thought. People have their own reasons. They shouldn't be marsh1tled into a single frame of choice. There was no unanimity even for the original inductees in 1936 -' Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth. Honus Wagner, Walter Johnson and Christy Mathewson -five all-time •eats. Ty Cobb was best, getting all but four ofdvotes. Twenty·one people didn't vote for Ruth a.net Wa~ner. Joe DiMaggio didn't make it until the third year of eligibility and even then was shunned~ 28 voters. • The walls of Jericho didn't come tumbling down. l'OtftOUI IUIUl.US NAMelTAT .... fllT The lollowl11t "'-11 001119 -• ... uot: CALIFOltHIA PACIP'IC CO., , ..... aH<oc:i. St.. C.... IMM, CA '2627. Tom C ... lllln, '* Cl•y SI., ot, ... Wl*1 ~. GJ' ntt2; P.O .... 114', N.wpot1 hocll, CA fl663, Tllll t>uslnen Is oondlleted bY on lfldMW.1. TomConlllln Tiii• ,, .. _,WIK llled wllll ltwl C-ly , ...... "'~-c-ty °" J ... "· 1"2. """" Publl-Or-Coost Delly Pilot. Jell ?I, 2', F-. '·I I, 1"2 ttl-11 l'ICTITIOUI aUSINHI MAMa STAT•M•NT Tiie •ollowl11t P•"•" h ool11t butlMttff ..,., .. PllM~ Or.,.. CMtl 1>e11r l'llOI, JOfl, ''· 1!-...... "· ,., mG J .a. DREAM MFG . -Ar-, CMlo IMM, Calltotll!e ta21 JoM H. llOef'I ... Ml Albor, C4tlo ""'Jlt -... c.lltorf'I• mv PUOll"*ll 0r-. COHI Dolly PllOt, Tllh -lnet• ll ~otlCNCIOCI by Oft JOfl. ti, H. Foti. •. II, I.., ,.._., llldMcko.i JoM Boeri .. Tiii~ lt.el..,,.nl wes lllecl wllll Ille C-ly CIOR of Or-C:-lit of'------------ Jo111Hry S, 1"2 l'lltm NMTZ71 Put»ll-Or-Coost Dolly Piiot. SUf'UUOIC COUllT 01' CALll'OllNIA JOl'.1, 1',21,29, ,,_, 112"1. COUNTYOflOllANO• l'SCTITUOUI IUSIN•U NAMe ITAT•M•NT T lie lollowln9 Person h dol119 ,.Cl•~~ ..... MIMAM,CO.fl1t1 MARRIAGE OF PETITIONER: JULIET ELIZABETH AODIH, RESPOHOEHT· ALAN HARRY RODIN. •ICTtTIOUI 9UICNe• NAMe ITA'NMllNT Tiie 1011owl11t perton I• fel111 0..llM .. -.: CLUTCH I IENTIERPRISH, •J AlleM• Ave., Mio .... Mwll.._.. .. OC:ll,(A ..... Lowre11~• M•C11t•llt ot1, ltttt WHm' Ln , HYllll ....... 116ecll, CA ~. Tfth .,..._. 11 •OM\l'tM i,y .. 11\f lvlev.I. .._..,..,. MCCUl'.- Tllll tl~I ... lllM WllCI .. c-•Y Clot'll Df °'..,.. c_.,"' JOI\. "· , .. ,. .... ,.., PUOll-<>ronot Cooll Dolly f'llet. Jell. ti. M. Fetl, •, 11, lteJ ,_., l'l(TUTIOUI ..,_, ... NAME ITATeMatn Tiie 1011owln9 perso11 ll dol11t o..IAnost•. CAI IHP'ORMATIVE Sl!RVICES; Ca l FRANCOISE IMAGIS, UI Sy-y '--• Coolto MtU. CA tKf1, Fro11~olM E. Fr'9o••· Ml Sy-y l..OM. C_.. MtsO, CA .,_21. Tiiis -'Mil ll •ondlrled 11¥ °" lndlvlclllel t<renc-EFr19111• Tiiis •--Ill .. wit" llW c°""'' ~of O<-C-IY on JOft. ... 1"2. , .. .., P11bll$1Wd 0<-CooSI Dolly Piiot, 1-----------~ DW111tt1•: IU_. 11'-IL Y I.AWi CAie NO. 0-1'71U J•n. 21. 21. Feb.•. II, 1"1 ,.._., P'ICTITIOUS aU .. NUI N-1 ITATUdNT Tiie loll-Int -""'' ••• 001119 bwSIMHOS: Ill S ~ S ENTERPfUSES, 1111 l&S LEASING; 11111 S ~ S FIHANCIA.L, no ~11 Dr .. ~ ...... CA '"'7. Jo•• Goorte s...1 ....... stll w. llMIMlll Ave., Sellto AM, CA '2104. Kevin ttowe S11lllvon, tUI P-rlllll Dr.,~ .... CA""''· Tiii• butl11eu It ~-u~tM by • 1111nerol~. LAW DEVELOPMEHT COMPAHV, 2111 VIiie Elllrede, N-.ort iaN<ll, CA'2MO. NOTICE I You ..... bMn wed TM . P1mjC 191'a '.OUrl mO'f -IOe ..-IM1 you wll-1 l ..... ----------- La-MU A. WoodwMd. 2111 VIAo E11trtclo, ~ llN<ft, CA tlt60. Tiiis ~I 11 ·--Irr .., i-wlclllal. ~.,......,. T"l'~-.... wlttl ... c-fy Cleftl el Or .... GllllllY Oii JOI\. y-boi"t ,..,d ~ you rft~ wlttllll lO GtYL Rood tho llllo<IMtlwl --If , ... """ 10 _.. , .. edVI<• of ... •ltonlef Ill tMs metier. --do IOfr ....... YIO-'l'OU'•-Of .........., If eftY, moy be llled on lime. AVlt.01 u.td llO tMlo .. ,,.,-. t , lt12. f'llDM ~I lrlNlel ..... clllt".ldlr ~onlr• Ud. Publlahld Or-Cool! Oolty Piiot, lln oudl•ncl• • menos ciue Ud. fCICTUTIOUI a UllN•IS N.Alllla STATe ... NT Tiie lollowlno perso11 h dol111 IMlllMHOS. S. t . OEVEL(jPMEHT COMf'AHY, •12JllC.ll_,, lrvllle,CA'211•. Grtt D. MCCloll-, • 12 Jo<k'°", lrvl11t, CA '211'. Tiii' -l'ltiS ll <onclU'le<I Oy Of' lllCllYICIUOI. Ashford almost gave it all up ICOYlllR.Wlv .. Tiiis llM......C -lllOd wlttl "" Cou11ly Ciotti el Of'MQll c-,, 4111 J1111. ...... 2 "'"* Put»ll"*I Or ..... Coo~I o.lly Piiot, JM 21 n F& • 11 l"2 171.., res~ cltlllro cit JO dl•s. U• I• · • • • · 1111 ... ..-ton-sioue SI U1 .... *'" IOll".llM el <-IO de llft ...... Oft Hie -o, cltberl• llo<:Of'IO •-0101ome111e, d• UI• Grev o. Mc:C .. llOtld Tiiis ...._, WIK flled wllll IN C°""IY CieB Of~-c-'llt Oii J ... •• "11. l'iCTITIOUI aUMNUS NAM&STAHM•NT ...-..... "_ ..... ,. ... sl ... , ,,_ LOS ANGELES <AP > -Evelyn Ashford . currently the world's fastest woman sprinter, was so discouraged that she thought about giving up her sport. But visions of Olympic gold at the end of the rainbow kept her going. "There was a tim e right after the boycott when I considered quitting," said Ashford. referring to the U.S. boycott or the 1980 Olympics in Moscow. "But I didn't feel 1 had completed what I know I can do. "My uJtimale goal is Hl84 ; that is the pot a t the end or the rainbow," added the former UCLA star who is aiming for gold medals in the lOO-and 200-meter dashes in the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles. Ashford's track career ha& been marked by a number or disappointments, but the 24-ye.ar-old sprinter said she feels very optimistic heading into the 1982 season. She's the only woman t.o' win both sprints in the World Cup Games, a feat she accomplished in 1979 and 1981. Ashfor d a lso is the American record-holder with a 10.90-second clocking in the 100 meters and 21.83 in the 200. &~:-Sunday, she ran a world indoor best S.64 in Chicago meet. On-Friday, ..she'll compete against a 60-meter field that includes Alice Brown -whose 6.62 is a world best indoors -in the Sunkisl Meet at the Los Angeles Sports Arena. "I felt pressure last year, felt like 1 had to prove I could come back from the injury.·· Ashford said recently. alluding to a hamstring pull that sidelined her for most of 19fK>. ''But this year. I just feel excited." • Her schedule pointing to the 1984 Olympics was s upposed lo include a light year of competition in 1982. But, because she possibly could earn up lo Sl2,000 for training expenses by finishing first in lhe two commercially sponsored 1uu1mm McCObKll MOITUAllH Laguna Beach •94·9415 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 H•llC)a LAW ..... MT. OllYI Mortuaiy • Cemetery Crematory 1525 G1Sler Ave Cos111 Mesa 540-SSS. ,_CIMOT ... S ~MOADWAY M09TUA8Y 1 10 Bre>-'way eo.a.-.a 142·9150 .· •'9Vn•.---..-uroaeo1 .. .,..... P111Ml_O.-_ CN1I Ooll'f PllCI(, series of indoor events this year. she figures to run a lot of races. J.,. 21. •. ,.. 4, n. 1..i m"1 Tiie 1011owl119 "°"•" I' dol119 ~------------1"" ...... ••t GRAY SCALE LAB, 11tot SllyP«ll I. TO THE REM"ONOEHT Tiie Jo11. 11, 11, F·eb. '• 11, 1"2 110-«2 pttlllotttr ftH filed • pellllo" 1.------------'0ftC°"""' yoi;r ....,,I-. If YOU loll lo fl .. a .......... wlllllll ••ys ol -"This was to have been my rest year, but it's too tempting. I can't sit out and see someone else get my checks." .&be said. Clr~le. Suite H, I Milne, C•lltornlo t27" ------------1 Rlcl!Md E. l(•smler, le Lucoro l'UCTITIOUS .u .... eu MAMIE STATEMENT T llr tollowl11t persOfl I• 001110 wslnena: Eotl, Irvine, c.lllOf'fllo t2114. Tiiis buMMH la 'onduc:IAKI ll'f Ofl lndMdllOI tlOI• tMt nil• -b wrwd on ----.---------you, .,_ dtfeult moy lie .,.,.,eel -NOTICE OP' TllUST•e-. SAL• Ille co11rl moy t11ter o lud9ment T .S. Ho. llM <Oftlolnlftt lnjurY.11 .. or _, oroe,.. On Feorwrt 11. 1"2, •I 11:00 A.M .• •oncerf'lllO dlvl1lon ol property, STAH·SHAW CORPORATION, o Ashtord seemed to receive more notice during the 1981 indoor season for the skintight ski s uit she wore than for her performances. OFJ DISTRIBUTING. 110 Bet9rove A•ellue, Gorde" Gr•••· Colllorftlo mAI S•r.t Kollwyn J.,-. 1111 POl\OY Circle, Cost.e Mesa. Cdlltorftle mat Tllh blft!MU Is conduct ... Oy on indlvldtlol. llkllotd,. 1( ....... , TlllS ll0-1 w•s flied wttft Ille COVIii¥ Cler1< ol o.....-c-ty on -so• ............. ~lllld c.ldlody, •llllcl Ct llforf'lo Corporollon •• duly ._...,., ... ,.... ~. •ost.s, OIJCI sli"ll ~111ed TNS* unOff olld .,..,_, J -rvs.1m ....., rolle4 °'MOY lie 9'0ftled by -lo Deed "' TrW doted; Oc..,.., '· ""'* court. Tiie gor11l1lvnef'I ol ...... •-. rec~ Oc-r t, •-. os 11111. "There does n't seem to be much interest in female sprinters." she said. "If the suit gives some added publicity, that's good. Saro IC. J.,dlne P111MI-Or-c-1 D•llY Piiot, , .. ""' .. _,or pr_.-ty, or ........ No. lfftS, In -,,,.,, .._ tlO .. Jo11 1, "· 21.11, 1m 1u.c.. court •wt-Ind --•nv• moy 01 90 Offlc••• Re<D'ds If' Ille offlu of ttle rnull. Couf'ly RKorwo of ~-.c-.ty, D•l•d·.O':totoer "· i.t1 Slot• ol C•lllornl•. eHcut•d Dy L" A. Brencll, C .. r, ROBERT G. JONES 011d ICARAH Arl-C. Potl•Jletll, Def>uly JONES, --wile WILL SELL "It seems unfair that no one will notice us until 1984 comes: then everybody will be interested in us." Tllh It.el-w.-filed wllll IN Co11nh Cler' ol Oron" County on O.<ember 10. 1'11. NOTICE OP' TitUST1e·s SAL• JAMel I . DUCfGell. AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST f't71tll T.S.No.ntft ....,_,,etUw BIDDER FOR CASH 011 AS SET l'lllMl:Nd Oronot Coo\I Oolly PllO(, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN,,,,., __ v ..... ~. .... FORTH IN SECTION m• F QF THE Jon. U. JI, JI. FM t, 1"2 US-C on W-Y. F-uery 10, 1"2, •1 c .... -... CO • .......,, CIVIL COOE •I ttle lronl enlr~• lo •.oo o'clo<.-• m of Wld ... ,. In ,,,. T .......... ts1·MM Stan·Sfl-C«'pof .. -. 23U E 11ttl room set oslde tor co11ducll119 PueMI.,_ Or-C-1 Dotty f'llOC, StrHI. S-. 411N!, CA'"" •II rl9f\I. Trust"'' s.in. """'""' IN offlet1 ol '°"· 21. • • .,._ •, 11, ltl2 Jn.12. title olld Int~ .-ey" to --11 E AL EST AT E SE CU 111 l I ES llold by II ""*' sold Doed ol T r11ll In ottANOECOUNTY SERVICE, l0<•teo •I 2020 Horii! -If' -Ille pr~y Ml.,.llld Ill said C°""IY Louisiana Tech SU ... ltlCMt COUllT Broodw•y. Sul~ a.. In Ille City of ~ _,_ olld Stole iascrl-~ goes for record 7t80wtc ~ ~-W. S...I• AN, Counly of Of-, Stole of f'AllCEL t: s... ..... co.""' Colllorf'I•. ORANGE COAST TITLE NOTtC• INVUTING ••os Unll N'o. 1t .u si-n ..... dltK•l- PLAIHTIFF: SHAAOH IC. 'YOUNG. COMPANY, o CelllOfftle corporollon, Hollo II Mreby q l•en lllol Ille In Ille CO!ldorn.nkim Ptor. re<Of'dt<I on DEFENDAN T; ROBEAT f'. osduly...,ol-T~-•llCI Boord ol TrulleH ol t"o Coo U Auousl S, t•n In BOOll IU2•. P- LU NDGREH. IRVIHE SERVICE 11wr11u111 ,. Ill• pow•• ot UI• Commwlllty Colt-Dlstrt-:1 of°' ..... 1120 10 U1J lncl11s1 ... , 0111<1•1 R USTON, La . CAP>--One of tbe 11.ict!st things am!(· tyl.Jil the record for consecutive victories by a women's basketball team is that after one more game, the pressure should start to ease up a bit, said Leon Barmore , associate head coach at top-ranked Louis iana Tech .. T ech al most blew lOth·ranked Long Beach State out of of the gym in a 74-46 victory Tuesday night that gave the Lady Techsters a 51·0 string dating back to 1980. "If we can just win that one _Friday night, maybe we can forget ' about a l l of this," Barmore said in a t ele phone interview on Wednesd COR f'OllATION. • Ce tllerlllo conferr~lftlt*cortolllO..-ol Trw'I C-ly, CollMr•. wlll re<el.,. --re<orlhof s.k!C_,.y ectipsin., lhe m ark or ,_ ..... ; JlllVINE SAVINGS ANO eae< ..... _HUNTER PAOl'ERTIES bids llCI lo ,__y S. ltl2, Fr!My, f'AllCELt: th S ..._.... .. jJ f L~N . IATlpN • ColllClf'ltl• INC • Colllorf'I• <••-•lion I I : 00 0 .1'11 •• , ........ ~ ...... , All Uf'dlYld•d one nln•IY·Sl•lll e 1 "u.,a~g_l4t ,.Set :Xj. c.,....,~. ; .. ~UM-· r'K~JU1y1f,1111,'"~'4'tl.i DeHrl ....... 'II Mlcl cOll ... dl,trkl 111 .. 1111 lnlerul n e ttnof'I '" -nelta Slate in 1974-76. ,,... Clelm.,,., l••Ht Ill or Uln Offkiot R«-of ~ ~Y. et leo':•IH •• 111'.......,. A-. C..U common in o. lft ,,,..,_1 "'onc1 to 0 I R b t -.. ~ ~ Oncrlll9f In "90 OJ. R«orOW'' IMlru-Ho. Met.o, Cal.._,,.o el wtlkft llme said Ille <OM"*' •ru of Lots 2, J, S, -t r a 0 , e r S • ltw C ........ : Olld DOES 11"'°""' X, .. ,.., by -of o br"MCll Of dtloun bids Wiii be lllUllll-ly --ollCI retcl ol Trocl HO. 9720, es ..... Mat> filecl In u n r a n k e d , 1 s . n o t 111<1"'1.... 1,. ... ,,,..., D' pertorm~• of 111o 1 ... : B-40.S. p_. :n 10 '1 tftC111.t1ve of ted t t T h SUMMONS CltM190liensN<urodttleretly lnchocllng PUllCHASE OF PRIHTIHG MIKell-M.lps, re<ordt of sold expeC 0 S Op ec C...se..*2tt 1Ml br0«llO'clefoun,Hoflc'eolwlllcll PAPER, INSTRUCTl()fjAL MEDIA Cou111y,ffwclli.rmhoellnedlftlllt Short of the record. But fllOrtU I Y•Mw...,..-, TIMI wos recorded~' 2', ""·In CE NTER: ORANGE COAST Arll<I• -tied "Dellnlllons" of ltle B a r m 0 r e w a s n . l ~ _., ............ ..,.. .-. ·-142:11 of OfllCl•I Re<D'cb of SOid COLLEGE. 0.Cl•••llon "' Cownonls, Condftlons ~ ..... ....,_-... -,...... County, ot po .. ltJJ, Recorder's AlllMlh-10•ln0<•or-,ewlttl end RHtrlctlons re<O<ded In B-complacent. ..... • ....... -........... IMlni-Ho. •llO. WILL SELL Al Ille Bid P'orm lllllrucllons ond IUU, P-llSS Of Offlclol R«orO. "Whal We have to be ...... PUBLIC AUCT ION TO THE C-111--SclKlfk .ii-"'"kll ITU "Oecl•rollon··1 •nf •ny • If Y911 wllll __ .._ ..,,,loof on HIGHEST BtDDEA FOR CASH • .,. llOWOflllle-moylle --111 om•-tsor•nneul_" __ very Careful about IS olltr ... l .. Wl llWlllff, ,,_ -do l•wl11t -yof lfteUnlltdSIOles.D' o , ... offl'e el Ille Pwc.....i119 AQllftl Of E•cepllnq tllerelrom 011 oil. oll that was just Part I. We "' .-.....u .. '" "'°' your wrlllH c ...... ,., cMcll drown ..... stole or solcl •olletllt~•i'I. '''""· ,,.,..,.,., ''"'"· ,.., .. ,.1 .. , h P I , , ,. __ ., ..,y, moy lie filed on 11,,.,.. 11otlonel -· o stet• or •-••I «°'flt Eo•ll .,._. '""" submit wltll 111, rl9111s •llCI otMr llydrO<•rDo111 by ave to get art I. he AVllOI u .... IN --····· union, or .. ,, ... or·-·· HVl"91 •lld bid • '""'""S <,...k, "»rlllled <"«II, wh•lsot--i..nown. ,,.., moy be S3id. "We have to finish •t tr....i ..... 9< .. lr <•lro IH. loon •uoc:lellon domlclled In 11\I' ,,,. _,., lloncl m-POYOble lo llW wlll\111 or _, IM Porcet of I- th h t"' , , •I• ••"Hclo • me•os ••• I.If. "•'•· •II poy-el Ille lime ol ..... _,Of"'° Coosl CommUl\lly Coll ... Mreln•bc>W dH<rit>ed. "'901Mr wllll e C ap '<'r. ......-....... • ... L Loo IO oll rlglll-!Ille -lnterell Mid by 11 Dhtrl•I Boord of TruSIMI In •n ,,_ perpet ... I r19t>1 of drllll119, mlf'l119, Friday night's victory .. ..,,..oc._ .. ...-. u T ruit ... 1n 11101 ru1 proper1; omount nol lfts ,,,.,. .... -~•nt c S%t up1or1nq, and -•11"9 111ert1or. olld a(SO S th 199th · th SI Utled-• ldkllor el ConMIO 0t sllu.tle 1n S•ld County end Sl•le. of ttle wm bid IK o ""ront~ lftol Ille llorl119 tn-removlnq IM yme lrom wa e ID e un oll09MD en Klit .sunto, -I• docrlbed•sfoll-s bl-r wlll enter 11110 Ille pr-Md solcflond or'.tny olller l•llCl, l11<W lne career of head Coach ll•cerlo ,,,.,,.,..,.,.,,.,.nit, d• .. ,. .. ..... I: ContrO<I II Ille some Is •w••-lo Ille rl91\l IO wNcKloO or dl•e<llonelly SonJ' a Hogg ,,,. ... , •. "' ·~·· ncrllO, 11 llOY Uf'lt :Mt, •n IN C•IY of , ... 1 .... u lllm. '" ttle _, "' lollw-t to ..,.., d•lll .,,., ,,,_ lrom ....... olller ,,_ · olqul\O. _.-'°' r09lstrodo •lie,,.... sllown •nd .. fined on 111•1 cerleln lfllo '""'" -.-rr.1. Ille proceods ol lhe thole 11er-. -•'-· oll D' ~ 8 a rm 0 re lj aid h e I TO THE DEFENDANT A CMI CONtomllllum Pion rec..-J-JJ, cM<ll Wiii .. lortelled, « In I .. c-wells, I~ •nd Sl>Oftl lntD, ttvouo11 believes Tech's players comPl•t111 M s Dun llled by 111e "''in 11oo1111n1,~ 11.sotOflkl•I of • boftcl, .. tlllt wm ~ wl11 .. or ocro•.,,. ~~of -•-111•111"" 09llftft .-. If,. •. w1111 to lo Re<Of~olOr-~y c.lllort1lo, lorteltedlosoid-:oll-411t_rlo:t, Mrel11•-dHcribed, ond to e.nom a re aware lhat they defend INt l•wwil. YOU m1AI, wllllln f'or<·IU: • No ....... INl'f wit--"" llld fOf sutll wlll~COC:lled or dlrecllOftolly could give Hogg No 200 • d•y• oft~ 1111, ·-I• wr...., A11wM11vlded11.-._,..,,,....,,. • P91'1od • ..,,.,.11 .. c.s1 • .,, •"9r dr111..i -11. ,.,._,~•"°"" ... '·"-• . -· .., YOU, Ille wltft lllls c-1 • wrnl°" LOC 1 of Troe! Ho. 101J7 01 si-11 on 0 IN dalt _. w ti. opeftllle IM'90f. ond lle,_111 ., beyond Ille tM1erlor with a vu;tory over Oral •HPGllM to,,,. <OMPIOlnt. u"1e" you Mu recontitd 111 Book u. ,..._. .. 10 TCte ...,. • ,,..,._ , ... "'" u. 11m11s •-'fOI. -to .-111, ••t-1. Roberts · do"'· YOUI ...,...,ll wlll M •11tet'ed on soot Ml<COll~,.,,.,,,; recorlh ol prlvl .... of ,..)r:ttnv •Y.,.. •" •i.s equip. me1r1i.1n. ,..,.,,, --•llCI , , Th · h Id b ac>PllcollOll of "'° plolnllll, -lllh Oro119e Cownty, CdlllD'11i•. togettler or lo welve •ny lrre9ul•rltlo~ or operol• •ny 1ucll well' or mlM1, ey s OU e. covrt m•y-er • luome"t-lnst you wllll •II lmprov•M•nls lllereon lf'lormolllles If' .,., bid or In Ille wltllo11t -.. ••• ,,,. ''"'' lo drlll Thal's quite a milestone tor lllt rt ll•• d•m•f'd•d In Ill• ucept1110 ,,,.,.,,..,,,., C-mlnlu,,; blcldl119. mine, •lore, UPlor• Olld -···· lo et 200 l·n o ur' complolftl. wlllcll could result In U".'ll\JIJtftrt• .... lStlntki".,.,loc:o..., ...._._ • .._. 11"ouOfl ... -10<eOf"'9-fGO f.Ml-01 N '"'cttdM' =f .... 'a• S e V e n y e a r 0 montf or P'-"Y or Diiier rtllef EXCEPT THEREFROM oll ou. '°" C.... C.1 ...... lf llerell\0-dttcribed. OI ,....,_Ill coaching ," he said. "It's ·--"'-~•"'' m111e••1t •"" 0111er 11ydr0<••bo11 ~otWld lfte Deed trom Tiie 1 ....... c.....,y, • Deleo -· "· 1111 -••!'COS • ., ................. of MO Publltll9f Or .... Cont Dolly PMot, cO•PO••tlon, r.cor-De<~ "· an honor for the kids LMA.Brencll,Clorll ... twl-onyrlfMloenteruponl ... Jor....,y?l,2'.1"2 J1M1. .. 11, In Booll. luot, Pogo 1011 of and the university too," Rk 11o<ow. s...:.:.: ~=!e~Y ::::~ ":.: :::!:~ ~s ';:,~.::: 0"~~~~ ~°:~·ino 1,,.,.,,0,,., 1111 IOllO Wllll!I ... BIVCI. SI•. 1'00 l11 l11m ....... 1s Of !"Kon!. Ml.I Illa s..O...rf«• -· rl9"11, bwl ... , ..... , WHI lM AftQlflft. CA t002• f'o~OI Jl Ille rl9lll of surtoce entry, •• ..wrved 121>1 H'-US. Aft tllChlll .. •-I for P«•l"9 NOTlal Ol'SALIE UNDIElt 111 Ille o.tdlrom TM lrvlne c _.,, Publlthed OJ-Coost Dolly Pl end rot--.,..., lllOI portion OIClllEI Of' l'OltlECLOIUll• • ~.,._ .. Ion, recoroto ~ Jt, J•11.7,l',11,Jt,"'2 111"1 el Lat 1of101c1 Trocl No 101:11, es FRENCH OUAATEll HOMES lt17 111 B-12SO'I, Po .. 12tl ti •"owll on Ealll bll "A" to Ille ASSOCIATION, INC vs. RONALD Offlclel RK- 0.Clorotlon of ttKtrlellOfts for Tiit OLSON, et el Ho.J~ f'AllC•L>: *lftes 0.-illook.orll, -~April I l ... ~ ........ BllAD GATES, Eutme"ls U HI fortll 111 Ille l'~TCOUS IUllNH4 N-. ITATU••T PlaJC llll( .,.,!,:,:~1:owln9 P•"•" Is doln9 ~------------: ANGELFISH DECOtt. un D•-ole Ave1111e. Co•I• Meao, c.a111or111o taat Robert Corroll Slmof't, a212 OoltOI'-Avt,,ut. CO\U Mt l •, ColllomlA.,._ Tiiis "°"'""' Is condllcted llY .. 1 ... Mduol R09er1 C.SlMOM n1~ .....,_. we filed wltll .,. County Clerll of ~.,,.. c--.. °"' Oe< .... -, .. lttl ..-tMrt Publl-O< ..... Co.tt Delly Pilot. Dec. l1, '"'· J .... 1, ••• 21. '"'M»-41. JI, 1m, Ill 9oo11 llMt, Hell tio of SllerCll·Cor-r Covnly of Or.,..... -11o111 wntitled "Conoln IE-b Off kl•• Rkoreb. Oftd ,.....KO<Wd Moy Stoi. Of ColltKfll• ... ,,.,....., urllly ,., OwMf's", .. _.,, Mttlt--s. tt7S. In llooll 1JMO, Pftll S11 of llltl by vlrtwe of DecrM ot FD'ec:-. encroecllrne111", olld "MOftt,._,.., Olllctol Rec-of °'""' Ctuftty, olld Sol• 111 Ille Superior Court of .,. Street unme111" ot Ille ••11<1• Colllor11to 1tw,..1fleftor rtftrred to ._. COll<llY of O<onot. Stole of C•lllor11la, enllll•d "Eoumenn" 01 I ll• "Otcler....,") .-CMport StNK• Jl1, tnlertd on Ho.,.mller s. lttl. O"ld O.cleratloll. Sold •OWfNlll It"""""' .. llMd -reco'*d N....,,ller S, '"'· In IM f'AllC•L4: _, ... "' Anktn II -Ill of Ille .... efltfli.d octlon, ....... 111 Fl'tll<ll Eonmtnb OS HI IOrlll Ill '"' Oe<lafOC!ell. Quartlr ~ Anoclollon lllC IM le'lkH>t wntftlH "~ (-b f'Oft .. 4: ....,. --pMM111llllsl, o«it-o 10f0wnen"Ol>d "~Mft*11oftt, A ....,..ctusive N.-nl 1or -l""'moflt -dlecrtt of ID'ectowr. e11d e11croocllme111" ol "'° otllcle -011~ of "'° c--of'd Mlle -lfttf -Id OIMn -Olllllled "~osemef'll" oC Ille -.....-....... l)e(laHllwl, Miki MM. R-OIMn -·-11•1 • .., Declor•tioft of COvef'-•. c ............ ·--....,. "'rtMr OtflnM Oftd Ille '""' ol Ollt lllOlllOf'd Hven •nd Rnlrkllons recorded 111 S- -•ll>M In Ank1t1 11 -111 of"" ft1111drM t. !orly t. 00/100 Doll•"· t?n•. P-1100 of Ofllelol Recordl Decloret.... lowl11I -Y M -UnllH Stein, •nd Clll• .. _, Ooclorollon"I Ofld ..,,. TCte strett --or -common by wktw of • writ ol enlo<ce,,.,.... In emtlldl'nOftbor •nne•olloM ,,,.,...,,, dotl911etloll OI 111o reol pr-rty os sold ·ocllon It-Oft H-lle• It, Tiit street oddrns a110 etllor ................. *t<r!Md I• Pllf...-..cl IO "''· I ..., (_ .... IO .... •H llM Commofl desltntlloll, II •llY. of .. be : H t Strtemwood . lrwlfle . properly Ill..,. County Of 0ftlf\9R, rtol P•-'1" Clffcrllbed •"v• 11 Collto,..... Slot• of Gelllot11lo, •url"4! os 11Vrport .. IO i.: ' o.w.r, '"'""· TS. ,,,,. llltnM _...., --~ lollowt: -Colllomla, all lletlMlty fw -1-re<lftesl Ill l.Of It• Tr.ct Ne. 4354 M ~Ill T ... "'*'Mttlfd TNStoe dtl<lollM M~ s'"9t .... or -c-_.,. Ill ............. al to U , Olly llMMfty IW OllY 111<9"9<-el .............. • ......... ......_.,...... "'° .............. -~ -Seid MIO Wiii lie,.,... WllllMll Office of tM C-ly lltcor .. r • ........ lltft,llMJ,~""'"'- warro!lly , •••••n ., 1..._Ul•f. o.-. ~. c.tlfemle; .--I Said SOit Wiii M -.. -•lllMvl rotlf'flllt Ullo, ,.ou1ule11, or ... .,..,.._,_..otrocerf. covette111 or worr011ty, ••,..•n ... ---aoetl, le llltltlY 1111 ,..IMlt* ~ &..... <~ ' lmpllff ,.....,,. tit .. ,-""'· .. ._. _ _,.._.._«°""1111Mltlt1911 as;,, .. ~_....,_~ ..... ---ts,IMNdl111SO.~.c-... IK'lrM .., Mlf 0.. .. T""4. w'ICll C•lfeMlo, >fr llllCI ........ of "'9 T""* Oftf ol IM llllilr.tt ...... .-. n """'*" T......,-wlti all eftG ,I....., lruMHl"N9MllYMlf O..•T,_, It ........,, ............ If ....,, .-.w ......... 111.1, "•••tlll•t11•1tl• ... ...y .... ,_....,. ll'IMlltlll -. .. "" ................. .....,... ... _,. .............. ...,.,.. •Mltlflt ISie .... c •• ---.., Mlf 0.. .. -~ ........ '"9, ,.._... -• ....,._ ... ,....... TNat It wtC: ..... w"9I ....... ....... " ... , ........ "' .. PUil.iC NOTICa •• ".... ....,._ ..._ ~ .. ,.. .. It trvelt c..-. 1111¥ .... OMf 01 Tl'lllt. GtV•N Tllltell "'*'' .... It, 1-~°"'-~ .. _.... ...... TM 1tt11 ...... 11 lllf ........... ot "~•e'cl8Ck, A.M.•1111t• Mltltl.-c49tl-... yefll-- 1Mi.tllftt.........,, ................ llilolll L....,, c.-....., NI Cl IM---~~~ ....... c-.n IM...,......• .. ,,..._ C1111tr °""" WllM. Ot\lef S.. Alli cottaof .... S.. atllll--•INIW~•ollllh !I wlll .. 11 tCIO ....... tlelcrl.. T5le llelllltcWy _.., .... OINOf .......... ,..... ~,.,,..,...,. .. Id writ eftf flerto, Trtnt llertlol•tt ••oc -.tef •11• ....... l,,_'I' IS,,.. ., .. ftlUCll .... , •• , .. ,... -41ollvond .............. I ....... • ~ClOAIT llOCHNf\' It ... ltfY tMI IM9'tollftll 0.Cllrltllft6' ... 0lllteftf~IW 'l'tftACOMf'AHY, •"" 111..,_. "'II c-.. •... le6e, lllf o """'*' ._ .. ca ef ~ A~c..._ollell, Ml!*r, ... CMl\AttewM-.of .... ·~lelOlt. , ....... , ... I •'r..-. u..-.--.. CftM ........ lee of beta.It -1¥1 ttlAL llTAle 01..-o4 SMo AM, C•tt..ie, •iect• 9 1M1 .. • ~ .... •cultlTIHMllVIC., J_., :-. "91 ~ ..... w5lon ISie rMI ~ 11J .~...,~-. L18H.O.. -, .. ,.._. •T-c.MffO...,s..tlt• OelMt ..._., ,._ tttt Ca.AU A c.llMIM,Ca.,_ ITM~W~A,_. 9r: o.1.woa11. .........A-...y 1111 ...... I II ...... 111..,....... I tt A 0 0 AT • S , llCMMl,CA""t -IMc1fl 1,..._ey, hlle llMr"'"*-" ' (fMUO..._., ...... -. --• -o--ro10-.,.ca ... ...-....,,..CA tlNI ., •• ,._..., .. . :-H.CINNr• Tot:1n•1....,. ~ ......... ~ .... Or-. C.-Oolty ,.., ~Or-. C... DIM,,._ .......... ~C... .... ~ ................. ... ....... ,.4,"9 ,...,,,, .. ..._.&, .. 1941 -· -----------.---------------,. - .... The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642 -5678 Among JH10f'le lookt;ig /or a rnatal. 10% read 1't1JL e&tatt claui/ied fld., •• ... • t. . INDEX TJ .... YISM,Cll 142·5&71 ~FllUU ~.~ i~ ... ;:. . . :: ' ", ;;;;; ::: r )4 c.&a ~ llu :=l I ~ ~ '. :; · EQUAL HOUSING · o: i=_•~~· :: OPPORTUNITY i..oe•.n ::: " ........ Motkt: • =~ · 1:; All real est1te •d· ::"1:_.'=t.• :: vertl h d lo th i s t • .. ,.,. newsp1per ls subject to \ tL"'::.ca,;w-::: the Federal Fair Hous· 1; ~ • ...-. * in& Act ol 1968 which J _...,.._ ,. makes it illeaal to ad-. :::i::..·w;-:: vertise "any preference, au1 "T'T( limitation, or dis-• ~ .::0 u " iao criminatioo based on ..,._,_SAit '* race, color, religion, -:*'.~,. :: sex, or national origin. ~· ~Lm•CrJp1s 111t or an intention to make 1· ?'"r'.....,~, {: any such prtlerence, •.· ~~':. • .. limitation, or dis· . --.. ~ : elimination." '' ==;._, i$ Thls newspaper will not , =~-: knowjnflY accept any o.i.rc-rr wo advert sing for real o.i11suu i,. • 2t00 estate which is in viola· ' • IMdltt.Ptnni,Crovu nw ti ol th I ~ J!~ ~~~·· = ~on-=-'=e-.a""'w_. ____ 1 lfmlS -:t::==.... = mc>IS: AfhriNl'I ~.~~·:. • .._..~llMir.ts . ,m:...,r:' ii ~,•.r::.n: s::=..:. ~:W : DAILY PILOT •tw• ~ U•lwa = Wllity for ... flnt ~::;-•uar : htcorrtct lutr:tl .. . --·-· ... -,. P9IMSULA HOMIS Remodeled, decorated 3 bdrm, 3 bath. mstr bdrm. ocean view $425,000. West Bay bayfront. Slips for 2 boats,· remodeled 3 bdrm . 3 bath $1,200,000. Ocean & jetty views. Marine room. 4 bdrm, 3 bath. 3700 sq.ft. $1,385,000. UDO tSU HOMIS 7ot VIA UOO MC>1D NI 1·1 Prime Lido Nord bayfront. 5 bdrm. 5 bath. Lg._L.R. 2 boat slips $1 ,500,000. Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath + large rec. rm. beam ceilings, $420,000. UNDA ISLI IA YFIOMTS Main channel view from 4 bdrm s bath home with pool $1.495,000. ' Lagoon view from 6 bdrm. 5 bath, playroom, dark rm , den. Sl,350,000! CAINATIOM COVE Spectacular bayfront vi ew 4 bdrm 4 bath. 2 boat slips $2,0~.ooo. · BILL GRUNDY . RFALTO~ ' ; -'(. ti• [ • t r '; (, r- ............ 4100 ~"-.. ~;;. ~i-... •_•_•_•_•_•_•_-_•_•_•_•_•_~ .... , ZllWf!IEW -...,. -UM>EI SI 001 J 1'nd out aMut the high-! taming real estate sales career opportun ities w1tb TH E R EA L ~ATERS. Licensing school fees completely refundable to school of ' your choice. Extenaive sales training. f or in· rormataon, call 751·6191 =~!IHI !: Condo has everything .__11..ui -you need + great ....,,.. 1tH1.a1 uio terms-5 min. to beach f::w-lfC' e, 759-1221 llllc ---llSES, llMST· IOT,f'IMCE == =1· . •-o...n·, lOlS ._.,.,..., -..., IO Lou lGZI ....,,.._ - ....,_,TD'1. *" ._EMEWTS, POSIMAlS & LOST & ftUNO SEIYICES lorvlft Olnft..,. EIPllYllDfT & PIUAIATIIN ~I­,. .. _. r ._,.. .. .,. ••r r lllC1IQlllS£ =::.. .~ =·Mmall c-r.•.:.0-111 • Qu Dip ,.,...IOYou ,, . ......,. c.,...w. -·'' -c-... =-.__,, ~ . ...__,.. .. "" .. llalull~ .... 2~ omc. l'ln • c.oiP ,.._ .. ... -·Ort-.I' ....... ..,"-_!/~ ..... , '• ~.~ti1riJMno ·,. llATS & MU1NE ,. EllPMENT --•11 -----------•n --.. , =· Ml =· ... --- !IOIO -------- ••• -· ----·-· -- * ~ • I t 00 .? ~ Q.) ~ • >< ('J) •• ~ • I t •(in ik spen' siv) not high in price; reuon- 1ble cost; clusified advertising. WANT ACTION? Want Ads Call 6'2·5678 Clusifed Ads 642-5678 IAYSHOll IAYAtOMT Watch the boating action & enjoy charming Cape Cod 4 BR home. Hardwood floors , high ceilings, delightful fam rm w/fplc & bar. 63 ft on the bay. 3 car garage. $2,000,000 in- cl uding prime land. Cathy Schweickerl642·823.5 (N61 ) MIWPOIT SHOUS -Fii! Beach property Lg 4 BR +bonus rm + den. Great community club & pool. Best investment for your family living . Submit on fin anc· ing -Seller w/assist $239,500 Fee Land Jane Paquin 642·8235 (N62) EXCITIMCi CHATUU Sparkling 2 BR & den borne near Woodbridge lake & park w/adult pool & spa . Walking distance to shopping center. Ex cellent financing available! $1 59 ,500 J eanne Newman 752-1414 (N63) UllC&ANlt CERAMICS MIWPOIT 9ACH DUft.11 OW. W1U. MW4CI AT I J% 200' to beach, 4 Bedrooms, 2 baths in upper; 2 Bedrooms in lower. Some view of ocean. Fireplaces. Patios. $279,500. Owner will carry 1st trust deed of $200,000 at 13%. No loan fee. WISUY K TAYLOI CO .. llALTOIS JlllS...,....H•IMd Ml'M'OIT CINfll. N.I. 64Mt I 0 llVltl TERIAC[ CORNER SJ0.650 emit._ fwtllll.,.. 2 ..._ + .. i... Lo • .., ,.., .... ,..... $210.000. VIEW-PRIVACY-GREENERY A•• •• ..-..s....._c~._. c...,_,. llllry. P•ar-'c ....,, Two ltdr•, dl•l•9 r•, dtck od 1po. SHS.OOOfle'-L WATERFRONT HOMES, INC REA1. EST A TE s..1r •• Rln!Ms p,_,,~ ~ 2436 w COMI HW\I 31S M.tww A~ tWwpo,i Bt.ach a.,. ltlAnd Hl·l411 '7UHt llE 111111 ILlllS ca. OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE PAMOIAMIC YIEWS Of Ocean, Nite Lites, Newport Center. 3 BR Estate Townhome. Gate Guarded Comm. of Harbor Ridge. Neutrally Decorated. Im · mac. & Ready For Immed. Oc- cupancy. Assumable Financin g. Lease Or Lease/Option. $699,000 - $2,500/Month. ·--....... , ....... 75.9100 u c°"* ... ..._ ... _,..c~ AESCIE.HTIM. A£Al ESTATE SERVICE'S IAYFIOMT LOT Best & last lot on Promontory Bay . $1 ,100.000 building pl ans for beautiful 4 BR home included 50' of waterfront. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 NEW BUSINESSMEN Contact .... DAIL y PILOT for lnfo,1111tlon rtgudlng the county require1Wtntt f9t Ullng 1 Flctttloue lullnna N~. Ml-4mm.m RAITHISI RACIOUS TOWMHOMll 3 Bdnn 2 bath Tn Ocie of Minion VleJo'• best artaa. StJler la flexible and will help finance lhil ODe. Include• wet· bar, French doora to b1Jcooy and a rirepit. fordetalll. 846·7171 ,. *'AYPIOMT• IOATSUP $555,000 WOW! Lowest priced bayrron t ho me ON BALBOA COVES. Large 4 bdrm, 3 bath. double fireplace. covered patio pl~ much more? Will AITD or sell-50'1, 75'1 or lease option! Wboo.., Prop. ........ •675-7060• Fer • Ad ill w_.•s Wortd Coat & .~! ' Stay Cool! OCEMRONTS •WOMHOUll ~-~.. Ulr.111.1111eyatd arl~~LY· Tt:·.~1:~:· lo dwn, k> mt. rate, llO yr lK dwn ,., .... owe ~R Nl\f DPLX·IO bllaDce, 2 Br l Ba, oall dwn, lo Int. rate, 2t yrs firs, lr1 r1rd, need• some TLC . Curt ~ NE\f DPLJc·real Hertlerta II,._ UM• lo down, low int. rate, 40 I yrioan. JACllS IEALTY , ' -·~~~-~~~ DICUTIVI NOMI . in San Antonio Hu area It Uplud. Tri·level with outJtandint view. 3SSO IQ ft. 3 BR 3b1, sauna 144.S,OOO. Good termJ. Lucille B. Scott, Bkr. 714/911·211111 TRY CRE ATIVE FINAN CI NG : COM duplex with good financ· mg. Each unit 3 Bdrm ? Ba. farmly room . Close to everything at $429,500 CoL.sw ... ,.,. MAL TOM HU L C.-tlwy. c:.-... -•"S·51t1 ..sAYllDI 3 bdnn, Z bath, frplc, dbl l ara1e. A·l CODd . 134,500. Oner will U · silt IA finuclll1. ..,~ ..... 541-1nt IMYESTOIS Will trade equity in M•a Verde t-plex for cOlldo So. ol San Dle10 Fwy. Bill KeaAedy. agt GMJ116 •..-sA .... • wml POOL~IPA Spacious 3 Bdrin, 2 ba. Beautiful area. SlS,000 dn. Asking 1240,000 11606/mo pymt. PP. Agt. 761} 70ll8 '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I VACANT MESA VERDE 11Z7,900. 3 BR 2 BA. 1612 Sandltwood. 20% dwn, owner will finan ce ll0,000 at 13% 5 yrs. By a&l· Don Pfaff, S46·Z313 E.OWMAIKn! 4 bdrm home in Costa Mesa. Won't last at Sl.20.000. t yr home war- ranty. Owner·ass1sted rmancmg. Call 979·5370. .ALLSTA"rE , A~LTORS !~!~ ..... !!!~ IMftU SO.OF HWY Terms available on this 1uper cle1n charmer. Priced right for quick sale . Grea Astle, 7"-1221 C..Quw.._... wnt f!IMAMCl-3 BR 2bl or 2+ 1uest ln owner's unit • 1110 I 8dnn rental ~ta1e. All ID lhall> coad. •/excel. loc1tlon. Owner wlll CllTY tie 2Dd TD. Beat buy iD tOWD for only ..... c:.1 ...... 1111 !JD ·.' r ,-1 I' '• '',I J NEW CONDO SO DM Agent. 631-5737 u.lltat.W.T.,._! Lowest price in College Part. 2000 sq ft 4 Br 1 ~ Ba family room home with RV access. StUer wUI CIJ'TY 11110.000 AITD at ~ for 10 yrs. Full pricelLJUOO. 751·3111 tW1i4•1Hdi 104t ••••••••••••••••••••••• NO QUALIFYING . SpaciOlll 3 Br w/atrium, ,.. the colleae Md shop· PinL Fantutic value. Onfy S12t,t00. Bkr MM1GI ARTIST ABODE, l mi to beech, 3 Br, 2 la SllOK, open hoult Swt l-5. 20612 Ecrd l.11., HB 960-2113 JBR borne ID prime loc. Creative f1na•ciog 1vai1. sia.-. atm .. , .... ..,, S6.a di lllD"9 JCMI la t.bit bullltiM 4 bdrm. z beLb bome. Ne» qulifr· ~mo.m ... or NO fOOLJN • .IUST •• for a Ir • l•oocl floors. Corter lot. VA/nlA ftkoomt. lkr ....... .,.. 1144 c--,-.-~__. _____ , &ii:;" ............ .. ~-.. ~ ::;}f '" MIATRAITll INT a..dllld 2 Id, lrt lat. ,.,.... " .. ••· •111 ""•"' Pm. a Id a",.,....,., 1a• ArWn. V1t11L No , •• nr,11 1 ................ ·s--· . .. .... '~ ' II rn .,. 1:1-slll .... . . 0.. ... 8/oW:..~. More value for DIMES your In the f•moua D•lty Piiot DIMES-A-LINE ADS AdverllH ltema up to HO In walue In OltnH-A-Line adl twtry Saturdlly In the Dally Piiot. lltng YOUf ad with c .. h lO any of our tltrH ClOflwenienl o"lcH or mall ~r copy w1tt1 a cMclt or money order for ltlt COrTtct 1mo11m. 20c per llne, $1.00 minimum. Sorry, no llwtatocll, p,roduce or plantt and no commtfdal .. art allowed. Each Item m1111 be priced with M Item over $50. Dlmt•A~ln• adt may lie~ at Ille C09!1 MIN office until 3 p.m. Friday, THE BIGGEST GARAGE SALE ON THE ORANGE COAST IS IN TH£ DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIEDS Daily Pilat YOUCAll CHiii •• CLaSSIFIED. To help you sell Items you don't need To help you find Items you'd llke to buy To help you publicize an ...nt « melle an ....... tnnounc:«nent ~ Walker & lee Rsal lt;f11le . ' IS LOCATION IMPOIT•MT? You bet it ii! So aettJe yo ur fami l y i nto lWvtt1ity Parlt. This 2 bdrm, 2 ba. hu central air and a covered patio. WitJi walkinf distance to everything. 139,SOO. Or a lot of caeh? Then call crassllltd. Thole things taldnvui> space In your home, Items you haven't ultd In ages, mar be 1u1t what SOIMOne else needs. So give us a call ... it's easy to use classilitd to get your hands on somecu h. '9!!1 ,_....,. ' ': A 'lcftHI helnftl ..... ........ .... ..... ~¢jlrllll ,.., ,., ... ,.... .... wtlldllMl•lltl ..... .............. ...... .,.,_.c_. .. .....,, •.e11IJ II lllllt trt -...c.a ........ ~ DtftrllllOI ti I .. DAii. T "LOT f tr 'l•f•r•tlltJI 111• ......., ..... ~' .... Eastbluff, S245,000. 4bdrm, 2111ba, Ira yrd, l207,000 uaumable 13% 1st. MZ-5161 i 640·8107. IAYSHOllS Charmin& 3 bdrm, 2 A PETE BARRE TI .. REALTY bath, immaculate condi· ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!•!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! lion. Private beaches. 1 ._ ______ _ Guard aate. $32S,OOO or 1-WTILUFF ree at sao,ooo II GIMMICKS This beauty below rmrbt value Is no doubt I.he best buy in Newport Beach. Lovely 2 sty, in· ckls 4 BR. 3 Ba + ram rm, elec kitcb, formal dining rm. adll play room, 2 fplc's, covered patio. Ideally situated on tall shaded oversized ' lot. Plenty of RV park· ing. A.sting 1275.000, 10% down owe bal at 11900 roo. Unbelieveable? Call 63\.7215 evs, 546·58111. IAUOAISUMD Attractive brick ex- terior. Lo cated on Marine Ave. Fully OC· cup ied commercial bli lding. Priced to sell at $498,000 by motivated owner. Attractive temw. 1714) 671-4400 ' tllJI Uf.Zlll HARBOR \ ·~ eo1•1ous & ••Y ~11w _ Completely redecorated 2 BR, den penthouse. For buyer wjth 1ood lute. Looks like model. Great assumable -Try 20% down or 6 months option. Greatly redK«I for motivated buyer . MM,000 Debbie Fratt -MAC· NAB-JRVIN'E REALTY 6'2·8235 OPEN l(OUSE FRIDAY -1011 BIJlkle Cove Eat -Newport ... f.:3 ... ,....._" C.wlll• .. j I I Mtr•lt4 ..._.. &....-. ,...... ..................... .. •••••••••••••• -•••••••••••••••••••• ... •••••••••,•••••••••• .......... ••••••••••••• ....... •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••;/;/• nLE INSTALLED ~-oo61&fam cltaa C090IAT10NS TIHS HARDWOOOFWORS YOOACLASHS CUSTOM INT/EXT ATWPLUMBI N AllKJocUCuarantHd bri&llt• .. wht 6PAJtTNEUHIPS Topped/removed, u · BuuUtuUyrluned YotaColle1eotlndl1 P!XJllRTSERYICE J:t4J't£G -Rt'~:::.. M i _John•3:J~ i..==-~:w..i=".:a"?......,..-I Cl1!U • 10 mlA. bitach. Formed b1 Altorne)'I pert clean upa, lawoare-Ind waxed. ·488l M~. &$$-l$M LOW RAT..S ---cu.tom Ctnmlr Tiit Hall, Uv/dln. ~ 11.5, MlOO ~novat..s.. 7)1.J47i ...... ..y f'N.KH£)()1C MS·ll7$ P\:zoertvM•ll._.. Pron\ptaerv. ~tust f:l room fr.50, r~b C:.... w..-..... WHY NOi' ON~ OF ... •••••••••• .. •••••••• •••••u••••n•••••••••• NELSONS PAINTJ,NG ••• z................... Chuck 87$ 140A _ pe(O::~· G1t1r./hm ................. 1-.1-.-.1. THEBEST!Slmmons llaul.cleaoup,eoncrcte URl(tKWORK · Small lnll'-JCt K~lcllComm PIOPllTY -.:_le • tJ · rptr~par. k Cr own mo ut d l nti Gardenl11L,_M666S4 rerroval.OunapTruck jobs. Ne wvorl, Co11l11 At•ooa0l' l't!ih11111 Jtefs, MAMACHMINT Trw ......... t i. • ~::fa· 531~1:0' mantles wall unit a' 0~ " ~ck se~v. 642 !6311 M~u. lrvaoe. Ref a. llc'd, Preci'1t. 837 263'7 Oran~e Co t1ro 15 yrs ·:~·;;~·.;;;;;.·,~·;1~;·;• •• Y No9te. 1~· ci.. cabinet a. Hardwood per ho~r.·:~~u~:~· DUMP JOBS &'7S 3175_. ---PAINTf.n Nto:to;os cx~ntnl'e Call ror Info Commercial Landacape SI~ 'fl~1~·•i;poo aalutlom lo wood pro Spec!allut In plants ' 'Small Movmi; Job (.\&.,tom 8nck Muonry WORK 30 yn up Int •nd r11h.•:1 -~ts 957.11318 1111~ · l , = blfml.13 ·WI 1 a rd e 0 m 1 1 n l C1J!Ml1S£64G l.391 Compl yard con1trur It'll Aroo1tlrrr1h~11• Hl-lllJ -.WY ....,.. . eual.W ~ Gretnbouatt Vegetable HAUUNO •DUMP lion, pool dec k• ' V1mi.P1m11n11Mb tll6 '"°l'fNO#. I ....................... c-.t/c..ctttt ....................... 1ardenln1. 0orclild1 It JOBS,u ldorRandy, rnrl01uret. Local n l• Plllntlllll'~thc01mt . ~~~'~.~ ........... . .. WICI II so~ ......... •••••••~•••••• DRY'WAlJ../ACOUSTIC othe. r exotlt plantll __ 1141·94!7__ ~&'11.2 Pl'dernn a the Nanw!.. JD Hom Reflnlihtni &~&deidlnc " THOllll~N S 14 yruxp. to'ully llc'd 6 .1!!:!'7-!278__ Harl Ma11onry Om•k, Ut. 2311534 1142 Otl62 AnUq~. kll , C•blnets ~'!n~ ~~·terr!l~1~1 ~=E OO~fe:.2 insured. "2·»49 KAf?Landse1pe Malnt. j i't.rv~v~~d~=a~~! ~~ic~~~~I~ Iler. tl1ep11lntrn11·roll arod FllW lintJ~.11450664 .&~ JJJ Doon windows pitlo • DRYWALL TAPING Restd/Comm. Cletn·UP. rln·up etc 1 ton truclt -· 7 Yl'!i t'JCP. i u11Uty work ....... Jltptilr ••DPllT• * TmSllYtCI * •4tl-JJJO• * ••••••• ••l!llll••llll••••l coveri.~eust.keu. c...lcTle Alltexturn •acoustlc UHaulln .548-24119 _ J:.!S.6.1LJmll4hrsl ..... l.QWr1l1-. 11n11fl4tilllW ••••••• -.~~r. ........... JAYETREECARt: ~. N10N2 su.zno ....................... Freeeet. Kevln4175-9088 Fomung Own 81.&Sintsll ; Hauling/clean up , dirt. •••••: .... ••••••··~ .... Mtkl' Stull Paint1n11 M COMMllCIAL Complete servke •nd ROBTSTEINBRON!R, =:e~~1~i~~ Dl ...... S.,.,.lc" 4 YrsExp.~ndsrapiog. shrub/tree tram . ell' •ABC MOV l.NC Exp . forda~le (Ju11lity l.11· f.MDUSTllAL stump 1rind101. 10 yrs GEN'LCONTRACTOR Call I 97 •••••oo••• .. ••••••••••• Grdng It Bmk Patios Junk trash. 841149114 pf'()(. low rates. Quick, t~ ~I M'11rk 1145 4200 ext> Lie. Ina. ~9308- Uc. tW3 645~ :nrtme 2-4639 E.M. Desieo ' Check Gnld Pro( Service at ·'---·· --cat\.'fulservu:e.~2 0410 11r ~ZKOO EMODIUM61 t:xpe111hap1ng,thinn1ng FJNEHOll E a •• 11,s.,.,.1c.. p . (' k a 1 ID e I s H ~C2tll Sub re9!owP~~He ~eu~~. ~~e~~i,:t~~ ••• ,MOVING• ,~ ~Pu:('~ 1,~f~ ~r w~~~::.~ & stump removal 7 yrs IMPROVEMENTS ....................... MTL/PCB Harvey ._. 115 l7· •_le. -Prompt.C111 759·1976 Top Quulily Spccrnl ....... , .................. ar C"a-rooms divided, exp.lns.~S· 1 ~-·~ Additlonl•Remodellne Hardisoo. S.S.3701. ~ Ser.lcH n iankLou John. curt! ln handUrlg. 25 yr11 HANGING SIO/ROLL dry wall drop ceilings & Tree Triming. clean ups, ~ .... ••••j••••• r:JIM' • IMtcitACULATI Bectrlc.. •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• -TREES/SHRUB TRIM l'X~. Competitive r ate#. 011c. on 'pu1wr. Strip tnm rarpentry to com Mor1thy service free est. ·a;s;;: ~'St~~ ~n Cll .... Sertlc" ....................... Graphic Designer Garage & Ydtleuir-up~ Noove ime 7 135~ eirw.,Scoll64S-932S. . . plet1on Ca ll Tom or Jeff 646·7S56 Tony's Tree Al!IM.~·8'l4 u HGmlfrt1"1SSOttlces ELECTRICTAN -prited Logos, brochures, f'reeest. SS7·827l STARVING COLLEGE UC PAPER HANGt.ll atOOJ~IJora93 3886 Si'rvace -__!__ -••Ru~ right, free estimate on fiyers, ong art work, ... __ --ST\JDENTSMOVING Bonded & guu Nn Job • ....._ TypillgSerfice ~ ;, EitpOayWork. largeorsmalljobs. lettertieads. la youts • ~a..McJ CO Lie tT124-436 t.ooamalJ ortoolarge -·..., •••u•••••••••••••oo••• -................... Uc,tltBZ 770.6M4 .......... l'W'V UC. •31118621 fl73-·03S9 ~~hr 493·874.S ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jn.sured 641·9427 Free est. Tony 1198 2728 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TYPING Past I C· Drl~ ,...klD& lot u-1.1.u•cA.a.ls-ywAWll • WaotaREALLYtU:AN ""'HUSGROW' -REPAIRSFORLESS ' re al aealcoatio ---"" ''"' a.oolir. (8Hrs. req ) RESID/COMM 'L ~ HOUSE' Cal l Gingham WA ,.. --,...,...... Shingles. flat. 30 yrs curate, reas. Cassette P atn. Lic'd. c. Custom homes. rram· Days Eves 3> yrs ex~. Do my own ••••••••••••••••••••••• Girl Free est. 645_5123 I ~"TAR Vt NG ACTORS •••••••••••••••,•.••••••• l'Xp ~est; 110..212s trans. 6.11-4065 e"'.,.e!:.._ a 1.41 lne. remo~el, Frueh 6'2·3298 64H259 work. Ur d. Al 1146-8126 C;,irpentry . Masonry -, . • MOVING COMPANY •BRY ('NT S• IEPAllS OHLYI Wi.dow Ce.c.ilMJ A PAVING <blrs, skylights & patio PEP GIRLS cleaning UC'DELECT ICIAN Roofing Plumbing ~HIN S CL:,ANI ~? Fast & Careful Lowest Walkovenng Remo\ al All""' 646 64fil •••••••••••H•••u••••• Stri in coven. 841-3652 senice. Homea·Ofrices· Qua!. work ReJ!s. rates Drywall Sturro Tile ,1 rv~l·e at or~1~7 Rota Law Allows. M /C All Types. 642 1343 . ·.J~S. "Let the Sunshine In·· l!ie&ll.'4ilALllCom~ 'a1.1Wesfd, C:.,.•• . A . 548.(1663 Freeesl. 6.11·5072 Tom J!errodel LB 646 9990_ ~:'111:~,~ousekeeplng \11sn Uc/Ins. 673-0&3 Pladtr/ltpair ~:~ :g:i~~ ;~h ClCall~nst~e w~~ Lie. 97312 645-1111 "fiNE'":!'Nl''s'H"woait• c:o..cton. • ...,... EITOP QUALITY GReneral ·M&a,i_i:tainant'e SUpplles furnished PcillHllg ··r~·.:~··•••••• •• • •••:• i·onstrurl ioo rebates -earun .:.. <X>llM RESJD n-.. r~-·Door h -••• .. ••••••u•••••••• ectriral work at epacrs .,.,curating Trustwonhy 9S7 800J ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...,,..., ER PATC HING 673-6743 S7J..S229 •RESIDENTIAL• Joeca • A h 1 ...,..,..,..eung/ 5 ung ... _1 Reas rates S31·5055 • allt ••Ra.r640..5144 ----· flnrpa1nt1ngby R1l·hard Rcstul't'os Int ext JO -:= --Avg l sty $30 avg2sty P I m~a· srp al Randy ~taCdM .._ ~r L.....-L.Doon ---HOME IMPROVEMENT-Quality Work. Depeoda Stnor l.it\ ms 13 yrs or yrs Neat Paul54S 2977 Huber Rooltng-alll)'pes S4S Chns957·m av DI • oo ln1. CHARRENOVATING All phases, lie, bonde<I. ~ al ble Ref~ Call Pam & h pyloc: lcustome s Ne-N·recover·deck~ ----Reelllfadlt, repai,rs, Compl · / & t ex,per. Free est & advice •••u••••••••;••••••••• Rep r Mwnlenanre Bob Dwight 673 7012 Jp ·a r 0 Nl·~I pati•hes & texture~ Lie ~411802. S48 9734 Clear\liew Windows aeall:o .. a, stri ping. . · tnt ext cus · AllenConst (Mikel •FRENCHOOORS• Heatl~g , rurpentry, · Thunkyou. 6~1441 Fre.tst. 893·1439 · -XJn1serv1t'e,freeest .._AM/eves. cabmets. 25 yn. 64S·3749 49'7·S322/4911·4863 1~ panes installed. 6 · ~It•<', tile. Fre~ est No Experient'ed & Reliuble CuttoM Pai.m.a !-:O'S P'LA.sn:RI NC~ HewDort loofillCI Jien____ 67J.9018_ ........ CUSTOMADOITIONS ADD'NS/REMODEUNG slideropeni:a,S7SOcom· Job too small 645·2811 Perso n Wil l Oo 2.'iyrs exp Lie. 4o!l941 AllTvpes Int orF.xl "QualityRoof1n11 fOr ~ ............... f~ l fi~:so R~f!o d8 11i Plus. Lic'd. Geor11e pl(unpainl ) 640·106S CM. Hoosedcanui . 549..:.t.~ I Bonded Ins Refs Color fi45..11258 F·ree e~I ~'ine Holl'll's .. 645·0104 AGGlfllSIV& le111 l ~ . . Pllmer&Soos,S57·6932. f•wltaeltfWIMag lb1daJljobs.lge/sml HOUSEWORK DONE t>xpert 96309_11Dirk PLASTER&STIJCCO Sewillg/Alterati•a rtp1-.ttlti0ft, law of· W 'ali • C AddiliOD5, remodels, ....................... Quality,exper,lir'd BY J APANESF. L-J:BPAINTING , RepairNOJObtoo:.ml ...................... . fte&J&hn.54S-IU2 ~ 1B!'U. :•k°tt. h~me improveme.nt, •SPECIAL* ~vel 894·9798 Proless1on1I Call Yoshi. SPECIAL! INTtEX1, l 1i4S-.:t20J!&l5 4199 INDUSfRIALSEWING M ....... , Ramdel Tr0.0Z36 ~. doors, patios, Any chair hand·stripped Ben's Home Improve· ~:ms dr):'.wall. La!I)' 64S·9383 ..._..__ ,tCUTrt ING1 of r!.~n04rs50 • d r ive w a ys re · gl d $197< A I'' Small My price .,_.__,, rieeesimaes '""' ........ ,.P-:.~•••••••••,._ .. _1_ • • or re ue . ... ment 111c .. Ta m :. •••••••••••••••••••••••' ---- For Classified Ad ACTION Calla Daily Pilot AD-VISOR 00·5678 • B&byait,~pr homes, 1 _..,..._.......... . plumbPh1ng, etc. Lie. To.uch Of Class tn Sen-ice. All jobs. big or ••••••••••••••••••••••• are ,small.! CdM , NB Dramsdeared from SIO I CARAGI;= SALE ads 1n yr-._'!e1,M7Ylhe. 'w'C:''(;''ici'...... 