HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-01-25 - Orange Coast Pilot111111 CUil
MONDAY. JANUARY 25. 1982
,.,__..
SUPER CELEBRATION San Franciscans whoop it up after
the 49ers defeated the Cincinnati Bengals. 26·21. in Sunday's
Super.. Bowl. Police h<.1ulcd in about 100 people who
cel ebrated too indulgent I~
49ers' celebration
I
marred by violence ,
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -For
the faithful San Francisco 49ers
fans intoxicated with triumph,
the giddy hours after their team
captured Super Bowl XVI was a
"giant Christmas morning "
thal, for some, turned to
col'lfrontations.
After the 49er s beat the
Cincinnati Bengals 26-21, San
Franciscans greeted the first
championship in their team's 36
years with a street celebration
as jubilant as any since the one
Winter has
·no mercy
back East
By The Associated Press
Wind storms clocked at 140
mph cut a swath of destruction
through Colorado. Minnesota
was buried by anofhet c;now blitz
a nd the Pacific No rthwest
braced for flooding as the nation
swung into the final week of a
"January to remember ..
More snow spread today over
the upper half of the Mississippi
Valley and the Great Lakes
Region into the Ohio Valley and
the Appalachians .
Temperatures dipped well below
zero from North Dakota through
the upper Mississippi Vall ey.
ll was 21 below in Sault Ste.
Marie, Mi ch ., 16 below In
Bismarck, N.D .. 14 below at
Duluth, Minn .. and 10 below in
Minneapolis.
Elsewhere: a storm brought
m o r e rain to the Pacific
Northwest, where rivers already
were Ooodlng.
On Mount W~hington in New
Hampshire, rescuers raced
temperatures or 28 d e1ree1
below zero and winds 1usUn1 to
100 mpb ln a search for two
climbers wbo have been miaaU.,
on the 8,Sfoot mountain since
Saturday.
In Oceana County, Mich.,
where public schools have been
open for only seven days this
month, officials closed them
a1aln today.
ftl leut 16 people have been
(See WINDS, Pace 'AZ>
•
unleashed by lhe end or World
War II.
But as the jubilation wore on.
there were reportedly several
stabbing and s hooting incidents
and police clashed with some or
the thousands of celebrants in a
bottle-throwing melee in the
North Beach section or the city.
Scores were hospitalized with
mostly nunor injuries and there
were no fatalities.
A bout 100 people were booked
for investigation or drunkenness
before violence erupted, said
Inspector Joseph Toomey.
"Now San Francisco is. No. I
in two things -being weird and
football ," said Rick Tasker. as
he hung out a car window and
blew on a whistle near the North
Beach intersection of Columbus
Street and Broadway, jammed
with about 6,000 celebrants.
Horns, firecrackers, sirens
and church bells echoed through
the city above the shrieks of
SUPER BOWL
COVERAGE -Page C1
rans. tens or thousands or them,
who poured from bars into the
s treets. forcing police to close
off major thoroughfares and
divert buses.
In the fashionable Union
Street area, thousands danced in
the street as a rock band staged
an impromptu concert, playin&
"We Are The Champions" over
and over. Others commandeered
a Municipat Railway trolley bus
and danced on top as 49er
s logans were painted on Its
sides.
At Union Square, celebrants
hailed the famed cable cars.
"There· has been an Oftlolnl
confrontation for about three
and a ball hours between police
department personnel and the
citizenry," said police service
aide Mite Conner today after
the North Beach fracas.
Dozen• of otficers were
dhpatched from out1lde
dlltricts to help quell the
dl1ruptlon, which betan to
subside after midni1ht, be 1Ud.
A bout 40 officers received
minor lnjurie1, he Hid. Toomey
said this momln1, however, that
the number of officen injured
(See ROWO'r. Pase Al)
• • • • • •
Ylll 11111111 UllY Ml
Radioactive steatn leaks
'Site emergency' called at nuclear plant in upstate NY . • >
ROCHESTER, N.Y. CAP>-A
"site emergency" was declared
today at the Ginna nuclear
power plant in Ontario, N.Y.,
arter a steam tube ruptured in a
primary cooling system ,
releasing radioactive steam into
the atmosphere, a fe deral
official said.
Radiation was released into
the atmosphere from 6:09 a m .
to 7:42 a.m. PST and the wind
was blowing from the northwest
at 14 mph, the National Weather
Ser vice reported.
Monroe County public
relations oHicer C laren ce
Bassett said the release had
been "isolated and terminated."
The plant, located about 18
miles northeast of Rochester
near the shore or Lake Ontario,
was shut down and the react.or
was being cooled with water,
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
spokesman Gary Sanborn said.
There is "no danger to. the
public at this lime." said
Richard Sullivan, spokesman for
tbe Rochester Gas & Electric
Co., which operates tbe plant.
Area fll'e departments were
moblUaed. No residents were
evacuated but non-essential
personnel were evacuated from
the plant site, said Sullivan.
About 45.000 people live within
10 miles of the plant. Rochester
is the third lareest city in New
York state.
Sanborn said the reactor was
being cooled with extra water,
called "makeup waler." He said
emergency core cooling pumps
w e r e not running , but
preparations were being made
to start ooe of them.
"From t e mperature
indications. th e r e is n o
indication or fuel overheating.
The tube leak in the steam
generator is apparently leaking
at about 5 gallons per minute."
Sanborn said.
Delta pilot
says runway
was 'unsafe'
BOSTON CAP> -A Delta Air
Lines pilot reported conditions
on a Boston airport runway were
"poor to nil" 37 minutes before a
World Airways jet hurtled
across it into the sea, the head of
a rederal crash investigation
team said today.
Patricia Goldman, a National
Transportation Safety Board
member, heading a team or 10
investigators, said the World
Airways DC -10, Flight 30
carrying 208 people, was the last
plan e scheduled to use the
Logan International Airport
runway Saturday night before
additional clearing.
"I'm not certain" whether the
pilot had been warned of the
conditions, she said.
The warning came at 6:59
p.m . Saturd ay from a Delta
DC -8 pilot . who wa s not
identified.
The plane came to rest up to
its wiftgs in Boston Harbor after
falling to stop on the runway In
freezing rain. The plane broke in
fwo, but no one was killed or
serious ly Inj ured . The 196
passengers a nd 12 crew
(See DC-11, Pa1e AZ>
He said safety valves had
"lifte d ," indi cating that
pressure ins ide the steam
system had forced the release
into the outside.
Sullivan described the failure
as a rupture of a release tank
diaphragm.
·'There are indications of a
leak from the primary system to
a secondary system in a steam
generator tube.·· said Sue
Gagner of th e N R C's
Washington office.
'A ·•s ite e mergency "
declaration is the second highest
in NRC classifications. Tt\e most
serious is a general emergency.
Orficia l s upgraded the
situation at the plant from an
"ususual event," to an "alert"
to a "site emergency" within an
hour.
The plant is a pre1Surfzed
water reactor. It has a capacity
or 470 megawatts anf·first went
into operation in 1969. ·
Th e plant underwent a n
emergency drill test last week.
Sanborn said an "unusual
event ... the lowest nuclear
emergency classification. wa
declared s hortly before 6:~
a .m. PST and was followed
minutes later with a declaration
of an ''alert," the next category.
Al 7:50 a .m . PST, a "site
e m e rge ncy" was de c lare~.
Sanborn said. ~
San born said the NRC ha:li
opened a center at its King e
Prussia. Pa .. regional office ~
monitor the s ituation arOI
provide a central location r4t
information. ~
....., .... ,.... ......... " .....
HEROIC Orange Countv fireman Scott
Nel son talks to Steve' DeSa lvo and Sonia Gerlitz. OeSal vo rescued Patricia Marshall
from her burning condominium in Irvine.
Woman saved from ftr6
Man rescues Irvine resident in burning condominiu'
An Irvine woman was listed in
critical condition today at UCI
Medical Center's burn unit after
being rescued Crom her burning
condominium early today by a
UC Irvine student.
Patricia Marshall, 28, was
discovered trapped inside her
condominium al about l a.m.
today by Steve De Salvo, 23, and
a companion, Sonia Gerlltz, at 14
Claret in Irvine.
Ora nge Co unt y Fire
Department s pokes man Jim
Sims said De Salvo ano· Miss
Gerlilz saw the fl ames when
they dr ove past the
condominium.
Sims said the couple stopped
their vehicle and obtained fire
extinguishers, apparenUy in the
complex. They then tried to
ente r the residence and put out
the fire, but were driven back by
names, according to Sims.
He said De Salvo then heard
Miss Marshall . calling out from
Inside the condominium. by then
nearly engulfed in nam es, and
went back into the building.
DeSalvo told firefighters he
found Miss Marshall in the
upstairs hallway, where s he had
taken shelter aner being unable
lo escape downstairs.
Sims said De Salvo carried
Miss Mars hall out of the
condominium and onto the front
lawn, where she was treated by
paramedics and taken to UC
Medical Center In Orange.
A hospital spokesman said
Miss Marshall is suffering from
second and third-degree bums.
Sims said a neighbor or Miss
Marshall's, Lew~s Sangerman,
also attempted to enter~· residence to search for o
occupants. However, he f
Mi ss Marshall was alone at' ·
time or the fire . .
Sims said the cause or ·
blaze is under investigation. lfe
s aid the fire ca u sed "n
es ti mated $80,000 worth 6f
damage. It took fire crews abcit
45 minutes to extinguis h ~
flames. Sims said.
llllCI CUii IUlll
Low clouds and fog late
ton I ght .and Tuesday ,·:~·
morning. Variable hilh
clo ud s a nd coo ler
Tuesday. Lows tonight 42
to ~. Highs Tuesday a al , ,
beaches. 70 inland.
Mortgage i.ssue ruling due llSlllTIUY
A reviewer hol ac<:lonn for
"Bride ahead Revi1Ued,"
which reivme• it• I l·porl ' •
aerie• on te~ t°"'flM. •·
Sff Page86. +: Decision to have big impact on Orange Coast
WASIDNGTON. <AP) -The
U .S. Supreme Court a1reed
today to decide wbl&ber ...._
can probi* 11Yiap aacl loan
aa1oclation1 from requirin1
people to pay off mort1a1ea u
aoon u they Hll &belr bomea.
The juatlces aald they wtU
hear ar1umenu that 1uch a
Callfomia law la aupeneded by
federal re1ulation of the 11vinas
and loan industry.
<S uch a rulin1 wlll have
tremendous Impact alone the
Oran1e Coast. Some loans have
been uaumed ln antlclpaUon of
the rulin1 and many other
ownen are walti.DI to aee lhe
court's decision before tf'Yinl to
sell.)
~
Such due·on-aale clauses In
home mortca1e1 are common
nationwide. They require the
homeowner to paJ off lb•
balance 'GI the mort1a1e lf tbe
mort1a1ed properly la ·aold
without prior consent of the
lender.
A 11'18 rqulaUon adopted by
(Bee ASSUM&, Pase Al)
'
....... -• • ... ·----"i-.. •
111.11
1~~ I
'
• • • • • Oranae Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, JanuafY 26. 1982
as ERA tireatlieil·Iast?
preme Court to decide i/ proposed amendment dead
ASHJNGTON CAP) -The
, Sup11me Court said today It
I declde whether the propoMd
ual Rl1ht1 Amendment la
d.
ut the timing or lbe court's
vlew couJd prove a cruahina
w to pro·ERA forces .
cordln1 t o cou rt clerk
xander Slevis, the Jualices
not even hear ar1umenta in
case before June 30 -the
ngressionally approved
dline for ERA.
he justices, a1reeln1 to
ed their deliberations lo
nl review, said they will
iew a ruling by a federal
ge In Idaho that the proposed
endment died three years .
.S. District Judie Marion
lister of Boise ruled Dec. 23
al Co n gress acted
PageA1
~SSUME • • • I
t)ie Federal Home Loan Ban.II: $..g a rd , a n i n d e p e n dent
r#ulatory agency, allows such
r.~quirements to be written into
m,,ortgage contracts.
uncoHUtutionally when lt
extended tho ratUlcatlon
deadline from March 22. 19'71 to
next June 30.
CalUater's decision also aaid
that state leplatures are free to
rescind previou s ERA
ratlflcaUon votes.
Althou1b the Judie's ruling
did · not block the ratification
proceas, feminist groups view it
as a major psycholo1ical
s tumbling block to a final
six·monlh ratification drive.
In today's brief order, the high
court said it will decide whet.her
Callister was right.
But the court's orders did not
i n c lude any timetable for
hearings. Slevis said he did not
expect the ERA case to be
argued this court term. which is
expected to end in early July.
That means lhe case would not
be scheduled for ar1ument until
next October, at the earliest,
and the controversy could be
moot by then.
Meanwhile, Judge Calllster'1
ruling han1s over pro·ERA
forces as they strive to 1ain
addltional state ratification
votes.
If ratified, the ERA would
become the Constitution's 27th
Amendment and ban
discrimination based on sex.
The ERA ratification drive
s uffered setbac ks in the
i e 1 i s I -.l u r e s o r t h r e e
non·raUfying states -Georgia,
Okla~oma and Illinois -in
recent weeks.
Thirty.five of the required 38
states have ratified the ERA,
but five of those states have
voted to r escind previo1\i5
ratifications.
WHALE FAMILY A humpback whale and
her child swim In the waters off Hawaii in
this photo supplied by the Greenpeace
Foundation. an environmental group working
............
to protect whales and other sea mammals .
The foundation is offering a Sl.000 reward for
a picture of a wh a lin ~ vessel operating
ill egal!~· in the area.
• in Ex-emperor cheered county
;\T h e requirements allow
U!pders such as savings and loan
associations lo then re·lend the I money al the prevailing interest
rat e . Because of climbing
interest rates, that means
: greater profits for the lenders.
'
Former Vietnam ruler visits Westminster
Arriving i n a s ilver
R o lls ·Royce, t h e f ormer
emperor of Vietnam, Bao Dai,
was welcomed at a Vietnamese
New Ye ar cele bra tio n in
We s tminster with ch ants of
··welcome Bao Dai," and "Long
live the king."
New Year's Day fo r the
Vietnamese community, but the
e ve nt was cele bra t e d all
weekend long. Jn Los Aneeles:
1,000 people gathe red at Los
Angeles Trade Tech College
S unday for a festival that
foc used on the role of mothers in
Vietnamese society.
was customary for citizens to
bow their heads in the presence
of the em~ror "to show our
res pect." Ms. Nguyen added
that s he c ame to the Tel
Festival to see Bao Dai after
r e ading o f hi s pla nned
app ea r a n ce i n a
Vi e tnam ese · l anguage
newspa~r.
!or home sellers who intend to
y a · n ew ·h o m e. the
r uirements often mean that
ntw m ortgages al h igher
i rest rates must be obtained.
' everal California residents
· s u e d ~aving s and loa n
~ociations that exercised their ~·On·sale options. .~The residents charged that
~h clauses in their mo~age
~tracts violated a Cahfornia
law.
· A state trial judge, handling ~ ~ases as one, ruled that a
~eral law, the Home Owners
l)9an Act o f 1933, and the
li'~deral Home Loan Bank
l\t>ard 's regulation superseded _.Y stale law that might govern
~h contract provisions .
'?11' California appeals court,
..-wever , reversed the trial
judge and ruJed that the state taw governed. ~he state Supreme Court
o8fused to hear appeals from
s4rVings and loan associations.
!\Jn three separate appeal& flJed .,ah the nation's highest court,
ijijwyers for savings and loan
1.fsociations throughout ~lifomia urged that the state
~urt 's "erroneous and
cl~ n g e r o u s ' ' r u Ii n g be
~rtumed.
· ·'Failure lo uphold the
·enfor ceability of due·On·s ale
c lauses may threaten the
financial stability or the federal
savin's and loan industry and
the availability of cr~it to home
~yers," said an appeal filed on
li'ehalf of the Pan American
SOvings and Loan Association.
8 fhe Home Loan Bank Board
'fso asked the-court to resolve
the issue.
~
kOWDY •••
~·1
rday have been much smaller.
+i1·1t•s still a little confusing,"
t gomey said. "Some of these
g1'ys might have been hurt -
trut not too bad -and we
ftkven'l got the report."
............ HA,~Y NEW YEAR -Workers climb a bamboo scaffold in
Hong Kong to erect a huge billboard marking the lunar
Year of the Dog . which began today. Chil}ese characters al
r ight read. ··Profits Year After Year .. and al left.
··surpluses Every Year.·· The English characters al the
bottom mean .. Happiness an·d Prosperit~-. ..
Search exhausted
for 3-year-old hoy
Bao Dai, the last reigning
emperor of Vietnam. arrived at
th e o utdoor Tel F estival
Sa turday, esco rte d by a
contingent of m otorc ycle
policemen. During his lO·minute
visit, hundreds or people turned
their attention away from the
dragon d ances, firecracker
de monstrations and traditionaJ
New Year's ceremonies lo greet
the former emperor.
The occasion was in honor of
From PageA1
The Orange County Tel
Fes tival is o r gani zed by
m e mb e r s o f th e l oca l
Vietnamese community and city
offi cials in Westminster.
Many native Vietnamese who
attended the festival had never
before viewed the form er
emperor in public . said Kim
Nguyen of Huntington Beach.
Jn Vietnam, she explained. it
WINDS RIP COLORADO • •
killed in snowstorms that began Three snow.clogged Cascade
moving out of the Rockies late Range passes were reopened lo
1ast week. limited traffic Sunday but 67
··T his is going to be a January wes tern Washington families
to re member. I'm ready to toss were evacuated as officials
in the towel and see what feared warming weather would
February has to offer -it can't melt avalanche·dumped snow .
be any wors e .'· s aid A met causing floodin g.
Figueroa. National Weather The rivers most likely to
Service meteorologist al the overOow were the Snoqualmie,
B a I t i m o r e · W a s h i n gt o Snohomish. Skookumchuck ~d
ln lernation-el Airport at Chehalis.officialssaid
Linthicum. Md . R e s i d e n t s o r t h e
Three-fourths of the United M inneapoli s·St. Paul area.
Slates was whitened by snow a lready struggling with 38.2
and subzero tempe r atures inches of snow, awoke today to
chilled an area from the upper find themselves immersed in
Mi ssouri River Valley to the another storm. A total of 44. l
upper Mississippi Valley and the inches of snow has fallen on the
WestemGrealLakes. Twi n Citi es in Janu ary,
In Colorado . tem peratures breaking the month's record.
re a c hed 60 degrees but the B y m idnigh t Saturday,
w a r m a i r b r 0 u g h t Muskegon, Mich .. had received
hurricane.Jorce chinook winds 89.3 inches of snow in J anuary, Anaheimpolicehavecalledoff red short·sleeved s hirt with that unroo fed ho m es a nd more than in any one month.
a door.to-door search for a while stripes. tan trousers and knocked down power lines from The previous record was 82.6
missing 3-year-0ld boy who was blue sneakers. De nver to the Wyoming border. inches set In December 1963.
last-seen-Friday· afternoon: .. -·. · · · ~dtre~ satd· Tony's moth~r.-The winds reached 140 mph at Ni n e Mi c hi gan counties
An extensive search by police a nd father Alberto Zepada, 34, Wundervu. a foothills hamlet remained unde r emergency
for little Tony Alex Geary was did not r e po rt th e boy 's southwest of Boulder. They were status today.
called off Sunday because disappearance for more than 22 recorded at more than 100 mph In Iowa, where winds whipped
officers said they "ran out of hours. as they swept t hrough the snow into 15-foot drifts, more
places to search.'' Investigators said the boy.'s T hunderbird Shopping Center in snow was falling today.
The boy, who lives with bis parents attributed the delay an Boulder, hurling gravel through In Boise, Idaho. authorities
mother, Claudia Geary, 35, at reporting his disappearance to car windows. estimated it would cost up to
2 S. Hamps tead St., is the fact th~t each thought the $20,000 to r e pair da mages
ibed as 3 feel tall, 40 otherwas wilhtheboy. "All of a s udd e n , the caused wh en a hi gh school
po s with brown eyes. Tony's father lives a block windshield just came smashing library roof collapsed under
He was last seen wearing a away from the boy's home at in. It was just like a twister," heavy melting snow. In Chicago,
1607 Michelle Drive. said Sandra Sweeney. in her car oHi cials say the cold weather
Meanwhile, Anaheim police in the shopping center parking has burned up about $240,000 in
In 1955 Bao Dai was voted out
of office and exiled . He now
lives in Paris and still keeps in
touch with his former cabinet
members. said Tet Festival
chairman Hoe Tran.
Bao Dai is touring Vietnamese
com munities in seve ral cities.
including Washington, D.C. and
Newark, N.J ., Tran said.
Cooling off
period seen
for Tuesday
T h at wa rming tre nd that
made Southern California the
envy of the nation over the
weekend is expected to cool
Tuesday.
The forecast for the Orange
Coast called for s unny skies
today , but s lightly coole r
tem peratures on Tuesday, said
Pat Rowe of t he National
Weather Service.
"Yo u·11 see variable clouds
and not·SO·warm temperatUf'es
tomorrow." she said. Highs of 77
today were ex~cted to drop to
the mid·70s on Tuesday. Beach
tern per a tu res today we-r e-
expected to be about 68 degrees,
fa llin~ to 6S Tuesday.
-<>vern1gbt lows tonight wm--·--·
range from 45 degrees inland lo
50 at the beaches.
Miners buried
CRAYNOR. Ky. <AP) More
than 100 mourners have crowded
into the small fra me house of
Purvis Hamilton lo bid farewell
to three or his brothers and a
.;ousin, killed last Wednesday in
an eastern Kentucky coal mine
explosion. The funerals were
'?ntn apparently the most serious
Golice injury, Sg. Al Bierman's Ctght arm was broken when he
fell during the boltle·throwing
''-and somebody jumped on
him," Toomey said. Banned book said they would continue to lot at the time. weather ·refated expenses.
interview the parents about lbe 1-;=::::::;:=:::;;;;:::;;::======:::=::::=::;::=::;:::;:=:::;::;::;:;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;;::;:;===========; disappearance.
conducted Sunday. ·
I.
A harried Central Emergency
Hosp ital dis patcher. who
declined to give his name, said
there had been half a dozen
shootings and stabbings amid
the celebrations. Another six
were in stable condition after
t r eat m e nt al Mi ss ion
Emer gency for s tabbings ,:
b roken bones and oth e r
celebration·refated injuries, a
nurse said.
="They are taking care or
:people as fast as they can and
admitting them lo the noon u
~st as they can." said nuning
:&iapervisor Cathy Nlcllola at St.
Francis Memorial Hospital. "All
4e rooms are filled."
:::=Police said doze as were
a rrested for disorderly conduct,
assault or resisting arrest aa the
celebration grew more trwazied
late at night.
return due
BANGOR, Maine (AP> -A
wom an who convinced a school
board to ban a book about the
Vi etnam war because of its
obscenities says she will accept
a federal judge's order that it be
returned to library book shelves.
·'I decided right from the
beginning lo leave il in the
jud1e's hands. He made his
decision and I'll stand by it,"
Carol Ann Davenport said.
The critically acclaimed book,
"385 Days," by Dr. Ronald
G lassner, was banned at
Woodland Hith School last
sprla1 after Mn. Davenport
perused her dau1bter's copy and
complained that it contained
obscenity. The book la about
American servicemen wounded
ln Vietnam.
00 .. ANGl COAST Daily Pilat CIH ............... 714'142·Mn
M°"*•a~ .... M2~
Thom• P. Haley ~-a...•-o-.
Robert N. Weed ............
Thomu A. Mufs>hlne ·-Mich HI P. Harvey --.oi...
L. Kay Schultz o..-.;,,,a.-.
Kenneth N. Goddard .Jr. ~oi...
Bernard Schulmen <:-....
Char ... H. LOOI ...............
Carot A. Moore ........
MAINC>na ..... .., ... c... ..... c •. ,...,.._:._1-.,c...-...ca ...
'f:iE.=.tT,c::: .. p,s:: ...,_ ~~ ...... ~., ~
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FromPageA1
DC-10. • •
m ernbers scr a mbled down •
emergency chutes and waded
through waist.deep water.
Several passenger s said
afterwards that the runway was
icy. But an airport spokesman
described the runway as "safe ...
Ms. Goldman said attempts to
salvage the plane could take a
week or 10 days because of tides
and since the landing gear is
embedded in mud. She said
officials would decide today
whether to remove the craft by
building a ramp or with the help
of barges.
Investigators were to talk to
the cockpit crew, including the
pilot, today. He was one of fOllr
people still bospitallzed.
••A pilot or co· pilot, stuMed.
walked past us, and he was
saying, 'I couldn't stop the
plane , I couldn 't stop the
plane'," Jeffrey Carr, a college
student from Attleboro, Mass.,
said after the accident. "He was
In a total state of shook ."
Passenger Debra Carr of
Sandwich reported the runway
was "sheer, smooth ice, just like
a skaUna rink" as she walked
from the wreck.
PutyourseU ona91eat. palrol-ts.
Rental Shea & Sid School 210iW. c..t.Mwy. ~ ...... ·c1.
~•lldt44
RCS
-the most suc-
cessful ski in
men's downhill
Worldcup
"My lnlormalion ls the plane
hit an lc'y slick and skidded. But
that's what t he Natlon•I
TranaportaUon Safety Board ..
trytn1 to find out," World
Airways spolre1man Mlcbael
Hendenonsatd. ~:::::::::::'.:::::::::::::::=:::::::::::=:;;;::=:=::::::::::~~~~=:'.~;::::"""~=:=::=~=:7=:--~~ ~---~ '
(' '
Coiistitution Conclave?
Backers of balanced budget amendment seek support
WASHINGTON -.(AP> -
Backen of a bal1nctd·bud1tt
amendment to th• Con1Utut.lon
say they are near victory ln
t h c l r c a m p· a I g n I o r a
conslltulional convention, but
are plMing their real hopes on
Congress. • Their chief lobbyist says it
may take prodding from voters
lo get Congress to act.
••There is no q u est.,ion ,
politically, you aren't going to
have a convention," George
Sn.y der I president or the
N allonal T axpayers Union .
conceded in an interview.
But ht prtdlcttd tbat, "A•
aoon u we 1tt another 1tat1 -
or lt could happen any Umt now
-the United States Senate wtU
<PHI the resolutipn and send It to
the House of Repru entatlves."
Snyder says he lhin~s Rep.
Peter Rodino, D·N.J., chairman
o f the House J udi c.iary
Com mittee, who opposes the
amendment. wlll block House
action.
''But the end of the scenario
will be by the elections of 1982
every candidate running for
Congress will have to take a
position on this very vital
Something looked
fishy, 41 charged
SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -
Don't gulp, but if you've been
enjoying some tasty salmon in
restaurants in Los Angeles, San
F ra ncisco, Portland, Septtle,
R eno , La s V egas o r
Albuquerque recently, you may
have been contributing to a
c rime. ·
In fact, some of the salmon
served in Chicago or New York
restaurants may also have been
illegal. -
Feder~I or slate undercover
agents aren't going to ~rrest
you. But if the salmon consumed
was among the hundreds or
. thousands of pound or fish
taken illegally f r o m t h e
Kl amath River in Nor t hern
California over the last few
months, the sellers or that fish
could be In big trouble.
Enforcement officials from
the U.S. Depart ment of Interior
ended a six-month investigation
Friday o f an a ll ege dl y
m ulti·million dollar fish ing
sca m . With the h e lp o f
California and Oregon agents, 41
people were arrested or indicted
in nine cities in the two s tates.
As much as 500,000 pounds of
chinook and coho salmon and
s teelhead trout may have
reached the black market, a
spokesman fo r th e Interior
Department said. The fish were
sold initially for Sl.25·S2. 75 a
pound but fetch~aiL prices
-or $'1-Sf a pound.
•'Once the fish gel into the
-maJor trade lines, it's hard for
us to trace where it's all going,"
said John Sayre, the Interior
Department spokesman. "But
we know ror certain that
restaurants all a.long the West
Coast and some in Nevada and
New Mexico were getting some
of the illegal fish. There's aJso a
good chance some of the salmon
reached the Midwest and New
York."
Most of those a rrested for
selling fish illegally from the
Klamath River were Indians
from the Hoopa and Yurok
tribes. Nineteen of 23 suspects
were arr ested in Del Norte
County, Calif., and held under
$5,000 bail. Three were arrested
in Humboldt City, Calif. Fifteen
buyers in Medford and Klamath
F alls, Ore .. were also arrested
or under state indictment.
The investigation began last
summer at the request of the
Bureau of Indian Affairs, which
wa s con cerne d a bo ut the
depletion of salmon and trout in
the Klamath River. The river
runs through the Hoopa Valley
Indian reservation.
Federal and state laws allow
Indians to Clsh the rivers for
their own s ubsistence a nd
ceremonial use but prohibit the
sale of fish. The fish population
is considered lo be rapidly
declining but is not on the
endangered species list.
"This activity, when
cons idered with heavy ocean
fishing and other pressures on
the resource, threatens not only
future runs of the species but the
future livelihood of both Indian
...and 1100-lnd.ian-eemmerciaJ-.nd
sport fishing interests ~·· said
Inte rior SeMetary James G~
Watt in a prepared statement.
Because of the destruct.ton ol
s pawning grounds and
overfishing, Interior spokesman
Alan Levitt said spawning runs
of s almon are only 10 perceot ol
what they once were.
lHUt," SnydW' Hid.
The Con1Ututlon requlrH
Con1res1 to call a con1UtuUonaJ
convention on the demand or S4
of the stale legislatures. On Jan.
18, Alaska became the 318t state
to approve a re~luUon calllna
f o r a balanced bud1et
convention.
"We are not giving odds on It,
but I think we have a 1ood
chance of getting addillonal
states this year," said David
Keating, Washington spokesman
for the Taxpayers Union.
Snyder , a former majority
leader of the Maryland Senate,
said the three most likely states
to be next are Wash ln1ton,
Missouri and Kentucky. He was
interviewed by telephone during
an airport stop in Atlanta on a
flight to his Florida home after a
lobbying stint in Olympia. Wash.
The U.S. Senate Judiciary
Committee approved a balanced
budget a mendment 11 -S last
May 19. Snyder said backers are
within six votes of having the
required two-thirds majority to
get the measure through the full
Senate.
The Constitution provides that
amendments may be proposed
eit he r by a cons titutional
convention or by two-thirds vote
of both houses of Congress.
There h as n ot been a
constitutional convention since
the first one in P hiladelphia that
drafted the nation's basic law.
Backers say an amendment is
needed because Congress will
rtol balance !he budget without
it. Opponents say it would rob
Congress of flexibility to deal
with economic conditions.
Opponents have also argued
that a constitutional convention,
if called, would be free to
rewrite the entire Constit4tion
instead of just dealing with the
budget issue. Snyder, however ,
said, "The r e are more
safeguards, if and when there is
a constitutional convention, than
there are with the present-day
Congress."
Doubts have also been raised
about the validity of some of the
petitions because of variations
in their wording. Even Ir the
goal of 34 states is rea$ed, a
legal batlle ls expected. W ashington, Missouri and
Kentucky are among nine states
-tn wtrtch-rcorfslftutiona
convention petition has been
apprOlled b y_.one...bouse.,-but not
the other. Others are Rhode
Island, West Virginia, Ohio,
Montana, California and Hawaii
"I wouldn't rule out any ~of
them except Montana, which ii
not in session this year," said
Keating.
Fo g du~ t o night
Coastal
1.-CtouclrMllJ IOQ"lltf ronfQfll and
Tutwl•Y morn1no with vari""4• hl9" cloudlftKs T-y
COHlal low 'l. lnl•ncl • Cot•I••
nloh ... Inland I• Weier S6 E l\twllere, 119111 v"riabla •lods
tllrOUQll ~ twce91 w~slerty S 10
11 -noh In •tt~-. Smootll wu.
Westerly s-11 I to 1 IHI. F09 and
low clouds l"creu •no late thlt
nenlno anct TUH<l•Y
U.S. summary
TM snow11orm 11181 ·-• out ot Ille R0<klfl IHI -k moved Into c ... ..sa. ~ uw11lnue<I to punl•ll \flt
Great l.Akn arN -ftO'lllefn New
Enoland •llft wlnd-t>lown snow A
blhord lmmoblll reo much ot 0Nllclll9an, -II• 9usty lll9h wlndt
rak..S C--. Sn-ll119erecl !ft Ille Great l.tkH
and nor111ef"n P1elns °" SunOev. with
more str-wlnctt In IM llM\llem
and <•ntr•I RO<klfl -~11114 UI> to
IJJ mph
SuD·Uro 1emperaturts were
repor1ed ac:r"" Ille -Nlluourl
River Vallev to t.M -r MlnlulCIOI Valley _, ... _tem~Hl IAkH.
Snow...,,.11 frOf'l'I ralft -warm
temperatunK pUS-rivers In ll'lt
Pac:lllc Nor1-o .. r lllelr banks
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Rlvenldl 1'941 Bklfl
RtdwoodCllV .. _ A aln wn forec•sl today, '-reacll119
from Ille Pacific NOr111wnt lftto ll'lt
northern Rockies, with snow et
hl olltr elev•tlons. Sftow or
--~...,.. ~1 lrOf'l'I Ille Grtal l.akH and ()fllo Vtll•v lftlO Ille
central and nor111ern A-laclllMIS.
Sunny skies were torocnt from
southern Cllllloml• Into tllt souttwm
Pia Ins end owr Ille Soutl>fftl
CM.1..0.lllA
Sacr-
S.llMs s...a-n11no
Temperatu<n •round Ille nation et
mid-day Sunday rAftOtd from• low of
10 bet-,_ In Thief Rl .. r Fa tll,
Minn , to a 111911 of U In Fort
lau<lerdtlt , Flt .
Apple Valley ....... ,...., ..... ,_
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MonlttoB•V 13 10
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Saceftd lllth 10:54 P·"'· U
Sun MbS:21 p.m., rl1ttt:02 •·"'·
Get GREEN cash
for WHJTE elephants with a Classified Ad
Call 642-5678
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Call the number below and your meaaa1e will be recorded.
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The same 24·hour an1werln1 atrvice may be used lo ~cord let·
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Orange Cou& DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 2&, 1982 8
,.,.....,..
PRISOM VOWS -Two convicted murderers.
Sabripa M. Parks. second from right. ancl
Alfred Ludwig. right. were married <JI
J effer son Parish Correctional Center 1n
Gretna. La. Performing the ceremony w;J s
Rev. Emmitt Adams. while witnesses we~:
Deputy Grace Anderson . lcf~. an.d bride~·
mother. Doris Monaco Lud~1g sat~ he a'\d,.
his wife. both sentenced to life behind bar~\.
ma~· nc•ver live together a!\ a wedded couple . .,
\A •
Oh ! FOr some· -Vegemite·
CM importer hopes to introduce Aussie spread to U .S·.
M e nti on Vegemite t o a
displaced Australian or New
Zea I ander and a dreamy.
faraway expression may come
over their faces as they recall
what, to them, is an obsession
a kin to our predilection for
peanut butter.
Beyond w hat they could
car ry here in their suitcase or
acquire in special "emergency"
ration packs, most Australians
or New Zealanders were as
likely to find Vegemite in the
United Stales as they were a
kangeroo.
But now t~eiemite.drough
is over, according to a· Costa
Mesa importer that has some
30,000 six-ounce_Jar:s~o! the-Stuff_
sitting in a warehouse waiting
for a dislrtbutor.
Diana R. Todd and J ess Dines
o( AU&tralasia Ventures not only hope to appease the Down
Unde r fiansplants but also
convert the masses to the health
and diet wonders of Vegemite.
as applifl;(f to crackers, grilled
cheese and meats, soup, stews,
gravies. milk, grated carrots.
raisins and chopped nuts and
"cooked mashed brains."
"Prior to lbis ven\ure." said
Ms. Todd as she sat surrounded
b y crates or her beloved
Vegemite, "Kraft of Australia
had set up emergency six·pack
ration pack~ges w!tti .handle~
m arketed for overseas aifdjcts.
And even though this stuff is
hea vy, U .S.A.-bound Aus-
tra Ii ans a re lege"ndaTy t or
never leaving ho,m e without
clutching theiJ' jars· and Uns of
Vegemite to tide themselves and
fri ends o ver t he rough ,
Vegemite·empty road a head."
M s . Todd, a n ative o f
Australia, has been marketing
Aus tralian produ cts in this
co untry f or 13 ye ars .
But Vegam1te is a r ea l
cha llen~e. · ·:::,on"ie oetractors say tne
cream y, tangy, dark brown
yeast extract tastes like coal
tar, axle g r ease o r dried
• 1
, I 1
anchovy -flavored varnish." the
Los Angeles Herald Examiner
reported Friday.
Its acceptance was s low even
in Australia when it was first
developed by chemist Cyril
Percy Ca llister in 1923 to
compete with the British export,
Marmite. ·
It is claimed to be the richest
known dietary source of vitamin
B complex and is an excellent
diet snack as well as a flavoring.
Babies in Australia with their
faces and fingers smeared with
the brown.1>as1e are. as common
~s jam-smeared tots over here.
"In our family it is primarily
used as a bFeakfasl s pread on
toast." says Mi chael Burgess.
senior Aust r alian trade
commissioner at the Au stralian
Trade Consulate in Los Angeles.
"It is something that one must
put in one's luggage, Perhaps it
lakes a n acquired tast e to
appreciate it, but we hope it's
accepted here."
Ms. Todd. who has already
begun notifying thousands Ol
delighted Aus tralians by met
that Vegemite is here, said a
s ix·pack sells for $12 .25, plas
S2.50 for shipping in Califorrua.
A single jar costs $2.84.
"One thing must be stressed,"
s he said. "You must approach
Vegemite with the thought of •a
mere smear.' It is to be used
sparingly, not piled on in g~
like peanut butter. The Initial
taste shouJd be on buttered toaM
or crackers, and then you IO
from there. Al first, your face
may Crown, but your body will
s mile.··
Patricia Thornton, presidell&'
of the Australia-New Zeala"d Americ;an Club in San Diego
s ays. "Ah , it's something we
grew up with in New Zealand.
We associate it with good farnit)'
times. You long for H if )'OU
can't get it, but Americana
might have trouble with it at
first. I've seen people taste it bf
the spoonful, develop a stricken
look and practically choke. Oh
God, that's not the way to do it.•·
f. • FDR still esteemed
NEW YORK <AP) Nearly
four decades after his death. a
majority or Americans retain
fa..vorable opinions of President
Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
In the lates t Associated
Press-NBC News i>oll. 63 percent
said tn~y h ave a· ·generally
favorable opinion or Roosevelt.
Eleven percent said they have
a n unfavorable opinion of him.
and 26 percent had no opinion.
In the poll, 1,597 adults across
the country were contacted in a
random, scientific telephone
sampling. The error margin for
a poll with this type of procedure
is 3 pe rcentage points either_
way .
Next Saturday marks the
lO Olh annive r sa r y of the
De mocratic president's birth,
and November 1982 marks UM
SOth anniversary of the first of
his four presidential election
victories. He died in 1945,
shortly before the end of World
War JI.