378711. 960-063S teners, 711 w. 17th St. I small.~ S231 -EXP ER PR EPARER I Exp d. Ron 673-6477 Plumbing Rep;un. lhe Daily Pilot brrng 9¥·f!2,646-s759 . ~ re 1 rp fl ea;::ls SEU. idle items with a IA2, C.M. 642·7712 Repa ir s. pa 1nt1 n g . Enrolled to pra1·t1rl.' I 0 L Man~un Pamlln)! Freet!SI M&M 642 9033 haPP>' re:.ults To plai•e ~=====~~ Have IOfnelh!ng to sell' ~~=un~~l a. Daily Pilot Classified Class1f11'<I ,\II~. ~our one· carpentry Chnsllan. re· beforC' the IRS Quality (.'u.,t work Lie 11362478 -)our dra'4 rn g c::ird. Find what you want in Claasit.ifd·adsdo It well. Wort uar. 645.3716 ~---___ stoy~hop1m1i.: n•ntcr ~ll!!'.!:9262 • at reas <'OSI. ~9_2418 l Ins t're;.-~t 731 8281 Want Ad Results 642 S671l phone 642 S678 toda ' Dru~ Class1r1e<!!.__ Or1ngt C:0. DAILY PfLOT/Thurad1y, Jtnulty 21, 1982 MllVa a. TNlt r ...... , UIO M•W.tH 7IO tWpW..W 710 tWpWllllM 71ff Dlilll" llJI ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• ~T••••• • ••• • ••• •• •• •• ••H•••• •••• ••• • ••• ••• •••••••••••••••••• ••••• ............. •••••••••• COIJ>l.Would Love To ~ Deldtd fllll or CLUX·TYPIST Noni. lll!!!lll•illl••••• · ..... ~Ce. Party with You ! Call Ptr few 1' "'°·/· irl w/ PIT help needed for hrtthboard operator • Oflct All typa ol real estate L ts 11 e o r Sy I v I a ooe other rhll only. buly elfd. Hin office 111 refiel niPl auditor. for JlfllDID lnv..un.nuamce lMI. -me.1111D31 •amcwm lrvliaeto.,.lltHct. lyr luury Laauu Beach llHUDIATILY lf t llh....._ ...... .,. 000 OHkea..w 44H .... lllW 4411 •:t:.•ll ~ prot jjddttirn 8t:.s.:!1'~~. a~t~~t~ ~~~e s~•Py,j,~·: ':~: =~~71~E~t El .s:.= -. ..................... ••• .. •••••••••• .. •• .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• .......... ••••••••••••• 641-217 "'"° ~.;rn1-:ag~ ll·M m. C.M.boaw.W ·t715 U:31H~30 Pll Mon thru HOUSECLEANEltS ..._. ..._._ HI0 12$0/Mo. rem. wntd, 9U72sq. ~ Sl.CIClper orOffite.woaq.ft, -----Babysitter miut Hjoy F'r l. Contact Glen aieedfd. P\llJIPT 1vall. •-llOflM •••••••................ •plil ulll, abr N. b<'b, IQ, ft .• 317S Birth., N.B. ,..a ves::u;• Eam H "At on Balboa PIOF. ISCOIT pl&floa wllh chUdren. l Sc~U3·1'31 50_h!:,_541:;...:·'1:..:.;1S=---NIVU A r&I SUNNY l 8R A PT 3 BR. 2. SB A Condo eal SU·54'13. laland trust deeds. Over Triih, Stt-8086 aft. !£m n.ilbt ptr wffk + IOIM Comparuon HOllltlleeper '-.•!l!!lllllllml!l~~-I Wort C1ole to..._ WITHPATIO.s:m W/P'P, p°'· Jae. Mike: Huntlnston Beach. 4lt lN!# .• J. r..... -dayt. Own trans. CdM Ll u ·ln . Monday · •·HOUSECLEANE•s l YICTOI 14CD N. S&Mar1ton '41-IUO dys; i4Z.Sl'78 Main St. 380 •Cl rt llJAIL SP4CI ...,.,,eq1aty. ~or loog I-.&. & VIC' ,lt&IS area. Collt&Utudent ok Ftidaya. Must Drive. "' • 0 ,....._.,, leNk• m-trOt' .!!!!:..... $195/mo Sierra M1mt. on Harbor Blvd. ~sq. ~.S5000mlnlmum. ..... .al Relllble wtreterenrea Balboa Pen in. Ref hr. p 'Car.MS·51Zl _... IOS'tr " = a...-.1 Nwpt Bch r 11 h Co Ml 1334 rt + ator:fc 35' n • ew•:z· lttr .m:...,.'1343. Desired. 873-$54$ HOU--R ., ,a ........ .a.H 1m1 Y Orff. -· • · n'.._.__ e. · · 67RJ 6 dSCOITS t 1 p C'j ... h .. ., ALat•d JtOO non·tmltr. l300 per mo. Newport Beach. 504 N. ll'tCWIU'lu ca S s-6700 ... B.4CK • BE:TTf.R Cook, exp. In lnatltullona enn. • oa -rs•• O.'tr ........ .............. ••••••••• p 831-7215 NewportBlvd.MOsq.rt. THANEVt:R ! 2"4HRS WYSITill rooking for amall plua. ot. Harbor bel forMlaiouv•i8di•. SE •WI~ D f'EMAUto1hr3br2ba to900aq.Ct.,Avall.al8S<NEWPORT BE-A CH. Wid ow h u US for 669·0~07 Personneededtomellt privateconv.hosp APP· llpm.67!~1Rlla_ -..,.toltlrD.,_, " " house on Balboa l•land a sq. rt. Sierra Mgmt. Prime loc on busy Pac TD's/l\f' Loans. lOK up. 6/ old 11 f h I ly at thti Garden5• 450 1...v-oay Df1tr sUll1. PTT. VILI •GE " Co 0•1 ,...,. NoCr~it ./No ""n"lty ( Outca I) yr II r 1 teur 00 • Gl-neyr'", 1.11gun~ 8"h. ""9"' ~ mo. Judi 67$.$216 . ... ........ 0.l Hwy Ideal ror retail -. ...~ • •. I :~ to approx. 2 :45pm ..... .. • .. • ASSIST AMT .... New 162 bdrm luxury Female. non·amkr. 3 MIWPOIT a.ndl orolflce uae. t,000 OsWsooAuoc.&73·73 11 everyd1y~ Mon-Fri . 4fM...:....*'15----.-,_..i.ttln& 1a operatlou Parl Um• laterl or adult •SIU In 14 plan1. l bdrm, 2 ba dpx. 2blb to EllCUT1VISTI to3,000sqft avall. 35,-. Yield PENTHOUSE MUST 8E DEP t;N COUllH !I Catporate maill•tocll bolileplllll ... .......,. Bdnn trom S4IO. 2 bdrm Buch on Peninsula. Luxurious suites av'aH. (7l4)MS·1l00 $16,735 seuooed lat TD DABLE. MUST II ve Orange Coast Savin111 rooms. Dell verlu, IMitper IOI' tUc.kt dlM from 1$70, Townhouse l250mo + utll. 111 • lut ror sul>leue in one or Ccata Mesa. buay Nwpt on 1.3.33 acres land at ISCOITS within walking distance has 1mmed. p/time operatloa ol machines • ..t. 141-tAI. llille ti ti:om '640 + poola. ten· mo rent. Call Suat or Newports exclusive of· Blvd. MOO tt rree stand Ade I ant o . S an "''t;,f;::,les to St~reek Elemen openin4 Good dnving shlppinJ. retelvlnc • ...::Bnft=~·------ ftll, waterlalla. pond.s! Beth 67S.5046 fice complexes. Airport In& bide. fully impr~ved Bernardino County. 15"k MIC VISA ~~:r~e. ~r:1b1~i drga~I r1et"P ormd. CHoua 1r1s:L81:30n dam1 ·.· heavy Uftin& involved.----... -~-· ~·for cookl.nc 6 heat· Neat. mature prof. d<111e. lndudes: LnCl. c111t. ldul ret11l or int only monthlY. due I Experience preferred. PAITTM inc paid. From San stralefit female. non· •fte<'eptlphooe office. Rent S1.051sq rt yr, 2". discount. (714) Travtf 5450 ~l after S:30pnl. 754 1801. 1700 Ada ms R/E finn. Call, 640-0123. .,_ bpudiq J_. . 1 DiecofrwydriveNorth smker,toshr 2 br,l~ba •Utilitles •Janitonal 63l·SMOaft.4 751-a da. Or 493·1153 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ave.C.M.E.O.E _bel ____ w __ een'"""'"-'1'-.JO ....... '-s'-:_30_. __ 1 c;,tll•I Hr• 11111 on Beach to McFadden apt. Close lO beach. •lOOfreecopies/mo. For Leue: olflce, 164 sq. and~71Jltves. 2 f1y for price ol I! PA DILIYBY opea6ap rw w ....., • ll\ell Welt on Mcr~dden SltS/mo lncl. utile •Ample parting ft.+ warehouse. 2S08 sq COMPETITIVE FIRSTS Coupons. 1.3 Countn e11• Bll*inc FulU .. une. Good dnvino ~ _.....,., t ri14..-., mat11tt --a. "' to Seawlnd Village. s.36-D> •IUtchen•Sect'yserv. ft O~at loc. Street vis 2nds. 3tck available. ~-&31-3669 -UNDllWIJTll record.640-7980 " for R. c•rtaer. o ~vatt am~ ... <114im.Sl9S. Hefp! Mother• 500 ottd available ability. Forbes Rd .. Res. or inrome prog. up VERY BUSY loan omce ~"?:!~e ~~~h3 ~i:.~ »U JToldl. Call J.Spm. Wlffletiw.._.. holistic roommate, In• Call Roxaone975-0740 ,Lagun,• Nieue99t (by to ~.mi~ ~.lso cas00,/or ·~:,....& 10 local Newport Reach DISICUll eaur liUgationexp. Top NMRl.ext.>a.AU,., f),m • Wlf1U11 f bdrm rondo home. M/F. Non· a cldesll space. Active rwy). oann: 4 -3.577 ; rost g · 5 10 1 0 Pt,....... Savings' Loan, is seek 3PM·11PM shirt, Mon. skills required Call Andra. apt. All util pd All i smkr. S27S + util. airport area. R.E. in· 497...,.. facevalue,(714)760-ISSI ••••••••••••••••••••••• ingexpenencedloan' thruSat.Wllltram.Sea Barbara Murr1y~m•111•111••• . .... amen1Uts.846-06l9 8S74l6 vest. olc. Call Paul or>• trltla.t~ 4500 or 857·2848, ask ror JobtW..t.d. 7075 underwnters tor con· Lark Mo tel, C.M. 64M4ti6 Doug N 1 DvaoeorSteve. _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• venlional real estate 646-7445 btwn Noon & PA.SlUPIUOM L1ve·1n Assistant for s days a wttr lDclud.., elderly gentleman. Live Saturday. Art °' dnlt· U1 2br. 2ba apt. in C.M. i.nC bactc;round bel:pfU. Ex·exeruhve wishes to f\aU company beoeft&a. maintain optimum in· Apply: PENNYSAVll dependence but needs 1860 Placentia Ave .• some assistance. Ideal c.M. ._ 4000 RmmttoshrDuplex.HB. · ewport nvest· N•••8• .. ••••B•i•••h•••••••• ---y 1 d loans Salary com6 .P.~M::.:·------••••••••••••••••••••••• lblltfr8ch.Sl90.Avail ment Counselo r s, . ,»7$ re .8860 sq. oung marre man _ LagunaBfachMotor lnn, Febl.960-86.19.Eves. 7S2-Sut. ft..orless.MlA 1one.S& 4vaH....ts/ wouldlikeoddJobseves mensurate with ex- 98S No. Pacift'c Co ast FREE RENT • per sq h Agent Pwwattls/ ' wllends. Cao do a perience Exrellent H Uke living alone, but su 5032 Lolt Ir FMcf variety of handyman growth Potential with ~, Laguna Beach. can't afford It'. Over... UptoJ mos if you act by · ag 0 . w~i.1 Kit h ,,,, F-"' lsl p . H B r """"'en rt ·o r"l" 1·11 ••••••••••••••••••••••1 jobs. 972.95~ eves; ask '1 gress1ve company Y. ~ y, c en female wanted to share ""'· · nme · · 0 · """"-.. c nc ~ "' 1 · ±-a•c--&.. 5100 ror Bill. Please call for apPoint available. Low winter wi'th same o.aau tum 2 fire loc. Competitive up ind. bldg wlapprox. -....._ .... at ...... ........ "" t XI 750.,, ft r a Ful ••••••••••••••••••••••• T-...v & Joes Car Detail· I ment· .. .,....~ .. .,. Apply AM only. OK'~ Doouts. 2959 Fai rview M.CM. Donut shop, p/time, AM. noexper. necessary Ap· ply in person : Dlpp1ty Donuts, 1854 Newport Blv!L..f_M. applicant would be an ..::.:.=:..._--_..,._----r es ...... ~ bdrm. I ba apt Costa ra es, nt exposure. .,... · 0 c sp ce. · H C ft Cl ~ .. J Ms Oc-ny Pans1a Call 960 .,. I r d d XI t S W ave ra ass in your in°. Call d;iy or' night · ... Balboa Inn. S90 & up Mesa S21S mo Util Pd now, ·Qt7l. Y nc Y · " · home , earn r re e 9fi6.57290r 975.7463 714-645·6505 mtelllgent, retJred male ~--- m good phys1ral condi· ASSISTANT weekly. Kitchennelle, 75l-2160or493·9S601Lisa <Xfire space for rent. 3115 Santil Ana loc Paul mer<·hand lse. Sally HEWPOITIALIOA ocean froot.675·8740 M/Frmmteoeeded to shr sq. rt. second floor. fTanklln7S2·.llil_ 848·~3 Seniors, Invalid Sl!rv SAVIMGSILOAM Room and bath. Fem 3br apt very close to Prestigious WestcllH Wanted 800 to IOOO Sq Ft ---Shopping, clea ning, llOO lrvlneAve., NB SJOO l mo . M any beach. mo.675·5048 areBlda$Cal.001l~~~~nMedical TlnNBorStWNBgforLlolCng SCRAM-LETS ~~J!'..g, pra(' nurse E.O.E. M/F amenities. ~5·2439 eves, g. ....., . ......,1. erm ora e ANSWERS - DRIVER WANTED PIT dri ver wanted for busy NBexe('., approx 2 wks per mo. Must be flexible & able to be "on call" days & eves. Non drinker & over 2S yrs old. 642-0380 days tion who would provide Persoonel/ Adverti•l•I' professional comp•· Dept. hu openiDa per ruonship forfree board & expulliOD · Npt. Bell/. :• modest compensation. Fiaaacial aervacea firm. 937-m79dys MICFIRJSTIAN RMMTE Fountain Valley, near &M-94lO HelpWmhd 7100 Beaut Call 615-2444 Good typin&, abort.hand, aper-req. Noa-smoller. 641M11J3 between f.2. Lag. Beach room WS, 28R lBA., E.C.M. Fwy, olfire in law suite 3800 sq. ft. with front or Ukely Cress •••,••••••••••••••••••• G Yt Pvt entrance & bath 1213 mo. &31-4796 Dan for attorney or other rice, large rear door, set Tiger -Slogan 0~~ ~Cf~;:,~ "~!ft' Wortin man 494.44$9 Ftosharechannmg 2 Br. professional. 963·0783 up for machine shop, OR ELSE ACCOUNT AMT ror busy salon Lu: re CdM guest house with Sup ER o F F 1 c E 32-.,. a sq rt or S8501mo Wehava a lot or freedom The Irvine Co has an 'd NB &3 L390 Bayfront. rm & ba, pool, fri>lc S32S1mo Cindy SPACE, & reception 1240 IAeao Ave Umt G. m this rountry of ours unmedlate opening for ll _ 1 jacuzzi. sand y beach. 7fi0.8233. area. SOOsqJt. s.590/mo Costa Mesa Da ys , In Ame n r a we say an Accountant in our Booltlteep1ng rlerk, PIT, Imo 840-8087 9\are Beaut deror Tur· util incl. Sec system. 540-9352, Eves !46·068t be!Jeve It or not In some Agriculture D1v151on rall Tues th u r Fri· Gated Area Pool Ocean Ue Rork Condo, p,1 rm we lb a r , opt i 0 n a Co!.'la Mesa Bldg M 1 I other coontnes they sa} The pos1t1on involves between 9-ll AM Ask Side Hwy S Laguna & ba, wsh 1dr}. pool, warehouse spare. Clos ml sq. rt with ll\•1ng bel!eve 1t OR ELSE preparation & 1tnalys1s ror Jan642·3431 Rm. BA. Pvt Ent, $295 q11et&pleasanl! S400 + fwys & OC airi><>rt Call quartersororticeon9700 ~&,,_:,___-~ 5300 of budgets, f1nanr1al loeldiHper Pl Util. Empl Rer ex ss12252 Dtana,54.>-0636 sq.rt blacktopped & ~ statemenl&forecast,as Part lime typing 10 ~722W Eves, MIF 10 shr ib;-m;;;se, -reoced Will sell, rent, ••••••••••••••••••••••• well as all phases or key 2 afternoons· per Hot.ts. Motets 4100 E1side C.M $2.50 + ,, • H U Nall~~ T 0 N !'..?,~sd1der opt ion By iteneral ledger arcount I week Diann •••••••••••••••••• ••••• utlls. 6'$-1688 I OIO 5/F Slrite V'!.u"r642 4610 , fOUN lDS :-~:~~:;s a~c~~ S36-2032 SIALAll MOTfl Mature adult to shr • •3Pr1vate0ffices lnd11Stnal bldg, 6000 sq. D commuoicationsk1llsre· IOOllHPO Wkly rentals now avail I beaut. house "''fri>lc & • •2Starr Area I\. wlspnnltlers. lrg rear IDE fREE qwred. Knowledge or Part-lime leading tu Sl05 ' ~P· Color TV jac,H.B 963-5766 • • Wetba overilead door & renred M computer systems pre rull·llme. F1C book· Phones 10 room. 2274 to. ---Available now·lst F1oor ~C::r"~~~~f~ Cal~ r~rred. Sen.d resume keeper ror mortgage ~~~rt rva CM ' .. T... 4350 -( 4 ! 1> au I a r In 0 . c M 642-5671 With salary h1Story to brokerage 10 Newport • "GU ...... l"'"CH 549-9671 _ ,.,.._..Dtc. Real'h, g rowt h op ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ""' E.~ l HEID A PUCE7 $60 single gar sare & Xlnt Location. Up to 1280 u--455 THE IRVIMI 0 . portunity, sa a~y com R Weeltl R ' I Sq Ft 7.,. p rt 1 ---r ILACI LAI/Mak ~~DI•. me~surate with ex eas. y ates secure. 731 W 18th St. .,. er sq n· •••••••••••••••••••••• N ker Kitchenettes-Phones C.M.673-7787 I l'ludin~ utilities Except Storage·R.V trai ler· Lost· Jan 7 in Lag. p lo•C·ltS12 pe:1e"~· C u1i°K·srno "Z" Channel Movies Hntg Beac.'h garage, S60 ~ectncit . 4.!'·44_51__ boat, C.M. S351mo. Kirk Bearh White around 1"9e, CA. 92713 pr .... err'64o,~ a e, Saodpiper, 1967 Newport 631.<*)0 m:>uth. 835-2487 or aft 6 '"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!II Bl.CostaMesa645·913L rro. Storage Only Ask -494-7249__ r= '2" Keith, 962-4471 ~ Mo-P.rivale office/ R ... W.ted 460 FOUND· 2 sml blk dogs- ... .._, 4175 Wests1de2car garagefor parlungl~tlthenette spC' •••••••••••••••••••••• 11 17 V1r Federal & ••••••••••••••••• ••••• • storage space. Ul6C~ Mall\ St Hunt. Bch Single Mom, ~. res1><>nsi Wilson CM ~·6687 Admip. Assistant, gen. duties in youth shelter 12/hrs a week _!42·2331 ..._ •• Gf'09 HM 645-1693 Dally Ja11tr All ut1I pd ble dependable wl4 yr ---· --- Sr. Clllens '8.ss.622l ---Avail. now• (71418411·3133 old'soo seeks C.M. house Found Female Toy Poo· A" MAMA'9EI Offke Ratti 4400 ___ or apt 10 rent by Feb 1 dle. champagne, male Needed for a ''ery nire. S-.,.1..,.. 4200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... .,....... _,. 'Inn• Shepherd Husky blk & all adult l2 unit complex IOOllEIPEl,F/C Manage dept ur 6. Pust through general ledger Sryrs management eper helpful Co benefits Ap· ply 1660 Plarenha Ave , C M ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1617 Westcl!H NB. Want 2T06MOMTHS _,,_ .... ers·~ -tan with Mich tag: in H.B. 2 br, p, ba 3pt Easter/Summer, weekly, 1 rina.ncial insl. 7000s.r Short term orfice space Retired cple nffd 2 3 Br. Female Shepherd tan & avaHable ror ma nager C..tr RetaM Stott l Br., sleeps 4 Balboa lst floor. A ent 541·5032. available 10 pnme loca 2 Ba uni condo or apt in b I k pup p y , M a I e with a large rent reduc K1trhen help needed Perunsula.675-0680 lloo .. near A1rporter Inn. Bturrs area, up to Boubter, blk. tn·rolored lion 7J9..1742 run or p lime Apphca V.catM.Ratak 4250 EXECUTIVE walking d1stanre to OC S7001~9625$33 __ P eacoc k Newport lions Mon thru fT1, 9 to SUITES Airport Xerox machtnf 1 2 BR house wanted, 9\elter, 125 Mesa Dr . .ASSIMILH llam Island Sweet ••••••••••••••••••••••• IN and other amen1t1es Bal Isle Rer Pete Costa Mesa 644·3656 Growmg NB mfr nl'ed5 Shop, C M 440 E 17th ' I ' OCEANP'RONT 2 & 4 Br Call Eva 9 • --I b r 1 g h I p e r s o n St C M 645-2883 I Avail WU1ter Weeki) tan AGE 1714,833.9778 675·5278 eves, 79·8860 l.ait White M Poodle u; w assembly exp Must ~ - - Dri•~/rrtiltff Oppty for advancement, Must be High Sctiool Grad, over 18, good dn V· 1ng record Neat ap pear11nce. Come tn for interview. Flf:EWAT STORES Z706 Harbor CM 556-0363 •• .. ••mceM• Depe ndabl e. ex · perienced, full time days for o(fire bldgs Newport Beach. Phone 644·1526 9 to 12 week da s MASSEUSE Wanted for South Coast Village Salon Please Call 1714) SSS. 7136 MECHANIC Macgregor Yachts. 1&31 Placenti11 C.M. EXECUTIVE 'cal Assistant, front SECRETARY ' back, EKG. Ven a Pro<essionaJ with xlnl. puncture. typrng. shqrth~nd &_ t.J_ping ~1720 abilities needed for MBifcAL .ASST Newport Beach Real PIT. Exp·d front ore. Est ate I n vest me n t Some IDS., It. bllllpg • Finn. Accoun~i~g back· typing. Fashion Island, ground a dehn1te plus. N:B. 644--0381 Call Sherri 549·2988. · · . --------Middle-aged rompamon fftMEIALOFFICE to elderly lady Prvl N.B. firm needs flex ible, room fl Bath + board & mot ivated pe rson Sal. N.B. area. close to Answer phones, type, bay&bch. Ref required. daily banking Must be -"6'/3-~2409;.;:.;;.;;. ___ _ accurate with figures Models ' Escorts Fem ~1·9277_ E 0.E. ()Uy TopSS. fftMEIAL OFFICE 642·4852 Art l2. Expeneore helpful I Modlflu.t•tcl Good typing ability Needs taU attractive Pro r 1c1 ency w 1 t h men/women for agency figures, l~key by touch asst ots. 548-7762 Opporturul)' for adnn· cement E.xrellent com· MOTB. MAIDS pan) benefits Informal 12J p/time pos1tion.s for office C M Call M1lhe small motel. CdM 14.25 all_er9a.!f1~5-SllOO--'---t tostart 673-4520. Monthl . 673-787!._ _ • Pl.Ali ----<!a)'S. • yrs Old Lamb Cut \"1r I be ra.st & arrurate Non C.AS .. El/P·tW Palm Springs area !Mon· New luxul') oHice spare PllMIH.I. LOC. I Atlanta & Brookhurst smoker KNOX CO 1 Afternoons & wknds Ap lerey CCJ condo 3 BR 2 10 Irvine's busies t <Xfire suites a\'a1I 1m ....,.1/l••Ht/ H B RF: WA R 0 1 ' (714167S.288S ply The Earl's Plumb GEHEl.AL OFFICE Ba , rurn w/atnum renter' Easy Frwy ac· med rrom s 1.oo per sq. ..... 1 -1~ AITENDENT mg 1~ Newport A\e Typing & hght book· MUISISAIDH Need all shirts. Can earn $61 00 per 8 hrs . Lescoul1 e Nurses Registry 351 Hospital Rd., Ste. 119, Newport Gotr, tennis Daily, cess Avail now' Call fl. full sen·1re lease. ••••••••••••••••••••••• F.ou nd M Shepherd Live in $2001wk Lt CM 6411289 _ _ I keeping. Pa rt 1t1me , weekly & monthly rates fordetails. 16371 Beach Bh•d ...-..U I Husky mix, Blk!Tan nursing for elderly Duldcare/Hou.sekeeper Mon·Fri, flexible hrs av11I. 714 558 8001 551-1_231 l,40.4230 7141842-6636. 1 malt Oppart.ity SOOS Michigan ID FToy Poo woman Wanted after school, 645-5421. 9-5PM,ask for Mark ~ol 405Frwy _ ....................... ,die Champagne F 848-296319621643 babysitt er & P T c;;e;~-Labor -- MAUI: lbdrm rum Con •DB.UXEOFFtCES• YM"WMptH..t.or LOSl~G LEAS~ti quit I Mixed Cocker blk M AITENDENT housekt>eper Hours, Golf Storage PIT do. Be st SWI mm 10 g r~o~rri~ ~os~4~. ~o Well app()inted ortire ~~ ~~;erl~Sseandl( ~~t Retnever gold F Ter Live IO, help disabled 2PM·6 JOPM 9'7S·04l~ or I pnvate Country Club' beach ~wltly Tennis l<ase required AdJ overlooking HaFbor On turesmcl~inl( nermixwht. proress1onal woman., ::198 art 6 Deerheld c.all: 644-5404 8 30am 661-38911. · Airporter Inn. 2112 Du· Par Cst Hwy Approx D:splay cases, wait in~ Found. Male puppy, hlk ~~Mesa. 551·3442 ~· _ m Tues·Sat Tahoe Ski Cond o. ~nt CaJIAM 833·3223 l}XJOs_g_Ct.17~41~5·7_100 ~oom chairs, Reaut)' w.s.ll ver. und.en·oat Attendant L1ve.1nto help 1 . CLERICAL Gen. Orr1 ce Cink Northstar 3 hclrm , l7TH STREET NB Sm Ortice nr OC Salon hairdryers and LaCresta, Dana Pt disabled woman Own j Personnel clerk PoS1hon Typist.~ 8am·5pm sleeps 8 S800 wkl~ Airport. Approx 350 sq hydraulic chairs. m1r 6§1·8478 bdr~M .6Ci·S839 ritinl(, bte pr entry, de Perm lion Entry ifi0.129.1 CO\T A MESA ft. 5350 mo. 54().2960 rors. shelves and plants Found. Lrg Black Liib ---tail record main tenance level, 4 wpm Sma II Beach. 642·9955 __ _ Nursing LVMCHAl&E 11·7 Relier. Conv. Hosp. Nwpt Bch. Re hab oriented nurse. dedlcat· ed & with smiles Con· tact. Mrs Slone. 642-11>44 No. Tahoe Condo. 4 Br. 5 2 °' 3 room oH!ce suites ~l'WJ)Ort Bc:H·h, µrirrw Also. make.up, shampoo I m 1 x , m a I e V 1 r ATTIMTIOM & or~anizat1unal skills ro m Pan Y w good min to Northstar $400 A c. plent)' or prkg Uhl PcOIO)Ula l11t'.1t111n, :100 and hair products I MJ lcreek Apts Bnstol & : ~8950 benefits Aon 642-9363 Nurstng wk. Tom s:;7 1668_ _ 10cl. /\Vail now Call S<I fl 2off1t·t· ,Ultt•i.. s:JOU Call &31·9754 or I pa u I a ri n 0 , (' M A.mb1l1ous boys and -LYN Dtx Indian Wells condo, 3 R!!!J~ics 675·6700 !l('r mo Mark 1>73 tlOOG -arter6, 898·6809 I 979-3278 ---~~ 1:0~ %re~~o o~d,;e~o Girl fTiday ror 1 man or. br, pool, spa. tennis, BAY FRO 111...1y rum Offire Nr NB C1v1r VIDEO GAMES l.aitl D: Nlnsh SetLter rems No angs a week gelling To place your message rpice Newport a~ea S200/d .675-2595 "" Center. 600SQ Ft Bar & SALES LEASING ame : ocy twn newspaper subscrip beforethe ermanenl part time 7,3 & J.ll:JO Conv. Hosp NB area. Pos. attitude • smiles needed, x lot benefits Call: 642-80'4. Pnme office 760-9440 Overnight Fac1lil1es New arcade loc avail Warner/Edwards H B_ lions. Traosportat1on readmg pubhc, M-F. afternoons only ...... ~ 4300 Costa Mesa. 250 sq rt. SS2·7730Eves. 957-0131 Reward Dys 559.3530, and constant adult phone tapprox. 20 hrs week) Nursmg ••••••••••••••••••••••• s111te Sl 75 mo Ut1ls in ev84.2;.~ supervision provided Dally Pilot Some t}•ping Good MUISISAIDI Prol to Shr 2BR. 28 A Sublet, Corona del Mar, ClothingStore phon~ p t t cld 779 W 19th. Sl d Lost Very rriendly Call3to5:JOPM ,askfor Cltwiried.642·S678 "' ersona 1 Ya Expe,"dallshirts.Conv. Cd.M Hse. l blk rr B('h. F JOO to 400 sq. rt Coast Womens G IDC, good COOlapoo, M.) Y'"-lhal _ .. _ ... ,N.-642-4321 •l must Offire_!IL..,;ho..,m..,,..'4-1._IJ-ll"'ll~· Bdb-8na Pm. sstJ:SJll. 6/S-9619 Partt?rg, rnl"'"tn· lea!e. 11cr.oocr + inv "T ftllU ---n •e NEWPORT try, suitable for in · Owner will carry at low white. choke charn. 343 your smi e ' join us! Fsame23+. larlogesh,uarnre awp:t~ fiEx1cesecuta~vae1'ISuablteesn~ao ot ~~~=: n~:~a1~'c~~: rate 773-1132 ~~~:;-'·~::Club aa· H p·1at' HAIOWAIESAUS ~:~c:rd642~~1 Ba N. B. 52 90 mo Airport, from S365 w d ull tart Chris, 673-8494 wishes to place yg F • ' I · · .. · ·' •'" · ·" "· "": F l 1 me /\pp I y 1 n .,_..,. .,..,.,7 ~·~•ice available. Call a rice to share, dwnlwn ~IUUTYBe ShALXOI Ht I barkless. yodelling dog p e r s-0 n C r o w n ' The faslt'Sl draw in the .....,....,, · ""'' • una ac n CX' 898.31126 Ha rdware. 1614 San ,, West a Dail) Pilot Fem, noo-smkr. 3br, 2ba now ror 1 month free. C.M. Construction Wl I sacrifice'. 3 oper -:: Advert1•tina r..i..S Mi_guel,N.B. Class1f1ed ~d 642-5678. duplex 00 Balboa Island. wa 833-9976. oriented preferred. Call Owner must vacate Found F Toy Poodle. , ''"'Ii. ~ S220lmo + util. Call Al· for details 642-4m dys. 644-21Sl tLois) champagne; F mixed I -1s 00 or 0 0 re 0 e . I MO. FIH 64S-9570eves. Cocker. black: F mixed ......_ ....& C........t. -Ltd. Partners. for st3rt· Terri hi b 673-7338 iWwpon inner afi('e space for lease, 'tog UP·lo·date N C . er, w tew/ rown ; · First r lass ·full service Sl751 Balbo I l d M Pomeranian mix, :!bdrm. 2ba apt, Park EXEC. offices, includes mo. a 5 an · machine shop. Great blaltck & tan; M Husky. Newport, $3751mo. incl all amenities. From 675-l73!I. potentials. Call David red & while. 644-36S6 125 it.ll.CallPaul:640-8937. $225/mo.644-7189 2sty,l300sqftokspace. 7141975-1024 Mesa Dr., C.M. Nwpt F. ~. 3br, 3ba, furn NEED A BUS. AD · ~~ OC~~rt Call "All Our Yesterdays" Animal Shelter. Lag &th Ocean Front DR~? Answering & . pm. . · book store. going out or Found: 7 AM Tue Jan Condo. S300. Eves mall service,conrerence f),mished. So. Laguna business. 30%/50% 19th. 21st & Santa Ana. 4W7·5.276 d' oc A English Tudor Bldg. 33S minimum olf all stCX'k M K h d p room. A J. •ri><>rl. sir. 4 desks. bath, wet Sale on now. All must tw.ee0s oun uppy NB pro( gentleman will lOOlmo. 714·833.oe92. 6'$-...,1 ......... beau home w /lady bar, ocean view. New clear by Feb. 1st. (Still ~=------~,.... 600 sq. n. Mesa Verde decor. S375 per mo . buying anliquari an Found: Grey and white over JO 5 760-0802 area 499-S361 booka 00 selective sub· kitten wlpatch or calico. Resp Str M Rmmt to Shr 545-4123 Laguna Beach. 450 Sq Ft. Jectsl 840-2491. 3026 E . ....:Ca;::;J:.:..1644~-SJOS='----- New 28.R, 2BA Condo "'-"' ha CoastH CdM NB • .. 5350 '-"-·.Woodbridge. $275 ruou w t you want in $430. Suitable for Sm wy1 • ,..1., ~i':u. ~ Daily Pilot Classifieds. Bus. 494-0318 Cost a Mes a Laun ...................... .. Exper. newspaper displa}\ salesperson to handle key accounts for Orange Coast Dally Pilot. Salary, commission and excellent benefits. Growth opp()rtunities fo r person with career ambitions. Send complete resume to Marji Fendel, PO Box 1560.'Costa Mesa CA. 92626. No phone rails, please. An Equal Opportunity Employer ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT 330 W BAY ST.,• COSTAtMESA, CA. 92626 AH EOU.t.l OPPOIHUHI V EMPlO\IElt . . : .d.···--························ ......... ·-. ( t ___ cc-__ :> __ > __ , ) WANTED ( (,--~<05----} ) Pl5T COMTIOL TICHMICIAM ladial local Pest Coe· trol Co., needs route technlci 111 for steady job. ~.tty level poa~tioa. We trua. no upeneace necesu.ry. Call Charlie, • Thun.8-12 m..-1 P'llSSMAM Exper'd. OD AB Dick ( 3IOCD and ltS. Call " 64&-71ll f.S (Mike) ........ •AB Dlek~-~ltlff!,_"'"'---i wort only. llaaactmeat respon. N.B. &H.m3 ...,....,.s•-· Need 2 experienced pec>- ple in COMMERCIAL• INDUSTRIAL real estate. For a succeuful ' growing firm. Best working conditions ia Newpo r t Be1ch . m..-.5061 Rettptioni.st Part·Time. Outgoing Pencnatity a lllu1l. Be Able to do a Variety ol cM.ies such u typiac. rllin& • be at ease with phones. lovolvea dutiDg with resideace of a Priv1te Homt Ow.era Assoc in lrviae. Workdays are Sat, Sua • Monda,ys. 9:4.S to 5:30. Ideal Situtioa for St•· dent. Call Barbara for Interview Appl al ·i ~1800 Between l·SPM. acwtiO+iST 2 p rr girl.a needed lo answer pbooe for N. B. firm or OC Airport. Neat appearance and frieadly personality a must. Morning and afternoons avail. 833-0440 llCWTIOtlST ror prestlcious salon who esUoYI people• caa haadle busy phones. Must be fu bion ·con· ICiOUI. Opp'ty for ad· vaacement f« the ri&Jat penca. JUcbard OueUett Saloa. 200 Newport Center Dr.1 N.8. ~ .• Beaiay Saloe iD ex. nail &ppelJ'IKe • fri...U, ......... u I .: &6«112 for ant· ~ "' Recepl, P IT . p tople • orieataled for art studio. ~ Phones, Ute lJPilll. fil. , !.r_'C ' errands. lloa .. Fri •"\ 646-7Ul/87S.735$ ' dry-SlUC fl'OIS pt/ mo. ....... Massacae FShr JBRL?A Bayfront Ml..o'763, A&eot Open 24 hrs 1 da'T AIJt W/ 1•. lf. *325 Pl 7dayuweek lfiil. F\am or Unfurn. SWAPPAITMllS a Gor•eous girls to m.m Bf in 2 places at once. " We w1U work your pro-pamper you. Jacuzzi. Hoalfmlte wanted. non· amoltr, share large 2 bdrm. 2 ba apt wtaar. Near Ocean. No. San Cleme!IM.1270 + \.; util. Call Nlct •S484 luvt !!!!UC• OD recorder. duct al the Swap Mttt. Sa1.ma. Locals 15 well 11 t o uri sts . Bank no rlsll. Consignment Americard. Master lennl arranged. Proven track record. 1122.,., Olarge, American Ex- N Bl d C pre11 . Diners all Adnrtisint Accut uec. Immediate opening ror advfrtlsing account executive to sell both weekly & dilly newspaper advertising to a wide variety or retail accouoll. Must be setr st1rter. willing lo develop accounts in a new territory. Space saln uper. needed. hlary plus commlasion. Benefit.a. Send resume to Carol Olson. Deity Pilot. P .0. Box 1560. Colla Mesa. CA 9311a. No phoM calls please . "NeWspOper Carriers tor routes I I .Oma ~\ ahr hit, will CCIII. cmad. avail. now. )111Dl·1251, -.a. Rnpo111ible roommate ftllled to sllart new 2 bldnn •. 538-91 llatue ruponalble remale, non smoker. :..~rt Oceaafroat. " ..... 4 Ir ..... prvt ._,lint Ave. N.1. .lat. ............ bled .. ,.. latlcl •till. NEWPORT CENTER ucelent Office Space 500 to 200 square feet Available for Lease Call Wm. F. Cote f9f more information ewport v · osta welcome. 714/645·3433. Mesa CA 92627, Suite 2U2HarborBl.CM 217.MHll7 lllte r .. °'!' ....... 5011 •••••••••••••••••••••• ,..,,. ..... For l«al reluatlon with a proleulonal mauage. Steve lM, S4"2117 Lonely Tonl&ht ! Need Company? Call Monica. m.1m l',nandally MCUrt single .._.,tea... IOJI male, mid 30'1, seek Ina H;;;z ................. rtnanclally aerure· lnvtll "5,000. lit TD. Owner. 1»1130 Ne~~~~ t~ffled dlsplay penon with managemeat abilities. Mutt be Innovative. capable of orcanhatlon • l lmelementln1 new product procrami. ;:. I Send reaume t.o Carol Olson. Dilly Pilot, P.O. Box 1.5111, Cella Mesa, CA_. "8antlal packa1e for ! remale 25·SO. Object lam or veature capital 1 ntrtmony? Stod brief ~ for npauloa ,...me • photo: Bo1 :n ,......._..,. IUft, •• prllAlld ot toa· llM. Daily Piiot, PO ..,._. ILnldica. Lilt a1 v... an ... Cll.. ,., .... Caplal IClllftft • I • 'Mft w ~tu..O .. ' ••':•" hldriell. i:t=•!!•:ct:•., -~ --r;.. ,.';..~· -• Loet ud roHd tOI• • li'.nu•.• 0.-&mlty "mplover • -.......... -.1'111............ ....."T." V..-" ,.. , Dlllr ""' a ... ,,... .... .,... tllltr't• ~.·· •• : •• ,._· ••• : ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • ... ,, ...... -.. -~-._.__... in Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley & Newport Beach .. • Good E•1ing1 • Super Trips • Great Prbts . • e r cu ' v e um t11 , • :w u 1 Manefftr will hiwe lht• 011por1 11011 to tstabh~h u r<'sull~ 11ric11t<'•l df'}•llr' mt:nt nimed al 1llt•l•l111i 1•111 phi). t neet.ls Skills ltl owrit r 11111p,·11· 111011 bl"nef1t., ori1n12auo11al twltJ\ "" .. 111 co mnrnnkut1on would ht• twl~1111l Prol(ressivc. dyn,1mu.· l'O"Olp.in\ 11n 1l .. u take ~·hur.:ti, huma1mt11· h•.11h 1 Please sen~ rcl!umt> an!I ... dt11 , r1 quiDementll to : Box lOOl l>aily Pilot Costa Mes:i, < \1 !J~t.2t• IJ!!!!~!!!~~!!!!!!!~--111!'11~~· I SECRtr~ v I fl' ! llC.,.OMIST He1lth Care Mana~1· ~nt Company 1n ln11n1• bu u lmmediatt open· inl for I h13hly 11k11ltd. profe,.ioul iecep tMWlt. We ire a lar.:1• r~ expanding rom' pan)', &Ad wt neeJ an lo d1vidual wbo can l>t-•t ~lour image and lllhoamt lime, handle 1 busy "Oimcn:.1on ' switchboard (Appro~ 130 calls per hr 1 Minimum s >tar!> ex perience rtquired M u~t lypt 4S wpm. Surtessful candidate wi ll b~ a'> sertlvt, molivatt>d. & posaess txcellent rom munication skills. Com pensallon parkaRe 1•om mensurate with bat k ground For mlerv1e11. call Sharon Rasms '114 1 S<in11•c111I' wh1 lrot 11 11 nt1nd °"'Orl<ttW h11 11 II\ ' I 1ni.: H.11,1 "1' h11111 1• k 1 1111( 1f lllU I• 'o\ .,1!11 11 I . I 1,11 I o(t.u h • 1•1 "'I 1 .111 lr:11n1·1• fi.t.! •l'.!. , 1 "'1n·tt11) 1-:,~·1•r1t·r1t ,.,1 1 '"'·'n ror I' Ill 11111< ~ .. , , ,. hr., 11\:I "1·S. \1 '>I• • tnlH lull Ill ru.i.l ~ •• 1.11. 641·1616. EOE MLF •'l!flljlt '"I\ I \lllt .... , .. /• Restaurant. Now ;1<•cept l ing applications for 11e11. 1 Sandwich Shop, parL I li me help. Hours 10 2 PM Excellent pa} .• 1r>2 lS Springdale, Huntinl(tun Beach (betwten Bol~a A: McFaddenl _ SALIS C'reauve Enterpnsl·~ SECRET ARIE ·' Wurl< lr'fll'" ''' ( h.to\ lt1fu-h t \ ll Kl llth\l I \ ,IQ \.'-S•I\ I\ I 1-1 tllli i.s _intervi I' win g for I plu me "'ork with our new promotional 1·on rept . E xcel op Portunities and 1·3luahlt I experience for 1·011<'1;< student:. Must bt-Jru 1 'I~ 1 b1tious For tnh'n 11·-.. • .1l• t'all 760-8213 Mun lhr 11 1 '' ' Friday J t~m-_ ------=i:i- W..C......,.etaH Newport StatJoner'I ha~ s., rl'!Jr"\ a fttime Tl.iesda) thru E.x~ S~~lo l Saturda s1uon .I\ a1LJ ~.I• 'Ir or 1 • 1 r11n 557-92121,t"'r'"-+ l-11-...... ,~ ... u .... t. ... , ... ,.,,.,...,.---....,._ ....... ..,----------'------.----...... Emmons. · I 1mm1 .t 1111•1 ..-.-...-.-;-.=. ;.;... -I.le fl •JU • Sa!es girl, outgoing & fat~· ~ a•·t ~ , ,. at , , fnendl)t. 18 yrs or older, 1 l' fl t HI 11i.· 'I; If I J,r. spt.swrt, full or part (iO + 1\1101 1 &-,1hl1• w 1t lune. Secood Glanct'. al with l''''IV" :..\tll.!l ~·o· OFF~R11 2122 W. Ocean Front. JI. ll h.irnlh· , ,, 1, 'IX•rt•lt•ii• ·-OlO CA Sl1 ' 675-3361 ,101 '' 1•111 ' pt.ono fl. l 0 [ '>ON , ~ l':incl\ t.f ,1dn11n tluh1·~ I CUST.QtA~f!S • J nlt r io r Dl'sq~n 1·,11111' c:.,,,~ "'"''"' 1;,;t ,.,, FUll1Pa11-T1me l'\o E~ • penenr t' 1'e1·es~Jn ' Fiair for Oc1·oratini.; ~:., senlial For Appl C'.111 714·960-5646 SALISUDY /&pr'd for matem1t} >lure F\111 ' or pltime South l'oa'l , Pl'!!!. ~i-~734 - SALES MAMG E.\I E~ 1 Image rnn.sult:1n1 In • tao31ble s3ll'S •'X p•·r Mr. Daltoo 640.0207 Wes-N>lic bl. A1trat'l1ve rompetrt•" ,. minded young men & women lo as~1~t )uuth ~program f or un ,. derpnvtlei;ed l'htldrl'n Guaranteed tnl·omt· f\Jn & rewardm~ po~• ~lion Call Ttm 89S 2897 ftl1 ~ mtmcnt ;:sa1~ Part Ti me -:. ENJOY VISIT :. WfWASHIMGTOH 'Lint'oln & llamrllon & ·• other people you 11.111 ~···· ·.on tht mone' ~nu c.1n • make as a Los An~t:lc) ; Tlme-s rirrul11t1on llepl . field rep Many ptoopl• ;-on the pit rirt'ulation ~sales p rogr3m earn > rrore than S200 J wr!'k ~ for workmg JUSt J few • houn earh da} s11(ntnl( :: up new Tunes Sub~cn1>· • !"" • mwuues. We pay hourh • wage + generous com 4 missions IC you have J neat appearanrr & ~ lmat'k for talkml( ¥.1th people talk to us about ~ this great p1t1mc op ~ portunity. Call Mon fr1 h 957.23511 eX1. ~ ~ SALISIEP nc"f EXEC f1,r ·-• :'\1111< rl1t I I Pt •ft-..~11 , •• ~ i 1 I • t_ j Ii.II• •'I I 81rtdu: r P 0<, iic I !\:I 1 '-I SFH\I• I SI, t• I ~:\11\"\I I' I• " ''" 'ii ! ... • Jn1111. -,q . ' THEODORE ROBINS FORD lOl>O HAUOR BLVD C.OSfA MlSA 641·0010 Sttles·Serv1ce-Leuing l{)r' CARVER . I01S I01CE. ffv1W '78 BMW 3201. Snrf. /\M/l"M Cass Stereo, AC, Nw Trs SI0,000. 546--0784 '70 BMW 2002 Xlnt Coad Compl Rblt Snrf, FM St 18')t 4 Spd, Shpskns, Cover . S4HO OBO 646 7973_ '78 BMW 320 I, 29K, A CJrefull) OriH'n 2nd WANTED! Late model To)Olas Vohos Call TODAY!!' C:ar. Aulo, Air, AM/FM nd c: JS s A 11 s er v I c e u s J{t.'('(Jr~. $9000. Office, 64M640. !!omc. 642·6421 Earle Ike Top Dollar Paid ForYour<.:arl JOHNSON l SOM U..C•Mercwy 2626 Harbor Rl vcf ' for sale Bra for '69 BMW 2002 Like new $40 Bill 8113·2'165 c.,; '715 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 Caori. $100. -67'.I 2252 9720 ••••••••••••••••••••••• I '82 210 2 dr. I $106.31 + lax 48 mo. O.E.L ~t.i Mesa 540 5630 284S Harbor Blvd. Costa Mna 1• 7 l~/54C!-64JL j 197; DATSUN %80.Z. six-ed transm1ss100. air <·ond1t10111ng, stereo, and mags. Extra sharp ! (844WYBl S599S Jlm Marino Volkswagen. 842 21X!l_ ~ ~-- I ! i ,I i A Tl.AS CHIYSl.&PL YMOUTH 2929 Harbor Blvd .. Coate Meu.. Tel. 646-1934. 3 bloekl aouth of San Diego Freewt1y off Hllrbof Blvd. Complete: 1 body shop. Sa.... Sefvloe. ,,.,_, S.Vlce Dept. open Monday thru Frldt1y 7;30 A.M. 1o 5:30 P.M. end I A.M. to 5 P.M. on Saturdey. • llACH MOITS 141 C>OYe Str"t Newpon e.ct\. T .. : 7S2-0IOO. Call us. we're the speclall• for Atta Romeo, Peugeot. Shl> & MaMratl. • THIODOll I09G FOU Modefn ...... Ml'Vloe, petta, body. pelnt & u,. deP'•· Competitl.,. rat" on .... & cllHy rwntala. 20IQ Hart>or BIYd .. Costa M .... 142-00100tS«>C11. JOHHSOM Ii SOM LINCOLN ~y 2928 Harbor Bl¥d .. eo .. Miia. Tel. S«M«JO. 57 v ... of friendly family MrVloe -Or-. County'• Old98t Lin- coln-Mercury ~Ip. sonM COAIT 90111 i• Harbor 8twd .. C... ..... Tll. lllMmD, RV .-vlOe lpeciatista. CUS10ftl .. WliOM. - - Orange Coat DAILY PtLOT/Thur9day, January 21 , 1982 MATCH THE NUMBERS OM THE MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IM THE BOXES MIWPOIT DATSUN -Dooie St,..t, Newport Beach. Tel. 833·1300. At the tn.ngte of Jambo,.., MacArthur & Bristol behind Vic· Die Mlon. Se*, Service. Leasing & Parts. Aett die- counta IO the pubJlc. • MAIHS CADILLAC 2ICJO Harbor Blvd., Costa Meu.. Tel. 540-9100. Orange COunty's Largest Cadillac dNlet'. Sales. Service. Leas· Ing. • DA YID J. ,tlLU,S lutae.flONl1Ac:.MA1DA a.lea• s.ntloe •Leasing 24188 Alicia P8111way Urigun9 Hille 837-249() • CHICIC IYllSOM POISCHloAUDl-YW 415 !. Co•t Hwy .. Newport ~ 67~. The only dNlefshlp In Ofenge County '#th theJe thr" great ,..... unOef one rooll IOI LONGPRE PONTIAC 13600 Beach Blvd .. Westminster Tel. 892·6651 Orange County's oldest and largest Pontiac dealership Safes, Service. Parts. • SAii. CHEVROLET 900 South Coast Highway Laguna Beach "Cale.Y• ... It ..... tor ,..," SALES HOURS: Mon ·Fri. ~7. Sat ~5. Sun 10·4 494·1131 546·9967 • SANT A AHA DATSUN 2001 E 17th Street. Santa Ana. Tel. 558·781 t Your Original Dedicated Datsun Dealer. • MIRACU MAZDA W."9 moved! Our new locatt0n is 1(25 Balcer Street. ~ Mesa. r .. 1. 545·3334. SloP by & v1s1t our brand new tnowroom and ... why we're the 11 Mazda dealer In louttlern California. Sales. Service, Parts and Leasing . • AHAH8MMA%DA '-o.e, o.c. ....... ~ ... '"-'-"lel Lee C:.." I01 S. Anaheim Blvd .. Anaheim 956-1120. Just north of Santa Ana Frwy. on Anaflelm Blvd. Call us flrttl ''WE ARE HARDTOANO-eUT WORTH IT!" • 111402 M~~:'\tet:'~A~,kwy. e1ut We offer what no tease company or bank can. 1. unra·modern eerv1oe dept. for 1st class ahet sale wvtee, 2. Factory auth. lacllitles & body shop; 3. IN~lon of the middlemen -leating deelet dif9Ct. 1.f040 4 M • COST A MESA DATSUN 2&45 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. ·Tel. 540-6410. Sen11ng Orange County for 16 years 1 Mile So. 405. • SUNSET FORD, INC. (Home ol Withe the Whale) 5440 Garden Grove Blvd. W.Stminster Tel 636-4010 • FRANK PROTO LINCOLM-MEltCURY Service and Parts Department always open 7 days a week 7 30 A.M to 6.30 p M 848-7739 • COMMll.L CHPIOUT <2128 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Meu.. ~ 20 years Mrving Ofange County! Sales. leasing. ter11ice. Call S4e·1200; special.parts line; 546-!MOO; body ahop line; 754-0400. • IOY c.uva ROLLS IOYCWMW 1&40 Jamboree Road. Newport Beech. 840-M44. Sales. Servkle, Part• And Leasing. • MM LWlt•. IMC. 130 W.'191h St., Coete Mee& 142·1M4 lewe time, tntf9Y & lrwtratlon. Call us for all ol your lllllng needs. We ..... all m•" and mOdela ol cars. trudl91vena. ··&678 .. Cl4 Orange Cout DAIL V PILOTffhuraday, January 21 . 1982 I ,, Landmark Smoker Study; • ' I .. " Newest research confirms·M -ERIT delivers taste of cigarettes having up to twice the tar. One low tar cigarette co n- ; sistently prov:es· it can m e t the taste demands of hig h er 1 1,~· tar sm okers. ·The cigarette: 4 Enriched Flavor:M MERIT. MERIT Beats Toughest Competitors. In impartial tests where brand identity was con- cealed, the overwhelming majority of smokers reported MERIT taste equ al to -or better than-leading higher tar brands. Moreover, when tar levels were revealed, 2 o ut of 3 .chose the MERIT combina, :tion of low tar and good taste. Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smo'\ing Is Dangereus to Your Health, . . . Taste Debate Ends. In a sec nd part C)f the sa n1 c study, sn1o ke rs co nfir m that MERIT ta te is a m ajo r fac to r in comple ting the ir ucce ,ful switch fro m hi gh e r tar bra nds. Confirmed: 9 o ut of 10 former high e r tar ma ke rs r e port MERIT is a n easy siv itch , tha t they cli cln 't git 1e tlp ta ste in s\vitching, a n cl th8 t MERIT is the best-tasting loiu tar they ',ue et 1cr tri ed . Ye ar after year, in study after study, MERIT re mains unbeaten. The proven ta te alternativ to high r ta r smokin g -i MERIT. O Philip 'Moms Inc 1912 Reg: 8 mg "tar;' 0.6 mg nicotine-Men: 7 mg "tar:' 0.6 mg nicotine-100's Reg: 9 mg "tar:· 0.7 mg nico1ine-100's Men : 10 mg "tar:' 0.8 mg nicotine av. per cigarene, FTC Report Mar'.81 .. MERIT; I Filter . ~,&lOO's - Reagan deCides, * higher taxes on 'luxuries' WASHlKGTON CAP> - President ~aaao baa--dedded on a Im bud&et plan that calls for bi1ber excise taxes, the transfer or doaens of social _ pro1rama to the states and the bi1geat deficit ever aent to Congress, administration sources report. After meeting with bis economic advisers Wednesday, the president settled on a budlet that woUld seek approximately $15 billion in new taxes to keep the projected deficit to about $75 billion, according to the sources, who did not want lo be identified. One aour~ said tM p....w.at would. pr.opme hl&ber lu• OD ci1arettes, liquor, wine and some "luxury" itema, but not OD beer. A higher tu ~ 1uoUne was under conaideraUoa, but DO decision bas been made, the source said. Tbe sources said the tax packa1e would call for hiper excise taxes on tobacco, alcohol and other consumer 1ooda and the narrowing of a number ol. tax "loopholes." The sources declined to be more speciric about the tax proposals, saying some minor cban1es were possible over the next rew aays. They said the president planned to dlaclOH bis . Info· rill t major budget propoeals Tuesday an in bis State or the Union message to Coagreas. t d Deputy While House press arres e secretary Larry Speakes confirmed that Reagan "mlde a In• Newport number"' decisioos yesterday" on tax plans, but would not elaborate. B STEVE -aaBLE Earlier tax proposals under J ..... ,_.-::;. . d i S C U SS i 0 n W i l h i D l h e A police informant who tipped administration centered on Newport Beach officers last increased excise taxes on month that a pharmacist cigarettes, liquor, wine , allegedly was peddling drup, long-distance telephone calls bu been arrested on suspicion and "luxury" items, such as 11:.----+-._....,. ....... .__.......,,......,m=aTT-,,....-e --u.,•:e • c . pharmacist be turned in, Higher excise taxes on beer, • authorities said. gasoline and airline tickets also Authorities said they arrested had been under review, but 29-yeat-okl James Cunninpam, there was opposition witbln the a Corona de1 Mar resident, after administration to increase taxes be aasertedly tried to extract on these items. $2S,OOO from pharmacist Jack Revenue fro·m the federal Geariq. excise taxes wo9ld be turned Cunningham allegedly told over to the states to finance Gearing be would not tesWy some 40 federal pro1rams in against the pharmacist in court health, education and oiner in exchange for the money, s o c i a I a r e a s t b a t t be accordinl to investi1aton from administr~poa waats to shift to tb 0 c t Di t i t state control, ~c• aaid. · A:Orn!;.:~ce~un Y s r c In addition, ltlea1a• wlJI Cunningham, arrested last propose the wboleule tranaler F tJ day, w aa a r ra i in•d or the ciant welfare and food WedDeaday in Harbot Municipal !~c'::n~~ ~ :.: Court and is being held in Heu ol tak4oyer of the ,ur1eoaln1 $l~=·a 58-year-old Lacuna Medicaid procram'i wltJeh has Niguel resident, is the owner cl been O'OWini 15 peReat a JUI' Jack'• Pharmacy, 3025 E . Coast in costs for proviclnl beafth Hi1bway, Corona deUlar. care to tbe naticfp 'a poor, G · d b. b according to the aour.M... eanng an is p armacy Treasury Secretary,..Doaald T. bookkeeper, Anita Poekentrup Regan discloeed Weddelday that Gabler, were arrested Dec. 18 OD L one "loophole " the cbar1es or conspiracy to sell rpb1ne administration wou14 seek to mop Ii · id b '-• b Ii narrow involves taa-exempt 0 ce sa t e, e eve industrial developm:f!t bonds Gearin& sold large quantities ol Demerol , amphetamines , that local governme sell to cocaine and morphine to attract 00.,iness. customers without required Administration officials prescriptions. declined to identify the other tax Wayne Flelds, an investi1ator changes the president approved, ror the district attorney, said It although one proposal under wu informant Cm>nlngbam wbo active consideration Called ror tipped police to tbe alle1ed limiting deductions that can be ille1at activity at the Corona del claimed on unemployment <See DP, Pa1e A!) insurance. • • • • • .... ... ~ ......... LONELY IE.A90N -A looe stroller walks down Huntington State Beach, which shows the effects of heavy rainfall. It's a far cry from the shoulder-to-shoulder crowds wbicb- flocked to the sands of the Pacific last summer. 1- 1":.; Coast to get sunny skies Friday Hail pelts R · t · · t , · th ad' north; snow ain ogive way o ,air wea er, warmer re ings lev l d . _-.'.') e rops The winter rainstorm that OHicer Dick Van Cott said \he the Corona del Mar Freeway on caueed acattered auto accidents, C H p re s pond e d to 11 the north and Pacific Coaat reports ol ball, power outaaee rain-related accidents in the Highway on tbe south, 1,510 _. tnnlc ~ td' • .... 1e.-11 County. He said lllOlt cuatomen were ~ by a tbe <>ranee Coast will live way were fender-benders, and no storm-related power blackout to fair weather and warmer ma.jor injuries were reported. Wednes day night, Southern temperatures P'rilk1. aceordinl Caltrana crews today were C a l i f or n i a Ed l son Co-. to Hatloaal Weather Se"ice working to repair traffic signals spokesman Jim Kennedy said. foreelllten. . that failed at Dover Drive and The outage was reported at A weather servlce spokesman 6:44 p.m. Power was reslol"ed to Hid the probabllitJ of rain ''It can change ball the customers by 7 p.m. and woulddroptolOpercenttoniSbt. to all but 60 by 7:35 p.m., Friday's forecast calls for d•rectii"9t un·thout Kennedy said. The remaining 80 clearer skies, some susty winds • .vr• customers bad to wait till 4 a .m. and warmer temperatures any warning." today ror power, be said. pea.king in lbe low IOI. One or the unlucky 60, a The depa.rtins storm will leave woman who lives in the Bay- i n its wake a rash or Pacific Coast Highway and at view Apartments at San inconveniences but few major Mo rning Canyon Road and J oaq uin Hills Koad and damage reporta. Pacific Coast Highway, both in Marguerite Avenue, said she Cable television customers iii Newport Beach. was forced to improvise during the South County were without Newport Harbor officials the blackout. service ror a time Wednesday reported that winds gusted up to .. We bad a battery-operated night when liCbtning struck an 50 mph along the coastUne from television with a 5-incb screen, antenna in Lacuna Niguel used 11 p.m. Wednesday to 3 a.m.. so we weren't too bad otr," said by the Slo{er Cable Televbion. today. No major wind damage the woman, who asked that her The rain played havoc with was reported. name not be used. "We didn't tramc, al.so. In the Harbor View Hills area want to miss 'Dynasty'." California Highway Patrol of Corona del Mar, bordered by Other Orange ,Coast cities §iamese saves.man in Mesa blaze BY JODI CADENHEAD cigarette in the bedroom, said ... ....,......... Richey. Damage is estimated at From now on Kacy the cat can $20,000. eat aU ~ steak she wants, says For the time beinl, the couple Gary KilJcolllns of Costa Mesa. will live in a moblle home lbey , The rive year-old black had planned to sell. Siamese ii belu credited with "A lot of people have notblna saving Killcollins' life Tuesday after their home ioes up in D11bt when a fire broke out at names " said Mn Killcolli.na bb apartment at 2013 Charle · · · reported scattered occurrences or hail, some nooc:ted streets apd a few fallen brancbea. Ov..U, however, stq_rm dama1e apparenUy was niinor. In Huntington Beach, veteran weather watcher J . Sherman Denny spent part of bia 15th birthday Wednesday cbeckinl the rain gauge atbp bis garage roor. Between 8 a.m. Wednesday and 8 a .m. today, Denny aaid be recorded .45 or an inch cl rain. He said this broutbt his rainfall total ror the year belinninl July <See LUN, Pa1e A2) Drive. Killcollins said be bad fallen aaleep oo lbe living room couch and wu awakened about 8 p.m. by the cat who pounced on bis chest. The livin1 room wu filled with deme smoke and when be opened the bedroom door the AirCal's p8ss plan really taking off windows blew out. "I know It WU Ume to 1et out," aaid the ~year-old tnd driver. Lu~:t. Killcolll.na bad nunc bl1 b et OD top of the cat u be ran toward tbe bedroom. OUaenriH, the cat mil.bl have died from smoke lnbalatioa, be aalcl. A nellbbor called Killcolllm' wife, Teri. ud lbe rmbed bome la tlme to see Coata Meaa nnn ...... apraJtnl water .. tile cbarred remalna of tbeif apartment. •'I kept ••kW enrybody, wllere'1 tbe cat, where'• the can" lbe aaid. . Nobody knew that Kacy. wu • 1tW in tbe apartm•t. blcUaC ..... tbe CCWS'I. M IOOD U be ........ lln. KllleoWM' ... tbe eat enpt .out. AU tile nr... ela11red,IMl8id. l'in dlitf Jlm BlebeJ laid tbe· eat ma1 Ila•• awateaed • Uleollm jmt .. tame. Appar~•Utt tla• flre was •tarted bJ ·a •ll!lol4erl~C . t l tn a pbraae, AlrCal's new "ZobeAir" flllbt paaa purcbue plan bas really taken off. The Newport Beacb-bued airline bu IOld more than $1 million in the paaae1 1ince the pro1ram wu announced Jan. 13. Tbe boob CODtalnlnl 10 flilbl coupon• are partlc11larl1 attraC4l•e to travel a1ent1, corpOraUou and ladlvldual1 wbo "1 fNcaueatb', Mid AlrCal ,,_ __ Maril......_. Uadlr tbe 1.oDeAlr pnicnm, traHI ..... an permitted to bu.J tbe 10.c:oupon boob for •. Otben an daarpd -· Betwem ... and J~ ,..... are Deeded to ftJ between -in Ute Alr<:a1 n .. 11ate .,-... l"or nample, _.,... ll aelded to fty one-way from Oran1e Couty to s.. .... uciaeo. TIM,_.. an tuod w.for-••'"•• -even ilUdrtt priftl IO up. OD a Pll"-flilbt buia, tbe emt of ft'1111 ..... Z..Air ...... laeapeHI•• a1 purelaa1l•1 tlam ..... AlrCal'I dlHUM , ................... .. pointed out, the 7.ooeA.lr fares are leu than atandard farea and 7.oneA.lr pall men do DOt have to comply with advance ticket purcbue requirements u do discount'ticket buyen. • Travel 81enta are permitted to sell the ZoneAlr pa11ea at whale.er price tbe1 eboo.e. Travel a&eata •bo baacUe larp numben cl AirCal,........ are npected to bmeflt. Smaller tra••l a1enciea, Petenon said, an ~ formlnl "con1ortlum1" to purcbue bloeb of r.c.eAir pua books. H1lb tOlume buJerl l9l even irater price breab, lie aald. AlrCal .. the ftnt alrliDe to eapel"lment with a IJltem like 7.oaeAir. Arlumeu 1hake1 LJTrLS ROCK, An. CAP> -Amlld.....,._..._.~ Arkwu, ratW.1 ........ dllbH a•d ellaadelleu .. ........, .... ,... .... reporta al ...... . By Tiiie Aueda&ed Prea A storm-that pe1tecL Northen California with bunts of hall and steady, aometimea fierte rain dusted roada wltb snow below 1,000 feet elevaUoa ~. closed hlpways and bad pol1" ferryinC surpriaecl residents ., icy billaide streets in Oa.k1a.nd. • The storm broulbt thandei', lightning, ply winds, sleet ud even moments of sunabint Wednesday before temperatuni dropped, plunging the snow &ne to 1,000 reet or below in Nortbenl California, the National Weat.bllf Service said tpday. · Up to two inches of rain feU ID a 48-bour period in areu devastated by floodin1 a.lld mudslides during a killer ~ Jan. 3 to 5, the Weather Servte said. , '• The rainfall lriHered DO _., s lides, according to 1berttt'1 department.a throulbout ~ Francisco Bay area. But families were evacuated f c anyon near Inverness western Marin County, 1 Dou1 Went~ omce of Emer1ency Service1.~ The evacuation wa4 precaution ordered by om in the town, which wu oee cl the areas hardest bit in ~ storm two week.a a10 that ~ al least 31 people in NortlMiliD California. Another 25 famlliea left Ulell' homes whantarUy in Pacllle~ coastal city ju.at south cl Franciaco, accordin1 to ~ Garcia of the state Office fil Emer1eocy Services. v II otor{sts on portions ff Interstate 5, the major W• Coaat route between Canada aai Mexico, were required t.o w chains until 1:30 a .m .• die (Sff 8A1L, Pa1e AJ) · llllCI l:UIT WllllEI . Probability of showers • ~::i~9.i~'?ai~0 .!~ :~tu~· warmer Friday. ffi&ba • to 64. Lowa toniabt 4Z to •.. ~. ~· .111111 flllY 80"°'9'• ,.,,., .... -. ·~. rH•U of a cfUH• tes·~:. ..,,...., " .......... ,. ~ ca•c•I t·'-• ••••at: r•· •••ct"'••t of Pa•~­ RneTe'• ...... "*· ..... AIO. .11111 : ... .., ...... ,. --~· :UL.... Atl ·---... -.c-• ....... Al · ca: 1n11 .. I·=··:· ---0 1--Ml , ..... --.: • • • • • Orange Cout DAILY PIL.OT/Thurld1y. JanultV 21, 1812 aYDAYID~ ........... _ •'A• ••·eoawlet tHUfled .•. , .. , . ., .................... .._Mtald~U.. tr.-=~-.-= .... ., .. =8'blr. CoMndl atatem•&a be ·~to......._ Beaeb Md urllqame zollee, Pbilllp • P10111 tol the ell)lt·mu . ur-wom~a ury la Ora•1• , uty Court .Juell• .f......tb s. .• eourlnlom: ~innesota 1; ............ bMrd WWle .., HJtlalal about dolq la bl• •leDfalber." • .................. u.. ~---•ata. QueallD lf be II conwleted ol first...,_ murder-will ll*la1 elreu"'ltwea in the llarela 1111 cleatb ol lllmtiDltan Beacb tnact drtvw aobert Bray. Bra,'1 body WU found piaDed beaeatb the 2,000-pouad tllt·away cab of bl1 ltU IDteraattoaal Harveater tractGr-tnller 111 lut Mattb I OD Sprla14ale Street ID RunU-.. BMeb. At tint, poUce belleved, Bray'• daatb ... aceldeatal. But tbey b•I•• to Hapect Wh•l1 when 1everal lo· formanu 1t.ppec1 fonrard and lndlcat.ed tbaf 0.. delmclaat bed .,,...,... to ldU bll lteplatber. Wiaely'a alle1ed crime partner, Jamea Duna1an, alread1 tnUfied that Wt..ely deliberately pinned Bray under tbe truck cab beeauae of bl.I Jealouay over family property. hii by recQrd snow ·. 7 inches in 24 .hours paralyzes Twin Cities 1f', ··~1n.A111da ... Prw ... A snowstorm socked inDetat.a'1 TwiD Cities wttb a ~ 17 iDcbes ol dry powder ·~ · Snarted tranlc tbrouPout Wiacomin u it moved east. Other snowstorm• were movinc in todQ on parts ol the ,Bu.tern Seaboard. tbe nortberu Great Plains, and northern Arhona, while 30·below 'temperatm. were foreeut for ton11111t in Montana. · Winter storm warnings were posted for northern Arlsona, northwest Montana, c'entral Ohio, aout.bwest PeDDSylvaoia, rtbeut Wlaconain and the · rtbero panhandle of West )rsiala.' ~Snow moved across the •prtbeut today, wbiteoi.ng the ~8SlOUDda of dirt-covered snow ,I iniDI New York City's Fewallra. Many commuters left , eir cars at home and packed into overcrowded tralaa 11 forecasters predicted an accu111ulation of up to four inc bes. henl)'-tbree Maryland achooJ district were forced to cancel or delay claues this mornin1, and tbe Naval Academy 't Annapo:~eoed later than usual. diabicts in OGI)' two counties -Garrett and Alegany -held clusea aa usual. President Reagan canceled a ttip to Baltimore, where be was to visit an industrial park, due to the snow. The surprise 17 .2 inches of snow that fell . in Minneapolis and St. Paul set a 24-bour record as tbe snow eased at I p.m. Wednesday. Forecasters, who oricinally predicted only 1·2 inches, expected mve snow today. "We are ~w in a good snow pattern that wtU be bard to break," said Mike Mor1u, a · spokesman for the Na(ioaal Weather Service in llinoeapolia. "Thla may be a reeord-brealr.inl winter." The state government and major corporatiom doled earl)' to let workers go home,· u did several school systems and shopping centers. Cara apun out or booed down on streets and highways. The Hubert Humphrey Metrodome, which deflated during a heav..y snowfall ln November,.stayed up. In Wisconsin, state transportation officials advised motorists to stay home. witb some roads reduced to one lane because of drifts. The state patrol said there bad been one fatal accident and many reporta of cars in ditches and semitrallers jackknifed on roadways. ~· :Bonin death vote unanimous ~~ ... LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tbe· ud boys whose nude bodies imposed only when murder ia 1 that condemned William were dumped near Southern committed under special to die in tbe as chamber California freewa)'s. Bonin still circumstances that are clearly a a • spent races tour murn-~arwes 1n spelled out. ·1· 1001 time IOinl over ill notes Orange C.OUOty. Outside court, one victim's ~ t decided on the aentence on a · But Deputy District Attorney mother, Barbara Biehn, said sbe ;, anirnoua fint vote, the panel's Sterling Norris said Bonin was pleased with the outcome ; reman ll)'S. • "stands a very good chance· ol and hoped Bonin would be i.;' "Nobody lites to take another haviJlg tbia verdict carried out." executed. ·man's life. But we did what bad "The crimes were 50 horrible, • "When the)' drop the pellet, '° be done," foreman Jobo II. so repeated." said Norris. then I'll be satisfied," she said, .. g ol Torrance said outside "There was 00 other juat verdict referring to c)'anide gas pellets ~t:f! .. ~:CS~ne!~k' .;..'!~ .. called . . . After listening to tbis used in California executiooa. "' evi·d--, I ..... _.. you reacb a "UnW be draws bi.a tut breath, : ·' Bonio'a awler said the ~"""~ loUUIA B · moral Jadement. My Lord. what I won't re1t." on1n was Tlaompaon, a•. a former Inmate wltb Wlaely at San Quntin Prison iD 1*, wu be14 iD com:?!. at eourt 1..t week by ,,.,.. ...... be nlUled to teatify about 1tatements be made to.-iffn. Tbompeoa wu then briefly lnearcerated at Oran1e Count1 JaU uatil be a1reed tot.tlfY. The witnela, aft.er baYiDI a irant ol immunity reiterated to blm Wectn.day, said -M limply Ued to police about WlHIY beeaUle be wu Ulf'Y at him. ActordlD1 .to police trauertp&a ol ... int.Mewl, TbomptOe said Wllely offend him ...._.. •.ooo ud '100.• to kW Bray. He aaid be tUl"'Md dowa tbe olfer. TM witnea ad.mJttect be ma · tbe ltM ...... to ~c• .aalcb inert•IDlted Wbe11, but be aald be coalda't remember nactb' wllat they were. ''I don't remember what 1 told the cops because U was baloney," be aalcl. "U It wu tbe truth, I'd probably rpmember ... ....., ............ ..,.,....._ MAKING WAVES -Brian Warfe of Newport Beach was one of the unfortunate souls caught in Wednesday's downpour. Here he sloshes his motorcycle on Riverside Avenue near Coast Highway where water is over the curb on both sides of the street. From PageA1 'l;year-old de eodaot "bad tbis man did!" convicted ol mu.rderiq her son. and himself for it" and WU "•-Wood 11. cl Bellflower emcJtlcw'-s'' wben tbe verdict Tt»e jur)t Md conncted Bann ~•• ·' ' · • . RAIN TO LEAVE •~as~ Wednesday. of toe 10 murders Ian. 8. Be wa1 Keene ordered a beariq Feb. • • • ~l, Tile lawyer, William Charvet, also convicted ol 10 c:OUlllU ol 2' at wblch Boa.in'• lawyer may Bcmin feels various lep1 robbery, aad it wu tM .,.a.al ar1qe fer modlfteat;40D ol tbe 1:1•1to1.17 inches. average y .. r In rainfall. ID the caae •lwUJ capse circumstanee of aarder 1entence to life witbout He said the area bad received .. SUanme Court to look at lbia committed durial a rob._.J poulbWty ol parole. ID cues only 1.81 inches of rain by this "But it's like a football ,~ae ._,. clolely" and order a that the proeeeuUoa uaed in where deatb la impo1ed, the date last year. game." be added. "It can . ew trial in tbe homosexual seek'"'• tbe deatb penaltJ. ID appeal la automatic under DeD.Q)' said the Orange Coast change direction without any ~IOrture aiayings ~ youna men Ca U"i:rni~. d~ath ca_D be California law. seems to be beaded for an above warning at all." ·~l * * * ~ewport solon's tax index m~asure hacked· ~I.A~ .. l i.\ SACRAMENTO (AP) -An Mrs. Bergeson said the all-but-three-points. year, depending on inflation. ~Jacome tax indexing meaaW"e; Finance Committee will be the The Jarvis ioi~ative would Tb~ Senate Rev,enue an.d ~Jaid to be a less costly toughest test, probably next restore full indexmg, accordlng Taxation Committee s analysis alternative to Howard Jarvis' week. to the CCPI. said the Department of Finance ' cut initiative, baa cleared its Income tax indexing means Mrs: Bergeson's .ACA~ would now es~mates that ACA34 would t Senate teat. adjusting tax brackets and also r~tore full .iodexJ.Dg! but r~u.tt lJl a revenue gain of $180 ';It Tbe Senate Revenue and related deductions and credits to accordinl.\.to a different ~x ~ullion in. Im·':'· a revenue loss ~uaticlD Committee voted 6-1 reflect inflation, so tbat a baaed on Ule av-:rage growth m of $tO million 10. lh,e following "Wednesday on ACA34 by coat-of·livinl raise won't push a wages and salanes -the Waae year, and a continwng revenue California Highway Patrol reported. . A bout 5 inches of snow blanketed foothills surrounding the Napa Valley wine country, said sheriff's dispatcher Will Mays ; and 5 inc bes were reported oo the ground north ol Redd.ing today. ~a 1 em b I>' woman Mari an taxpayer into a higher bracket. and Salary Index. loss thereafter, . ".fSer1--. R·Newport Beacb. . California baa bad ioduing In rttent years, the WSJ baa T~e lone committee vote Snow flurries swirled near sea '; Tb• measure baa already since 19'18 .. For lt78 and 1971 the been lower than the CCPI, .nct against AC~ was cast b)' Sen. level oo the peninsula south of :Jpaaaed the Aaaembly. But it brackets were acljuated for all thus would cost the state less. Dan B~atwraght •• D·Concord, ·san Francisco along Highway · • u at clear t be Sen ate but three percentage points ol When the bilJ passed the who. said be dJd.n t believe the 101 , a heavily traveled stretch 'eoutitutlon•• amtDdmeDts and -lbe-Calil....._Cuaaumer Price Auemhly, the leaJ•laton were '•11slatu .... abould . a~we a &la•~ •&t•dl fsem Ca&i! ' E nce committeH and t.be index. For .., and 1181, they told that repe~ of l;be ~ mea~~ ~ co. mpetiUon with the North Coast to Los Angeles, said · te ftoor by Ju. 21 to join were 1ndexed by the full CCPI, P.ercen~age·point tri1ger 10 Jarvis lDJUative because a ball a patrol diapatc.ber in Sao Joae. JU'Tla inlUative on the June but that expired tbis year and either. bill would cost the state ~·· Rubeo Ayala, D-Cbino, The twin storms from tbe Gulf ~ot t b e s y stem re tu r n s to $15 millioo to $230 million next said be lboucbt the voters should of Alaska were expected to puab >'~ • have the choice. out of tbe area by tonilrbt. ., As for HlDI aa1r1 wltb WlaelJ, Tiompeoa laid be made bi1 stat.emea&I to ,..ace bee ... ... beard tMt ............ malrinl ....._.. aboa& ldm to Loa Aqelel ..... aftlffra. Botb Tbompeoe and WlMb baH bee daafled witla ........ robben ba c a••llUGD wD ta.. tbeft ol *°·000 la jewell from a Temple Qty utlque lbop. ''I'm ltW......, wltb WWle,'' Thompeoa said. "But I'm ·not ioln1 to lie in ec.rt. . . " * * * FromPageA1 'DP ••• Mar pharmacy. Fields said Cdnain1bam alle1edly tried to pat tile • '1quee1e'' Oil Gearlq early tlU moatb. He aald Gearin& aDd llP Dana Point attorney, William Krall, brou1bt tbe alle1~d blackmail try to their aU.enticJn Accordin1 to Krall, Cunningham aalred tbe pharmacist to slve him part o1 the money and theo to make monthly pa)'ments of $1,000. Krall alleged Cunningham wanted the monthly payment.a malled to him in Me.xlco. "He even pulled out a IUD at one point to show be was serious," Krall reported. Authorities said they set up a meetiD1 between Cunningham and Geario1 in whicb both N e w p o r t o I f i c e T a l'll"CI inveati1atora for the district attorney were ll.atenin& to lite convenation tbroup a bidden microphone tbe pharmacist agreed to wear. Krall charged that Cunningham is a longtime informant to the Newport police and baa worked with the district attorney's office previoualy in drug cases. The attorney said be plans to ask tbe district attome1'1 oftlce not to prasecut.e the cue qaimt the pharmacist because of "conflict of interest." Krall further charaed that Cunningbam "set up" the cue against Gearing •'so be could play both sides ol the field." Gearing is scheduled to appear for a preliminary bearing on the drug cbar1ea early next month. Schmitz gets week delay • • mcensure SACRAMENTO CAP) -A bea-ri.Jag on a re1olution to condemn Sen. JobD Schmits' remarks about abortion-rishtl advocates and a military coup is being delayed a week. Senate President Pro Tem David Roberti, D-Los Aqelea, said Wedne.9day the delay would give Schmits uoW Jan. %7 to prepare hia testimony. •·Senator Scbm i.U-iiaa requested that be be Ii veo cme week to prepare bis position OD the Dialler. ID view of tbe fac:t this la a bilhJy cootrovenial issue we will grant tbat request.'' Roberti said in a statecqent. Roberti introduced tbe resolution last week depliorins Scbmih' name-ca!._lill ,.,,.o,,f_.,. • • • y iQi""i bis remark tbat a m.Wlaf)' ecq> waa tbe ''best tbinl we eoGld probably hope fOI'" lf R•pb economic Pl"Oll'lllDI fall. ~-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- fBookmaker 'should serve' term Former Saddleback College Board of Trustee• President AIJD Braanoa abould not b& permitted to escape from aeni.DC tbe remainder ol bis two-1~ MDlmce on a felonyn1 connction, a proeeeulor iD tbe cue says. Deputy District Attorney Ricbard Toobey aald Brumon, 51, ol SllaU Ana, wu rele•ed from Veea.W. State PriloD iD mld-Deeember after aerYing oDIJ four months of the l,lftleflbld ... 8ranDoD ... freed due to a death in tbe famllJ, ToobeJ aatd. An. tbe release Br....._•s attoraey, Wiiliam Steward, petlticmed • auperior court Judie tor • modlfteadOD ol the priaa sentence. A bearin1 la now scheduled for Feb. 23. Toohey said that under normal circu1mtancea Bran.non would have been forced to serve 11 months ol the two-year sentence before becoming eligible for release. Brannon drew the two-year term from lud1e William Murray after pleadiJll pilty to a siqle COUDt ol bookmalriq. Brannon bad two prevloua bookmalriftl·nlat.ed CODvietiaaa wbeD be 11111.end tbe guilty plea. Brannon aerved on the Saddlelleek eou .. e t.oard from 111'7 to 11'11 and WU eoDlidend one ol its more conaenatlve members. -Bia ftnt arrest occyred iD c11.,-.111M ..., ........ n4.'M2-1111 ' Al d•••,_.•Mt..a21 M'1N OPPICe . lt. ............. C-.._,CA, • ~---:--tlll,C.... .... ,CA.Wll c-~~~=..~:c:.:s:; ::. .. =;: e ~~~ ... • ......... .... I I I ·"""""""'-· ,...._ ' 1972. That cue involved, in part, accuaatiom that Brannon hired a man to force one bettor into payiq a $2,800 debt. Brannon pleaded cuilty to a count of gamins . a misdemeanor and was sentenced to 90 days in Orange County Jail. He served 42 da)'S under a work furlouab proeram before b is sentence was modified, Toohey said. lo 1179, Brannon pleaded guilt)' to a aiq.le count ol feloay bookmalrlq and wu placed on probaticlD. The 1111 luiltJ plea fol.lowed Brannon'• lDcllctment bJ the Oraqe County Grand Jury. He wu aceuMd by iDv..U,aton ol operatin1 one of tb" lar1"t boolrmatr1n1 operatiolra in the COUDty. ToobeJ aald It would be wraq for Br ..... not to be forced to be returned to atate JWilOD at tbe upeomlq beariq. •'We're not. ta1klq about ua.J am all try," Toobey said. "lie'• bad tbrff caHI lD tbe last cleeade. lie'• been ba court mare tban a lot ol altor'DeJ•." That'• 450 tree& Baca... ol a l7P011'apllieaJ error, die ......_. ol redwood trw to be plaated at UC lnlDe wa1 la error· la a 1te»r1 •neartu • "J['u•••1'1 Deltr Plfot. '!'bi CCII I --·-· ' CILIBBA!IOB SALB , .............. • lad.I•' ...... . ...... $LAVICK·s -... JM1t91 ... -.W7 Whm ~ best swrprises bqin. Flll*ln ~ (714t M4-t•• -.,.rt llad\ Nmr.n..1.at~·Smnlllgt•La\1lgll • I ' , 1 \ Arw ......... ~ETS THE COUNT -New J ersey's new governor. Thomas 'Kean, and Count Basie ham it up for photographers at i.rtaugw:_al ball this week in Edison. N.J . Tax Rroteste r pays visit onl.y Tax protester Paul Bell paid 'a visit but no taxes to the Internal R e v e nu e Service. an annual ritual that h e s a ys pr oves th e government knows he's right about taxes being voluntary. Bell. who claims he hasn't paid "a penny of federal or state tax in more than 11 y·e a r s," he 1 d a n e w s conference in the lobby of the f e d e r a l buildin g in Bakersfield after stopping at the l RS office lo try to engage IRS representative Br uce Davis in a debate over the revenue system, which Bell called "a joke." "He did come in," Davis said. "I didn't give him an opportunity to talk -it's a matter of policy." Roosevelt came to power. Pepper. 81. was elected to the Senate in 1936. ormer rlrst lady Betty F vlalted the Capitol ln A tln to thank Texas tor p 1ln1 a blll requlrln' h Ith luurance policies t.o c r alcohollam treatment. n . Ford called the bill tremendous 1tr ide to ard the reco1nlUon of al hollsm . '' or a long time, there w a question whether al olllm was a disease or m ly a lack of will Powtr.'' sad Mrs . Ford , who un rwel)t treatment a tew ye S ICO for problems With al oh o l and drug de ndencf. ·'Coverage of a l hollsm as tar a s In ance is concerned has va ed, but this type of le 'station makes it atory," rm e r Sen. Geot1e wra, who was laraeted •feat by conservatJve er a and lost bla 1980 re lectlon bid in South Da a, ls leaching a course on eUgion and politics In A ·ca. Govern s ays the ous right won a political sacre" in 1980 because liberals, like himself, Frank Cburcla of Idaho Sen. Birch Bayla of na, were caught off e 1972 Democratic pr dential nomine~ b~gan tea Ing classes Monday at UC nta Barbara. Addressing a joint session of Congress at a Franklin D. lloosevelt celebr ation will be the only r emai ning New Dealers still in Congress - Sen. Jennings Randolph, D-W. Va., and Claude Pepper, 0 -Fla. During the Roosevelt years. Pepper was in the Senate and Randolph in the House. R andolph, 79, was first elected in 1932. t he year Both have been s trong advocates of New Deal-style gove rnm e nt programs throughout th ei r con g ressional caree r s - a lth o ugh both s uffered defeats in the 1950s and spent several y ea r s out o f government before running agai n . Randolph for t he Senate this lime and Pepper for the House. TE HER NOW Formt·1· Sen George MrGon•rn nf SOl~ Oakot &J . <lefl•atect fol' n•-l er t ion in 19R0.-1 s te<.1~in~ a coursl' on n•ligfon andpolitics in Aml'riea at l 'Ganta Barb.ini Rain taperiag off Smell crefl ... .,1 • ..,y. So111i..r1v ••-IS lo JO II-wttll stronoer l'dlS et'ld 4 lo 1 IOOC ~ -..,.omlne _, to -.st 10 to JO llnots todey, cte•reesln9 tonl9M. rerlods of ,_,, wltll IMii.teo llluftde~ dr.rNSl"11 MICI only • c.._.• of "-t's tonight. U.S. summary. Snow blen••••d m"'" of tlle Mrtllern Midwest on Wednncto. cf1Mt91"9 IO rein lo ..,. sout,., -reJn c-,,_, 01 It,. Wesl eo.11, with hall reported In P•rls ol Cellfornle. A l'e~ord 12.6 iftCMI of 1nOW fell In Jtorm w1rr,ln9 for mount11,,, In southern -County and o-ns V•lley for IO'tl Mny snow end SlrOf\9 ll"~tv wlndi. Oue ru c•n U!Mct ln•reasln9 ~ers -ISOl•t•d thunelers-" wllft l<Y.•I i..11 eno ts-«> mpf\ winch tOCl•Y· Lr.el ~ _, -to 2.SOO lut In northern doerts Nortt-.rn dewn lllQl>s »to 45, lows 1 .. *' Sou-n _,, llivl's to ss. 1-s »to '2. Trev.C.,.s eclvhorv for lllOW 1 .. northwest C.llfornl•. Sl'IHl•·SbklyO<I aru •nd Slerr• Sllowt!" t-rlr19 olr tod•Y· Extended f o recast el9'1t "°""In Ml--lls .... Pevl, Fair with• wermlft11 tr.no. Hl9" and • lemedl> tOt"t llM roof cife "°""' temperetutts In lhe •oestel erees 1 .. In Ille Los An9elu svbvrb ot Mis end IOwt ..-u, J7 lo '7 bvt wllh Ka~lellde Helllhb. lnki'IR9 • U , .. , lree1ln9 In the col4"1 ••lleys. HigM Olcl "°"· In IM _..,M ft'IMlly ,,, .... Into Snow ,....,_ from Ille northern Ille~ -"9'Y cold nlgftls with lows Plel11t ............ mucll ef Wisconsin, 12 lo 2S. U.U..IAlltc.o.JMbc•• ....a..J4~,,.,.~-------­nortfi:O:ifilre1 Kensn. The •now ._ birnecl to wld9t'( s~•O•red rein o"9r T lhe lower hall Of Ille MIUIUIPlll emneratures Veltey -In a -oleces In Ille 'r HUtflern PlelM. In lhe WHI, tllvnurstorm5 NATIC>tf'STEMl'S l•sVe~ lllll• Roo lowlsvllle Mempllli Mleml Mllweu•M Mpls·Sl.P Nuhvuiu .. ---· New Orl- N-Yor• Ollle Clly Om•lle P"'leclpf\le P-1• clvmped -~·Inch hell .,..,., Ille Albvqve ~entrel -..,_,.,. coestel r99IOM Ancllol'891 ol Celllornle, end rein wes K •1ten10 Atlle•llle •IOftO tlw ~n hell of t"9 Pr:lfk Atlante CMl4. 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OS -411 11 .. 76 .. »II tJ to l t ,, CAUll'OllNIA TUllH AptlleVelley to tllo Cerollnes. O..lllth r .... .,..._. ....... ..-llM nellon et El Peso mldOey w.dftndey ·~ lrom ,. Fell'baMs M l-HA In wer.-. Minn., to eo Hertford lnM~AI .... Teus. = .. .California r ..... of SlloWe" .... •to1•-11111nct•rs,..••rs In coastal end m•unt eln erte s of S•utllern Cetlfornla wit!\ lr:al 11911 enC1 ......, ...... ~ W':rHSlftt·-y. Ve rle "• cl•udlneu Frldey. C...t"*-Geld. R•ln ,,...111y In Orenet C-y mtreMlnl ,,_ • per;eftt IMay " 4t jll«CMI """"'· H""s IOllNy Ill tlie mid te ...... *• S7 to 6J Frldey, i....o•• (Mw.;e .. ~ *-"" te IO "'~"' In lnl ..... 11 • .,, lolllelll HltMln ......... lnlN•. Hips In -t•lns IMey a nd l'rtliey • .. IS, .... II la a. WIMer Heusteft .......... J.-:11 ...... 1• Kens City a.ilet'slleld . .,..,_ Beevmont ....... 81"'°1) 81y111e Cetellne Culver City Ew••• FrffftO LelltAr- LMKa•IW LOfl9 ._,, Los A11991ft llRf RIPOii ... -• 6 6 • ... ... 1 1 • • ........ ... -J • J • ' . 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Whal do you Uke about the Dally Pllot What don't you like? Call the number below and your mus will be recorded · transcribed and delivered lo lhe appropriat ltor. · The same 24·hour answetiq service ma used to record let- ters to the editor on any topic. Mailbox con tora must Include their name and telephone number ror vertr . No circulation calls. plGse. , Tell us what's on your mind. • Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thursday, January 21, 1982 s Edison gives equipment County accepts emergency supplies for San Onofre By DAVID KUTZMANN O( .. Mty .......... Oran~e County has accepted as a g1tl. more than $200,000 In equ ipment f ro m Southern Callfomla Edison Co. to bolster emergency preparedness in the event of en accident at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. The Board or Supervisors voted t.o accept the speciaUzed equipment Tuesday. Included In the various s upplies donated by Edison - which is see king federal licensing for newly built Unit.a 2 and 3 at San Onofre -are $139,000 in communications equipment, $57,000 in radiation measurement equipment and $9,700 in supplemental supplies. Edison officials have been assistin g local agencies by either donating funds or eq uipment to ensure that emergency preparedness meets levels acceptable to fede ral nuclear otfkials. The utility. 80 percenL owner or San Onofre alonJ wltb 20 percent owner San Oteeo Gu & EJectrlc Co .• ls currentl y awallln& word oo a full-power operating license ror newly built Units 2 and 3. The U.S. Atomic Safety and Licensing Board already has authorized i ssuance or a low·Power test license for UnJt 2. Thal decision was announced earlier this month. In making that decision, the three-member board aald it fell emer gency resPonse plans were adequate enough to handle any situ a tio n s a rising fr om low.power o peration of the plant. However, before rendering a final decision on full-power operating licenses, the board must determine that emergency plans for communities within 10 miles of the sprawling nuclear Reward may aid jewel recovery Two Laguna Beach jewelry stor e owners are offering a $5,000 reward to anyone who can lead to the recovery of a safe and jewelry s tolen dur ing a daylight robbery. The announcement follows the arrest of a 23-year·old suspect in the crime, which took place Jan. 13 inside Gallery One of Laguna Beach on North Coast Highway. Owners Ken Uranga and Jerry Hall were beaten and slightly cut with a large knife wielded by two men who entered the shop in the late afternoon, saying they wanted to look at jewelry. The pair were hog-tied and Ule thieves left with a small safe and about $54,000 in estate jewelry. ranging from expensive rings lo bracelets and brooches. And while Ri char d L-owell Higgins, 23, who frequents the Dana Point area, is still being held in connection with the robbery, police s ay they are s eeking a t leas t one other suspect. Hall said Wednesday anyone knowing the whereabouts oC the one -of-a-kind jewelry should call detective Gene Brooks of the Laguna B e ach Polic e Department at 497-3311 . Air crash killing coast man probed The cause of a U.S. Coast Gu ard helicopte r c r ash on Molokai Island that took the life o r e Newport Be a c h man remained under investigation today. according to a Coast Guard spokesmatn in Honolulu. Weapons si te challenge rs await hearing The Coast Guard had earfier announced the death of Lt. Cmdr. Horton W. J onnson. 33, whose amphibious helicopte r crashed in heavy weather Jan 7. Also killed in the crash was Lt . Collee n Cai n , 29. of Burlington, Iowa , the first woman aviator in tKe~ Coast Guard, according to Public Information Officer Bob Baeton. Baeton said investi~ators are examining the wreckage of the Sea Guard helicopter which went down in a rugged canyon Anti-nuclear activists in SeaJ a rea. He said ofricials would be Beach say they're encouraged a listening to recorded tapes or U.S. District Court judge has in-flight conversation preceding the crash today. refused to dis miss their lawsuit Ba et o n s aid t he downed against the Seal Beach Naval helicopte r 's flight r ecorder. Weapons Station. sim ilar to the recorders used on The lawsuit alleges the Navy stores nuclear weapons at the airliners. had been recovered. b a s e . I t c o n t e n d s a n According to Baeton. Johnson e nvironmental impact report and Miss Cain were on a rescue with an emergency evacuation flight to a fishing vessel which plan is needed for public safety. was in distress with seven The Navy refuses to confirm people on board when the crash or d e n y wheth e r nu clear occurred. weapons are stored at the base, He said a U.S. A~my ~ssault located off Pacifi c coast tea~ used mountain chmbs.ng Highway south of We~minster equipment to recover the bodies Av enuf . ' of the two fliers Jan. 10. Judge-Ar Andrew Hauk denied--Johnson was a 1970 graduate the Navy's request Monday in of the Coast Guard Academy in Los Angeles to dis miss the suit New London, Conn. He had been and continued the hearing to a helicopter pilot since 1972. April 26. He instructed the Navy Bae ton s a id J ohnson was to file more Information and married and had two young arguments with the court. children. .J power plant a r e adequate i handle a major accldent. Edison s poke aman Da Barron said hla company abo about t.o donate about Sl00.000 equipment and funds to S Clemente to upgrade eme~1e capabiUtiet there. Mu ch o f the e qulpme earmarked for the crounty been delivered a lready, said. l( Their supplies are in add1Udb to another $6,500 in fund• t,be utility contributed lo the c~ treasury last year lo offset extra cos t s associated with 4" em ergency test drill in May. ' Federal emergency ortic! concluded at that lime t emergency response plans ulf participating agencies weae "minimaJiy adequate." ~ LocaJ planners have since~ that many problems indeotifi "'f>y federal offi cials have · rem edied. Doubling of audits likely ; 11 ~ ,; LOS ANGELES CAP> -Twi- as m any taxpayers can ex~ to be a udited in the coming years as the Internal Reven~ Service gets more sophistica computers installed. the head the J RS says. ~ Speaking to the Los Ange!~ chapter of the California Sociefy of Certified Public Accountants on Tuesday. IRS Com missioner Roscoe Egger Jr. said : .. fn the next two years we should see the level of a udits at least double." However. IRS spo kesm~ Scott Waffle in W ashingl~ backed o ff from Egge~. prediction Wednesday. sayi the increased number of au · was dependent on the agenc • "more effec ti ve u se computers a n d com puter technology." " The IRS is g e tting ne\ computers for its servi~-­ ce nte r s n ation wid e, a pr eliminary tests h ave be con du.c ted in th.e agency~· Kansas City center. Waffle sai Ear lier Wednesday, Robe Giannangeli, lRS spokesman tn Los Angeles , had said the doubling an the number ol eudiaJJ referred only to people wittl adjusted gross inco m es ~ SS0.000 or more. But Waffle latt; insisted the doubling .. applied~ all taxpayers . regardless . income bracket... ~ Giannangell said slightly more than 93 million tax returns Wm filed last year. and about 3 percent of them -or 2.1 million returns were audited. Egger said he hoped the increased audits would diSS\1&~ tax cheaters and ferret out moije questionable lax shelters . - Egger said the tax -shelti. problems surfaced mainly in~ r eturns of people in the $50,000 tax bracket and above. He si preliminary tests of people that bracket and at the Kans City. Mo. center showed ~ per cent s hould be a udited. Currently, he s aid, a bout!l8 percent of the people in that bracket are audited. 1 In a closing r emark to ~ C P As Egger cautioned lthem ~ . "th ink twice before s igni returns with questionable t shelters'· in light of the changes. 40% Off~ .JIL BAUME & MERCI ER GE NEVE MO~ ,o/c.':ltJIO"rr Raff. Jewelry invites you to a once-in·a-lifetime opportunity. A Liquidation of our entire stock of BAUME & MERCIER men's and ladies' 14K & 18K Gold watches , some with diamonds . 32 FASH ION ISLAND NEWPORT B EACHL-~~LI F . 92660 (714) M4~2U40 •sizing of watchbands addltlonal charge . ~~;.. Hlf Orange Co11t DAIL V PILOT (Thuradey, January 21, 1982 ... AP ....... MAJOR SETBACK -Rep. Cathey Steinberg. 0 -Atlanta, left, a-.ot the fight in the Georgia House of Representatives r 'tl&-~ua1 Rights Amendment. watches with colleagues s the vote goes against ERA. 116-57. Seated next to her are ep. Tommy Cham bless. 0 -Albany. and Rep. Ken orkman. D-Decatur. The defeat ended ERA chances for atification before the June 30 deadline. ... Money: supply 'erratic' WASHJNGTON <AP> - Pr .. idmt &eqan'a prosram for tb e nalloa '1' economic r•ur1ence la belna thwarted by the Fed4'ral Reaerve Board'• erratic piana1emeat of tbe nation'• moaey supply, .a top admllllttratioll offlclal aaya. Althou1b controlll•I the 1rowtb ~ IQOUY la crtUcal to the preakteot'a plan, the Fed'• alternatlnl plttern of too mueb and too little eontrol bu c.....S mark« uncertainly over inter.t and inflation rates, 1ay1 Treaaury Secretary Donald T. Re1an. Tbe situation, Re1ao aaya, "did not help ws in our recovery pro1ram." At the same time, private forecasters are predictiq . the worst economic crisis in decadet unle11 the Fed eases its pip on the money supply and tbe administration and Con1ress move guickly to rein in the federal budaet. "Wi&.bout adjustments now ln the current thrust of policies, the U.S. economy runs the risk ~ a rnaJor coUapse, unprecedented in the postwar periOd," Warn5 economist Allen Sinai, senior vice president of Data Resources Inc. Regan said Wednesday that one of the Fed's major problems in maoagine the $440 billion money supply ls its reliance on Imprecise tools that "need, probably, sharpening.'· ·'So, while, perhaps in retrospe'ct, they could do a better job, no one bas yet been able to convince them that they could do a better job," the treasury secretary S'aid. Midarity goes underground J overnmen~ pressures farm_ers to bring grain to market WARSAW Poland (AP> - liddl,\). militants have ncb ... a new underground ovem'ent and a news paper, formed union sources said ay. The martial law...covernment, eanwhile, stepped up pressure farmers to briJla grain to arket in food:short Poland. The governmeat s aid in bruary and II~ farmers st sell 264 pounds of food and ain in order lo be able to buy pounds of seed grain, but rned there will be shortages seeds and fertilizers li~ recorder ta ~ept aecret WASHINGTON <AP > deral investigators say the o flight recorders recovered m the Air Florida jet that ashed last week reveal here we should concentrate r efforts." But they're keeping contents of the instruments crel. A Navy frogman retrieved the -called "black boxes" from bottom of·the Potomac River Wednesday, providing eral officials with the most portaot tool yet in the ek-long investigation. tof mine · timafound min e wh e r e seven men , including four 'members of the family, were killed in a blast that a state official says may have been ca us ed by coaJ-mining explosives. It was the fourth mining disaster in the Appalachian coalfields in s even weeks. Thirty-one men have died. Texas grower& have fruit flies AUSTIN, Texas (AP) -The finding of three Mexican fruit flies in the Lower Rio Grande Valley this month means Texas citrus shippers must resume fumigation of fruit going to other citrus-growing s tates, says Agriculture Commissioner Reagan Brown. He said, however, as a resuJt of the freeze in Florida "there have been some new mnrkels opening up for Texas growers, and these sales should take up some of the slack.·· U.N. debate eyed on Golan annex UNITED NATIONS CAP> Jordan and Syria are caJUng for a n emer ge n cy General Assembly session to debate Israel's annexation of tbe Golan Heights because the Unit~d States vetoed a Security Council resolution calling for sanctions against the Jewish state. Jordanian Ambassador If youw put eeide your decoreting dreems for a lo~ehei living room until ycu find • reel value . . " heres the aneww to thoM dreams. ell the finer Quehty features uaUlltY bind In aofu reguler1Y Mlllng for aeoo.oo to H00.00 ... now only s599°0!! 80" aot. tn eholc. of etytea and oovera In a wwlde -.ctlon of oolore. 2 week• only. Hazem Nuseibeh, who sponsored the sanctions resolutions, said after Wednesday's vote that he would ask the 15-nation council to convene the assembly session. The 157-nation assembly's Third World majority probably wouJd censure Israel, but the assembly is not empowered to take punitive action against a member. larael will nix Palestine state WA SHINGTON CAP ) I s raeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin is telling President Reagan that Israel witl reject any agreement on Palestinian autonomy that raises the possibility of a separate Palestinian state, a knowled1eabie source says. The source said Begin's views are contained in a letter to Re agan that was delivered Tuesday. Deputy presidential press secretary Larry Speakes s aid today that Reagan had received Begin's letter, but made no further comment oo it. 19 in hospital SPENCER, Okla. (AP) Nineteen people remained hospitalized -two of them critically injured -after a water beater exploded at an elementary school, spewin1 rubble that killed five children and a teacher by breakin1 their necks. • DllA"9CMMTID -U ted Auto Workers Pres ent Dou1la1 A . Fr er announced Wednesda at bar1ainen for the uni and ,the nation's two bi est automakers were una to reach agreemen on contract concessions . _,AIHINOTOlf CAP> -OU •~• Ulff ar• cbeatln •.• ~ o • ol llalf ab~ d ll8rt • 7ea1 ~eca UH lif S•••r••••& fail u rt-•• ld:fa"= ••rt• the= al ....... up on 'fedttal taad, a spec commlllkm ..,.. Jn a •t::.• rePort re.....S today, the mlulon oo FIH9I AccolllllabWty of the Nattoe'• t:ner11 Rwwc• eharsed tbat the Interior Department's effort to m....,e the" bUlion royalty pro1ram were in "diaarray" and ln need of • "thoroup overhaul." "Tbe Sovernment has no way of verifying independently how or'llers Pres id 'tOugh secrecy' WASHINGTON ( Responding to commen around the government, aaministration offlci are considering keepin1 eve more documents secret tha they oricinally planned. Tbe new plans are c in the second draft or a p presidential order whi obtained by Ti!e Ass Press on Wednesday. Tb is designed to replace on in 1978 by President my Carter to 1overn how an wMn officials can classify '<ma! security information a "top s e e r e t , • • • ' s e c r e ' dr ''confidential." . Tbe second draft is b oa comments that adminl atiaa officials offered to a fi draft written ln October. The new version nolonly retains earlier proposals live officials broad new po r to shield documents from ubUc view and keep them cl ified longer, it also expands hole powers in several areas. Among them: -More informat.ioaF "systems, installations; p or plans relalinl to n al security" could be classifl . -The existing requi ent that each portion of a d ent be classified separately its lowest possible classifi lion would be reduced. Instead whole documents could a sincJe clusiflcation, · the opportunity for portions to remain available to the public. -The "top secret" label could be used on information with a potential to cause "grave damage" to national security. Currently, it is limited to that which could cause "exceptionally grave damage." -Where there is doubt about what clwiflcation to apply, the document would receive the highest classification. The most recent draft waa circulated Dec . 23 by preaidential counselor Edwin Meese to 10 agencies for additional comments. The October draft threw out Carter's requirements that covernment secrecy be balanced aaalnsl the public's riiht to know and that dama1e to national security musl. be ''identifiable'' before a document can be kept from the public. Asked about the latest changes, Morton Halperin, a member of Richard Nixon's National Security Council staff who now directs the liberal e-eater for National Security Studies, said: "It's worse than the first draft. They're still moving in die wrong direction." Administration officials dealing with the proposed order were either unavailable or refused to comment •on it Wednesday. ~YS ••oUam1 ...... tuen~ ltp• OD I~ .. and ~ ...... 1'MN .... 80 ID~ ... ,roaa,·-••~ a.a.mt,_ a..-. Dawlll ~ _.......,... • ......... •"9i•llal ... ~ ... , .. ¥....., ol ::r==-.:l-::e~·· ~ problem• for ... tb•~ yeart. ,. Li nowea 1 aid lnterl91' Secretary Jamee Walt llu accepted many of the eommi11ion'1 recommended i111provel'D9ta and baa a ~ foroe workln1 to implement chan1ea. Watt bad scheduled .a .news CODtereoce to aanounce hia plans Friday, but moved tbe aessioa up a day. Tbe cbanee came after wejtber forced President Reagan to cancel a planned trip to Baltimore today. Reagan arran1ed to be on band at Walt's news conference in the White House. . Interior Department officials said in advance of the news conference that Walt would announce be is creaUn.1 a Mineral Management Bureau to take over the royally colledion function. · The commission. appointed six moo~· a10 by the Reaian admJnlltraUon, recommended 60 changes in current government policy to tighten controls over royalty paymeQls. Tbe changes would: • -Take the royalty procram away from the tJ.S. Geoloeical Survey and place it in a separate bureau at the ·Interior Department. Tbe report said the scientHically oriented Geological SUrvey was not the ptoper place to "manage a piultibilllon dollar financial enterprise.'' -Impose fines of up to $10,000 a day and even c riminal penalties on oil companies that fudge on production reports. No fines are imposed now. -Fbrce the oU industry to tue over more of the r~rd keeping now bandied by the government , with tbe goves;ruQent ,lnate-.d stepp~_ ~ its field tnsoecUo°* and a~un; efforts to calcb violators. ' -Increase th e royalty percentage for new onshore leases to 16.6 percent from tbe current 12.S percent. lY .1 ARTS FRJDAY1 JANUARY 22nd. I 0 A.M. . ENTIRE WINTER STOCK OF DRESSES & SPORTSWEAR NOTHING ~s THAN soi Off! ' .. , HOURS ~DAY 1().9, ~TUROAY 10-6, SUNDAY l?