In the latest poll, more than 60
percent in every age group s~a
they have a favorable opinion Qt
Roosevelt. t
F o r e xample , among
respondents aged 18-24,
ravorabJe opinions or FDR were
held by 61 percent, while 11
percent said unfavorable and .n
percent said they were unsure'
Meanwhile, among respondent&
aged S0-64, favorable opinions
were held by 69 percent, with 18
percent unfavorable and 12
percent unsure.
,
•
I. . ..
act fashioned, rOmantic dinner-dancing is back in style.
... and rhc Grand Poruac now offers you
an ~111 to c~c with your favorite memory.
Soft tinkling dinner music,
clcpal candJ~lit W>k sent• the p-andcur ol ftami ... tablcsldc ~ookcry.
The ulti~ly dancelblc Fred Can'Oll Trio ls fcalurcd
Thund8y throu8h Slllurdly 7 to 12, and soft plan<> other~· Valet parking.
,
--~THE REGISTRY H~~-~
IM*ll) MKAntlur l!liule\-.nl (714) '1n-8'777
""'...,,.." llo4~1·1fT"""'"'" I~~
----~ ____,,,r=,,.;==;;;m,,.,~~ ------------
UNDICIDID
Former Rep. John 8 .
Anderson, R-111..
says h e ha sn 't
decided whether he· u
r u n f o r t fi e
presidency again in
1984. He ran as an
independent in 1980.
& !&££&
Soviets said sharing command • ID Ethiopia war
KHARTOUM , Sudan (AP) -remainlnc rebel stron1holds. But the other Soviet mllltary men were with
Erltrean rebels claim that four sources, reached by telephone from the Ethiopian force, and that lt was
Soviet 1eneral1 are abariq In the abroad, aald the Ethiopian forces bad backed by six MiG-23 and 21 MIG·21
command of a major new Ethiopian made "no s p ec ific mllltary warplanes and a number of Ml-24
campalen to crush their 30-year~ld achievements" tbua far. helicopters.
war for the Independence of They said the chief tariet ls the The diplomatic sources ln Addis
Ethiopia's northern province. v I l I a i e 0 f N 8 k f 8 , a re be 1 Ababa said Menglstu shifted 30,000
Bolstered by huae shipment.a of b d l b 000 f soldiers from the Ogaden, In Soviet weapons, the Ethiopian army ea quuters n t e 6• · oot southeast Ethiopia, to reinforce the
, drove the rebels out of Eritrea's mountains of northernmost Ethiopia. estimated 80,000 to 90,000 troops In
cities arter mld-1978'. But the Representatives of the Eritrean Eritrea.
Insurgent.a claim they atlll control the People's Lit>eration Front In These reports from tbe Eritrean
countryside In the mountainous Khartoum sald ln interviews that warfront cannot be verified, slnce
territory of 3 million people fourSoVietgeneralsandtheleaderof foreign journalists have almost no
bordering the Red Sea. the Ethiopian regime, Lt. Col. access to the area.
Diplomatic sources ln Addls Mengistu Haile Mariam, were in the The EPLF secretary general,
Ababa, tbe Ethiopian capital, Eritrean capital, Asmara, directing Ramadan Mohammed Nur, said bis
reported that the army launched an tbe operation. forc es we r e prepared for lbe
many men he had, but diplomat.a ln
Addia Ababa estimated his strenfth
at 8,000 to 10,000 lighters.
Se me re Ru ssom , an EPLF
me mbe r , sa id the Ethiopians
attacked rebel positions In the area
of tbe Barca River west or NakJa in
November. He claimed the Eritreana
killed 1,200 of the attackers and
wounded an equal number.
Tbe rebel11 repulsed an Ethiopian
offensive against Nakfa, launched
from the port of Mersa Teklay, in
December 1979.
N ur said lbe Ethiopians mounted
the offensive at this time because the
Erilreans have been weakened by
fighting among themselves. and the
Sudanese.
il!J ij
,
t
offensive last month to crush the The rebel spokesmen claimed 2,000 offe nsive. He refused to say bow ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..:...:..:~..:...:..:..:........:..::..::..:._.:.:..:..::..:..:..:.;.:......~...;..;...;:;;;.;.;,,.,_;.;;;.;...~~~~~~-=-~~~~~~--'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~_;;_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---
TO RETIRE
Assemblyman John
Th u rman .
D· Modesto, says he
wlll retire from the
state Legislature at
t he end of the year .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 25, 1982
Feaiher$·fly over SF pigeon trapping proposal -
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Some
people call them "feathered rats."
They are poisoned, cursed and
kicked. Thousands of dollars are
spent to remove the chalky residue of
their presence from buildings and
monuments.
The pigeon, -or TOCk dove -
reportedly came lo the New World
with lhe Spanish conquistadores in
the 16th century. City dwellers have
been keeping a wary eye upward
almost ever since.
The challenge of controlling the
hated but gentle squab appealed to
Frank Hainze. He spent a year in
Reno, Nev., perfeclina his skllls. And
then he asked San Francisco for
pe rmission to trap bird• on a
contract basis for private companies.
In Reno, nobody aaked for a
permit, Hain1e said.
But feathers flew u he araued his
plan before a San Franclsco Health
Department board a dvlaina the
public health director, who holds
permit power over the pi1eon plan.
''Thia would be a aad city if we
could not er\joy their aon1a. their
cooina, theiT presence," said Richard
Av a nzlno, president of the San
Francisco Society for the Prevention
of Cruelty to Animals. after the
hearm,.
Halme's critics were not silenced
by his assurances that the pl1eons
would not be harmed in b1a one-way
traps stocked with food and water, or
on their trip to the Sierra foothill•
where they would be releued.
"We can take them out and dump
them some place, but who'• 101n1 to
feed all those bir<ls?" aaked Martella
Visse r.
She aaid she has tleen feedln1
pigeons in downtown San Francisco
for the last doien or her 79 years.
"I've had several attempts made
on my life," she said, and six times
police have picked her up because
she fed lhe birds in forbidden places.
Generally. she says, the police
ignore her.
A vanzino said there are hundreds
of people like Marietta Vlller in San
Francisco, feedln1 the thouaanda ol
pl1eona that bob and peck la Union
Square and Golden Gate Park, that
perch on and foul the City Hall dome.
Halme, a 30-year·old Hilton Hotel
bartender whose denim jacket wu
wrapped around a tuxedo shirt and
black tie, said he trapped 2,000 to • 1
3,000 pi1eona In Reno. iq
"No pigeons have been ir\iured. by 1e1
t u
o'il lA
88
sb
my process whatsoever," he aaid. ml
Even so, Avanzlno passed out
1ruesome ~ of pl1eon carcua·
es he said were recovered after a
pre vious trapper failed to maintain
his traps, and the city failed to
inspect them.
lOO's: 15 mg. "tar" 1.0 mg n1co11ne.
KING· 15 mg. "1ar". 11 mg. nicoune. av. per c1gare1irbv FTC method.
Warn ing : The Surgeon General Has Determ ined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health .
..
'
..
Nobody does it better.
ntis-·is·-your world.
This is your Winston.
Smootli. Rich.
Taste it all.
New
lOO'spack.
iJlStO
'
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 2&, 1982
W'hy the delay on
return to prison?
In the past 10 years. Alyn
· Brannon. a former member of'
the Saddleback College Boird of
Trustees, has been convicted
three times of bo o k -
m a kin~-r e lat e d offenses .
including two charges that were
felonies.
The first case came in 1972,
another in 1979 and a third in
1981. The latter was described by
investigators as one of the
largest sports betting operations
they'd ever seen.
When Branrron pleaded guilty
to one count of felony
bookmaking last year, Orange
County Superior Court iudge
William Murray seemed to think
that Brannon needed something
more than probation or work
furlough time in the county jail.
He sentenced Brannon to two
years in state prison. Brannon
would have been eligible for
parole in 16 months were he to
receive credit for good behavior.
Well, guess what? Brannon
was released from prison after
serving only four months of the
term. He was let out to attend a
family member's funeral. Now, a
hearing has been scheduled to
determine if Brannon should be
returned to prison to complete
his sentence.
We 're not ·faulting the
authorities for allowing Brannon
to attend the funeral. What's
disturbing, however. is that he
will have been out of prison for
two and one half months before
the late February hearing is held
on his possible return.
The case has the appearance
of Brannon getting preferential
treatment. That is not the way
the system is supposed to work ..
Responsibility needed
A bill pending in the
Legislati.tre offers senators and
assembly members a simple.
clear issue on which to
demonstrate resf??nsibility.
--Tnis doesn t happen that
often and the bill doesn't have
that much of a chance.
. Th~ bill in question is SB884
b y Sen. Robert Pres ley.
D·Riverside. which received 5-0
approval last week from a Senate
committee and goes to the full
Senate.
It calls for a conflict of
interests provision to prevent
legislators from representing
paying clients before most st ate.
regional a nct lncul agenl'it•s
Current law · bars them from
representing clients before state
agencies which license or
regulate professions.
A similar bill was stalled
twice last year.
Penalties under the new bill
would range from a reprimand to
a jail sentence.
The bill has some chance of
passage by the Senate. but then it
wou l d h ave to go to the
Assembl And ther.e Hes the
problem.
The Assembly speaker and
most powerful man in the lower
house is one Willie Brown. who in
his law practice represents
c lie nts before San Francisco
agencies.
However . he's not the onlv
ope who has done this. Others
who are lawyer -legislators or
arc hitect -leg is lators have
appeared in behalf of clients
before other government bodies.
Such a practice clearly gives
the ap p earan ce. a nd the
s uspicion . of pressuring the
public body in be half of the
applicant because of the counsel
representing him. not the merits
of the case.
This practice s hould be
stopped
Legal victory lwllow
About 1,400 United Airlines
flight attendants fired in the late
1960s only because they were
married have won a hollow legal
victory indeed.
A federaJ judge in Chicago
,last week ordered the airline to
off er the women ~heir old jobs
back. But ,when the line has just
laid off 1,000 attendants because
of flight cutbacks the case calls
for a Solomon. And there have
been no openings since October
1979.
Was it only 14 years ago that
women could have been barred
from a position known then as a
stewardess only because they
were married? What kind of
reasoning went into a decision
liike that? How could we have
gone aJong with it?
We did. And now the legal
and financial chickens have
come home to roost. And they
promise to bring along with them
some black crows of human
problems.
To be settled by litigation is
•
whether the 1,400 women will
receive retroactive pay.
About 300 plaintiffs will go to
the top of the hiring list due to
senior ity. Which means 300
already in line fall back.
If they are hired, they will
receive the top salary of $25,000.
The legal bills for botlt sides
have to be heavy.
United says it would cost ,$10
million to fire the attendants now
working to make way for the
"class of 1968."
And the airline says it wou ld
take another $21 million to
retrain the attendants in the 1982
ways of the friendly skies.
Another issue has rea't-ed its
ugly head. While the efforts to
overturn the marriage ban and
reinstate those unjustly fired
were necessary, they have set up
competition for jobs between the
plaintiffs and those women and
men who now serve as flight
attendants.
Hindsight is wonderful: and
almost always embarrassing. not
to mention painful.
,Opinions expressed In the &pace above are those of the Daily Piiot. Other views ex-pressed on this page are tr\ose ol their au1nors and artists. Rea<fer comment Is inv1t·
ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (71 4)
642-4321.
L.M. Boyd/Nagging ancient
No matter h ow ancient the
literature, somewher e in it are
plaintive references to nagging. Our
Love and War man lists no complaint
; by man against his mate that dates
back further. It's not exclusively a
woman's habit, please note. But
when committed by a man, it's
usually called something else -
griping, fault-finding (carping,
quibbling, whatever.
'
You know how a spider web is
woven with circular strands on
outgoing spokes? ll 's only the
circular strands that are sticky. The
spok• are dry.
Slmp&est way to lilt your friends,
11y1 .& client, is count the telephone
numlllra you don't have to look up.
Jt'• Mid by the Norweaians: ''The
laaier tbe man, tb• more he promiHI
to do tomorrow.''
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
• ~'"'" ,,..,., •er of 1"' -•• ,. -.. .,., Wl~t.-~w~·· ...
Q. What do you call the shape of a
football?
A. Prolate.
New York City law requires every
apartment front door to have a
peephole.
Q. What proportion of the world's
diamonds are mined and marketed
by OeBeers?
A. Mined, 40 percent. Marketed,
about 85 percent. It sets the prices.
And others who come up with
diamonds don't tend to buck the
system.
Q. Where's Somen Tasavalta?
A. That's what the Finns call
Finland.
Q. Don't a lot of women start losint
some o( t.helr hair after ace 35?
A. At lease nine out of 100 do so,
according to medical records.
Thomas P. Haley
Publiwr
Tllomas A. MUrpltlne
Editor
BarNH Krei.-ch
EdllOl'llrPlll Edftor
Citizen Legislatur-e backed
Declaring California's full -time
Legislature "a disaster," Sen. H.L.
"Bill'' Richardson h1,s disclosed plans
to introduce a constitutional
amendmtnt to tum the clock back to a
part-time citizen Legislature.
Richardson, who was elected in 1966',
says he is now one of the very few
remaining members who served with
the "c itizen-legislators." The
-b~gisiature-was cbllverfed Co full time
'in 1966. More than half of the Assembly
are members elected in 1978 and 1980
and less than half of the Senate was
elected prior lo 1976.
The change, says Richardson, has
been costly, inefficient and totally
unnecessary. "It has done substantial
damage lo the democratic process by
discouraging sizable numbers of
Californians from running for office and
the overaU quality oJ our Legislature
has decreased since the advent of a full
time Legislature."
RICHARDSON CONTENDS the
citizen-legislators were "more mature
and substantially more experienced in a
multitude of human endeavors because
each of them had employment other
than in the LeJislature and were more
diversified In their overall economic
knowledge.
''They were not only legislators but
wage earners in their own
communities," he said. "They were on
the Riving end of taxation as well as the
spending end. Most of the year they
lived and worked in the communities
they represented. Their constituents
we re their customers, suppliers,
day-by-day friends and acquaintances.
Seeing them wasn't just a weekend
phenomenon.''
In contrast the senator pointed out,
·'the full-time !egislators tend to be
isolated from the realities of the world.
Most of what they see and h ear
IARl IATIRS
em an ates from the legislative
environment, an environment filled
with narrow special interests with loud
emphatic voices." He said the full-time
leg.is lat.Dr loses "the more balanced
perspective the part-time legislator
gained by constant exposure to the
market and social forces that exist in
his district.
Richardson recalls that the reason
advanced for a full-time Legislature
was lo attract a better quality person to
public office. "rt is obvious now that the
opposite has happened. The salary is
not e nough to attract top quality
executives nor could higher salaries
guarantee that quality would be elected.
"The iob, however, 1::. attractive to
those wno choose bureauu·acy as their
way of life Currently there are 31
members of the Assem~ly who are
former employees of that body ,
advocates or people who earned their
li ving from government."
"IT IS THE BEST job many of them
have ever had," says Richardson, "ancl
subsequently the fear of losing it is
paramount. Many a le_gislator's vote is
com promised when his e<:onomic
livelihood rides upon the votes he casts.
A part·time legislator whose primary
income is from outside the legislative
world ts logically more independent."
The senator scoffs at arguments that
because of its population the state needs
a full·time Legislature to deal with Its
problems. "This presupposes that the
Legislature has the answer to all of the
soc ial problems and that a
democratically elected group of people
are somehow wiser than the cumulative
knowled ge emanating from an
unfettered society."
Suggesting that many of the problems
are the result of govern ment
interventions , Ri c hardson said
.. American government w~s intended to
be a limited government and it shouJd
not be necessary to have a full-time
Legislature for a free people."
He said while he has 14 co-authors for
his proposal he doesn't think he will be
s uccessful witt} it in the Legislature and
will eventually have to present it as an
initiative.
Youths moving toward conservatism
Students are more serious about their
wor~ than they've been in years. That's
what colleges a r e r eporting .
Administrators say they even see a
difference in attitude between this
year's freshmen over the seniors. The
freshmen are partying less, talking
politics in bull sessions less and
spending more time at the library than
at the local pub drinking beer.
"There clearly is a much greater
respect for authority among freshmen."
one professor was quoted as saying in
The New York Times.
WHY IS THAT? What has suddenly
caused young people to become more
conservative? This kind of a report
from the colleges would warm the
hearts of many Americans who were
sick and tired of the revolutionaries of
the 1960s and early 1970s.
I have mixed feelings about it. The
protesters -it didn't much matter
what they were protesting -irritated
me, but i( I'd been their age, I probably
would have been one of them. They
were such well-meaning, bright.
idealistic idiots. I knew a lot of them.
When the protest-children of the 1960s
were 10, they began to be embarrassed
with their parents because they said all
their parents were interested in was
money. When they were 12, they turned
against their teachers because they
didn't want that narrow kind of
education. The following year they
s tarted s moking marijuana and
listening to loud music that drowned out
any thought that might enter their
heads . By IS. these young people had
bought the Playboy philosophy that the
traditional rules about sex were
confining, artificial and anti-social.
That's the way it went, and by the
time they were 20, a lot of the bright·
est young people were uneducated
,~,,
-Al-DY-RD-Dl-IY_ ........ 4
pot-smokers, sleeping around with a lot
of different partners, growing their hair
longer than was comfortable as a badge
of their age and protesting the war in
Vietnam. They ate naturally grown.
organic food for their health, but didn't
wash very often. The conventions of
their revolution were more formal than
the conventions of the society against
which they were protesting.
Why this happened and why many
young people today would support
President Reagan and maybe even a
war in Vietnam is a mystery to me.
There's no sense in an adult trying to
understand young people because they
don't want to be understood. Parents
and educators who say they understand
them are kidding themselves and older
people who try to be one of them by
joining them and going where they go
or dressing as they dress are laughed al
in private by the kids_ It's a strange
thing that everyone old has been young
a nd no one young has ever been old and
yet the young seem to understand the
old better than the old understand the
young
IT'S TOO BAD that moderation.
o p e n -mindedne ss and the
middle-ground of any issue is so dull to
. us. It's only exciting 1f we're radically
this or radically Lhat The excitement is
out at the extreme ends of a position.
I'd like to see .Lhi.s new breed of <:olleg.e
student study hard, drink less beer and
find out all they can about nuclear
energy and devote some intelligent
attention to bringing about a national
policy in regard to it. With the
exception of a few protesters lert over
from 10 years ago. young peosile don't
care about issues like that one way or
the other. A
Most of the activists of the 1960s are
gone now. ~Fe approaching middle
age and they're tired of their own
rebellion. They've joined the rest of
society and taken a job with the
ins urance company. The only vestige or
their rebellion is the solar panel on their
roof, if they were lucky enough to be
able lo pull themselves together so they
have a roof.
lsn 't there something acceptable for
kids in between radical conservatism
and radical liberalism? Does the
pendulum of the philosophic clock have
to s wing to such extremes? •
Country putdowns penned by own meniliers
For all you quiz lovers who have been
clamoring for another assault on your
. brain-box, here is an unusual one I have
devised. consisting of quotations about
different countries and nationalities.
Most of them are ironic putdowns,
I ~
-IYl-11-Y U-1-111-~
penned by members of the same
nationality.
One-third correct in identitytn1 the
country Is a respectable score; if you
can also name the authors, you shouldn't
be taking a qui&, ypu should be pvint
one. Off we go:
1. "Wherever -extends her
sway, she ruins culture."
2. "It la easier for a -to become
an atheist lhan fbr anyone e lse In the
world." i . ''In --we threaten the man..
who rjQal Ute alarm bell~ and leave him
in peaee who starta the Rre.''
4. "We -.,.. too potdcal to be
c •
poets; we are a nation of brilliant
failures, but we are the greatest talkers
since the Greeks .··
S. "ln --the dead are more alive
than the dead of any other country.··
6. "A --is someone who can get
in a revolving door behind ,you and
come out ahead of you.'·
7, ''In --a 'good' discussion is
one that lends Itself to arguments
rather than answers."
8. "No place in ---where
everyone ca n go is considered
respectable."
9. "The ---a re addicted to
tension as a welcome way of Ufe , as a
stimulating spl'ingboard for individual
and collective ~dvancement."
10. "One trouble with ua --is that
we're fixers rather than preventers. '•
11 . "--will never prOduce any
great idea or 1reat achievements,
because lhe people don't Uke or truet
anyone who rises above the ordinary.··
12. "Given extenaive lelsure, what do
the -do? They eat erabl • . . take
a!tel'DOOILIUlPI • --cat.cll..crtckeU , r-r
lake batha . . . make paper bout • . .
have three meals in one and
produ.e. cbildnn ...
ANSWERS
1 "Germany" (Nietszche)'. 2.
''Russian" <Oostoevski >. 3. "France"
<Chamforl). 4. ''Iris h" (William BuUer
Yeats>. S. "Spain" CLOrfa). 6.
"Hungarian" (Attributed to Michael
Curtii).
7, "Italy " (Pileggi >. 8. "England"
(George Moore). 9. "Japanese" (Yukio
M atsuyama >. 10. "Americans" <Gen.
Doolittle). 11. ~·Switzerland" <Francois
Bondy). 1.2. "Chinese" (Lin Yutang).
lllllY•
Newa nub for Gene Autry: Tbe Aqela
don't need Re11ie Jacteoa -_...,be
can pitch. R.C.
..._, .. __.._ ............ .,....,._ .... _...,... ....... ~-··•1 ............ ,.... .. ....., ... ....., .....
-----~
..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 25, 1982 s
Revere-naes
Radio station's gift saves re -enactment
BOSTON CAP ) -The
re ·e nactme nt of Paul Revere's
historic ride, threatened by clty
budget cuts, will be given ru11 rein
lhis year after all. thanks to a $4 ,000
gift from a radio station, supporters
say.
"We appr eciate the financial
s up8ort and s pon sors hip from WR R. It is most gracious," City
Councilor Frederick Langone said
Thursday. fie earler had criticized
the mayor's office for cutting funds
for the aMual parade §Ind ride.
Because of Proposition 2'1'J , a
tax-limiting statute approved by vot·
ers in 1980, the cit y earlier announced
that it couldn't come up with the
$2,000 supporters asked for this year
t o stage the April parade and ride.
The Patriots' Day parade is one of
eight parades, including St. Patrick's
Day parade in South Boston, that the
city plans l<> withhold support from
this year.
The North End Allied Veteran•
Council sponsors the parade and
rc-en11ctment of the ride In which
Revere galloped to Lexington some
200 years ago lo warn the colonial.I
that the British were comlna.
The council wanted $4,000 iniUally,
The city offered
nothing.
but trimmed its request to $2,000
because of budget squeezes.
The city offered nothing.
The Patriot's Day parade starts at
City Hall and winds its way past
ancient graveyards where many
Revolutionary patriots were buried.'
ll ends behind Old North Church
where a man dressed as Paul Revere
takes off on horseback lo retrace the
historic ride.
Snow pack
sets r ecord
WAS HI NGTON CAP I
FITNESS P CIAL
North America set a
J an uary record for
s now cover last week
and is threatening the
all-time m ark , t h e
Nati o n al Weat h er
Ser vice reported.
D o n Weis n e tl , a
weather service sate llite
• • •
)
SHAn ur -LOSE 10 IN. ' I LIS .
Unlimited Visits
CI Mo.I
• FREE AEROBICS .. ~ ............
LAND'S·END Land's End, the most famous headland on the National Trust to purchase it. Th~ new ownt'r or lh<' expert. said snow cover
the Englis h coast. was bought ror more than S3 million by tip of Cornwa ll is David Gold s tone r e a c h e d
.. (Designed for the
Mat•Jre Woman)
a local radio station director who defe ated an attempt by 1 R · 5 mi 11 ion -s quar e --------------------~__::....___:_ ________ __: _________________ kilometers • Cardiovascular
fitness
D~rUocrats seem headed for real convention • Nutritional
Glidne
• Finn' Tone Party's 'reform ' rules will be thrown out if national committee adopts report • Fabulous Exercise
Eqaipment WASHJNGTON CAP) -The Democrats are
moving toward a 1984 convention that, for a
change, could be a real convention.
Th.is Is the thrust of new rules tentatively
approved by the party's latest reform commission
-a convention where actual deliberation lakes
place, where the presidential ticket is picked.
Because of rule changes that followed the
s hatter ing 1968 meeting in Chicago, recent
Democratic conventions have been little more
than rubber stamps.
Delegat es were bound l o presidentia l
candidates well in advance of the nominating
convention. Things had gone so far by 1980 that a
disloyal delegate could be thrown out.
··R eform'' rul es also encouraged a
proliferation of presidential primaries. And
because of the media attention they got,
candidates winning highly visible early victories
tended to snowball to an insurmountable delegate
count.
The delegate totals mounted from one Tuesday
primary to the next, and the rules tied up each
delegate won. All that was left for a convention in
July or August was lo confi rm a decision made in
February or March.
In politics, especially Democratic Party
politics. anything can happen. But next lime
things should be different -iJ the party's national
committee adopts the report of its Commission on
1111 llllYlll
Presidential Nominations.
The 1980 rules bound delegates to vote al leas t
on the first ballot for the candidate who won them
in primaries or caucuses. If a delegate tried to
vote for an.other candidate, the vole would be
disca rded and an alternate brought in to cast the
vote for the candidate who had won it.
The commission threw all of this out,
requiring merely that delegates who run pledged
to a presidenUal candidate "shall in all good
conscience reflect the sentiments of tho6e who
elected tbem ." Conscience and political reality are
the only guides.
Of P,>U_rst. a delegate wbo goes to the trouble
to win eledion to the convention as a supporter of
a presidential contender is likely to stand by his
man . No wholesale desertions are expected.
But a perfectly feasible prosped is for a
candidate who wins a commanding bloc of
delegates In the primaries, but for some reason is
discredited before convention lime, to lose the
nomination.
Democratic delegates at least would have the
option of looking toward the November contest
with the Republicans instead of back to the
primaries.
Another important modification in the rules.is
the provision of more than 500 delegates who will
go to the convention totally uncommitted.
These will be Democratic me mbe rs of
Congress, governors, big city mayors, state party
chairmen and vice chairmen and other Democrats
in public or party office given automatic delegate
status.
The objective of this rule was to bring
m ainline Democrats back into the conventions.
Many of them, with elections ol their own lo
worry about , have avoided presidential
conventio.n$ because of the controversy and
divis ion displayed there. Others have been
embarrassed by running for delegate slots and
being beaten by outsiders riding the coattails of
special causes or hot candidates.
At future conventions, these party regulars
could provide a bloc of seasoned and independent
delegates capable of stopping a candidate who
may have run well in the primaries but who might
lead the party to disaster in November.
Also, any candidate who fails to line up a
winning majority of delegates in advance, wiJ1
have to win over these uncommitted delegates at
the convention.
And that's what conventions used to be before
all the reforms, a place where leaders a nd
supporters of the party got together and decided
whom they wanted lo run for president.
• Free
Aero~
Open To PubNc
10 Classes s25oo
Guest Pass
71~964-5242
Nearly 2 million due audits
HOUSE OF
TAILORIMG
Al TERA TIOMS FO R
MEM & W O M(M THE PEANUT BUTl'ER,
WINE AND POPCORN
MADE IT TASTIER •••
AND NOW
SO COAST Pl A!A ~40rn1
lowf'r lr .. rl bf CorO\l\f'I Check of selected returns brought record penalties
WASHJNGTON CAP) -Sometime this year or
next, nearly 2 million Americans wtU open t.belr
mail and learn their 1981 tax returns are being
audited by the Interna l Revenue Service. The
experience will cost some sleepless nights and, on
average, extra tax and penalties of about $2,000.
About 5 percent of those taxpayers will be
chosen by the luck of the draw. But 90 percent will
be audited because some of the figures on their
returns set off a warning in IRS computers.
The remainder generally are spinoffs from
leads developed from returns originally selected
fo r audit. For example, if an audi ted return
showed the taxpayer did a lot of business with a
particular individual, that individual also might
get audited.
The IRS has fought successfuJly in Congress
and the courts to prevent public disclosure of just
what triggers the computer alarm. But it is
generally assu med lo be based on average
deductions acceptable at various income levels.
Despite fewer audits, examination of selected
returns in 19M resulted in recommendations for a
record $9.4 billion additional tax and penalties,
including S2 billion on individuals. Thal compared
with $7.1 billion in 1979.
The higher a person's income. the greater the
chance of being audited.
In 1980, 1.14 percent (114 of every 10,000) of
non.business returns c laiming income under
$10,000 we re audited ; 2.03 per cent of t hose
claiming $10,000 to $15,000 ; 2.66 of those between
$15,000 and $50,000, and 8. 74 percent of those with
$50,000 or more income were audited.
Short of a formal audit, IRS subjects most
returns to two computer checks.
-The arithmetic on almost every return is
ch ecked by computer. ln 1980, 6.5 million
individual returns had such errors. About 3.6
million of those errors were in the taxpayer's
favor by an average of $315. The remainder would
have cost the taxpayer an avera1e of $203.
-Second, the IRS computer cenerates notices
lo taxpayers whole returns carry deductions that
cle•rly are not allowed. For example, a penon
who deducts funeral expenses for a relative
automatically gets a notice demandin1 that t.be
deduction be dropped and taxes rec:orqpuled. •
But In a full-lledged audit, a ta..,.yer comes
face to face with an IRS a uditor or revenue acent.
If you're select ed, IRS will check your
records, listen to your story and outline any
proposed change In tax liability. You can end the
dispute on the spot by agreeing lo the exam iner's
finding. That could mean you'll have to pay more
tax or that IRS will give you a refund.
If you disagree, you may appeal to other IRS
authorities or to the courts. Carrying your case to
the IRS regional appeals office will, in most cases,
require that you sign a sworn statement outlining
your argutnent.
If you still don't agree with IRS, or il you skip
the I RS appeals process, you may -within strict
time limits -file s uit in U.S. Tax Court and delay
paying the disputed tax until the court decides
your case. Or you may pay the tax and file suit for
refund in U.S. District Court or the Court of
Claims.
~HI
t 'IAtSECtl 'T
'81 ZEPHYR
11;\; Ml.E \\'ITll Tl llS .\I>
•21.8.58.o.
\l'N :W:l:l INlll \ f'\\')11.\1 \•J\l,1~1\lf•\'1111\ l'\\\11 "'
f>I 11 MKJ.l • l'KJI 1.111!1.l I~ 1<11
I I'll l'l(JI I. M 17 I 1~1
1~'.: 1,w·,·~:!:.~~l I! ,. ll:!!•
~ ontDl8 ON MLE Ill"\' llM. Lf..A:O.f. A I
.1011~so~ a so~
'"'fll\-\HHllH' I
S40-fiH:iO
The Clulnge Starts When You Do ...
FINAL WEEK
JANUARY
SALE
SA .... IPIOM
SOOfo to 70% OI MOii.
D1•l•&..,1rW u_....,,.... .. aa...,.
The Time To Start Is Now .•.
The Place Is "Powers"! Chanoe It Al/I
0.1ma11a1Ny •mpt0\11 lhe way you
IOOk feet and aapeal lo ochers We 11 make lhe
C/\enge Easy Incl Fun .. en e>rep;are 'IOll IO•
OOOO<lllMY Alf classes ll•lofed to 'f0'.1' age ar<i ncea\
IN ORANGE COUNTY
3 TOWN l COUNTRY. ORANGE
.17'~ 547-1~8 )ohn KODe11 Poftrs
CALL OR COME IN TOOAV
... ...__......, ..... ,..... ............. h...., .... ...,_..._,"....., __ ..
...... T.-.. ....... ..W1 l1 ..._.,. ...
Sale Ends
January 31 , 1982
...... w .................... ,,, .... ,...
...... wu'ne.
11.IClllC .-
ml'ml
.............. c.... .....
CAlfm ... •1 2 I ....,,
. ... ••• &46-1737/64&:.I194
WEIGHT WATCHERS ·
MAKES IT EASIER!
INTllODUCDf G
GOLD CARD
from
WEIGHT
WATCHERS
" WE WILL REDUCE YOUR
WEEKLY FEE TO ONLY SJ.00
AVAILABLE ONLY UNTIL JAN. 31. 1982
HmlB'•HOW
1. JOIN BEFORE JAN 31 , 1982 AT A REDUCED RATE
OF ONLY t11.00 (with coupon betow).
2. ATTEND 12 CONSECUTIVE WEEKllY MEETINGS
ATTHt REGULAR FEE OF ONLY H PER WEEK.
FROM THEN ON YOU_P,U ONLY Sl PER WEEK
UNTIL DK. J1, 1912 AS.LONG AS YOU
RETAIN YOUR SAME REGISTRATION NUMIBt.
>--'lllAT'8 AU. YOU llAft TO DO-NO OONTaAC'N TO • ..,., • ..--~
EXTRA BONUS-II' YOU ACT NOW ... ~---------... ...~----------14 .... , 14 • ....,
,_Tm.ti.Am .U.DTYOU CAU.
8H·SMS
WEIGHT•WATCHERS.
'
I
Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 25, 1982
THE ·-INSURANCE INS'l'ITU'fE FOR HIGHWAY
-
-...
. ..
1178-80 ... els wldt tile-BEST 1978-80 Mod.els widt the WOllST
bas1U'allee ~1U'J elat• experience ins1U'allee IDJary elal• experience
(A relative injury claim frequency of 100 is average) (A relative injury clafm frequency of 100 is average) , . l&eladn l&elad•e
•ec Kake ... , Siu Pre4111ea q Kake ... , Siu fn4111eaq o, V"'Oldsmobile Custom Cruiser s.w. I 58 Dodge Challengert 2 Dr. s 162 ·01
V"'Oldsmobile Toronado ~c. I 58 Fiat Brava •• s 156
V"'Buick Estate . w. I 62 Toyota Corolla Tercett 2 Dr . s 153
V"'Oldsmobi le 98 4 Dr. I 62 Datsun 20osxt 2 Dr. SS 150
.,...,Oldsmobile Cutlass s .w . c 65 Plymouth Sapporot 2 Dr. s 149
.,...,Oldsmobile Omega 4 Dr. SC 66 Plymouth Arrow+ 2 Dr. SS 148
.,...,Chevrolet Caprice s.w. l 67 Dodge Omni 2 Dr. s ~ 142 .:
V"'Pontiac "Bonneville s.w . I 67 Honda Preludet 2 Dr. SS 140
.,...,Oldsmobile Delta 88 4 Dr. I 69 MazdaGLCt •• SS -139
.,...,Pontiac Catalina 4 Dr. I 69 Hond a Civict 2 Dr. SS 135
.,..., Buick Le Sabre 4 Dr. I 73 Datsun 21ot •• SS. 135
Mercury Marquis 4 Dr. I 74 Plymouth Charnpt 2 Dr. SS 134
.,..., Buick Century s.w. c 76 Mazda RX-7t Sport SS 132
.,...,Chevrolet Malibu s.w. c 78 . Mercury Bobcat 2 Dr. SS 131
Mercury Zephyr s.w. SC 80 Toyota Corolla t •• SS 130
·.,...,Buick Century 4 Dr. c 83 Ford Mustang 2 Dr. s 128
.,...,Chevrolet Citation 4 Dr. SC 83 Honda Civict · s.w. SS 119
Dodge Aspen 4 Dr. ) 84
Plymouth Volare s.w. I 87 tjapanese·made.
Souru: Highway Loss Data Institute.
Car Sitts: I= Intermediate, C=Compact. SC=Small Coolpact, S=Subcompact. SS=Small Subcompact. Body Styles: SW =Station Wagon, Spec.= Specialty, .. =NO( detem1ined.
The Insurance Institute for Highway Safe~ QIJA.LITl' is more than skin deep. More people
has ranked cars according to the frequency wit buy General Motors cars than those of any other
which they are involved in accident injury claims. manufacturer-and have for many years. These
We are pleased that GM cars (~) are the customers have their reason: they see greater value ' , highest in this rating. in GM cars. It may be reliabili7;~ durability, fu el c
We believe these results reflect not only our economy, are:earance, serv.iceabi ity, or safety. But
cars-their quality, sizitJweight, and design-but whatever t eir value perceptions-they have made
how and where they ari 'driven. · us the world leader. .
It shows that our cars and customers go well Again, let us reminq you ... drive carefully and
together. We hope it will continue that way. b ckl ' . . . u e up. . .
General Mo.tors ·
Chevrolet • Pontiac • Oldsmobile • Buick • Cadillac • GMC Truck
'
' ·~
...,,.
MONDAY, JAN. 25, 1982
CAVALCADE
COMltS
TELEVISION
.. 82-3
84
86
.... _ _, ......... -........ _"" ....... ._ .... __ ;II ~-~---• -
\
Charles H. Goren
challenges
bridge Q£votees.
See Page 83.
Thousands came to air base, stayed for life
By JODI CADENHEAD
CM .............
A more unlikely candidate as
city historian for Costa Mesa
couldn't be found.
Ed Miller confesses that ~
hates to read and can't stand
writing.
"Now I like history a litU~."
he said during an interview from
his office al city hall where he
has worked 11 years. "But It's
boring to me."
Yet for more than a decade
this custodian of history has
AT TH ll It ll N D ll Z Y D U er
...... l'I ••••
Blnhday
Ball
"~ .. .,.__,,
AT THll
R~
BAllROOM
\N BALBOA
Saturday
v light .. _ .... .... -....... _
I I I IM _, lll1ITI
111% ............... .. ................... ,.,
BUY V. I. WAa 80ND81 ---·
ROOSEVELT ERA Dancers
aided cha rity .
•
..
been .tracking and preservlnc
the past before it disappeared
forever with the death of uae
who lived when Costa Mesa was
a railroad boom town called
Fairview or a place named
Paularino. '
» His sold-out history of the city
called "Slice of Orange" was
followed by Ch~ "Haybumers of
Orange County," a book about
the horse-drawn trains that
operated at the turn of the
century.
But Miller, 53, says that hls
new book. "The SAAAB Story,
The History of the Santa Ana
Army Air Ba4e," will be his last.
For one thing. it cost $22,SOO
for him to print himself. And it
was hard work tracing about 300
of the pilot cadets who trained at
the sprawling Army base during
World War II.
Few people moving into Costa
Mesa today know that more than
1,000 acres from Fairview Road
a nd Harbo r Bourevard to Arlington Drive and Wilson
Street were once covered with
1.3 million square feet of Army
barracks and 28 convalescent
hospitals.
All that remains of the once
bustling military base is a
plaque at the Orange County
Fairgrounds. A corner of the
original base later became the
Air National Guard Base.
Although Miller was only a
high school senior when the base
was finally closed in 1945, he
decided its story had to be told.
And tell it, be does. History
buffs and nostalgia-lovers will
find 215 pages crammed with·
photographs and inter esting
lid bits, that might otherwise
have been forgotten.
-Bob Hope, Jack Benny,
Jeannette MacDonald and Jerry
Colonna were just a few of "tl{e
Hollywood stars to visit the
base.
-Some of the bygone bot
spots frequented by the cadets
included the Circle Lounte, the
Rendezvous Ballroom\ Cadet
Cafe and Bob Mu1'phy's Balboa
Bamboo Room.