-5 I ' • I an·~~~i ... Anaheim PIOZQ & Fashion 1$1an.d 714/535-5'558 . 714/759-0596 both stae,s OCUS f\'onl the~ ~..,_Gd Galt.al J9dr\ . $1 ~ ""' ,, LESSON IN HAIL -When an unusual hailstorm passed through Santa Barbara Wednesday, Melissa Malone, 2, learned a LandlOrds win as bills killed SACRAMENTO <AP ) -In a victory for landlords, an Assembly committee killed billa to ;Prohibit apartments from excludiDI insured waterbeds and to require "just cause" for evicUom. The "just cause" bill, ABm by Aasemblyman Tom Bates, D-Oakland, resembled tenant-backed meuun11 that have been defeated repeatedly in the lut few years. But the waterbed bill, AB2ZSI by Auemblyman A.rt Apoe, D-San Francisco, was new. Both met the same fate Wednaday in the Assembly Judiciary Committee, wbldl beecled warninp from real estate apnta and apartment ownen that they would be expemlve and unfair to landlords. At nos• bill 1ot only a 4-4 vote in the 14-member committee despite an unusual presentation that included the c!!'OPPinl of a model waterbed. supposedly with the same aen.ity u a regular one, oo the fioor to help refute claims that waterbeda are dan1erous(y heavy. Reynoao con/irmed for atate high court SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Cruz Reynoso, who picked crops u a c.bUd in the fields of Southern Calllomia and is known now u a 1tauncb defender of the rtlhta of the poor, bu been confirmed u the first lfispanic ever on the state Supreme Court. Reynoso, 50, a juatice on the 3rd District Court of Appeal in Sacramento, weathered oppoaition from law enforcement poups and proHCuton, receiving a 2-1 confirmation vote from the three-member state Commisaion on Judicial Appointments. The sole opposing vote came from state Attorney General Georse Deukmejian, a candidate for sc>vernor, wbile Chief JusUce Roee Bird and Lester Roth, tbe senior presldin1 appellate court Justice, supported the nominee. FBI begina probe of inveatme nt /inn LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tbe FBI would lite to talk with Joel Nelson. So would California '1 Corporations and Insurance 'clepartmenta. So would about 400 investors who appear to bave lOlt $20 million to tbe investment counselor one described u "friendly ... jcniaJ ... a real sweet py." Nellon, 47, bun't bMD aeen since Dee. Sl. sbortly after a morinc COIDpmlJ deared out the Woodland Hll1s olftces of Ida APll Enterprises, an umbrella company for HTWal ftrim. A1lo m•utns ls bis MCrelarJ, Doaaa Santia10, wboee buaband Joee estlmaa. lae loet SID.• to bis wile'• boa. 'Committee /ormed /'f' Cranaton bid · LOS ANGELES CAP) -U.S~ Sen~lan Craut.on'• tboulhta aboat ...,....,.. a pnsidentlal bid lD lllC bne takm • a '•llNe farm wttb the or1an111Uon of a eommlttff to nplore tbe "dntn11'1ii:7 and feaetN ... ' of bis egdldeey. SftD ._,.. IUcll acUID II not l!lllairtd _. ... wl aaUl candidaeJ 11 lcina.U, declm'ed, Crwton Ad•l8or7 Com•ttt .. ""•'nna• AllJD 0 . Knpa said Wedn••d•J lie bad offlelall1 aotlfled CUirmaD JGlm Wurm llcGarTJ of tM Pederal Sl•ctlon Comml11lon of the 12-membet eom_.....'• at.tence. &u'6n aenienced in MJCreb caae SAN DISGO (AP) -A Navy_.,., CODTicted ol .. a 1 milltarJ Mertill to tbe SclUlb Afrtua ._.._, ... ......,._,D.C.,wWlll'ft._dau twe 1eara beeaaH of a plea-bar1alal•I ···-..... Baba. tbe -ol •• 817 .... ,. ....... ·~ .. .._,..... • for ••• ,,.. .... ... .. ... ~ ............. la 1'"tkletotM ..... ,..,.111•1 ...... onend to forfeit pa1 ud allowuc• aad tla•UMd fN9 UM aentee. TH lf•TY laid •••••· tW • acrnmlM , ...... la ei'iMa ....... _ ........ ,... ... ..., • fw .... CillHt._......._._ .. ------- Orangt COMt OAIL V PILOT!Thuraday, January 21 , 1982 H/F · '\ -·Flowerpots enter &ar. But groupa in. abortU>n iaawr aren't throwing. tMm SACRAMENTO <AP) -Tbe 1roups that are baWIDI ucb other over the emotion-charted abortion laaue are now Ullnl flowerpot.a and •ppl• corw. They're not throwlnl them at each other, however .. In lbe Capitol on Wednesday, anli·abortlonlata 1a1d they would 1ive Clowerpots to tbelr 1ympathllen in the Lelialatun -lhe flowerpots are to be med for plantln1 the apple cores that those le1islaton will probably be 1ettin1 today from abortion-right.I 1rot1p1. Friday is tbe ninth anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court 'a ruling le1allatn1 abortiOM in lhe early months ol pregnancy. At lhe state level, lobbies are active on both sldes over issues such aa Medi-Cal abortion funding and parental noliflcaUon. The California Abortion Righta Action Lea1ue, usinc a theme of ''Choice is as Amtrlcan 11 apple pit," planntd today for tb• aecond 1tral1bt )fear to diatrlbute apple pin to 1-iaJaton who voted for abortion ri&htl last year and apple cores to anti-abortion lttlllaton. Enterln1 the fray 1• tbe California Pro-Lile Councu t.okl a news conference Wedneeday It would g'ive flowerpots to anti-abortion lawmakers so the aeeda could someday 1row Into apple trees. In addition, all letialaton and Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. will be tiven roHS, national emblem of the anti-abortion movement because they are ''the color ol blood, which aymbollaea tbe lives of unborn babies," said Erin Sill of Sacramento, the Pro-Life Council's re1ional director. The nowerpots will go to 4S Assembly members and 28 senators who voted against Hearings compromise backed SACRAMENTO (AP ) - Newspapers anil le1ialatora reached a tentati•e comprombe on a bill to open most preliminary hearint• to the public but close some taUIDOlly in hip-publicity beariae•· The agreement wu reached Wednesday, a week after the state Supreme Court unanimously upheld tbe consUtutlooallty of California's 1872 law requirin1 a preliminary heariDI to be closed at the request of a criminal defendant. A bill spona0red by newspaper pubU.ben\ origina1Jy drafted to repeal the 1872 law and require a1J pnliminary beari.nes to be open, was amended into compromise form in a two-house conference committee. The bW, AJJrn, allo mt measure to suarantee aea11 the preu and public to reports of crilqes and Gov. Edmund Brown Jr." that proposal last year, spomon said the new which protects a1ala accidental dilcloeu.re ol informatioo, bu been cle.....a with police IJ'OUp&. it OVER 10,000 ENGLISH WOOL SWEATERS (Heavy & UghtWeight sweaters in all sizes) • Shetland • Cardigan~ • Lamtiswool • ·Boat Necks • Pure Wool • Turtle Necks • Crew Necks • Stripes •• V Necks • Solids .... ~:. .. Save 50% or more off retail pricesl i ~rts Saturday, Jan. 23 .th111 Sunday, Jan. 31' qp~n I 0 am • 5 pm Daily 895 Skypart Circle, SUite C lnini Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Th uraday, January 21 , 1982 Homeowner insurance Mt city bminess - I Huntington Beac h City Council members have decided to put, as id e a tontrove r s ial proposal that the city become partners with a private company lo offe r home insurance. The so-calle d ··Municipal Ho m eowne r s Ins urance" plan purport e dl y would ha ve gen e rated a nnually between $100,000 and $300.000 in premiums for the city. However. the proposal me t w ith s trong opposition from bus inessmen a nd ins uranc e agents in the c ity. They said governme nt has no bus iness competing in private e nterprise Other citi es in Orange County. including San Clemente and Seal Beach. are considering th e muni c ipal ho m eown e r s ins ura nce plan. Hunting ton Beach officials defided to wail and see if it works in other cities. Basically, the plan called for the city to provide numerous free hom e ins pections for fir~ and burglary safety. If a ho me passed inspection. the own'er would be contacted b\· Avco Insurance Group agent·~ and o ffe r e d the mun ici p al ins ura nce at purportedly lower rates than compa rable packages offered by other companies. 1'he home theoretically would be a low riisk because it passed t he ins p ection. Avco agents conte nd there would be premium dollars le ft over for the c ity Avco would ta ke 30 percent or pre mium s t o pay for a dminis trative costs. Wha tever was left ol the remaining pre miums after c laims were p~id . would go to the c itv · ·However. private insuran~e agent s c laim the c ity would s pend more money conducting ttlume rous home inspections than they wo uld make in premiums. They said Avco was overly optimi sti c about the cit y 's p ros p ec ti ve income. They conte nd only Avco would make mo ney on the proposal. The serious ques tion o f whether government s hould be involved in this fi eld of private enterprise and the uncertainty of the program 's success is why city o ffi cials put the proposal aside. "More than 200 companies and age nts o ff e r comp e tit ive packages of home insurance in Hunting t o n B<.•ac h . And a t present. there's no outc ry from the communit~· for government invol vement in the horn<.• insurance industr~· Delay election change Huntington Beach officials affairs. so thev will be _____ ..... h,..a .... v_..e_d_e.cided lo ask \'Oler:i.jLth~·'---i''1··t1tltt-1Pel°t,UITrtrtl11nrffno-fi•r;mneectd-rbf:aiTTOf:sor I want to consolidate the separate \'Oti ng party. city elections in April with the The arguments for con- June primary or the November so lida tin g the e lections. in General Election. a dditio n t o the fin a n c i u I The move reportedly woulci (·o n s ideralions. a r e th a t at c ul the cost of cit~· e lection-; present on!~· a small number of nearlv in ha lf from S.50.000 to p<:'op le vote in c ity electio ns. about $27.000 a nd ~oulcl at making it all too easy for specia l least triple the number of voters. interests or single isc;ut· pn•ssure from about 15.000 to more than groups to control cit y affairs. 50.000 F'urthe r. lbe a q~umenL'i go. Some Orange County cities h~· exposing mo re \'Ol ers to cit~· alread,· have voted lo m ake lhl• offi tes a nd issues. you will c·h a n ge . Amo n ~ them arc 1nc·rease i nt l•res t a nd NcwportBeach.lrvineand Costa part i c ip a t 1o n in l ocal Mesa. governm ent. And finally. of The arguments a)!ainst the course there is the point that lt\e c hange are that including tit~· theon· on which this nation 1~ officf's and ballot issues on Lhe based j·s that t he broa des t J u n e o r November ba llo t s franc hise the broadest voter inevita bly w ill bring partisan par ti ci p ation ultim a t e!~ party po liti cs into what I!'\ e ns ures thebestder1s 1on supposed to be a no n-partisan Thet Oa tl y P ilot hilS tended to election . State a nd national believe that local elections do t ick ets will influence voter bes t w h e n fr ee o f partisan c hoices fo r loca l offices. and involvem e nt .or e nta ngle ment p a rt y s I a l e a n cl p u r t ~· wi th state or nationa l issues or f u n d -r a i s i n g w i II t <1 k e o v e r s I at es. lrnditionall ~· no n-partisan c·1 t ~· Huntington Beach could be affairs. well advised to hold off for u ---Further. the argume nt goe~. while to see how the c~olidated the a ddition a l vote-rs in the 'e lections a ffect other cities. The prima ry or gener a l election will bud get d o ll a r s in \'OI ved in b e mainl ~· people n ot reall~· waiting are not a ll that interested in or informed on cit~ signiricant A time to celebrate A ccle brut inn I ct!'!I '' l'l'k h.' th<.• Fri<.•nds of the Fountain \'alll'' 1.ibran \\ilS lhl' f1r ... 1 ... oc·1ai .(•ve nt t.o 1nc·orµo r att• a ... a lute to tHe d(, s 25th hirthdu' F o u n t a i 'n \ · a I I l· ~· " <• !'I incorporated in 195i. To µrcp;11't1 for the c it,··s mileston<.• this H'<ll'. the C ity· Council appointC.'<I a I 0 . m e m b e r e o m m 1 t t e l' I o eoordinate local birthciav l'\·cnt s. The committee 1s. working with local scrvire clubs to h<.·lp the m incorporate the birthrlt1 ~ theme in ,·arious soc·aal t•venl :- st'heduled through Junt• Fountaan \'a ll c~· somt•t1ml'" • 1s ac·tusecl of hc·an ~ a s l et·p~ IH•drooom rnmm un11' "hosl· n•sidenb .;l'ldum pul I togt•I ht.•r ht• hi n<l l'l I ~" H i t• :-Ill' 1 ;ii and 1·ullural t•,·enh. T h i s ' t• a r · .., h 1 r t h cl a ' n•le brat inn t•ould t.:1n' n·s1dcnts a t·ha nct• to d isprnn• I hal 1magt•. The eomm1llt•<.• is l''q >ede<l to a nnoum·e a :-c·hC'Clult• of hirthcia~ t•n•n ts plannl'd in t·on iundu>n "ilh thl• loc·al servic·<.• t luhs Tht>se attl\·1t1l1S s hould g1\'l' Fountain Vall l'' rl•..,1dt•n t :-a1\ opportunat~· to dt;mon..,lr;1lt• sonw ('I\ ll' prtck Opinlor1s expressed in the space above are those of \he Dally Pilot. Other views ex-pressed on tnis page are tnose 0 1 tne1r autnors and art •Sts. Readt>r comment 1s 1nvlt· ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Me~. CA 9'2626. Phone (7U ) 642·4321. LM. Boyd/Drinking tMter Say you're lost in a desert wilh nothing but a canteen of water. Showd you not sip it sparin&Jy onJy as yo\f peed it? All taJes ot fact and fiction lndicate that's the way to 10. Jn hand, however, is eontrary counsel which ~ no, drtnk it down, better to carry it in' your body than in a canteen. Could this be 1ood advice? l More than 100,000 villages in India -about 16 percent of them -have no source of drinking water within a ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat P..01 ..... _,,_,ti Ille~ .. , •t ........ y SI., 'Ml• Mew. A#ftl cen~t tit .. . ..IMO, ~la Mew, CA th» ). m He. So rePort scholars who ltudy the world 's naturaJ resources. Blame uncontrolled floods and ablftinc water tables. Seems incredible, doesn't lt? · Q. la it true you caa tell whether an a n imal is a meat e ater or a vegetation eater by counting the toes on its feet? , A. All r know Is the meat eaters never naturaUy have less than four toes on each foo&. Thomas P. Matey PubllSher : Tllomn A. _,,,...,.. Editor Barbara KNlbiclt Editorlal Page Editor ... ,. I Decision risk to students? Are California's school children being s ubjected to unacceptable risks by reason of a recent FBI decision'> John F . Brown, executive secretary of the state's teacher certification agency thinks so . Many local school supe rintendents agree. Their reaction to the FBl's notice of a moratorium on the processing of finge rprint cheeks has been an angry one . Fingerprint checks by both the s tate's Bureau of C tim jnal Identification and the FBI have been a routine required by state law. But in October the FBI, citing a .27 -day lag in this work.. announced 1t was s uspending the·service for one year during which time it hoped to develop a s wifter computerized read out. The fede ral agency said it had notified Congress in its budget requests of its bac klog and plan to remedy it with the c urtailment of services. SCHOOL OFF IC IALS however , noting that the moratorium excepted applicants for law enforcement and security guard jobs, contended that teacher appJicants likewise shouJd have been exempted: Browa says be is worried about the damage that couJd be done to the children during a whole vear as a result of the decision. He said that more than 29,000 appiications for teacher licenses are ret'e1ved each year and that about JO percent of Lhese are found to have criminal records Although the fingerprints are submitted both lD the slate bureau and the FBI. many of the records or . llRl WATIU criminal activity ar\. found only 1n the F BJ re port ~ T his is because l be orrcnses ha ve ~n committed in other states. Actually, compared with the total number or applicants. t he numbers turned up by the FBI ard small. Brown said out of 2.600 rap sheets the FBI had provided informi.lioo not found in the state records ln abodt AOO cases. Still . many of these tnvolved serious offenses s uch as r.ape. armed robbery and k1dnapplng. The school officials contend lhe FBI ch ecks are essential to protect the schoofchtldren f.rorn. potential child abuse aQd drug abuse, stating it is too late to react after a child has been harmed. · But the FBI s aid it had made its decision after carefully weighing the potential adverse effects against the koown benefits of improving ils service to the criminal justice agencies JN AN ATTEMPT to d evelop a lte rna ti ve sources for c hecking out·Of·slate applicants t he licensipg agency turned to submitting requests for information to the teacher li censing agencies in other states Response has been poor . F urthermore. il was discovered that California is one of the frv. stales requmng fingerprint checks of teat'her applicants In view or that and the relatively few C'ases fou nd each year the question is raised as to whether the California officials may be overreactang. Or 1s the conclusion that the other states are beipg woefully Jleglectful in protecting th 1rchildren;r· ,, Proba blv before the a ns wer lo that is known the· FBI wi ll have recommended its service to the s tate's teacher licensing agency It has indicated that it will at the end of the year's moratorium but will impose a $12 per applicant charge Brown says this charge would be absorbed by an increase in the fees it <'ha rg€.'s applicants ~th~FAJ~rch-sta te simcS1·"°en~cede o)nreth~e~pouubslll.ilhc~c ~ . 00 ' tirus·.~.•·~~~ ~~~~~~ ~~~!~P~ ;, The Idea or the separation of.church d~ now allempHng lo .. olfor help .. lo the and state does not appear in the United On the <'Ontrary, the ttecision cannot leaseholders of this community CouJd States Constitution, nor in any of its be based cm the U.S. Constitution. since greed possibly e ntertain guilt? amendments. the Constitution does-hot contain the Further . the Irvi ne Company's ''The church shall be separate from principle of separation of churt'h and overall expansion plan in our area may the st.ate ... and the church separate state. The decision will be appealed. appear inevitable lo the m : however, h'om schools." ELIZABETH W. RICHARDS they seem to forget that they are ··congress s hall m ake no• law dealing with a well-established. spirited. respecting an eslablishment of religion, community that will not be dictated to MAILBOX or p;,ohibiting the free exercise thereof Tht> first quote above is from the Soviet constitution. The second quote is from the Bill of Rights -the First Amendme nt to the United States Constitution. This country was founded as a constitutional republic . with the concept that its laws, rights. and privileges cam e from a higher power "The Creator" -God himself. Many early settlers. from the Pilgrims on, believed our country was founded according to God's divine plan. and they dedicated themselves to-h~lping it grow according to God's will. · AS TO' EDUCATION, lbe first one-room schools were tauaht by God-fearing Christian teachert who used the Bible as a text, and later the almost universal McGuffey Readers, filled with Biblical stories and moral teaching. AU or our first institutions of higher learning were founded by churches: Harvard, Yo.le, Princeton. William and Mary, Pomon~ Redlands -the list is endless. You can be sure the founders believed , with Noah Webster, that "Education without the Bible is worthless.'' • The American 1ubllc has been subtly "sold'' a faJse do'ttrine. lt Is the USSR whose constitution decrees eeparatlon of church and state. When our forefathers referred to the s ubject. their m eanlnc was hr different. They bad observed that In a country with a national chur ch. the co n cenlratton or poliUcai ·and eccleslutical power Is too INM. Hence, they were vocal and adamant that no sing le Unlled Stat.a chuttb be f~. But it was understood that wonhlp of God would undergird all actions of officials In government. as well H those in every school and university. ' "ou state <lditorial, Jan. 12> tbat..&he Arkanau decision ouUawlnl .-1 U.e for teachlne ewohata.n and ereaUOn science wu ". . . a proper .,_.,.of th e CouUtulion ualnat a &aw t•at Qiiote1 "Uterally, what no one knowa al this point ia just how deep a receulon we are 1oing to be In ." -Treaury, &.treury O.ald ae1••~ What Ch eap rates? by the greed of the "foreign-run" Irvi ne Company To the Ed1lor · J im Wood's comments on the leased land controversy (Daily Pilot. Jan. 81 facing Newport-Irvine r~idents seem to be a new hjgh in arrogance. As a real est ate broker. one can onl y hope that neilhet Mr. Wood nor anyone on his staff at Unique Homes has ever profited from selling .. . people Jacking rina nc1al roret;ight. . . .. a home on leased land. AS FAR AS the leasehold system allowing people to purchase homes at ··cheap rates." nothing couJd be further from the truth. Broker Wood should know that peqple pay the market value for their homes when they purchase them. <Historically speaking. homes have never been c heap on the Orange Coast.) The Irvine Company s houJd freeie all lease agreements for 1982 and allow people to purchase their land according lo its value at the time they acquired it. That way. all affected people would be assessed by a common guideline length of residence in the community. If residents choose not to purchase their land under that arrangement then they can re-negotiate the leases with the Ir vi n e Compan y and carr y the landlord-tenant relations hip into the 21st century DON SHERIDAN Concern lac king To the Editor: With respect to the Irvine Company leaseholders' situation. it would seem to me that as the lawsuit of the Committee or 4000 gets under way. and the facts and figures of the lrvlne Company are f'CVtatfd. Ute c~ •1)11 QYerall lack of ~n ol tie -llWUte ~a.,my rpr ow com"'-~Y will tlttoft\e ertd~t. , . Pttftttpe the eftorts Of t~ ""Comm1ttee of 4000 will prove only the Up or the 'iceberg in revelation! IF THE convictions of the Irvine Company were as genuine and selfiess u those of the Committee ol 4000, I find • !Atkrs /rnm rtodtrs urt u.'f>l.c:omt Th# ""' 1n C'<>ndcns1• IC'lltr1 lo /11 IJ)Qet or t'11m!nn11• htw>/ 1.t rt'~trl'ed IA'fltr.t of 30cl u'<JTdll or Ir,~ will ~ gwm prt/trtflct All -tl'1tff.rmtm tnt'lndt> ,,RMIUTI' and ma1lmg odrlrr.,.~ ht4t nomri mo11 ~ u:ithh('ld on rt · que111 1/ .~ufl1r1en1 rtason 1s apparent l't>lltrli !('Ill nt>I t>r publls/led. t..ftl~t$ ma11 t>t IC'l<'phont'd f(1 f>42.&l#6 Nomt and phone numhv o/ thfl contnbutor must hf giutn for i•rri/t otion pMrpt"•lt'.t t J . WARREN JOHNSON. Fight Watt policy , • To the Editor: Can il be that Laguna citizens a re so apathetic about what happens to our shoreline that lhey are makang no pro- tests against Interior Secretary Watt's proposal 'to s~I leases for oil and gas explora tion between Laguna and Point Conception? He envisions at least one major offshore lease for California an- nually until 1986. After leases are signed 1l is too late to do m uch about averting potential degredation of our coastaJ ·re- sourrcs. WHAT WOULDN'T a Santa Barbara oil s pill do to Laguna's business in- terests? To our marine life -the sea hons. the fi sh. th€.' pelican? To our recreational beaches -the scuba divers. the surf riders. swimmers, even those who are just there to enjoy relax· ing in the sun? Or the.sea view? Will it be enhanced by towering oil derricks on the horiion? Oil on beaches might be scooped up. but cleaning up tide pools is another story' Supervisor Riley, Mike Fisher, Ex· ecutive Director of the California Coastal Commission ; a nd Michael Shapiro. the governor's Outer Continen· tal Shelf Project Director. all of whom could effectively oppose the oil explora· tion, have heard little oppositi9n' to Scct etary Watt's pla n frol'T\ Orange Couoty's citizens. Mayors Heather and Bellerue of Newport Beach and Laguna have had no strong support for their oll exploration protests . As citiiens who care, we must let Gov, Edmund G . Brown Jr and other concerned officiaJs know of our opposi- tion to this despollaUon of our coast. EVELYN OA YMAN Sure Naney Re..,aa ~cllrtwe any benefit from •II those .......,. clothes. And, If you believe that. .' . D.L. .....,_t ___ ........ .,._. __ _ ....... '"'"' .. """" .... •;-.•· .......... .................. .,..,, ... ..... :. -,. llllylllllt THURSDAY, JAN. 21, 19'2 ._ . .-..... -·"!.···········-.. ··-······ ....... . • '... • ..... )> .... Economists predict slow recovery from recession See Page B6 . ) 1111111111 IEICI If 1111111 lllllY CAVALCADE TELEVISION STOCKS 82-3 84 87 Supervisors pus~ $179 million . BolSa Chica wetlands proposal ~. •Bird watcher• to tour park The Sea and Sage Audubon Society will conduct a bird-watching field trip to Huntington Central Park Sunday Jt 8 a .m. The 300-acre park in Huntington Beach has lakes, a mini·wilderness and a nature center. Numerous unusual birds are wintering there this year, according to Audubon spokes woman Sylvia Ranney. These include the summe.r tanager, eastern phoebe, golden-<?rowned kin1let and pine sisldn, she said. The fi eld tri p will Include a section for betinnlng .bird watchers, she said. For further information, call 97Hl250. •Robbery suspect arrested A Garden Grove man bas been arrested oo su.spicion ol robbing Hanshaw Liquor, 15080 Edwards St ., Huntington Beach, of about $100, police said. William Robert Mathews Jr., 26, was arrested in Buena Park early Monday by officers who beard of the description of the 1etaway car used in the liquor a tore holdup, police said. In the robbery, which occurred at 11 : 15 p .m . Sunday, a man pointed a sbotaun at the clerk and fled wtth cub from -the re&lltw, police said. •U.S. cities lecture topic U.S. cities will be the focu.\ of a free Coastline College-sponsored lecture tonight. PauJ C. Schmidt, ass~late professor of political science at Cal Sta\e Long Beach, will discus$ "Urban Design and Political Meaning" at 7 o'clock at Allstate Savinp and Loan, 540 Westminster Mall, Westminster. The program is part of Coastline's "Scholars in tbe Community" series. • Job program set at schools Coastline Regional Occupational Program, a training program serving the Huntington Beach Union High, Newport-Mesa, Irvine, Saddleback Valley and Tustin Unified school districts, will begin its spring semester Feb. 2. The group arranges for training of students and a limited number of adults in local business and industry. Enrollment priority is given to hlgb school seniors, juniors and anyone a1e 18 or older re5idin1 in the five participatiq school districts. Most trainin1 prosrama are one semester in lenstb, requiring five to 12 hours per week. Students can receive high school credit for their participation. More information can be obtained by contactlna a bllb school guidance counselor or by calling the pro1ram'1 offices, 979-19155. \ • College 1hows We•temflicb Ten Western films will be screened to promote discussion in a class entitled ''The West : Myth and Reality," to be offered during the spring term at Golden West College in Hunt.ington Beach. Films such as "Shane," "High Noon" and "The Shootist" wiU be presented as parW>f an examination of the nature of 1ood and ..U, the loner versus society and changes in Western beroes. The clua wiU be offefed in day and evenin1 seaaiona. The only char1e ia a $5 materials fee. Registration at Golden West continues through Jan . 21 by appointment and on a walk-in basis beginnine Jan. 2&. Classes begin Feb. 1. •JI alley schools eye lunch hike A proposal to raise student lunch prices by 10 cents will be cobsidered tonight by Fountain Valley Sc hool District. The trustees meet at 7 p.m. in the di s trict's new headquart.ers at 17210 Oat St. District a dministrators will propose that the full lunch price jump from 90 cents to $1, and that the a la carte milk price rise from U to 25 cents, aU effective Feb. 1. District officials say the · current lunch pricee do DOt cover the cost ol operattni the lunch procram and that the price increases wiU be.Ip r e duce the district's expenses. PlBJC USE SUMMARY AMA __.MTBI antlR fltaJC -~YI MMa ~ liWWltA YIU.AOE IM.IOR ~ STrlHTI TOTM. fltaJC use ~-U-•M...C. MAR .. Pl.AN -Orange County Supervisors have asked coastal commissioners to approve $179 million development in Bolsa Chica wetlands . Map by Signal Landmark Inc. s hows developer's plans for the coast al area. -County Courthouse 'prison' Sa-nta Ana edifice has role in TV movie, 'Mae West' By JEFF PAUEa ... ..., ........ The Old County Courtbouse in Santa Ana was changed into New York's Welfare Island Prison Wedneiday during a day's abootinl for the television movie, "Mae West." "It's the perfect building," said asaiatant director Bill Beesley, lookin1 up at the stately structure. "We couldn't ult for more." The only cban.e the movie company made in the appearance ol tbe buildiq - now a state monument -wu covering the name up~jtb brancbee of a nearby plant. That accomplished~ the 82-year-old buildlnc was ready to double as the prilon where Mae West did time for ber alle&edly obscene Broadway play, "Sex." Aon Jillian is starring as Mae West, along with James Brolln as her lover, Timony. Jillian paced by the courthouse steps before the first takes, lettinl herself into character on the chilly Santa Ana morninR. "I was a litUe scared about the role at first," ahe aaid. "But as l found out more about llae West, ber character delighted me . Her walk , voice and man.oeriama were so flamboyant that J bad a lot to work with." Miss Jillian paced again, fine tuning the famed Mae West swagger for her entrance into the prison. I ·'This h as been an easy project in a lot of ways," she goes to do her time. Other shooting will be done in the Los Ange les area, at Magic Castle, the Mayfair Theater a nd the Society for the Prevention of Variety Arts. "It's the per/ ect building. . . we couldn't ask for more." said. "The enthusiasm bas been very high and it's a reaJ class act. We 're on a tig.bt schedule but we won't cut corners. For the last seven days we've had 12 and 15 hour shooting schedules." Director Lee Philips, a veteran of a dozen television movies including "The Red Badge of Courage," "Crazy Times" and James Michener 's "Dynasty," waited outside the courthouse, bemoaning the light schedule. "These schedules ar·e drawn up by production types. not creative ones,.. he said. "No matter bow long they give you. you always need another day. We need 21. David Lean spent f ive years on "R yal')'s Daughter" and said he needed an extra • day. So I guess that kind or complaint is typical.·' "This isn't really a frolicsome kind of story, even though we've got seven musical numbers," said Philips. ··1rs a happy story. basically. J illian continues to amaze me. She's very talented, very disciplined and eager . Her song and dance numbers are wonderful. There 's a lot or humor in it too, as you might imagine. Mae West was quite a wit." Some 125 cast and cr ew members assembled outside the courthouse at 9 a .m . to begin the shooting. Vintage cars bearing "New Yo rk City Police Department" signs were parked ou.tside the courthouse, portable dressing rooms lined French Street and a dozen extras dressed a s reporters and policemen loitered around the courthouse entrance. Ex-city attorney tries again This is the eighth day of ~booting for "Mae West." Tbe courthouse will serve as two settings in the movie -the courthouse where Miss West is sentenced for her sensational play, and the prison where she Neither Philips nor the ABC Network has a clue when "Mae West '' will be s hown, although it looks like early spring. "It's hard to tell right now,·· said Pbjlips, "In this business you learn to take it one day at a time." COM18ACK? Ex-Huntington Beach city attorney Don Bodfa plans to run . for his old office this year. Police seek S&Lhandit RuH"llioe a..cb polite an H&rddlll fw 1 mu ~ · of commJttiDI two local HYiap ud 1MD ........... WI moatb. Tia• •ore recHt incldent OCHIHd I& "1:17 p.m. ....., dt• a maa, armed wt~ a 1"0l.-.-.. fromMartaa le•lap, Ul Mala St., pol1" said. I Huntington's Bon/a gears for come'back campaign Former Huntinaton Beach City Attorney Don Bonfa aaya be'a 1earin& up for a political comebllct. He held office for 10 yean but was walloped i n 1171 by incumbent City Attorne7 GaU Hutton who received 8,380 votes to Bonfa's 1,514. Jerey Bame, the otber candidate, iot 5.n7. Bonfa, H, aays hia ehief campaign alosan for the upco~rU electloa will be, "Had Gall Hutton?" He ..,. be'U •Streu wbat be aays ia Mn. Hutton's CGllftieta with Qty Council members aad what be c1aima ii ber poor lqal performance. However, Bonfa, wbo sot in a pbylieal altercation witb cme of Illa deputlea durtq bla ltQ ID offtee, abo aeknowled1ed bis terms in oftlce were mark.a by conflleta and twklna. ''Tbere are certain ....... frietlona whH JOU bave an elected city attonMJ wOltilla with elected cltJ eouDtll membln, but tboM dlff•.,.. canbe•Wmtw,"11.ta..._ He eolltmdl be can mWmlw tit• eoeftletl ... effecUftlJ lba lln. Hatta. lln. a..... oo•ldn't be reae••d for ----''Ar/ dlnWiw• I •&J Mft. bad wllll • ea•clll ,.._la 1l1nlftC!uee to tit• probl ... Gall bas ba.d with the City Council," Bonfa contends. "She ju.st hasn't been doina a 1ooc1 job, .. be laid. City Council members over the yean have tried but failed to get voters to eliminate elections to mate the city attorney poeitioa appointive. It's been a complaint that aome electecd city f awyers are uncooperative and too poliUcal ia tbelr le1al opinions. Bonfa blames bi• election defeat on publicity •urround.iaa tbe tm altercaticlll be bd ID city ball with former DeputJ City Attorney Jobn O'Connor, and ID unaucceaaful lawsuit ftle4 acatmt him • days pripr to the election bJ former Coadlma Baa stebert. n. lawsuit a1Mled Boal• ..... tatea mautborbed conference lriPI at dty expeme. Bollfa flred O'Connor and eowatar-Mied Siebert. Mn. HllltoD Nldred o·ec..or- wttll 2° IMlck pay •bell .. toe* . lloft•er, abe alilo ftNd 0'0mmar ... Uilu I ,_,. lawr for ··1mu~. '' TIM laWIUlt acmet --.rt ii .wi...-..Boldaaud. ft• far • .a, lln. 8._ aad Boafa la••• t•'•• o•t ...aM"!_'!" ~· TIM fwml ... ba 11191 1'Jll .... CltJ a.t ..,.... . MAI .. .,. RmlfftD -That's the old 0....,. 0ouDtJ CoartllouM In tbe MeQrau.nd •• mOvie crews ftlm a 1cene from the TV \ Plan hit by coastal officials By PAT&JCK KENNEDY o/ .. Delly ........ Orange County Supervison ha ve asked coastal com missioners to approve a $1 79· millidn d evelopment i~ Bolsa Chica wetlands near Huntingto n Beach despite criticism of the plan from top commission officials. Development plans include 5,700 homes, an 1,800-alip boat marina and naviaable ocean channel through Bolsa Chica State Beach and a minim• 600-acre salt marsh preserve fori nsh and birds. I Supervisors endorsed the ~ Dec . 16 and unanimous! decided Wednesday to send it coastal commissioners for approval. Howe ver , Micha.el Fiscberr executive director of the Coastal Commission, said the plan "faila to recognize Coastal Act policies protecting coastal wetlands. Tbe plan proposes to use public funds to develop, rather t.b.ul preserve the wetlands of ~ Chica." As executive director. Fiabel! is top adviser to the commissioners . He ur1ed Supervisors in a letter to restrict residential development tO 300 acres or mesa area to the north of the Bolsa Chica project and ta preserve most of the 1,300 acre1 of coastal lowland. Fisch er 's letter noted tbe S tate Fish and Game Department bas identified 152 acres of Bolsa Chica lowlands .. ·'viable wetland" babitatfor fi8la and birds, including endan1ered s pecies. He said 1the county plan proposes homes 00 this acreace. The Bolsa Chica encompa.saes about 1,600 acres of lowland and m esa area south of Warner A venue along Pacific Coast Highway , It's in unincorporated area, surrounded by Huntiqtoa Beach. The state presently operates a 200-a cr e we tlands wildlife preser ve a long Pacific Coast Highway Supervis ors Roger Stanton and Bruce Nestande had banb words for Fiscber·s criticisms. N estande said the letter wu "prejudging·· the case and was "really out of line."· Stanton added the letter wu "biased and slanted" and wu only tbe opinion of commiaion s taff members and not necessarily that of tbe com missioners. Supervisor Harriett Wieder noted that the plan's propoeed. salt marsh restoration would be among the most significant .,.. undertaken in the nation. : ii NYSE COM.POSITE TRANSACTIONS OUOfAflCNf' IN(~uoa t••OH ON, ... ~·· YOltlC. lliillO•IU, ... , .... c ...... •ono ... OIUOlf AllO (IMCINNAtl tTOC• llCCNANOU ANO •8Nltll0 I Y TMI NAtO ANO INSTINlf Time critical Pf"!'blem DETROIT (AP) -Ttme m~ be the most critical problem fadna lbe United Auto Workers and the nadon'a two largest carmakera aa tbey struggle to reach an a1reemet1t on contract concessions, UAW feeders said. Bar1ainer1 for the UAW and Central Motors Corp. mel 1* Into the eveains Tuesday. trylQI to beM a Saturday deadline for an_.,....._ Both GM and Ford Motor Co., placued by a sales alump, aay concesaions from lbe unloe are Yitai to their financial beallh. "We obviously didn't develop lhe kind ol progreaa we needed to 10 all flilltt, bul we're aUU williAI to come back ln the ISIOrnlna," •aid UAW spokesman Doa StilJman. "There la 1'8.fftetent time to reach a aett.lement, but whether we wt1J or not .•. la a very opa quesuoa." H /F ., (This u iJw /ourllt pearl o/ a Jo.pan MT'N• °" IM>ul to aav~ on .,our 1•1 incMM W.••.J A woman who owned a 2~·carat diamond rtn1 that had cost St0,500 waa wrlUna a check at a supermarket Whtn the caah.ltr not.Iced the atone WU not In the ring. Tbe owner had la1t noticed U.. diamond In the rln1 about an hour earU-r while ahe was filln1 her nailA. She had tbe rln1 cheeked aJler discovering the losa and found lhat two pron11 were miHing and two on the opposite aide were forced upward as If a stron1 blow bad struck one aide of the ring. She claimed a caaualty deduction for loll of the diamond. The Internal Revenue Service dlsallowed the ded~on because she couldn't name any sudden event that might have jolted the diamond. The Tax Court disagreed with the ~ IRS and allowed the casualty -lo ss deduction . It is n't •,.. necessary for the ._, fcienneur~0 ~e~bl~h~ ftllll 1111111 £ Z happened, since it must have happened between the Ume she did her nails and wrote the check, The IRS Is almost certain to bar a non-buslnns casualty-loss deduction arising from drouaht conditions. However, in a 1981 decision, lhe Tax Court showed it will uphold such a deduction where the damage occurs in a short lime. Thia caae involved the 1977·78 drought in Marin County. Jn February '77, strict water-ralionina rules prevented the taxpayer from watering his lawn, plants and shrubs, and by June they had all died. The taxpayer claimed this reduced the value of his property by $2,000, which he took as a caaualty loss. The Tax Court upheld the deduction because the death of the greenery "resulted swiftly and directly from an extraordinary calamitous drought." An unfavorable Tax Court decision agrees with an earlier 6th Circuit case that a loss caused by a tree disease -as distinct from an attack by insects -cannot be a casually loss. The fact that Dutch elm disease is spread by beetles is not an attack by beetles and the resulting damage is not a casualty loss. Another '81 Tax Court case helps you measure a casualty-loss deduction. The tax regulations say that you can measure a loss as either the decrease in fair market value of the property that results from the casualty or as the cost of the repairs. . One appraiser arrived al the amount of decrease in value of a damaged building by subtracting the estimated cost of repairs from the value of the building even though the repairs hadn't been made and lhe IRS rejected the appraiser's valuation of the building after it was damaged. The Tax Court held there was no reason why an appraiser couldn't take into account the anUcipated costs of repair in arriving at his post-c asualty valuation of the property. The I RS says you can't deduct a casualty for which you are entitled to insurance that you voluntarily decide not to claim (the same attitude the IRS takes toward insured medical expenses>. A district court and the 6th Circuit have upheld the IRS. But in 1981, the Tax Court disagreed wilh the IRS and the other courts in a case where the taxpayer had burglary insurance on which he had already collected three times. On his fourth burglary within eight years, he filed no claim but look a casu.ally-loss deduction. The IRS barred the deduction; the Tax Court upheld the taxpayer's claim. My advice: File your insurance claim if at au possible and thus avoid an IRS dispute. But if this jeopardizes your continued insurance coverage, remember the Tax Court ls on your side if you deduct a casualty loss without filing an insurance claim. Tomorrow: EdacaUo• expe•aea aad barter clubs. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW YORl(tAPI FIMI Dow·"-..,.._ for w.o .. J.. '°· "IW YO•• CA!tl -lttl<H tall ...... , .. ---.~-­,......,.. ...... 'ITOCKI ........................ ., ···,,;,;-·,cir:.-.·:r-,o·~·~"':;_·~ 10 Trn I ltO,~ JSUS JO.it M7.12-J.•· IS Utl I ICM.» !04.G 10US 1 .. It-1 ... '5 Stll I JIUO Jl111 JJ1 .l1 :DUI-I A I-./ s,m.-Tr... I 1.Ja,• Uftl~ I 111,• '5 Siii .......... I 1,)Q.1- WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YOIU( CAl"I J ... IO . 1 -...c:• '~Ji 0.Cll-/ftJ =-:::.. I 41J , ... : New ...... I • "-·-I 10S WHATMIUOIO N~W YORI( CAPI J .... lo .... ~ T~ 1-0.Cll-, .. v=-=. I 2tl I 1t6 1111 New ...... I 1 .: ..... _ I .. SYMBOLS .......... -........... ..... u.. ............. -.... tl ...... .. _,.,.. I .......... .,._ --.. -..... -....... ... ====-~-..... ... -. • .::i=-........ ......... , .......... -. Dlllll'leer,... .. .,........ ........ ==~-:::::::= ill£!f-5 .......... = ·--;a; ---. ....... ~-.-. =.· .. -:: --::-.= -..... ··::r--.. ':&11:---~·-·-~= .. *:IC:. ==· ~---:~...:.:.i-=.= == : 1: .. , ... -~. . , \ I .. I I SU,ER FAN -Newput Beach's Paul Salata hasn'l missed a Super Bowl. and' sipce he's a former 49er. guess where he'll be Sunday. l..a·kers . avoid ' letdown Fre•AP61pa&cltes INGLEWOOD -An emotional defeat the previous night to the Denver Nuggets didn't seepl to put a damper on the Los An1eles Lakers ' performance Wednesday night at the Forum. With forward Jamaal Wilkes scoring 30 points and guard Norm Nixon adding 28, the Lakers rolled to an easy 132-113 NBA victory over the New Jersey Nets. , In jumping out to a 33-18 lead late in the first quarter, the Lakers went on to ruin Nets coach and former UCLA coach Larry Brown 's return t o Southern California. LOS ANGELES led 66-46 at haUtime and outdistanced New Jersey by as many as 2S points in the third quarter. The Laker attack included 20 poi a ts by c enter Kare em Abdul-Jabbar, 16 by reserve guard Michael Cooper and a career-high 11 by Kurt Rambis: The Nets were paced by rookie forward Albert King with 19 points, and Buck and Ray Williama had 18 each. Lakers Coach Pat Riley said altboueh the Lakers' 140·139 loss to Denver on Tuesday was disappointing, their comeback Wednesday was encouraging. "I· have to give the players a lot of credit for them to come back," be said. "Last night was very emotional. That loss was one of the most disappointing, because of the effort we put in. Tonight we had 53 fastbreats. Our guys were constantly going. I was delighted." B&OWN SA.JD the loss was unfortunate but he said lhe Nets would bounce back. •'The Lakers were ereat. They shot the ball well and they did everything they wanted," Brown said. "We made a run for it in the second qua.rter and that was it. You can't let tbe Lakers dictate the tempo of the game. We mbled a lot of shots early and theft lost our confidence." Los Ansel es shot 57 .3 percent from...,, COllDfldina OD 51 ~. attempts, while New Jersey made 48.2 percent of its field goal attempts, sfnting 48. out of 104. Nixon made his first 11 field goal attempts and ended 11 for 15 from the fioor while Wilkes made 12 ol 15 attempts. &All.BIS llADE all ftve ~ bia altem• from tbe ftelct .Md led the Lattin with me rebOunds. Loa An1elea outrebounded New Jersey 50-39. Buck Williams wu the Neta' leadlnt1 rebounder with nine ano atorei ei1bt of bis 12 field eoal attempts. Geralaitis fined .-re6drd 115,000 NE1rYORK CAP)-Tennia laJ• VltM o.:,taitia bu been ln.S a record .$16,000 b)' the M•n'1 lnternati+nal Proleulon&l Tennla eou..cu for womQll'olfeme8. Tbe 1JOU1t slapped the tmnls pro from ltlnp POiAL, L..I., with a ss.• lfty f• two l8ddeDtl durlat tbe lJnl~ States ()pea lut Slllt•ber ._ SlO,• fo.-ta at I DI walked out or the 11....__ IDdoar.naal lD AU.- tralla ... Odobel'. r Ga PM bu-.. , ...... tb•IMt Qt= to -, .. ' 11111J PUil · THU~DA'V, JAN. 21, 1912 Football fanatics make COMICS C6 Super Sunday a special occasion for restaurateur. C2 . CLASSIFIED ca Guess ·who Salata willroot for? .and that's relevant Ex-49er hasn't missed a Super Bowl yet\ ~ By .llM McCU~DIE oi .... Dllltr ~ ..... Exe~ Paul Salata if be NMU to 1bow qmptoms of ti.e tncreul ... ly aom~ Yirus known a.._ fevs, ' He didn't coatract H two weeis qo, wbm be traveled to the .., _... lo wat.cb San Francisco ..,.,.t Da.llM, •21 . to claim the NFC ct\..-pionahle, and earn the right to meet the Clne.Uati Beacala in Sunday's SuA'fr Bowl ~VJ. NO, THIS AFFECTIOHATE alnlction ,.,.. WN back. Back, to. lid to be exaet. That's the ~year the Newport Beach sewer contractor broke into professional football with the San Francisco 49ers, then of the All-America Conference. This was San Francisco's pre-NFL era, when it was competing against teams like the Los Angeles Dons and New York Yankees. The following year, the 49ers moved into the National Football Leaiue and Selata was a member of that team. A eenuine origtaaJ: It Uierefore comes u no surpriae to bear Salata aay he's pulling for tbt ..... Sundav. IT'S AUIO NOT aurprialni to hear that Salata atrlve,d in Pontlaci Mtch., Wednesday ni8bt and wl I be in attendance Sunday. He's attended every Super Bowl since the 1ame's inception io 1967. He's not about lo mill the 49ers• first appearance In pro football's premier event, even if it means venturing into the deep freeze or the Midwest. This is being labeled the "Great Experiment or the North," the first Super Bowl lo be played in a location not known for its comfortable wtnter climate or e nte r.taining touris t atlNctions. "Even in the springtime, there's not a heckuva lot to do in Detroit," Salata says . "They have to make up things to do. In a place like New Orleans, il C ent~ent) is automatic." STUL. SAIATA is looking forward to seeing his NFL alma mater compe~e in Sunday's cluaic. 49er fever has taken hold. '•You should have seen 'em in CandlesUck last week," he said. "I left a half·bour after the game and I could drive right out of the parking lot because no one else was leaving.•' met the Miami Dolphina in Super Bowl Vil. The teams were headquartered 1.- 0range County and the center of restivites was the Newport.er IM. The involvement from the Newport Beach community and all the extra-curricular activities in the days leading up lo the ga m e ma.de this Salata's most memorable Super Bowl. "IT WAS AN all-timer," be aald. It's that type of ctarnival atmosphere that has attracted Salata to every Super Bowl game. The game itself serves as a climax lo a week of celebration that Salata claims is unmatched for plain good limes. "Hall ot my friends and townspeople were involved. Fort.be Commiuioner's Party, we took over the whole Queen Mary. It was a blast." Salata has earned a reputation for being a fun-loving sort. He's credited with being the founder of Irrelevant Week, a week.Jong salute to the Jut player selected in the annu_aJ NFL draft. According to Salata, the party was never more in full swing than in 1973, when the Washln~ton Redskins ·'The press is continuously eulogizing the superstars and No. 1 draft picks," Salata said. Bavasi offers Yanks a player That is,, if Angels sign Reggie From AP dJspalches Ange ls Executive Vice President Buzzie Bavasi says be will give the New York Yankees a player if the Angels sign Reggie Jackson. Bavasi said Wednesday that although the rules don't require such a gesture, his conscience dictates it. "I DON'T even know if it's ethical," he said , "but it's something I feel I have to do in good conscience s ince I've said all along that we weren't going into the free agent market this year. If I send the Yankees a player, it's the same as trading for Jackson." Arte r negotiatio ns with Jackson aJl day Wednesday in Phoe nix , Bavasi said he is "more optimistic than ever'' that the Angels will .sign the 35-year-old outfielder·designaled bitter. Bavasi said he and Yankee owner George Steinbrenner have aereed on the player lo be traded, but he would not name the man. He would s ay the player is not a front liner. The Angels' executive said he has been in contact with Steinbrenner, and "he still seems to have some interest in Jackson. I don't believe it's as great as ours." Jacks on 's age nt, Gary W.alker, says he has agreed to provide Steinbrenner an equal chance at the player after au the bids are in. ANAHEIM-BOUND'? -The Angels and Reggie Jackson ma y b e n ea rin g an a greem e nt which would bring the s lug ge r West . Anoth e r sess ion of negotiations between the two sides is planned. The Baltimore Orioles, the Atlanta Braves and the Yankees are still in the running to obtain Jack&on. CORNERED -Estancia 's Randy Tift < 44 l is pressured by Corona del Mar's Mike Hess C30) and guard Chris Lynch 1151 INlly ""' """'..., ~ .... , O'o..tl during Wednesday's Sea 'View League crucial in the Eagles' gym. Sea Kings won. 40-35. WALKER SAID he is "very encouraged" by the talks with Bavasi, "but that doesn't mean anyone...e.lse..js out of it. It would be premature to say one club or another is the favorite." But Braves owner Ted Turner reportedly said that Walker and Jackson hadn't been returniac bis calls this week, and Orioles General Manager Hank Peten indicated he hasn't talked with Jackson recently. "I'd hne to think that's not a very good sign at this time," said Turner. CdM's . marksmanship £Oils Eagle zone Sea Kings make .their shots count and move into f~r~t in Sea View League The game was everything it was billed to be with Estancia's Eagles controlling the isaue until lhe fourth period, then the Sea Ktnc• comlna back, their defense limillnl the E.,lell lo 3·of:ll from the field and but nine aecaod half points. Estancia had a shot with 2:32 left, but Brian Midland's aecood free throw missed and Corona de:I Mar held a 36·35 lead, then the two teams scrambled back and forth until Hess hit a pair witb nine seconds lei\ to get CdM a 38-35 lMcl and with one Uck left Olaorl added two more free throws for the flnai margin. ·'I toll our kids that even if Hess misses we still have the lead," said Errion about the situation with nine JeCOOds left. ··But Mike looked at me with an.. astonished look) and said, 'Hey coach, I'm , not going to miss it.' Cavaliers owner baeb hi& cqach CLBVSLAND (AP) -c ·lneland Cavalten owaer Te4 1. Ste__plen w~:t.! .... r ..... tUt Coach Chu•D wulDlm '•d ..... ~ loaiqMa TIMN 11111 beta 1-..aaU. _., lo the wM tMt o.IJ w• ln tu. tut-ho..an as coach ot the stru111ln1 NaUonal Basll•blll .U.OClatm ~ •'Chuck Daly llilere u our eoaeb and lte will ....... toaela, ........ aald .•• , exped <lbuck Daly to flldlill tile Uaree yean al=,_, .... " ·B.albi adciect "I et~ wiDI from• ." "He's a pressure player, as if no one else is in the gym. "These kids don 't have the outward-look, it's all internal. They keep their poi s e . I thought Hess was outstanding defensively and offensively and with Petersen drilling them Che led all scores with 14 points, 10 in the first half) . . . we needed all of it. ·'Then down the stretch they just played as hard as they could." Lynch and He.ss added 10 points apiece lo the winner's totals, whlle Estancia failed to get a player in double figures. "I thought they'd try to go inside more," said Estancia Coach Larry Sunderman. "But the way they were shooting from outside who's to argue? "Petersen really hurt us. We were so concerned about Lynch and Hess. Maybe we should have made an adjustment a little sooner." • •eor.a dll Mar ceta a lot ~ help from its 1uards and puts a lot of preuure on the baU. We don't have any excuaes." The Baca. bit 14 of 21 from the field (51.9 percent) but those outaide ahots of Corona del Kar'I Juat kept falliq, and eventualJy lt Sot them the lead at 11-34. Ea..U. &Ille Sea IUall went up by a II·• count, "" Randy fin HturDed ln the fourtll quarter, after s.lttiDI out 15:4'1 ol playlnfttmewllh three penonal foula, and hlt a pair ol buckets to Ue It at II, tbell Jett Gardaer bit two free tbrowl wttb S:ll to 1lve ltllWlda 1t•1 lMt lead (JWI). Tb.ve't ao re1t for Satuda -Ute Eqles IDUlt travel $· l to ~wport Harbor l'rldAI Dl,.t, wbll• Corona ~el Mar r•t•• to Ill Ito•• court to dael &Jal...., (N). ~ Bavasi earlier had implied that the Angels would not try to s ign th e 35 -year -old outfielder-designated bitter if New' York intended to try to keep him in a Yankee uniform. IT HAS been reported , however, that Walker planned to listen to offers from other teams, then give the Yankees a final chance lo negotiate. Alt.bough most details of the bargaining between the Angels and Jackson haven't been made public, Bavasi did say the Am e rican League club had made an offer that would tie Jackson's salary to attendance at Angels' games. Wednesday's meeting. waa held in Phoenix because that i1 where Walker lives. Bavasi did not indicate when or where the next session would be held. GRETZKY SIGNS . RICH CONTRACT EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) - Wayne Gretak.y, the Edmoato& Oilers sensational hilh·s= center, and the club's ~ Peter Podtllnctoa, have a to reaew a 2l·year contract U.. will make Oretsky lb hi1best-pald pl91er in N--Hockey Leque ldatary al than h mlllJon a year. At a news eoalwence prior EdmQldon'1 81me .,ailll& "uk-W~4D•M•Y a111tt Poc-kUn1toa said '' NDetOtiac..d deal ii in ttnM nine, lix and 1lx years. Orange Cout DAILY PILOt/Thuraday, January 21. 1 MZ • Ocean View giv;e s it fhat .. lit t le ~ By .JOHN ll:V ANO ........ "" ... After Ocean View Hi&h lost to Edison last Friday, marking the Seahawlta' second loea in their last three outin11, Coach Jim Harris made lt a point lo find out what was wroq wlth his team . 22 -"which la 10 more than we·.e "'8 1elting," Harris added. "We'•• tuid~ with that alJ y•ar Joq," --~·· Coath Dave Btown u "9 _,..., hla i.am •boot 10 , fk oo PobU and 12 relloundl trom•.1am Uaevltch and lS points from Mlke J ~u4i1e. ~ la1I blibnt output al UM The Seahawka (2·1 la leape, ll .. overall > led from the ••rt and eacept ~re• C12 of 17) ~ tile Reid In the 1 tecond ball ucl 1tiQ. come up short. ··we h~ve to ldjrD "ta~• car• of the aedon. ' • • f told my player1 that tbey had to be wUllnl to plaJ to the ,olnt of pain ... and theokeep fo6ftl ," explained Karria . "J told them i they needed a rmt. we .. ad people oe the beach who eoaad slve t.Mmene. BASKETBALL .. _ .... -· . Fountain Va 'I fipi1hed with 17 t~trt. ''I had us work.lq on a lot of little tbln11 durinl practlce, thlnldq that waa it, and it turned out to be one big thine," explained Harris followlnc the Seahawks ' 55·S3 Sunset League baske tball victory over visiting Fountain Valley Wednesday nl1ht. for one brief moaaent when the BUOQ.I knotted the score at 44-aU ln the foWtb quarter, Ocea" View waa able to keep its distance. ··~ to ...... .bad~ tbla one a ' Uttle 116t D&uer.'l lldd~ B{OWD. "This was a blg game, no doubt a bout it.'' J elf Huches certainly dld bia beat In lryjn1 to overcorne any problems the Barona had. The 6-3 senior olten outahot bis own tAtammates in scoriag 28 or the team's 53 points. "I told them that they needed to co out and•lfet after it. J bad to........, It from them because nobody ltnew It wu misaiag. What Harris discovered wu that his Seahawks were pacing themselves; that they we.ten't putU.na forth that little Actually, the Barona U·I. 11~) cou.Jd have won the came tf their own t urnovers hadn't been so destrucUve. •1 Menta lly , e motionally and p h ysically I t hink they feel tbe dlfferenee now.'' HOT HANO -Fountain Valley's Jeff Hughes netted a game-high 28 points for the Barons, but it was in a losing cause as Ocean View prevaile4. 55-53. extra it t~es to be a winner. "Usually, my teams know they need to·eo alter it. Thia one is Just starting to realize that. 1-.. never done so much talking to a team ln my whole life than I have this one thla week," said Harris . Fountain Valley, which traUctd by aa many as nine ln the flnt half, alowl)' whittled away at the defldt unW a Jell Hughes Jumper lied tbe acQre at 44 with 5:50 to play. Hu1hes, creati.U many Of his own shots, hit on J,2 of 21 attempts from the floor. Ilia $eammites, meanwhile, were 11 of 21. Teammate Ken Harter was the only other Baron in double flgurea with lS. Althoup Wednesday ni1ht'1 1ame •as the Oral leacue meedn& between the two schools, lt was actually their second coofnmtat.ion tbia aeucie, with Ocean View winlllne that by a basket, too, 61-59. The Seahawks didn't exactly give their coach 32 minutes of basketball against the Barons, but they gave him But every lim e the Baron.a bad a chance to Ue or go ahead .tier that, a turnover would place tbe ball back into the Seahawks' hands. The Seahawks, who connected on only 41 percent (19 of 48> or their attems;>ts. Noting the two acores, Harris R\11 a smile on his face~ and with bis t.c>nP,e planted firmly in theek. quipped: "•· guess we're soundly a t>ucket better.'' ,."\\"\. ,,,~' Super Bowl XVI reaso n for a party From AP dlspa&cbes Head Coach Richard Fralc, no 5l relation to Frick and Frack of lee C. t comedy fame, will call the signals for a sellout crowd of football fanatics Sunday during Super Bowl XVI. Fralc bas no conn ection with the San 1''ranc1sco 49ers or the Cincinnati Bengals, principals in the Silverdome in Pontiac, Mich. who will be the featured performers in the game. Super Bowl Sunday brings on a rash of parties across the nation and Fralc, the manager of Camino O'Brien's Mexican restaurant in Diamond Bar. bas sold 256 seats for his bash al $5 a throw. Each fan is promised a seat in front of one of five big screen television sets for the show. And that 's only the beginning. The Ram cheerleaders, the Walnut High School marching band, the Cuckoo Camino Cbk ken, a Dixieland pep band, the Cal Poly <Pomona> cheerleaders i and a host or other extras are also scheduled for appearances. Quote of the day San Francisco's Dwi1ht <lark., whose leaping catch of Joe Montana's pass with just 51 seconds to play gave the 49ers the winning touchdown in their 28-27 triumph over DaUas in the NFC championship aame: "It was a high throw, just like it bad to be. I dldn't think I could get it. I'm not f!lUCb or a leaper. But I guess I can go as high as I need to in a championship game." No. 2 Missouri shakes off Kansas lllclty Frader sank six crucial m free throws in the final minute as unbeaten, second-r anked Missouri survived an upset bid by archrival Kansas turning back the J ayhawks. 41-35 in a Big Eight ba s k e tball game Wedne sday night . . . Elsewhere, OtheU Wihoa and Ralpla Sampson both scored 18 points to lead third-ranked Virginia to an i.>-54 thrashing or George Washington University . . . Sophomore g~ard Jim Maaler tallied 22 points to lead ninth-rated Kentucky to a 91-76 victory over Florida, which lost its 10th s traight game. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA I Sherrill wants 'integrity' at A&M Jackie Sherrill, in his first news [I] conference as Texas A&M's bead C. • football coach, said repeatedly Wednesday that be plans to "brfog some . integrity" to A&M's football program. The former University of Pltfsburgh coach, who declined to specify the terms of his contract , washed his hands of the firing of former A&M Coach Tom Wllsoa, a n action which cleared the way for Sherrill to take the dual post of athletic director and bead coach . . . Owner Geae Klein of the San Diego Chargers denied a report Wednesday that the Charaers were interested in obtaining quarterback Bert .Jones from Baltimore . Dkk Saymauld, Colts' geg_eral manager, told the San Diego Tribune that ~ Sanden, general manaeer of the Charaers . had ca ll e d a n d expre~se d interest in Jones ... Alfonso Gardner, a three-year defensive lineman at Florida A&M , has been arrested on charges or using stolen credit cards, Tallahassee police said. Sixers snap losing streak Bobby Jones scored six of his 21 m· points in the fina l 2:24 to r ally Philadelphia to a 115--110 victory over . Portland Wednesday night in the · · National BasketbaJI Association. The victory s napped a three-game losing streak for the 76ers, who avoided losing four straight for the first time since 1974 . . . Larry Bird kept up his hot scorin~ touch by pouring in 32 points to l ead Boston to a 112-103 t riu m ph ove r Indiana ... Greg Baltard scored 29 points as Washington defeated Seattle, 106 -95 to s n a p the Supersonics' eight-game winning streak'. It was the fourth straight win for the Bullets ... Rolando Blackman's 12 fourth-quarter ,0 ... 1 points helped Dallas erase a 15 -p oin t deficit a nd' beat Milwaukee, 109-104 ... Pbll Smltb scored seven points in the final 31h minutes and finished with 23 points, leading San Diego to a 108-99 triumph ovet Golden State. Monge signs pact with Indians Sid Moage , a free-agent II left-hander who has pitched for the Cleveland Indians the past 4i.ii seasons, signed a three-year contract with the Amer;can League club Wednesday. Monge moved from the minor leagues to the Angels in 1975 and joined the Indians ln May, 1977 and has compiled a 29-35 record with a lifetime 3.46 earned run average and 47 saves in the major leagues ... Veteran right-handed relief . pitcher Ron Reed signed a new three-year contract with Philadelphia. Phils General Manager Paal Oweas wouldn't confirm anl... financial figures but did say that two of thf' three years we.re guaranteed. . ------ OUTSTANDING VALUES! ttl2YW ~ANTUM WAGON 5Pd. trans, air cond.. leatherette seats, radial S.ow ~-.._ Coadfflolll Ufta/ellaln tires and morel (Stk. 3089~ (004796). Mountain High Mt. Baldy Snow Summit Snow Valley Goldmine 20·24 pow/pp 8L 8-12 pow 24....S pow/pp SL 18-24 pow/pp 4C 30-42 pow/pp 3L CENTRAL CALIFORNIA June Mountain 64-88 pow /pp 4C Mammoth Mountain 118 pow/pp UC China Peak 57-73 pow/pp FO Dodge Ridge 60-84 pow/pp FO NORTBE&N CALIFORNIA Mt. Reba 78-138 pow/pp 6L Kirkwood 132-216 pow/pp FO Heavenly Valley 87 pow/pp 21L Tahoe Ski Bowl 84-124 pow/pp 4C ~ortbatar 43-124 pow/pp FO Squaw Valley 54-132 pow/pp lOL Dooner SID Ranch 120-144 pow/pp 2L Alpine Meadows ~192 pow/pp 9L Susar Bowl u11-aeo pow/pp SL Boreal 144-1• pow/pp 4L Homewood Ski Area 72-120 pow/pp 3C Conditions: ho -bardpack; pp -packed powder: pow - powder. Ufta/cbain: L -lifts; C -chain; FO -full operatiao. ll --tp. Utt Price s 12.065 Dhc...t$1470 SALIPllCI 5 10 595 SClaOCCO C'oupe . s 1peed tran•mlaeion, metallic paint, rear window wiper/waaher, a114y wheels, .-.0 ~ and morel (Stk. ) <01~ NICI . 5 10 95 Gre~ky has own celebration Wayne Grebky celebrated the ~.· signing of his new contract by • scoring a three-goal hat trick and rookie center Tom aoo11s. figured • in two goals 20 seconds apart late in the third period a5 the Edmonton Oilerl spurted lo ~o 8-~1 triumph over St. Louis Wednesday night in the.' National Hockey League . Gretzky now has 60 goals this seaso" . . . New York Rangers defenseman A•dre Dore broke a 1·1 t i e wJUa a backhand sho,, fben 1 Nick Fotla clinched his team's 3-2 victory over the rival New York Jslanders ... Doac Salllman's goal witb two minutes left gave Hartford. its first win over an Adams Division foe this --.son -a 4 -2 con que st or oHTDY Quebec ... Rick Kelaoe scored three aoaJs. two in the final period, to pace Pittsburgh to ~ S-4 victory over Boston . . . Dave Babyela scored his 1*1'1 goal or the season and set up Merril :t!ell for another , while goaltender Doa1 e taert notched his first shutout ol th~ ae on in W i nnip eg's 3 -0 b l ankl•g o f Washington ... Vaclav Nedeaauky set up Danny Gare, Willie Buber and Gre1 Sclamidt with perfectly executed passes to help Detroit secure a S-4 victory over Chicaeo . . . llfll Valve tallied. two goals in a 25-secOIMl •PAI).<> help Toronto wipe out a three.goal Calpry •d and lie the Flames, 4-4 ... NMI .,.....scored one goal and one assist in Minnesota's 3-1 win at Colorado. UCI coach named to Olympic post UC Irvine track and field coach •. kevla •eNalr bas been appointed to an Olympic dev elopme~t post. McNair, 33, has beell Mleded as the Western R egional Coordinator for the Olympic development or 400-meler hurdlers. 1be region includes California, Washington, Ore1on pd Arizona , as well aa Montana ~and Idaho ... Joeepla W. LaCnb, eo, prominent horse owner and breeder, was proaounced dead by docton al Arcadia Methodist Hospital late Wednesday following his collapse at the· winner 's circle just after b is horse, Unpredictable, won the San Miguel Slakes, the eighth race at Santa Anita ,Park . .z • Bolt Addle, a former reporter and sports cotumniat for The WashJngton Post, died Monday niebt at Suburban Hospital in Bethesda, Md. ')le was 71. Television. radio TV: No events scheduled. RADIO: Basketball -Lone Deacb State at Utah Stale, 6:3S''p.m ., KLON (88 FM>; UC Irvine at Pacific, 8:05 p.m .. KWVE 008 FM>;• San Jose State at Cal Stale Fallert.on, 1:30 p.m .. KWRM (1370). Hockey -Minnesota t Kings.~ 7:20 p.m., KPRZ (1150). Edison rQmps; Mar i08 b e ate n It w~ an easy night for the Edison Chargers bas ketball team Wednesday as the Cbatcers breezed to a 67-39 victory over host Westmln.ster in Sunset' League action. Huntington Beach's Olien posted a 55-50 win over ~ host Marina Vikings in another leacue outing. Ai Westminster , Coach Barry Leigh µaed his entire roster of 11 players ln a game that found Edison jumping out to a commanding lead in the first quarter and increasing the margin to 38-14 al h alftime. "We played everybody tonight and it was a team ~ffort," Leigh said. "Jeff Stephens and Richara Chang got us going orrensiveJy and Rick DiBemardo bit the boards for us but 11 guys divided up ttie playing t ime." · The Cbareers used a full-court m an-to-man defense to force 15 turnovers by the Lions. EdiAOO made nine miscu~ but it made littJe difference in the final outcome. I Huntington Beach 55, Marin• 50 A cold shooting Marina team fell behind in the second quarter and never recovered. At halftime, the Oilers held a 25-23 edge and improved by one point in the third period ln a ga~e that . saw tltern hit lS of 2S free throw attempts compared t.O 8 of 9 fcw the Vikinp. Huntington Beach increased its lead to as much as 10 points in the fourth quarter but Marina battled back to within five at conclusion of play. The win ties HunUneton Beach with Ocean View for second place in the Sunset League standings with 2-1 records. Marina drops to 1-2 to· 'tie with . Fountain Valley for fourth place with Edison the leader at 3-0. OC·C falls, 79-70 EL CAJON -Chris Beasley bad a 30-poinl performance but it dldn 't brine about a victory for the Orange Coast College Pirates he.re Wednesday night as host Grossmont posted a 79-70 South Coast Conference basketball victory. Beasley. the Pirates• leading scorer as well as- the top man In the conference, moved into ninth place on the all-time OCC sco~g li~t with 816 in two years. He passed Mike Woods who had 809 poln0ts du.ring u,i.~j-~~-~~ s1easons. .. 1 .1 ···.:r······· . ross mon\" ump~ nto an ear y eau ancJ increased the margin to 20 early in the second half at 46-26. The Pirates battled back to close the gap to eight with 2:31 left to play but never got any closer. The loss was the fifib straight for the Pirates In conference play this season while Groumont posted its second victory. Beasley, in addition to his 30 points, pulled down 11 rebounds and ha4 three steals. His conference average is 26.8 and his season overall mark is 2213. College bas·k e tbCi ll. JOHNSON & SON .. Presents ... Tonight's games .... UC 1 rv ..... el P.:llk l"r.-st. M UC s.nte ._. S... J-SI. et Cal~ l"lllle<10ft ....... LCMl9 9Mc:ll St. M Utell St: Air ,:-. M •vu Inell-5'. .. ,._ Me•ko SI. H••-._.. v..-•tut ... SH Dl9liD SI. M W\I01T1"'9 ........ W. IC.9"1uclly et Allron .,Nley .. Or- Cl• ...... It. M v-.-St. .............. ~ SI.Lown .. ~ E.IJl ..... elN.1- llldl-.. '"'"°'' •-•M .......... em Ml(lll ... SI. et Mk:lll9911 P ..... et0Mo5t. Ttll•etl. llllflol1 ........ Wl(flff•St ... W. Tun st. ... ,............._. .. "--·-··1 .... Auttlft ,,_. M T--Tedl Arll·Llttle "9clt .. ~ l"unMll • Oledet Leu"'-Tecll •I SW LMllM• ·- Mem ... M.etflll- Men:erM NE IAUISl..,e Mwrr .. St. et~ r--W•ll• "'-' .. M«tll c ... u ... S19'Mfl M N-Oo'i.- Soutll CM9llN .. S. MltalM ... VMl elW.~ .... "•"''*" .. c.ollll• VII(• el l"el~..._, OklllnllOn HotyC-MllM "*" fllW'!• .. 5'- Fridar~•me• USC .. Cel~ ·~--..... 1 WelMntlloft a . a Or990ft SI, Portl9"det..,..Clen St. M~ry'a ........ nllM U. ol Sen~~ Loyola G0101-.eet R ........ NeYMAlt-Mw.tlerSI. •o1w SI. M MMleM .._ .. , .. ~st. , ............ $1. N.....,....AttllM M INM SI. . . ... 1"•1"'14 .. ,,... Lont.,.... U. • \.oyole, Md. .... Jec:ll_l ... • llootll .. ._ ... . • f I • I NFL's Picks Of :TbeW~k PETE PSIS SAN fUlllSCI All Ill WAY! Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thursday, January 21. 1982 H /F Cl ~ >· N9A wasT••Hco-.,•••MC• UMn '9•111• """"'• o.l•nS..le PorltelMI SellDI ... l'aCAlk ........ W L ,. " ,. 11 JJ .. JI :., 21 0 12 t1 ...... Dhilila. ll'CL Ga .ns - ..... 2 .•n 4111 .w, .w, ........ Seti A11IOfllo 0.nver Ho..tllOll KelllHCllV Utell t4 1J ..... - 21 " .ns • ..., ,, 21 ... 2 , 14 " .u• 11 ,, 24 ,,,, 11 0.llH 10 21 .2'J 14Vt •AST•aN COM,•••MC• A .......... BollOll Pftll"91pf\ie ..... """°" New York NewJ erwy 30 • 21 12 .. 1t 11 21 '' tJ ~ .. DI,,..._• Mllweu .... AllMll• llMllM>e ~;~:ri Clenl- " ,, 11 11 11 27 ,. u " 24 1 ll ....... , •• Sc_ Lellen ,., H-Jersey 11l tollOll 112, Inell_,. 103 Pllll"9ltlfli• 1 U, "°'11-.d 110 WeMl!ngloft 10., SfftUe tS DellH 1Dt, Mllweull .. ICM S.11 Dle9D IOI, Gol-~ tt T ......... ~ Atl-etNewYor11. Ulefl •I SM M..io DellHet K-Clly O.lrolletSel'I Die90 Ukert 132, Nets 113 ·"' -.• ., J .!Gt 10\ll ... 2 12 .410 14 ,.,.,_ .500 •Vt .4M IVt .410 10 .410 10 . , ... 11\1> NIW , •• ,.y -KlllO lt, B. Wllllems , .. E lmore 10, Welker 3, II. Wllllema 11, O' Kor•11 1', Coo4l •. B•ll•Y 1. L•~o s. Gm llllkl 11. Tot.els 4 IMI 113. LOS ANGIL•S -llembls 11, Wllkff •. Abdlll·J-r 20, Jollftson 10, Nl•Oll 21, C-r 1', McAdOo 4, Lencllller99r 4, JorOen 0, Ire-l. McO.. 4. McK...,. 2. Totel1 SI ~IU. SC-tty Qllentn He• Jerwy tt " ,. 3:>-113 LOI Al'l99tff 33 3:1 3:1 U-1Ji Tllr~ QCNIS -Br-. F°"led -- none. Tot.t lollls --Jff•Y '11, lAK Anoetes ts. Te<Mlc.ts -LOl A-les ,,..... chlensel. A -11,:121 COMMUNITY COLI.EGE GroMmont 79, Orenge eo.at 10 CHUU•GI COAST -... , .. ., JO, T. ' Krollnfeldl 4, G. l(roflllfeldl t, Gelllo.., 4, Tllomes >, -leu •. N-3, Beldwln 11, Dlm•IMlteO. Tot•ls: )1 l.•1'70. GllOSSMOHT -BollMr 1, Lewis I, C.rllCI-I, Meler 2, Wlllte 24, J-10, TllomPtOn 4, Wllltmarsll 20, L•l•nrlno 2. Tot els· 32 IS.to19. Helfllnw: Grotsrmel, •24. Totel lolll•: 0r-. Cout to, Gro- 1t; Tt<llnl• .. l loul: C.lllo<ln 10r*'99 Coesll South Coeat Conference ~· 0-.. W L W L Full•rlOll 4 0 11 I 5-lte Ane • I 1' 1 Ml. S." Al'I-l 1 14 S Cerrllot 1 J 10 f Groumont 2 2 14 • s.r. Dl990 MMe 0 ' " 0"91199 Coesl o S t 12 ........ ,. .•• _.,:•> Ml. SMI AlllOlllo et s.tlta Ane "ulltrlOll el 5-1 Diep Mete Gros'"'°"' et Cerrll0$ Mlaelon Conference C:--• ··1. "'"'"'di cc s 0 SaOcll•t>VJl l Sen lt,_.dino 2 s. .. Di.eocc 1 ,....,_..,,, 1 Citrus 1 Pelomer o S .__ .... sG-11:•1 Pelom ... a1 Sedd'-'" Cllrus et s.n Bffnerdlno Solllll-m et Sen Diego CC 0-.. W L 11 3 ,, , 11 • ' . • 10 " . S IS IMM IO, Sedchbeck 42 SaDa.•UCll -~II •· Gere. O. De•tll-1 It, w.IMell 0, MCAlllelet 2, OtPrleM 4, Mollcrlef S, C41ft II, N..-t. T9'•1•t .... ,..2, llt\flM• -Cir-1...All_, e, tr-vlcll 11. H••• o. ,,...,_ •. Ai. ... , n. v._... 2. rotet1: 101~21'0. le-...,...,.. SM411eWk I 11 II 11-41 ,,,,,... . " ,, ,, .... Tetel ._,..:......._~ .. It. INllM 1t. Co .... MHe 12, !I T0t0 41 C:O STA M•SA -t e ,.aley ti, Pell~llowllll 7, It....,.., It, Slre.,... a, J, "leld l, G. Field 2, EllMft 7, Mellllt t, Lefw•ret,Colllo. T ... 11: •n·Jtu. • L TCNIO -11.1-:lltltr 2, lflllleM<111, F- t , Trlck9" •·A.-l, Lewis J, Menlf!Nll •. H'"'Mel •• ,..,., s. Taula: IS ls-17 "· Sc-...,---. COiie Meta • 21 11 "-42 El Toro U S t It-ff Totel '°"'" Coate Mew lt, ti Toro 21. F ... leel DUii Arnold IEI Torol, Trl'.U" IEI Toro I. NewDCWt 51, University 41 ••"POllT NAaeott -tall 13, S.-r t. Liner 4. Petitti•• "· Follr 4, Selby 7, S.,lclm_ 0. TGYts: 21 t+.21 54 UNIV•llSITY -Gue» "· 11 ... se 10, Mytrt 10, Retclltt. 0, Sloboff I. Cllel •. Larwn J. TMIK! tt 1-3 U. Sc-. .., OUtten N .. port Hwtior 14 10 11 1~ U11lnrslty 10 u U 1--45 Totel loull: N-1 Herbor 4, U11l .. rslly 14; Ttc,lwll-et lolll: "-IUnlwrsltvl. Dene Hiiie 74, Legune Beech 51. DANA Mll.U -lleftlro,t 4, Me"9toll S, llllOrer 1', Swor\....,. 12, sce.-11 11, Herrl1 •. S-:llrey 20. Tot.els: J01+.1174. l.AOUNA ••ACM -RldOelt JO, 5Mr1 10, Dvoro I, Meow> 10. M<~.ctl I, ......, I, Weldrup 3. T-s, F-o. Wiiiard 0. Tetal1: 211+.27 SI. . Sc-.., cai-tera Dane Hiiis IS It IO D-14 L ...... • IMcll 13 .. 11 It-ti Tol•I louh: Dene HHls n. L..-hr:ll 1'; Fouled owl: Rentrop !Dene Mlll1l. TIPt>er ''--.. ...-111. Tr:llnlcel foul: c;.yer I~ lier.Ill. Edlaon 67, WHtmlnater 3t •DISON -SlepMns 10, GOllOge I, Smltll S, Cll•llO 11, BlnMlll 4, LHWY 3, DI .. rnenlO 11, M•Jor 4, Miiierd 2, Feble n 1. -.. o. Totelt: 31 HOU. W•STMINST•ll -Eeslln U, Petite 7, Down• •• Nl•.ol.t •• P•l•I 2. Bl•htl.., a. Ondlcs o, Gremt o. ShrewMl<lry o. Totall: 11 S-14 lt. Seen tty Clllll,.,. Edison 11 JO 10 lt_.7 WMlmlMter I 4 II .. _,. Total lollll: Edison 11. w .. 1m1nster 10. Ocean View 55, Ftn. Y•ff•y 53 ,OUNTAIN VAl.l.•Y -Herter IS, Jr.OCIS 4, VIII-• 0, H11911H 21, Wtllteftelr 4, ICllCIO 0, Jolwl Eck-lier o. Kosty o. ~I 0. Tolel1: 23 7 ... Sl. OCtAN Vt•W -0.8r-r II, W..- 3. Ant_...,, 0, Usevlt~ll to, Gerroll •. Jlldoe u. Gerlson o •.. rry o. Tote1': It 1'·J1 SS. Sc.en .., ClllllNn Foun1e111 veu.., 1 14 " ts-sJ OcHn Vlew 1' f 14 1'-'S.S Tot•• follls: F-.111 Velley JI, 0-Hn Y ... t ; F-out: -II-Ir IF-taln Yelleyl. Hunt. S.Ktl 55, Menn• 50 MU•TIMGTON ••AC:M -Lene 13, T~ 12, A'P'9S•. Sl\eckleford t , Sele.,.. IS, F.-re o . ...,,..... o. Miiis o. Tou11: JO IS.25 SS.. MAlllNA -FlllpMI n. _,., 11, Smlltl U, Ktuumen •. Chafnlk 4, T....,., 2, llet 0. Totela: J2HSO. Scor9.., OMt1en Hllftll1191on BMcll n n 11 11-ss Merine 14 I 12 14-SO Total loull: -llnvton .. r.11 11. MeriM 20; Ft111M out: K._ IMetlMI C ....... k CMerlnel. HIGH SCHOOL STANDINGS South Coelt Leegue L...-OWnl W L 11 • 10 • 10 • 14 s I • 1J • W L Cec>l11r ..... ve11.., J 1 Ml»lon Vle)o 3 1 D•"• HUii 2 1 ,.,,,,....... J J L41911f\a IMcll 1 J Lev..,•Hllls 1 J .. ....,..o-11:•1 Mission Vle)o et L.a91MW llff':ll Dene Hlllt •• s... c1e..- c eo111reno Veller el I. ....... Hiiis ow.el • l II 2 tJ , It , • 1 • 1 I 11 I 11 I U o.w.ei W L ,. 1 11' • • •• It 1 . , 2 12 ..,. 9fomen'1 top 20 1. Lt11blane Tt<ll IUI 14-0 1,lOO 2. USC IHI 1.m l. lt11tten t•1 1,ISI 4. ChtYNY$t.. •2 1,021 S. N-cerotlne St 14-2 ta '· Mary9-IM ttO 1. Old Dom""°" IM -t. Ktl'IUCky IM IOO · •. *"' C-1114 1~a no -10. LOllO BMcll SI 11·1 160 11. Or990ll 1~2 •n 11. THM IS.,J '" 13. Gffroi• 10-3 .503 U . PennSt. 14.1 453 IS. VIII-• 11·1 "" 1'. Color-, .. 3 au 11. #MmpllllSI 1"2 212 11. SlePllen F. Au1tln •s t• It. Arl-S\, 11-4 111 JO. AIZllrn 1~ I M 111•1 OMo St. l~J .. Oilier .....,.. -••vine ¥Olti °" •t -1 liO bellots l•IPll•betlce l ord•rl llllnol,, K•MH Stilt. Nor111-•rn, Ylroonla. Women MION KMOOL a AMlllN•I Clf'"A 1. ltl•erslde Poly C11~1; 2. lnel.-ct ll•·l l; J. GMr llW I; 4. Sell Gellr .. I 11).21; !. Joflrl w. Hor111 (IHI: 4. 8'*'9 1~11; 1. ...... UNI; I. Hewburv Peril llJ.>I: t. Lynwood (IHI; 10. Fon'-111141. c.,•A I. E--.. 112-ll; J. Alef'llany 111•1; J. Alt• Lome 1~21; •· Loer• 11>!1; s. F<lollllll (11,J); 4. -...11o (IS-21. 1. L.a 5«N llH I; t. le OulnU llH I; • Welftwl ( 1141; 10. Oreeet 111-11. Clf'J-A I. M!.-Vlt)o 1,.11; 2.A"'"'9 1,.11;1. Clll110 <•SI; 4. BrH.OlllMle (14.JI; S. v-•• 112.J>: •· c..,i11r-YelMly 11 .. ,; 1. Mor.M Yel .. y (1NI; I . SclllltY CIN I; t, Gtelldele llM; !~. SWlny Hiii\ (11-41. NHL CAMl'elLLCONf'IElllEHCIE ~DM.i .. t:dmOlllOll Ca le•ry Yencou,,... ..... Color- W I. T Of' GA,_ ,. 11 t 16, "' ., 17 to 11 1t0 211 •S IS n 10 , .. 11' «I u 16 1 112 tu 11 10 JI 1 13:1 217 21 N.,,t10fv ...... MlnMIOla 11 ,. ,. 117 UI so St. Lo.tis JJ JI 4 112 ,., • WIMIP'i! " 21 10 112 20t 44 Clllceoo " to • 201 101 '3 TorOlllO IS 20 ,, '" 20t 42 O.lroll ,. " I '" ,.,. )(o WAL•SCON,•ll•NC• ,..wtd!OI ....... Plllledllptlle 21 U 2 I• 1'3 lil HY 1.i~ JS 1J • 195 ISO 54 HY 11.....,., t i 1t • 161 11t 41 l'llllOllrp JO 1t , ,,. '" " Wes1111191on 12 21 1 UI 1.. 31 U-Ol..W. luflelo Boston OWlle• Mofttrtel H•rllord ,, 11 • '" ,. ,. • 1'2 " ·" • 21t ,, 11 Jt 114 11 24 IO ISi Wat •••'•kww Pith__. S, BostOll • Heriford 4, Ouetle' J NY R-n l, HY 111-ra J Cefoary4,T-• Detroit s, CN-.-.o. Wl11111"9 l, WesllillQIOll 0 E4"'onton t, st. '-""" 4 Ml....-J. Color-1 T" ...... 10- Ml ......... ll .... Tor-et BoslOll C•IM r't' et Detroit PUu-,,. •I NY lsl-r1 MontrHI •I Pllll-IPllla 140 '3 1'3 SI ltl 5' 114 5' '°' n ..... Anh ........ Y-.HM.ILft c._.,...,_ .,, .. _..., ''"" uc•. • ""'°""' 1...,.,lelT,_.11. ..... ml 7.M •.M >M • ...., TllW l~I ,, ..... ...... .......,,~.. 4,09 A ....... C.0.U'I"• I.HY.,..,,, s.wi.. Aa IM~, O&em..d ..... I.II Mii, 9111 .. l(~y. ,...,.._.,Ml••· Tl-; l1dllJ MCOllO llAC•.4 lutloflOe. E .. l•r 0 ... IT-I 10.00 4.00 tM Clle•ll• ~$1 .. llel a.40 t.40 Dolltlle (DlltfloyH41 .... I I• Alto raced: I W-DoclD+', o .. c. 9-, Petite Power, Fent•1tlc Liz, Recine Oelltlll, COllrl DIMIM ... , Gol A H-y. Tl,..e: l:IU/S. U DAll.Y DOU~• If.II peld $41.IO. '2 ,_, .. loll Delly Double 0 ·111 pelcHU O. TNI llD llACe. t lliflOnt• O.wn .. Qlllrll (Fe.--....tl IJ.40 ... S..00 ...... 0 ... ,,,._, 1.00 s.JO A1Mrk e11 .._.., (M-;Cerronl !.IO Alto rr:M; str.wo.rrv Sll-:k. Dv.NM Petr-._ .... II•, FIMI lsMI, MIU t.-y RHIHt, Wiid Wllll•. Jem Crell, Aoo .. tte. Tim•: 1:14.t, f'OUllTM llACa. 4 lurl0ft9$. Chrla'• I.ad I Fernelllled , 21.40 u.oo •.40 El Tr-.i.o IH-ettl '1.40 10.20 Ml<Mfle's DrNm CGuerrel 3.00 Alto recllCI: Dlllenl Guy, Two SIC1e1, Setldl of v ..... Perly's <>vet. lrlgfll 111•. l'l"TM llAC•. 1 lurlOllQ\. Grl1lle Co..Nel 24.00 1.10 U0 Olleftturn L-. (McCerrOlll 4M s..i A,.w•r lo Mink CAlmussenl >.OO Also •Keel Pomliell COllrl, Foyt•a Ack. Tim• 1·t4 4/S U SllACTA C).Sl paid U 12 00. SIXTM llAC•. t V. lurl01191. Gringo J im CMcCarront n.• •.tO 1.tO A·ld-ISlblll•l >.JO J.40 A·Slr Pel• IOuerrel l .to 3.40 A-COUjlled entry Also rececl: Fllllf\V Gum, Mevlc Force, Streit P,....., Hll Par-. Sllc>Q<ln Prince. Tim•: l :IU/!. S•Y•NTN llACIE. 1.,.. mllM on turf. Potier 15*11•1 S.40 UO U O BrOllr.e L.lty IMcC...ronl 4,00 l 40 Velvel CN .. laln (A~) 1 • .0 Alto r...-ec11 Ket.sure, N)er• Time · 1·n .o U •XACTA (1-3) paid Mt.SO U PICK SIX Cl+.J.S-1) peld $14,ln..O •1111 lllr• •IM lllO llCkeU (llW hor•1l. '2 Plett SI• COllloOletklll pelo UIM.20 wlltl 42 winning lk ltell llowr ...., .. .,. U Piek Sia scretcll con10l•llon paid Stl.10 wit" ,.. wlnttlng tlckeU 1111,.. l'tOrMS, one scretclll IE IOMTN llACIE .• furlOflOS Urtt>redl~._ C Dele,.ou.seytl G1nerel Jimmy ISlblll•I Helen's S.eu CAsm~I 10.00 S.IO •.40 IUO S.40 uo out ot Alto reud: lrltfler, S.pulveela, Hoell, <>41• Arrey, Hey Rot> NINTM llAC•. I 111' mll .. Pro•ldelltlel IMcC...ronl t IO s . .o 4 to On Tiie "'-! IC.S~I S .cl •to Eerly TometOH CGallltanol s.JO Aho ra<1d Lii's B• H-..py, Apache Scowl, Rena Chief, D'Footot, M19'1ty Fella, Bao. Bal .. y. Mist., Benlernln, Flwl Ruler Tim•: t:M•/S H •XACTA (~111 peld JOO.SO. Alleftclence: 1',3'4. Hollywood Perk WaC*•k>AY'S llHUl.TS u ............ ._._._, .. , f'lllST llAC:•. One mlle pace, Gen's Gwst IMllCll-1 U.00 t,110 •.IO Huntert H-r ISIMllll 12..20 t .40 Ctllfttry Jenkt IT-Ill 1.00 Alto r...-Ad. Pl1lft War Clllel, M•. Joe 8 . Anclyt $--r. 81.rk Forfll, Bole<o Chief, Loyel H- Ttmt: 2:1» 1/S SIE,OND llAC•. One mlle pec.e. T ec> On Wood CACk....,,.,,l l2 AO •.to I• B•llllMll O'SllM IGoudnl•ul o&..20 J..00 Syoney o.. IGnilldYI uo Also rrllCI; 0.-Commend, Breoatto, Celm Y-sell, Time Trecer, Et Rey IU•o. Grendl>a Rruy Time: 2:0. llS. U DAILY DOU8L• 11·11 peld SISUO. TNlllD llACIE. One mlle pace. Shelter Pe"*' IGolldrfful 6.00 4.40 UO winier'-(Melerl t .«i 1M Tiie P\#111 (~l 3.20 Also rred: Sen AftClrNS, Oul~lt Larry, Sebrl11• Lu•I•. Tll1 Comedy Awaro. Str••,,,...._· Time: J:O.J/S U UlACTA IN I petO StUO. f'OUllTN llAC•. QJlie mll• lrol. llutlk y-.. ,~ .. 1 1.to 4.40 J.40 l.C.P. (~) S.00 4.00 Alley 8rulser IHoUI s,tO Also rreo· H'911 Cltmt.r, 00.R E TodO, Lucas can pla,y, during rehabilitation NEW YORK <AP> -Washington Bullets guard John Lucas will be permitted to play with the National Basketball Association team while undergoing a rehabilitalion'program for using cocaine, NBA Commissioner Larry O'Brien announced Wednesday. However, during a mc.t'ting which lasted severaJ hours, O'Brien told the 28·year-old Lucas that any recurrence of his involvement with drugs would result in an immediate suspension. Institute, a national health organization which administers a program jointly sponsored by the NBA and the National Basketball Association Players Association. 0' Brien ordered Lucas to under go rehabilitation under the direction of the Institute. take punit.ive action at this time. l have accepted his statement that he is not now using drugs and his commitment that he will not resume such usage." The NBA said Lucas was advised of O'Brien's decision and said: ''I'm thankful for this chance to prove that I have beaten my problem and will ·do everything necessary to complete this rehabilitation program. l know that if I fail , the next step is suspension." "'"" 11.ACe. Oftt mi .. .-<•. tit ..,.,..1....,.1 n.oo '• ..-W1My 1t.._ n ... 111 11.40 ... GV.W S-IWl.Wdl 4 .• Al .. ......-: ..... 1'"4t, ICl' ..... I H-, Al'fll ........ , If-'< ... , •• Oler<eel H-, .., o ............ Wei'-'"" TIMI t:OI 2/s. ti e XAC:TA t•tl ..-.tuuo. .. ..... 0.. .. ....,._ti... .. .,,. lltMJftt .......... _ _, l'ar", Ille ll11el llH tr•~•• ~ W.4l11eM•Y'• P•oor em were V "'flCelMo P PICa IMJl 11 ........... 1 .. 111 Hid 11,147 10 wllll II• WIMlllt tlcMtl !tour ._. .. ,. lwe C."1 .. letl-1. U PY.II ii• <.-l•llO<I paid ttt.40 wllll tit wlllllina llcket1 IWlrff llor-. twe ct111el•ll-I. U Pl~ll l11 1~r•l<ll •ori .. lell.., i>tlO ..,,tO •1111 U wlnnlllf ll<MtU ltwe ..,.., -kr•IClll. Women'• toum ement l•llMll891 ,.,,,..-........ Andrea J...., Clef. Kei. Lattlam, M , 4·2; .. Ulna ..... dtf ... ,,. Nor10ft, 7·S, ,.., •• , : Vlrolnl• llud~I dtf. v-VertnMll, +.I, .. ,: hl•le HenlU Oii. Wendy w1111,, t-t, 1•. Anne Smltll Clef. K•lllY Jorden, w ... ,. t -4; W"""' Tllrllbull Otf h tsy N-IMn, •·>. .. , WCT tournernent let flMllke CMyl ,, .... II-"""" John Sedt1 dill. J-H1-rH , .. J. 1.t, tela&e• T-ry dtf. Rl-:k #Myer, .. J ... ,. 1·5, Tomei $mid def. Sen<ly Me-,, .. , •·1 Hollywood CleHlc <•tG_,,.., l rerlll ""''"_s...,._ Yen Wlnltllly def, Pel>lo Arraye, '•· •·2. Cerlos Alberlo Klrma yr 011 Zolle n t<uNri"y• M , .. ,; E•l•la n Slmonuon Clef Damien Keretk, ~J. •·I; Pllll Dent 0.1 ••1111 Du P .. ouler. •·1 •..... "'"'"-~ Pal Oupre·lla ul R•mlru det Peter F•lgl·Het<O Oolo1a ... '· ~ ... Pnll O.nl·Klm Wer w lcto. d•t Pablo Arr•ya -De mle n Kerellt, .. >. 6·1 Brew.nee Mesters tournement let~. S-11 Alrical Nigel Burell 61 Marto. McNullY .. c;.ry Player 11 HIO y Prlu ,, TPA statistics c Tllreutll Jen. HI SCOlllHG LE ADE llS ' Tim ICll•. t.0.00; 2. EO Flori,.,., l .... Leonard Thompson. S<.oll Hcxh. W•vn+ Ltvl,41.00 AYIEllAGE DlllYING DISTANCE I Cnarlle Gibson. 18S 3. 1 Bruce DowQleH, 21M.3; 3. T •leo 01•k1, 211 5, • Mlllt Soll, 190.S, S. RO<I Bleck, 219 I OlllYIHGl'EllCENTAGE IN "Al1'WAY 1 Lerry Nt llOll, 133; 1 Devt s ... n. 12•, 3 ArnotO Pelmer, .I04. •-C•l•in PM.te...1112. S JOMINl\atto . ~. GlllEIENS IM lllEGULATION I Devld Grllllem • .IM4; J Tim Slml>'Oll. Tom Pllrlnl', Wa'f"* Levi, JOl\n Mallalln ..,, AYE1'AGE PUTTS PE1' 1'0UNJ I Lerry Rinker, 26 00; 7 hleo Orekl. Tom Kiit, 11 • .0. 4. Lt<! E•oer. n.o . s Da vid Hiii, n.so PlllCINTAGE 0" SU8-PA1' HOl.IES I Tom Kitt, Wey111 L.tv•, :lll, l . T ateo Ozaki, .372, 4. Lee Trevino, Jerry Pa11. 77L IEAGLIE LIEADEllS I Jo• H•oer, Slteecer Huth, Peter J acobsen, Stew Main'"· Jtfl S•nderl. Scoct Simpson, Jim Tllorpct, G••Y Trl•lsOflno Tommy ,,.,,,_ 111, J. ll tieO ••11tn 1 911101E l.EAOEllS t Scoll Hoell, 47, 2. Eo Flott, Greo Powers, 41, 4 Jtm Boorot. oo 5 J""" Mehaffey, JI. ..llllE MONEY LEAOlllS 1 Ed Flort, SS4,SOO 7. Crei9 SIMier, U •.000. 3 Tom Kilt. S2',700; •. Jo1111 Mell•llt y, U 7,4•0; S Vance Heafner. U t ,IOO, • Rtw CelOwell, s 11,100. 1 Scocc Hoen. S1',,00, I . Ja~ Hau l15,4'5; • BOC! Glider, 115,000, 10 Kelln Fer11u•. SU,7 .. 119ft'• eoccer Ml ... ICMOOL ---· 1, c:-. ..... .._....,,., v~ 1'.lell, lltv• SUS*' Bowt odd• San ,renclsco 111'1 IW•r CtnclnM ll ,,,_ Nw.•••-llK•&...,.. l•I Super Bowt re1ult1 R .. ulb o1 prevlolit s-t ow• o.,..,.. S11ptr Bowl I; Gr-Bay Pecker\ INFl.l Jt l(e nSat Clly Clllet1 IAl'LI 10 S..per Bowl If• Green lay Pecho (HFLI U .Oekl-11•-•IAFLI 14. SUHr Bowl Ill Htw YOl'k J•ll CAFl.I 1•. 8•1tim-Collt INFLI I Super &o.oll IV l(•llw • City C:llltl\ IAFLI 1l, Ml""9'°4• Vlk~ IN,LI 1 Super Bowl \/': Belli"'O'• Cott> CAFCI 1', O•lle•~ INFCI I). Super Bowl YI. Della•Gowboys INFCI 24, Miami Dolplllns IAFCI L S1111Ctr &owl VII Miami Do1p11ln1 IAFCI 141 WH i,lnotOft Rt011<ln• CNl'CI , Super Bowl VIII Ml•.nl Oolpllln\ IAFC) 1•, Mlnnel01• Ylltln9s INFCl I Supctr Bowl IX Pilll-1111 SIHltn IAFCI 1• MinllllOta YI kin~ INFCI t Supctr Bowl X P1lllDUrgll SIMI.,, !AFCI 71 D•llasC-'t"CHFCI 11 Supet Bowl XI O.kland Reid<!,. !AFC) Jt~i:::'i:!:1 y~~ ~"O' o!~.:~~boJS I H FCI H . Dt nvt-r Broncos CAFCI 10 Super Bowl Ju 11 Plll1buro11 SttHtlor• IAFCI 15, Dell•• CoWOOyl (NFCI JI Super Bowl XIV· Pll"burQll SIHI.,, IAFCI 31, LqsAngelH Rem\ INFCI 1' Supctr Bowl xv 0.-lano Relele•• !AFCI 71 Pnll-lplli• E•Qles INFCI 10 Pro bowling ALAMEDA OPl:N Se<-R..,Nll u -n 1 Bob H-••v 2.•11 7 Too H-• 7,•7• l. Ranoy He•rQ•O•t 2.•S41 • Eu l Mthony 7 .... 5 M•r>l\;lll Hol"••n 7,62' ~ Dave Soula• 7,.00 ' Ken Ftrnar>M1 2.sn I Slt•t Coot< 7.113 Jay Rabi"'"" 2.113 Erne Sclll&get 7.113 1 I Jell Mett.,,Qty 1,m 11 J ell Moron 2,S7' 13 Mtllt Durbin 2.SI• I• Cn..ck Pierce 2.S1l IS Don JOhnlOll 7,S!4 Wedneldey's transactions IASEIALL AllMrlc•fl L•-C LEY ELAHO INOIANS S•gneo S.o Mono•. pile-. to • lllrM yu r c0111rec1 Sioneo 8 111 N•P\oroonr . <•t<her , end e uigneo him 10 Ch•r luton 01 lllt tnttrlf•l~l Le- Nat1-1 i.- PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES -S19"fC1 Ron ""°· pi1Chtr, lo. tnr .. yur con1rec1 . IA.SKIETIALL Na"-! ..... e!Mll A1-lelieo1 ATLANTA HAWICS TrecMO Al WOOd, lorw•rd. -CNtr11e Crl•>. Qll4rd, lo lhe s.n Diego Clopper> lor Fret me 11 w 1111em1, g.,.ro. PHIL.ADELPHIA '•ERS Purcn ... d IN 'Olllr•ct Of Mike Bencom, lorwero, h om Ille tnolen• P.-er~ S EATTLE SUPERSONICS Pt•ceo Armond Hiii, OU.r'01 on t~ llllUrtd reserw llsl. FOOT IA LL Ha_F_llL-CHICAGO BEARS NemtO Mille Otlka ... ad CO.Ch ST LOUIS CARDINAl.S A"'-ecl IN resl!l"alklll ol JOit Sulh•en ••co P'ttl-ol -••lions HOCKEY NatleMIHeclteyL- PHILADELPHIA FLYERS Tre- 1!1•11 Costtllo. cenltr . and a \l'OllC!·round 1 .. 1 dr•fl <hOo<t 10 lllf Toronto M•ple LH '> lor Derryl Simer. ·enter The meeting ·was called by O'Brien after Lucas admitted in an interview published in Tuesday's Washington Post that his use of cocaine had caused him to miss severaJ games and practices over the past two years. '• ohn ·Lucas assured me that he is not now involved with drugs and or. Duvall, who met privately with Lucas to evaluate the situation, confirmed to me that in his professlonaJ judgment such is the case," O'Br ien said. "WhiJe under no circumstances do I condone his past actions, I do sympathize with his problem, one which is nol unusual In today's society. Lucas, who scdred two points and handed off s ix assists during his ll0 minute stint in the second quarter or Wednesday night's game against the Seattle Supersonics, refused to comment on his situation. SAVI NGS UP TO Also present at the session was Dr. Steven Duvall of the Life Exte.1Sion ''Therefore, taking into account the unique circumstance of his voluntary public disclosure, I have decided not to ··I did the article,'· he said of the Washington Post story. "It was a one-time deal and that's it." COLLEGE BASKETBALL UC Irvine vs. "fONIGHT 7:25 p.m. K-WAVE -FM-108 In the Larbpur, find a new classic chic and the tradi· tional quality and Warranty unique to The North Face. MON-FRI 10-9 · SAT11<>-6 (714) 548 8641 SUN 12·5 YOUR WILDERNESS OUTFITTER SINCE 1946 .. . 