-Tires were the first
commodity to be rationed,
I
• IAll 80UNDARlll -Twe colleges. pne high school.
county falrsrounds and park now occupy site . . .
followed by su1ar, taaoline,
coffee, and meat. Stamp No. 1
out of a book of 28 was aood for
one pound or sucar bet ween May
5 and 16. '
-Cadets had to be back on
base by noon Sunday at which
time they would carry a peMy
in their fist durinj inspection to
remltkl them not to swing thelr
arms.
One of the most interesting
stories Mille r un covered
involved the disappearance of
two 16-foot murals that had been
painted by Sgt. John Otterson,
whose paintings hang at the
Empire Slate Building and the
Yale Fine Arts Museum.
The ·murals r e mai'ned at
Orange Coast College until 1961
when the college turned them
over to Maxwell Air Base.
Miller located both murals In
a store room at the base and
they are now at the Costa Mesa
Historical Society's office.
"No single event did more for
Orange C ounty than the
air base," said Miller. "Because
many of the,cadets returned to
live."
Between 18,000 a nd 26,000
cadets a year passed through
the base for pilot training.
In the closing days of the war
the base became the fourth
redis tribution cente r in the
country for returning veterans.
From Nov. 1. 1944 until the
following year. 81,000 soldiers
stayed at the base.
When the base shut down for
good , the property was sold
pieceme al to a number of
buyers. including Orange Coast
College , Orange County
Fairgrounds, the city of Costa
Mesa and Southern California
Bible College.
The largest site went to Macco
Corp. of Corona del Mar. The
company paid $4.7 million for
249 acres to build 1,000 homes in
what is now Mesa del Mar. ·.
"Most people will loot at the
book with nostalgia," said
Miller. "It was their first
OPEi
fte •••u.o• t • ~ ...... ._.,._ .........
I ...... .._ ___ ,,_ __ __
...__._.....,.. --...... ...,._ .... ______ _ .
1 A YllJ Hw Mew Yar ·1 ... _____ , __ _____ ......,_. __ .. ---.....---.... ,... .... ----. ..... .._ .. _....., _____ _ ----·-·---... ---.. .. _,. ....................... __.. -······· ..... ~--...
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., ... -........ ., ... C-0 . ..--.. ~ ... ,,...
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TIE Fii zanE
Crill ....... , .. , -:. ~.:· -:.. t.
.::-:::. ~~i}.1
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.................... r __ ,...t
c.e..... .·=-:~ 3~!~
t ~1!,~==..:.::5
------w ;;::_;_ j·~1i
1Hll:LP WANT II: DI 1-==--~w
_.,_,, .--... ·-.-·-·-
' NOW OPEN i • Sunset Cafe
ANO TllAILUI PA< t
f'IATVRIHC
Delicious Meals
Ju" South of 1t.. CouMlr Cl•b
t warg·• uaJ-ag~ I _o...... ...... 6111 u.
BOWLING ............
II' 'SIJ _.
SPOBTLAND ~ llOWLDIO ALLEYS
P.AVILIOM BALllOA
... ------' ........ ,. ... ". . .... -• expowre to the aUitarJ ad
they have fond tboupts about it
now."
OLD ~DYERTISEMENTS Cost a Mesa
historian Ed Miller. inset. documented how
loca I cares attracted cadets: notic<.· ration
poi nts for March 12. 1943 groceries. below.
•LITMY MA•uvmtS -Enlisted men of lhe 414th AB
Squadron were photographed, above, leaving main gate on
631, S. MAIN--OPIH ::,:1 P. M., SAT. TO If P. M.
l=I•J:@:r!'1:1•E
OLEO ....... ·-..... .... 17! l&TI :.......: ..... 22• .... -... ..... .:;:.;..::.:_ · ··· _ PEP ~~ ...... I!
Shortening~· 11 .... " .... ~11· ·-..... u, wmm -.. 1r ----------•111111 .... II' Mazolaa:-_,.53c ';!rte IPPLE ~._·~21·
:u.a.m -n· MAZOLA ~.:.~~ 27e .nu.:=.:...."'"11~
7 ..... -·--·""" 2'il I ...... o,..,., .. • ... Ile ...,,. TOM. S-Ce.... .. '"" COCKTAIL ..
14 .. un..uu::::~L • .;;;--.ft!!! " -.... _...I ~--ICJc ,..,. TOMAT~. v_::-~ PINEAPPLE . .. _ _
14 ... -....~it -•ae 1• .................... .,.. 1~ --.-TOMAiOU--::. -:'I "' SUPIEMA . .. 7-
6 -. _...._., --lftll! 2·1.,.-~7.11 =--21e ...... ST. llANS ......... v-1.,.. _ _PEACHIS ........ __ _
IJ ua. .... .........,.. • -14e JI ·---~· IK -2C)c ..... PEAS.......... .. ... . ,_ PEARS .... ..
10 ......................... l't.r: 10 ,_...,...,_ 1~e ...... HITS . .. £-,.... APPU SAUCE ~
5 -~··-13e1s ---~ .... KIAUT . . .. • "~ GUPIE JUICE ~-7-= II ... "_ .. ,_ 14c1 ou. .... ....,,_ IOC
rn. SPINACH ............ \.... Nl~LETS . .. ... .
POTATOES IOUN'Gn_l!j Grapefruit
iiU:.-. 65e YAMS ·4k 2Sc.~ ... 25e a
Newport Boulevard for 5-mile march to
Cadets, at parade rest, named home states.
1:
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, J1nu1ry 25, 1982 ,_
•ANN LANDERS
•HOROSCOPE
SNOw'/ MONTEREY -A frigid Pacific storm
that d~ted Northern California with snow
didn 't sp a r e t he Mo nte r e v ·B a~·· Tl1e
Send a Valentine message to that f special person in your life. Put rt in
1 print in our special Love Lrnes col-
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Feb. 14.
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... Ml
ctmmME
UMnLTHE
OCIAM
FllDES
SOLID
LOVIALWAYS
JOFf
ttlJ
Cllristmaa la for giving;
New Years ia for fun But
Valentines Day Is the tin to remind you
Y<Mrll THI OML Y
OMI!
Love
toAnniefrom Bob
To Donna from Eddie
Roles are red, Violets are blue,
I know this is romy But I do love you!
FRED Happy Valentine's Day
Love, Gloria
•Just fill in the form below. or c all us at
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day. Feb. 12.
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written below on Sunday, Feb. 14. (Write
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Bring or mall to:
lllllJPlill
s urro unding hills are glis tening wh ilC'.
providing an unusual backdrop for fishing
a nd sailboats. "----------------------
PROTECT YOUR VALUABLES
Home ••• rl11111. , .....
lns!Jrance and Documentary Photography
' 754-6630
.. Qi
......... 6 u.u-Siert
A Dining Tr.adition Since 1922
Serving Lunch & Dinner
Reservations Suggested
645-7077
If ,~ott don't ,,·ant • to drink
That's ottr
bt1siness
COSTA
MESA
MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Call 642-2734
Alcoholism Recovery Services
301 Victoria Street
Costa Mesa, CA 92627
Approved for Medicare
SPIRUUNA SEMINAR
Tues., Jan. 26th 7:30 p.m.
1 ... At The Park
1855 So. Harbor
Anaheim
Dr. Micllael S•sane
of Irvine Health Center
Complete Line of New Products I
POil l•CMIMATIOM:
,.
Students just pan·ots?
DEAR ANN LANDERS: "Last La ugh
In Lafayette " describes a parrot named
Al ex at Purdue University who · is being
taught tt va riety of responses to assorted
stimuli. including s ha pes and colors. While
the tutor seems lo be lie ve this feat
constitute s real communication. it is my
opinion that Al ex's a bsorb-and regurgitate
approach strongly resembles a technique
tha t is ver y popular on our cam pus es
today.
If a parrot at Purdue can do as well as
t u i lion-p aying s tud~n ts. i t cert a inly
va lidates our comp laint that too m any
··s cholars " can get by if they simply mimic
wha t they hear . T hey do n 't need to
understand anything.
I a m prepared lo say students a nd
parrots a re really c ommunicating whe n
they can expres s their own ideas in the ir
own words. So. dear Ann. you need not eat
you rs . HUMAN PARROT IN ATHENS
!G A.l
DEAR ATHENS: Dr. Hannah Gray,
president or the Unive rsity of Chicago, s aid
it best. Actually, she doesn't re member
saying it at all, but I was so impressed I
wrote it down -and promptly lost the slip
or paper. He re's the reconstructed version:
.. How remarkable that so much in·
formation can go into one ear of a college
student and out the othe r , without
engaging any part or the brain."
That ls about as accurate a description
of the "absorb·and-regurgltate" approach
as you wil• eve r hear. Thanks\ Hannah
DEAR ANN LA NDERS: My husband
h as been h aving a n a ffa ir with his
secretar~· for two yea rs . lie repeatedly
denied it until I caught them together.
He insis ts it 's a ll over cla ims they
still find each othe r attractive but are
"controlling themselves:·
Both m v husband and hi s sec retar v
be lie ve I s hould : ·
1. Trust him.
2. Accept the rela tio nship as a platonic
boss-secreta ry set-up.
3. Never again suggest tha t she get a
job in another office .
4. Re grateful lo be married to this
"wonderful " guy a nd ke ep my trap s hut.
I do not ag ree with any of the above.
S h ou l d I ? .J UST AS KI NG I N
WISCONSIN
DEAR JUST: Obviously you do not
trust your hlfsband, nor do you believe the
relationship is platonic. <Nothing iii your
letter suggests that he s hould be trusted.>
Demanding that the secretary be
~MW UMBS
ousted from f he office wUI net you zero. So
now you are faced with that same borln«i
que stion: Would you be better off with him
or without him'! Only you know the
answer.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I gel madder
a nd madde r as I read all these articles on
Herpes. No distinctio n is made be twee n the
kind l have a nd t he type acquired through
se xua l relations. I have had Herpes s ince I
was 17. Al that time. I not only was a
virgin. but also I had never e ven kissed a
boy. You per formed a great service when
y ou a lerte d you r r e aders lo Herpes
Simplex II 1 it was the first t ime I had
heard or ill. but ple ase explain that there
is a diffe re nc e bet wee n the v~nerca l
Her pes ,a nd the innoce nt cold -sore t~·pe
ALSO FRO M IO WA
DEAR IOWA : I have repeatedly made
the distinction between genital Herpes and
the other kind. Either you are not a steady
reade r, or y our paper is cutting my
column. I hope you see TIUS one.
Can dr ugs be a f riend in time of stress') If
you keep your head together cart they bt' of
he/p ? A nn La nders . new booklet . ··T he
Lowdoum on Dope:· separates the fact from the
f ictior1 . Get it today. For each booklet ordered.
send $2.00. plus a Long. self-addressed~ stamped
envelope '37 cents postage 1 to Ann Landers.
P.O. Box 11995 Chicago. Ill 60611.
POT SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
IS lT
YOU ANO l
WMO A~E CRAZY,
OR
\S M'
£VE*'Y80DY
ELSE~
,..,.~·~.IM~~~~ t.>.41t~~ .... '\to...,..0f'H
Gemini: Change due
Tuesday, January 26
ARIES <Marc h 21-April 191: Focus on
soc ia l a ct ivity. inq u iries. in tell ectua l
c u r iosit y a n d e le m e n t o f s urpr is e
E m phasis a lso on fulfillment of ho pes.
as pirations. Lines of communicatio n open
a nd d,ia lo.g_Qe wi.U e nsu.e wi1h a very
romantic individua l.
TAURUS <Apr:H 20-May 20 >: Way is
cleared for progres s in coonection wit h
business or career . You 'll be involved with
de tails. cha llenges and a need for locating
s uitable m a t e r ia l. Aqua ri a n fi g u r es
prominently a nd could provide exam ple of
le a d e r s hip . Yo ur pos it ion will be
strengthe ned .
GEMINI I May 21-June 20 l: Emphasis
on communication. long-range pla ns and
t ravel. Be ready for change. a variety of
choices and confrontation with me mber of
opposite se x. Le arning process will be
stimulated. You receive message which
aids in resolving dilemma.
CANCER <June 21-July 22 >: You 'll be
com paring prices in connection with home
improveme nt. Purcha se of luxury item
could be on agenda . Do mestic adjustment
d o minates Sfe na ri o. Fa m ily m ember
discusses l?<>rl'bwing . le nding and interest
r ate s.
LEO <July 23-Aug. 22>: Focus on legal
affairs , partne rs hips. public relations.
ability lo perceive potential. Refuse to be
aatisfied to know that something merely
happened -find out why it occurred .
Pisces. Virgo persons figure prominently.
VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 221: Obtain hint
fro m Leo m e s sage . P a tie n ce and
p e r sistence become twin a llies. Keep
resolutions concerning diet. nutrition.
medical or dental appointments. Cancer .
Capricorn persons play key roles. Money
arrives following delay .
~IBRA <Sept. 23·0c t. 22 I: Relations hip
is tested: changes occur. plans are revised
and a n unnecessary burden is remo ved.
HOIOSCOPf
BY SIDNEY OMARA
A ri es a nd a n o th e r L ib r a f i g ur e
prominently . P erson al magn e tis m is
e mphasized a nd powers of pers uasion
s urge to forefro nt.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 211: You gain
added independence. logjam is removed
and you'll make new s tart which fe atures a
pioneeringr conce pt. Focus a lso on home.
pro perty. longst and ing negotiations and
news concerning older relative
SAGITl'ARIUS 1 Nov. 22-Dec. 211 : You
regain sense of direction. puzzle pieces fall
..Jnto place a nd hunch proves accurate.
, Accent also on shor( trips. visits. relative s
' a n d favor a b le responses to inquiries .
C a n cer. Ca p r icorn. Aquarius pe r sons
fi g ure promine ntly.
CAPRICOR N I DC'c . 22 .J a n . 19 1:
Spending spree could be par t of scenat io.
Ha ve fun. but reme m ber recent budget
resolutions. Gemin i. Sagittarius persons
figu re prominently. You'll locate ite ms
tha t had been lost. missing or stolen. Gain
indicated through written word
AQUARIUS (J a n . 20-F e b . 18 1:
Circumstances favor your efforts : cjoors
previously c losed will be opened . Lunar
cycle high judgm ent. intuition prove
acc urate and you'll gain objective. Ta ke
ini ti ati ve. i mpr int s t y le . d is pl a y
enthus ias m a nd s ho w that you are a
le ade r.
PISCES (F e b . 19-Ma rch 20 ): Open
line s of communication. che ck files.
b e c o me m o r e acli v e within group.
organization or club. Ge mini. Virgo,
Sagittarius persons ,play significant roles.
Romance is highlighted and aura o r
intrigue could dominate scenario.
=t.::.~A 857•4775 .:.~--r---------~---J ~-------------------~"14 ~"'---~--~..----~----------~------------_.;._ __ ..;.~
·-··· .... ,By PHIL INTERLANDI ot Uiguna8each
.
' l ...
I ) ~ t l "'. d ·i .• 1• I •
"He did say 'witchcraft,' didn't he!"
" Moni lowers
• expectations
I haven't read' it yet, but I just heard
there's a new book coming out, "401 Ways
to Get Your Kids to Work a t Home:· by
Bonnie McCullough and Susan Monson.
Offhand, I can only think or two.
Perpetual cruelty and their own .Swiss
bank account.
Most mothe r s entering the labor
market outs ide the home are naive. Thev
stagger home each evening, holding the
mail in their teeth, the cleaning over their
arm . '\ lamb chop defrosting under each
armpit, balancing two gallons or frozen
r:nilk between their knees, and expect one
'Of' the kids to get the door .
G ROW UP, mothers! Kids don't
breathe in and out unless they're paid
scale. Their contention is. "Who asked you
lo. work'? It's not our fault you 're not
fulfilled s hrinking jeans and fighting
stubborn stains ...
You're not going to believe this . but I
or:iginally went to work in 1965, to buy a
flMA IOMllCI
ATWIT'S END
Barbie doll a wardrobe to go to the Ohio
State football ga m e with Ken in a
cardboard car.· One year later I couldn't
have a doll languishing in dust balls under
the bed dressed better than I, so I worked a
few more years to buy a few things for
myself. The rest is history.
As you can imagine. I tried every trick
in the book to gel the children to pitch in
with household chores. From shouting, I
got varicose veins of the neck. Nothing
more. I progressed to ··Dirty Looks" and
"Martyrdom," which also got me nothing.
I thought I was onto som ething one day
when I discovered the TV dia l was loose
and I could carry it around in m y pocket
like the distributor or a car. When they
performed. they got 'l'V : when they didn't
.they got withdrawal chills. Then they got
sm a rt and went to a neighbor's home.
Moral: If the home is everyone's castle
. . . let everyone clean it!
Symptoms
of hepatitis
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I suppose
It doesn't make any dUference -yet, I'm
curlou. I'm 1ettlng over an auack or
hepatltl1. I wonder what kind I've bad.
I undenland that there are &wo main
types. A ud 8 . Naturally I wonder how I
contracted mlae. My dodor say1 It's likely
ihat I've had Type A, which he catts
lnf ectlous hepatitis . I must have picked 1t
up from some food or drink Infected with a
virus.
We're very care ful to refrigerate rood
in our house. SO I still wonder how I picked
up my hepatitis. -MRS. N .
OEAR MRS. N.; Mos t cases ol'
hepatitis are mild. So much so lhat they
may be confused with an attack or flu .
Especially if no jaundice is present.
The patient may have fatigue ror a
week or so followed by nausea. vomiting.
Arter the acute attack. pati.ents like
yourself feel wrung out and debilitated for
at least a month or·more.
Treatment consists mainly of rest in
bed . until blood tests indicate that the live r
T JOUI HIAITH
OR. 'PETER J. STEINCROHN
inflammation has subsided. The incuba tion
period is about four weeks in hepatitis A :
about 12 weeks for hepatitis B. The disease
is milder in children. more so in older age
groups.
Hepatitis A variety is excreted heavily
in the stools. It ma~· be picked up from
apparently health~· pe rsons. But outbreaks
may be caused by uncooked food or by the
virus involved in salads. custards. sliced
meats. et c. Hepatitis can be serious but is
rarely fatal.
The virus of hepatitis B rarely appears
in the stool. It rarely causes epidemics.
Sources of infection ma~· be contamina ted
in s trume nts. n eedl es a nd bl ood
transfusions. It m ay be trans missible in
homes. hospitals and dental offices. In this
t ype s ymptoms may not come on until
three or four m o nths after infection.
Jaundice Qccurs in less than 10 percent of
these cases.
Immune serum g lobulin given to
contacts is muc h more errective against
hepatitis A. Nevertheless it should be given
for those exposed to any type of hepatitis.
Travelers contemplating visits to foreign
countries with questionable sanitary
s tandards should be immunized with
immune serum globulin before depa rture.
FOR MR. B.: The reeling is that
computer tomography 1CT1 should not be
used as a routine screening procedure.
However. it is the method or choice in
severe head injury. and where there is
sus pected presence of brain abscess.
spontaneous hemorrhage into the brain
and brain growths. '
FOR MR. W.: .Pharyngeal gonorrhea
is a small but s ignificant venereal disea se
problem. It is quit e often overlooked.
Patien t s respond to trea tment with
pe nicillin or s pectinom~·C'in. If in doubt.
have vour doctor lake a s mear-<.·ullure of
your ·throat with a cotton·tipped stcrill·
swab.
Dr. Steincrohn welcomes reader moil but 1s
sorry he cannot answer personally. Letters of
widest interest Will be answered m t11s column
Send your questions to him m ca re of the Da1l11
Pilot. P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa . Calif 92626.
~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'
GOREN ON BRIDGE
BY CH~LES H. GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF
Q.1-Both vulnerable. as-
South you hold:
+KQ83 ~AK1092 0 84 +A7
The bidding has proceeded: s .. ~ WeK Nord! Eul
I ~ PaH Pa11 1 +
p ... P ... 2 o Pa11
? ,
What action do you lake'!
A . -Remember. partner
could not act over your open
ing bid. Now. he is simply
seizing the opportunity to
show you a long diamond
suit, little or no stre'lgth and
not enough hearts to raise
your suit. Even though you
have a pretty good hand. you
have nowhere to go. Pass.
Q.!-As South, vulnerable,
you hold:
+KT& !VS OSS. +J109U2
The bidding has proceeded:
Weet Nerdl Eu& SHth
I ~ P .. 1 NT P ...
P ... D1t1eP ... z+·
, ... 2 !V , ... 1
What action do you 'take'/
A. -Think for a moment.
What hand could partner
po11ibly have that would
warrant a firtt·round pas1 ot
a one heart opening bkl to his
right, followed by a third
round cue·bid ot hearts?
There isn't any. Obvlou1ly,
partner couldn't ad over one
heart becallM thaL wat hi1
bell 1uft, Ud now he want•
to ,a&y heartt. Pua.
Q.1-Bolh vulntnble, ••
outh you hold:
+Q94 ~A8754 OKQIO +JS
The bidding has proceeded:
North Eul South W eat
I+ PHa 1 v Pa11
2 + Pa11 ?
What do you bid now'?
A.-You are in slam ter·
ritory. and we would recom
mend vigorous act ion except
for the fact that we are un·
sure just how useful our dia
mond values are going to be.
We can advise partner that
we have a good hand with
substantial values in the un·
bid suit by jumping to three
no trump.
Q.4 -Both vulnerable, as
South you hold:
+AJIMZ !V7'542 0 7 +M
The bidding has proceeded:
N erth Eut Se•lli
l !V •• 7
What action do you take'!
A.-Thlt it close. We would
be inclined lo bid a quin two
heart1, but we do not object.
even mildly, to the ag·
rreulve bid of four
hearts-there ate a number
of minimum opening bids
that partner could hoicl tbat
would offer excellent plly for
four bearta. The one ~Ion
that mu1t be ruled ouL i1 a
double of one .,adt. Oalr oa
very rare oeeulou II IL ....
to make a low-level 'j,= double when JOU ....
la the suit whldl ,.,.... ....
bid.
Q.5 -As South. vulnerable,
you hold:
+Q106 ~AQt763 OQJ5 +K
The bidding has proceeded:
South We1t North Ea1t
I '\J Pa11 2 + Pa11
2 ~ Pa11 3 + Pa11
?
What action do you Lake'!
A. -Partner's rebid is not
forcing. In fact, it tends to
show a hand that is weaker
than a normal two·over-one
response but with extra
length in the suit as compen
sation. Partner cannot be u
good as six clubs headed by
the A·Q·J with an outside en
try. so 'you are unlikely to
make nine tricks at no'
trump -indeed, if he doesn't
have the ace of clubs, no
trump might be a disaster.
Pua. ~
Q.e-Both vulnerable. as r South you hold:
+A~OBU 0 814 O.l +Aft&
Your right.·hand opponent
opens one diamond. What ac·
I.Jon do you take'/
-A.-Since you have a good
opening bid. we 'would not
fault you severely If you
opted t.o doublt. · t hen bid
apa4et. However. we feel
that 1ou won't make pme
unleH partner baa enourh to
UL v~untarlly, eo we would
e~ a aimple one •l*le
..... .. , to 9" how lM aue·
tloll developed.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, Janu1ry 25, 1982
...
I
HAPPIER DAYS -Sheikha Dena Al-Fassi,
holding daughter Hesseh, and ex·hus band
She ikh Mohammed Al-Fassi, holding son
AP
Turkei, are shown outside their Beverly
mansion in 1978. Mrs. Al·Fassi is seeking h
of his S6 billion fortune in a divorce suit.
MARRIAGE & .
REMARRIAGE Ja
H
b
SEMINAR
Sat., January 30th
Kathy & Bud Pearson 8:30 A.M. to 4:00 P.M.
"Many things you've wanted to know about marriage
and remarriage, but didn't know who to ask "
This Seminar is designed for: The Seminar is about:
• Those wno have just been separated or divorced Growing. Love. Kids, Ho'us•no.
• Those wno have not yet married for the first time Finances. Relati6nsh1PS. etc
• Thoee wno have lost their male In everyday oommon sense.
• Thole wno are afraid of re-matriage understandable.
• Those wno went to rema1ry someday wher•you-hve 1""1S
• Those wno are remarried
St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church
60I Sf. An*••• IMd-Mew,.,. IHd Acrw tr-.._.,.,. H ...... Hltlt See.of
Semirw Cost 11 110.00 per pe™>n ii pre-registered. 112.00 at door (Includes lunch and materials)
F0< further Information call (71•0 831·2885
,~ l/,od1 y0<1d ....
•
It is worth the price to have at
least one thing in your tire that is
absolutely perfect. Newport Floor
Covering is proud to be chosen to
1introduce to your a rea R.S.·V.P. a nd
all its richness. beauty and brilliance
unequaled in any carpet. R.S. V.P. is a
classic European velvet and has
pinpoint surface refinement and a sort
wool-like luster rarely seen in nylon
carpeting.
If 1x•rformanl'l' 1:-. :1 <.'lln:-.icll•ral wn
in pur('hasinJ,! ~·our l'arpl'I ~ ou Cl\\ t•
it to mursclf to s<.•t• R.S. \".P. F:ahric;1 <ll•s i~nt•d and t•ng im•t•n•d R.S. \'. P .
using ANSO~ IV NATURAL LUSTER
nylon. a fourth generation fibe r that
gives added stain a nd soil rt•sistanct•
in addition to posili\'l' control for the
life of the carpet
Most import41nt. R.S. \'.P~ is backt>d b~· t~ahrica's. outst~ndi.n~ '
sE'rvict> r••cord and t•om mitmt>nt to" ard "Quaht~ without
Co mpromise." C'umt• s t'l' \\ h~· ~·our <h.•t·onatinJ.! hudul't <lt•s<.•l'\'l'S R.S. \'. P . •
CARPETING • DRAPERIES • LINOLEUM • FLOOR 1 1l.E • WOOD F'LOOltlNG • W'At.I. t'AP~K
New1>ioi1 .
ftoor Eoverlns
3500 E. Coast Hlpway, Corona del Mar. Calirorn .. taas 675·1836
• Serving Newport area for 28 years •
Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/MQnday, January 25. 1982
T•E
f.\MILt'
Cl•Ctl
•lff Gl:OaGI:
-
,,
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
"A bread and butter note? Don't you hofto
thank them for the rest of the dinner?"
"I hate Mondaya."
"It's nice you think so much of me.
but I can't drive like this!"
~ ,,
·w~. ~ Ev~rr W1~ ! wiavER HEARO ~ ~~A 5'THm\ 10 A CHILD~¥
I RfMEMeEA 0AC.K
WMEN ALL WE MAP WERE
WOOP-00RNIN6 CATS
MOO~ Ml' LI.I NH
NO, I H,AVEN1T
FIXED 7HE
Doo~BEt,L
)'ET ...
ACROSS
11ron Ind
Slone -
5 TwelltY
10 Pertodl ,. ··D1111Cr'
t5 lnertgll , . ........,,
gooee
t7 lebld
1'Tr ..... Ot·
lllCI
20Wlmlr911f
52 Adjust•
55 Bring to mind
st Eacitel
61 Men·sneme
62Wtler9Anna
went lol:.li=&&
13 ~ ~ HolHtli 640odn
65 llundert
.. TheP9n4•
leucfl
t7 Afllrmetl¥el
22 Spollld DOWN
23 ~ 1 Subjolrll
2• W.-Y 2 HoodUn
25 "F .. of 3 llMlrd: Pref.
"T OIF" • DruNI
21 Slfotllll: 5 Olldld
2 WOf'dl I ... eoftly 44 AlcGrd •
32 Cerrilgt 7 ICMd"... 47 ~
33 -... 0.... • ,.... ""' 41 n.11110
SS """9n t..... St ,._ ""· • Unll .... pontdgl ... " u AMlt
• 0!1*11... ......... 21 TlleHuneer 13 ~,,... ... TlleOld lod 2 WOf'dl JO 0.0..... 54 ........................ ....
4H...... t0 ltllliA IUlllll 3t ....,_, 61 Loud eound ._. ......... ._ a-.... 't 1rtnt • S4 v. \ 11 ICIOftlltl
41Mef:M, ti,,. UIMped""' _. .,,_ ,,._...... .... 11,.... ........ ,. ..... ·-.... I.... .,.. dlllf .....
It .......... '--41 ...... -•UNlllJ.
I •
PUNtTI
SHOE
"r'Oll KNOW HOW A
eASf(ETeALL PLAVER
EAfS A OOU6HNUT?
&EE:!-rrs
~OAPE:P wrrn
ACCESSORIES!
by Tom K. Ryan
by Jeff MacNelly
&E~fO~IT e;.a< ~ YOO'RE "rn~.
by Ernie Bushm1ller
AND EVERY BODY
IS BUYING -
WATCHDOGS
WELL1
EVERYBODY
EXCEPT---
SLUGGO
THERE HAVE
BEEN LOTS OF
BURGLARIES
LAT ELY----.--__.,
GORDO
l f!i/WISEO
M'r' #IP
IJAPPl/o.J6 VN
ONE OF ~STIE~f
t'L~K,. •INKERBE;\I\
MI:ti!Cvf ~~
THERE A P/!A
UAJOER f1',
PRIAICE?
by Gus Arriola
by Tom Batiuk
HEK E I STAND I NAKED
AND EXP05E.D TO THE
,-------------------------WHILE ~ ROOT!> A~E.
ENCA5W IN 1HE F~ZE.N ~l AND BEETLE.~ AND
G~UB5 CRAWL.. U~DE.R f'IV..J
IT'S ~T A Vt.Rt..; PRE:rfQ
UFC:!
ELEMENTS ...
FR.ANKL-Y',
POC, WHA1"'S
"T"O S1"0P
Me F"OM ~l!"T"1"1N6 UP .••
BARK !
'™AT~ f)EOt.>~ i'ME. S~'f1C:
£.\.f.C.1'~1C1f'I IN 1~E C.AT 's
fV~ WILL ROI&) 'f~~H
'ie>OR '100'1 ~O bl'Jt 'fOlJ
E.IU.R'7 .. \ (:,() AllE.AO, 'f .. i 01 'f, ~O!(;~
~I 'j
-_ .. --.. . -·-. _____ ... __ -----------
by Kevin Fagan
by George Lemont
~ PIPN'"T"
KNOW 1"HISY CARRI ISP
1"HOSe.'
by Lynn Johnston
''U~LESS ~&HIFIGET"
LOST "'"™ A ~,
t
If MlettA.:L DOUGAN o1 ................
Notes rrom the local club'acene:
Hawaii Is known for uportln, 1u1ar cane,
pineapples and music 1roup1. n the latter
catt1ory we find M constellation of schlocky
Polynesian acts with lnterchaqeablt pal'U. Even
thoae performers from the island• wbo would
prerer, we suspect. to 1lve a stralchtrorward
routlne seem somehow compeUed to include at
leaat one hula number and a rendition or
"Hawaiian Wedding Song" in every set. Perhaps
they are victims or our own expectaUons.
A happy -nay,-dellchUuJ -exception is The
Fabulous Krush. compri~ed or eicht immensely
talented Hawaiians with· nary a ·1rass :;klrt
among them. The Krush has been· making quite a
name for itself recently, wlth two album s on H~waii's top ten chart in the past year and a
gree nhous e full of bouquets from Oa hu's
entertainment critics. All well deserved. we ml1ht
add.
The Krush. now appuring at 'the Kona Hawaii
on Harbor Boulevard in Santa Ana as part or their
annual mainland tour. is difficult lo define. We
mi~ht s a y t h ey a r e a co m edy ·
country-rock.gospel-swing-lounge act with the
occa sional rc m alc impersonator thrown in for
spice. It is tht!ir aggressive elecliclsm' that gives
the Krush its wide family appeal.
Each set includes at least one tribute to the bag
band era. ·with the Krush donning appropriate
costumes <Indeed, costume chan12es are a bl« part or their act) and pu:king up trumpets. saxophones
and trombone lo blast out numbers like "Sing,
Sing, Sing" and :·Take the A Train." Then there
are the gospel routines, highUghted by a rousing
"Operator, Get Me J esus." A litUe Hawaiian stick
dancing. An Elvis impersonation 1weU , no one's
perfect ). An intriguing musical rendition of
Rudyard Kipling's poem "lf." The Incredible Hulk
singing "It lsrtit Easy Be Green." All played and
suni with immaculate skill and terrific energy.
They're a great group. The Krush, and they'll
be holding forth with two shows a night at the
Kona until Feb. 7.
01.on:s AREN'T MOLDIES: The Crazy
Horse Steakhouse off· Dyer Road alone the
Newpof\ Freeway has long been established as
0 "range .County's prime s pot for hearing
name-brand country acts. Now manager Fred
Reiser is tapping another entertainment gold mine
with reprise acts from the '50s.
Most recent of these were The Coasters and
The Drifters, two of the more popular
black-music-for -while-kids outfits from the sock
hop days who proved, to the delight or a highly
partisan crowd, that they are still musically
vrable.
Although these vocal groups play shamelessly
to our nostalgic needs. they have updated their
material by energizing the arrangements and
speeding the tempo. Both shows consisted of pure.
joyous rock and roll.
The Coasters, who launched their career in
1954 with "Down in Mexico," boast only one
original member -bass singer Bobby Nunn. The
new gu_ys sing in a style that is faitbfuJ to their
predecessors. Theirs was lhe most satisfying of
the routines.
Vet The Drifters drew no complaints. Led by
original member Bobby Warren Hendricks, they
presented some rem arkable vocal harmony
visually enhanced by a lot of choreo«ra!)hv.
Both acts projected a warm stage presence
and communicated nicely with the audience. It
was a gOOd evening.
THE1 BEAR FACTS: H you put the Marx
Brothers and the Sons of the Pioneers together
what wouJd you gel? Riders in the Sky, one of
America's strangest western music groups.
Ride rs combine s good s inging in the
Chev'J has the ~ to make
this Hol .... Season the looniest ever!
~e{i)~~~
~QOO~~~~O
lroJ :::~ NI' I •• •~ '"' •(ii),
ORIGINAL
Coasters
group.
Bass singer Bobby Nunn or the
the sole member still with the
"Tumblin' Tumbleweeds" vein with an off-beat
humor that keeps the audience in stitch.es. Their
tongues are almost in their cheeks when they
perform, but not quite.
Riders will appear Thursday at the venerable
Golden Bear in Huntington Beach, alon.w1th Dirt
Band rounder John McKuen, who began bis career
al the Bear years ago. McKuen is a bit of • comic
himself. and the night has promise.
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE ·
,,,. ~· .. ,., ... ''"""· 1110 ........ _..-... ...,•W.,.ol
l'l'IJ_.•CIOJ'Wll'llf'b ..,._"'OO}'N"C~
~l ill !Ell 4H() FILMS ll(C(llll
OI( SE~ C1' rHl M01ION "1CluAC
COO€ OF SHf llfGUlAflOl'I
REm lPGI At
sn owt "' 1 :00
Ilk> Eainomv S... ,..,,_
Sor John Goeliud
CHAIUO'fS Of' RRE IPGIAt
7:00. 1:20
I Aochard Dreyfuu
.... UFEIStT NllYIMY1 CRI At
r==='='o=o=1='='=0=1=e=··~o===>
I Peul Newmen
·-ICEOP llAUCE (PGI
Sloowt at 7tM 9:20
We At 5'\0Wt at 7 :tl. 1:)0
No Economy See••nt ,
RAIDEM OF THE LOST MK "GI At 5ftowt •• 7:00. 1:1' N• llc•n•mY SNUnt I
nolutlOMifY Cuw F, vnd .,Of,.-.. n e.to.
Yow AM cs reidt0 ,.. your _.., II no AM
Cl9t r·ad•O .,.h ttft.lttOn -·_..-... ,
\IOW "'""AM -••le.
Mor,.n F11rct11ld
1HE IEOUCTICm CRI Dressed To Ktll IRI
John 8elust11
NEl81.-tAI
Tome 9andill (PG)
Np .......
I c~:;r •n
,.,_ I IPGI
Nine To Five IPGI
le * 'iiu:1 ii.;nolds
IHARICY"S llMOffJIE IR I
ZOOT SUIT IRI
MIDERSOFTHE LOST MK (PG I &
l'tun Gord on (PG)
Ttmotl\y Hutton
TM'SIPGI
Cannonbell Aun IPGI
l>t'•ve·1nt Open 8: 30
NIGHTLY
IF
Unde• 12FAEEUnleNNoted
-------·-------·-----•
Olllf e1'4rts f .. t!Mry 1, ltl2
,....,"" .. ~11 .... ....... c.-.... ...., ....... c.lllenlll,
Offtr ..,ir. , ..... ,, 1, 1 tG """.,.., .. ,... ............ . c..... .... ...., ....... Celllflll..
--_......._
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 25, 1982
'ti/ t'!IH1 i1i1/\'•d
•Humor and
eruticism in a tender
and entertaining WQr4(:
........
a...,ltal a lowe
alfalrnU,
aaew.-e ..-, ....
... 1eanaa
-tlle tne
=~of [R] "2" O .... . .. , .,.
Whose life Is It anyway?
llllA ll TORO HUNTINGTON BUCH OllANGl
B•tJ PIJ/d • f d .... ,.o, s rOOl~t• tl~ I dw,uo~ C111Pt11n c;.,.~do111e
~?9 ~339 '>8 t ~1180 1148 038~ b )4 ?~~ l
COSTA MlH lllVINf
Edwa1ds Soulll Co.t~I l'ldld '14& '; 11 I fdward' 'Noodb"ll<l" ~~I Of>~'J
•9AAOAIN MATINEES•
Monday thru Saturday
All Performances before 5:00 PM
(Eacept Special· Enpglment1 1nd Holld1y1)
LA MLllAUA MA.L Mrrooo 01 llo•ee<ons
LA MIRADA WAUC-IN 994·2400 -c -n· --"""°" "TA!tS" -11:11.-.1ta.-••
·--·aML•l'Wa "AlllNCl OF MALICE" -,,... ••·•·•.••tut
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALK ·IH
... --·····-"ON OOU>EN PONO" -U:tl l.M. I.JI, 1 •• t• ..
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WAllC IN
Focurty At ~ Nno
-I --··--........ ""AIDE.RS OF THE LOST AlllC" --.H---.......... , ... ..,,.
---· ..,.., c-wna "WHOSE LIFE IS IT ANYWAY~" ,, ........ , .. ,, .. ,.
"" --· ''SHA"ICY'S MACHINE" 1111 ..................
Foculty 01 ConOlewood
213/531·9580
, ............................. ..., ...... I .. , I ,.,.. 16 iCS& 0.-, ...... ,.... ... ......... ..,.., .... .,...._(llftt .... ....
_,. "AEOS" tl"G1 ., .....
.U.T Alt"°""•
·SHAAKY'S MACHINE .,, ,,. , ......... ....
.... -_,ec.;.-:.=.:--..
""AOTI•" -...... .&.--,_ ....
21J/6J4·_•_2_11 __ -.-____ _ --·--·-...... ~··Of' THe LOST MK' I ···-=-·•M.e:Mt•t..•
"'
LAGUNA
-----"CHAlllOTS Of' FIAE" -' .......... ·-··· ..... ,.,,
so . COAST WALK -IN
Souln Cooat Howoy
01 l tOOOWOJ
494-1514
"MOl>E"N "'°9UMS",... _____ ... ,., ... __
"HINE TO Aft" 1111 ____ ... ,_ ..... _ _.,,. ....... --.....cMT'lll·--.. "ATLANTIC CITY" I'll -.-...... .. .... __ ,,... ........... -
... ~ ", ... 915 ··6:00 ,_, .. ,..,945
IMPORTANT NOTIC(• CtUI OREM UMOlll 12 F"EE!
""U' ••• W•r•ot ••• I•••'" 5 30. Sol Su• ""' 4•30,111 Cllif-Jr SOllllO ••OU~ !M 1,. t ~ IS rOUA ~(11
~ C.U ~ WIT>' Oll!Ot accfSSOltY llOSITOo -~ UI l'OllTAIU • .U CM-St CllWH•S UI Oii Alt IWllO
ANA .. llM
ANAHEIM DRIVl·IN
8U!~A PAlll
BUENA PARK DRIVE IN
b~o•n Ali• •••• OI ll\Ott
121-•070
BU!NAPA~I
LINCOLN DRIVE-IN
kin Oteeo ,,., at 11100'""'" (\o I
M2·2.UI
tlfl .,. ~~'f ~
..,,~ .. -.. .. -
-oe.ATH VALLEY",., -·:lllllOTlL H£lL" 1111
--~ ..... ,_ "THE 8000ENS" ,..
"""' "THEY CAME F"OM WITHIN" 1111
_,_ __ lOftU.-fllil
"GHOST STORY" ,.,
"""' "THE HOWLING" ,.,
MOllYl.!OA_I_
"DEATH VALLEY" 1111 -"MOTIL HeLL" 1111
Hl·WAY 39 DRIVE IN
. 'I ... --··--"IT .. INI" 111• ''ON OOLDI~ fllONO" -
"111 .............. c•N WAIT" -• "STI" C"Al'I'" 1111 ....,...."' " to"l It SOIJllO Clllf II S011!00 ·~· !Vlli:IJJIJ:lf"'·o111'71--;--:-=.,:: .. :'.,::-=:::u . __ _
1'\.111 .. , .. HOUCTION" 1111 "T .. f'tNM. CON,LICT' lllJ """ "MANI~ =-N&ION" 1111 "LOOIClll" '"' . -Cflit 'I JOUJll>-CINE If SOUND
,. "A .. ~ ... ----·· ... -LA HABRA OrllVt IN "ON OOlDIN POND" -·-......... -•lttc• ................ "HIAVIN CAN #AIT" ,...
17MM2
k ----. ·~ ·'
ORANGE 0'11VE 'N
.. . .... .. . ....
MISSION (Jt/IVt IN
. . . . " .. ---~-...,,, A " N f 5l n l.'1 • 1 11~ "Tl IOLTl~lllllNDA"
"11..0 DI LA .... Tl .. . _ ................ ~
M7· ltl
( "flllOOUtN ~Ml"' __ , __ .._
"Al9'fl\.A .... ---
..
'
• ..
lfteVI... IPMlllt end
.-n·~~lo ....... a.. ... '*"" ;· ... ................
...,_ .. (ttlo) o.Mretl
IC.-r, ~ Or_.., A
.... """"' ...... petty ltwOllQll dlftclll Afl1ce In
-ct. of• women'• 11ua-
Nnd.
Ml(Z')MOVll
TUBE TOPPERS
KABC • '7 :30 -.. Eye on L.A."
Child pomoaraphy is among toplca .
KOCE 11 7:30 .and KCET a 1:00
~ofltlel...;ot-.....................
olttlO. •111a. .. "~°'--wt/I'' (ttrlt ..... c:.i-
~ ........... ..... ... *'Y.., .-. l--.n ~---~.., ... Of.., ol ..... hl.rlllnl ____ .,..,.....
Illy tlle alllp'• fiery• ..,...,.. C411141in, 'PO'
,_, O'TOOla. ...........
..... bitter ....... 1111'* ... Mt .... -...
~ ......... . _ .............. .
(1tMI 1111-... Ill,
~Qi.-.~ ...... ===-= "'~°' -~ and ............ of'*
llWIMlnd llrlMy oeoldel 10
~-.. -· r .. ~~ •a*'+ ... atotti"Q "A.ti 1ha
... "(IM4)._ .. ,_,
~ llllott. I A r-.
...... 111111 II US1M1 to ..... .... • ,.,,., lie
OOIMlllted .. ebollt 10 be
~.
.. Brldeshead Revisited: At Home and
Abroad." Sebastian takes Charles to
._'ld&i..L..bii-..Lathe.c j n Venicc.~P •• slot'
below .
tM. MCMI • •• .,,,. ..... ...,Tllirz-""'c..,.1or~-.M'""lnr...--1 ~~T.,_...., ... .._..,....,....
Wino•" I 11401 "'"" ODeron, Allpfl Aldwd•
Men" (1174) ._. .._
-~~· ..... (I) "°'* CAUi
KABC 8 9:00 -"The ~merican
Music Awards." Annual awards
ceremony is broadcast Crom Hollywood.
'°"· Tiie ~ NI FOtm eoc c autully •"*1• tlle llW•• ol ...,., 1,.uftwefte,
ll 11 (C) MCMI
1tr. "*"' Oltttl A OOlitOt
Meurlty .,.,d .... r '•
•t•a ~ lhedowy .. ..,
wllO l'llUl'dlnd • CIM'C)Ua
co-eel. • * * * "SO BIO" I 1103) Jane Wym1n. Sl.,llng A con lrtlel ~ foka
I I e:oo1•• NIWI CHAM.ll'a ANClaLa
I THI fMTa IHAOOW
THI JlfflMON8
•• HAWAll"44
~ Out of M.000 for •
P"OnY Clllrity.
• IHOCK CW THm NIW
"The LMdlcepl Of PIM-
_.,. AoOlf1 ~ -
oentr.-on ..,..,,._ ot
peradlM • lllultrMed In
KNXT 9 10:00 -"l..ou Grant." An
angry motlier c laims her son was
damaged by a newspaper story.
•• "4utVWll Aun" (1N0) ,...., ore-. Rev MNlend
A f'OUC) Of '-'-80"1
•klfNlie llPOfl • 08"0 of
.,.,. __.,. In ·~ Atl-
-dellt1 'R'
Heyden. A widow le dluo-
polnted by lier onty aon
wtlO ..._ "" 10 find lllt
own wey delplte '* 81'16-
.... deoolollon 10 """
··--·~ (I) OMNIWI
I MCNIWI
N9CNIWI
• M()Vll I
• * "TN High Country"
{1981) Timothy Bottom•,
Linda Purl. An MC"Pld
conYlcl "'° Illa hAndl-
~ girlfriend run lo
t~ mountlln• flellng a
aOciety thal refects them
'PG'
uo • wnooue IAa<.
KOTTER
• KceT ..weeEAT:
CAUFOfNA
~L
AEPORT
........ AEPORT
(1)8NIW8 tll IAANIY~
1:00 e cea NIW8
• N9CNEW8 8 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
• A8CN&W8 II YOU ASKED FOA IT \
F1e1ured: "Modern·Day
ThrM Muallet..,a" •nd
"All'lcen \loodoo C..emo-
ny"
.;·w·A·s·H
Hawkeye turns "811111 to
solYe • rash ol robberies
for Which h• Is Ille prime
1uapec1.
•
JOKER'S WIU>
OVEREAIY
Guesta. flullSI Jean.Pierre
Rempel, mylhotoglsl
.JOleph Campbell (R) 0
l!l MACNEll / LEHRER
AEPOffr•
()) TIC I-'C OOUOH 9 ENTERT AINtootENT
TONOHT
An lntervll'f" with "Air·
~"star Robert Hays
QI THE MUPf'n8
Guest: SI-Marton
CB)MOYIE * * * "'f111 World's Great·
-Athlete" 11973) John
Amoa. Jan-Mlchael llln-
c.nt. A coac:h who la hav·
ino • run ol t>.o luctc •
returns to 1111 roots in Alrl·
ca · •nd discovers • super
athlete. 'G'
(O)MOW * * "Tiii t<ld From Nol·
So-Big" ( 1978) Jennifer
Mc:Alllsler A 12 ·)'18'-okl
girl fonds herself In and out
ot trouble whtll running
the town newspaper 'G'
(S)SHOWTIME LOOKS
AT1MO
A ullrlc tOok II laken at
-of the ma)O' -Storie&, people and .,,.,,,,
of 1980.
7:IO 8 2 OH THI TOWN
F .. lured a vltll to a Los
Angelea JAZZ dub. •profile
ol Los Angetea 1Nirahs1
Jane Golden: a look at a
g.roup ol urban pioneers
who .,. '"'°'Ing old Ille· ' torten hOnlla..
8 8FAMILYFEUO
• LAVEAHE a 8HW..EY
&eot#AK'f
8EYEOHLA.
A report on cMd P<>tnoo·
raptly, • poo< man'• IOOlc
at Rodeo Drive, • prof11e of
Mel Blanc. 1111 men behind
Bugs BoM y voice: a loofl
et cures for lnsomnl•
TELEPHONE TERROR -Carol Kane
portrays a teen-ager frightened by
threatening telephone calls in "Wilen a
Stranger Calls," to be aired at 9 tonight
on\KNBC <4> .
• M•A'l•H
Ma) Houffhan·a !lance .,.,._ ,, the 4077th and
llN>Clc• Frank by ulllng
him to bl his bell men
•
TIC TAC DOUGH
MACNEIL I LIHNR
REPORT 8D GNAT
PEW'~
"8 rlOHhHd Aavlalted·
Home And Abroad"
Sebutlan ,.., .. Cllartea to
Vilit 1149 latlllr (Laurence
Otivllr) In Venice whlfe M
liYea with hie mlatr-.
(Part 2)0
()) ~.M. MAGAZJHI
A Pl111burg11 man's lnc:ted·
Ible apor11 memorabilia
COll.ctlon; a lem&le magi·
clen'I allemc>I lo catch a
bUlllt In hit mouth. 9 YOU A8KID flOfl fT
Featured· "Modern-Day
ThrM Mualclt-1" and
"A f r1can 1100000 Caremo.
Cb'~
*'**'It "Bananu" (11171)
Woody Allen, LouiH
l-A product 1 .. ter.
bOfed with 1119 everyday
routine. goes to a amall
Lahn Amerocan country
and blcomll • doctator
during a poltlicaJ U~Yef ·Pd·
(Z)MOlllE ** "Patrick" (1978)
SuHn P8"fleligon, Robert
Helpmann Though In a
0"9 com•. • young """
la 11111 able to ...., r-.
tor wrongdoings by
unlealhlng Illa .,_tu!
paychoklnellc powers
'PG'
8:008 MR.~
A Ila loNI her ablllty IQ
"pop" and with It 1J01S the
power '"•' kaeps hit !torn permanently tiding away
O IBum.EHOUIEOH
THEPMINE
Cflerlla ..._ 1111 '""' 10
blcOml • caN8' of line
lurnltura. O 8 MOYIE * * '.+ "Ride Thi High
Country" 111162) Randolph
Scott. Joel McCrea. A pair
of CSOWfl..and-oul gunmen
are hired to guwel • INp-
ment ot gold.
8 0 TH.AT'a
~
Featured: an ~
t>oomerang ,...., member.
• man wtlo tries to •-•
104-ton lrtln with "I•
IMlh a C.Ql•w
~
"Pac 10" Oregon Stele vs
Washington
.. P.M. MAGAZINE
Jlme" ( 1949) Jolln Wayne,
John Agar. T~ tough
trelnlng thet a U.S. Ma<lne -oeen• """" 1111 rlbllll-OUI rlCNlll retlMll In the
eaotur• Of lwo JllM.
eMEAT
PIJVIOMIANCU
"8rld11head Aavl1l11d:
Home And Abro ad"
S.baatlan lakM ClletllN to
visit hi• lailllr lleurencl
Ollvtlf) In \lenlca wlllr• hi
!iv. with. hi• ,.,.,,....
(Part 2)Q
()) ~ARAMa
(I) IHOWTIMa LOOKI
AT1•1
Thi ,_. at0<1M, people
and evenll ol 198 t ...
IHtured In 11111 yeer-.nd · r...,.. GMOYE
• • • • "Kramer 111.
Kramer" ( 1979) Ouatln
Hoffman, Meryl Streep, A
man belllM ""th hie ••·
wife for custody Of llllir
young aon afler atMt walk a
OUI on them. 'PG' a:ao 8 (I) PNVATE
llHJAMIH
Captain lewis It promoted
to Inspector 0-11 and
~ ant1clpat• -having lo dHI with Judy r AU .. THE FAMILY
Miiie INl'1 decide If hi
wants to be In the welting
room or Ille delivery room
during '"' birth of ....
beby.
• 8PH8TBN/
~
(Premier•) Leonerd Blm·
stein and the lllenna Phil-
harmonic perform 8eetho-
Y8'1' 1 "Egmont °""1ur•."
Opua 84 and Iha "Sym·
phony No. 1 In C Ma)or," °""' a1. ~MOYIE * * 'h "Liiiie Oer11f\o•"
( 1980) Tatum O'NMI. Kris-
ty Mc:Nichol Al aummer
camp, two ·~· gll1e compete IO -WhO wtll be
the lln1 10 loM "" WOlnl-ty. 'R'
t:008()) ... ,. ••• "
Wllln • major ern-ll'om
~· . .-.~ Iha! meml>lf1 o1 Ille .onttt .. bl tr....,.,...
CR)
8GIMCMI
••~ ''When A Stranoer
Calle" C 1919) Cllert"
Durning. Tony Bec*ley. A
Loa Ange1M polloemetl lol-
lowa Ille lrlll of a homldd-
al 9'C8Clld mental petlent. e O THIM 8 CAN
MUllCAWAl!Oa
Fwi--di In"" ....
ol P09 I rOCk , 80UI and
country~ wll bl~
.. nted In thla annual _.,da ceremony. to bl
telecast from the Shrine
Audllortum In Holly.wood.
I MERV OIW'FIN
llEANSTIJN/
IEETHOYf.N
Ille --· ol o.uguin, Moiwt. Ceunnt. ,,. ......
MdPic-.(RI
(8)MOW
• • • "Coat Miner'•
Deughttf" ( 1980) Slaay
Spa cek, Tommy l••
.ion., 8aMd on Loretta
Lynn' a au1otliognClhy. A
young g1r1 lfom • poor
'"""" In rurll Kentuelly mMTIM a mud! older Ioctl
boy who .,._. her rlM
to ''"dOm In I~ music lndualry. ·po·
10:00 8 (I) LOU GMHT
An MCl'Y mother delfN
"" IOf'I ... dameged by
MWIPll'* -· of 8 • Mnl8IJonll holtege caM. .........
"'°""8 ..
(J.fmlCANN/ff
(P--1) Hoel Alexender
Scourby lnlr~ the
wortc and pllllotophy of '"' 1even contemporery
Amerlcen ertllla who will
be proll*l In future lflOwl. •
.MOVIE • *. "The Hunter'' (1979)
St-~. Ell W•
lach. Rafptl "PllCHI" _Thor·
IOf'I leeda • d~~ 1119
... modtfn-day bounty
hunter. 'R' 10:30. INDIPBID8fT
NITWONC NIWI
• MWa•tGYOtM
WON.D
Martin Agronalty eiq>IC>r•
"" Impact of the 1-.00-
munlcetione revolution.
• "'°""8 IN
,.....CllNN/ff
!Premiere) Hoel Alexender
Scoutby lnlroducel Ille
worfl Md phPloeoptly "' '"' 11ven contempor"'I
Alnettc.n artlata who ..
bl proflled In M\n ahowa.
~MOYIE * * * * "TM EleC>hant Man" I 1980) John Hurt,
Anlhony Ho9'1lne. A dedl·
clle d phyalctan """
under hit wing • horribly
deformed """ wtl09I llte
till """ tied bllfl ..,.,., In
dlMP ,,... •llllibltions.
'PO' •
10'.AI CZ) MOVIE
• •~ "Silent Scream"
( 1MO) A1b1cce Beldlng,
Yvonne O.C.lo. 9-tl
coll-e• atudent• take
,_ In • loleOodliig Gld
--..... • .WV ... ... uneohildl'IUder-
commltted )IW9 .....
'R' 1,. ••• ())08 ....
• IAl'UflDAY NIGHT
Holt: DMl Arnu. ~!
DMI fttrnu .k.
• Ko.we
A pttwete ~ trlM to
IUm • CllMt'• IUlcidl ·11110
a ahor1 !rip to 1MY atr-
lor lllrnMlf Md .. wife. 8 THmJUISOCMI
George ca1ch11 dlaco ·-· .IAHfON>ANOION
Lemont 11 ottered • or.no
Plane> by • wealthy eccen-
tric 11 hi wltt move tt out ot
···~ .............. .. I ttlO) lidward Wooctwerd.
Jee* T~. Auetrall·
-conactlpted to tight on England'• aide In the Iott
War decide 10 flOlll Ille
Iott guerillu on their own ·-· 11:ao. ()) QWCY
~ and Sem in-11-
""' wMn • dOllft ~ ~ Ill In • tmalf
r~ community. (RI GGITOMICIHT ~I hoal: Joen RI_.,
Guetta< Rlctl llllll, Angil
Dlclclneon.
8 9 MCHNI
NIGHTUNI 8THEOOO~
8obb'f Aigga ~ o.c.
In ~ and maneget
to wio ~hlng. lnelud·
""' Ille tPerl"""' llMI. •LOVE.~ l'TYLE ~T:
COt«M IHOW.
MPOftT -~MC NIW8
11:11 (R) ITAHDING M>OM
ONLY
··An Ewnlng Al The Moulin
Rouge" 0-ge Hemlllon
hoata M exciting -Wno
lrom the Moulin Rouge In
Perie l..eurlng tevlall cc.
~. pr_.tille danc·
.,.. Md loe>n<>lch lntetne-
llonel variety ect1.
11:GO. aHA NA NA
GUMI: Bobby Rydell. eO MCMI ·~ .. ~ .. (1•771 Mar-
lo .,,__, a-. °'~
din. A hi tpltlted _,..
ettMlpl to cope ....,. mo6-
.,,. ut*-' nWrtege. (R) .MCMI
• •~ "The Amulng
Apel" (1977) ~ ..
ry. Llllle-known 11011
abOUI the '1ruggll lor llK·
vlv81 of men't dolMI r .... l'-.,. ,_.., In tllla
atlldy ol varloue ~ of
llPll •ound ""wortd. • WCE DOI IGI M
au..tS: Ben v-. Pie
Zadora. Fllittl Bfown, Jw,
Johnlon, Tlld a-.
• LOW," I UC>M em.
• M08TIWMT
9'ocll ntuelc'a relt'llflg
,,.... -¥llNll .... In IM~taipedllWIM
... FoNfll .. Loe Anfllet,
~_,, ........
.......... cutl "°"' -o11111~.
11: 11 {%) MCMI
• • ''Thi fWum Of Tiie s.c.-8-1" (1M0)
Marte Arnott Gordon
~ Tiie ,,.,..,. "' •
orowc> °' °*"' ltudlnf•
active In ... ~ --
-· dwli'IO 1"9 'IOI gatfllf for • ..-.net
reunion. 'A'
1l:IO Gal TOMOMOW
au.ts: Battlar• Weltera.
Meat Loaf, JICqUlllne ~
ut.jR)
• GENE AAJTflrf
..... w
.mWON<NIWI
11:M <ID MOVll • * "Night Of The Juo•
""'" ( 1980) J-Brolin, Cltfl Oonnen. A lotJNW
police offlctt teunc:het •
dleper ... -di Uwough
"'8 ....... of New Y0<k
City '°' hie mlMlng deugfl-ter. mlltellenly tddrMIC>Ped
by I peydloplthlc Cflml-
1181. 'R'
11:40. ()) M,.'ll'tCll(
Benecell ln-ligel• Ille
~-of 123 mil·
llon worth of French
lmp(8Mlonlatlc peinllnga.
(RI
1:00•..,.
"Waatern Jamboree"
(1938)
·=OUT ••• "Women Of SJrtw"
( 1_..) GIN L.ollobrlglde,
seM Cotinery. A ~
man~ to pin-.
lrol of hie unde'. Ion--
"""" Ille help of • bellullM -· (C)lllCWW * * • 1.+ "'-"' Tango In Perla" !1973) Merion BrM·
do. Marla Schnelder.
Directed by Blrnerdo Ber·
toklcc:I. ,,,. mlddle-eged
man wlloM unfllilhf\.11 wife
,_Illy committed aulclde
and M ~ )'Ol#'O
-meet and begin I compllcalld ell air
throughout which they
'9lTleln Nlfl'lelMI 10 Nd\
other.·~
Cl)MOW I
• "The Children" (11180)
Martin Sheller, 011 AogerL
A "''"GI radlOICllff
cloud '"'"' • group ol lldloo6c:tlildi en Into mur •
--lomblet with bladl tlngemella. 'R'
1:JO. • OtD1.: IAT THI llAT
' Deborah H.,.ry and Ille
rnemb« • of 8londle per.
torm 1111 10f9 from their
llbum "e.I To The S..t"
• In this video pr-tetlon.
HO 8 INTIJWf,....,.,.
TOtmHT
An In..,._ wltfl "Air·
pmne" Mar Rober1 Haya.
!= * * "MIMn And Howard" (1MO> hM LMMt, "-
....... An OlhlrwiM
unknown OH 1tatlon
~ delnll .., be lh8
ftgllltul ""' to .._d H.,...... bl!Uon dollar
...... 'R' 1:•1 .... l:tl ..... 1:11 ..,.
• • "llt'l)roper Channell"
(1911) Alen Artcln, ..........
~· A "'*Of mleun-
dlnllll'dintl ceu.. •
IOdel WOttter lo belllYI ''* the $.)lilt~ d.ugh-• ., of • aeperated coupta
ia 1111 vtctllfl of ctlld abuae.
'PG'
2:t08 NIWI Cl) IHOWnu. LOOKS
AT 1tlO
A utirlc look la tlllen JI
a.(l)MCMI
• • "a.meDy And ......
(11n) Sid CMMr, Jullel
Miiie. A cute, cuddly koele
.,_ "nwr .... " the tlOIY
o11n Auetrlllen ftmlly. ·o·
lctl (%) AWAl!Oa TMIA Tlfl
•:GO (8) MCMI
• • ~ "81ck Road•"
(1911) S.ity f'leld, Tommy
L• .ion._ A hOOlllt and a
down-on·hl .. luctl bo•tf
,,_. end l'IUd _, to llnd
lh8 cflild .... g8W UC> '°' adoption two yeer1 _,..,.
'R'
• OOtiMJNfTY
l'ROClllAl•MO
•: .. CC) MOYIE ** ''Aoed 0-"(1981)
Stecy KMCl'I, J.,.,,.. LM
Curl&
Ttwsda•'• •... ·-~ "'·"·~· e:oooo ••• "9 To 6" (IMO)
.i-FonOe, Dolly Parton
Thr .. worlllftO -
,..,.. llQAlrl8C "*' tubJu·
gallon by a mell cheuvlnltt
bou.'PG' (() * • 1.+ "Any Number
Can Ptey" 1111491 Cletk
Gable, Alexia Smith An
llonMt and cerlfr" gem·
bier'• .... la bMet with •
--Of traged!M. e:ao ••• ''Pliper Tiger"
( 1976) D•Yld Niven.
Totlllro "'"'-· ~ tutor
of the kidnac>Ped eon of •
· Japan111 ambanador cau-politlcel terrorlam
wtien hi act• out many
..... of heroism '"'' had ~Nlly lmp(eued IM boy
.. .JO ...... "Hold Thal Uni"
( 19621 8-y Boyt. Leo
Goree., Thi Boys gel
lmlolved In crooked IPOf1 •
~l>llng.
(CJ * * 1-i> "Thi Cll And
T~ C-.," ( 19311) Bob
Hoe>e. Paulllle Oocklerd
In order to colltct their
inlllr•lance. • ltmlly must
lplfWI '"'nigh! In• haunt·
ed~
10:00 • ''Blood 8errler''
( UNIO) Telly Se ..... Eddte
Alblt1. A border petrolmaro
trlet to l>fiflg lllndownel's wno trafflc In Illegal alien
worll.,. lo juetlce •
(J) **'h "Falto" (19801
Dom DelulM, Atw. Ban·
croft. A portly ~
.. • ., !Inda ttlal nothing
CM detnpen hie deelre lor
food -·~ ~ , .... In love ·PO' 10:10. • • * "Thi Hunltf"
11970) St-~. Ell
Wallech. Relpfl "Papa"
Thorlon lleOa ·, danoer·
OU1 life llS a modern.dey
bounty hunter 'R' .
11:00~··~·(19591
ONvte e11 Havllland. on
Bogetoe. A man .11....,,1a
to prove hi 1181 been
libeled but ruina hil CUI
when he has trouble
remembering details
11:30 CJ{)** 'II "Zulu Dawn"
( 11180) Burl LancHllr
(%) •• "I(...,_.,. ..
(IMO) T .. wyl Ntlkadll,
Tlutomu Y1m11alll. A
looll-11111• tlllef .... -
and cerrlM out the reepon.
lltNllllM of • J...-
-'O<d wllO ... --pectedty tcllled to prOVlde ... lieu!-•· with "'°'' time 10 enact their
~.'PO'
1l:IO. * * * * "Kr-\It,
Kramet" ( 1979) Ou.ttln
Hoffman. Mli'yl Streec>. A
men battlll with hi• ••-
_.,. lor CUllody of !heir
young IOf'I •fl• an. ....
out on them 'PG'
1:00 CC> • "l(tondlll• ,_ ..
j 19801 Jeff Eaat. Rod
&.lger. Tiie ~ J8dc
London ..,. out to ...i.
Ilia fortune during lh8 Gold
RI*!. 'PG'
CJ) * * ~ "Any Numb«
Can Play" ( UMll) Clertl
Gabie. All .. Jt Smith. An
,_, and eeflfr" gem-
bier'• Ille la blMI with e
-*of tr~
t:ao 00 •• * • "Bedlec''
11"4) Ricnard Button.
Pltlf O'T ooll. t<lng Henty
" of England Cl ..... with
the Archblehop of Cainllf·
t>uty during the 12111 c.n-
tury. II * • "Young And Fr•"
Eric Lateon, I.A Stein~
When tr~ tore. •
)'OUnQ boy IO join a wegon
Waln In llle N9Q9d ..... lie
,.,,..., • young lndl.tn girl
and blglr'8 e MW We. 'PG'
1:46 Cl) •• "Melvin And How·
ard" ( 1N0) Peul LeMal,
J8lon RobWdl. An Other·
wlM unknown gaa atatlon
attand.nl Claim• to bl the
nglltfUI hllt lo Howard
Hug1111· bllllon dollar
•late.'R' j
S:OO 8 * * ~ "The Mating
5-'l" 1tts11 Gener..,.
ney, John Luno A woman
~ Into her eon'• llOme
1n t~ guiM ol • ""''"' 10
concNI her Identity from
her aociely daogflflt·ln-
law.
l:aG Cl) * * "Barnaby Ano
...... (11177) Sid c-.
JuMt Mills A cute. cuddly
koala bear 'nafrtlel" Ille
story Of an Auatr allan ,...,,_
.., 'G' •:oo CC) * • "Superdotnl"
(19781 David JanHen,
Donna Mills. A lanallc will
acop " nothing 10 keec> •
football t~ from winning
lhe Super BOWi • * * "Legend Of~ S.. Wolf" ( 1975) ChlO
Connor•. Batt>wa 8.cll
8Mld on • llory by JllCll
London A writtf la kid·
napped by 1111 CllW ol •
Mal hunting ahlp and
made '"" m11e by thl
sflip 'I fiery-tempered cap.
tlln 'PG'
4=*» (%) * • • "Autumn Sona-
ta" ( 1978) Liv Ullmann, •nor1c:t eeromen. A pt"os-
pe<ous concen p1an111 os
reun11ed with her
es1r1nge<1 oaug111er ano •
re,,..,lng end deepliy emo-
11on al ballte baglns
t11twetf, them 'PG'
0 CE.lE8RITY
8UU.SEY£
A P11t1burgh man' a ~ed·
11>11 IPOf1• memorabilia
coll~loon: • hou-1•
who helped publlcill Ille
dangers ol OES: Und1
Harris surl• In Hawaii: Chef
Tell on cuntng beef coats
9) MOVIE • * * "Sands 0 1 lwo !Premiere) Leonard Bern-
etein and IN \lienN f'M...
harmonic perform 8"1no-
van·1 "Eomont Overture."
Opus 84 and 1111 "Sym·
phony No. 1 In C Ma)or,"
"" llp8tlment I l**CAYETT
MGltfwmt
GOOOeft
JOHN DARLING_
·CHANNEL LISTINGS
9 KNXT ICBSI
8 KNBC (N8CI
9 KTLA !Ind.I
e KABC lABCI
D KFM8 ICBSI
1J KHJ·TV (Ind.) e KCST (A8CI
• KTTV (Ind.)
• KCOP·TV !Ind.I
e KCET IPBSI
e KOCE IPBSJ
(OJ On-TV m Z·TV
1fl.J HBO
'C CCi~mul
(fJ IWORI NY., N.Y.
fl) IWTBSI
t i IESPNI
$; IShowtime)
0 Spolllghl
• (Cable News Network I
~~ * * ~ "Thi Friaco t<ld"
( 11179) Gene Wilder, Harf'l.-
aon Ford. A POIWI rabbi
llnda hlmNff ln"°""9d In
wtld frontier mlMdven-
tur• with • detlng benll
robber when he lr•vela 10
San FrancltcO 10 1111• -
a rww congregation. 'PG'
(8) H80 8NEM<
PMYEW:PaflUA.RY
A ,_ hoal lnlroduoee Ille
"Chengee" Fecld wll" • .,_,.,, a family Hperi-
ltlCM the grief Of Mpar•
tlon trom lrlenoa and
f atlllllar lurf oundlngl.
(C)MOYll • * ~ ''Thi Night Poner"
( 19741 Olrll &ogeroe. Cher.
lone Remptlng. A b&.wTe
r~ .. ,......., .,.._ ' '°""" SS GM.
CM end 1 lormer-.
trallon camp prlaoner
when !hey meet by c:MltCI
In a hotel e1ter the-. 'R'
(l)MOYll
Brideshead'~is remarkable series-
tory on PBS unfolds slowly and gracefully; is faithful to Evelyn Waugh
yTO•JORY
,._ ..... Pr91 W'"9r
NEW YORK -'' Brideshead
evisited" on public TV is, quite
imply, one of the most remarkable
daptations fro'bl literature ever
produced for television. The ll·part
series continues al 7: 30 tonithl on
KOCE (50) .and at 8 on KCET (28) after
a two-hour premiere episode a week
a10. ~ The -story unfolds slowly and
racefully. as faithful to Evelyn
augb's novel, published In America in
ember 19'5, aa teJevi1ion probably can be.
Tbere is a careful attenlioa to aettlns,
to mood, that la only partially realised
by the rader. At. one point ln Ep68ode
Two, Cbwles Ryder and bis friend
Lord SebasUan Flyte, are followed tbrouclr the llreetl and CHU ol Veake
for nearty five minutes. Not a word Is
1pokm.
Tbe caat la out1tandln1. notably
eremy Jrons ( • 'Tbe Freacb
Lieutenant's Woman"> as Charles, and
ADU.., Andrews ("Danser UXB, .....
upcomla1 "haaboe" on CBS) u
SebalUm. 8'r Laurenee OUvltr mu•
bis llnt appearance cm Sllilode Two u
8ebutlan'1 father, Lord MarebmalD,
ud Slr JobD GelllUd returm toward tbe
end ol U.. boar as Chara.• fatber, Sd••=· ... ..... ~·· opw la Uae
1prl•1 of 19'4 wltb c•arlH 1
disillusioned captain in the Brltlab
'army. His company is moved durtnc
the night to an unknown destination.
Thi new camp, Charles learns the next
morniq, is Bridesbead CuUe -and
that sUn memories of bis lint meetln1
with Sebastian, at Oxford, ln 11122. Much
of tbe remainder of the novel ia in
Chari•' memory.
Charles drives to Brldesbead with
Sebastian one afternoon, but t•e
nobleman's son cuefuUy a'YOldl aD1
contact with bis family, espeelally bll
sister Julia (Diana Quick). Then, one
afternoon during' a break In Ult ICbool
year, Qiarlea rec:eivea a telelf8!D from
BrideabUd: "GravelJ lnJureil. Come at
once. Sebaltian."
Epilode Two be1lnl wltb CUrles la
bia ftnt extended visit to Brtdelbe..t
Cut.le. &ebuUaa bu broil• a 1mall
boat ln his foot, bul ii CClftftMd to I
wbHldlalr for a lbODtb.
•• 1 believed my1tlf verj near to
heaven durtq thole laquld daya at
Brlcleabead," CbarlH 1111 ratber
omlDOUllJ u t:pllode Two....-. "It ii
thus I lllEe to remember Sebutiaa, u be .............. .
Bat 18'1 a ba:r= e for .. Pl'•• Cbar•. ID palater worb •
tbe flnt Ume wl olll, in a room
attached to tbe e .. u.. Tbt twe fNDcll
learn about wine, ud f« Clauiel, &MN
ii HpolUN for &lae ftnt time to a aubJecttM& wW ..._..a ..... ..._.
la ''Brldeabeacr RNl1lled" -
'It
Sebutian'a rellcton.
"rt's ao d.iffl~ult belq a Catholic,"
Sebaatian teUa lUI companion one luy
altemooo. "Who was it uaed to pr•7,· 'Ob, God, make me 1ood, but not yet'! '
•'I auppoee tbey make you bellen all
sorta ol nomeme, •• Chari• MJI.
"I• lt nomeme!" Seba...ttan ub, DOt upecUna u answer. SebMtlaa, ..,.
able to walk, lnvUea Cbarlel to Veaice,
to apend • fortnlcbt wltb bil f•tber, wbo
i1 livlnl tben la self-exile wltb bll
mist.nu, Cwa (Stephane Audran).
•'I had been fWI ol curiollty to meet
Lord Marcbmaln," Charles aay1.
"Wb• I did IO, I WU ltnlcli bJ bll
D011Dality, wblcb, u I aaw mqr. ol blm,
J loand more to be 1tudled .. .''
Tbe Yacatlon 1oon 11 over. ''TIM
fortnlpt ln Vealee p....S ... ctlJ Md
1weetly -ptrb1p1 too 1wMtlJ,"
Char• rememben. "J wu clrowDlnl ta lloDey .'.
But u tbeJ an about to ... "· Cara
· warn• Cbarl• or lb• MarebmaiDI: •'They art full of bate -llate of
th••••IHa ... ADcl, .... caatlOH, •·a..•I• clrlab too much.''
''ftat frlmd JOU wen IO ........
aboat," aaut.• fatber llb • lala
return to •--· "clicl be die?" a.art. .... ., .. umplr Uaat Ille W ..-~
of &111• 1um••r la Veale• wit' le,.., ..
h•aaa.uuHntd..._ •• ,., Ill
snee.
FCC head queatioru acce•• rule
By JEUY BUCK stations. It was approved by tbe FCC
ah.....,... over the oppositiOll of then chairman LOS ANGELF..S -Mark S. Fowler, Dean Burcb. ' •
c b a i r m a Ii o f t b e Fe d e r a I The rule was intended to encourqe
Communications Commisaioo, said local staUoos to produce community
recently be questiooa the value of the 0 r i e n l ~ pro gr a m s and t be
10.year-old prime time access rule. production of shows outside of tbe
''I believe that the rule may well control of the networks. It did not
distort lbe marketplace for achieve lta intentions, bowever, and
proerammlnc,' • be said. ''It produced largely a proliferation of
pre-empts the jud1ment of tbe iame allow1 and otber cut-rate
marketplace particlpanll, ln WI proirum. ·
cue tbe aetwons, tbe produetioe If tbe rule la appu.led lt proaaably
commUDltJ Md tbe afl'Wawa." will baYe little lmmedla&e effect cm SaJtac be wtMm "tlM wlldom ol the pracrammlftl aclledua. ol A.BC, tbl1 rule ~. 1topped abort, NBC aad CBS. Tbe net~ aftlllates
boweftf, Oi achocatlnl lll repeal. can be expected to vt1oroualJ oppoee
Fowler, UPOlated cbalrmaa lut reatoradoD o1 tbe half bour to tbe
year bJ PreNdeat Rea1u.·told tbe networks, Juat u they now oppose Academy of Televl1lon Arta ud expaDllon o1 tbe network .... ......,.
Scleneea that be tboulJat lt WU UIDe to a full hour,
tM FCC ablt ...... Iii '1nllt-Mp n. ...... ball bour o1 Ume lilM
concept" ...S . I•" broadcutea proHd t•=wety ,.... .... '° ..
freedom to IUCeeed or fall • tWr affiliate llatlw, ud It bl alllO
".:• Mid tUt wbl1e be did DGt t.blM aided tbe fort•• al tM ........ ..,
the prime time nle waa oa 1 belplq _to clrtve up tbe prtee o1
colUaloa eourae wltb Uae Flrat H•ertillltl beeaUH ol tM leU'ekr of
Ameaclment, "It 11 a ral• U.at mlau&ll lt er.aa.d.
....... malbtplaee ....,. "°"*' ......... ol 1111 ...... oa 1 .....,marlltill 'Wl'Glll WQ.'" to o•tll•l•I lalt plallo..,ear ..,
''T•e Pl'l•e U•• H .. 11 Nie .......... .._._. .. 9'1_~ r.n.ta tM .... of ptr'• tM meaU II little ~ .......... 1-98 ............. w .-. If .. po11lllle. TIM .,_. lai!'l ...... 11 .. lll••t u.ar , ....... ..at......... ......... ....... ,..,. --af= ... '=:r::,;r~ p=='9M-.. ·°"·m . .. ............. .. •• ., I ff r ...... h ~··511•1 .... .. .... .., .... SH c e ........ la ... • I& te ......., lflQIJt• rtt."
•.
PONTIAC, Mich. <AP) -It was a victory born In
the fertile football mind of Coach Bill Walsh, carried
out with cool efficiency by quarterback Joe Montana
and saved by a determined offense.
The San Francisco 49ers are champions of the
National Footabll League, 26-21 wlMen over the
CinciMati Bengals In Super Bowl XVI.
Yes, the San Francisco49ers, thatsamesadsack
franchise that limped through consecutive 2-14
seasons just a couple of years ago, now rule the roost,
hoisted to the top olthe mountain by a creative coach
and his talented quarterback.
"The difference is simple," said 49er flanker
Freddie Solomon. "Bill Walsh. Every week, he
keeps comingupwithsome moreX'sandO's."
The San Francisco playbook <Is chock full or
11111 Pilat .
MOt+OAY, Jen. 25, 1912
STOCKS
CLASSIFIED
C6
C7
options for Montana. Most teams have 20 or 25 pass
plays in their arsenal. "Bill's offense has 60 or 70,"
m a rvelled Montana. "BiJI Is way ahead of everyone
in making game plans. One game last year, we had
over 100 passing plays. And there's a formation for
every play."
t e
UCI baseball team
hoping to shore up
pitching staff. C4 .