36eO S. BRISTOL ST: SANTA AHA. CA 9'004 500/o OFF 899 SUITS Re~. Up to 8385 ............ Now From SPORT COATS Reg. e p to 8285 .. . ..... ~o w From 859 T ROUSERS Reg. Cp to 885. . .......... !\ow From 829 SH I RTS Reg. Up to g4o ........ . . .Now From 814 T IES Reg. Up to 822.50 . ' .. Now From 89 I ! I ~ t I j Baseball's prcessing dilemma • re writer• capable voters for the the Hall of Fame? WILL GU'llLBY ·e· a wu a rust!• la tt.. Imperial Ballroem ol • ton Oefttn whm CommilMMr ~wlt uhn stepped to tbt roelrum to proclaim that om~ run kine Hau Aaron and Clfted l"rank obln1on were tbt lateat to be voted Into ar•ball'• Hall of Fam•. "Aaron received '°8 of a po11lble 415 votes for ht blabe•t 1"trcent•1• 1lnct Ty Cobb's 91.2 ercent ln 1t38," Kuhn intoned. A NEWSllAN IN the second row wa1 heard to rowl: "How can nlnt 1uy1 not vote for Aaron? - bty're idiot.a." •'Schmoes," added anotber. "Ir aron shola.ldn't be. •ottlfl ta unanlmbualy, who the f.~ ahould?" complaift.s another. "We ought tol ee it theae l\IYI deserve t:o be in· the BaaebaU rltera Auoclation," came the gripe from notber side of the aisle. t It bu been su11ested that the names or those ,vho cUd not vot.e for Aaron be made public. There •re those who want the culprit's unmasked, •xpoaed and hung up on the line for national ~idi~ule. : That wQU.ld be flagrant injustice. • ftl WHAT PIA YER, great or near great, holds e God-given ri&ht to be the unanimous choice? hasn't been so ln the put. It won't be so in the future, insists Joe Reichler, former Associated Press baseball writer, author, a member of the '¥riters' section of the Rall of Fame and longtime aid~ to the commissioner. "Someone wanted to bet me that Pete Ro,,e would be a unanimous pick when he become eligible five years after r;etireme"Dt," Reichler said Wednesday at the ceremonies. "I quickly offered to take it. It'll never bapj>e~ There always will be some people down the line who, ror perhaps a variety or personal re&SQnS, will not go with the mob." I .._._111_Wby not? It'• tbelr prlvUt1t. It ii allo pa\ently· t11A11lr fot UI• battball writers to reveal the •uua and votes of Its 400-plua merabtn •ho -..UaUy Cd ballotJ. IF IT 8£-true that there ,re 1tanc. -Babe Ruth, Ty Cobb, Willie MaY• and Hank Aaron - wboae dMdl leav• no queeUon about lhflr richt to a nlche in Cooperstown, N.Y., wby b<»ild In election? Put them 1A automaUcally every 1eat, hold a vote only for .the frtnre players. Jt the 8BWAK Wl'iters w•nt thia to be a cleau~craUc · proeess -•i it should be -t.ben every mtmber haa the privi ece to vote hia conacleoc• wltbout fear or retaliatlqo. That vote 1bould never be pubUclf disclosed and questioned, "bo more than any dellDocratic ballot for president ot other office It'~ not our system. SporU writer Jack Lane put the first ma~h to the impeadtnc 1rus nre when he wrote iq the Wednesday momtn1 New York Dally News that If Aaron weren't elected unanilQOualy. the~ would be controversy. I A8 LANG POINTED out, it waso•t until tbe dynamic WUUe Mays was elected in 1979, l1nored by 23 writers, that the storm over unanJmtty ·broke. Lani( said the 23 were referred to as "schmoes." "People will say that if Hank Aaron ls not qualified for the HaU ol Fame, who is?" said Lant, who wears a second hat u secretary of the BBWAA and counts the votes, "and lf he is qualified, why doesn't every man eligible to vote check his name on the ballot?" The answer to that is simple: This is the land of free thought. People bave their own reasons. They shouldn't be marshaled into a single frame of choice. There was no unanimity even for the original lnductees In 1936 -Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth, Honus Wagner, Walter Johnson and Christy Mathewson -five all-time greats. Ty Cobb was best, getting all but f'Out of226 votes. Twenty-one people didn't vote for Ruth and Wagner. Joe DiMaggio didn't make it until tile third year of eligibility and even then was shunned by a voters. The walls of Jericho didn't come tumbling down. Ashford almost ·gave it all up LOS ANGELES <AP> -Evelyn Ashford, curtently the world's fastest womQ sprinter, was so discouraged that she thought about giving up her sport. But villOD$ of Olympic gold at the end or the rainbow kept her go ing. "There was a time right after the boycott . when I considered quilting,"' said Ashford, referring to the U.S. boycott of the 1980 Olympics In Moscow. "But I didn't feel I bad completed what I know I can do. ''My ultimate goal is 1984; that is the pot at the end of the rainbow," added the former UCLA star who is aiming for gold medals in the 100-and 200.meter dashes in the 118'. Olympics in Los Angeles. Ashford's track career hu been marked by a number of disappointments, but the 24:-year-old sprinter said she feels very optimistic beading into the 1982 season. She's the only woman to win both sprints in the -World CUp Games, a feat she aecompliab~ in 1979 and 1981. Ashford also is the American recard·bolder with a 10.IO·second clocking in the 100 meters and u .q_in theaoo. LutSunday, stie ran a worfd indi>or beat 5.M in the Chicago meet. On. Friday, she'll compete against a 60-meter field that includes Alice Brown -whose 6.62 is a world best indoors -in the Sunkist Meet at the Los Angeles Sports Arena. Her schedule pointing to the 1984 Olympics was supl)osed to include a Ugbt year of competition in 1982. But, because she possibly could earn up to $12,000 for training expenses by finishing first in the two commercially sponsored series of indoor events thi' year, she figures to run a lot of races. "This was to have been my rest year, but It's too lemptina. I can't sit out and see someone else gel my checks ." she said. Ashford seemed to receive more notice during' the 1981 indoor season for the skintight ski suit she wore than for her performances. "There doesn't seem t-0 be much interest in female sprinters," she said. "If the suit gives some added publicity, that's good. "lt seems unfair that no one wW notice us untM 1984 comes; then everybody will be lnterie~ in us." Louisiana Tech goes for record eclipainl tbe mart of tbe 51 atrai&bt •et by Delta State in UT4--?S. Oral lloberts , unranked , Is not expected to stop Tech abort ol the record. But Barmore wasn't complacent. I U•STO N, La. <AP~ al tbe nicelt tbiDp about tytnc the record for couec:utive victories by a women's basketball team ls tbat after one more came, tbe preuure should .iart to ease up a bit, said Leon Barmore , associate bead coach at top-ranked Loui'siana .•miii:;;l;r•~1•1--1•1iiim•·---------:oei~~~:J rr::; Bb~:c~ "What we have to be very careful about is that was just Part I. We have to get Part ti " be said. "We have to /inish the chapter." •I . I MOllMICIC MOITUAl•S • ' Laguna Beach 4!M·9415 Laguna Hills 7&8·0933 San Juan Cap1S1rano 495-1 776 : HAaOll LAW~MT. OUYI • Mortuary• Cemetery I Cre!NI tory • 1625 Gisler Ave . r Costa Mesa 54-0-5554 • ....c1•onas l&LllOADWAY MOttTVAAY 110 Bro.ctway CostaMeu 609150 State out of of tht: gym in a 74-46 victory Tuesday night that gave the Lady Techsters a 51-0 s\ring dating back tot•. •'If we can just win that one Friday night. maybe we can forget about all of this ,·· Barmore said 16 a telephone interview on Wednesday. 1 A victory Friday n.iibt over Oral Roberts would give Tech sole possession of the record. P11'111 ~ ..... Or ... ~ OeOy Pllet, De_<. JI, "'1,.iM. 1, It, 11, 1'G "7N1, 1· Friday night's victory also was the lMb in the career of head Coach Sonja H<)gg. Barmore said be believes Tecb's players are aware that they could give Hogg No. 200 with a victory over Oral Roberts. "They s hould be. That's quite a milestone, to get 200 in your seventh year of coaching," he said. "It's an honor ror the kids and the university too." Pt,_, ~ ..... Or ... c.... Delly ...... OK. *1, lttl, JM. 7, U. JI, "IU611,.1. , . . ..a .. r I • Orange eo.t DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, Jtnuary 21 . 1882 ..... ieonca• llUUC~H w ... aCTTO MCTMlllt•• TMa CAUN•HMA COMMaltCIM. CODa NOTICE IS HEIU!IY OIYaN TO HE CllEOITOIH OP YI MINO ---..... H IF ..... • • • • 1111111 1:1111 Ylll 11111111 llllY Ml THURSDA Y. J ANUARY 2 1 1982 OH ANG E COUNTY L Al II OHNIA ".?'>CE NT S Reag~n mulls higher taxes on 'luxuries' BULLETIN WASHINGTON <AP> - Preside•& aea1aa clamped a Wd Way • ftul deelaloM • It.la IM3 .... et plu after briq "aeeoad ~ti" abotlt callla1 ror 1a1111ter exche hxea, admhlbtntlve IOU.fttl reported. WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan has decided on a 1983 budget plan that calls for higher excise taxes, the transfer of dozens .of social programs to the states and the 1>iggest deficit ever sent to Congr ess, administration sources report. After meeting with bis economic advisers Wednesday, the president settled oo a budcet 1 that would seek approximately $15 billion in new taxes to keep the projected deficit to about '15 billion, according to the sour~. who did not want to be identified. One source said the president would proi>ose higher taxes on cigarettes, liquor. wine and some "luxury" items, but not on beer. A higher tax on gasoline was under consideration, but no decision has been made, the source said. The sources said the tax package would call for higher excise taxes on tobacco, alcohol Inf and other consumer goods and orniant the narrowing of a number of tax "loopholes." • d The sources declined to be arreste more specific abo"ut the tax propQiali,. sayinJ. some -minOr chanies ·were p(>Ssible over the ·-r.:: .& ..... -Newpo' rt~ . . nexl~few days. They said the t: fl. A . _ -• president planned to disclose his "' major budget proposals Tuesday By STEVE MARBLE in his State of th e Union ... ...,.......... message to Congress. A police informant who tipped Deputy White House press Newport Beach officer s last s ecretary La,rry Speakes month that a pharmacist confirmed that Reagan "made a allegedly was peddling drugs, number of decisions yesterday" has been arrested on suspicion on tax plans, but would not of trying to blackmail the elaborate. pharmacist be turned in, Earlier tax proposals under authorities said. d i s c u s s i o n w i t b i n t h e LONELY SEASON -A lone stroller walks down Huntington State Beach, which shows the effects of heavy rainfa~I. ll's ...... .... ,..... .. flMltcll .. ._. a far c ry from the shoulder-to-shoulder crowds which flocked to the s a nds or the Pacific last summer. Authorities said they arrested administration centered on 29:year-old James Cunningham, in creased excise taxes on a Corona del Mar resident, after cigarettes , ti q uor, wine, be assertedJy tried to extract tong-distance telephone calls $25,000 from pharmacist Jack and "luxury" items, such as Gearing. jewelry, furs and yachts. Cunningham a llegedly told Higher excise taxes on beer, Gearing he would not testify gasoline and airline tickets also against the pharmacist in court had been under re view, but in exchange for the money, there was opposition within the according to investiaaton from administration to increase taxes the Oran1e County District on these items. Attorney's office. Revenue from the federal Cunningham, arrested last excise taxes wouJd be turned !1r l day , was a r r a i g n e d over to the stales to finance wednesday ln Harbor Municipal some 40 federal programs in C<riart and is being held in lieu of health, education and other $10,000 bail. s o c i a l a re a s t h a t t b e Gearing, a 59-year-old Laguna administration wants to shift to Niguel resident, is the owner of state control, sources said. Jack's Pharmacy, 3025 E. Coast In addition, Reagan will Highway, Corona del Mar. propose the wholesale tramfer Gearing and his pharmacy of the giant welfare and food bookkeeper, Anita Poekentrup stamp programs to the states in Gabler, were arrested Dec. 18 on exchange for a total federal charges of conspiracy to sell takeover of the burgeoning morphine. Medicaid program, which has Police said they believe been growing 15 percent a year Gearing sold large quantities of in costs for providing health Demerol, amp)letamlnes, car e to the nation's poor, cocaine and morphine to accordingtotbesources., customers without required Treasury Secretary Donald T. prescriptions. Regan disclosed Wednesday that Wayne Fields, an investigator o ne · '1 o o -p b o I e' • lb e for the district attorney, said it admiMstration would seek lo was mformant Cunningham who narrow involves tax-exempt tipped police to the alleged industrial development bonds illegal activity at the Corona del that local governments sell to (See TIP, Pa1e A2) attract busi:Jiess. ............ PllLllm ••ea•• -Gary KillcoUlnl bolda bia cat, Kacy, credbd witb wakinl him to a llre ln bl1 Cotta Meo apartmlDt and aavtnc bla life. Coast to get sunny skies Friday Rain to give UXlY to fair weather, warmer readings The winter rainstorm that caused scattered auto accidents, reporta of bail, power outaps and traffic signal failures along the Orange Coast will give way to fair weather and warmer temperatures Friday, according lo National Weather Service forecasters. A weather service spokesman Officer Dick Van Coll said the CHP r espo nd ed to 11 rain-related accident• in tbe South County. He s aid most were fender-benders. and no major injuries were reported. Caltrans crews today were working to repair traffic signals lbat failed al Dover Drive and said the probability of rain , 'It can change would drop to 10 percent tonight. Friday's forecast calls for diirectwn' un·thout clearer slties, some gusty winds • and warmer temperat ures -any warn.;ng . '' peaking in the low 60s. • The departing storm will leave in its wak e a ra s h of inconveniences but few major damage reports. Cable television customers in the South County were without service for a time Wednesday night when lightning struck an antenna in Laguna Niguel used by the Storer Cable Television. The rain played havoc: with tramc. also. California Highway Patrol Pacific Coast Highway and at Morning Canyon Road and Pacific Coast Highway, both in Newport Beach. N ewporl Harbo r officials reported that winds gusted up to SO mph along the coastline from 11 p.m. Wednesday to 3 a.m. today. No major wind damage was reported. In the Harbor View Hills area of Corona del Mar, bordered by the Corona del Mar Freeway on the north and Pacific Coast Highway on the south, 1,510 customers were affected by a storm-related power blackout Wednesday night, Southern C a lifo rnia Edi so n Co . spokesman Jim Kennedy said: The outage was reported at 6:44 p.m. Power was restored to half the customers by 7 p.m. and to all but 60 by 7 :35 p.m., Kennedy said. The remaining 60 customers had to wait till 4 a.m. today for power, he said. One of the unlucky 60, a wom an who lives in the Bay· vie w Apartments at San Joaquin Hilts Koad and Marguerite Avenue, said she was forced to improvise during the blackout. .. We bad a battery-operated television with a S·inch screen, so we weren't too bad off," sajd the woman, who asked that her name not be used. "We didn't want to miss 'Dynasty'." Other Orange Coast cities reported scattered occurrences Ca nds ~ of bail, some flooded streets and t S 0 U a r n rm a few fallen branches. Overall, ---~·_., ___ b.Q..wever, s torm damage apparently was mmor. Siamese saves man in Mesa blaze In Huntington Beach, veteran weather watcher J . Sherman Denny spent part of bis 85th birthday Wednesday checking the rain gauge atop bis garage roof. • BY JODI CADENHEAD °'_.,..., ........... From now on Kacy the cat can eat all the steak she wants. says Gary KiUcollins of Costa Mesa. The fi ve year-old black Siamese is bein~ credited with saving Killcollins' life TueSday night when a fire broke out at bis apartment at 2013 Charle Drive. Klllcollins said he bad fallen asleep on the living room couch and was awakened about 8 p.m. by the cat who pounced on bis chest. The living room was filled with dense smoke and when be opened the bedroom door the windows blew out. "I know it was time to get out," said the 35-year-old truck , driver. Lucidly, Killcollin.s bad flung bJs blanket on top of the cat as be ran toward the bedroom. Otherwise, the cat might have died from smoke Inhalation, be said. A nei&bbor called Klllcolllns' wife, Teri, and she rushed home lo Ume to see Costa Mesa flrefllbten spraying water on tbe charred remains of their apartment. '• J kept asklna everybody, where's the cat, where's the , cat?" abe said. Nobody knew that Kacy. wu • sUll lo the 1partmeot, bldlq under tbe coven. >..SOOD aa be beard 111.n. KUlcoU.lm' 'foice tbe Cit crept ~-All tbe firemen cheered, lbe laid. Fire ddel .Jim IJjcbey laid tbe cat may have aw1keaed • KllleoWDI Just la Ume. ~pp1reotlJl the fire waa atlrted b7 ·a amolderiac ,\ . cigarette in the bedroom, Sllld Richey. Damage is estimated at $20,000. For the time being, the couple will live in a mobile home they had planned to sell. "A lot of people have nothing after their home goes up in flames." said Mrs. Killcollins. Between 8 a.m. Wednesday and 8 a.m . today, Denny said be recorded .45 of an inch of rain. He said this brought his rainfall total for the year beginning JuJy <See RAJN, Page A2) AirCal' s pass Plan really taking off In a phrase. AlrCaJ's new "ZoneAir" night pass purchase plan bas really taken off. Tbe Newport Beach-based airline bu sold more than $1 million in the puses since the prop-am wu announced Jan. 13. The boots conta1nln1 10 rupt coupons are particularly attractive to travel a1ents, corporations and individuals who ny frequently, said AirCaJ spokesman Mark Petenon. Under tbe 1.oneAlr procram. travel 11enta are permitted to buy tbe 10.coupon boob for t1i85. Others are charted 9515. pointed out, the ZoneAir fares are less than standard fares and ZoneAir pass usen do not have to comply with advance ticket purchase requirements as do discotmt ticket buyers. Travel agents are permitted to sell the ZoneAir passes at whatever price they cbooae. Travel agents who handle lar1e numbers -of AirCaJ passencen are expected to benefit. Smaller travel a1e~~!,es, Peterson said, are consiuenbc forming "consortium•" to purcbaae blocks ol ZooeAlr pasa books. High volume buyen 1et even greater price brew, be said. AirCal is the ftnt airline to experiment with a sy1tem like ZoaeAlr. Betwem one and 2~ puaee are needed to fiy between .ones ln the AirCaJ flve-1tate ayllem. For example, one pUI la needed to fty ooe·way from Oran1e County to Sao Franclaco. Tbe J::: are ... fore.er Arkan8a8 8hake8 even ticket priee11 10 up. Ll'M'LE ROCK, Arlt. (AP) _ On a per-fQc.bt bula, tbe COat -A mUOeartbquairatiOOk Hetral of flytna andti-7.GMAir ls DOt u Arkaosaa, rattlla1 wladowa, tnespenalve H purcbHlDI dlabea aod cbaadellera Uckeu under AirCal'• ~ Wedoelday nlcbt. ,,.... ..... DO fare P"OIJ'81'.D1. But, Petenoa reports~ damap. " I •' Hail pelts north; snow level drops ·. By Tiiie Aaaocla&.ed Prn1 A storm that pelted Nort.bern California with bursts of bail and steady. sometimes fierce rain dusted roads with snow below 1,000 reet elevation today, closed highways and bad police ferrying surprised residents up icy hillside streets in Oa.kla.od. The storm brought thunder, lightning, gusty winds, sleet and even moments of s unshine Wednesday before temperatures dropped, plunging the snow level to 1,000 feet or below in Nort.berD California, the National Weather Service said today. Up to two inches of rain fell bl a 48 -hour period in areaa devas tated by flooding and mudslides during a killer storm Jan. 3 to 5, the Weather Service said. The rainfaJl triggered no new slides, according to sberifrt departments throughout tbe SM Francisco Bay area. But dl families were evacuated from.:. canyon near Inverness ~ western Marin County, sa§ Doug Wentworth of the Coui&Y , q mce ol Emer1ency Services.'~ "TTie e v a c ua'"t ron-w precaution ordered by olftciaii in the town, which was one fl the areas hardest bit in lbe storm two weeks ago that kill.a at least 31 people in Nortbeftl California. Another 2S families left their homes voluntarily in Pacifica, a coastal· city just south of S... Francisco, according to Aolta Garcia or the stale Office tll Emergency Services. Motorists on portions of Interstate 5, the major Weat Coast route between Canada and Mexico, were required to U. chai ns until 1:30 a .m .. tbe <See HAIL, Pa1e A2) · · DRllGI COAST IUTll~ Probability of showers decreasing to 10 percent, , tonight. Fair and slllbUr warmer Friday. Hi&ba 80 ... to 64. Lows tonight 42 to' 52. · 111IDI tDUY Bolton'• ,,..,., _,... .. , ,. ruuU of a ctUua loz'· , upntnlg, u threat,.., to c a1t ce l the aaa•ol '. re ·eftach1 .. ftt of Pa•I • Rewn'a ~ 1*. PGfl' ~ AJ~ ' . I 11111 .... .,_ ........ . . _ ...... . L.&..,. "" ---... ... Callt .. ~ ,. == ... .. ' ~·· L Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, January 21 , 1982 Local Coastal Pllin , . . action appropnate In a split vote this we('!\. lht• La~una Beach tit~· Coun t·il approved a Local Coal\t al Plan that. if certified h~· the s tate Coastal Commission. will Sl'l'\'l' a s a b I u e p r i n t l'o r I' u t u rt' development in the Art Colon~. Proponents of the uppl'O\'l'<I plun. which was two.~·t•ars in tht• making . term portions l'l'lating to hillside de\'l'lopmt•nt u s u "<:ompromise ... Opponent s. s pt't i fie a 11 ~· Ma\'OI' Sall\' Bellt'l'lll' and '.'lt.>il Fitzpatrick: claim tht• formula that determine:-. the amount of new hillsich.' dwelling units is l(lo hi~h . I Th<tl l'Ould ml•an un udditional 600 homes in tht.' hillsidl•s. but proponents of the.• p I a n s a ~· t h l' r t' u r t' (> t h l' r (1onstn1ints that would lt•ssl'n th<1t fi J! ll 1'('. For t.' :-; u m p I t• • ~ t• o Io g ii· h II 7. U I' cl S . WU l t• I' t• O 11 I' 1' l' S • h ."d rplog~ t·oneerns ~llld trat'l'it· <·onsi<l(.lfalions purportt•clly would t ut down on the numbt•r of units a de\<•10~1· (.'Olll<I t'XPt•et . M r s . B e I I e r u e <• n d Fitzpatrick souj!ht a clelu~· of plan apprornl until till' :\pril t:i l'<>ttndl elel'Lion . Thl·~ said till' n t.·w c·mmcil shouJcl tw allowed to appro\'e tht• dot umenl and forward it to tht• l'ommiss1011. The plan pro,·i1ks fM a ma ximum devl'lopml'nt of 1warl~ flOO nt•w homt•s on l'l'main111g \'atant hills idt• land in to\\11 hased on il dens it,. formula. But city pltinning i-offit•tals s a y it's unlikely that many units would ever be approved in L a guna's undeve loped hillsides. And \\'hill' their l'On<.'erns an· s int'C'l'l'. the notion of hol<lini:: off until a 1ww tOltnt·il majorit~· m.i ~· <tppear in three monlhs is 1111f:11r Tht• l'lllTt.>nt t·ouneil. along with <'itizen commitlet•s and tht• tit~"s plunning staff h:l\·u s pt•nt litl'ra lh· thousands of hours on tht• doi:·umt•nt in publit· hearings. t ommitlt.'(' mt•t•tings ancl stud~ Sl'SS iollS . Decision risk to students? The formul a l'al ls for a maximum of four lll'W units j)l'I' ttc·.t·e on la nd that inl'ludt•s slopt:•s 11f ht•t w~en zero and 5 pl'l'l't'nl But land that is 511 !)l'l'l'l'lll or stet•per will onl ~ ht• allowed 11111• unit pe r 10 a('l'l':-. unckr tlw formula To l'ur·tht•r refinl' or n •do tht• 1·oas tal plan w1 tt.fW\\ f:ttTS 011 I h t' (' II \I I\ l' i I \\ fl ll I d Ii l ' 11w ppropn at l'. Are California's school children being subjected lo unacceptable risks by' reason of a recent FBI decision? John F. Brown, executive secretary or the state's teacher certification agency thinks so. M a ny local school superintendents agree. 29.000 applications for teacher licenses are .received each year and that about 10 percent of these are found to have crimi~ records. Although the finge rprints are s ubmitled both to lhe state bureau and the FBI. many of t.he records of r, c::::. -. ·r '"' But the FBI said it had made its decision after carefully weighing the potential adverse effects against the known benefits of improving its service to the criminal justice agencies. Terrorism hits home Their reaction to the FBI's notice of a moratorium on the processing of fingerprint checks has been an angry one. Fingerprint checb by both the s tate's Bureau of C riminal Identification and the FBI have been a routine required by state law. But in October. the FBI. citing a ·21·day Jag in Ulis work, announced it was suspending the service (or one year during which lime it hoped to develop a swifter computerized read out. The federal agency said it had notified Congress in its budget requests of its backlog and plan lo remedy it with the curtajlment of services. IARl 111118 ~, criminal activity are found only in the FBI r eports. This is because the offenses have been committed in other slates. I N AN ATTEMPT to develop alte rn a tive sour ces fo r checking out-of.state applicants the licensing agency turned to submitting requests for information to the teacher licensing agencies in other states. Response has been poor. Furthermore, it was discovered that California ls one of the few states requiring fingerprint checks of teacher applicants. Our pra~·ers and our dt•epl':-1 he artfelt s~·l)lpathi es go out to tht• '.'J l'wport Rea<.'h p a r e nts and sistt•rs of Lt . Col. Charles Ra\·. the assistant l '. S . mi Ii ta,:' attachl' who was murdered fron1 ambus h Monda ~ on a P aris st reel. We know that a ll pt•ople of our nation join in that s111To\\ Cl'rt ainh· Pres icll'nt Rt•agan dot•s The pres ident said that Col Ra~ "ga\'e his life in tht• lint• of dul~ as s ureh · as if h(• had falle n in tht• li ne of h·atllt'. .. President R eagan a<ldl•d . ··Our hearts go nut to his famil~ in their berea,·eh'lt•nt and thl• wanton at't 111' his murcll'rt'1':-. reinfon·es our clt'tl'l'miantio11 lo s l a mp o ut 1 n t t• r n a t 1 c1 n u I te noris m <:tnd preh·nt ~11ni1i11· tragedies in thl' futurt'. .. 'certa inh: in light of tlw int' rt' a s in g terror is m a 111 I gangs teris m that has betin t'XJH.•rien<.'ed in l'l'tTnt timt•s 011 a worlclwirl<' has is . it t·oulcl lw fai rl~· Sll)?J!<.•sted that Col. Ra~· did mdl•e<I fall in halllt>. It is the hattlt• or all human ht•inj?s to haw tht• 1·ight to ht• saft• from tht• \'ill' aC'ts of otht'r huma n pred ators . To lw sJft• 1111 tht• s t r <.>ets a n(! e\·en in t lw1 r 0\\ n homt•s . To IH• frt'l' fro m t t•1-r11ris m. Col. Ra ~· lost hts lif1.• to 1l1ost• fon·t•s of l'\'il whkh toda~· wt• find inl·n•as ing ly a1·ti \'t' in 11\tr s uppol'<.'dl~· d\·ilizt•d sol'it·t~· It woulc1 ht• onh a s mall meus ure of t•ondoll1n<"t• to t host• "ho moum his d t.>at h. hut his los:- m;n· wl'll sern• to intt•nsir" ttw dfiu·ts of' our nation ;111(1 all n ations to stamp out '' anton ad:- of tt•rrorism. • Sud1 al'tion wouhl i111l1•1•d serve as a l'ittinJ! memorial to Col. R ~1 ~ ·s hit• and to his 11ltinwh· s11<·rif11·t• SCHOOL OFF(CIALS however. no\ing that tbe moratorium excepted applicants for law enforcement and security guard jobs. contended that ·teacher applicants likewise should h•ve been exempted: Brown says he ia worried .t»out the damage that could be do~e to the children during a whole year as a result of the decision. He said that more than A~tually, compared with the total number of applicants, the numbe rs turne(l up by 'the FBI a re small. Brown said out of 2,600 rap sheets the FBI had provided informal.ion l)Ol found in the slate records in' aboU\ 400 cases. Still. many of these inv<Jfved serious offenses s uet\ as rape, armed robbery a nd kidnapping. The school offrcials contend the FBI c hecks are essential t o protect the s choolchildren from potential chi Id abuse and dru·g abuse, stating it is too late to react after a child has been harmed. l Chur.ch!~state split n~t • Ill • To the Editor: The idea of Use sepantion ol churcll and state does not appear in the United St.ates Constitution, nor in any ol its amendments. il)lposed ,r~igious theory disguised as -science on the public schools.·' In view of that ;and the relatively few cases round each year the question is raised as to whether the California officials may be overreacting. Or is the conclusion tlfat the other states are being woefully neglectful in protecting their children? Probably before the answer to that is known the FBI will have recommended its ser vice to the sta t e's teacher licensing agency. It has indicated that it will al the end of the year's moratorium but will impose a $12 per applicant charge. Brown says this charge ~ould be absorbed by an increase in the fees it charges applicjlnts. Constitution it interesting that the I rvine Company is now attempting to "offer help" to t.he leaseholders of this community. Could greed possibly entertain guilt? Growth tied to lwusing "The church shall be separa,te-from the stale . . . and the church separate from schools.'• "Congress shall make n o law respecting an establishment of a;eligion, On t.he contrary; the decision canoot be based on the U.S. Constitution, since the Constitution does not contain the principle of separation of church and state. The decision will be appeaJed. ELIZABETH W. RICHARDS Further. th e Irvine Company 's overall expansion plan in our area may appear inevitable to them; however, they seem to forget that they are dealing with a well-established, s pirited community that will not be dictated lo by the greed of the "foreign.run" Irvine Company. re South Orange County's industrial and commer-eial base is to continue to grow. hous ing at a wide' range of prices must be provided for the work force n eeded to man the expanded capacity . That st a te me nt was made r ece ntl y b y 5t h .Di s t r i ct Supervisor Tom Riley at a pane l di SC ~S~ i oe S p 0 [l.S 0 r e d b Y Sadd e ac Colleges-Starr Development Office. Riley said projections show a potential 227 percent increa se in the south county's population b e tween 1980 a nd 1990. as opposed to a n expected 139 percent population rise in the north county. This phe nomenal growth will be accompanied by ·an increase of about 40 million square (eel of office and industrial s pace in Lhe south c.ount¥ within the next 10 years. Riley said in 20 years. South Orange County will have a trade area greater th a n D a llas. Houston. New Orleans. Denver or What cheap rates? S eattle. MAILBOX To the Editor: Riley declared the county's J i m Wood's comments on the leased inl'lusionary hous ing program. land' controversy (Daily Pilot. J an. 81 which.-requires devel6pers to facing Newport-Irvine residents seem provide 25 percent of their units or pr,ohibiling the free exercise thereof to be a new high in arrogance. As a real in the affordable range. is a s tep. eslate broker, one can only hope that but not a cure. for the area's The first quote above is from the neither Mr. Wood nor anyone on hi s housing needs . Soviet constitution. The second quote is staff at Unique Homes has ever profited Clearly. if the quality of life from the Bill of Rights -the First from selling " ... people lacking Amendment to the United States financial foresight ... " a home on In the,.M>JJth CQ!!Q.ty_jfil!J .,8,,_0_in..-...,..to.,._ __ ..,. .. o ... ns""t"'it'ff\t"tioftln"".-·---------_..,•e~e..ased-•an&r-. " deteriorate as aresuTt o r apt This country was founded as a development. innovative methods constitutional republic, with the concept AS FAR AS the leasehold system mus t be use d to ins ure that that its laws , rights, and privileges allowing people to purchase ·homes at housing needs are met. came from a higher power -"The "cheap rates," nothing could be further Th i s me a n s p h a s i n g Creator" -God himself. Many early from the truth. Broker Wood should transportation . hous ing a nd -settlers. from the Pilgrims on. believed know that people pay the market value m u n i c i p a I s er v i c es with our country was founded according to for their homes when they purchase industrial and commercial God's divine plan, and they dedicated them . (Historically s peaking, homes development to be s ure one does themselves to helping it grow according nave never been cheap on the Orange to God's will. Coast.> no t outstrip the other. A 1rh 1 · c hould f aJI "'As TO EDUC"TION, the f1'r st ... e rvme ompanys reeze · Cons idering the predicted " lease agreements for 1982 and allow rate of growth during the next 10 one-room schools we.re ·\aught by people to purchase their land aceording years. provisions for a dequate God-fearing Christian teaehera who to its value at the time they acquired it. housing will b e impos sible used the Bible as a text, and Jater the That way, 'all affected people would be without concerted. cooperative almost universal McGuffey Readers, assessed by a common guideline -e f f o rt s b v a 11 I e v e I s o f rilled with Biblical stories and moral length of resideqce in the commurlity. If g ove rnme nt and the housin~ teaching. All of ovr first inst.itutions of resi<tents choose not to purchase their higher learning were founded by land under that arrangement then they industry. churches: Harvard, Yale. Princeton, can re-negotiate the leases with the • William and· Mary, Pomona, Redlands Irvine Co~pany and ca rry the Oplnior1s expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex· _ the list is encUess. You can be sure landlor~-lenanl relationship into the pressed on thi~ page a re thOse ot their authors and artists. Reader comment Is 1nv1t· •the founders believe d, with Noah 2lllt century. ed. Address The Daijy Pilot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone <7U) Webster, that "F.ducalion without the 642-4321. Bible is worthless." . OON SHERIDAN J WARREN JOHNSON Fight Watt policy To the Editor: ,.-. Can it be that Laguna citizens are so apathetic about what happens to our shoreline that they are making no pro- tests against Interior Secretar Watt's proposal lo sell leases for oiT an gas exploration between Laguna and Point , Conception? He envisions at least one major offshore lease for California an· nually until 1986. After leases are signed it is too late to do much about averting potential degredation of our coastal re· sources. WHAT WOULDN'T a Santa Barbara oil spill do to Laguna's business in· terests? To our marine life -the sea lions, the fish. the pelican? To our r ecr eationa.J beaches -the scuba divers, the surf riders, swimmers. even those who are just there to enjoy relax- ing in the sun? Or the sea view? Will it be enhanced by towering oil derricks on the hQllzon? Oil on beaches might be scoopliW up, but cleaning up tide pools is another story! LM. Boyd/Drinking water • The American public has been subUy "sol~" a false doctrine. It is the USSR whose constitution decrees separation of church and state. When our forefathers referred to the subject, their meanint was far different. They had observed that ln a country with a national church, the concentration of polltlcal and' ecclesiastkal power is too •reat. Henc:,, they were voral and adamant ~ sincle United States churcb,be I . But it was undentood that wonhlp of God would undeTg~rd all actions ot officials in governmen\, as well as thOM Concern lacking To th• FAttor': With respect to the Irvine Company leaseholders' situation, it would seem to Supervisor Riley; Mike Fisher. E'x· -ecutive Director of the California Coastal Commission : and Michael Shapiro, the governor's Outer Contiaen· tal Shelf Project Director, -11 of whom could effectively oppose the Oil explora· tion, have beard little opposition to Secretary Watt's plan from Orange County's citizens. Mayors Heather and Bellerue of Newport Beach and Laguna have had no strong support for their oil Say you're lost in a desert with notbln1 but a canteen ot water . Should you not sip it spariD&IY only as you need it? All tales Of fact and fiction indicate \bat's the way to 10. In hand, however. ls contrary counsel which says no, drink It down, better to carry it in your body tban in a canteen. Could tbia be Sood advice? More than 100,000 vUlaees in India -about 16 percent of them -have no source of d.rinkin1 water within a mile. So report scbolan who study the world's natural resources. Blame uncontrolled floods and shifting water tables. Seems incredible, doesn't it? Q. Is it true you can tell whether an animal is a meat eater or a vegetation eater by countlnt the toes on its feet? A. All l know ia tbe meat eeten never naturally have lets than four toes on each foot. TltOINll P. M•ley Pubttsher ;TllomnA.-. ... H Editor -aarura Krelblcll Editorial Pefe Editor • hf etery school and ullivenity. You .aate (~Ju. JI) that die Arkanftl clec .. ton awlnt "all alme for teaehtn1 evolutltn and cteaUon setence waa " .•• a proper .,_.. el the Constitution .. alnlt a law U.il ··uteraUy, whal oo one know• al this poiDt la Jut bow deep a reeeulon we arf 1otn1 to be tn." -TreHmr7, .. .......,.Dlul ... taL me that as t.he lawsuit of the Cpmmittee or 4000 gets under way, and the racts and fi~ of the lrvine Company are revealed, the 1reed end overall lack of concern of tbe ltvlne ComPlft)' for our cOmmdl\ttY •fll ~me eTtdent. PerhaalJ ttle efforts of the Committee of 4000 will prove only the tip of the iceberg !ft revelation! , IF THE convlct\ons of the ltvtne Oompany were as genuine and seJft"' .. those of the Commltt~ of 4000, I ftod . -· • ei<ploration protests. As citizens who care. we must let Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. and other concerned officials know or our opposl· tion to this despoilation of our coast, EVELYN GAYMAN l.ltltrs from rtodtr!S are welcomt. Tht "1.a 111 rondl"MP letters to /U lf'O't or 1f1m1note libel IR re~rr11N1. l,f'tters of 300 word., nr lt~R uitll "t>( gft>rYt prtft'rt,•U . Atl-• ltlltrs mu.~t 1ncludf' signature and modtttg Sure Nancy Rea1an .,_.'t derive addrt1ss hwl Mmu ma11 be 1t11rhhel.d o" rt· any benefit rrom all thOH dellsaer q141•x1 1( xuff1 r.lt n1 reason 1s apparent clothes. And. tf you believe that •.• Pottry Wiil pot bt' pul'>Uthtd. LAlltrs rna11 ~ .O.L. ttlt>phf11'1ttd In 642-6086. Narrit and pl!Ottf n11m~r of the conl"butor m11sr b« 91~ /01 IJC!rajic.al..,,. purpottt I ..... , .. ___._ ........ .,:-c-·· _....,, ........ _ .............. .. ,..,,. .. _, ......... ""' r • 111111 lllCl/lllTI l:UIT llllJPllll THURSDAY, JAN. 21, 1912 . CAVALCADE TELEVISION STOCKS 82-3 84 87 Economists predict slow recovery from recession See Page 86. D South Laguna annnex viewed · DeiJelopers in. area seek agreements with Laguna council members • Candidate 1et1 open h~rue Lacuna Beach City Council candidate a.. Ge•trJ will bold an open house Saturd,ay from 4 p.m. t.o 7 p.m. to give reside~ an opportunJty to meet him. Gentry's home "is located at 1475 Pacific Ave. Wine and cheese will be served. ~ • WM·elchair baaketball ala~ed The Saddleback College Gaucho wheelchair basketball team will appear at the Dana Hills High Sc.boot gymnasium from 10 a.m. to 12 : 30 p. m. Sunday. The Gauchos appearance is part of a benefit sponsored by the Dana Point Chamber of Commerce and the El Camino Real Junior Women's Club. The school is I located al 33333 Golden Lantern St., Dana Point. All proceeds will benefit the college's wheelchair sports program. Admlsaion to the game is $2.50 for adulta and $1.50 for children age 12 and under. For more information, call Ron Hastings at 831·4885 in the college Office of Special Services. • L.ittle League aignupa aet Little League baseball registration is under way in Laguna Beach with a Feb. 1 deadline for those who want to participate in major and senior leagues. Minor. Bantam and Pee Wee league signups will continue until March 1. Registration fees include $25 J)er minor league pl•yer and S50 for major and senior leaguers. The cost is reduced for additional family members participaline in -ieague play. Major league tryouts will be held Feb. 13 at 9 a.m. for 9 and ~O year olds and 1 p.m. for 11 and 12-year-old players. Team managers are needed in all leagues and volunteers should write to P.O. Box 509, Laguna Beach, 92652 for information. • Women in art lecture topic Linda Wataoa. instructor of design at Coastline College, will present a lecture entitled "History of Women in Art," at 7 p.m . Tuesday in the Irvine city Arts and Crafts Center, 4a>l Walnut Ave. Admission · is free to the l ecture, which will be accompanied by a slide show. For more information call 552-1085. • Seniors get tax aaaiatance The Senior Citizens Club of Laguna Beach is offering free income tax assistance to its members beginning Feb. 1. Tax experts will be on hand at the community center from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Mondays and from 9 a.m. to noon on Thursdays. In addition, they will answer questions about Medicare payments and services durin& those boun. No appointment ls oeceuary and seniors can call 41'7·*1 for further information. Coast plan readie._d for state officials Laguna Beach planning officials say tbey should be ready to ship the city's Local Coastal Plan off to the state Coastal Commission within two weeks, after minor changes are made to the document. Council members Tuesday save ftnal approval to the plan in a split vote that saw Mayor Sally Bellerue and Neil Fitzpatrick seeking council s upport for a delay in endonine tbe ~en unm alter the April lJ City Council election. Tbe plan, ll certified by the state Coastal Commiaaioa, will serve u a blueprint for f'uture development in Laguna Beach, to be used in conjunction with the city's General Plan. The two council members contend the plan calla for too much development in the city's vacant hillsides and does not take into account already exist.in& lecal bu1.ldiq sit. in other puts ol town. The coutal plan aupporta a hillside density formula that would allow a maximum of nearly aoo new bomea on remainin& vacant billaide land. The formula allows, for instance, a maximum ol four units per acre on slopes of between zero and 5 percent. Land in excess ol 50 percent could only build one unit per 10 acres. BJ ITEV& lllTCJIELL .............. In wbat ls seen u a pouible exercise la futility. Lacuna Beacb City CouncU members will talk witb m~ developen in Soutb La1una about tbe poulbWty ol annexint ~ portion ot tbat unlncorporated area. Tbe drawback, as City Manapr Ken Frank sees It, la that owners of several larte development parcela just aoutb of Laeuna's city llmlta really have no compelllne reuon to want to become part of tbe Art Colony. But members of the Local Aeency Formation Commiaaion made clear earlier tbia month they woo't approve annexation Teachers' contracts weighed La~ Beach Unifted School-• District tnaatees are achedu.led to receive contract proposals for the 1182-83 school year from district teachers and counse.lors when they meet toai&ht. Representatives for the Lacuna Beach Unified Faculty Aasociation and the Lacuna Beach Penonnel and Guidance Aaaociatioo, which represents counselors , nurses, and p1ycbolo1iata. are to submit separate propo9ala. The cuJdance association is aakinc for an 11. 7 percent raise under a one-year contract for 1182-83. The proposed increase calla for tbe raise to be applied unlfOrmly across the present salary schedule. Accontine to ficures contained ln tile propou.I, tile 11. 7 percent ncure represents the increase ln the cost ol llvine durin& the put year. Teacben are ukine that their aalary be tncreued for i.m..a to ~· mean avera1e of salary IM!bedales for all otber unified aebool districts in Orange County. Teaeber spokesman Dave Ra1en said the percentace ol increase bas yet to be calculated, and declined to estimate the raise, wblcb would vary accordinl to the teacher's pay scale. Lacuna school Superintendent Bob Sancbis also declined to speculate on what the rate ol increase would be under the teachers' initial contract proposal, saying it would be tabulated after talU bestn. The district contract with ita teachers and otber certificated ataff will expire tbia July. That contract, •creed to in 1980, allowed for a 12.S percent salary lncreaae over the two yean ol the agreement. The La1una Beach Unified School District bas bad to cut more tban $1 million from ita budcet over the last three yean, the result of declinin& enrollments , passale of Proposition 13 an the Serrano-Priest state Supreme Court decision. County Courthouse 'prison' Santa Ana edifice has role in TV movie, 'Mae West' ByJEFFPAUU ............... The Old County Courthouse in Santa Ana was cban1ed into New York's Welfare Island Prison Wednesday durinc a day's abootine for tile televlskln movie, "Mae West.'' -"It's the perfect buildinC.'