Silverdonie
Ah, last year. The 49ers remember it well. They
were 6-10 also-rans then and glumly watched their
Bay Area neighbors, the Oakland Raiders, win the
Super Bowl.
game's most valuable player. "He is one of the
coolest competitors of all time and he has juat
sta rted. He'll be even better In the future."
That would be hard to Imagine for the Ben1al1,
who saw Montana complete 14 of 22 puses for 1~7
yards and play the Super Bowl as lf it were just
another day attheoffice.
'·We couldn't think of the Super Bowl after that,'·
Montana said . '·We had to concentrate on improving
our record. We had three rookies starting in the
defensive backfield a nd P'e starting for the frirst
time."
That is Walsh'sslyle. Hewasn'tafraid to tum his
secondary over to those raw rookies, Ronnie Lott.
Eric Wright and Carlton Williamson, and he
certainly wasn't concerned about giving the football
to Montana
All Montana's magic though .. rpi1ht have been
wasted but for the defense that refused to bend even a
yard late in the third period. Threetimeathe Ben1ats
tried to score from the l·yard line. Three times -
twice with just 10 players on the field because of a
mix up caused by the noise and confusion -the 49ers
stopped them.
"J oe will be the great quarterback of the
future," said Walsh uftcr Montana was named the
The problems started early for the Bengals.
(See 49ERS, Page C3>
Bengals admit
pressure hurt
Inability to. capitalize early a key
P ONTIAC, Mich. <AP ) -
Forrest Gregg's pa ins taking
preparations failed to keep his
C in c inna ti B e n ga ls fro m
suffering a severe case of nerves
in their first Super Bowl.
G r'egg, who faced Super Bowl
p r essure t hree ti mes as a
player, attempted to tailor the
routine to make the Bengals feel
a l ease durin g w eek -l on g
buildup for Sunday's meeting
with the San F rancisco 49ers in
the National Football League
c h a mpions hip ga m e at the
Pontiac Silverdome.
Just minutes into the game, he
realized il hadn't worked. The
Bengals failed to cash in when
the 49ers fumbled the opening
kickoff.
"THEY WERE a fr a id or
ma king mistakes," Gregg said
a fter his club fell to the 49ers
26·21. .. Those guys wer e not
light all week long, not at all.
· · 1 think th al maybe when we
got that first opportunity a nd
didn 'l c~pitali ze on it, they
thought loo much about what
could have been."
The Hengals came up empty
a fter the fumble recovery on the
o p eni n g k i c k o ff wh e n
quarterback Ken Anderson was
intercepted on the S·yard line.
But tight end Dan Ross said he
had the jitters before that.
"I think it was the first time
tha t anybody in this lockerroom
had been in the Super Bowt:·
s aid Ross, who caught a record
11 passes. · ·1 think we were kind
of awestruck.
didn 'l. They didn't let it get to
them ."
GREGG TRIED to keep his
cl ub relaxed during the hectic
days leadjng up to Super Bowl
XVI by holding off on curfew
u n ti l We d nes d ay night ,
s heitering the _players from 'the
media on arrival , and letting
them spend the night before the
game with their wives. -
Ross said the coach also tried
to calm his players down at
halftime after they had fallen
behind 20-0.
"He told us, 'You're playing
nervous, you're playing scared.
Just go out and pj.ay your type of
football,'' Ross said.
With Ander son le ading the
way. the Bengals cut the defi cit
to 20-14 in the fourth quarter.
But they got no closer.
A nde rs on attributed the
Bengals' slow fi rst hair more to
m 1s lak es tha n nerves. The
Bengals also lost two rumbles.
"I DON 'T. THINK we were
lig ht in the firs t half. no,"
Anderson said. ··we just made
mistakes. You can't play in the
Super Bowl and have that many
turnovers and expect lo win."
BENGAL SANDWICH San f'rand sco tight end CharlC'
Young is fli pped over b~· Cincinnati 's J im LeClair css i
and Bo Harri s Sunday after making first -quarter
..... r.-s
reception from Joe ~1ontana The 49er~ ht•ld on to win
Super Bowl XVI. 26·21. cles p1 tt• a st•<·ond·half c:omt•ha<'k
t•ffor t b~· l he• Bcnga Is
• · 1 walked onto the fi eld and it
hit me where we were -in the
..>Uper Bowl. The big difference
is that Oaey played loose and we
G r egg, a Hall of Fame
offensi ve lineman who played on
two winning Super Bowl clubs
with the Green Hay Packers
a nd on e w i th the Dallas
Cowboys, had said he wouldn't
be satisfied ir the Bengals lost.
Alltloug h he was sm iling in
post.game interviews, he said be
hadn't changed his opinion.
· · I ' m n o l h a p p y . I·' m
diasppointed," Gregg said. "But
we d1dn-'l quit.
He's just your average Joe
That's Mon_tana, this year's Super Bowl MVP
PONTIAC, Mi ch. <AP> -The nicknames
poured in for J oe Montana last year, but none
seemed to fit the way they did once upon a time for
"Broadway Joe" Namath.
"Joe Cool," "Golden J oe," "Frisco Kid," "Sir
P ass," "Midas," "Beaut" and "Big Sky," his
persona! favorites were among the entries in a
contest to find a ha ndle for the kid from
Monongahela, P a., who grew up to become a star
at Notre Dame.
But does this one fit? "Most Valuable Player
of Supe.r Bowl XVI."
Namath was Montana's idol, but today they
can look each other in the eye. Namath won his
Supe r Howl and now Montana has won hls. The kid
need not take a back seat to anyone. .
HE'S A WINNER, this J oe. the Moses of the
San Francisco 49ers, the player who did the most
to guide the 49ers out or the National Football
League wilderness.
Heroes fulfill promises or at Jeast
expectations. Montana did just that against the
CincinnaU~engals.
He was the story during Super Bowl week,
adorning al least three national magazine covers,
the subject of almost consta nt attention.
Then, with an ease and confidence that almost
seemed routine, he provided the perfect finish to a
stunning one-year turnaround for the 49ers.
Consider what heroes and dreams are made
or. and then consider the accomplishment of this
Phillies sign pitcher
PHlLADELPHJA (AP) -Free·a1ent pitcher
Larry Christenson has re-al1ned with the
Philadelphia PhllUea after leqtb~ and sometimes
vitriolic comments by both aides.
Pbillles Gen~ral llana1er Paul Owens
confirmed Sunday that the 28·year-old
ri1bt·hander bu a1reec1 to a rour-year C!Ofttract -
three ,ears IUaf•nleed -for more thaa SI00,000
per teaaon.
The Phillies had planned to announce the
•ilDlnC Monday, but Cbrlatemon dlleloaed the
deal in an Interview with several telniaion
aportseasters S.turday nllbt while attendln1 a
baaketball 1ame.
24-year-old from a coal-mining town in western
Pennsylvania. · • ,
M iddJe-class family, high school star, No~re
Dame hero and, finaUy, a Super Bowl MVP
quarterbcack in his third year in the pros.
HE'S BLOND, articula te, patient. He seems to
thrive when the pressure Is the greatest.
When he was a junior at·Nolre Dame, he took
his college team to a national cha mpionship. When
he was a senior and the Irish were in the Cotton
Bowl, Montana brought them back from a 34·12
deficit in the fourth quarter to a 35.34 triumph.
The comebacks would become a ramiliar
COMMENTARY
pattern of doing business for the kid with the
sllng·shot arm.
His passing percentage of 63. 7 led the NFC and
the 49ers' 13-3 record proved that he could perform
quite nicely in the big time, with big stakes or
fame and fortune.
When he tossed that winning touchdown pass
to Dwight Clark in the National Conference
championship game against DaJlas two weeks ago,
you knew the guy had magic. Yet you had to
wonder if he could do it again. ·
So, he not only took his team to the Super
Bowl, bis team won it and he was named MVP.
WE SHOULD have known It would lurn out
this way. ·
He dJdn't bend during the hoopla called Super
Bowl week. He seemed almost to thrive on it.
The beadUnes fn the national ptess re ad:
"Montana lla1ic," and "The Wizard of San
Francisco." Yet, IHlldn't seem to rue him.
' No controversy surrounds th4s newly found
wonder. No bra1adocclo, no cockiness, but an elan
that's 1enulne. ~
He loves bones, and he has lhla ranch and thJa
wife and tJUs biatory called Notre Dame.
Just your avera1e Joe.
The 1enlua el the 41ers ii Coach Biii Walah.
The heart II the kid named Montana.
BAD START Things didn't look good tor
S an Francisco e arly as 49er Amos
I .a wrencc (center > loses a grip on the
opening kickoff . lea~lng to a Cincinnati
recovery. The Bengals were unable to take
adv'aritage or the early break, as* San
Francisco intercepted on the ensuin~
series or downs .
Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT/Monday, January 25, 1982
.---------------------------Todd'• attack coats him 11 ,500 Blazer1anap1treak In BOiton
PONTLAC l IUly &ay Bates 1corcd 16 of hla m • M ch. -New York • 1ea1on·hJ1h at polnt1 In the fourth Jet. quarterback Richard Todd has e • t quarter Sunday lo lead PortJand to a been fined a reported Sl,500 for an • altercation with a spom writer, a 123·ll9 victory over Roston In the lone National
1pok••man ror the Nat onal l''ootball Lea"'ue 8118ketball As1ociation game In Boston Boston -~•1--~..a • wu JcadJna 85·84 when Baatu m•cte a tHm Ol;'Vftf.,.....,.. Sunday· three·polnl play with 9: 40 left. Robert P1r11ll,
t'rank Ramos, public rel1tlon8 director, who led Boston with . ._ personul iscason hiih of 36
here for the Super Bowl, said Todd was lined by points. then sank two tree throws to Uc the sconi
NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle for Todd's nt 87, Buh~s followed that with a pair or fret>
_____ locker-room run-in w . ..,.i~th...___IM'owa.-to tlv~e.oruand lhc.Jead I.or good. l'tle
Pl~ett pre fe rs
playing to watching
SteVe Serby, wlio covers t e Trail 81aiers snapped I three-game losing
team for the New York PosL streak with the success.
From AP dJ1patcbes
PONTIAC. Mich. -Oakland EE
Raldtirs quarterbuck Jim Plunkett, 411 t
named Most Valuable Player In last
year's Super Bowl, says he was more
relaxed playing in that game than watching the
latest edition Sunday from the stands. ·
"What l don't like about sitting up here is I
get too nervous," Plunkett said Crom his
front-row seat in the press section before the
San Francisco 49ers powered
past the Cincinnati Bengals
26·21 in Super Bowl XVI. ''I'd
rather be playing, having the
fu~. experiencing the·
excitement."
Plunkett, covering this
year's game ror a te levision
network, predicted al the
kickoff that San Francisco
would win. "The difference
'LUNHn w i I I b e d e r e n s e a n d
turnovers. and I think San Francisco has the
better defense," the Oakland quarterback said.
. "I think Joe Montana has to be given a
shght advantage because he's having a great
year," Plunkett said of the 49ers quarterback.
By halftime, Plunkett was on target, with
the 49ers ahead 20·0. Plunkett explained: "The
49ers have had Cincinnati off balance all the
way .. Cincinnati will have to start playing better
defense if they're going to get back in the game
m the s~ond half."
Quote of the day
. Cl~mson Coach Daaay Ford, after
being mformed that his Tigers bad been
nJmed national champions in the final 1981
Associated Press football poll: "That's.
great. ~·m tickled to death for the players,
the assistant coaches and the university. Jt
really hasn't s unk in yet but it will. It's
like Satchel Paige said ... I keep looking
back afraid that someone will catch us.
But l guess they can't, can they?"
There was no indication
whether Todd would appeal
the fine.
The fight took place last
November after Serby
approached Todd In an effort
to patch up their strained
re lationship. Serby had been
Tooo critical of Todd's plav and
had written that TOdd ·<!id not deserve to beat
out Matt Robinson when the two quarterbacks
vied for first strtni with the Jets in 1979.
When Serby approached rum, Todd told him
to ·•get awuy from me." Serby and other
witnesses said at that Jfoint Todd grabbed him
about the neck and threw rum into a nearby
locker.
Serby, who suffered racial cuts In the
incident, filed criminal assault charges at the
time but a Nassau County district attorney
ruled after a police investigation that there was
no cause for prosecution.
Gretzky scoreless, but Oilers win
Glen.a Anderson scored once and ~ had three assists and J arl Karri '
connected for two goals to lead the
Edmonton Oi lers to a 7·4 National Hocke
League triumph over Colorado Sunday night.
The Oilers got goals from six different players
-none of them Wayne Gretaky, in scoring five
straight times in the second and third period.
Edmonton look over sole possession or the
overall NHL lead with 69 points . . Darren
~eltch's SO·.foot sl~pshot with 2:45 remaining
hrted Washington into a 4·4 deadlock with the
New York Rangers. Ed Job.nstoae's second goal
of the game had given the Rangers a 4.3 edge
after Washington had jumped in front, 3·1. The
lie extended the Capitals' winless streak to nine
games. including five losses and four
ties ... Rangers' right wing llon Du1aay is
suffering from a partial separation or the left
s houlder and is expected to be out or the lineup
for 10 days, the club announced. Duguay, who
has scored 27 goals and 47 points, was injured in
the second period of Saturday's game against
the New York Islanders.
Wadkins aces way
into Phoenix lead
He promises not to play it safe
PHOENIX , Ariz. <AP) -
Jerry Pate, in the hunt for the
title in the rain-delayed Phoenix
Open. recalled a court esy
extended by this event in his
early days on the pro golf tour.
"They gave m e an exemption
<from qualifying) my first year,
and 1 went on that year and won
the U.S. and Canadian opens.
When I came back they said I'd
made ·em look awful good.
"Then I won the tournament
that year and they said l 'd made
·em look like a genius ...
And it"s holding true again.
For reasons known only to the
s ponsors, a picture of Lanny
Wadkins -a non-winner for
almo.st three years -was
selected to grace the posters
that advertise this yea r 's
tournament.
And, g-0 1ng into tod-ay' s
rain-delayed final round ,
Wadkins was in the lead, four
strokes clear or the field.
• Country Club course and four in
front of Mo rris Hatalsky.
HATALSKY, WHO scored the
first victory or his s ix·year
career last season, birdied the
18th hole Sunday for a 68 that
left him at 202.
'"Lanny 's in a pretty
comfortable position." Hatalsky
said Sunday. ·'He won't relax
tomorrow. I'd like to have been
a little closer. We'll just have to
wait and see what happens ."
J ohn Cook, who had a 67. was
another stroke back at 203.
Larry Nel s on . the PGA
champion and leader through
the first two rounds, slipped to a
pa r 71 in the warm suns hine and
was six back at 204. Also at that
figure were Pate, Scott Simpson,
Jay Haas and Mike Reid.
Sim.pSOO-had a 63, Pate M, Haas
and Reid 66s.
H A PPY MAN l.annv Wadkin~ had a hig smile on
his fact.• Sunday and for j!oocl
n·ascm. after' shooting <.in
K u n d t• 1: · p a r 6 3 w h i t• h
1n t lucte ct il hol l' 1n -11 tH'
Wadktns took <1 four st rnkt•
h.·~td into to<la' ·~ fin;.il round
of lht.• Phot.•1\1x <>pt.•11 J.!Olf
t 11u rna mt•nt
Kings settle
for fifth tie
Gamecock women's team shrlnktng
Two more playe rs have dropped •
oft the nationally-ranked University
o r South Car o lina women 's
basketball squad, leaving but seven players on
the team , The Slate newspaper reported. The
~aper says that standout freshman Medina
Dixon and 6·6 sophomore PtaJUcla Allen have
left, bringing to four the number to leave the
squad since the resignation of former head
coach Pam Parsons earlier thi s
month ... Eu sebio Pedrou of Panama
overcame one.point penalties in two rounds and
scored a unanimous decision over J uan LaPorte
of New York to retain his World Boxing
A ssocia tion f eat herwe ig ht title
Sunday ... Pbll Mahre, the first American to
win the overall World Ski championship last
season, virtually clinched the title again Sunday
when he d e feated Swedish ace Ingemar
Stenmark in a special slalom race on the
Lauberhorn course ... Andrea J aeger, a local
favorite. and Pam Shrtver will be among those
trying to end Martina NavraUJova's three-year
reign in the Chicago Tennis Championships to
begin toflay. With Ch ris Evert Lloyd, the
world's top.ranked player, skipping this event.
and Tracy Austin and Hana Mandllkova
sidelrnea w tn back Injuries, Navrafilova-s-
toughest challengers appear to be Jaeger and
Shriver.
Television, radio
Following ;ire the top soorts event<> on TV
tonight, Ratings are: , " , . excellent; " • "
worth watcn1ng; • ., ta1r .• lorget 1t
[el 8 p.m .• Ch anne l 9 ./ ./ ./
COLLl;GE BASKETBALL: Washington a t
Oregon.
Announcers: Mike Walden and Pete Newell
Arter suffering lheir fir st Pac·10 setback of
the season against Oregon State Saturday the
Hus kies will try to st av in the conference' !Ille
chase The hosl Ducks, always tough a t home, are
3·3 in the Pac-10 and 8·7 overall Washington Is 6 1 and 13·3. RADIO No events scheduled
Montana just
passes his 'test '
PONTIAC, Mich (AP> -Quarterback Joe
Montana, the Most Valuable Player in Super Bowl
XVI, gave himsetr a passing grade, but not a high
one, for his performance in San Francisco's 26-21
victory over the Cincinnati Be.ngals Sunday.
Asked what he thought his mark should be
after completing 14 or 22 passes for 157 yards.
Montana grinned. "Oh, B·minus, maybe C." he
said.
Why that low?
"There were times I should have gotten out or
there on the blitz, times I could have done better."
Montana said he felt that the 49ers' Super
Bowl victory was vindication or a team which was
underrated all year.
.. People around the country still d1dn 't believe
in us ... he said. "even after we beat Dallas.
Pitts burgh, Cincinnati and the others.·· Montana
was asked if he ever thought that winning the
Super Bowl could be this easy
"Who said it was easy"'" he said.
The 49ers quarte rback said his team's poor
field position through much of the second hatr
dic tated a more conservative play selection than
San Francisco had used in building a 20·0 halftime
lead.
"We did exactly what rcoach> Bill Walsh told
us not to," he said ... At halrtime, we said we can't
get big penalties and let the momentum switch.
But the first four plays, there we re three pe nalties
1n the st.-cond half.
CBS gets
•• act going
After suffering slow start
By LARR:V SIDDONS A•S.-.t1W .... Y
CBS, llke the ClncinnaU Bengals. had 1 rotten
~tu rt Sunday before regrouping for a very
rcspectuble showing In Super Bowl X Vt.
The network probably came out of the 1ame
better than the Bengals, who 'Jost the National
Football l,eague championship game to the San
Fr ancisco49ers , 26·21 .
Each, however. will have things to mull over ln
the off season
Armed with 23 cam eras, 100 m icrophones, 14
videotape machines. four graphics generators •(ld
the innovative "Chalkboard," producer Teri\Y
O'Neil and director Sandy Grossman generally
presented the sighL'i, sounds and statistics of pro
football's biggest game in easily un~erstood fashion.
BUT THE PRI MARY problem for CBS came
rrom a most unexpected spot -the announcers'
booth, where veteran play-by-play man Pat
Sum mer all and c ritically acclaimed color
commentator John Madden worked.
Confusion seem ed to have overtaken the pair in
the early going, with each making mistakes on such
~OMMENTARY
basics as names and description of key plays. Many
itmong the 6timated 100 mitlion viewers across
America must have heen left wondering about what
they hadjustseen
On the 49ers' game-opening kickofl fumble,
Madden accompanied a replay by saying the baU
was knocked "from Armstrong's u ms ." Amos
Lawrence was the kick-returner, a fact reported
correctly on the original play by Summerall.
But the former NFL kicking star, working his
14th Super Bowl on radio or TV, soon made his own
~laring error. He told the nation Johnny Davis, a
reserve running back, scored the 49ers' first
touchdown. when in fact Joe Montana got the TD on a
quarte rback sneak, without so much as a fake. That
•call was quicklycorrected.
.... WBJtADONE or two misidentirications," said o· Neil. "Pat was blocked on Montana's touchdown,
and had Davis scoring. But we corrected it, and we
we nt on from there."
There also were two cases in the first period
whe re penalties were virtually ignored or
improperly reported by Summerall and Madden,
one for illegal procedure and the other for illegal use
()f hands. The second penalty was initially described
as pass interference by the aMouncers, and later
brought a brief and again -confusing attempt at
clarification from Madden.
While the Bengals continued to sputter through
the second quarter. the announcers slowly turned
things around.
Summerall. who a ppeared to be grasping for
things to say a s he went on about Bengal kicker Jim
Breech's size-5 shoes before the opening boot,
started to focus on each play, and Madden, wearing
the Super Bowl ring he won as coach of the 1977
Oakland Raiders. began providing insight on why
the best team in the NationaJ Conference was
beating the best team m the American Conference
so badly
"The turnovers are killing the Bengals."
Madden said. noting the 49ers had turned a pair of
fum bl.e recoveries and an interception Into two
, touchdowns and a fi eld goal
BVTHE SECOND half. as the Bengals' offense
came alive and put some s park into what could have
deteriorated into one of the dullest Super Bowls,
Summerall and Madden were rolling, with more
analysis and anticipation of play calls.
It was a lso the tame when O'Neil and Grossman
made their finest showing as the Bengals , trailing
20·7, drove to the San Francisco 1-yard line. The
49ers stopped the Bengals on three straight running
plays twoontackles by linebacker Jack Reynolds,
the third a TD-saving open.field tackle by linebacker
Dan Bunz.
O'Neil had said before the game he would keep a
c lose eye on Reynolds, and that attention paid off
with dra matic footage of the veteran linebacker
s topping250-pound Pete Johnson in his tracks. BUT T HE FOR MER PGA
cha mp wasn't yet counting an
end to the winless s tring that has
exte nded since the 1979
Tournament Players
Championship.
TOM KITE, the 1981 leading
money-winne r was 66·206.
British Open champ Bill Rogers
had 73-213 and David Graham,
the defending titleholder in this
tournament and the U.S. Open
champ, was 76·211.
Wadkins started the final
round two shots back but moved
in rront with ~ string of four
consecutive birdies -three or
them after irons shots left rum
putts of less than three feet -on
the front s ide. His ace, a 2·iron
s hot on the 231-yard, par·3 13th,
stretched out the lead and he
pulled away another stroke with
a chip of two fee t for an 18th hole
birdie.
VANCOUVER <AP>-Jim Fox
scored his second goal or the
game with 45 seconds left and the
Los Angeles goaltender pulled for
an extra attacker , giving the
K lngs a 5-5 t ie with the Vancouver
Canucks in a National Hockey
League game marred by a
bench-clearing brawl.
College basketball JOHNSO~ & SON
"l can't play it safe," Wadkins
sa id after he'd s cored a
hole-in-one on the way to a
spectacular, 8-under-par 63 in
Sunday's third round.
"This course has thrown up
four rounds or 63 already ltlis
wee k . I 've got to keep on
truckin'."
W adklns, who missed at least
a month of the 1981 season with
a hand injury, took a 198 total
into the final round. That's 15
strokes under par for three trips
over the 6,726-yard Phoenix
The tournament was thrown a
full day oft schedule when a
rainstorm interrupted
Thursday·s play.
Pincay captures feature
ARCADIA (AP> -Laflit
Pincay, with a little help from a
pair of four-legged fr iends,
enjoyed a very s uccessful
weekend al Santa Anita.
On Sunday, before a crowd of
25,497, Pincay rode Super
Moment to a two-length victory
in the $79,850 San Marcos
Handicap. A day earlier, with 1
crowd or 58,072 in attendance,
Pincay guided.To B. or Not to a
slim triumph in the $68,500
Sierra Madre Handicap.
Le Due de Bar, ridden by
Walter Guerra and carrying 111
pounds, was third by t hree
lengths and returned $2.60 to
show.
Little Bonny finished fourth
and Yvonand was fifth and last
in the event for 4·year-olds and
up that was origina lly scheduled
to be run lJn Santa Anita's UU1
course but> moved lo the main
track because of recent rains.
Woodland Lad was scratched.
Fox batted in a waist-high
rebound at 19: 15 for his 19th goal
of the season moments after Los
Angeles center Marcel DioMe
won a faceorr from Vancouver's
Thomas Gradin deep in Canuck
territory.
It was the fifth straight tie for
the Kings and left them winless in
15 games. including seven under
new Coach Don Perry.
Andre St. LaUTent, Marcel
Dionne and John Paul Kelly
scored the other Los Angeles
goals. The Kings are l·l0-9intheir
last20games.
Gradin scored twice for the
Canucks, with Kevin McCarthy.
Ivan H1inka and Gary Lupul
getting the other Vanc;,.ouver
markers. The Canucks now are
2· 13·6 in their lasl21 games.
A r e a teams travel
If you're interested in
watching any of the three area
com munily colle1e basketball
teams in action this week, check
the price of gasoJlne, because a ll
PCAA C•I. --W L l"ct, W L l"cl UC lrvlrw • 0 '000 u I .. F~uno SI 0 I 000 IS 1 .. S.11J-SI I 7SO • • tOO S.111• ll•ber• ) uo • 10 l7S Lono ll••d• SI. ) JSO s 10 ll3 Cel St•te Futlet1on ) uo I 11 01
PKlll< J JSO s 11 JI) UlehSI I J lSO l 13 ,.
P•cfflc-10 Conference CMf. -W L "cl, W L l"cl o ... oons1 7 0 I 000 14 t .llS Wat11l11Q1on I .,, 13 l llJ use ' ISi " ''° Welfllllqlon SI J us " S!IO UCLA J Sii 10 .. , Or-l soo I SD C•lllor11I• s , .. • • SCIO ArlrOfl• SI • UJ ' . di Stentord • 10 6 10 .JIS Ari Ion• 0 ' 000 s " .JIJ WCAC
C•f. --W L ""'· W L P'llL
P-nllM • 0 I 000 " 6 ,M7
Sen Frencltco 3 I .ISO " 2 ·'" GOllt• .. > ' 750 " • -647
Pof11•nct , , SCIO 10 , •• S.11U1Ctere I 1 uo 10 , .•
SI Ma~•, I J uo ' ' .m SMID .... I J uo • • -Loyole I , .uo ,, ,. . "' We9tem Atttletto Conference c ... .._
W L ll'ct. W L ll'cl. WyOfftlll!I • 0 1,000 ,. . ·'" Hewell s 0 1.000 I) t ,..,
Sen DleGDSt , , ... II s ... •r..-v-. • ' .sn 12 ' ... TdaJ.•IP-' , ·'°' 1 ' .161 Ulell J J .JOO ....... Celor-St. , • .m r • .All 111-Mexke I ) ·''' . ' .,,
Air l"orct 0 1 -l 11 _,..
Presents ... SouthwHt Conference c .. 1. s.-
w I..""''· W L l"ct. r .. n •01 000 U OIOOO
Tn .. Al.M 1 too 11 • 713
An.•ns.A~ 1 .. , IJ t ..,
TCU ) soo I I SCIO
r ••• , 'If(" .,. II • W7
"°"""" -II • 7l3 Bey lo< -' . tOO Alce 100 10 I 1el SMU 1 s .. , • 10 J7S
Big Eight Conference c .. 1. *-w I.. ... 1. w l ll'Cl Mluovrl s 0 I 000 It 0 I 000
Pete the .. Greek'i Ke"W,SI 0 I 000 .. 1 llS
NebfHh 1 soo 10 • •ts O•lehom•SI , soo 10 • •U
"•11"' J HO •• tOO O\lehom• J HO 10 • •n low•SI J lSO • 0 lH Coto<•OO 1 • 100 t I S1' Picks Of Southeastern Conference C•I. s.-T he Week
W L l"cl. W L l"cl T..,110-90 1000 13 . J .113 Aleb•m• , ISO u .J .116
Ktnlvcky , '" ., J .tOO LCMooltlene SI , ·'" I 4 .Pl AU1tur11 .soo 10 • ·'" MIHIUICll>i JOO . ' .,.,, Geerol• JIS ..... Vanck'11111 >IS . , MoJ Florlcla IU • 12 .uo
MIHIHl~SI. 0 • 000 . " "° Atlenffc CoHI Conference CMf . ....
W L l"ct. W L l"cl. HOflll C ..... IN ) ' .w ,. 1 .m Vlr9lllla • I .IOO " I .... ....... _ 1 IOO lJ J .Ill Nortfi c.rolTfti St , .Ml " l Ali! '"'-•YI-• JJl 10 •. w °'*• • )Jl . ' .. CIOfntoft s ·* ..... 0...9leTe<h • .1a l IO .)JO
Super Moment, who carried
the high wel1ht of 125 pounds,
covered l~ miles in 2:00 3.5 and
paid $4.20, $2.80 and $2.10.
F.orlion led most of the way
before being passed by the
5·year-old Kentucky -bred
winner late in the stretch. :~~:~~a~~1:~:. contests require New Parts .De partment Hours up~ere·s how the week shapes · • Now Open 8 :00 am -1:00 pm S a turdays
The win was worth $45,900.
Super Moment earned nearly a
half·mlUJon dolla.n In 1191.
Forlion, ridden by Marco
CHlaneda and c:arrylns 11'
pou ndt, finished second by
seven len,U.., and returned S3
and a .JO. The S5 exacta ol Super
Moment and ForUon paid DUO.
T he victory WH tbe second of
the day for Pinuy, the only
Jockey to record more than OM
victory Sunday.
The Plctr Sht, ln which bettors
attempt to telect the wlnaen ol
races two t brou1b seven.
returned Sl.•1163 .•. There WU
only one wtnn1ni ticket eold.
>
TVllOAY '--------"'T"""------------~------------------------..:---------------;.._..._ ________ __. .....,.catc.ew-e LYXX•L~7 •CAPRl•CONTIN£;\\TAL• MARK \'I• LlN OLN•COt G.AR•XR7•ZBPHYR
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L I ~COLN ~IE
1618' Harbor Boaleftftl. Coeta 'Meaa
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(714)~
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INCHES SHORT Running bal'k Pett·
J ohnson 146 1 of lhl· <:1nc 111nati Hl'n gab 1-.
s topped at t h <.• goal·llnl' on t·r11ti<il
fourth·down pla~· during Sun<ht~ ·..., Supl·r
AP Wl,..pl>o4o
Him I Th<> Hlt·1< gn.tl l11w .... 1.111d d111·111J.! thi...,
"l'l'H'" \\,1 .... 11htrt111H·ntal 111 tlw1r :!Ii :!I
\ 11·ton
Midwinters West Regatta set
MISSION BAY -More than 50
Thistle Class sailors and their
crews are expected to convene
here Thursday for the 11th annual
Mid w inters Wes t for the
international class . The regatta
will continue through Saturday.
In addition lo the California
sailors, skippers, crews a nd their
families arc expecte d from
Florida. Michigan. Ohio, Texas.
Washington, Oregon and Arizona.
The Thistle is a one·design,
ce nterboard . 17 ·foot hi g h
performance s loop that a lso
ca rries a s pinnake r and 1s
c<ipahlc of planinl! in a 12·knot
breeze The bo<1t "a!> des1~ned I)\
Sandy Douglas ;,ind originally wa-.
built of molded plywood In recent
years the boat has been built of
figerglass. but the old \\oodcn
boats are s lit I com pel1l1 ve
Andy Fox or Orlando, Fla .. IS
expected to be on hand lo defend
his l 1 ti e won in the 198 I
Midwinters Also competing will
be runner .up Larry Klein,
Detroit. Mich. and third place
Skip Kemp for Coronado.
There "'rill be practice racing on
Mission Bay J an 28. Three race!'
Wreckless takes series
Wreckless. a Capo·26 sloop
s kippered by A. G. Kading,
Capistrano Bay Yacht Club. was
the Midget Ocean Racing Class
( MORC> winner in Cupislrano
Bay Yacht Club's San .Ju<in Series
Saturday and Sunday.
This is the rirst year that an
MORC group has sailed in the
series. Runner·upwas llol Fool. u
Choate·30, co-skippered by Greg
Baffent and Ron Dougherty. San
Diego Yacht Club. and third was
P ep p e rmin t Patt y, a
Nelson·Merit·25 s kippered by
Roger Ritzdorf. Balboa Yacht
Cl ub.
MORC are hoats JO.feet and
under which s<.1il under a c;pet·1al
hund1caprull•
Overall and Cl;,is.., A "l'ne-.
winnC'r 1n thl· pc rfnrm<.1nt·1•
Handicap HaC'1ng Fll·l'l v. a-.
n a whide. ..,k 1ppt·red hv Kcnnv
Kuhn. Capo BYC. -.1·<·<11Hl wet"
Li g htning. Angelo P C'\.koff.
Voya~crs 'V, ano third W H'>
Va I k ~ r i c. B 111 M u r ra v . ('a po
BY('
PllRF·H I Holo K1k1 , Hick
R<.1ff. Capo HYC : ~· Sko<,hi Tiger.
Rob Strang. Ca po II YC . 3
Daybreak. Hob Gates. Capo BYC'
W. SKI REPORT ~~
Mountain High
Holiday Hill
Mt. Baldy
Kratka Ridge
Mt. Waterman
Snow Summit
Snow Valley
Goldmine
Green Valley
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Snow depth/inches Conditions
18·24 pow /pp
18·24 pow/pp
24-36 pow /pp
44 pow/pp
24·36 pow/pp
30·36 pow /pp
62 pow/pp
36-48 pow I pp
24·36 pow /pp
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
June Mountain
Mammoth Mountain
China Peak
70·90 pow /pp
136 pow /pp
72-97 pow I pp
Dodge Ridge 72·96 pow/pp
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
Lirts/chalrs
6L
6L
41.
FO
FU
FO
FO
2L
FO
FO
3L.19C
3L
FO
Mt. Reba 96-156 pow/pp 6L
Kirkwood 144-240 pow /pp FO
Sierra Ski Ranch 123 pow/pp FO
Heavenly Valley 103 pow /pp FO
Northstar 60·138 pow/pp FO
Donner Ski Ranch 120-144 pow/pp 3C
Alpine Meadows 180-276 pow/pp llC
BoTeaJ lS0.1"92 -pow /pp F0
Homewood Ski Area 78-152 pow /pp 3C
Conditions : hp -hardpack ; pp -packed powden: ,pow
powder.
Lifts/chairs : L -lifts: C -chairs; FO -fuJI oper&lion.
will ht' ...,ailed 1ns1cle thl' b;iy Jan
Wand the final tv.o rnc:es in lhl
o(·t·<.1n orr ~11s .... 1on Hay Jan 30.
Vortex races
to victory
Sofl Southe rly to westerly
winds prevailed Saturday for lhi:
first race of South Shore Yacht
Club's wintt•r l11bachi Series.
Class A winner was Vortex.
ski ppcred b} Bruce Twichell,
Voyagers Yacht Club; second
wa-. lloratw. Don Bartz. SSYC.
and third was Salac:ious. Dick
Schlcsinger.SSYC.
Cla-;s B winner was Pintado.
Duvt• Williams. VYC. followed by
~l e:-./ Pt.'ll.', l't•tt•r Fycr. \'YC. <.1nd
!.ollqmp. K Jren Bluel. Rah1<.1
Coro11th1an Yal'hl..Club
In <'la:-" I· t hf· I rnph,\ winn<'r-.
\H 'rt' For Sail. I.\ It· \\'ilhb. SSYC.
lmnr.11 \lin11r1l\. 1'.1ul Rlank
~~' < '. and Sn11 Joli. C 'l.11r Snov..
SS\"('
The• rluh at<.11· hl·ltl a Sabot
fl• g .t I t iJ \\ I I h t h e f o 11 0 \\ i n J!
rc·-. u lls
Sf:~IOH Phy llis Willits
SSYC'. 2 Gi l Knudsen. SSYC.
,Jl';'l:IOH I Worth Houghton,
SSYC.2 Pr-ll'rZ1ka.ScaScouts.
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Orengo Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 25, 1982 ca
FromPageC1
49ERS SUPER BOWL CHAMPS • • • • After recoverlnai a fumble on the opening kickoff.
-Cincinnati had gutden ol)pOrtunf , movinr o a
firs t down at the San Francisco 5·yard line . But thti
Beng!ls came up s ho rt when Dwight lllcks
Intercepted an Anderson pass and returned it lo the n . I
"We had an opportunity right off the bat to
scor e," said Cincinnati Coach Forrest Gregg.
''When wedidn'l, I think the players started thinking
about what could have been Instead or what was."
Reality for the Bengals was a 49er march to the
game's firs t touchdown. It was a 68-yard drive,
climaxed by Montana's l ·yard plunge. Thirteen of
those yards came on a flea flicker, of all things.
Montana handed oft lo Ricky Patton, who turned the
ball over to Solomon, who returned it to Montana,
who threw for 13 yards lo Charle Young.
''WE KEEP SURPRISES in our back pocket,"
said running back Earl Cooper, the only man in
the 49er backfield who didn't handle the ball on
that play.
· For lhl!1r next trick, lhe 49ers halted Cincinnati
at the San Francisco8 as rookie Eric Wright stripped
a completed pass from Chris Collinsworth and rookie
Lynn Thomas recovered the ball. Thal turnover
launched a 92·yard drive. the longest in Super Bowl
histor y. For the touchdown, Montana threw an
l l·yard pass to Cooper.
"ll was just a fake up the middle," the fullback
explained.
Now it was 14 -0 and things were getting no better
ror the Bengals.
Starling from thci r own 34 on their next
possession. they drove lo the Cincinnati 5. On fourth
and one with 18 seconds left until halrtime , Ray
Wersching kicked a 22-yard field goal for a 17·0
bulge
That would have been a perfectly fine halftime
lead, but the Bengals girt-wrapped three more
points Archie Griffin fumbled the kickoff and Mill
McColl recovered for the 49ers at the 4. Wersching
returne<l ror u 26·yard fi eld goal and the serious
Super Bowl was turning into a laugher forlhe49ers.
"We cc•rtainly appreC'iated the point~ ... Walsh
said.
BUT 1WALSll WASN'T overly comfortable .
··with a Ken Anderson on the other side, 20 points
aren't all that much.'· he said.
In the drt•!)s1ng room, C1nt·1nnali tried to
regroup,
'"I told the team we've been down before."
Gregg said. "I referred to our first game of the
season when we came from a 21-point deficit to beat
Seallll'."
ln the49er lockerroom. Walsh advised his team
to approach the i,ccond half as if the score were 0-0
and to avoid maJor penalties that rould reverse the
momentum. '
The advice was wasted. F'lags fell all over the
field and before tbc 49ers knew what had hit them.
Anderson had Cincinnati on the scoreboard with a
nine·play, SJ.yard drive. lie went the final 5 himself
and now it was20·7.
Then, with just under seven minutes left in the
period. the Bengals came back for more. Anderspn's
49-yard pass lo Collins worth drove them lo the San
Francisco 14 and on fourth·and·one from the 5, Pete
Johnson smashed into the middleoflhe line for a first
down at the3. CINCINNATI HAD four cracks to gain three
yards. A touchdown would put them just six points
awa)'\with light years left in the game.