• said a11iatant director Bill . Beesley. lookin1 up at tile .. at.ately atnacture. "We coWdD"t uk for more." Tbe only cban1e tile movie company made In tbe appeumee of tbe buildbll - DOW • state mcmument -WU co•erlDI tbe name up wltb . braaet. of a nearby plant. TUt accompllabed. tile a-1ear-oN baildblC ....... to double • t1M prtlcm "'*9 Mae Well did Ume fCll' Iller allelecllJ obeew Broedwa7 pjaJ. "!es." ADD JUlia la starrtq u Mae We1t, .._. wtt.b Jam• Bnlba u b• Iner. TlmoQ. JUiia P9eed •tM ~ ... Won ... ftnt taket. ...... llenelf lllto etaarac&er • tbe eldll7 8111&a Au--... .......... eearid .... tMnlellllr'll."•..W."11& .................. ....... ~ ....... ••· Her walk, •olee t•• •us s1 ,... IO .. ...,._ that I had a lot to won with." 1111.ss Jillian paced •lain. fine · tuning the famed Mae Weal swa11er for her entrance into tile priaon. "Thia bas been an eaay project ln a lot ol ways.'' Ille said. "'lbe entbualum bu beell very biCb and it '1 a Nal dMa act. we•re oa a tiPt sebedale but we woa•t cut coraen." Director Lee Pblllp1, a veteran of a doaen televlakm mo•les iDc1UcllDI • 'Tb• Bed Badie of Coura1e." • 'Cru1 Times" and JaJDel Mk1MMr•1 ''DJIUlltJ. •• waited oatal4'I tbe COW1Jaoule, bemo .. ••1 tlM ~ 1ebedule. . ''Tbme scbedulel are dnwa up bJ produetioa t7pn. DOt creatlft .... " be said. "No matter bow _, ~ JW. ,ou .. ..,. Dead .., • We Med D. Deftd lA88 .... fl•• 1ear1 on "a1a••1 D .................... ....., . aa utra~. 8o I ,_ tW klDd GI II at:: Tlala II e al1r•a1 of ..... , ................. ~ ~ wW Mrft .. two. ............ ...ta -... ~-............. .. HM...tfwlMrl-111 I ,.., .......... _ ....... '"' to .., Iler U••· OIMr sbootint will be done ln the ..! Ancel• area, at llactc CutJe, tbe Maytair Theater and the Society for the Prevention ol Variety Arts. "Tbis l.sn't really a frollct0me klnd ol atbry. even thou.lb we've cot seven . muaical numbers," said PblU ... "It•• a bapp1 st.orJ, basically .. lllllan eontlauea to amaH me. Sbe'a very talented, very dildpllned and ..,er. Her sonc and dance numbers are wond~ful . There's a lot of bumot In It too. u you milht im.,me. llae West wu quite a wit.•• Some 125. caat and erew memben 111M1Dbled outalde tbe eovtboule at t a.m. to beCID tile llMWJ.... Vln&ale Cart beutai ••New York Clt7 Polle• Deputmmt•• ..... were parbd outside tlM eourlboUle partable dre111D1 rooma U.td rr.cJa Street and a doHD eztraa dre11ed •• reporters and poll~ Wt.red UOUDd -. ~ ......... N.._ Pldllpe _. ta.. ABC Natwortr ._ a ct.. .._ ''llM • ... wW ... ........, eM'1~ It looU lb eart1 .,...... n•1 ...,.. eo Wll rtO& --~·· Mid ...... .. ........ 11 :. •• ,. ...,. '° tu.J.t .. .., ll. UM.,, . of a portion of South Laauna unleaa the city attempts to' necotiate development a1reementa with several ~r landowners in the annexation area. LAFC members met Jan. 1S to diacuaa the annexation of a portion ol South La1una from La1una 's southerly limits to Aliso Creek. The area includes the TreJsure Island Mobile Home Park , Hobo Canyon, La1unita and Blue Laeoon. The commission continued the bearing for six months, asking tbe city to meet with l•rge developers in the area to see if development agreements can be worked out. Specifically. partners in a proposed 440-unlt time share project at the mobile home park, and developers of a nearly 700-unit project al Hobo Canyon have expressed opposition to the annexation bid. They claim the city's sole purpose in annexing a portion of South Laguna is to prevent such p1·ojects from taking place. ~ City officials have aen such claims, but Frank sa be believes future talks w1 developers -especially the Hobo Canyon owners -would be extremely difficult. . In a report to the City Council, Frank said developers· might be expected to want guarantees for city approval beyond what Orange County supervisors have agreed t.o. 1 PUBLIC USE SUMMARY AREA flW84 S'fSTEM O'nU PU8UC WATERWAYS MAKS PUeUC llAfUNA Vll.LAGE lllAJOA PU8UC STMETS TOTAL PU8UC USE ~ -AL LA-AIUI, IHC. ACRE 650 130 ., 110 120 90 1100164'4) I Council members this ...- directed clty olficlala to .._ with major developers ln &.bit area, as sugaested by LAFC. ·· Tbey also asked for u analysis of petition ai1na_turep turned in last year by ~ Lagunans s upportiDI annexation. They want to t.,. if there ls a level of support felt the notion frorr. tenants OUUkle of Treasure Island. Tbose tenants stand to lose tbel• mobile homes should tbi t ime-share project b completed. City planning officials wert a sked to return with the resultf of their study at the Feb. J,J council meeting. MARSH Pt.AN -Orange County Supervisors have asked coastal commissioners to approve $179 mHlion development in Bolsa Chica wetlands. Map by Signal Landmari Inc . shows developer's plans for the coastal area. · •;"° :· Bolsa Chica project pushed . .· County asks coastal ~nel to approve development By PATIUCll KENNEDY ... .,..., .......... Orange County Supervisors have a ske d coastal commissioners to approve a $179-milliQn development in Bolsa Chica wetlands near Huntington Beach despite criticism of the plan from top commission officials. Development plans include S,700 homes, an 1,800-slip boat marina and navigable ocean channel through Bolsa Chica State Beach and a minimum eoo-acre salt marsh preserve for fish and birds. Supervisors endorsed the plan Dec. 16 and unanimously decided Wednesday to send it to coastal commissioners for fmal· approval. I However, Michael Fischer, exec'4ive director of the Coastal Commission, said the plan "falls to reqnize Coastal Act policies protecting c;oastaJ wetlands. The - plan proposes to use public funds t.o develop, rather than preserve the wetlands of Bolsa Chica." As executive director, Fisher is top advi s e r lo the commissione r s . He urged Supervisors in a letter to restrict residential development to 300 acres of mesa area to the north of the Bolsa Chica project and to preserve most of the 1,300 acres of· coastal lowland. Fischer's letter rioted the State Fish and Game Department has identified 852 acres of Bolsa Chka lowlands as "viable wetland" habitat for fish and birds, including endangered species. He said the county plan proposes homes on this acreage. The Bolsa Chica encompasses about 1,600 acres of lowland and mesa area south of Warner Avenue along Pacific Coast Highway. It's in unincorporated MAI .. .,.. Rntana -That•• tbe old Or--CoaatJ ~ .. tbe bMQrouDd u mo.le cren fllm a ~ from tM TV area, surrounded f>)'. HuntinttoD Beach. -- The state presently operates a 200-acre wetlands wildlife preserve along Pacific Cout Highway. Su per visors Roger Stantoa and Bruce Nestande bad bard words for .Fischer's criticl.lms. : Nestande said the letter wu "prejudging .. the case and wu "really out of line." Stant.on added the letter was "biased and slanted" and waa only the opinion of commiukla staff membe rs and not n ecessarily that-of tbe com missioners. Supervisor Harriett Wieder noted that the plan's pf'C?PO'ed salt marsh restoration woWd be among the most significant ner undertaken in the nation. I .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thur1day, January 21 . 1982 . It's time for talks on leasehold issue On the one hand we have the' Irvine Cpmpany. landowner. und on the other. the leaders or 1'he Committee of 4000, who claim they represent at least that many r esidents. whose homes a re on land leased from the company in Newport Beach and Irvine. For some weeks now the company and the committee have been locked in a war of words over lease r e n e wal provisions that are coming due. Numerous homeowners t•n· that proposed increases in the concerned citizens and civic leade1·s havt.e voiced hope that the issue might be settled In some form of compromise that would at least be palatable t o both sides . That sam e urging for compromise has b('cn expresst!cJ in this space. • land leases are outrageous and wi 11 force them o ut of their homes. possibly at a significant financial loss. Yet to date. most of the declarations and speeches or statements of vie ws on the issues b~· both sides appear to have bee n directed to the citiienry at large in both the cities of Irvine a nd Newport Beach . There would seem lo he a large measure of logir to the s uggestion that perhaps representative s of The Committee <if 4000 a nd Th~ Irvine Compan~· dismount from their hi g h horses. c·ome out from behind the legal barricades and s it down,,.at a table. fat:e to fate. lo see if they can search out an~· common grounds wherein· the seeds of. compromise might he planted Irvine Company s pokesr;nen . on the other hand. not e that rental fee increases Cor the land leases are in conformance with a land value formula included in the original lease documents and agreed upon by the leaseholders. It ·s all on the up-and-up. Those are the verv basic issues. Beyond that there have been ~rg um ents. counter - arguments. charges and counter- c ha r g es and detailed e mbellishments of the issue . Throug l:t it all. numerous We think this would be a g rand idea. And if both sides feel they need a neutral s it e. Wl' would be ha pp~· to provide that table. Pay raise excessive? If there is anything good about a r ecent pay raise the Irvine Ranc h Water District Directors gave t hemselves. it seem s to have inc r eased the number of people inter ested in filling an empty director's seat. The raise. which went into e ffect Jan . 1. boos t ed the allowable pay for a director from $50 per meeting to SlOO per meeting and from a maximum of SJOO per month to $600 per month. Ten people a re now seeking appointment to the director 's seat vacated by Wayne Clark. ~uch interest in the technical a nd tedious job of Irvine Ranch Water District director seems so m ew hat unu s ual but hea rtening. However. we wonder whether this apparent increase in interest in the director's job is worth the extra salar,y costs the Irvine Ranch Water District ratepayers will absorb as the result of tht:' doubling of the directors' pay. Most water district directors in Orange· County meet l wil'c monthly and a re paid $50 for each meeting . The Irvine Ranch Wate r Di strict direct ors a lso schedule two public meetings a month. but individual directors Irv ine Ra nch Wate r District directors are paid SlOO for each public meeting and each private committee meeting in which they participate. With s ix m eetings a month. t ~e Irvine directors may get paid for as many as 48 meetings per yea r at the rate of SlOO per meeting. The doubling of water district directors · sa lar y was made possible this year by state legis lation. However. directors from the Orange County . Water District. Moulton Niguel Water Dis trict. Laguna Beach County Water Oistril't. and South Coast Count v Wate r Dis trict turned down the pay raise. Mesa Consolidated was the only other water district in the county to join Irvine Ranch in taking the pay raise. But in the case or Mesa Consolidated . the directors meet onl y twice monthly and forego the additional four private committee meetings the Irvine directors seem to think are necessary. Usually one or two Irvine directors will participate in a given committee meeting. •also participate in as many as four additional private committee meetings monthly. Comparison with other water districts seems to indicate the I rvine directors have somewhat overstepped on the salary scale. . Fast action encouraging- Con s ider a b l~ ftttrn· ";1s C"reated earh· this \\'et•k \~·hl.·n :i "milk\' substatfrl ... was found fl outin'g down San Jouquin Cret•k. which flows int o San l>tt.•j.!11 Crcck. which clumps into l 'ppt•r '.'it>wport Ba.'. T h i s h I' 0 ll g h t II ll I En,. i ronmental M u nal-(cmc111 .t\j.!(•ncy workers a ncl stall' Fish and Game peoplt• and the C'l'L'(.'k was e ven dammed off to kel'P thl' milkv stuff from flowing into lht.• ha v \\·ate rs . · It is c lear!" cncot11'iJl-(tng 111 witness such •"apid attion <Hld awareness on the part or public off i c i a Is <.'ha r g e d " it h I IH• • rt•s ponsihtl1 t.'· Ill pTot <'"' 1111 r puhlit· wa tt·r~ Te!»tS to dall' ha\ i· 111d11·att•d that th1• milk\ S ltli~talH'l' IS 110n-to'i(· ancl · ;1ppart•nth 1H1 I h re a I I o t• i I ht.' r \\ t I cl I 1 I t.• 11 r humankind Perhap~ when tlw lt•sts :11·<.· ('ompletecl. wc ma~ lt.·arn lh;1t tht• mi lk y sub~tan<.·c "as something iust as bl<1nd as milk it self. Ne c d I es s t o s a ~· . m a n .'' o fficials and plain <.·tti zt>ns <.·an attest to thL· fa ct that a lot mort.> noxious stuff than that has flowed into L'pper Nl'wport Ba~· in past ~ t•ars bt>fon· penpk got t•:..t•11l'd a hout rt Opinior1s expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex- pressed on tnls page are those ot their authors and artists. Reader comment is mvtl ed. Address The Da11v Pilot, P.O. so .. 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Pl'\one 17141 642-4321. LM. &yd/Drinking water Say you're I05l in a desert with nothing but a canteen of water. Should you not sip it spartncly only as you need it? All tales of fact and fiction indicate that's the way to 10. In hand. however, is contrary. counae.I which says no, drink It down, better to carry it in your body thin in a canteen. Could this be good advice? More than 100,000 villages In lndla -about 18 percent of them -have no source ol drinking water within a ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat mile. So report scholars who study the world's naturaJ resources. Blame uncontrolled floods and shiflin1 water tables. Seems incredible, doesn't it? Q. Is It true you can tell whether an animal is a m eat eater or a vegetation eater by counting the toes on its feet? A. All I know Is the meat eaters never naturally have less than four toes on e.ch foot. ThOIMS P. H•ley Publisher \ Tltomn A. MuFphlne Editor Barbara Krelbich Edltor1a1 P•ae Editor Decision risk to students? Are California's school children being subjected lo unacceptable risks by reason of a recent FBI decision? John F . Brown. executive secretary or the state's teacher certification agency thinks so. Many local school superintendents agree. Their reaction lo the FBl's notice or a mor a torium on the processinc of fingerprint checks has been an a11gry one. Fingerprint checks by both the sta t e 's Bureau o r Criminal Identification and the FBI have been a routine required by state law. But in October the FBI . citing a 27-day lag in this work. announced It was suspending the service for one year during which time it hoped lo develop a s wifter computerized read out. The fede r al agency said it had notified Congress in its budget r~uests of its backlog and plan to rem~dy it wi\h the curtailment of s~rvices . ,. ,', ·~4" SCHOot.'· OFFI CIALS however. noting that the moratorium excepted applicants for law enforcement and security guard jobs, contended that teacher applicants likewise should have been exempted~ Brown says be is worried about the d a m age that could be done to the children during a whole vear as a result or the decision. He said that more than 29.000 apphcalions for teacher licenses are received each year and that about 10 percent of these are found to have cr iminal records. Although the f ingerprints are submitted both lo the state bureau and the FBI. many of t)le records of IARl WATllS criminal act1v1ty are round only in the FBI reports . This is because the ofrenses have been committed in other states. Actually, compared wilh the total number or applicants. the numbers turned up by the FBI are small. Brown said out of 2,600 rap sheets the FBI had provided information not found in the state records in about 400 cases. Still. many of these involved serious offenses s uch as rape, armed robbery and kidnapping. The school otricials contend the FBI checks are essential to protect the schoolchildren from potential child abuse and drug abuse. stating it is too lete-to react a fte r a child has been ha rmed. · But the FBI said it had made its decision after carefull y weighing the polenllal adverse t:ffects against the known benefits of improving iLs service to the criminal justice agencies. I N AN ATTEMPT to develop alternativt: sources for checking out ·Of·s tate applicants the licensing. agency turned to s ubmitting requests for information to the teacher licensing jlgenc1es in other states Response has bee n poor . Furthe rmore , it was discovered that California is one of the rew states requiring fingerprint checks or teacher applicants. In view of lhal and the relatively few cases found each year the question is raised as to whether the California offi cials may be overreacting. Or is the conclusion that the other stales are being woefully neglectful in protecting their children? Probably before the answer to that is known the FBI will have recommended its service to the state's teacher lrcensang agency. It has indicated that it will al the end of the year's moratorium but "ill Impose a $12 per applicant charge Brown says this charge would be absorbed by an increase in the fees it charges applicants. Church-state split not • ID Constitution To the Editor: The idea of the separation or cbu~h and stale does not appear in the United States Constitution, nor in any of its amendments. ·'The church shall be separate from the state . . . and the church separate from schools." "Congress s hall m a ke no law respecting an establishment of religion, MAil BOX or prohibiting the free exercise thereof .. Thf' fi rst quote above is from the Soviet constitution. The second quote is from the Bill of Rights the First Amendment to the United Stales Constitutio....._ __ This country was founded as a constitutional republic, with the concept tha t its laws. rigH'ls, and privileges came from a higher power "The Creator" -God himself. Many early settlers. from the Pilgrims on. beheved our country was fou nded according to · God's divine plan, and they dedicated themselves to helping it grow according to God's will. AS TO EDUCATION, the first one-room schools were taugh t by God-fearing Christian teachers who used the Bible as a text, and later the almost Ul\Wersal McGuffey Readers, filled '\vith Biblical stories and moral leaching. All of our first institutions of high er learning were founded by chcsrches: Harvard, Ya le, Princeton. William and Mary, Pomona, Redlands -the list is endless. You can be sure the rounders believed , with Noah Webster, that "Education without the Bible ls worthless." The American public has been subtly "sold" a false doctrine. It Is the USSR whose constitution decrees separation of church and st.ale. When our forefathers referred to the subject, their meaning was f ar different. They had observed that in a country with a national church, the conce ntration of politic a I and ecclesiasUcaJ power is too grut. Hence, they were vocaJ and adamant that no single Uniled St.ales church be founded . But lt was understood that worship of God would undergird all actions of officials In government, as well as those Ir\ every school and u.ntversily. You state (Editorial, Jan. 12) that the Arkansas decision ouUawlng equal Ume for teaching evoluUon and creelJon science wu ". . . a proper dllens4t ol tbe Constitution •-•Inst a law that Quote8 imposed religious theory disguised as science on the public schools." On the contrary, the decision cannot be based on the U.S. Constillllion. since the Constitution does not contain the principle of separation or church and slate. The decision will be appealed. ELIZABETH W. RICHARDS Whal ch eap rates? To the Editor. Jim Wood's comments on the leased land controversy (Daily Pilot. Jan. 81 facing Newport-Irvine residents seem to be a new high in arrog2nce. As a real estate broker. one can only hope that neither Mr. Wood nor anyone on his staff at Un ique Jlomes has ever profiled from s elling ". . people lacking financial foresight .. " a home on leased land. AS FA.ft AS the leasehold system allowing people to purchase homes at "cheap rates ," nothing could be further rrom the truth. Broker Wood should know that people pay the market value for their homes when they purchase them. I Historically speaking, homes have never been c heap on the Orange Coast.) The Irvine Comp•ny should freeze all lease agreements for 1982 and allow people lo purchase their land according to its value al the time they acquired it. That way. all arrected people would be assessed by a common guideline - length or residence in the community. If residents choose not to purchase their land under that arrangement then they can re-negotiate the leases with the I rvine Com pan y and carr y the landlord-tenant relations hip into the 2li;t century DON SHERIDAN Pressure play? To the Editor: Jim Wood's spurious comments about the Committee of 4000 <Jan. 8> should not be dignified by a response, but a few observations a~ut t.is conclusions are needed to set the record straight. In his entire diatribe, he made onty one true s tatement: the leasehold issue ls adversely atrectln1 the real estate market. He's obviously hurting because ltls reaJ estate commissions are down. He blomes the situation on "t he rantings and ravings " of the lease holders. The real culprit Is Mr. J • l.trtrr$ /mm r10dl'r~ urt• wtlcomt TM r111hr Ill c1/fldmat> /etrt•rs to fll 8J'l0Ct' or tlm11na1.-llhd r~ n·~t'rrt>d l.t>tltr.it o/ 300 u•MrlR 11r /('R~ will tw gtcrn prtftrrnct .41/ 11•/tt'r~ mi.~t mcltldt R1gna111re and mmhng address hlll namts may be Wllhhrld on rC' qt1t•111 1f 11ujf 1r1t'nl reason 18 apporen1 .... "Ulerally, wt\at no one knows at this ftvrtry will not t>.> ~l>ll$htd L.ttt,ra may~ point ii Just how d"p 1 recmlon we tC'lt'phrm1•d 111 642~ Nome and phon1 ar,e goln1 to be in." Treuuy, numhrr 11( lht coritnbulor '""'' l>t' 11'Vfll for Seeretar, 0..ld ...... ' 11f'r1/u:atu>n IJW'P'l.~(R .. Wood's friend. The Irvine Company and their outrageous land prices and rentals. NO BUYER wants anything to do with leasehold prope rty. The only sales that have been m ade have been at prices hundreds of thousands or dollars below the "fair market prices" quoted by The Irvine Company. It is obvious that The Irvine Company 1s now resorting lo the old economic pressure play. Instead of facing the issue and trying to resolve the problem, the company appears to be coercing others who are subservient lo them to s p e ak out aga ins t the s uffe ring homeowners. You can e xpect others like Wood to whine their vested interest. Profit is one thing. Mr Wood Greed is the word you should use. LOUIS E. SCOTT Accept solution To the Editor: The Irvine Company 's recent unreasonable offer to leaseholders in Newport Beach and Irvine has created an economic hardship for homeowners. Irvine Tomorrow. as a citizens group, has tried to make Irvine the city we all dreamed about ... the promise come true .. We see the "new" Irvine Co mpany's proposed land value and rent increases as a threat to our neighborhoods. Some homeowners on leased land will be unable to pay the rent increases or the inflated prices for the land. which will result in resident -and neighborhood deteriorution. The Committee or 4000, consisting of leaseholders, has formulated a "Bill or Rights" that is a fair and equitable solution to this problem. lrvint Tomorrow Board ol Directors recommends that the Irvine Company accept the leaseholders' "Bill of Rights... The unconscionable financiaJ burden placed on leaseholders must be resolved fairly. Irvine Tomorrow requests the City Council or Irvine to do all within its Pf>wers to protect the rights and property values of all it.s citizens. PATTY KEMPER Chairwoman, Irvine Tomorrow Sure Nancy Reqaa doeln't Mnff a ny benefit from all tboae dt1lper clothes. And, tr you beUeve that. •• D.L ::=.-; ~··-................... . .. ..... ... ..._..... . ..... ,.. .. " .. ...o.1., ........ llilyPillt THURSDAY, JAN. 21 , 1982 CAVALCADE 82-3 111111 TELE VISION 84 STOCKS 87. ' Economists predict slow recovery from recession See Page 86. _ .. . . .... "" ... Rail station funds set? . Councilman sees state money for Irvine facility . J A •• TS mlllloo train 1tatioD propc>Md for Irvine la virtually auured of receivin1 state: funding, Irvine City Cougcllman Blll Vardoulis reported tOday. V ardoulla, also a member ol tbe Oran1e County Tran1portatlon Commi11ion, said the project baa been pla~ number one on a fund.int liat for transportation projects throughout the state. Californi)l Oepartment of Transportation 1pokeaman Hank Elizaearay confirmed that SZ.2 million in state funding for the project is a "f o reeone conclusion" due to its position oo the list. · He said the California Transportation Commission will co n si d er a Ca ltran s r ecommendation that the proposed station be funded. E.ll zag a ray s a i.d the commission routinely approves U&.U.C. AIR STATIOH ......, ........ IRYINE DEPOT -Officials say that state funding is likely for this railroad station proposed for Irvine on the south side of the railroad tracks and north of the Santa Ana Freeway. such recommendations. The balance of funding for the project ii to be donated by the J Irvine Company, lrviae cltJ : tranaportation oftlciala aay. l The station la to be loeat.d oe the soutb~de ol tbe Sula re railroad track• near tlae interaectioa ol the Santa Aaa and Laauna freeways. · In addition to aervtn1 M a • train depot, the 1tatloa would i also be a center fOI' commercial t b u s tr an 1 port a ti o ~ ·.t transportation otflcla.11 aa7. 1 If fundine la approved f« ta.. project, coaatructioa wort 11187 belin aa earty aa thil 1WD.11Mr1 accordinc to officials. The station's location woWd be jual north ol a "Super~ Center " the Irvine Compaay proposes to build on the ''Goidln Triangle" formed by the Santa Ana, San Die10 ud Laaua Freeways. 1 The station la also loca~ la close proximity to tbe developing Irvine lndu1trial Complex-East. Bolsa Chica project pushed County asks coastal panel to approve development AIAPOAT SCULPTURE -Introduction or model or sculpture of John Wayne finds his son Patrick apparently deep in thought. When completed in summer or 1982, the 9-foot .................... ~ bronze statue will be placed at John Wayne Airport. Ceremonies were held this morning in Santa Ana. lly PAT&ICK KENNEDY °' .. ...., .......... Oranee County Supervisors have asked coa s tal commissioners to approve a $179-milliQn development in Bolaa Chica wetlands near Huntineton Beach despite criticism of the plan from top commiaaioo olficiala. Development plans include 5,100 homes, an 1,800-alip boat m a r ina and navigable ocean channel through Bolsa Chica State Beach and a minimum 600·acre salt marsh prese.rve for fish and birds. Supervisors endorsed the plan Dec . 16 and unanimou s ly decided Wednesday to send it to coastal commisaiooen for ftnal approval. However, Michael Fischer, executive director of the Coutal Commisaaoo, said the plan "falll lo r~ Coastal Act policies protecting coastal wetlands. Tbe plan proposes to use public funds to develop, rather than preserve the wetland.a of Bolaa Chica." -- Courthouse goes back for 'Mae West' Santa Ana landmark useq as location for filming of television movie By JEFF PARKE R °' .. ~ .......... The Old County Courthouse in Santa Ana was changed into New York 's Welfare Island Prison Wednesday during a day's shooting for the television movie, "Mae West.·· "It's tbe perfect building," said assistant director Bi ll Beesley-;-looking up al the stately structure. "We couldn't ult for more . · • The only change the movie co mpan y mad e in th e appearance or the building - now a slate monument -was { - covering the name up with branches of a nearby plant. Thal accomplished, t he 82-year-old building was ready lo double as the prison where Mae West did t ime ror her allegedly obscene Broadway play, "Sex." Ann Jillian is starring as Mae West. aJong with James Brolin as her lover, Timony. Jillian paced t>y the courthouse steps before the firsl takes, getting herself into character on the chilly 5-nla Ana morning. "I was a little scared about the role at first," she said. "But as I found out more about Mae West , her character delighted me. Her walk , voice and mannerisms were sC1 flamboyant that I had a lot to work with." Miss JUiian paced again, fme tuning the famfd Mae West swagger for her entrance into the prison. ·"This has been an easy project in a lot of ways," she said. "Tfi'eenthusiasm has been very high and it's a reaJ class act. We're on a light schedule but we won't cul corners. " Director Lee Philips, a veteran of a dozen television movies including "T he Red llAI ..at' Hvl•llD -Tbat•1 tbe old --......... '-mo.te "Kae West.'' Ann Jllliu ltan ,;m; James Broiln (ript) ••her k\yer. Oraaae County CourthoUle in tbe backlJWlld u morie crewa fllm a scene from the TV I Badge of Courage," "Crazy Times" and James -Micbener's "Dynasty," waited outside the courthouse, bemoaning the lilbt schedule. . "These schedules are drawn up by production types, not cr eative ones," be said. "No matter bow Iona they live you, you always need another day. We need 21. David Lean spent fiv e years on "Ryan 's Daughter" and said he needed an extra .day. So I guess that kind ol complaint is typical.'· Thia is the eiptb day of .•hootiq for "Mae Weal." Tbe courthouse will serve as two aettinca ..lD the movie -the courtbome where lllsa West la sentenced for her semational · play, and the prison where abe 1oes to do her time. Innocence plea in gun case A UC Irvine s tudent baa pleaded inDoceDt to tbrealminl a UCJ adminlatrator with a fate submachine eun. · 11 ajid Forooaandeh, lt, of Irvine, entered the plea w~ in Harbor MUIUdpal Court to lbe miademeaaor cbar1e of tbreate11ln1 a university otnelal. " He i1 free on $1 ,000 bail pendl n1 a Feb. 8 pretrial heartna. He alle1edly threatened aaalatant Dean Ron WilaoD wttb an exact replica of an Ual aubmacbine 1un on Jan.' 11 durin1 a diacuuiOD about b.la 1tudent 1tatu1. Forooaaad•b reportedly wu concenaed tbat be mi1ht be expelled for cheat.lnl and forced to return to. hla native Iran, when be fund bis life would be ID daqer. HIJ alle1ed aecompllcel Doqlu Brwt Smltb~ OI New JeneJ, bM bMa • ball pendlnl trial oa •lldemeaaor c••rlH la COllMdlm wttlt die lacld1n& As executive director, Fisher is l op advis e r to lbe com mi ssioners . He urged Supervisors in a letter to restrict residential development to 300 acres ol mesa area lo the north of the Bolaa Chica project and to preserve moat of the 1,300 acres of coastal lowland. Fischer's lette r noted the State Fish and Game Department bu idenWied 852 acres of Bolsa Chica lowlands aa "viable wet.land" habitat for fash and birds, including endangered species. He said the county plan proposes homes on this acreqe. The Bolsa Chica encompasses about 1,800 acres of lowland and m esa area south of Warner Avenue along Pacific Coast Highway. It's in unincorporated area, surrounded by Hun1tlniltGDJ Beach. The state presenUy operates a 200-acre wetlands wildllf preserve along Pacific eoa,t Hiehway. Supervisors Roger Staatoa and Bruce Nestande bad Unit words for Fischer's critJdama. Nestande said the letter wu "prejlldging" the cue and wu ''reaUy out of line.'' Stant.on added the letter "biased and slanted" and wu only the opinion ol com1mllman! s taff members and no nece$sarily that of tbll com miuiooen. Supervisor Harriett Wieder noted that the plan '1 . propoMCl salt marsh restoratloa would be among the most aip.iflcant ner undertaken in the nation. . • Women in art lecture topic Linda Watson, instructor of al 7 p.m . Tuesday in the design al Coastline College, Irvine city Arts and Crafts will present a lecture entitled Center. 4801 Walnut Ave. "History of Womeh in Art," Admission is free. • Family Service president cited Irvine r esident Mary Boyce has received the annual Family Service Award for her work as past president of the counseling organization. first year of service on the board of directors. Installed as new officen were : president JaH Sc•• w;-u llerton ; vice president John IUffefer, Corona del Mar ; treasurer B••berte Also honored during the Lopez, Santa Ana and annual Family Service secretary 8U.Ue Beanaaa. Association dinner Jan. 13 in D a a Go Id a er,. Mark Costa Mes a were Bea Branson, Me1 McCartm.7, Thomas of Capistrano Beach Charles Bowes and &elten and Billie Be arman of Schiff were installed as new Fountain Valley, for their . board members. • Chamber duo to perform The chamber duo Objet d' Art will perform in UC Irvine's Fine Arts Concert Hall al 8 p.m. Feb. 2. Valerie llillg on flute and Anisa Aagarola on guitar comprise Objel d' Art. which 'will present a musical p r og r a m ranging from traditional classical selections for flute and guitar to original contemporary -· compositions written for the two instruments. Tickets for the concert are $5 for generaJ admission, • -. for UCI students and S4 for .. o ther studen ts, senior citizens and UCI staffi facu lt y and Alumn Association members. For more information call 833-6379. • Donalion procedure• outlined . Criteria used by companies the Voluntary Action Ceoten in deciding on whether or not of South and West Oranae to donate to non-profit groups County and the Volunteer • will be discussed in a forum Bureau of North Orant• ·· Jan. 28 at the Fluor Corp. in County. Irvine. The for um wlll be beld Tm.omaa Elllck, a vice· from 8:30 a.m. to 12 :30 p.m . president at Fluor. will be at the Fluor Corp., JUI the keynote speaker at the Micbellon Drive. Tbe fee far •· forum spon1ored by the the forum ia po. For mon Soutbem California Center information or reaer'valklal for Noqprofit Mana1emenl, call (213) 62Pr'1011. • Job program •et at achoo& Coa1tline Re1i0Dal Occupational Pro1ram, a ... alnlnl procram ..mq tbe Huatin1ton Beaeb Union Hilla Newport-II ... , lnlae . Sad-leback Vall•J and Tu1Ua UaUled 1claool ... trldl, will bellla lti 1prtac ....... Feb.a. Tll• ll'CMl,P arr..,.. for &ralalal of 1&1ll1M1 _. a Im .. --of ........ II • local buUn-and.....,. BDrollmlllt Dliarttr ii 11"9 I 'to bltll 1clloolH•lori, Junion ud..,... ... ia. older realdlq la tlM ftw partldpe"ftl ldlool dlllltdl. .... ~ .... I obtalMd bJ CClllUletllll • • • ' Hlaoa!_.~ ea-I • .·~~·~·· .. i .-.. c Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT!Thuraday, January ~1. 1982 Heliport denial ~ , tl>On't eM JWise The Costa Mesa City Coun cil this wee k turned down a request by Downey Savings and Loan to operate a heliport in the city but some aircraft noise problems linger on. The decision won't mean an end to helicopter racket since cities have no jurisdiction over the s kies above them. Many of the res idents who packed city hall in opposition to the heliport at 3200 Bristol St.: probably walked away convinced that their noise proble m s are over. Far from it. Councilman Donn Hall made a reasonable point when he voted in favor of the project. saying a heliport in the city would give Costa Mesa clout in attempUng to deal with other pilots who fly over the city. In fact, he predicted t hat n oise would increase because pilots now have no reason to care how much noise they make flying over the cit y. • "I don't think the a·esldents are going to get what they want wit h th e d e nial ," sai d Councilwoman Norma Hertzog. "What they really want is to get a ll helicopters out." It is important to keep in mind what the c ity can and cannot do. The council can keep a helicopter from la nding or taking off from Costa Mesa. but they cannot · control helicopters that fly overhead. Actually. the most significant decrease in he licopter noise occ urre d when Fluor Corp . decided to bypass Costa Mesa when transporting executives to and from its Irvine ofCice. Also. the Fede:!ra l Aviation Administration recently raised the operating height from 500 to 700 feet. Neither d ecision was made by the Costa Mesa City Co uncil and vet both aF-e expected to significantly affect the area. ·MOose trip on carpet So m e Cost a i\J e s a '.\Joo-;t• Lod ge leaciE:·r~ appear 10 ban· been t r~·ing for the poor rwighhor award of the n :-ar ren•nll,· \\'ht'n the~· loc k ecl· out a gn'iu p ol volunteers who regular!~ I\• ·cl necch-senior t ili7.t'ns . 'fht• disaJ:?reemenl wa:-. on•r :i c·arpt•t. As it hapµt>ncd. the Ft·t•dh;1t·I. Foundation T r a n spnr1u11e111 Lunch program. whi<:h offer:-. hot lun c hes to th t• t'lderl\. \\~1:-. sc heduled lo mo\'c las't \\'t•t•k from the.Moose Lodge.• oul lo R4!<1 Middle School. B u t w h e n I h e '' o r k t' r .., s howed up lo mo\·e refrigerator ... a cli shwas ht'r . oven a nd tht•1r othe r equipment. the~ found th<· Moose l...o<lge c1oors lntke<I Moose oft'a·iuls saul I h~·~ wen· going to hold the k 11 <:lu•n equipment until the \'Oluntecr group agn•ed to ins tall a Ill'" carpet in the lodge hall This doesn 'l s eem \'t•r~ frat ernal of the :\loosL'. a:-. ;1 fralt•rnal organization II'.., pn·tt~ ha rd to ~uggt•st I hl' \t1lu11t<.·t•r:-. <lamagt•cl lhal t•a rpt·I all that mueh mor1.· tlwn lh1.· '.\loo:-<· rrH'mhers clid tlwms<.•h·L·:- When t ht• food for sl'niur:-. 'nluntet•r:-mon•d 111111 I Ill' lo<lg<.• two ~l'ar:-. ago. a IH'\\ t•;1rpt'I \\;1:- in:-;talle<I. a long "llh ;1 l'L'lllllL: kitchen. fl oor and h.1throom Thost• impron•mt·nts n·ma111 ''1th tht• lo<h!L' At best. tht• :\loo:-;<· :trl' g111lt \ 11f a pool' l'ommunit ~ rl'lation:-. joh .. \I \\'Ol'st. lhl·~ ;q11wa r to bl' tr ~~i ng Io must"k som t"OnC' t'nr snmt:> m•w'i•aa'pl't . Out of it :ti I. ho\\ l'\'L'I' nlll' hnght spot did ;.1pp t•;1r Roger Aston . 1m nl'f' or t lw Carpet Burn in Cu..;ta :\te~a . h<t-. ,·oluntt•er<.>d to put a nt'\\ <.'[ll'J)('l 1111cler I he '.\ toOM'. th u:-. ;1 llowing thL· ,·oluntl·er:-. who aacl the neL·<I~ to recove r their kit che n equipment a nd continue to do good works. Aston m a\ IJl' in liaw for th<' (;110<1 Guy of the Y<.•:ff :\w:ll'CI H11t tlw Moost• trippl·cl on lhl•ir l'Urp<.•I Tree solution tall order When it <.'Omes to a t rt'<' 111 Costa Mesa. most honwownt'I''>. 1l seems . would rather ll\'l' "Ith ;i cracked sidewalk th<rn watl·h a sapling become firewood In the past. rl•s ifh.•nt~ h:n l' stormed cit~· hall. turnt.>d to tht• c· o u r t s a n d t h r e a t t• n 1· d annexation. all 111 an attempt In s a v c t r e <.> s m a r k <' d I 11 1 dcst 1 uction. Now a C'itizen:-.. romm1l ll'L' h as com e up \\ith a c·o11p lt· suggestions the~ hon<.> will s pan· the trees buckling their sidt•\\ a l ks in College Park. Replant the 50 trees r<.•mm'l'O hy the cit~· in October and tr~ pruning the r<1ots rather than removin~ the trees. the~· sa~ Karen McGlinn. a spokes · woman for the group. told the City Council that root pruning will run onl\' $11 5 to $185. compared to ·tree r e mo\'al a S275. On the s urfa<.·e that sounds likt' a ~reat ide a . Noboct~· likc•s It\ see a tree c ut down. But Keith Van Holt. clirec:tor of Leisure Service for the <.'it~. • points nut t h:1t r oot pn111111g doesn·t alwa,·~ \\Ork a ncl h<1s to l>l' ctom· a lmost a nnua lh · fnl' tfw ~1s h lrt·t•s that dominatt· Cnlll'~t· f>:irk. If that •~ tn1t·. tlw ta:\(Kl~l'I'" ('flldd ht· footing ii ('11'>11~ hill fw· man' n·ars to c·1lml' \·~1n llo lt s u11I l ilt• t·11 ~ f'l'.ll'l'tl'<l the rclt•a ol root pnaning <I rt•\\' ~·eat~ agu lur that f'(•asnn His 'taff plans to mL•t•I with lhl' <·om m ittee ht•I ort· (lf'l'Sl'l11111g " fi nal a·eport lo I ht• l'tHllll'll Ill''' month. Aft<·•· c((•\'OI ing a grt•at dt•al ot ti me to the l'l'port. Co:-1 ;1 :\k..;a residents han• found 11111 that thl' tree probll•m 1 ~ not l'as ah soln•d It is goo<I to °'L'l' l'it izt:•no.; g iven a n opportunit~ to work with the c ity. w c·11 hope tbe eHorts of the citizens and thl' ci t~· can som e hO\\ come up with SOlllmhlng-that gaves som~ tl'ee-s . s o l ves the proble m of legal liabilitv for fa ll s on nat'ked sidewa.lks and doc.s n 't s et a precedent that would cost a bundle when applied throughout the cit~· u·s a big or<ler Opinior1s expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex· pressed on tn1s page are those ot lhe1r autnors and artists. Reader comment 1s 1nv1t· ed. Address The Dail y Pilot, P 0 . Box 1~0. Cosra Mesa, CA '>2626 Phone t7141 642·4321. L.M. Boyd/Drinking water • Say you're lost in a desert with nothing but a canteen or water. Should you not sip ll sparingly only as you need it? All tales of fact and fiction ind.jcate that's the way to 10. In hand, however, is contrary counsel which says no, d rink it down, better to carry it in your body than in a canteen. Could this be 1ood advice? More than 100,000 vUJa1es in India -about II percent of lbem -have no SOUl'H ol drinkinl water within a ORANGE COAST llilyPilat mile. So report scholars who study lbe world's natural resources. Blame uncontrolled fl oods a nd shifting water tables. Seems incredible, doesn't it? In South Africa, the women of lbe Tembo, the Flngo and the Nguni , trlbes are forbidden to eat e11s. Belief is eggs are so sexually stimulating lo women that they who partake of same 10 mad, mad, mad for men. ThotMI P. H•ley PubllSher : Tltomn A. Mui'pJalne . Edhor Barbara Krelblc" Editorial Page Editor D . . . k d ? ec1s1on ns to. ___ stu .ents. -Are California's school children being s ubjected to unacceptable risks by reason or a recent FBI decision? John F. Brown, executive secreta ry of the state 's teacher certification agency thanks so . Man y l ocal scho o l s uperintendents agree . Their reaction to the FBl's notice or a moratorium on t he processing or fingerprint checks has been an angry one. Fingerprint checks by both the sta t e's Bure au of C rimin a l Ide ntification and the FBI have been a routine requjred by state law. But in October the FBI. citing a 27·d ay lag in this work, announced it was suspending the service for one year during which lime it hoped to develop a swifter computerized read out. The federal agency said it had notified Congress in its budget requests of its backlog and plan to remedy it with the curtailment of services. SCHOOL OFFIC IAL S however, noting that the moratorium excepted applicants for law enforcement and security guard jobs. contended that teacher applicants likewise should have been exempted, Brown says be is worried about the damage that -<?ould-be-done to lhe- chlldren during a whole year as a result or the decision. He said that more than 29.000 applications for teacher licenses are received each year and that about 10 percent or these are found to have criminal records. Although the ringerprints are submitted both to the state bureau a nd the FB!. ma1'y or t h e records or fARl WATfRS criminal activity are found only in the F' RI r epo rh This t, because the offensel> havt• twen committed in other states. Actually. compared with the total number of applica nts. the numbers turned up by the F.81 are small. Brown s aid out of 2,600 rap sheets the FBJ had provided information not found in the stale records in about 400 cases. Still, many or these involved serious offenses such as rai>.e , armed robbery and kidnapping. The school orriclals contend the FBI c hecks are essenliaJ to protect the schoolchildren from potential child abuse and--drug abuse ~atmg it-1s loo late lo react arter a child has been harmed. Church-state split not • ID To the Editor: . The idea ot the separation of <'hurch and s late does not appear in the United States Constitution, nor in any of its amendments. ·'The church shall be separate from the state . . . and the church separate from schools.