Twice, Johnson barged into the middle of the
line. managing two yards on the first carry and none
on the econd..Dn..tbiul-down,-Aftde~pa1aed to
Charles Alexander. but Dan Bunz stopped lhe play
for no gain.
Now 1t was fourth down and the Benaals tried
Johnson again. Nothing.
··1 saw the 49crs raise up al the snap of the ball,"
the 2SO·pound fullback said. "I figured I could go
under them. It just didn't work. There just wasn't
anything."
''We just had to stop him,·· said49ers linebacker
Jack "Hacksaw" Reynolds. "We knew he would get
the bull. He's like a Mack t ruck."
G reggdid not regret t he play call.
''IT WAS THE first time we've been stopped
on that play this season," he said. "If I had It lo do
all over again, I'd still give It to my big fullback."
The 49ers survived even though they had only 10
players on the fi eld for the first two plays of the stand.
Edison, OV
1-2 • rellUl1n
It was a week in which only three ranked
team s escaped defeat. Edison was s hocked , so
was Ocean View, and Servile was ripped by St.
Bernurd in non·league action.
The results'! A big shakeup in the Daily
Pilot's Orange County prep basketball rankings,
but ft~d1son remains as the No. 1 ranked team
despite iL'i 72·71 overtime loss at Huntington
Beach J\nd Ocean View remains No. 2 des pite
Frrday·s 62·60 loss to Marina.
Corona del Mar moved up to third arter
winning its 12th straight and Estancia, despite
splitting !CdM was a 40·35 winner Wednesday).
actually moved up a notch lo fifth.
The only other team to-win a pair was
Brea-Olinda. but the Wildcats' stock continues
to take abuse bccuuse of a very weak schedule.
Brea-Olinda 1s Orange County's winningest
team with an 18-2 record, but is al the No. 6
plateau
The new kid on the block is Huntington
Beach. a team with a deceiving 9·8 overall
record. The Oilers share the Sunset League
with 1-:d1son and have become a team to be
reckoned with in the past two weeks .
Huntington Beach 1s lied with Marina a l the No.
JO s lot
Among last week's r anked teams -Edison,
Occ<.111 View. Estancia. Fountain Valley, Marina
and Laguna ll1lls could do no beller than s plit
u pa 1 r nf games.
Daily Pilot's Top 10
Orange County Prep Basketball
Pos. Team
I Ecl1~on
2. Ocean View
3. Corona del Mar
4. Fountain Valley
5. Estancia
6. Br1:a -Olinda
7 Servile
8. Mater De1
9. Esperanza
JU. ct1e1 lluntington Beach
M<irina
Record
16·2
11 ·7
12·2
12·6
14·3
18·2
12·7
11 ·7
14·3
9-8
10·7
DU"*'"<* LOWCM fflllf' "°"""' COMll One o f the best
on·t1me records going
That's style Fares that save
v9u money everv dav on
every flight That's style,
too A1rCal we do more
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vou there in style'
SAN fRftNCISCO SJ9 565 • J9
J9
42
42
SAN JOS£
OftKlftND
R£NO
PHOENIX
FRESNO J6
lftS V£GftS leO
65
65
65
64
55
59
-
Orange Cout OAIL y PILOT/Monday, Jllnuary 25, 1982
PARDON M'E \';rnco uve r Ca nu c k
cfl'f('nsem an Kc\'ln '.\'I C'Carthy st a ~·s low
while s lopping t ht> ru!>h of King-;' forw~fd
Greg Tt•rrion during Sunda~ .. s match I in
'
.... , .........
Vancouver. Kings jum ped to a j .o lead .
then needed to scramble lo get a 5·5 tit'. ttw
t·lub's 15t h strai g ht c·ontest without a
victor~·.
This college conference got tired of slowdown games
MIAMI (AP> -It baa.t't revol11tlofttnd <:ollege ~aketball, but the ~·secol\d lhot clock certainly ls
_., ve and well In the Sun Belt Cont erence. \
Adopted In 1978 on a ·oae-,_., expertmental
basis , the shot clock --tashlbnfd atter the NationaJ
Basketball Auoclatlon's M·second ine~han.lsm -ls
thriving In its fourth season.
But unlike lbe NBA's clock, which forces a
rut.paced game , Vic Bubas, confere n ce
commlasloner , says the Sun Bell clock merely
encourages a team to play a "normal" game of
basketball -not too fast. not loo slow.
t StaUaUcs back Buba•· claim. -
Eighty perce nt, or 10,871oflhe13,MUha&l taken
In 129 conference games durtn• the ftnt three
seasons of the shot clock . were ,.a1ed ln thl rlrst 19
seconds of Possession.
Fifteen percent -2,019 -occurred d1,1rln1 the
20·29-second timeJra me. and onJy 5 percent -839 -
came with less than 15 seconds remaialnt on the
clock
IN THREE SEASONS. there only were 15
violations of the shot clock that resulted in turnovers.
"When you have a 45-second shot clock, you can
hold the ball -If you want to slow it down -until "WE DIDN'T want lo put in a shot clock that there's maybe 20 or 25 seconds to go. But then the
would make you racehorse up and down the floor," question is, you're not assured you're 1oin1to1et as
says Bubas, who pushed for Its adoption after good a shot as you would have cot ten if you decided to
watching New Orleans struggle to a 22·20 victory play bas ketball rightaJWay," says Bubas.
over South A la ba ma in the championship game of ------:-::::;i-:;iiiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii the Sun Belt postseason tournament in 1977. 1
"In fact, 45 seconds is eternity if you really
kno w the truth about It," adds Bu bas, t he highly
s uccessful coach a t Duke University from 1959
through 1969.
"And what happens is that due to the fact that
our teams do not have to race up and down the floor,
they get down the floor in a normal fashion and they
j us t decide to play basketball. The average shot
comesoffin 15seconds ."
Sampson tough
in ·Virginia win
LOUISVILLE , Ky. (AP> -Virginia didn't
want to get into a running game with Louisville
a nd center Ralph Sampson m ade sure it wouldn't
ha ppen.
Sampso n keyed a surge at the beginning or the
second half that moved the Ca valiers from a 38·35
ha lftime lead to 48·38 with 15:25 left in the
nationally televised college basketball game.
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This week's ~peclal
UCI
I ~. . a questton
T he third·ranked Cavaliers went on to poat a
74·56 victor y over No. 17 Louisville, dealin1 the
Cardinals their third straight loss of the season.
Virginia now is 18·1.
The slender 7-4 center ignited. the Cavaliers
during the spree. hi~ting a 19'-footer at the opening
or the half. two short jumpers and two three
throws .
.... arms
Anteater baseball team may score more runs, but "Our plan was to control the tempo or the
game. and once we got the l~a.d we were able \o .do
that ," said Sampson, who f1rushed the game with
26 points and 10 rebounds.
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By JOHN SEVANO
01 Ille Dally 1'1194 St.IH
Ask most experts and they'll te ll you baseball '
1s 75 percent pitching ... if not more.
Using that a s a basis , UC Irvine's 1982
baseball team may be in for a long season.
''I'm going to have to get more mileage out of
my pitching staff than I did last year," admits
Coach Mike Gerakos. "As a team we'll hit as ,.,e ll
<as I ast year! and probably score as ma ny runs .
As a unit, we should also be better defensively. So
it a ll comes back to one key area -pitching."
The Antea ters finis hed last season with a 31 ·23
overall mark. 13·15 in the PCAA (s ixth place). At
the plate UCI hit a respectable .314. On the mound.
however. UCI was a woeful 5.~.
"Pitching ·wis e, I have confidence in our
ability to perfor m at the Division I level," says
Gcrakos of his current staff. "It's a matter of
keeping them healthy. I can't afford to have any of
them hu rt "
lJ nfo rtunately, Gerakos already has problems.
Le ft-hander Josh Randall. who was 7·8 last year ,
d1dn 'l make the cut academically and left school.
Senior right-hander Andy Bisnar, who sat out last
year and was expected to be the ace or the staff
BASEBALL
this season, is currently scrambling for enough
credits to become eligible.
And. Junior Cas Soma . a walk -0n last year, has
been ha mpered by a bad back and is JUSt now
start.mg lo t.hr-0w again.
"Look." says Gerakos emphatically, "we're
not going to take a back sea~ to anyone . I know Cal
Stale Fullerton I a PCAA pawer) bas a lot of people
coming back ... but so do we.
"I think il helps that this is my second year
here because my players know me and there are
fewer adjustments that have lo be made."
The Anteaters open their season Friday. Feb.
5 at Southern Cal College (2:30 p.m.). Their first
hom e game will be against San Diego State
11111::::!11::-Satuc.~dl...6 (ooon dpuble·Ju:.a.~r~ ~ _
A s for a r undown of the 1982 squa , here 's how
it looks by pos ition:
CATCHER -Grossmont College transfer
Steve Barnard has nailed down the starting spot
here. A good receiver with a strong arm, Barnard
hit .388 last year and wa~ named first team
All-South Coast Conference. ' We kne w we bad to
strengthen ourselves behind the plate and Steve is
who we wanted," s ays Gerakos.
FIRST BASE -Senior Ralph Gedies, who s at
out last year. gives UCI a left-handed first
baseman with experience. Gedies hit .230 with 2
home runs and 26 RBI two years ago.
SECOND BASE -Mr . Versatility, Dave
Glick. this year's team captain and last year's
first baseman . moves back to his customary
position at second. Glick. a member of the state
champion Orange Coast College Pirate• two years
ago, hit .361 last year. "For a c0Ue1e baseball
playe r, tl's tough to find anyone better," says
Gerakoa. "He 'll do whatever you ask of him. He's
a total team ~layer."
Whale
Wat elf
,... ...,.-...;;~., Trewl "'9 1119'l~ lllolrcl IN ~: '*"""' AU. •• View "" "'* -lltie: wtlllll. • • ,... ...,, In
dlys gone 11¥. fl'om "" I did! al lhlt &Z' ~r •
With eccommodetlOns or 38 ~
th9 Allure tr..ia from LldO Manna
Vllla99 thru scenic Newport ••Y
bef°'9 wenturlng onto .,,. ~ for a
flbuloul. ,,.. to be forgotten look at
~ ... ·-~-
Gel i..oy '° Mii dilly llMng ~-I CllNoW'°'lldlitMI I ~!~ 714 '7S.Mt4
GlAAKOS COWAN GLICK
SHORTSTOP -Mike lnglehart was a backup
at second, third and short last year and seems to
have nailed down th e shortstop position this
sea s on. Ge rakos desc r ibes him as a "s uper
athlete." Strong defensively . lnglehart's only
we;:tk ness m ay be at the plate 1he hit .211 last
year).
THIRD BASE -Junior Mike Rupp is one of
those hard-nosed competitors coaches love to
have. Rupp played last year at Santa Ana College
where he hit .415 en r oute to being named first
team All-South Coast Conference.
LEFT FIELD -The duties here will be split
be tween junior Steve Hayworth and freshman
Paul Hammond. Haywort h hit :315 from t he right
side or the plate last year. Hammond. meanwhile.
was the Del Rey League's Most Valuable Player
He a u.ended St. John Bosco High.
T en c·oo~& Sedan!! ToChoosf' From AlSimllarSavings!
Cad11/oc \'olul' Proll'Clrrm St'rlll,.I' Agrument A ooaloble
AJICert ... l>oKtTop._.s.i, AJJ,......,,..,,r ..... ....._ Louisville managed to cut into the lead and
trailed only 5§·50 on Jerry Eaves' 16-footer with ~i~~ ~~~a~~~~~;e:cuh\n~a~:f~~~·e.in~~~i:dat~~~ ••1~1 u~~== :: :mr.•:
Ca v a liers outscore the Cardin als 18·6 the 600 H b B d
remainder of the way. NA9 ~osto ~~~ Iv ·
Louisville Coach Denny Crum said he wasn't DILL~ ..
sure if his team would have been able to overtake ~ (714) 540·1860
Virginia with Sam pson dictating the Cardinals' ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ offensive s trategy.
· · 1 was very pleased with the effort that the
team put out," he sa id.
AL openers set
NEW YO RK <AP l -The 1982 American
League baseball season. including a record 82 1
night games. open Monday, April 5. in Baltimore
with the Orioles hosting Kans as City.
After Baltimore and the Royals get the season
started on Monday. four day games and two night
games are scheduled for Tuesd ay. April 6. Texas
will oppose the Yankees in New York. Toronto
JANUARY SPECIAL
APPROXIMATELY plays a t Detroit, Clevela nd at Milwaukee .and
Boston at Chicago io afternoon games, with rught
contests set for the Angels at Oakland and Seattle $
a t Minnesota.
The Minnesota game will m ark the openlng or
the Hubert H Humphrey Metrodome, a new
enclosed stadium being constructed in downtown I 97
PER
MONTH
Minneapolis.
The AL schedule in cludes a r ecord 1,123
playing dates and just 11 doubleheaders.
· h h' In the s econd round or openers. Toronto's CENTER FIELD -Carlos Rivera, w o it ho m e debut com es Friday. April 9 a ga inst
35 Hours flight trlining
Includes 20 hOur1 dual
lns1Nciion. 15 hours
SOio CPC priwrte·pilot
kit, 35 hours ground
training. °FM ~
ment to obtlin private
pllOlliC:ente under FAR
PART 141.
.272 last year, gives Ger akos speed and a good a rm in the outfield. Rivera will also see backup Milwaukee. Detroit will be at Kansas City that
duty in the infield. Junior Darren Kelchner, a night. Cleve land's traditional Saturday home WESTERN SKYWAYS
transfer from Santa Ana community college. will opener will be held on April 10 agatnsl Texas.
a lso see som e action because of his bat. Boston's home ope~er against Chicago Is. set for Monday, Apr il 12 with Texas home that noghl for
its opener against the Yankees. RIGHT FIE~D -When Gerakos accept~ L,h~ . The Angels open at.home Tuesday night. April
Jc;>b a t UCI, the forst playe.r he contact~ was Junior L3, against Seattle and the final home opener will
rigbl·hanjer Ron Cummings. Cummanes ~r.e~d ~ al ieettle ~r.¥1v ·Q~l ...AetiUG +'~-b..J).p~d ...
at ArcaJ1a Rlgnaii'Ohalfoh~at"Ot.'L~ opposing the Ma riners. CitrusCol~ge. He was an All·M1s~on Con~rence ~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ selection last year. During his three years in high ~
school. the 6·1, 185-pounder hit .477, .467 and :477 .. CPLL.CTQtt'S COIUIEf' 1·1141 .... °"'...... .,._Cl S1.t1
PITCHERS <Starting) -G4:rakos will go with ~".:!!'!... =.. J::..
essentially a four-ma n rotation. assuming they all ~ :rs tau• stay healthy. Left-hander Dave Woodhead (4·4, "'..._ ... .,,. .• ., ...
5.20 > has o ne s po t nailed d own. So does ..,..c..e..._vi .....
right·hander Dennis Cowa n (1-0, 6.49), a Fountain 1===·='7=14='_...===·==~ Valley High grad . The other two spots depend on
who 's available. Gerakos is hoping it's Bisnar and
Som a (3·4, 5.99). lf not, freshman Eddie Deese
(9·4, 1.60 ERA at Sonora High ), fi gures to crack II••·~
the rotation.
PITCHERS (ReUef) -Two former Orange
Coast College craftsmen will carry the bulk of the
load. rught-hander Larry Hicks (6·1, 7 saves. 4.82 )
s hould get the first ca ll , with left-hander Gary
Brahs close behind. Freshman right-hander Cory
Collinge (South P asadena Hi gh) also figures to see
action. .
Of course. it's the· latter pas ition Gerakos Is
concerned with. tr they can stay healthy so, he
believes, will the Anteaters .
8th Annual 552 Club
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PRO-AM GOLF
TOURNAMENT
Thursday Jan. 28 & Friday Jan. 29
.,.....C••tCaakrC ..
1600 I. C...t Hapw.,, Mew,...t le•c•
Only Orange County t:ournament
fcw.PGA Jouring ·Players in 1982
-vour: Chance to See tne
Top PGA
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• -·
E>range Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 25, 1982
SCOREBOARD ·
SUPER BOW\. XVI
... ,. 21, Bent•I• 21
le-!If ca.a ... " S.n FranclKO 1 1J 0 •-M Cln<lnn•ll o o 1 >•-11
SF --·-I run CWertclli"9 kklll
SF -Cooper 11 oau trom Montene
1weru1tl119 lll<kl
SF -FG Weoclllng,,
SF -FG -1<111119,.
Cln -AlldenOn 5run18rH<ll klell)
Cln -Ross• pau from A.-non 18tM<ll
.ie111
SF FG Weo<lli119 40
SF -FG WenclllllQ u
Cln -Ron 3 pass from Ano.non I BrH<n
lllO I
A 11,210
SI'
F lrtl do.ni ?0
Rusllu-yards •~121
PHSlllQ yareb , ..
Return yard\ SI
Passes t•JHI
S.C ks Dy S-It
Punts ._..
FumblH·losl J·I
Penaltles-y•ds W5
Time of "-'61on n · U ........... stattttk•
°" 14
7•n ..
" JS-,...2
"' -,.,
•SJ 21·•1
RUSHING -San Francltco, Patt°" 11·».
Cooper t-:... Monlena ...... IUnv 5·11, J
Davis J·S, Clark .-monus 2. Cincinnati,
Johnson 1'-lt. Ale .. noer S· 11. An0trt0n
•·U , A. Griffin I·•·
PASSING -San Franclsto. Montane
1•·22-0·157 Cln<innell. A.-rt0n Js-;i..J.JOO
RECEIVING s.n Francisco. Solo..-
•·52. Cl-•_.S, ~ J.IS, Wll'!Oft 1·72,
Youn9 H •. Petton 1·6. Rl119 1». Clnclnnell.
Ron 1"104, Collln•-lh S·IOI, Curlis >-4J,
K re1der J-l6. Johnson J ... Al••-• J-3
Super Bowl records
TllHe are Ille lndivl-1 -team re<Of'Ch
Ml or lied In lhe 1"1 S .... r 8owl by IM
Clnclnn•li &.n9al• and the S.n Fr•nclsco
•ters ( 11 records •• ,.. Mt eno 10 liltdl
INDIVIDUAL
MO\I Tciu<-. G-o.,. Ron,
Clnc•nnah, 1 Ul\arMI by ••9'11 others I.
Mos l Fltld Go•I•. G •mt -R•y
Weru lllng, s.n Fr•nclsco, • Csttarto by Don
Cllendlet", Gr""' 8•y. 1 ... 1
Most Compltllons, G•mt -Kt n
Anderson. C•nclnnatl, U Colo record, ''
•ll•rMI by Fr•n Terk ... lon, MIM HOI•. 2'
•ll•mots, 1'7• •nd Ron J•wor>kl.
Pllll•delpllla, ll •llempl.s. ltll I
Hl9llesl Completion Percent-. G-
(mlnlmum ol 10 all...l>ptsJ Ken Andtr»n.
Cine lnn .. 1, n S percent, U ot :... 1o10 rec-.
liMI SIMr. G-hi', lt'1, lotkpercenll
Most Receptions. Game O•n llou.
Cincinnati, II Cold rK<><d, t . Geor;e S-r,
New Y orll Jell, 1MI.
Most Touclldown RKtPllOns, Game
O•n Rou, Cincinnati. J lslWrMI by lour
olllersl.
MO\t Kickoff Reiurns, G-t -S, 0.vlcl
Yorser. Clnc•nnall ,_....,by hoo otMnl
TEAM
Mo$1 Pofni. Fourtll O...rler Cln<Hlnetl
14, Oll•reo b1 four ollltr IHm11
Most Field Goell, Game Sen FrMl<•SCO,
• ISl\arltd by Grffft 8•v. 1 ... 1
Mosl FlrU Downs, G•m•, Tum -
Clnd nn•t l, U Cold r.c:O<d, Jl, Oelln, 1'nl
Moil First Downs, 8olll T .. ms, GarM -
O Clnclnneli J4 end S... Francisco ?O (old
re<ord. o . OHl...O 11 •nd Mlnntt0I• tO In
lt171
Moil Pesses Compleleo, G•mt -u .
Clnclnnall lolO rK<><O. J•. Mlnnesot•. 1'111
Most PenH Comol•IMI, 80111 Teems,
G•me -Jt Clnclnnell 1S •nd Sen Fr•ncls<o
u Cold record.,., Mlnntsol• J• and O•~••no
12. lt111
L•r9ttl Hellllmt Luo !>Ml Frenc1sco
20. Cinclnn•ll 0 Cold record M•am• 17,
Mlnnoot.e o. 1'70
Lo~st 5<0<1119 On•• '2 v•rds, Sen
Fren(l~<o COid re<ord. " .. ros, O•ll•s vs Plllsbur9'1, tt7'1
MOSI Ft~ Downs by P•nelly, Game. Botll
T .. ms -lo Cincinnati• •nO Sen Fr•nclw:o J
lold re<<><d, S. •ccomollsllt<l lwlct l
Hl9llHI Complellon Percent-. ~.
Tum -13 5 oercenl (lS-of·~. C1nclnne11 v•
S•n Francisco. lold record, '1 t, 0.11 .. vs
Oen.er, 1'7tl
Mo11 Po>ncs Se<ono Hall. TH m ,
Clnctnnell (.,..,.0 by •-ollltr\I. 11
Most Finl Downs 8y P•nally, Tum •,
Cln<lr\lull Cs/\ereo by c-0111tnl.
Mosl Pleyen Wltn 100 Or More Y•r4' '"
Peu Rec eollon1 Clnclnn•ll, J,
Colllnsworttl 11011 -R-1100 , .. ,..,..,
by P1ltsbur9'1, St .. l_,.ltl -Sw-. 1'7'1
Most Kickoff Returns. Te.,,,, Gemt
Cincinnati, 1 ""'"""by lwo ollltr>I •
II Jllll. 1•. 1 ... ; Green B•Y INFLI :13,
O•kland IAf'LI 1'
I J.,. IS, lttl, G'•tn Bo (Nl'LI ».
Kensas Clly IAFLI 10
Suoer Bowl MVPa
XVI Joe Monlene, qb, Sen Fr•n<ISCO
xv Jim PlunUll, eb. o.lileno
XI Y T .. ry 8reftNlw, Clb, PlttsburOll
XIII Terry ~-Nw, qb, Plll\burttll
IC II Harwy Merlin, de, •nd R-y
Wlllle, di, 0.llH
XI Freo 811etnlllotl, ... OaillenO
x Lynn Sw...,., wr, Plll•burllfl
IX Franco Harrh. rb, PlllH>Uf9'1
VIII lArtyCIOMe,fb,Ml-1
v II Jakt S<oct, '· Ml-I
VI R099< $1-11, qb, 0•11 ..
V Cm.ck H-ltY. lb. Oall•s
Iv Ltn O.WMlll> qb, Kan.us City
111 Jo. Nam41llt qb, New York J•O
11 8ar1Starr,Qb,Gr...,8o
I B•I Sl•r. •• Green B•y
Aoed to Suoer Bowl NFL ,1.AY0,'5
WIW-C ..... f'u-,.fts ......... ,c-·
NY Glanu 21. Pllll-lplll• JI
A-"c .. C-•
Bufl•lo 11. NY Jets 27
C .......... S-lflMI•
N.....,I C~etK•
OlllH ll, Ta,.._ B•y 0
San Frencltco JI. NY Glints J• ._. .. c_•
Clnclnnetl Jt, Buff•IO ti
San Ole9041, Ml.,,,1 ll Coll
C......_eC111,..__.,..,
NMleMIC...._t
San Frenclscott, 0•11•• JI •-•c....._. CIACl,.....l JJ, SM DM9e 7
5-.... XVI
San Francisco i.. Clnclnn•tl ti
Sant• Anita
SUNDAY'S RESULTS
Ulr!lef ... u yt......._,.,. m .. 1...,.1
l'lllST RACE. t •n lurlon9•
Windy's Oullt ISlbllltl t IO •Ill l 40
Tiit M••'*' cB1 .. •1 "60 •>.., Btrlolinl Cloolll t 20
••COHO ••c•. One mll• oe<• Sllervld Junior Cl(u.Olerl U 00 • fO • llO
LIU• S-1-lltrl t llO •JO Hlelll•no •yro H 1 , _, , J.40
Also ractd: ~ 0..,..1,.., C"6rleus HeWll,
Ardens P9rry,•FasNon Aoor•. Callnul, Ten
Pttcenler, Popler Or .. m N
Time· J 01 l/S.
U DAILY DOU8LI Is-!) paid WO fO
THIROaACl.Onemllepece I
Frosty H-r IB•lontl 7 llO J 60 J 60
811bbl Hac>y IAUINM J.10 7 40 Mr. N.M. C~rHul J.llO
AIM> raced' A.L WttellS, Howdy Mon. Rey
Del Cimino. Andy• Foroel•bl•. Andy• Lily
Tlmt J 01
., IXACTA U t i Da•O '30 JO
FOURTH ••ca. One m ilt pa(t
Lot•n> ~---IJ. 51\err_,,I t Ill S.70 •.OO
S11per s ... N CF. Sherrtnl t 10 •.411
Slelller CWl.,..,dl 1.~
AIH r•<td. H•I Clltri•, F•ll ••one,
ReneH Chance, Windy Rene• N, Teel
Henery, C-lry Lobtll, Torrid BHu
Time 7:01.
""™RACE. One mllt pact
Lora L-ILonool 1S 00 I Ill • ..,
8urlle's Bri9M1P I Kuelllet I JI Ill 10.111
F•lllmenlo IK-.191 •,IO
Also raced: Teel Wive. IC:•nl••IO•, Rtach
For Tiit Sily, Noble Rlnv, 8rllli•nc J•Olt,
Julie H•rper, Ge"y J uruor
Tlmt J·OOJ/S
U 1£XACTA Cs-ti Datd "'SJ.00
SIXTH RACI. Ont molo pece
M1c AdlosA IKuebtwl 1s 1111 t.00 •.40
Cool G•Y IAublnl l tO 2 60
S<otcll Ooul>lt ILl9fllllilll •JO
Also ••od Tiit Maestro N. Wlntarlo,
C'll•rttrl• Pl•Y. Bundy And Ory, lde•I
Gem
Tim• 1·s••1s
U E XACTA CJ It paid llJO 50
SIVINTM RACE. 0... milt P«•
1us Marirw (Auoonl n 00 t to • 40
CrOU9"1e IAn0toon1 s 40 • 60
Sen M•rlo CKutbltr I •Ml
Al•o r•c.O· ScolllSh t.ocn, C1p1e111 KnoQlll
N. O•lmeld, Su•tan Hanover, Pllaro
Time I SI llS
U I XACTA ll·Jl paid Silt 00
E IGMTH RACE Ont milt pact
CourlgtOUS Red CK11e1>lert 17 Ml
8ye 8yt Victor CAndtrsonl
Desmond 10.somttl
I Ill l.00
•Ill uo
1 40 Aho rac-•o· ,..ult ~O<llet. t..anteroury
Line. c..omtl"<
Time 'OO JIS Also feted Counselor Cooney, Tumln;
Wllttls, WU 'S Rtb, Loom J e l, TulHI,· lmmarwnl luue. Sl>ort•nQ Cl•si. Rooney, NINTH •ACE. Ont mtl• P•<t MlsclltevOU'I Tiit Tllllly 11..-.
Time 117 ~~.~~.0~11Rulltr lA11b<l\I lfO !: !:
SECC*D RACE. t furlonvs R'1ylllm And Bl.,., IC1m~lll •.Ill
8-•-W!Cltn IH•rri•I ,. JO '·'° S.40 Aho r•«d' llama. AmHer, Eloci ..... 1
Bii of 8teu lsi-m.tltrl 5.JO J Ml ltoy S, Country E•o<tU, Flr\I Cllanco. B-
M•m• Tia IH-yl •.to Go L
AIM> raced My FevorlltAunt. Owen Mint Time 1 01 llS
IH•• Haw, ..... .,..,... , ....... ~lllon•bl•. PEXACTA .,_.l ... Tlf~'9
(;•rel• Time I II
U DAILY 00U8LI CJ 11 palo SI0.60
TH1aoRAc1.111i.m1111
Reconfirm C ~i.-1 J7 .10 t eo S.fO
Mail 0 G,..,. CMcHarvutl 1 to •to
Conscious E ltor1 I Slbillt 1 J.llO
Also raced Salt• Goal, 8rtak end Try,
Olden A911, Tera Orivt
T•me l 451/S
FOUR TM RACE. I~ mlltt
O.nah Rl09e 10.1-un •ye>l 10
•·HHrt &.e1 10r1eoa1
JIO 110
llll 1t0
7.to
PIKt, a·Su\low,
PO<I Y•l•l• CH•nwnl
Aha r•<•O Mentwl
Knlglll ol Gold
T•mt I IO •15
FIFTH RACE. Ont m llt
Hl9l1 Counsel I Plncay) 9 00 4 10 1 IO
Oorcero IOelal•ouss•Yll l IO J Ill
H•<•wlno CPltrcel J fO
••s6 r•c•O Oefl•n<t:. Always, &ell.
St~ncharrv. Fteet Temoo, Mr M•Uto.
0199""' Potnl Time I U 1/S.
U I XACTA 19-3) oalO '46 50
SIXTH llACE. t 'n lur1Dn91 Gl•mor°"' Sinn
CGutrrel I .0 • 00 l 00
Perme-hly CH-ltyl • 10 J 00
Brusll Wllll F•me ( Plnca.t • 10
Also raced. l,ce Froli<, H•*••lan Stwtu. Unlor9tllal>lt, Bliulul Momeni, Ro101.,.,
Snow Oen<tr, Aeel Affinity, My\f\etn ..
Sec ono Orono
ltmt I 1Mf5
U f'ICK SIX It S J 1·•·31 paid U .S7•,JO
wlln '"'" wlnnin9 llO•h lfl•t norsesl SJ Po<ll Sia <on"'l•llon paid 01 IO w•l11 60
Wlt1t1lng h<k•I• "°"' norse>I SJ Pi<ll Sia
urelcll consot•llon paid lll> 20 wllll 11
•lnn1n9 lk kfl• "'"" llO<ses. one scr•l<lll
TENTH aACE. One milt pect
Gary Goller I0.>0m•rl 1t IO 10 IO t,JO
Don C••l Star IAub•nl II 60 7.10
Su Rove<" HOOOI 4 fO
J •mes Hondo, Sco1c11 T lmt Allbee.
Fl•aton N, ~rty /4fr. CNmp..-qne Prine.•.
Cool 11 Man, Raut lWn
Time 1:02
U E XACTA II 31 paoo '41•.'IO
Alltnoan<e •.m
~ • • ,,. . "
UC Irvine schedule
Fri • F...,_ S -•I Souihern C•I COll-
S e I . Ftb • S •n Diego SI
Cdouble·lle-r. 'lODnl
TuH. FtO.. Cnapman Coll-
Wtd Fe«> 10 •I Cal SI 0om1.._,
Hiiis
Fn Fe«> 11 UC 81r1oe1ey
Sal , Fe«>. I) Unl...,nily ot New Me•ico
Cal LnY~, 1 pm I
• SEVENTH RliCI .• furlono:. S11n • F•b. .. •I Nh•dl ·L•• V•va•
Pro..Oest a.. CS-m•lott > l,llO • oc> 1 oc> I double.fie-• 11 a rr. I
J ohstan CH-...) 4 tO 1 Cl Mon , Feb U •I Nolda l a \ V-
A~lrlous IPln<•YI J 10 lnoont
Also rec.a Son9 lo Remember, P•<lllN. Fri., Feb " UCLA
Ablsl11I•. FHlurrno Sal • Feb JO -•• UCLA (doubtt·M•dtr.
Time I 10 2/S. noo<>I
"E XACTA IS·ll o•id '" 00 Tut• .. Feb. n Ar .... P•cillc NOTE Tiii\ II Ille fir" lime In 1" 5-r Fri., FOCI i. Cal SI Oomin9.,.r Hiiis
8-1\ 11\al Ille tum lllal ;alntO tllt ..-1 U l"ICK Sill 11-4·)'4 t-~I Da1d S1't,U :UO S•I . FtD 11 US lnlorn•llon•I
ylfdS from s<nmmage, 1 ... 1. C•n<lnnali wllll orw "'""'"'9 llc kel h i• llorw>I SJ PKll Unl .. r"ty C-•.nt-r. noonl
oul;ainltd s.n Fr•nclsco JSlo yard\ 10 J1S S•• consolat•on Dlld l l ,Ito JO •1111 •I Mon., -ell 1 C•I Poly P-•
Super Bowl reaults wlnnln9 llck•h Iii•• 11orws1 Fri., -ells -•I c ,,.om•n co11eoe
f'AST SUl"Ea aOWL GAMES EIGMTH •ACE. 11r. mil"• S•I , Merell • L• Vernt College
hi .. M•Y I Cel 51 Lot An .. IH SOUTH AME•tCAN Z:ON•
looub1t.-r, noon I' C•t ....... ~•I
Tuts .. MaY• Cel SI Fullerton• C.........S, ._._,
Fri., May7· Unlwr"tyol Sen Oleto" M ...... S.l., May t el Unl•trllly et Sen Olo(IO Jos. Altj-ro Cortes ctolomblel del
ldouble.flffdW, noonl' Adrien Clarll, lo·1, •·•1 Arturo GonH IU
TuH .. May 11 -•I L-heel\ SI • • <Colomblat dtt. L90 aolle, 1·S, ,_., 6·2. •·•
Fri., May .. -•• UC Sen•• 8¥Mra• Cal llMMe• ..... u,,....,,
Set .. May U -UC Se111e Berll•ra ........... J, U ....... y l
ICIOuble-.-1' Silltl9t cleftOtH PCAAGtme I Victor Pe«I (Par~y) Ott. Ditto ......
All t•me• tlert el 1 :>0 p,m unltu t ·I . S·7. •·•. •·•; Fran<h<o Gonultr 01nerwlwlnolOIMI. IP1r.•gueyl clef. Jow L O•mlenl, .... ,_.,
-(_ > .
NBA
WHTeaN CON,eReNCI
1. ......
Su Ille
PMenl•
Golden Slalt
Por111nd
Sen 01190
S•n Anlont0
Denv•r
Hou.ion
Kensasc11y
Ulall
.... 111c:oi.i • ...,
W L l"tl
30 11 1n
71 U •7S
H U .tlS ,, 17 .s.t
11 II SSO
IJ 2' HJ
M~IOlvklea ,. u tSO
21 10 SH '' n ,..., 14 ,, 341
'' ,, ns
o•
2VJ
~
I ,,,,
II
s
IV,
12"' 1)
0•11•• 11 7t JOO u
IA.STE RN CONl'l RENCE
Bo\1011
P111110.lpl\l1
W•>lllnvton
New Vork
New J•rwy
tndl•n•
Cnouoo
Delro11
C••••••no
Att..,lk Olvlllea JO II ,. 17
11 " " ,, ,, ,,
C .... ,.•IDlvllleol
131
101
ns ...,
•Jt
71 14 .•St " '° .. , " Jl 07 II Jl •Jt
II 2" JU
1 ll 11S
s-y'•S<.,..
Por111no Ill, Boslon 119
-Y'•G-•
Sulllt 11 New Y°""
T""4ay'sG-•
M1tw.,"w •t l..ak..,
0111 .. 11 Allllllla
cnoc190 11 W•S/llnvton
Pnlleoeloni• 11 S.n A111on10
1no1 .... 11 Hou•lon
Nt • Jersey al u .. 11
College
SUNDAY'S SCORE
Ytro1n11 I•. Loul•vllle ~
Community college stats
GOt.01£ft WIST Til-41
H•llon 8 o¥ttn
King o ....
Je<ol>•
Enrllart
Ourh•m
Mytts
M•rllno
Rtv1'
G l'U.
" 41S JI ~
?0 2U
?O J)(O
" 1"1 . ..
16 1'
II 11 , .
Bradlty •
..
I
MtGH-)
ORANGE COAST lt-IJI
0 .....
8H~IY » ~
G Krolln!tldl 11 HJ
8•1dwln 17 11
l110m1> JI Ill
T KrOhnltlOI JI ti
C•lnoun 71 •S
N•nson IJ 11
M•lllrtu 11 1"
H•ll•n 14 It
01m•lanle lo
lurMr
Ooods
Wl\nlt w\au
Ooyl•
Htll
Molcl1•11
Ht1d
Fuuhtr
Bryant
Ground
Ou•ol•y
Rud
SA00LE8ACll llMI
G ~
10 ,.. . ..
11 21].
J• 111
I~ U 1 " .. .. 6S 10 ,.
11 lt
II 41
~ 10 11 ,.
WCT tournement ,., Mule• City)
$1 ...... l'IMI
I
'"' II
IJ
I ..... • II
'""
..... ". 11 1
12,
II t
'" SS •• 4 s •.O
3S
JO
I)
A ...
11 ]
10 I .,
S> . " JI
I I
I J
I 3
O• ..... "1 IU ,,.
10. •• . ' •• ,. ,,
JI
11 I !
Tom11 Smid Cit! JOhn Seori. l·6, 1-• ....
I 6, •·2 !Smid wins l l00,000, Sadri wlm
'40,0001.
"" Futures tournement
c.1 ......... cu1n, OwM<I s-.... ..... 1
Glynl• Cole. (8rll•lnl de! Lelllfl Anne
TnompM>n CNtwporl Nows, Y•.I. •-• • ._.
ICOIH win• '5.0001
~l'IUI
M•rforle Black-COitaw•l·S..wn L'!D
IAu>lr•ll•I 0.1 BerMr• Jordan CKlt19 ol
Pruuo•. Pa l·Oi-Oeslor ILOllQ 8te<lll,
•·J, •.•
Phoenix Open
L•MY W-lns tS·70-tJ-ltl
Morrh Het•lslly •1 .. 1 ... -201
John Cooll 70 ..... 7-lOl
Jorry P .. t 71 ,.t-lof-104
S< Oii St rnP1oOt1 75·""'"3 -104
JeyHIM .... ...._:MM
L•rry Nelson U ·10 II 104
Mike Rtld 70 ...... -104
0 A. Wtibflt19 11-•t •S 10S
Tom Purtr., """t-10 10i
Andy 8ttan IMI... 106
Mike Donald 71 .. t-lot-X.. Bruce Lltllkt ,,,., ... __
Fuuy l0tlltr lt .. H5 106
Tom Kilt 11-•1 ... 106
Fred COUC>ltS '°""S-7) 207
O•n Pohl tl-t•I0-207
Bob Glider H•71·"1-to7
&en Cre,,.,.... 10.11 ... -201
Jim Simons 61·11·•• J01 Torry M..,,..y 70 71·"6 207
8111 K r•lnrt 10..t-tl J07
Ont Elcheli.rger 10·12 .. S-JOI
G1~y Giibert 11 ..... t -JOI
Tom W••Skoe>I 10-t>·ll JOI
Crel9 St.Oler 69·"1·12-JOI
Lon Nlelwn 6'·"6·1J-JOI
Bob EHt-i..7~7J-20t
B•rry Har-II tl·ls-61o-20t
Georo• Archer 11-11 ... -:iot
JOhnny Mllltr 70..•IO 20t
Rotitrl T""'-1 11·t J.11-20t
Curtis Sir-H ·10·70-20t
H•le lrwln 7l_.7,.t-20t
tltltll Fer-10.10-t•-:iot
Miki Siittlv"" 11_. ... t -tOt
!Im Deni U 71 ... -JOt
i<ott Hoell 11•..--10t Cllvln Peete 7•·"1·tl-10t
Ru c e1ow.11 11·104I 10t
W•yne Ltvl 12 ... ·10-JIO
Jim Coll»rt 69-71 70-JIO
~I Hen<OO 11·11 ... -110
Homtro Blanc•• 12 .... 11-211
O•n H1llclorson 10,70.11 Jll
Andy Nortll 71-10.70-'ll
Boo 8y,.,.,, 7J .... 70-J1 I
8oby Wldltlns 7l•Hl-111 All.., Mii~ 74 ..... t 711
David Gr_., "1-1• 111
J.C Snead 7J 10 ... -Jll
Ken Grt.., 70·70·7'-JIJ
J.<ll R..,,..r 71·>0·11-Jl2
Ge<><Qt Burm ti IJ.11-JU
8111 Call• 71-13-JIJ
L.-aro T"°""""" 10... 1• 11J
0on J•nu.,., ••-tt-14-112
P•ul All-12·11-t9-J12
Y•ntt Healner l•·tl·11-113
Ltt Elder 1"1J·10 JU
Peter Jee-12-71 70-213
8•11 RQ9et'l 10 70-IJ-111
Tim SI,,,_, 10·71 17 JU
G•ry H•ll•r9 10·10.IJ JI)
R09er M••lble n-1~1J -11•
Deep••• Hatting NIW~T ,..,,., ~· -JI •nolt".
1 0.H, JI mec1< .... 1. 1 llno cod. I bla<k -
baH. SJ rock h"1 l0."9Y'l Lee-I -S.
•1111•••• lt5 roCll <od, I c-<oo. 5 Wind
bass, 1 <•ll<o tins. It meclltrel,
DANA wtfARF 13 •nv.... , ban. *
ro<k coo, JO ma<klrtl, I lln; cod, 10 <-
cod
OCEANSIDE 4S anoiers ,. ,,. ... IU
rock tlsll. U mackerel
SAN DIEGO 11 ....... 1 -.. •nolen· ,,
m a ckerel, 132 rock llsll, 101 roo coo, I llng
coo. I .... L-. ~1-lftH'• ~
H&M L ........ I J• •nvltrs: 345 ro<k cod,• v J "2 t . F I FC Super Momeni ( P1nceyl • 20 2 tt 110 I double·-· noon I .,v1 -J.,. •.1 ;.-n r•nc sco CN I Mon .Marcll t -a1S.nOie90S1.11p.m.1 _.,.l'IMI
U , Cln<lnnetl CAFCI JI F<><loln 1~1-CS.I J 00 2.20 Tuo Merell • 11 U.S Internet-I Sntrwooo Slt••rl FerOo T ayge11 Oel
<-cod
NHL
CAMl"81LLCC*l'EaeNCE
Edmonton
C1191ry
V'"'COUVtf
Kll•ts
Colw •oo
Minnesota
St . LOU!\
WlnnlP"9
Cl11cago
Toronto
Oe1rol1
SM'ftMOM-
W I. T 01" GA-.
,., 17 • , ,. 104 "'
.. 21" I" 221 0
IS J• ,11 "' ttS 41 I) Jt 10 19) J34 )6
10 32 • 1.0 ,,, 11
N• ~h Ol•!Meol "14 IS ltl 1"S SJ
1l 21 • IN I.. JO
11 JI 10 IN 114 ..
II 22 9 711 JJ1 '3
IS 11 12 103 J ,, •J
U 16 t IU 104 )7
WALES CONl'lalNCE
l"alrk k 01•1•1..,
NY l>lanOt" 21 13 6 191 15' 60
Pllllldt llltll• ,. 16 ) I'll In se
NY Rengtr\ 21 10 I 112 IN ..
P•ll>bur9fl JO JO • IM 1'2 • Weslllneton 12 ?t t 11] 101 J1
Bull••o Bo1lon
Mon1r111
Ouebe<
H•rtlord
A,.._Olvl•I•
29 11 9 '" Id •1
,. 14 • '" '"' ., ,. 11 ,, JI• 1• 60
JS " " 714 '" ~ 11 24 II 1U 1'11 U
s-. ... s, .... Kl11t• S, Vancouver )
WlslllllQlon •.NV R•nve".
Edmonton 1, COlortdo •
Teeli .... '•Gem" Cel;ary 11 Boslon
Mlnne\Ot• •I Toronto
Harl lord •I Cl1•<-
T""4ay'• Game•
MonlrH l •1 o..ec.c
Wlnn11»9 •I Oeiro;I
Plltsbur9fl •I NY !\landers
E dmonlon •I SI LoulS
Pl11ladtlDfl•• al Color•OO
KlnQI 5, Cenuck1 5
kwetoyl"-
~lnt l"eriM
' L01i At199IH, Fo• 1t ITtrrlon. Hardyl,
1 JI 1 Los At1911 ... St Laurent 1 I 801ell.
Mulvey I, •·s1 ) LOS AllQ<'IH , Dionne JO CM
Murpl\y, Cl\ar1r-1. II 11 • Vancou-.
Gr1dln ll CSmyl, Wllham\I It 17 Pena111-.
Cllerlr-. LA. 32, Wllll•m>. Van, J1
KtllY, LA, S l4
Ste ............
S V•"cou"•'. Gr•d•n 24 t 8old1r•v.
Helw•rdl, I 'll • V.,.couver, M<Cer'llly •
1 Boldlrev, Halward I. IJ n I Y•ncouwr,
Hllnka 11 1-0oNIOI, "71 Penall•••
Vancouver bench, wrvt4 bY 8r•\•r. 1 Sl,
Kelly, LA, • 10, Wlllo•m•. ll•n, • 10, L
Murplly, LA, 1 ... W•lh, LA. IJ SI
H1n9sleben, LA double minor u S.
Hudy, LA. maeor maltll miM.Ondu<t-99mt
mt1conduct, 11 '' Ch•rlr•w. l A
major ;ame mlsconoucl, 11 ... W•ll•. LA,
mlnor·m•Jor q•m• m1\tonouc1. 11 491
Wllll•m•, Van. II ••. Oel<><emt. Y•t1, trlolt
minor m•tor.9aml' mhtonOv<t ti ''·
Smyl, van; maior 9-ml\Condu<I. •• It
Roi•. Yan, m•1CI'-m•S<ondvCI It ••
Tlllnl f'e,.....
I LO\ Angele'\, KeHy I (FO•, TernonL
11 4J t Yan<Ou•tr. Lue>ul I, It 14 10 LO\
An9e10. Fo• It !Turnbull, Olonnel, 19 I)
P•n•lttes 8otdtr•v. Va n • 01. SI
L aur1nl LA. • 10 W1lll•m\, V•n • 10
Hanqst-. LA, 11 0
s not• on _, Los A"9f••• 10 10-11.31
Y•ncouvor 1-Jl·•·ll
Go•lies Los Anotl•• Kt4tl\
vencou-. 8rodour A 12 ... s
Weekend lranHctions
IASl8AU
Na-I Le .....
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES !>09rwd
l •trV Chr~t"'loOf'\· ptlc,._., to • tour Y••r
con1rac1 1'00T8ALL
Neti....11'-llL,e ....
!>AN FRANCl!>CO Of;RS Annovn<MI
1110 rellrtmenl ot P•ul Hbltr, 11all1>a<1o
MOCKEY
NetleMIM«Uy L-
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS Stoned
Frid P•rhni, c~l•r. to • tour year conlrK t
CO\.LEGE
TEXAS A&M Ntmecl Cll•rlt\ Tl1ornlon
•nocl•lt alllltht director lor all •Dort•
OctPI football. eno W•lly Groll .. -·••e
attltt llc 01n:ct0f' for flNnci•I att•ir\
XV -Jen U , ""· OHiand IAFCI JI, Le Ouc Oe 8ar IGuerr1t J to Unlvtr;oly · Smid·8•1•n Teroc1y, ..... 1.5
...... -.Pllll~ld!Y.llt~.H.,._ _,,.. Alsorac..i L!!l!.'~Clr ,,,_ __ ., Mw+ --~----~--~~ ~ ------·---"?'--=:~-)«V~ ~mt&lr;i\fAl'<.r.tr. ~ill~~ ,.. •.. ' ~. ~ ·-"J'"""" "''•~•1c· Los A~ies ,,.~~I ,.' ' U IXACTA 16-SI paid n• 50 Fri., Merell l2 -Gon••9a Unl¥erslly l•t G!Mntl•. ararlll
:---------
(double·lle.oer, ,,_,, si...IH l'IM I
XIII -Jllll JI, 191'; Plll\buf'Clll IAF'CI Jl, NINTM RACE. I l11"mlles. Sal , Mar<ll20 UnlvtrSlty ol Waslllf191on Y•n Wlnllslly Ott C•rlos Klrm•yr 6 l "'l
0 111 .. CNFCI )1 Bellelomant IM<Hu-1 14 00 • .0 • tO (Ip m I IW•nllslly win\~ 0001 . ' OeXnl~erCAJ~11~S. "71, 0•11 .. INFCI 27. Tan;aroaCMtnal tlO 700 T1111 .-c11u e1uverneC011-~l'IMI
XI _ J t "11 n-i d F SwlllBird lGuerr•I tfO Tllun .. Mar<ll U SoullltrnCel Colle9f Pllll Oenl·Klm Wir w lc k Oef
Minne le ~FCI 14 · -r 1111 IA Cl ». AIM> raced· Plenty O'TOOle. 8alllewlnd,· Cdouble·M-. ,,_,, , Klrmiyr.CMsio MOiia, 6.1 . ._J, 6.3 (Deni,
X SOJ It 197 .. Pl c. FCI JI lmpet1 ... 1 ~"·Gr•<••~ Tues • Merell JO •• Cll SI. LO\ An;eles Warwlo """ lll,0001 -an. • "· llsbur9fl ~ · Tlmt I G J/S. Frl , Aprll J ~rdlrw• • O•llHINFCl17 UIXACTA l6-Jl palO"*)O S •I . 40,11 3 •• Popoerdln• Womenatournement
IX -J en l1, 1'1S Pllhbur9'1 CAFCI 1". Attt-t JSttJ ldOUble.nt...., _,.. (atSNll .. I
Mlnnesote (NFCI t ' Tllfl AP"ll.. el UC Sant• Barbara• s.tftlffMI ~.
VIII -Jen 1J, lt7•, Miami CAFCI 2•. Fri .. '.l.or11 • •• , Loyol• Marymounl' RoSlt CAslls-Wenoy Tumbull Otl. Andre•
Mlnnesote (NFC> 1 Hollywood Perk Sal .. April 10 Loyola Merymounl J eeger-Belsy N•;elsen. •·1. lo·1, •·l ; Anne
VII -Jan. 1', 1'71, Ml.,,.I (AFC) 1'1 SUNDAY'S aESULTS (dOUble.-noonl' Sm1111·Kallly Jordan clel Sue Berkt,,Ann
Wnlllnvton CNFCI 1. , .... ......_.._.,_ ... , TuH ,Aprll ti UnlWrsityetS.n 01e9>• Klyomur1.1 S .•. 1
VI J"" "'· ttn; 0.llH INFCI >•. FlaSTRACE.Onemlltpect Fri Aprllt•-CelSt Fullerton• OevlaCup
Mleml CAFCI J Soan Ovl IAftdtr-.1 1 00 •JO J.to Si c.', APf'll 11 el C•I St Fulle rton EASTERN ZONE
y J"" 11, ""· 8alhmort CAFCI "· H H Cll-r (Todcll u 60 lo.40 Coouble..,._, -·· (II -11•1
O•llH (NFCI 13 Gypsy Sam CWlsl\ardl •JO Tuts., April ?O ""-rdlrw' ~ ·-•• ""''"""'"I IV -J .... 11, 1'70, K•tlM• Cily CAFLI n . Also ractd: Flnel s-9. Stmlnol• c111.i, l'rl . Al)t'll 23 •• L-Beecll SI • ~
MlnnesotelNFLll Stn9• RI•. !ipry's ~I. Gentrel Sll•er. S.l ,AprllJ• LongBeecl1Stcnoonl' J04\ Younvoae 1Sou111 Korul ael Alta
Ill -Jllll 17. 19't, Now York .Hh IAFL) 819 Sprlt19, 8e<I Glenv•lt Tues . Aprtl J7 •I Loyol• Mery-I' ~•rc111, t-•. lo·2, lo·J. Kim C-llo 15.oul!I u. a.111..-1 (NFLI I, Tlmt J 03, Fri . April JO -•IC•• St. L ... An;eltS' KOrHl dtl Manuel Y•lleremos ...... 1.5
Camel. Where a man belongs.
Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. 8 mg. "ta(. 0.8 mg. nicotine w.
per c1garene by FTC method.
ca
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'
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• .... , 4 o c I I 4 A ¥40
Orange C(\att DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 25. 1982
l
Garage sales, yard sales, rummage sales, street sales ... no matter what
you call them, the idea is the same -TURNING THINGS YOU NO LONGER
NEED INTO CASH. When you get tired of fighting your way into a crowded
attic or garage, or when you need a little extra cash, have a garage sale! So
get into the act, clean out those unwanted items, and make money doing it! ..
It's fun, it's profitable, and following these 10 steps will make it simple.
Decide on dates.
Look at a calendar and set the dates and times of your
•
sale. Weekends are usually good, but many successful
sales have been held in the evening, just after work.
Check the weather forecast in the paper, and watch for
any other large event that may attract potential buyers
away, such as fairs or community events. Have your
sale run at least two days -some people may not be
able to come on any single day. ·
What to sell.
)
Everything! That is, eveJ)1hing you haven't used in the
• last year. If an item has antique value, or is brand· new,
or has unusual value, be sure to ask a healthy price for
it. Get a pad of paper and search your whole house.
Look everywhere, and list everything.
Fwniture. This is your main attraction and your
best source of income. Be sure to place furniture
where it can be seen from the street. Price
furniture low enough to beat auctions and
secondhand sales (check the classifieds for
compartsons), but high enough so you can come
down a Httle when someone shows interest.
Rockinq chairs, chest of drawers, tables and
chairs are all very successful at garage sales, so
feature them in your ad.
Antiques. Smaller antiques should be grouped, and
kept close at hand where you can watch and talk
about them. Nostalgia items are very popular -
display them well.
Clothin9. Make sure c lothing is clean, and mark
the price way down. Put as many things as
possible on hangers. Separate kid's things by age .
Display adult clothing by sex and age group. Low
prices are a must on clothes except for unusual
items, which should be tagged With an
explanation (like, "hand-embroidered flowers,
dress worn by Mae West)."
Appliances. These wi II sell for a fair price only if
they work. No one will take your word for it. Have
an extension cord so they can be tested, or better
yet, have radios playing, old TV sets-turned ori
etc. Make sure buyers understand they are sold
..... \"
\\ .
5 . . .
Where to advertise.
Place your ad where it will be seen by people who live
in the area -most people shop close to home. The II Daily Pilot is read by 88,000 adults in Costa Mesa,
Newport Beach, Laguna Beach, Irvine, Huntington
Beach and Fountain Valley -guaranteeing you wide
exposure. And with the Pilot, you 're not paying for
waste circulation in Los Angeles or Anaheim. Plan to
run your ad 3 times or more, and start it a few days
before the sale so bargain hunters can have plenty of
notice. '""
Make a sign.
w To help make your sale successful, make a few signs Ill from cardboard and letter with a magic marker: A good
sign size is 14" x 22".
Placing your sign.
The morning of the sale, but not before, place your
II signs. Be sure and add your address and any
directional arrows. This should be done about a half
hour before the sale starts. Place your sign where it
can be seen from both sides of the street by passing
cars and pedestrians. CAUTION : Some towns have laws
that restrict"the placement and duration of garage sale
signs. Please chec~. with your town's planning
department or clerk. ·
Marking prices.
Mark prices where they can be seen clearly. Office
Ill supply stores have varoius sizes and colors of stickers
that work well, or you can use maskin9' tape. However
·you mark them, make prices low. Garage sales are for
bargain hunters. Remember, whatever you can't sell
you'll have to drag back in the house and store again
for another year.
. Serving refreshments.
-~------~~~~·,.. w:a:31c ....... _... .... -~ I -:a-..,,,._,,._.. _ __..o.:;;;i~
Th ts doesn't have to cost much, and creates a friendly
.~·~phere . It also encourages people to stay longer
and perhaps buy more. You could even charge for
expensive items like donuts, or the kids could go in ~
business for the day, with a lemonade stand.
,.
Plants. These usually go fast, but keep them out of
direct sunlight. A good idea is to name your plants
before the sale (Spider Lady, Cousin Jasper,
Maggie), and write a line or two on the
name card about how to care for them.
Write your ad.
Here is a su~gested ad: "Garage Sale -desks, II Bentwood rocking chair, toys, infants' clothing, 1922
Victrola in original cabinet, many gadgets, lots of
unusual items, rock collection, plants. Refreshments, 8
a.m. to 6 p.m . Saturday and Sunday. 1234 South
Anystreet, Yourtown. Just west of Main and 2nd."
Use this sample ad as a guide. Be sure to list unusual
items. Be as·specific as possible. Give directions if
needed. Don't use abbreviations-many people won 't
bother to decipher them. CAUTION: Don't advertise
anything you don't really have. Every item in the ad
must be on hand at the start of the sale.
•
Display.
Make sure everything can be seen . Have card tables or
• boards used as shelves between two chairs. Don't
cause people to bend over unless you can 't help it. Use
one table as a desk where you can see everything and
take money. Use only one cash box (tin cans or boxes
work fine) and make sure someone is appointed
"cashier" at all times. Arrange beforehand for a friend
whcr-can hetp-an swer:-questiornt;-t"elief...f~+unc A-; ete.
Check your neighbors and
friends.
II See if any want to join your sale. Th is wi II give you
someone to share expenses with and increase interest
6 4 2 5 6 '18 in your sale. If others join you, be sure to include this in
• . your ad (example: "three-family sale," "neighborhood lailJ Pilaf _____ .._.sa-le"). -Grou_..p sate-s are.._a lot-morellillllilifun._.too. -
330 w. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA. . 4 GOOD LUCK WITH YOUR GARAG( SALEI
Open ~5:30 Monday thru Friday, Saturday 8-noon. MAY 11 BE SUCCESSAJ[ AND AINI
l
1
I
'I ..
•.
;·
i
(·
'• ~
I
·: '·
,
'
Confused
by all the conflicting
food bargain claims?
\<7 \\'hen you want f ood bargains -pnces
you can count on. the proof is in print .....
in the grocery ads in the Daily Pi lot . Shop the
Daily Pilot . get the facfs. compare .....
then you know you ·re really getting the most
f or your moneJ:J. \
SHOP WITH MONEY-SAVING
COUPONS FROM THE ..
lailyPilai
rtlllCINOTHHS
-.L NOADWAY
MORTUAIY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
&42-9150
IALnlHGHOH
SMITH & TUTHILL
WHTCUFf CHAl"IL
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
646-9371
... Cl llOTMllS
SMITMS' WOlrTUM'f
627 Main $1
kunt1ngtoilBHch
536-'6539
rACINC Y•W
MIMOltA&. rAU
Cemetery Monuary
Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pac1flc View Drive
Newpor1 Beach
644-2700
ti42-4321
.
'Pray f~~ p~y no h~Jp.
PEKING (AP) -Some YOUDI Cb1nese who
want pay raises are 1otn1 to temples to pray to
Buddhiat imqes, a letter in tbe Pekiq Daily
complained. ·
Others pray for 1ood health, protection from
disasters and solution.a to job ualpment.s that
keep husbands and wives apart, while still more
pray silently, the letter said.
It said, "We don't deny that many problems
remain to be solved in clotbinc, feediq, bouain1
and tranaJ)Ol'tlna people." But lt added that only
sweat Md banf work would briq modernlaaUoa
and hither llvlnl atanclarda to Cblna.
Hoarders
warned
~~~~~~~~~~-
--. ........... t---
LaeM. llOTtC•
NOTICE IS Hl!llEIY OIVl!N tllet
IM l•t'-'"I 1.._ el ,_ « t...ed
'"'"9rtr -..... -11J 1M "'°'><• OeHn-Ill , .. Cltr of G•l• MeWI lw • -led lfl .. <-_ Ill ,,..,.., <•OI S A L I S 8 U· R Y , dert: ler'1 lrow11 lt•yce u111..,
Z · b b ( A p ) e kyt1e, ...,., "" ScllwlM ,.....,.., 1 m a we -••crc•e. lor ·• 11.0 '~"••1111 Gasoline boarders have S<r--. 91c¥c ... ._.., .,. • ...,,.,
be ed th r CrulMr lkyc .. , Ber'• 0.-Sctoiw!M en warn ey ace 10 '"· lkrc ... ..,.., , .. Hlllty t w o y e a r a ' "M1111" 8Mdlcrutt. lkrc ..... ,., imprisonment at bard •tec• 1c11w11w1111ttt•r• lkrc ... Girt'•
McCoeMtcl WOITU.UllS Leguna Beach
494-9415
labor and fin-Of •t,""" Oret19e Murrer Sll11tr•y llCytle, ..... • """" Sceoter, Surl .... rd, Oetel C•ltttd u n d e r t o u g b n e w w.do1,.. IMd • o.1e1 ..., "'"' I I trol l COi~ WMdlflt Ill ... ue -con awa. NOTICI! IS l'UllTHl!ll Ol'ilN !Ml Laguna Hells
766-0933
San Juan Capistrano
495·1776
He•DI LAWM-MT. oun Monuert • CerT18 lefy er..,.tory
1825 Gillet Ave
Cola.Me ..
~S564 0 ...
Ener1y Minister 11 no -_..,.,.. ..,...., ....
Si b M koni Wninl _,.,.. .. "" ,,..."" witlltfl M¥9fl m 8 8 , OU OI ...,_ .......... tt1t tll*keti-. e1 the meuures, aald tbe ""' 11et1ee ... tttt• ...,. .. tM11 .,.., re1ulatJona would curb lt1 IN ......... 11 ""'-•-.•1t1 • City II C.-. -.e. lfl 9Ncll c-tt1t • • a rt if l c I a I ' • f u e 1 .--tY1•..., • .-.. .-1k -•• shorta1es tbrou1hout ... u,... .... -. ... -.
the former Brltl1h OetM~~T!:-1• • colony ol Rhodesia. o.t.r"*'t
Tbe r::w:Uona were ~ 0r ... c..c Deity~. ,,_,a,,.
Im poae after four t-=-....,,...-.,...----...iac~ months of 1asoltne 'P1nd whlit fOU want In
sbort-.es. Dally Pilot Cle11lfleds.
J ,
' , --·--------........-... --...... ...._ _________ __
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. January 2e. 1982
.. ,a .. T ....... 8'tlAU , .......... ,
T.O. llllVICI COMPMY M _.. .........,.,.........,,. ........ ClAS .. •
eel& ....... flf n. WIU ......
AT .. UaLIC AUC:YION TO TNI HIOHllT l lDOllt ,0. C:AIH , .. \ ............... .,. ...... ------------------..----------
-··-~ ..... , ... , ...... ............. c-... ...... _
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lalll,.ICIA•V: A•THUll I . M8111TZIL eAd MallllL J ,
MllllTZll.IMlllllM ... wW."telM ............ ~ ... ,_ ""'*· .... ..,, ...... 1 ... .,
Offtclet ...... Ill -"*-.. .. 1111.uNlr., Or ... ¢ellllty; .... ...
ti 1•11•1 41tKrlkt Ille lell-1119 ..,...,...,,
Tiit lelld ttltrreel le IA t11I•
BNrlfl•lt .......... 111 ....... ..
CM ....... c:-.er .. Or ........ I• •• , ... !" ........ : "•itc•" 1: Ulllt .... .._Ill Ill City el ......... ,
.. ""· '-"' .. Or ......... .. c .............. -•• , ... "' IN Ct *"'••llo&M ,...,. rw..-. t11
0c....-.. ltft, ..... '""· ..... 11•. Offklel _.,.., .... c-,.
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lflterflt••lllllMl l•-·-... 111 ................ c-...
Ai'el el Lii 1 el Trect ....... II*' Ill#
llled 111 MM *74, .-eea It te 4J
lllCluel ......... ..._ ..... ~--ellkt .. Ille c..,. 11 ....... .... '-''·"---"' ........... .. Ntk ...... _ .. ~ .... ..
o.ci.r.-. .. ~ c:-. .....
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TAY LOI{ ('0 i
I ') I'' --------1; I "; : I I:. '
M1W BCLUSIVI -HAllOI YllW '
Fint time offered. Quiet park·like
setting. Huge rear yard 179 ft wide. Rm
for paddle tennis and pool, or areal for
an orchard. Picturesque cul de 11c
street. 3 bdrms and Family Rm.
$379,500 including land. See anytime.
~o
W1SUY M. TAnOI CO., IWTOIS
JlllS. ........ .. MIWPOIT c:eue. M.I. ... ....,,. ,
.... """"' ... ----~ "· '"'· Ill -11«11 ...... -.. Offklel .._ ... et IHI ~., CYM
C..-UYIM61
Tired of 11rd work?
Need a new lift 1tyle?
Y• will loYe tllla Im·
metu1ate. I Bdrm toe• domlaham . Dlacover bow .,.y It would bt for you to llave a carefree
life for oely suuso.1------111!!111-I .... ..._. CAU.NOW. ..wLYMAllUI ....
'"OKIM' ..... ''). 8Rf MY ........ , ..... .,_ ....... ..._.
ElCCE"1 THl!llEl'llOM ell ell, ....
MIMrela ............ , ......... .
............ -..... wlllltut .. ,..,., ........ ,., ... ·--... ..... -........ . "AllCILJ:
l!••-Cll • audl ............ " ta/are ~klll••r NI 1trt11 111 111e Artkle eflllllM "E__., .. el IN
Oeclaretle11 u11der Ille Sect1011
HeMllltCtl Ill -II Artl<le Mllltled ..
lellewa: "UtllMlet", "sett..,._ -E11er~· .,.. "C-ArN
Ee•met1t".
U lee lt1111d Drive, N••P•rl
lee<ll,CA
"Cll a .. , .. , -Ht er.,.c-
de1l111•llo11 11 111ew11 tlHlve. 110
warr111\.)' It 9 lve11 tt le Ill c_,. ........ or CWl"eCtNU)." T"9
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1W r-el• llWMdl w deleull lfl !fie
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tlleU11d11•A11•-DKl9' ..... .. Del ........ ~,.,,....
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lo tau• .. ..,... 1111•• le ... , Wll4I ....... .., ..... ,.,, ............. ...... .... -....... ..... -...... ~
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Ille Rec:..-Ot-12, !WI" lllllr.
Ne. 19'11 Ill -IGD -IOM, el WI .. Oltklel llec:enh.
s.111 ... •Ill .. -· -•• .._. ceve11e"t or werrMty, ••fll"eu .,
...,..1.0, ........... tttte, _....... • .,
fft<lli'llW.W: ... lo pey ............ 1111
IWlfle ... ..., Ill IN -Ill --lly Wiid o.d el Tnm, wlttl 1111-t 111
...................... --.lfeooy, ......., IN-· Mill Deed el Trwt. Ifft, C-9" -U-IH el tlle
Trint• .... ol h lnllb c ....... lly
WI .. 0..0 ol Tr .... Wd .... wUI ..
lleld ... T....-,, .. ..,_., "· Ha al J:IO p.m •• el tlle ~ Av-
Mtre11ee, • .. Clvk C-,.,.._,,,..
-Eett °'9pfNft A-, lfl .. Cll"r e10r ......
At Ille tlnw el ... lllltlel lllAl!lulleft
O<I tllls. notjce, t• lotel -el t•
u11peld bllet1ce of tlle ••ll .. t1e11 wcured llr .... ....., detcrleM ..,..,
lrinl alld ...,,,,_ cesb, e._.
e11d ao .. a11cu It U0,00.lt. Tc
..... "' ............. bid ........ _,
ceU C7t41tJ7....._
081•: J_., IS, 1"2
T.O. KllVICE COMPANY ...... T.-
•r~McM11ti...
Auh-Sec-y
0..Clty ........ w.i o. ..... u. ....
C71411»4m1 P\ltlllNd Or .... c:-4 o.lly ,,__
JM . ts. F• I. I. 1-ls.a
NOTIC& CW TlllUSTE•'I SAL•
T.1.-11-t-
Of't F__, 17, 1"2 el 10:00 .-elect:
a m., •1 IN lrolll Elltrance ef SAFECO
Tltle 111"°ret1Ce '-"'· HS He. Bn>OO,.ey, lt1 l"9 Cib< ·el S-te Alie,
COUtlly .. 0r-.. 511 .... C.lllOrnl•.
SAFE CO TITLE I NSURANC E
COMPANY,. c..._euon. '"T .... , ...
vnotr ,.. L-Fenn S.CIWitY IAllCJ
Contract,. •-ul.., br OCEE RITC1H
allCJ BEVERLY RITCH, -aflCI wll• u joint •-ts. recorded l /S/tO
•• do<u_..,. no. 400 In -usu. p~ IS.7 of Offlclel Recorc11 111 llw
ofllce of Ult Rec:orclttr ol Orenoe
County. Calllornla, Dy reuon ol
deleull In tl\e pay..-1 or portonnenu
ot oblloa110,.. 1uurec1 tllerebr
lnc:ludlnQ '"° broach or clofoull. nollce
ol which wH recorclecl 10/Slll es
clocumtM no. 4471 in -UHJ, -,.., ol sold Offl<lel Rec-. will sell •I public auction lo tl\e 111911M1 .,._,
for <•"'In ._,_., ef ,,. Unl-
51•tH1 wit-I Ml\'-H.,e,.aAl_.
warranty. •.,,.-eued or lmptl.., es to
llllt, POHesllon, or enc:umbre11<H, for
the purPOso ol paylno obll9at1on1
wcured bY solcl L-F...-m Security L•flcl Centrect, IN lnt..-HI conve,.ci
10 ••Id Tnlitee ....... .., L-Fonn
S.curlly ~ COtltrect In PF--1Y
11tuat.., In ttw Counl-t of Or-. S1411e of Calllorllla and -rlbecl H :
Lot 6, lloc-A of Tract .... 13', u
_,. on • "'"' recorded Ill -11,
P990 )fol Mltcell-~. 111 IN
office el llW C-r recerWr el Ulld
ceunty
TIM ...,...., ... ._. .... Hllmate Of
ces11, • ._. --tneft .. of
Fec.n.ery 11. 1'92 It Pt, .... ; ulO
_, wlll lntl'MM untll d919 of wto.
Tiie ure•I add••n a11d otlM•
cemmOfl llKigfwttlOfl, II •"Y. of tM
•••• P•-rlr delcrlDed abon h purport.cl 1.e be' UNKNOWN
Tl\t under1igMcl TMllf• dlKi.lm1 eny lleblllly lor ..,, lnc:orrect<WH of
IM 1lrHI tdd•e•H -otlwr <omtnOfl
detlOfl•llOfl, 11 ony, -,,.,.111.
Oetod: J-y I, 1"2
VENOOll· 11081!11T C. REMICK
afld MYRA T. llEMICK, -•ncl ....
AOORESS: 201' Or-. Ave., cose.
Mue, CA t2627 Telepllone OH>
IMJ-JS47
$AFECO TITLE INSURANCE
COMPANY, a COtllorollOfl Trv1I•
AOOREU: l03 W. Stll Sirwet, S...
1..-nenlll\O. CA '740J Tel.,.__ 11141
... JSJI
ly: K•Y.._lcu ,
AMiii..,. Sec:r-y
Putlllllwcl Or..,.. C:O.st Oellr Piiot.
J... "·JS, .... '· 1"2 J~
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r .. ._)ft '"'"' Th--l•I ~,,.,..,ft
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AJh1'lrt11wl e• R-. -·-d twft)Motri\ c;...v._,
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llSllSS,lblSl·
MOT. rJIAllCE
SllYIClS
~trtlhr-f'ftor1
HIPl.IYMlllT &
PllPAUTIOll
"C'toiltti .... lr....-1 ..... JvttW.i.tWl'tl'
.......... f'll ....
MllCMAllllSE
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llATS&MN (..,..,
um.o
um.no
,,,. ---~ -J~ ll.W -ll<lt --.. -... mo -Ult
This newapeper will not
knowinf ly eccept eny
advert sin& for reel
11tai. which Is In viola-tion of the law.
BllOIS: Acl .. rffHn
.... dttck ....
~..=.r;:...t;
DA.IL Y PILOT•-•
l.wlty for tllt flnt
I.correct l•ttrtlo• .,.
:= Hamel for~ ..., ..•.•.................. :: ....... f\111 --1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
DIEAMHOUSE
WITHCHAIM! You 'll love it here!
E)iglish Tudor style. lov·
ely tree lined street,
pride or ownership
neighborhood and an as·
sumable loan or 174.000
at 12' •'. interest Full
price on this 3 Bdrm 2
bath doll house is
1104. . Call 646· 7171
CdMFIXH
$2ZS,OOO ~ue beach cotta11e paint, carpel and
imafination! Excellent
location. Motivated owner will help finance.
Walk to beach! Hurry ,
ca11673-SS50
THE REAL
ESTATERS
-.OW MAIUCn!
4 bdrm home in Costa
Mesa. Won't last at
1120,000. t yr home war·
ranly. Owner-assuted
f~CUli.. Call 9'19·S370
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
STAITSMAIT
IN COSTA MESA Assume •1.000 in loans at al2 rm. family room
features cozy fireplace!
3 larce bdrms. Sparkl· in& clean condition. Only -Bhtrs. Lease option. 2 br. $12$.000! Call 673-8~1 wide greenbelt 1139,SOO --;~t -=Bk=r~, 644::..:.Tlt-'-'·0=~""'"4Ll-X---i rimtt
:... "THMS" -,..,.
•I> -----------.n
Beautiful triplex near
South Co ast Plaza.
Owner will cerry rinanc· inc at 12•,;. P rice
12&1,000 Excellent. ex
rellent locetion Call
1Mtl1
: •DISHTID : •IAl&AIN : I MeuVerde'sflnest! Va·
: cant, owner wents out!
-Large 3 Bdrm. 2 bath : home family room.
-brick fireplace. quiet I trtt·Uned strttt Close to shopping. call now,
..... 546-2313 I ~--1 ! --1------... -1 HAllOl RIDGt ::.: An exquisite ofrering.
... Elegant & spacious 3
::: bdrm + family home. I ::: ~~ ~~ r l~a:~r:::~
-coastline, ocean & night
Uchts. Prestice. com·
Iott . luxury & security.
Reduced. now 16115.000.
,.,,. --
SOMERSET '"A ...
Delightful 2 Br rondo
rloR to So Coast Plaza
& airport industrial area. Beautifully de-
corated. Great Slllrttr
home 1m.~. 1s1.31s1
CoufW..WPCMT MAI.TORI
2Stl LC.-... ,. c.r-... ...
115·5511
----------
LA9UESTA
$133,000
A great oprortun11y
priced we I b~lo w market. Owner wants
rast sale & will help
finance. 3 Br 14 • 81,
ch.uminc fl oorplan
7Sl-3191
(Owner f111ancingl. Al\. · I ~.5,WI VllWTOWMHOMH !!!!l!l•!!!!!l•!!!!!!!•!I!!~ Master suites. View or
---... --:: SIWON S
:! ~tJ! Wit fer S• 1111 114 da Isle -Newport ~ Bee c h . C u s t o m ~:,: waterfront home ·
mi priced fer below market ~ for quick ult. MAI ap. 11i. ~raiaal 14.4 million · fill JI» educed lo onlr 13.6
:;: million. &tiler wU carry
fl• 30yearfln1ncln1at 10~.
;:: Room for 3 larie yecht1.
ri• Indoor/outdoor pool/ape ~~ with retractable roof.
"'' Un derl!ound wine fl»
fl• cellar. parate 1u11t "i' AND maid's quarters. :It World's moat romantic :l: master suite overlook· :l: Ina entire harbor.
rlfl Broker consideration. -To see call Rick. Bkr. mnao. '1292 anytlme.
Ocean & Ni1bt li1hts.
Qliet Area. Parks. open
spaces. Sl37 .000. X Int
fin. Halor Pat Alts
751-llllOS, 673· 7300
SI 0,000 DWN!
FIXEI!
B1r1ain! 3 Bdrm 2 beth. pool ! Owner extremely
1111llvated! •.soo total
price. Call for more de·
tails. $t6:23 l3
THE REA L
ESTATERS
IMPICCAILE
~., .,
Alfi: -
Located in presU1ioua
Spy&lua. this 3 Br 2 Ba wtlJI formal dinl111 room
and family room bu
fabu.loua rmuntain and
city U1ht views. Good
rlnancin1 offered by
motivated ow ner. ..... -C..M•f •u c...,. •T c..t to NII at $50,000.
NOTica TOCllaOtTOttS tt;:": =
0,.8UUlTlll .... l,.a• C.... *' cs.cs.'"'_."' u.c.c.1 c.c-i -1tt tlilJ"'-. '-tt.t.ltLIJ1&.1L.IJIL.1'1J"1'4--n;~,,______ = ..
credllen el HOWAllO IC. KIM efld ---:'"t ' (\ l 1---------.,,. SUNHEE L. KIM, Tr~ • ...._ ri -...._ • I
lleme addrH1 11 14111 Mulberrr •-~ -·-'
A•et111•. City Of ,,,,,,,.., c_,, .. =· = Businessmen or.,.., s....., Cellfenlte, t111t •..,.. ..,,..,, -
1re11ll•r t• •llOut t• 11e "'•" t• ·:t=&,.. -I/ ~011 art do111g j
MO HAMMAD 5AEIDI l"AEZ. ,_ = b111i11••• 1111dtr a 't Tr .... me.......................... "' ..
1'Jt 111. Coif ... ~. Allt. H.Jt, City ,::::a : f'icflrlou 8111i11tu !
., 1111ttenot1, ~, ., 0r.,.., sc• .,,.,,.....,.. -.'Vamt p ott rtq111red
1
1
ot CelllwNe. ~ "'4 "" la"' , ......... ,, -:...~ flle ~ It • tf ......... le ~ ... -. v. "' IJINHIC llnu
._,.._. 111 ..,.,.. .. : •11 ••• "' Pro/tutaltl •Codt. Ste. :~ :~~--=::::. =:: moo to l79J01 ro /alt a
"YOOUllT CONNaCTION" lflel f'ictillou 8111i11eu
COtllmCIAL
2 alor9, 1 blodl to ocean
H down. Owner wJJI
c1117 btlaDte. IMS.000. .... ~,...,. ......
•671-7Mt•
tecMH .. ,. Via.,,.,.,.., t, City ~pl•:t;ourme111ce Namt Stattmfftt 'Giid r. u , ... a ...