·· "Congr.ess s hall m a ke no law res pecting an establistlment of religion. . ' MAILBOX or p:,ohibiting the free exercise thereof The first quote above is Crom the Soviet constitution. The second quote is from the BiH of Rights the First Am e ndment to th e United States Constitution. I This country was rounded as a constitutionaLc.epublic... witn the concept that its laws, rights. and privileges cam e Crom a higher power "The Creator '' -God himself. Many early settlers, rrom the Pilgrims on, believed our country was founded according to God's divine plan, and they dedicated themselves to helping it grow according to God's will. AS TO EDUCATION, the fif'ttl one-room s chools were taught by God-fearing Christian teachers who used the Bible as a text, and later the almost universal McGuffey Readers, filled with Biblical stories and moral teaching. All of our first institutions of higher learning were founded by churches : Harvard, Yale, Princeton, William and Mary. Pomona. Redlands -the list is endless. You can be sure t he founders be lieved . with Noah Webster, that "Education without the Bible is worthless." The Americao public has been subtly "sold" a false doctrine. It is the JJSSR w,,ose constitution decrees separation of church and state. When our forefathers referred to the s ubject. t he ir meaning was. far different. They had observed tbat In a country with a national church, the con cent ration of po Ii tic a I and' ecclesiastical power is too 1rut. Hence, they were vocal and adamant that no single Unit.eel States church be fowacled . But it was understood that worship or God would undergird aJI actions of officials in government, as well as those in every school and university. You state (Editorial, Jan. 12) that the Arkansas decision ouUawinC equaJ Ume for teaching evolution and creation science was ". . . a proper defense of the Constitution uainst a law lhat Quotes "Lit.er ally, what no one knows at this polnt tJ just how deep a rece11ion we ar,e 1olnc to be In." -TreHarJ, &e~retarJ Doaald ae, ... imposed religious theory disguised as science on the public schools." On the contrary, th~ decision cannot be based on the U.S. Constitution. since the Constitution does not contain the pr inciple of separation of church and slate. The decis ion will be appealed. ELIZABETH. W. RICHARDS Pressure play? To the Editor: Jim WOQd ·s s purious comments about the Committee of 4000 tJ an. 8> should not be dignified by a response, but a few observations about bis conclusions are needed to set the record straight. In his entire diatribe, he made only one true s tatement: the leasehold issue is adve rsely a ffecting the real estate market. He's obviously hurting because his real estate commissions are down. He blames the situation on "the ra nting s and ravings " of the leaseholder!t:-The real culprit Is Mr. Wood's friend, 'the Ir vine Company and their outrageous land prices and rentals . NO BUYER wants anything to do with leasehold property. The only sales that huve been made have been at prices hundreds of thousands of dollars be low the "fair market prices" quoted by The Irvine Company. It is obvious that The Irvine Company is now resorting to the old economic pressure play. Instead of facing the issue and trying lo resolve the problem, the company a ppears to be coercing others who are subservient to them to s peak out against the suffering ho meowners. You can expect others like Wood lo whine their vested interest. Prom is one thing, Mr. Wood. Greed is the word you should use. LOUISE. SCOTT Concern lacking To the Editor: With respect to the Irvine Company leaseholders' situation. it wouJd seem to 'me that as the lawsull of the Committee of 4QOO gets under way, and the facts and figures of the Irvine Company are revealed, the greed and overall lack of concern of the Irvine Company for our community will become evid~. Perha-ps the ~rtorts 61 the C<irnmitt.ee of 4000 will prove only the tit> of the ic~berg in revelation I IF THE convictions of the Irvine Company were as genuine and 11elfiess as those or the Commitlee of 4000, I ~nd • l.f'tltr• from r<'odrra urt u,'flcomt Tilt rigltl lo cnndt•111w ltllni lo /II spoct or thm rnotl' ht>.>/ rs re trvt'd l.l'tlf•u oJ 306 IL'ords or It"~" r.t'll/ l>f' g111"'" prr/,,'ttCt All ltltf'rs m•~,, inclvdr s1gno111rt> ond maalmg addrn-Intl nomr1 may be wtlf\lwld on rt· _qrw.•I r/ 1111/#-lflenr r<'oaon Is opportnr l'rltt ry 1111/ nt>I be publlshtd t.cttvs mo11 tit /Plrph1mt'd to 642 60116 No mt and phone> numb,.r of tl'lf' conlnbutor musl be gmni lot otrl/lcoJlon purposes. -·---·---But the FBI said it had made its decision after carerully weighing the potential adverse efrects a$ainst the known benefits or improving Its service to the crimmal justice agencies I N AN ATTEMPT lo develop alternative sources fo r ch ecking out-of-state applicants the licensing agency turned to submitting requests for information to the teacher Ucensing agencies in other states. Response has been poor. Furthermore, it was discovered that California is one of the rew stales requiring fingerprint checks of teacher applicants . In view of that and the relatively few cases found each year the questioo is rais ed as to whether th' California officials may be overreacting. Or is the conclusion that the other states are being woefully neglectrul in protecting their children'! Probably before the answer to that is known the FBI will have recommended its service t o the st a te 's teacher licensing agency. ll has indicated that it will at the end of the year's moratorium but will impose a $12 per applicant charge. Brown says this charge would be absorbed by an increase in the fees it charges applicants Constitution rt interesting that the Irvine Company is now attempting to "ofrer help" to the leaseholders of this community. Could greed possibly entertain guHt? Further. the Irvine Company 's ove rall expansion plan in our area may appear inevitable to them ; however, they seem to · forget that they are / deating With a well·established, spirited community that will not be dictated to by the greed of the "foreign-run" Irvine Company. J WARREN JOHNSON Fight Wall policy To the Editor Can it be that Laguna citizens are so apa the tic about what happens to our s horeline that they are making no pro· tests against Interior Secretary Watt's proposal to sell leases for oil and gas exploration between Laguna and Point Conception? lie envisions al least one major offshore lease for California an- nually until 1986. After leases are signed it is too late to do much about averting potential degredation of our coastal re· i:.ources. WHAT WOULDN'T a Santa Barbara oil spill do to Laguna's business in· tei:ests? To our marine life -the sea lions, the fish. the pelican? To our recr eationa l beaches -the scuba divers, the surf riders , swimmers, even those who are just there to enjoy relax· ing In the s un? Or the sea view? Will it be enhanced by towering oil derricks on the horizor.? Oi l on beaches might be scooped up, but cleaning up tide pools is :m other story! Supervisor Ri ley , Mike Fisher, Ex· ecutive Director of the California Coastal Commission : a nd Michael Shapiro, the governor's Outer Continen· tal Shelf Project Director, all of whom could effectively oppose the oil explora· tion, have heard little opposition to Secretary Watt's plan (rom Olange County's citizens. Mayors Heather and Bellerue or Newport Beach and Laguna have had no strong support for their oil exploration protests. · As citizens who care. we must let Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. and other concerned officials know or our opposi· Uon to lhls despollalton of our coasl.r-'\. EVELYN GAYMAN Swe Nancy Rea1an doesn't dertft any benefit from all lhOM d.....,. clothes. And, If you believe that. D.L. _, .. ....-..--~ .. .-. ..... .. ............................... ' ........ .. ..... ............ Dell,....... ' llllyPlllt THURSOAV1 JAN. 21, 1982 1111111:1111 . CAVALCADE TELEVISION STOCKS AIRPORT SCULPTURE -Introduction of model of sculpture of John Wayne finds bis son Patrick apparently deep in thought. When completed in summer of 1982, the 9-foot ..., ........ ...,...,....._ brome statue will be placed at John Wayne Airport. Ceremonies were held this morning in Santa Ana. Bolsa Chica project pushed County asks coastal panel to approve development Development plans include 5,700 homes, an 1,800-slip boat marina and navigable ocean· channel through Bolsa Cblca State Beach and a minimum 600-acre salt marsh preserve for fish pd birds. • Ficker, Banni~ share honor& Newport Beach architect Wiiiiam Ficker and developer Hancock "8111" Baanlnc Ill have been named co-winner s of the annual Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce "Citizen of the Year" award. The award was presented during ceremonies last Friday at the Marriott Hotel in Newport Beach. The ceremony marked the 75th anniversary of the chamber. Ficker, an award winning 'rchltect and world class yachts man, was cited for numerous community activities including being in s tr um enta l in the successful project to replace the Upper Newport Bay Bridge. Banning was honored for hi s year-long stint as chairman of the Newport Beach 7Sth Anniversary Committee. During the ceremonies, Carol J . South was installed as the chamber's 1982 president. She is the first woman elected to that post. • Aahe to he.ad board of YMCA Newport Beach resident Michel '· Allle. a retired IBM executive. has been elected c hairman of the 35-member Orange Coast YMCA board of dlrecton. The Orange Coast YMCA serves Newport, Irvine and Costa Mesa. As tie, who U ve» on Udo l1Je, bu been adlve ln the YMCA for more than 12 yean, ....m. u campalp cbalrmu ..a Chalrl¥Jl ol tbe Famt11 Cri1l1 Oenter CommlUee. AllO ll9et9d to tbe board was lo•• Salladay, an engineer, and Ray Selualerer, busineu mana1er with the Newport-Mesa Unified School District. Both are Costa Mesa residents. Others are David Oberbeck, a CPA, and Du Beals, personnel dlnctor for the Irvine Company. Bolb are lrYlne l'elddeata. N_,wport reUdeatl elected to JM..boent ....... 11 ,,. w---. ol Price WaterbouM; ................... ol Pacific Federal, aad Bal ~e-zH1, ol P8dfte lllltual. . ' coastal commissionen for final approval. However, Michael Fischer, executive director of the Coastal Com mission, said the plan "fails to recognize Coastal Act policies protecting coastal wetlands. Tbe proposes to use public funds to develop, rather than preserve the wetlands or Bolsa Chica.'' -- As executive director, Fisher is top adviser to the com missioners. He urged Supervisors in a letter to restrict residential development to 300 acres ol mesa area to the north of the Bol.sa Chica project and to preserve most of the 1,300 acres of coastal lowland. Fischer's letter noted the State Fish and Game Department bas Identified 8SZ acres ol Bolaa Chica lowlUMb u "viable wetland" habitat for flab and birds, Including endancered species. He said lbe county plan propoees homes on this acreage. The Bolaa Chica encompasaes about 1,800 acres ol lowland and mesa area south of Warner Avenue alon1 Pacific Cout Hi1bwa,y. It's ln unincorporated area, surrounded by Hun~ Beach. Tbe state presenUy operates a 200· acre wetlands wildlife preserve aloo1 Pacific Cout Hitbway. Supervlsora Ro1er Stanton and Bruce Nestande bad barlb words for n1eber's critJclama. Neatande said the letter wu "preJudcinl" tbe case and wu "really out ol llne." Stanton added tbe letter WU "biased and llanted" and wu only the opinion ol commluion ataff members ana not nece11arll1 \bat f>f tbe eom•' I IJNl'I, ,. t 82-3 84 87• E'conomists predict slow recovery f ro·m recession See Page 86. Coast Guard faces cuts Corona del Mar facility targeted for trims The Coaat Guard aearcb and rescue operatJoo ln Corona deJ Mar reportedly baa been lar1eted for bud1et trims aa part ol a muaive cutback in Cout Guard operationa acroa the country. Tbe Coast Guard, it was revealed today, ii plannln& to close 1S stations in 11 statea and slash operations ln 16 otben. Tile service also plans to decommission 10 Coast Guard cutters to help mate up SiM mjllion sliced from its requested 1982 budget of $1.403 billion. Search and rescue operations out of Corona del Mar, San Pedro and Marina del Rey were listed as areas that will be Mesa crime rate drops 3 percent The crime rate in Costa Mesa dropped almost 3 percent last year, according to statistics released today by the police department. The biggest decreases were in robberies, auto thefts and thefts in which losses ranged between $50 and $200. Assaults and r esidentia l burglaries were up, however, according to the year-end report. Costa Mesa police Capt. Robert Moody said he i s pleased. He attributed the decrease to a general counlywide trend and a policing patrol program that divldt:S the city into three sections . • "By dividing the city into three areas, we are able to keep a clos er eye on the crime picture," said Moody. "But it's bard to say whether law enforcement has an effect on crime," he added. Four murders occurred in Costa mesa, i.n both 1981 and 1980, therefore showing no rate change. There were Z7 rapes in 198Q and 26 last year, according to the statistics. Moody said he was most pleased by the reductions ln robberies and car theft.s. 'The city's major crime totals in 1981 shows : -Murder: four, same as previous year. -Rapes: 26, down one. -Robberies: 128, down from 141 reported in 1980. -AssauJts: 470, up from 442 in 1980. -Residential burglaries: 1,384, up 2.4 percent from 1980. -Thefts over S200 -1,087, up S percent from previous year. -Thefts between $50 and $200 -1,295, down 9.3 percent from 1980. - -Auto theft : 353, down from 389 in 19M. The loss of property from . robberies, thefts and bur1Jaries totaled $6.8 million in Costa Mesa during 1980, up 5.4 percent from the previous yeat. Police recovered $2.3 million ln stolen property, showing a 9.4 percent increase over the amount recovered in 1980. affected by t.be cutback. A recruiting office in Garden Grove also was marked for closure. The Coast Guard currently operates an 82-foot search ~ rescue patrol boat out of Corona del Mar and maintains two fuU crews to operate the vessel. ' The Corona del Mar Coast Guard cutter serves Newport Harbor as well as Daha Point and Huntington Harbour. Coast Guard officials said they've been requested not to comment OD the reported cutbacks until Saturday, when a press conference is expected. "At this point," suggested Coast Guard Capt. Jim Mitts, "you know about as much as I do.'' A number of cong ressmt;o a cross the country expresseli concern over the planned trims. several suggesung the cuts wiU result in a loss of life. Aides to Congressman· Robert Badham, R-Ne wport Beach, said they will meet Friday with two ranking Coast Guar d officials to discuss the reported cutbacks. "The congressman feels it would be very bad to put lhe Corona del Mar operation on a restricted schedule," said aide Howard Seelye. "Newport Harbor 1s . after all the nation's largest small craft harbor." Seelye said Man gets 5 years for deaths in Mesa A Downey man was given a five -year state prison term Wednesday in what prosecutors believe is the toughest sentence yet handed down in Orange County for a vehicular manslaughter and a ssault conviction. Sentenced by Superior Court Judge Francisco Briseno was defendant John Thomas Lankford, 21, who was convicted of killing a pedestrian on a Costa Mesa street in April or 1981. The sentence handed down by Judge Briseno was the maximum allowed by stale law. According to prosecutors, Lankford deliberately aimed his car al two men to see how close he could come to them Killed wh e n h e wa s stru c k by Lankford's vehicle was Kevin Pehl of Laguna Beach. who was walking with a companion, Peter Covington, also of Laguna Covington was not injured The defendant wa~ originally cha rged with second-degree murder, but pleaded guilty to the reduced charge or vehicular manslaughter. He aJso pleaded guilty to a charge of assault with a deadJy weapon. . In many cases. observer~ s aid, people con vict ed of vehicular manslaughter are put on probation and rarely go to state prison. Newport planners eye medical tower A proposed multi -st or y Newport Beach medical tower that has been criticized by doctors, patients and homeowners, comes before the city Plannin'g Com mission tonight. The 65,000-square-foot tower would be constructed near Hoag -Memorial Hospital and adjacent to the existing Park Lido medical complex. The applicants -Park Lldo Ltd. -are the owners of the Park Lldo complex. P~trol ~ar strikes pole - A Costa Mesa police officer's patrol car struck a light pole in Newport Beach early today when the officer was pursuing a drunkelJ dTiver s u s pect, according to police reports. Officer William Paul Redmond said his car skidded out of control after encountering a rain puddle at Newport Boulevard and Finley Avenue. Redmond was not injured in the 1 a.m. crash and damage to the vehicle was reported minor. Police said the driver of the other car was not apprehended. Jn addition to• the medical tower , the applicants also ar e seeking permission lo bwld a two-story parking structure near the building Nearby resid e nt'\ have complained ~h medical tower will create t much noise, too much traffic d will reduce already-scare parking spots. A group of doctors rrom the existing medical complex said their patient!'> already ar e having trouble loaating parking spots in the area. Several doctors sa1d the}' fear that dus t and nois e durrn g cons t r uction would ha\e 111 effects on their patients' health. Crash s uit file d A fourth 'law:-.uil 111 C'onnt>clion with the· Fr b Ii <'rac;h of an A i rCal Jetline r <i t Orangl ·County's John. \\';.1~ 11t• Airport has been ftled ,ID 01 angC' Count~ Supe rior Court Malcolm Wo:-.tt•r a passenger on Flight 336. d<11m :-in the action that he <.uffen:<I inJurie~ bee a ust' or a I lcged nl'g Ii gent ac·tions of th(' airlln•· BoeinJ? Aircraft Compan) United Technologies. µ1lol Don Clark a nd co-pilot Ned Prlt'rson. The passenger is ~el'kmg $1 mill ion in dam~iges ..., ........ ..., ..... .._. ntm LA8J tAUCIH -Corona dei llar Hilb 'over Eatancla H11h. The EatJes led lfloi~!-.-....... 8clloal etaell'le•.._.. wboap it up at tbe IDd ol UM way but tbe Sea K.lnp overcame tbem ln Wedwday nlpt'• 40-35 bulretball vtdory tbe ftMi l«Ollldl. See details, Page Ct . I. N Orange Coaat DAILY Pt LOT /Thurada)&. January 21 , 1982 It's time for talks on leasehold issue • On lhe one htrnd we httve tht>' Irvine Company. landowner. and on the other. the leaders of The Committee of 4000, who claim they represent at least thut muny residents. whose homes are on land leased from the cQmpany in NewPQrt Beach and Irvine. For some weeks now the company and th-e committee have been locked in a war of words over lease renewal provisions that are comfog due. Nufl;lerous homeowners crv that proPQsed increases in the land leases are outrageous and will force them out of their ttomes. possibt~· at a significant financial loss. . Irvine Company spokes men. o n the other hand. note that rental fee increases for the land leases are in conformance with a land value formula included in the original lease documents and agreed upon by the leaseholders. Jt ·s all on the up-a nd-up. Those are the ven basie issues. Bevond that thei·e have been arguments, co1unter- arguments, charges and counter- c ha r g es and detailed e mbellishments of the issue. Through it· all. nume rous concerned citizens a nd civi<· leaden; have voiced hope thut th~ issue might be settled in some form of compromise that would .at least be palatable to both s ides. That same urging for compromise has bee n expressed in this space . Ye{ to dale. most or th~ declarations. and speeches or state m ents of views on the issues by both s ides appear to have been directed to the citizenry at large in both the cities or Irvine and Newport. Reach. There would seem to be a large measure or logic lo the s ugg es tion that perhaps repre se ntative s of The Committee of 4000 and The Irvine Compan~· dismount from their hig.h horses. come o ut from behind the legal barricades and s it down at a table. face to face. to see if thev can search out an\' common grounds w herein the seeds of compromise might be planted. We think this wol1ld be a g rand idea. And if ~bc)th sides feel the~· need a neutral site. we would hl' happ~· to provide that ta ble Terrorism hits home Our prayt'rs and our dl'l'IH':-1 heartfelt s~·mpathit•s go out to tlw ~ewpo 1·t Bead' pan.•nt:-<1nd .;isll'rs of Lt. Col. Charles Ra\. t he a ssistant l '.S . m il1t a 1:, altal0hl1 who was murcll'n•d fn11tl a mbus h Monda ~· on a P ;1r1 :- st ret•t. We know tha t all peopll• of our n:.ition join in that s111·1·11\\ Cl•rtainl~· Pt:(•sidl•nt Rl•agan clol':- The presick•nt sa id that Col R"' ··1.wn· his life in lhl' linl' of dut' as surd~· as if hl' h<HI fallt.•n int h~· line of bat tit.'.·· Pre;-;icle nt R cag ;.1 n addl·d . ··Our hearts go out to his famil\ in tlwir he r l'<1n1ml•nl and th~· wanton att of h is murdt.'l'l'I°" reinfnrees our dt.•tl•rmiantion tu .., t a m p out i 11 I t' r 11 ;1 t 1o11 ;1 I terrorism u nd pn.•\ l'lll ... 11nilar t ra1H•<iies in tht.• futun• ·· Certe1in l~-. in lig ht ol 11w l n ~ r l' ''si n g I l' r r·o r 1 s m :111 d ga n gsterism that hC:ts bet.•11 1 l'Xpt.•rit.•tll"l'd in n•c·1·nl t1ml1s 011 a w11 rldwidt• h:is 1s . 1t 1·rntld h1· I a1rl~ s uggl'stl1d th:1t ('111 Ra~ did 1111kc<I fall in hatt ll' It 1s tlw halt ll' ol all h111na11 ht·1ng:-. to h<1n· tht.• right to hl' sail' from tht.• nil· ;1l·ts of utlwr h11ma11 pn•dators . To ht.· .;.ifl' 011 tlw "tl'l't.'lS :llld l'H'll in tht.•11· 11\\11 h o m t.• s To b l' f r t.' ,. f 1· n m ll•rronsm Col. Ra' lost ht:-lilt· to I host• l111·n·s or t.•\il \\"hid1 to<la.\ \\l' I ind 1 11 < • r l' a s i n g I ~ :1 l"1 1 '· 1 • i 11 o 11 r ..,upposl•dl~· d\ ilizt.•d ..;m·u•t ~ It would he..• 011h a small ITTC'<ts ttrC' of c·onciolC'm"t· to t host.• ''ho mourn his <fl•ath. hut lus los.., ma\ wl'll st.•rn• to mll't1sil\· tlw 1•ffi1r ts of our 11at ion :111(1 a ll nat mns to stamp out ";into11 :11·1:- nf ll•1-roris m . Such ;1C't ion would i11<h·t•cl ..,er\'e as a fitting memoria l to Col. H.n ·:-lif1· and to his ult imatl· ..,;i,:riftn· · Fast action encouraging Cons ider c.i h It• flu rr ·' '' a :-. l'l'l'utl'd early this wet:k wlwn ;1 ··milk,· s ubs ta nee·· was found floatin.g down San J ouquin Crl'l'k. w·llit·h flows into S;rn llit•J.(11 C rt.•t.•k. whieh dump:-into t ·p1wr '\ t•wport Ha~ , T h is brought 1111t E n,·ironmt.•nt<.11 :'\1 anagt.•m(•111 .\gt'ne~· workers ancl slatt· Fis h anci Gam e peoplt• and ttw l"rt'l'k wus e\'en de1mmed off to ket·p t lw mi lk,· stuff from flowing into tht· ha\· \,·att•rs . · · It is l'learl~· eneouraging to witness SllC'h rapid attion a nd awareness on the part of public offitial s t.·harg l'd wi th tht.• • n•spnns ihilit ~ tu pro11.•<·t 011r p11hlk watt·r~ Tl•Sh to dalt.; han· 111d1t"akd that tlw milln suh..;t;irH't' 1s nnn-lo'\tt" a nd · ;q1 p;1n•ntl.' nu I h r l' a I I 0 l' it h l' I.. \\ i I 1 II i rt I 111' hu m<111kind . Pl•rhaps \\ hl'n t lw ll'sts art.• compll'tl'CI. we m;1 ~ k ;.u-n lh;1t lhl' mi lk,. sub:-;tam·l· \\as -;oml'thing 111st as hlancl as milk itsl'lf N t' l' <11 l· s s t o s ;1 ' . m a n ' officials <inti pluin <"ll 0 1zt.•ns l'an :•llt.•st to lht.• fa<·t that :1 lot mon· noxious shifHh.m-1 lmt--has flrtw into l "pper ~t.·wport Ha~· in 1ws1 ·' t.•ars he[on• pl'opll' got l''.\l'il t.•d ahout rt Opini0f1S eJCpressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex- pressed on tnis page are tnose ot tneir autnors and artists. Reader comment 1s invit- ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa M esa, CA 92~26. Phone <71 4) 641·4321. L.M. Boyd/Drinking water Say you're lost in a desert with nothing but a canteen of water . Should you not sip it sparingly only as you need it? All tales of fact and fiction indicate that's the way to go. In ha rid , however , is contrary counsel which says no, drink it down, better to carry it in your bocly than in a «;»teen. Could this be good advice? The number of Australian boy babies jumped sharply in Canberra's Merseyside region in 1959. So sharply that the medicos knew it couldn't be coincidence. But the only big change thereabouts had been a switch in the c.ommunity's main water supply. The new water was hard. Ext.-emely so. Ever since, the researchers have been trying to fi1ure out why hard water boosts the male birth rate. More than 100,000 viUages in India -about 18 percent of them -have no source of drinkin1 water within a ORANGE COAST llilyPilat mile. So report scholars who study thf!-world'S>natural resources. Blame uncontrolled floods and shifting water tables. Seems incredible. doesn't it? Q. Js it true you can tell whether an animal is a meat eater or a vegetation eater by counting the toes on lls feet? A. All I know is the meal eaters never naturally have fess than four toes on each foot. You know what Henry Ford rud for relaxation? Went sailing to get away from tT~fic jams. In South Africa, tt.. women of lhe Tembo, the Finco and the Nsuna tribes are forbidden to eat e11s. Belief is eggs are so sexually stimuJating to women that they who partake of same go mad, mad, mad for men. Thomas P. H•ley Pub II Sher : T"°"'6 A. Mu ...... lne Editor ~ larlNtra Kreibtcll Edltorlef Peoe Edttor t Decision risk to students?- A re California· s school children being subjected to unacceptable r isks by reason of a recent FBI decision? John F. Brown, executive secretary of the s tate's teacher certification agency th in ks so. M any I O'c a I sch o o I superintendents agree. Their reaction lo the FBl's notice or a moratorium on the-processing or fin gerprint checks has been an angry one. Fingerprint checks by both the s t a t e · s B u r e a u o f C r-i m"i n a I Identification and the FBI have been a routine required by state law. But in October the FBI, citing a 27-day lag in this work, announced it was suspending the service for one year during which time it hoped to develop a s wifter computerized read out. The fed eral agency said it bad notified Congress in its budget requests of its backlog and plan to remedy it with the curtailment of services. SCHOOL Ofo'FICIALS howe ver. noting that the moratorium excepted applicants for law enforcement and security guard jobs, contended that teacher applicants likewise shouJd have been exempted: ·- Brown says he is worried about the damage that courd be done to the ~ children during a whole year aa a result of the dedtiQn. He said th.at more than 29.000 applications for teacher licenses are received each year and that about 10 percent or these are found to have criminal records. Although the fingerprints are sulJmilted both to the state bureau and the FBI. many of the records of , ' llll IATIRS criminal activity are found only in the FBI r eports . This is because the ofrenses have been committed In other states. Aclually. compared with the total number of a pplicants .• the numbers turned up by the FBI are s mall. Brown • said out of 2.600 rap sheets the FBI had provided information not found in the state r~ords io about 400 cases. Still. many of these involved serious offenses suc h as rape, armed robbery and kidnapping. The school officials c;ontend the FBI ch ecks are essential to protect the schoolchildren from potential child abuse and drug abuse. staJing it is too late to react after a child has been harmed- Church-state split not • Ill To the F.ditor: The idea of the separation of church abd state does not appear in the United Slates -constitution, nor in any ot its amendments. "The church shaU be separate from the state . . . and -the church separate from schools." "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, .· MAILBOX or p~ohibiting the free exercise thereof imposed relijious ttleory disguised as science on the public schools." On lbe coatrary, the decision cannot be based on (he U.S. Constitution. since the Constitution does not contain the principle or sepa'ration of church and state. The decision will be appealed. ELIZABETH W. RICHAflDS Pres3ure play? To tbe Editor: Jim Wood's spurious comments about the Committee of 4000 (Jan. 8) should not be rugnified by a response, but a few observations about hi s conclusions are needed to set the record straight. In his entire diatribe, he made only one true Thf' first quote above is from the statement : the leasehold issue is Soviet constitution. The second quote is ad versely affecting the real estate from the Bill of Rights -the First market. He's obviously hurting because Ame ndme nt to the United States his real estate commissions are down. Constitution. He blames the situation on "the Th~s ~ountry w~s founded as a r a ntings and ravings " of the const1.tut1onaJ rep~bhc, with the .c~ncepl leaseholders. The real culprit Is Mr. that its law~ r!.ghts, and pnv1~~ges ~tiend, Tlte trvi~ C9m2pny and came rom a fltgher power the-their outrageous land prices a nd Creator" -God himself. Many early rentals ' settlers, from the Pilgrims on, believed · our country was founded according lo NO BUYER wants anything to do God's ruvine plan, and they dedicated with leasehold property. The only sales themselves to helping it grow according that have been made have been at to God's will. prices hundreds or thousands of dollars AS TO EDUCATION, the firs t one-room schools were taught by God-fearing Christian teachers who used the Bible as a text. and later the almost universal McGuffey Readers, filled with BiblicaJ stories and moral teaching. All of our first institutions or highe r learning were founded by churches: Harvard, Yale, Princeton, William and Mary, Pomona, Redlands -the list is endless. You can be sure the founders believed, with Noah Webster, that "Education without the Bible is worthless .'' The American public has been sublJy "sold" a false doctrine. It ia the USSR whose constitution deerees separation of church and state. When our· forefathers referred to the s ubject, their meaning was far different. They had observed that in a coyntry with a national church, the conce ntration of poll tic al and' ecclesiastical power-is too creat. Hence, they were vocal and adamant lhat no single United States church be founded. But it was understood that worship of God would undergird all actions of officials in govemroent, as welt as thole in every school and university. You state (Editorial, Jan. 12) that the Arkansas decision ouUawlng equal time for teaching evolution and creatloe science wu ". . . a, proper deftn.M ol the Constitution •••intt a law that Quote1 "lJterally, what no one knows at this point ii Juai how deep • receulo.n we are golnt to be ln. •· -TreaHry, se'eretary .,.. ... •••••·· . • below the "fair market prices" quoted by The Irvine Company. It is obvious that The Irvine Company is now resorting to the old economic pressure play. Instead of facing the issue and trying to resolve the problem, the company appears lo be coercing others who are subservient to them to speak out agains t the suffering homeowners. You can expect others like Wood to whine their vested interest. Profit iS one thing, Mr. Wood . Greed is "the word you should use. LOUISE. SCOTT Concern lacking To the Editor: With respect to the l\"vine Company leaseholders' situation, it would'seem to me that as the laws uit of the Commitl'ee of 4000 gels under way, .and the facts and figures of the Irvine Company are revealed, the greed and overall lack of concern of lhe lrvhae Company for our community will beeome·evident. Perhaps tbe efforts of the Committee or 4000 .tu prove only the tip of 'the lceber1 II\ revelation! IF THE convictions of the Irvine Company were as genuine and selfless as those ol the Committee ol 4000, I ftnd . -· L,ft(er.~ from readers art i«kome. The rlgltt to cond~s•· letter$ to ftt apace or ehrrunolf' hhfol 18 restrved IA>tlers of 300 u¥1rds or lea:. U.'tll f)(' g1vtn pre/er~e AU ''""'8 mu.!I inclt.ld, 111(lnature and'moihrag address bul nomf~ may ~ witl!Mld on re• q1H1111 1/ ,,uff1C'it11I reason 1s oppor,,nr Pott'!I wtll not ~ pMl'>h•hfd 1,.1una mov be lelepbimtd Iv 642'/iON. Nome and pht>nf numbtr of 11\t eonlr.tbtitor must be gt1>fl' /or t1trf/leoltofl ptlf'PO&ta. I But the FBI said it had made its decision after carefully weighing the potential adverse effects against the known benefi ts of improving its service to the criminal justice agencies. IN AN ATTEMPT lo d e velop alternative sources for checking out-or-state applicants the licensing agency turned J.O submitting requests for informati'on 1.o the teacher licensing agencies in other states. Response has been poor Furthermore', -it was discovered that California is one of the few states requiring fingerprint checks of teacher applicants. In view of that and the relatively few cases round each year the question is raised as to whether the California officials may be overreacting. Or is the conclusion that the other slates are being woefully neglectful in protecting thei r children? Probably before the answer lo that is known the FBI will have recommended its service to the state 's teache r licensi ng agency It has indicated that it will at the' end or the year's moratorium hut will impose a $12 per applicant charge. Brown says this charge would be absorbed by an increase in the fees it charges applicants. Constitution it interesting that the Irvine Company is• now attempting to "offer help" to the leaseholders of this community. Could greed possibly entertain guilt? Further. the ~rvine Company's overall e°Xpansion plan in our area may a ppear inevitable to them; however, they seem to forget that they are dealing with a well-established, spirfted .,._ community that will not be dictated to by the greed of the ··foreign-run" Irvine Company. J, WARREN JOHNSON Fight Watt policy To the Editor: Can it be that Laguna citizens are so apathetic about what happens to our s horeline that they are making no pro· tests against Interior Secretary Watt's proposal to sell leases for oil .and gas exploration between Laguoa ahd Point Conception? He envisions at least one majo~,U~lWu:ni.a ........ i.:-...,.. nu ally until 1986. After leases are signed it is too late lo do much about averting potential degredation of our coastal re- sources. WHAT WOULDN'T a Santa Barbara oil spill do to Laguna's business in- terests'? To our marine life -the sea lions. the fish. the peli can? To our recreational beaches -the scuba diver:;, the surf riders. swimmers, even those who are just there to enjoy relax- ing in the sun'! Or the sea view? Will it be enhanced by towering oil derricks on the horizon? Oil on beaches might be scooped up, but cleaning up tide pools is another story! Supervisor Riley; Mike Fisher. Ex- ecutive Director or the California Coastal Commission'; and Michae l Shapiro, th~overnor's Outer Continen- tal Shelf Pro)ect Director, all or whom could effectively oppose the oil explora- tion, have heard little oppositi9n to Secr.etary Watt's plan from Orange County's citizens. Mayors Heather and Bellerue of Newport Beach and Laguna have had no strong support for their oil exploration protests. As citizens who care. we must let Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. and other concerned officials know of our opposi- tion to this despoilation of our coast. EVELYN GA VMAN Sure Nancy Reagan doesn't deriv- any benefit from all lhoee desl•ner clothes. And, if you believe thllt. •• . D~&. ....., .. _.._ ................. . ............................. , ........ ... ....-. .. ......, ... Deity""· 1 •' Orat\ge Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, January 21. 1982 N NYSE COMPO ITE TRAN ACTION CWOTAflC*\ INC'-UOI t•AOl•O" '"' lltW YO•• MIOWUT, "A(lf'I(, 111"1. 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Uc dOO a ..... $yKoo ~Tl!_T'!_ Pa-~ Ali.. tJt '.'.:.a n -1 Hw 1 22 ' t'I H\4 + lOh AO IS .. t2'6 + .... ~1T .60 I !Ot t!_~-~ Mcllfll 1,JO ·; 1 tt~.-.-i,\ "''"'" ,a U 1U 2'"-"' TICO I n 6 ... tt • ~ ~=IMS S S "r 1 ·· 'n-.+ v. flMeMI 1' " J • •• KUtA 1 ... , tM -... + .. IWIWl llfH7 • 19\'t p,.11.., ·• J 22 IY>•"' I 1s 11" 14 " '"" : .. 4 ,,, l~.:::: .nw .401 4t 1~."' IMMlll '·· u .......... t"'"' ... •111112 ,., ft~ 14 -cTtc•·,. 1 es 11 :..'°' :~mr:c..a.•,:,m U".:~ ~:w 2~' »t -.! - Dow Jones Final UP2.38- CLOSING 141.27 fTIW " tM fourth part of Q lO.part NriH on how to saue on"°"' 1911 income tartt.J • I , . ' A 1.Jll 1 t7 U 'h--NO '· .. 11 • 1 =· l' .. n I.Ml ' •S .. ~ H:::rr.· ". 10 11-.·.-·~ MIO<n11 i• • ftS ,,.,, .. -. "'"""'' .... :: .. u ... -... T .. 19'd "IO J7 2"h+ 'h A .SO I 6 119--~ IOI t 1" 1 · · · • • If sir .. ICW t ·••• • ' e' r.'" 14 MldSUI 1'.t. S tSI It~ \'I ... h lle• . 211 414 + \lo ::'.:' , .. ~ ' u d~ n .. ~~ i.: ~ '"J : ~ :::~~lu.: ~ ~ :~ ~ =:::..~ ... ·1: I "'; I..,·.... =~:::w :-:. •• ~ l!~ ~ =~~ ~! :: ~ ~~ ~ l:= ~ 1 ,, • .: ~"': ~ :;111 • Off + :-;. .. ,: • ~ flt EE"'~ 2~ ' 1~ ~ ... -~ IC 11111 t:io 1s4 .. -3'141 Min-.. •'JO • 6 lf\lj ...• PSvCOI 1M 1 1n t:M& ..... TllOyeft IO • 10 -" A woman who owned a 2'h-carat diamond ring that had cost $10,500 was wrlUne a check al a supermarket when the cashier noticed the stone was not in the ring. The owner had last noUced lhe diaglond in the ring about an hour earlier while she was filing her nails. She had the ring checked alter discovering the loss and found that two prongs· were missing and two on the opposite side were forced upWl\rd as I r a strong blow had struck one side of the ring. She claimed a casualty deduction ror loss of the diamond. The Internal Revenue Service disallowed the deduction because she couldn't name any s udden event that mjght have jolted the diamond. .~ .... d.__Y, ·,: .. IJ "'-• · -+ ICIOlpl JSO S • ·~ MlllR SJ I t 1' l"t """A·t-10 "1'" "'T•nMI 2ID I IJ I'~-.... A .· 1,09 t .. 41\"t .. I. -o t" ••, _ Emht-' 2.10 .. t s.1\IH Ill ICN ' . 10 ·~ -Mlrinei\ 1· 1' S ti It\.\--~"""' .-• ' > " T<lltlr n • IS 12111-"" : lit~.~·j,:: Z2__;: tfltt• ,;: 61GD ""'• E~ l,Ull J2 ~ •• llfAC,. 1.40. JIO G "-M llt1&SI S4.\lo '-~:~ u:.~·~ ~'°""'i-, TelllNIW 1 It MO S1'9-'9 ·~" l.tt • ilYl: ... , .. s " 171•• l"':1~ -~-11 : ~· ~ INAI" 1.tt .. IS 1Jt\• Ill Mllll'L J.IJ • u. 11\lt-I/, PSvNH 2.12 • m ,, ... 14 T,•,,•<omYll • I 1?? ,.!~.-.~ A 11.is' 2l nv.···~ ... llLI 1.12 • n u ..... ::iic.n :w' 111 n -" IU 1111 1.10. , .. ~· • ~.roe., ... ,6 1 ,!: !!.~ ..... PSNH ,,,,.IS . d«I .. -.. "' d .. --.. A t It .• (S6t 11 "' flll..IJll l.62 .. 1100 11¥1 • Vt Elliils• n s • ·~-~ ldalltP l ,M 6 .. 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I ,.... ~ Monr<ll IO • I lt\ro • V• PSEG pll.IO dO •\lo-V. Tulllll 10b I • lHo Vt Al'lll'SUfl s l '3 mi,..... ""'f'" •.• " uo 17!.'t.. . Esqul .. 1.02 • • Hlh t -llMllM pf2.IS " ,. • ,.. MoftOOr '3 • • 45 v. PSEG pl1.«> • llOO .,\11-1\lo Tu IMC 2 •• ~ ,. .... • l'J\ Al'Mll ZAO I Ji.7 31~2 t:•·60 • " ~ ..... £tt9•C .IOll • 17 ""• Vt 11141G•ll.~ • 11 J,__ V. Monswi 3.IO I 411 l>W.1. 'h Pllblkil . IOI 2'-• V. T11l••1' OS 53 1011 21~ I AllVU 1.:rz 6 42 .. ~ .. ~ Mm .IO 12 '" I • Vt Ellrlrw W 10 21 22'A-v,, 1114111PL 2 . .0 I tt JI"'• ~ MnlOU l I 11 11 4 'to Putblo 12 S 20 4 . hNMs J QI 6 6J 1'\IJ, v. Alll .... 1.10 7 U12 :llfflo+ V. rt 1 U IU I~-"' Elllyl 1'.so S )Sld21111-2 lllON•tl 2 S 10 H\ot Yo MonPw 2 • 1 130 2•:V.. . ' P9SPL 1.7• S ttt U lll .. , h<>G<K .2• 14 tOSJ 2'V. -11> AHesof l.JO .. I -~ Mlrtwl .• 20 l\l'I •..•. Elllyl ot2«1 td56 -2111 1,,.aco .ttu ... d!St't-'-MonSI UO•. 21 1' . Puru 1.61110 412 2' -""hl'M 2S1t •Ud2' _,._ Al'llAw •• IO 11 e '"• .... M•I pf us. 11 "'. "' e ...... ., : ' ii .. IS-.,. ...... " l.40 • IU dSJ... " MONY .... I 2A •• ,. ..... PvtUllF UI • Sf3 ""-~ T••Ulll ' •• '.. 20 • 'It AMArr 1t209t '"-•I.\ MllF'dl.Ue •• 153 U .... Ev..,pll«I •• • 'It 1 ... Rpl 2.lS ... JI-.•'-MooAC llO t 2S 31~ V. Purollll~ I ISi J2t't-1"° Tolll1t lt lt ll't• 1,t., A.Air wt • JV...... MM :s.• s '21 56 . • .. bc.t' I •• SU ll "' 1"9<Tt< .u • lO 1111 . Mo•M' .. s le? ens·-"' Pyro • IS. s". "" Ttal•Oll '., • 2U ,...,. AA.Ir 9' 2.tt ·• 1' 13">-I.\ ..._ llfl.611 •• 1 SI • ll't btlV 1.;,. .. ' 1 ""• '4 111141511 I S 16' ~ • "" Mortn l?b I ~ IS -IU 0...11.0 ta • ttJ »"-• V. Tl'Mltll. 14 )4 J~. "til 12 1' '""' • "' Clwlw PtS.H • JO >411,. "' Euon, J • 1 llSI m .. 111 111111co ti> I 111 1•v. • "' Mor91n 1«1 • "S SJll> .... ~~~"o"·,I0561.0. dlD1n IOI'> .. "' TlltmE n 11 ,. 20•,. • "' A 13.11 • ,. ~-" c ... 1... ... • a ·~·. .. . -,__,. -lftlllftY • --•·1' MorKnd t 10 I 15 2S'4. -..._..5c llV. .... Tllloll.I \ 1 10 10 ' ,. . A ., us .. 1 "~· "' .llnlNY J.M • .. ....,_ "' FMC 110 1 •n , •• ,., .. v. lllleQRt 1 .. ""'·. ... Mont5 .IO ' "' 13 ' .• o...tl•' .60 • •• " -" Tllm!MI '" 12 JO .. .,, -A II UO • .. 31"'• Vt llNY '"1.17 • • u JI-. .• ·· Feor91 '.• » 310 dt2V.-v, l1tlltl'n 11 .60 i J2 "" • I,\ Mor Nor 1,SJ I SO Jl:V.. • II. Out\lor .. 1• t • V. Tl!Omln 6o111 7 20 14 A t I " JO .... GllftV• I .•• 10 ""'• "' FtllrCI 21 I 10 t2 11<115• J.10.. a " .. Molrot• 1.eo '1113 ~1'>+111) -·-· -TllmMdn s ,. lt°'ll A •• • • 12Y..-"' CllftPll 1 S2 t 327 Jiii>+ -, F.ctt . 14 J7 S"+ ·~ lllltrte 1.• • 22 d'-\lo MtFutl tM IO G »Ii• 14 R81no .tU• 1 Sll't ·· Tlltlfty 10 • SO "" ~~"" i: ,, 4ff ~ .... _: ~ C:\W II S ''t ~~·I._ F•lrc"" ,IO l 451 It + '" thlrht • 1 10 t HIS 27°"' • "" M<111lrd tot I tU •'Ill. . RCA taM 02S 1..-.0-\\ TICAr \ 110 S tOS 1' • 'It A . ' 17S I • 2SVt ~111:::. ., • so • 1111 Ft Ire pl 1611 • .. t1V.. . . lftlrlll. 2.60 • Joi 12 Mltld Ill «I ~ 6 61'. .... RCA pl • 22 1"-1\'t Tld.,,,, ., • ,.. n• ·-· A~· 1'.stlO J JSYo".'.\\ ci., ..... T 2ii J1 It : .... =~~,,''"..! : ·~-:~~lu 1:.~.~ :~ ..... j •• ~~'" s ~ :~~ RCApl 2.12 ...... Tl9frln . 31ld10 -'I> The Tax Court disagreed with the ~ I RS and allowed the casually -loss • deduction. ll is n 't a,c n ecessary for the .:; owner to be able to IJl1Jll PllJfl ~~ ~ id.entify when this L . .3-L.. happened, since i\ -· t- must have happened. between the time she did ,ber nails and wrote the check. · · ,,.. . - . .: :.,::: 1:: ~ :.:~ !t::: ~ CMIF"ll 4011 Sl I~ · • F•r;;. 9 W IV. l1t1Flev 1 1J JIO tM-'°' Murp() IS 6 220 ltV•-II) =~Pl J::! 10 ~ n~-:-~ ~::::r'Je1 S~ ti I~ ~.\..' :~ A~eml'I ._, U JI', Yo l"ltCll U21 U S. » • II. Fedto 11 )Vt • • llllK•rv -~ "" MurryO I 20 S II 17l't . . . RTE . ..0 1 6 I "" Tl,.,1 ofG4 so lSS st 'II :~,.~ ~: ~ .... :111 cc~~"··-=·:.}: ·E: i. =:l'~ '·J):: . .ri ~~-~ :~~,..,.~·~·; ~ ~:::~ ~~~·~·. li ·::·..,. ::::i:~· n _t ~·~-.... ~:="',JI: n ~ ..... The IRS is almost certain to bar a non·business casualty-loss deduction arising from d.r(>-uf'}lr conditions. However. in a 1981 decisi9'1'r the Tax Court showed it will uphold such a de<K.iction where the damage occurs in a short time. This case involved the 1977·78 ~drought ln Marin County. In February '77, strict water·rationing rules preven.J..ed ' the taxpayer from watering his lawn, plants and shrubs , and by June they had all died. The taxpayer claimed this reduced the value of his property by $2,000. which he took as a casualty loss. The Tax Court upheld the deduction because the death of the greenery "resulted s wiftly and directly from an extraordinary calamitous drought.'' -, ~' .. .tfa ,,../I A~ 1.IOt 2 lt •• •' r • FCll!oloa 1 J2 I • 10' V. llllMllll I • S 1 20'4 -N--R•mc>< , ... IS JO 22'--"-TOCISl\p 1 S .. I 7S'.. •;, A ... rill.. 12 ; 11 UV. •• CIWy\wl tJ ,._,_"' FedH~ 16 . 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An unfavorable Tax Court decision agrees with an earlier 6th Circuit case lhat a loss caused by a tree disease -as distinct from an attack by insects -cannot be a casually loss. The fact that Dutch e lm disease is spread by beetles Is not an attack by beetles and the resulting damage is not a casualty loss. Another '81 Tax Court case helps you meas ure a casualty·loss deduction. The tax regulations say that you can measure a loss as either the decrease in fair market value or the property that results from the casualty or as the cost or the repairs . One appraiser arrived at th~ amount of decrease in value or a damaged building by subtracting the estimated cost of repairs from the value of the building even though tht> repairs hadn't been made and the IRS rejected the appraiser's valuation or the building after it was damaged. The Tax Court held there was no reason why an appraiser eouJdn't take into account the anticipated costs or repair in arriving at his post·casualty valuation or the property. The IRS s ays you can't deduct a casualty for which you are e ntitled to insurance that you voluntarily decide not to claim Ct.he same attitude the IRS takes toward insured medical expenses). A district court and the 6th Circuit have upheld the I RS. But in 1981, the Tax Court disagreed with the IRS and the other courts In a case where the taxpayer had burglary insurance on which he had already collected three times. Tomorrow: dubs. Education expenses and barter AvcopfUlhl 2 31'4•1 Cnl>wpt243 . 1 ISl/o-14 GO•t•n . lt 200 t +'WI K-rsl 10 1 • NwEn\lt2.tl 41 JO•-. ~~t•E'.~207 ~ 14 1 ,,•,, UOIP•Mn ff 22 J-+ ~ ~_., .I01• 1012 J! !!~-. t~ ConWr •. SO • •. . 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