.... _pert a.tll, c.tllltr .. ~..... -th• /lout It -bh•IMd. fo.r. r1 ...... .... Slllle el Cell'-"'11, -• ,.-T lie eu11l ,,.,.,,,r w111 11e readln1publlc, /our cO!Ufadfw tlffb. f'..U I
c...__..."'., • ...,,,.1..,.-, pltcxte WE at "" DAILY .... of l'••ruerr. 1"2 et 1t:• e,m, •• Dal'• Pilot P/'Of -"·t:-''" WISTlllN MUTUAi. llCllOW Y " ,._. ,,. -n
co""· Altll~ Merli"'~....... c1 ... mte1.141·5f71 11or11. eau ,,., GA4 ·.
..._..._1,t•tS.Y.,..SCl'ftl, OIPARTM£NT a.I 111~':.:0:..!":~":'::.:::'.:..-u2-m1 izt. u2 /ot 142171 ::fiE~";=-;;;: r· ;;;:~~,~ ;~ . PiZ
" Ille Tl'....._. ....... ..,.. Miid• o( • ---......... ., ... , •• , '* ~·•rt:-· ~ II 1'1&'1 wlllU... • ,_ to Mil tt.lt bitft'lt Olttd:J_,,,,. • DAILYPILOT ,. ......... ,, •. ~=:'Seeldl~-....,.., latlleDAILY LOT mVICIDIUCTOIY 8'urt111 It 11 th'
You will be deU1bted to entertain your friend• in
IJU youth oriented com-
! munlty with ·all t ht
anwnities, pool, tenni.a,
lake and a better wey of
lift lo start your remlly. You will love the Oak
plank entry end thick
~ct brown cerpeta. art gallery walls. 1197 ,SOO.
'75-141 I
m-611.1266 We heve a brand new Vu
phone at REIMAX and
we are looking rorward
to uslst1111 our heannc
•mealred friends with
their rul estate needs
Call Anoe MacCasland.
agt. bet ween 9-$
TTY 631-12166
..... e••••ee••••••e•e••
Eani 11" on Balboa
lllaDd llult deedl. Over
SK= 8llort or lonl term. minimum .
..... tty .... -671-28" -
IYOWIB ISLAND'S MOST
CHAR Ill NG SGL RES.
3 bdrm + loft, FrenelL
doors • windows. Flnesf -appointments tbruout
214 AmelJIYtl. Open Sat
~~/gt~~ ~~
MIWPOIT ... TI
Custom near new •
coreeous thruout Cape c.od 4 Bdrm, family rm,
formal dinin1 rm. ""!-
brick frplcs. 3 decks
W/octlft peek. $465,000 6
terms
JACOIS IEALTY
'7M,70
Hllll' ~ou read tod11y·1
l.1llSS1ricd Ads? H not
.\1>1.i"re m1ss1n1: the best ~arg11111s 1n town!
HA .. 1111£ -FIDCll llAllOI
llO VU OF a.,. OcMI & WttJI ......
M1 dfh ... ..., & ..... I e::
tlllh.,..5700 Mio ft. ml•1Ha, ..... wt1114M._.,,.._. ... ,._ -....t.L,.. .... _. ----.... _.. 1111,rua • ...a -&
.,.. ............... C8ltem fer ... ,.rtk.... ............ • ... hit tr•••• ., ... Lm m ..._. ..._.
SUtO.OOOt.e.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC.
REAL ESTATE
l•Jb w c. ...... .....
N."tli'Pftrl f\, ... h
'11·1411
II\ M~r""' Aw 8.oh ... t.i-1
67Uttt
Ell:
111111 1L11n ca.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
115 CANYON
New Li s ting -Beautifully
Upgraded Dover Unit -Single
Story 2 Bedrm 2 Bath + Den -
Bright, Cheerful Decor -Special
Wall Coverings -Shows Like A
Mod e l -Owner Will Carry
Financing -Call For Appl To
Show. You Are Invited To Inspect.
$425,<XX>.
® ·--..........
RfSIOENTIAl AEAl ESTATE SERVICES
. f#o POI OMI COM
Live happily ever after in this cozy
owners unit & receive rent on the
attractive 2BR + den rear unit.
Both for just $289,500. Assumable
loam too!
IN NEWPORTCENnR
644-9060
nfNtCNAB-·a~-
MAllOI ... BeautllUI "KIDI··
lnstcn" with panoramic view •
BR + fam rm. Great ftnanciq.
EQjoy tbe private • HCuritJ of
Newport'• most deelrablt Id·
dnll. --Jerry Tbom ... 151.fJOO(PO)
,......._. o-ea c-o.i1, ......_ 1::Hlll:::::•:ANTl:_:.:·.:.D .. A.:.°':.J~~·!!.P!;!1!i.e!!1!::::=18!1~U' c~~Mll·!lm!!LJ· J_.,H, ,_ ... .._ _________________ ...
. .
! , .
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:!• ... , ~,.
~· •l· .. ~; ...
.·
::
I•
...
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..
.·
..
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I r· .. I :
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~· ..
-
Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/Mond1y, J1nu1ry 25. 1982
,,
Occun & jetty views. Marine room 4 ~drm . 3 bulh. 3700 ~q .ft. $1 .385,000. '
, .. UDO tSLI HOMES
P.rime Lido Nord bayfronl 5 bdrm. 5 .~j.lth. l.~._ L. R. 2 boat slips $1.500,000.
Remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath + large
rec. rm. beam rci lings, $420,000.
·-· UMDA ISLI IAYFIOMTS .~ain channel view from 4 bd rm, 5 .:~ath home with pnol $1 ,495.000.
f.l..agoon view from 6 bdrm. 5 bath.
<Playroom, dark rm , den. $1,350,000 !
'" CARNATIOH COVE
·S'pectacular ba yfronl view 4 bdrm , 4 ~~ath, 2 boat slips $2,050.000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
l~' h,,y,·d• Dr,. "'< B r,/) 0101
Fw • Ad hi Wo.tt's Worid
Soft, Soft Jacket!
7351
t,A6ci B~
~-HERITAGE
. REALTORS
NllDOM HOUSE
3 Br. 1 Ba. large yard
~ 000 .••. 641·0763, A
MESA YllDE
3 bdrm. 2 bath. frplc. dbl
garage, A 1 C"on d
Sl34.500. Owner will as·
sist in rinancing. llOf Mcc.nh, ltltr.
541-772'
,.
Walker & lee
Reel Estate
1 S9 I \ 0
,.
Detached Rome 3BR.
2BA w/fam rm in University Park $875
Plus SIOOO Security
Walk to Pool. Park,
Shopping & Schools
!i!J-4141 or 85 7-2040 A .(I.:_
IA.<erf1eld patio home, sgl
ram1ly, 3 br or 2 br &
den. (•omm pool, avail
Feb IS S72S mo tncl
gardener 559.5927 an
!P!!)iWkn_L_
Woodbndge. lge 2 br. 2 ba
condo, rrpk , a''" lge 2 gar w1opener Walk to
lake &i shopping S69S
&JG-000
L.,_lelldt .)241 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR 2 Ba EMERALD
BAY 1 sty, nr beach, lov·
e l y Sl 200 mo
213 2116-~lt __
Niguel Shores 3 Br. 2 ba
home Gate guard. Priva cy Adults
S8S0 d ease. O wner
633638
3 OCEAMFIOMTS
24 Hr Secunty, 12 ma orr
pvt bch, fis hing pier,
2Br. adlts only, no dogs
S750·S8SO·Sl.OOO t 714 1
~~~l..._6 __ _
Oean 2BR House Nr Bch
Sm Vrd, Gar. Kids &
Pets OK! $750. 494·2S76
WOW!! Won't l•st! Newport
Cretl townhousr. newly ~. 3 br, 2'2 ba Walk
to beach. tennis. pool. •
51>1 Mini oct1n view
Avall. feb. LJ.95DJ mo. l
yr leue Children ok
~11144
3BR. 2BA Cul·dt-Sac Lrg
Vrd $12$ mo Kids &
Pet.OK. 64.5-7818 -Easlbblffs 4 Br. family
nn. lge yard 642·S161 or
~8107 -BLUFFS 3 br. 212 boa,
den, pool , good lot>
$1000 Agt 644 6368 ,
644-0134
Westcliff 38r. r r +sml
ofc. New cpts/paint
1195, 646·6789. 631·21.!.1_
• u Heights : 3 bdrm 2
ba frplr, 1700 mo. 2SJ
Knox St. 64S·Sl tO _
Bl uffs Great Loe &
Del'Or ! 38R. 21,BA ,
Fam Rm . SllOO
7§0-~. 67S.S930 --
2 Br. 2 Ba Bay front. comm beach. tennis,
docks S2000tmo Agent -
640-99001 b'7S·3767.
Newpon Crest Condo.
3Br. some w1ocn v~w
-.tsOO moiar631-0460
Did unit. 3 BR condo,
great location near Hoag
Hosp • comm pools ,
adlts only . $800 mo. LUSK REAL TV 67S·3411
2 BR. 2128 A Condo
Newport Terrace. Gar.
t:arport & Pati o . S700 1 mo 63 I ·S800 ,
~2199, or 1213 )347 2S44
3 BR 3 Ba Bluffs condo,
Sl150 Dollie Johnson.
700.1966 75-6000 a
t Bdrm Eastblutr home
aut o s prinkl e r s Gardener $895 857 4828.
642-0350~----
5BRFAMlLVHOMt.:
4 ba. lge yard, gardener
SJ7001 mo 646·S3SS
Bii.ir Condo. 4 bdrm, J
baths Sl20Cl month
644 2607
Canal Front. Newport
Shores. 4 Br + . Lease or
option to buy SlSOO mo
Tennis. pool. walk to
beach Agent 646 t044 or 645-2805~---
Blurts magn1r1ce nt
harbor ocean vu. Jbr.
newly redec. Kids pets Sll65 675-2967 __
Pnvate commun1t \ or SEAV IEW. 2·4 'er
homes. Cully equi pped kit c h e n wi th
nut·rowav~. 2 rrplc's &
wet bar Sl400 & Sl700 a
m>_!llh ~~
NEWPORT CREST 4 Br
21: Ba Some 01•ean
\'lew S92S mo A~ent
b.11·221fB:__ __ _
lllw/IHtSUp
3 br. tba Sl!IOO fin.l('e Johnson 1!7S·094 l
Beach t>ottage nr Bobb\•
M<'Gee·s. frplr. pa1 10.
pool, spa. panl~ rurn
Mature person. $450 mo
+ 1st & last 67S fii70.
Wed Thurs ooh·
..!..
]
..
Fill SPBW. ..
W..1A~o~y
fora
JOd111d latllt DAILY
MOT
•¥1C1 DlllCTOIY DO IT NOW!
AtltPwS... Yow-D~Pllot
Senke Dlrenory
ReptHtftt 1tl ve
MJ.U71,tatlZJ
c ..... ..,. •• .,.. ........... ..... Iii ....... , . ,... ............ w.c;;;c~tc1~= ..... j;;;_:;;;:···· ··:nmoooaa~··· ·HAiwooo;t.Ooii .. ;;:e;:..::.;:;;; ;;;.:u;;-;;i~·,;.· ·~~;::t::~· lleamcltan~uphola Freedttrp7ftfffft 1~ PIJH ln1t1lltd, t' Be1~ycltued Ca11Wa(IU)4J3.-41fl IW. Uc, liu. 1J 1rt ol hM. H J.IUt
trwk mount Uftlt Room lddiUw tenant alideropenln!, f750COGI llld waxed. _.l IT14)1U·.., eve1 hlllwlocal cualomera. !D'S PW ERING W uar. NS·S'718 lmproverne..'t In · pl.lgab!t~)@=1085 ....._ D61utmwtlco!!!f l n.ii*rou. Ul·~IO T •· ·1 .,,_,, AJJTyptt Int. or !xt. poo • eteam clean. suraac• work, aeckl, ,_,..tllflll1Mlt ....................... 80NBHINECLEANING c.e..P..... ~-FrMn ,
ColcW brl1htener1, wbt p1llol •••••u ... • .. ••••••t••• DUMP JOBS ~uU~hri~an y Cpl 25 yn exp. I.Jc. 4*41. PLASTER' STUCCO
crpta · 10 min. bluch. m«l67Uc3um •SiPICIAL• HmaUMovln1Job1 Cl L rat • our BDadld. Ju . Reta.Color Aepair.NoJobtooaml.
Rall, Uv/dln. rms 11s: An.Y cialfbucJ.atrlpped CaJl lllKEMe·l.Hl un n \ .Nu d •. aprt.113411 Dttk ~1645•4119 ava room fl.SO; coucb ....................... or re1lued, l lt 75. A Haul, clean~. concrete ILtM/LGCal el.~ W ·B PAINTJNd ,
110: tbr ~. Guar, eUm. Touch Of <?tau In· l't@val. Dump Truell. ~ Ctucutan KMJr. SPICIAL! rNTJEXT, " t. I ...................... ft~ ::X1.tr~~al~ork i=::t terim, 711 W. 17th St. ckaerv.842·71311 Self·lltarier • 11.00 per .,.u, LI gu.9313 ..................... ..
all you need lo know myself. Ref a. 531-0101 Fotmed by Attorneys 11 C.M. 642·7712 HAUUNG' DUMP ~fluent Ho mu J'm Small-Mr p rlcea Dr~~\::1~~~0air:io
•boutbankruptcy,call NoSteam/NoSllampoo Reas.rates. 557-5700 k•rl111 JOBS.allforRandy, are smaU! Cdll, NB. Freuet. 1161042·9033
t-----7 ... 14....__135 __ •• .;;.162=---1 St.utC:."6Al1ti1t. Fut ,._,,__w~.......... ....................... 64HM27 W-T• Ellp'd. ltllnm.-.n A-••pwu BJNO• ~ ...__ ......... ._ nus f ....................... oLM p J.-··-,~ -dry.)'reust.839-1582 ....................... CLIAMUPYOUIACT EXPER.PREPARER · IUIWl lm..al HEATING-REPAIR ••••••••••••••••••••••e-.t/"-....a.... Cr o wn mouldln&. Topped/removed, ex· TODAY! Yard11ara1e Enrolled to practice CUlt.worlt.UcHU471 REPLACE 645-1611 •WICI & SOM _......,.. mantles, wall unl\11 pen cle1111q11, lawns re· ctn.up, ett. l ton truck. bd th IRS Q u Ins. Free est. 731.a81
Buiw.rt C!•-ce 11147 •••••T•Hn0M•••PSO••••N•~5••••• cabinets. Hardwooa novated. 751-3476 ~$25.6.11-1983 !24 hrs) at:::.. c!t. M9.24~: ty CUSTOM INT/EXT "••rfl M•19-.t -· · . ·-'·"I t ood P "· ' --EXPERT SERVICE ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• Adctitiona • remodelln1 CONCRt"TE CONSTR ...... ona o w r.,. WHY N010NE9F 1ulln1/dean·up, dirt,
"'-I'-Doors windows patio Uc •-· 642 8482 blems. 631·1528 TifE BESTI Simmon& shrub/tree trim etc. M•a.., LOW RATES PIOPllTY _..... ' ""-' ' --. G-....... ' :.:J.. • ...................... NlJ.BROOW c:.u:.1175 MAMA•IMINT ....................... rovm. rreeest. Reaa. c:...lcTlt Dry.-.. ...,nan1,ll48-6684 Junk ,truh.848·41194 BRICKWORK: Small •-------"------1
PJR QtrUts, W2s, Fin. Uc. #3lOIM2 549·2170 ••••••••••••••••••••••• la!D Landscape Malnt HAUUNG-&udent has jobs N t C t NEUiONS PAJNTING Or1111e Co. area. 15 yra
StrnU. Coomplde Stt·up ROBTSTEINBRONER, ·n=~·c;;:~1~·ri1~ .. DRYWALL/ACOUSTIC Reaid/Comm.Clean-up. tge truck. Lowest rate. Mesa, r~Ji~re: R~~.~ Int/Ext Resld/Comm =:~e.Callforlnro.
H en. Reu. $40.~ qEN'LCONTRACTOR l'ioors . Showers . Tubs ~tyrs exp. ~Uy llc'd & Lt Haulinc. 548·2489 Prompt. Call 759-1976. 675-3175. Acoustic ctilln11. Reis, 962 •it•
hd..ctl.,. Uc. •391M63 645·6456 Callanytlme972·4639 wund. 532·5549 Fonnlng Own Business; Thanky~u.Jobn. CUstomBrickMasonry Uc'd.Frteest.llS7·Je37 -6
~•••••••••••••o••• nNEHOME -......,._ DRYWALLTAPINq 4YrsExp.L1ndscaping, TREES/SHRUBTRIM Compl. yard construe-PAINT!R NEEDS
Prompt, prof. service on IMPROVEMENTS _ _.. AJltextures,1coust1c Grmg &i Brick Patios Garqe•YdClean-ups lion, pool decks ' WOU -30yrsexp.fnt
major apples. Steve's Additions• Remodellng •••••••••••••u ••u•••• Fteeest. Kevin 675·9088 Gntd. Prol. Service at Freeeet. 557·8271 enclolures. Local rers. /ext. Acoustic cellln1s. •••••••••••••••••••••• J.D. Hom Relinishing
Antiques, kit. cabinets. Fine aintln . 645-0664 AJ!pk. Strv. 541-1514 • 131. 90 /Wk DNftli.J Serric" Prices SU re to Please. Hw C.. W.lct 64M512 Davis Paintln1 847-5186 ...... _ -SN Hot 1unch. C'.M. Chris· ....................... 498-21tsb17·9,W/E. .. .................... Hart lluonry . Brick, PainUn1 '1theGame,
....................... ~ UanPreschool.646·M23 E.M. Design & Check Gar de ning -Comp!. Q>mpanlonAide,Deslres Block, Concrete. Rer. Pedersen'stheName! lchencabinetsbuiltor
AIJSl'ATEPAVING -.-.4'-CGN'l'WACTOlle a. ... ,Sw'flc" Pa c k a ging I S H clean up & free hauling Uve·iDPoeitionw/Co,n· uc.36112!M.646·1597 Uc.2311534 64z".0862 refinished, restored,
Sealcoating . Striping Uc. 113491182 770·6SM ....................... MT LI P CB H a r v e y for usable Items. patible Person. 833.1471 Muonry our Specialty! Hae paintin&·coll. irad beauillul stlln jobs. 25
Repairs. Com m./Resid. Hardison. 545·3701. Michael 645-6734 II -a... II Clean quick depend• 7 yrs exp, quality work. t""'n~ex~. 642"=-·.;;.;8689;.;:.' ;;,_.. __
u c.13'7312 645·8181 U-U•••coMSTI --........ic...1 Garde . w led omtew•-9 bl a, do • I . b. Lowrates.Dana643-l869 _,, .... , ......... ~ . ..un • . nine. an . •••••• .. •••••••••••••• e ... e any s ze JO • 11 ••• ., ...-t'OIOI . RESID. ~ustom homes, fr am· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mow1ng, ~g11'1g, raking. Want a REALLY CLEAN 1'1631·200h Mike Shill Paintin1 Af. ••••••••••••••••••••••
Joe ~mpanaro Asphalt ing, remodel. f'rench ELECTRICIAN -pnced s we e P 1 n I -~Fr e e HOUSE• Call GI h ....__.. fordable Quality Lie. COMUllCIAL Paving ' Roortog. doors, skylights & patio ri1ht, free estimate on estimates 645·4~72 or G' 1 Fr · 1 .,u '!,&123am ...... ..., Free Eat. Mark. 645-4290 . ~IMDUSTlf•L R urf I · rovers. 1148·3652 lat"" or small,. obs 645-5737 ir · ee es · .,..., . ., •••••••••••••••• ••••••• ,,.. ..... 2890 • es ac ng , repairs, PEP GIRLS cleaning .. ~ ROBIN'SGLEANJNG •ABC MOVING·E~p .. 1-""-..-oAiW'~~-----1 DEUMGI
sealcoat. s triping. service. Homes.()(fices· Uc. #39662! 6~3·0359 ~ Service-a thoroughly prol .• low rates. Qwck, ..... Turn lost or unused ~AM/eves. • ..................... Apts.548·0663 RESID/COMM L ....................... 1 house M00857 camulservke.552·0410 ....................... space Into a workable Driveways. Parking Lot FINE FJNISH WORK 20 yrs exp. Do my own Carpentry · Masonry c ean · · HANGING $10/ROLL area· rooms divided,
Repairs, Sealcoating. Retrodeting /Doors hung Ca•aton. G....... work. Lic'd. Al 646·8126 I Rooting . Plumbing Ex~ Housekeeping *A,. I MOYIMG * Strippine-<lisc on paper drywall, drop ceillngs '
S •S Asphalt Rand 72CH280CdM ••••••••••••••••••••••• UC'D ELECTRICIAN Drywall Stucco · Tile SUpplies furnished • Top Quality. Special Visa/MC . 645·11325 trim carpentry-to com·
Uc 631-4199 CHAR RENOVATING Hw lepalr QuaJ. work . Reas. rates Remodel. J.B. 646·9990 Trustworthy. 957-8003 care In handling. 2S yrs Scott plftlon. Call Tom or Jetr
...... ,. Compl. int/ext & cust. ~~~~ !i:i·ai~d~~e Free est. 631·5072Tom GeneraJ Malnlllinance <tJallt~ Work, D~nda· ~~v~i:.~~~J;~les. UC.'PAPER HANGER at661·2913or49J..3886. •tt••••••••••u••••••,., cabinets. 25 rs. 645·3749 All Co M'k ) TOP QUALITY Repairs & Decorating le. efs. Call am & Bonded ' guar. No job • .....__ AOG RESS IVE leg al CUSTOM ADDITIONS en nst I 1 e Electrical work at •Qualitt • Ray 640·5144 Bob Dwight, 673-7012. STARVING COLLEGE too small or too lar1e. =-~ ............. ..
representation, law of· Kitch en remod 497·53221499·4863 Heu.rates. 531-SOSS Ben's Home Improve-HOUSEWORK DON E STIJDENTSMOVING Freeest. Too 898·2728 REPAJRSFORLESS
ftces,24hrs.54.>8422 Skylit...s. Rers 8111 ADD'NSIREMODELING El-. S I It ' ~nt 8 y J A p ANES E CO. Uc. 11Tl24·436. •-_. Shingles, Oat 30 yrs . Plans. Llc'd. George Cl ""'"c ~rk pedc a >d'« Sentice. All J'obs. bio or Professional Call Yoshi, Insured 641-8427 .-r-•• Fr · Aill-tf•• 646-0lm Pilmer&Sons,557-6932. ean. qlllc · epen a· " 839-500S WATCH US GRO W! ...................... exp. eeest. 770·2725
•u•••••••••••••••••••• ,.. ble. Wedo any s12e1ob. small .. 964·5231 , . STARVING ACTORS •BRY~NT'S• t•AllS OMLY!
'T9lONYOUICAI Ahdo~~o~~·p;:.!'!~ee~~: •631·2004 • jRepasrs .• ~8;l ~tin g , College Student cleans MOVINGCOMPANY WallcovenngRemoval All1'ypes,646-M63
lniltead. °!,.!ax. 40 mo. M windows, doors, patios. Root Co•triilcJ I ~!~~ ~ nstian, re-homes in C.M. & H.B. Fast & Careful. bowest jAIJ'l'YPes. M2·l343 BALBOA ROOFlNG CO. wtty. 7sz,.M11/752·0892 lo ajor Repairs driv e w ays . r e . ....................... · ~nd. ref. 1142.9383 Rates Law AIJows. MIC ,....., .... r 1beonly roofing co. with
· PROF.POLLSHING' Remodeling. Doors plumbing, etr . Lir BF.STMASONRY 1 JACKOFALLTRADES c II S d 'II Visa Uc/lns.673·0853 ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• construction r-ebates Serv" h . 8'2·8951 848·2464 378711 Pb!lfi0.0635 TILE & LINOLE UM Call day or night, I 0 ege tu ent wi , . PUSTER PATCHING tee al your ome or · Gre 675.4394 I •Jack 675.301._ Clean .Your Condo to u )~ re looking r~r a bet· Restuccos Int I ext 30 613-6143, 6'73-8229
business. Rlck 675-0344 'SELL idle items with a ~II with t::ASI::! Perfection Wayne. Call ter job, you wont want p 1 · fllbet Roofing-all types. WANT ACTION? Dall) Pilot Classified It's a BR EEZE Ha\'e something to ~ell• 1 WANT ACTION?, Ans wer Ad 11498 . to miss the employment yrs. Neat. au 545·2977 New.fecover·decks.
Classifed Ads 64:1·5678 Ad. Class1f1ed Ads ~~·5§78 _ Cl<!s~.1!1ed ads do .!.l well L}ass1fed Ads 642·5678 642-4321. columns in Classtried. ~ 1dl! 1~ 642·56711 Uc 141llm. 543.9734
~~~~ ..... -··.. ..... .
It N I I ....................... BllDOIT RATU/Uc~•
Low ... lml JoM 01.
Freuet. IM. Ml·11J'
lwlm!Al•tll111 ' ;;~~;;~ .............. . INDU8TRl~LSl!WINO
6 C\lTl'ING ol f1brid·
Free.Umatet S41M
"' .......................
TILEJNSTALL~!>jt All Kindl Guara•~
Refs John NO-ntf
Custom Ceramic Tiie
ProcnpUerv. Freutti
ChurU7S.14tl
r ... s.mc. • •••••••••••••••••••••• •Expert Tree Prunlna•
Comrnercl1l Llnd1cide
Services 157.Gll
JAYE TREE CARE Complete service 1941
stwnp erindlns. 10 yn exp. Uc. ln1. '40-93111
Expert s1tapln1. thinnin1
'stump removal. 7 yn
exp. Ins. 6'75-21121
Tree Triminei clean upa.
lloothy HrV ce frff est.
646·7556 Tony's Tr-8
Service • ,......, :
••••••••••••••••••••••• Credentialed formll ~~1y~x.!~~~~~~h~t:.t i
grade. Corolla del Illar.
644-1147
r,,... Stnlct • •••••••••••••••••••••• TYPING -Fut, ~
curate, reas. Ca11etfe
trans. 631-4065 eves.
w....c ..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Let the sunshine In"
Call SUnsliine Window
Cleaning,-btd. --w&-8851
•RESIDENTIAL•
Avg l st)' S30; av1 2·1t)'
S4S Chris ~7 .8318
ClearView Windows
Xlnt service, free est . . Ken 673·9011
,
Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT/Monday, January 25, 1982
l._. dtt Mu 1U1f11rn 'tlluwCM 1>1.1plt• 11•
'\mft • tw.1_, • r~lntt. + Utll a.n 911 1111111 lnt'I ltlO Ill:!, MS 116\
•• *3 •ft ~pm klnw. 2lilt, 2RI\ Pool
IAl(Wllt Nl•llt'I Sllor(',, t' J1w 300 Yr~ lfl 8.-ilrll
"'•mllr, 1w1 honw 1n l100 Jl'fr. &311 ~111-4 t:ve'I ICUVdM t'Ofnm ijuu•t ' 1171 0'1tiO 1>11)'¥
111 IM!W . rurn 'rt'nn1,., M lo' Shr 2800 Sil (I l.ux
POUi. J1t, tv, wbht't tlm Nr SC.' Pl,iu S3M dl'jC'r Sleflli to but't1 • · Pvt khlillmfttt', pvt t•nt Mo Rm rr i.m furn
!al l250 t' I WO bl It ~ rroo
lift' ~ ~.3490 t111ted Arru l'ool <>1·e1ir
IWroom with kilrh prl Side .or ll111hw11y S N b d ' l.u11una Room. R111h r 11• •n ~hoppintt Priv111e Jo:ntranl't' 129! '~"..· l62 lS20 i Utll Mulit ht• f.mpl
Rm In pvt h orn11. llli\'t' lld 49!14722 t mploy1.1d ma ltt p rer. f.ves
~~lthout klt 11rlv Resii F. ~·~. Shr 28 R.
---28A In CdM "137.50 + • ~ t\im. relna. mlcruwuvf, Uttl 700.:11'13
kit. priv., Ph<lnc. swim Non -. ming pool, steps to Rt•h ·smoker M <!Br. Iba
1275/mo. ~·5366 · apt S200 mo li;t & last &
·------ser dep. Avail 2·1 112
~-~ .... !~.~ ?.~!'.~.~ .. ~?!~ ~~.~ ...... !?~! ~?~ ..... ?!.~ ~~.~~ ..... ~!.~! ~~.!~: .... ?!!! ~.~~:.~ ..... ?!!~
&lere•Offiff IJIOq ,, ~o 1q rt lnou11lrtll FO ND Sol Pt1ln1 ~KING
Mtu V ... ArH , •aae V.otk fut rt'nt Sl1nw1e male. AdrOi'St ~ 023 841 t!IM l'N 546 GT12
llTAILVACI
<.i Hltt)of Blvd 12*1 i;q
ft + •ol'll&r 3" •c:a. fl
R(lllonomh·» 61~ ti700
ANTF.O· found f{'male P.nah~b
lndustr111t or ufrlcl.! Oull~Oll pup111t· V11: 11a~-... 400-600 aQ fl In A11am5 & llrookhun.t South Orao~\l l'u1tnt> for 1 i2 11117
t'\ l'rnna ond Wt'{'kt'tld re ht'ari.al of rt'llt)()nbtblt• found CJkulatot
m:k buo<l t"all bt't S & G I'M
OJfita Mesa. buJy Nwpt rall Rl'1tlna t'42 470U
Kl\'d 9400 It frl't' stand 546~9 Lo~I I Whltl' Shadow.
!RI( bldg, (ully tmprovrd plt'liM' help Uli fllld hi m
Ind rrvt ldt!al rt'ta1I or 4550 Sht'\'I' <lot: l'oodlt• mix ,
BRANCH MANAGER
GllA T WISTERH
ISLOOIUMG
FOILlADIRS I
Dur to our {·c>nttnued
itmwth, we ore bl•l•ktnll
an l0<Jl\•ldu11I
t:oan-WtolQflltl•
TICtMCIAMS (~ fX'rcl~t' It Wttjlhl lw health chnlC' Ii row
11111 ro with opv·1y ro1
11ubtit11ntrnl utf,•unc•t•
ntt'OI S3. 75 14 ~o hr
~1,1rtm& 64~ 7717
COURIER
Oranl(r C'oaNI S11v11111i.
HOUSl«HPll Nur.ln1
Pffm pot11tion '~hr' wk HUISH AIOI pl~ Hunt lh1rbor b<•f 1':Xper'd 1ll 11h1fl11 l'onv &pm. tn3 1S21 Kita 11141> Nwpt Jlrh Jlnn11
your ~rn1h• It Join u~' HOUSRH,ER Jo'rr<' m1r rrwd d""' 111
S u n u n d M 11 n & ltfr an~ (',111 642 !!044 llousekt't'11101i 11nd rhald
t·url' t.,41111.111,1 ll1·Jrh !•,w•r•11.•,.•-----•
An•u U4 t K700 1•:1a1 N•:1':1H:1>
dll,)"», <t97 3!l8J r\l') Jnd IMMl-:Ul1\'H,I. 't'
Wt'Ckenth S.Crttsits h u~ irnrn{'d '' tlmt•
OIJ''"'llll t;ood dm•lni: llf~11.•~u•r•a•nc• ... ••---•1
fl!t'Ql'd llou~ ll.3011m S with & wrlhout
~hu1 thund
GtMrat Office N1':V1':H A n :1'. 111 m l' 11 II I. I 11 du f .G. .
7:14 lllOI 1.700 Adami.
/\Vt. l: M •: O •: II a N o J> r 111 11 I: :. I 11 r W111 k r10~1'111 llcmw
olf1c•e. llt'nl SI OS i.q rt ••••••••••••••••••••••• 25lbs. 2' h11(h, wht &
631S840_aft.4 'turugc ll \' I n1t lt1t ;1prit•U1 w'brn pulrh julil
l''or Lell!ll': orrit•r, l!tlt sq :.~ul. CM S35 mo Kirk : bt.•forc 11111 lk1l(c l'llllar
fl • warchouxe, 2508 ~11 h l~ w ~llvtir slurls ll<•w11rcl'
fi. Grtiat ll1t•. Strt'et vis ...... W.ttd 4600 1!•"1039 eve)>, or Iv rnxi:
f o r a Hll AN l'll MANAGF.~.U;NT j/061
Iron In uur MISSION uuton-.>b1Jc bUlrs rcpi. 111 VICTOR
ability Forbes Hd . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 831·4~dya DELIVERY ---------llu11t1111:11111 ll e u 1·h brllll"h. l1"Si1Jc· Hul1·s. no 'ft:mporurv lfrr\'tt't' VIF:JOorftcc
1.agunu Nigul.!I I by Rrtirt'<.I t·plt• rtt'tod 2 3 Ur. F0tuid l'olllt! Ml~ Dot.: Uri ver 111•r1lt-d 1 m rrwy I. Joann: 499 3~7( 2 na unr l'Ondo or apt Ill Nr Sunflower & UrJMtot.1 •dcal l.':tndidttl4' shol!)d 111u1l1ilely lot 1'1111111111..:
4!i'1·<&844. Uluff:i ar1:a, u11 lo ('allti-1H773or002·90G3 Jl0Sl>Clil\2 oruwltl'~t·urx ~'rmln<X' R1.'lt11hl<'& --$700 mo 002 5533 · , ot 11rrv1ows e:<pcm•nn 8eJch Stor1', Nrw1iort , , . IPeno.ais 5350 l&Sll Supervtsorlnthl're w1•1J i.:rooml'd l'nrl
Wulk tn1fflt• pnnw lc:x·u liarajle, loronn 1M Mar ••••••••••••••••••••••• tail nr rinimcial arcu time. Mon, Wl'd. f ra
' · • 5!'lli &\2<1 •:o •: M r IJrllSIK'l'ttn~. ullr:t<'li\e ·--------·1 1•111111>t'11~atmn IJUCklllll'
1ndud11111 lull t11mpl'n~<1 Ooo'ty A•ailablt
111111 rlu rini: I ru111in1: t-:x ror ~i:fr nM1ll\ att•tl 111111\
l'l'llt•nt fr11111e be111·ftt ~ t.'lll(er lo lt•Jrtt Mrkl~ &
111dut.h111: l'OltllJarl) 1Jl1td I) 1 ~tr N k 111 ~ 11 'I' F\im. NB Apt S.JOO lnt',lds ~·au Stephen 751 4739 Util. M Prof. Cungeniul R f -Non·Smkr 642.8363· c:1p emale w 3 )'r old,
lii:J-1401 l'all675 1636 A wml Mcnsaae for branth udmmi~tru _!!!!!!!!!! _____ _ 1100! 800 S<t ft 1175 4185. :.1rrt1 I tf-..U • \'ou wlll be responsible 1 G-11 811'.!0. llhk for lll'Y
Osx·n 24 hrs a dal' · ·
dt-nlill ltu1Hd .ul\'~llC'I' ~II! W'JS
11\1.•nl l~ltt'nl1al. ~rlW () It l) ~; II I) 1-; S I\
auto • )1111·r1l 111 i & i n rSTOMF:H S1':tt \ jt 'E after 8P M 0 ,' toi.hrYourhome Pref 2 ~1·75fl _ u Y ~ · r~ 646·2563 art 6P M.
HeWs.Mot.ts ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4350
SIALAH MOTB. •m;;;;t:•;:;~\;;;;•;,•
Wldy rentals now avail se<'url' 731 w 18th St
1105 fr up Color TV C M 673·7787
Phones in room 2274 ----
Newport Blvd CM tR..tal 4400 646-7445 •••••••••••••••••••••••
1617 Westrhrr N 8 Want MllD A PUCE? r10anc1al inst 7000s r ~eas. Weekly Rates Isl 0~ At~nt5.t1·~2 ~t~he,iettes·Pho~es EXECUTIVE Z Channel Movies
Sandpiper, 1967 Newport SUITES
Bl. Costa Mesa 645·9137 IN
.... .._.., -4 175 HEllTAGE
•• .. ••••••••••••••••••• PLAZA
lrowll'1G,.._.H ..
Sr. Citzens ll5S·6221
............ 4200 .......................
Su\er/SUmmer. weekly.
l Br .. sleeps 4. Balboa
· ula. 675·0680
New luxury off1re SIJ3C't'
in Irvine's busies t
renter! Easy Frwy at··
cess .'\\'atl now! C' all
fordelails
551·1!31 6_4~42)0
• DB.UXE OFFtC ES• f)-om I room to 1400 sq Ys ... l..tals 4250 rt FromSI 15asq rt No
••••••••••••••••••••••• lease required AdJ
OCEANFRONT 2 & 4 Br Atrporte~ Inn 2172 Du
Avail. Winter. Weekly ~u;a11 AM 833 3223 Monthly. 673·7873.
Palm Springs area <Mon· lnH STIHT
terey CC) condo 3 BR 2 COST A MESA Ba, furn w1atr1u"\ 2or3roomortire sulle!.
GoTf, tennfs Dail}. A t. plent} ofprl<R L'nl
weekly & monthly rates 1 incl ,\\atl now tall
ava il. 714 ·5511·8001 1 Realonomacs 675·6700 ~5PM,askforMark. r SQ rt Mesa \'erde
No. Tahoe Condo. 4 Br 5 area • min to Northstar S400 S45·4123
wit, Tom 85H668 -
Dl.x Indian Wells rondo, 3 j ~AYfRONT
br, pool, spa, tennis. I Plj_~~face i60-9-140_
l200/day. 631-0772 1Co5ta Mesa. 2W sq. ft
JI' Ing. drywall lined, dbl swte $17S mo Ills m
dr. at'cess. $75 mo cld. 779 W l!lth St
1146--4152, 146·9501 ~l·~-
1 ..... tosa. ... 4300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• F, 00.45. 3br, 3ba. furn
Lag Bch Ocean Front
Condo S300 E,•e s
61-5276
Housemate wanted. non
smoker. share large 2
bdrm. 2 ba apt w gar
Near Ocean No San
Clemente. S270 + 11 utt I
CaJI Nicll 496·5484 lea\•e
mess eon recorder
38R Hse Behind Back
Bay. Mellow. Clean
~~yrs. S250. 979·8886
Prof male to shr w rem
gorgeous. spac1ou~
Nwpt Shores home
540-96019-S Randv
Mature respons ible
Female, non smoker
Newpo rt Oceanfront
SZJS/mo. 548· 1667
NEWPORT Executive Suites has or
rices 3\'aalablc nr 0 l'
Airport, from S365 w full
servtt'e 3\ aalabh.• Ca II
now for I month fn•1·
Ll~a-8:1.1· 9'J7G
I MO.FREE
.... rtc~..ter F'irst class full scrv1re
EXEC. olftres. mrludes
all amenities From
S22S mo 64.t.7 189
NEED A BUS AD·
DRESS? 1\nswermg &
mail set\·1ce. c·onferem·e
room \dJ OC A1rpor1
SIOO mo ii~ 833·0092
5ro & 572 sq ft SI 00 per
<;q rt • 397S Birch . ~ B
\g_ent 541:5032
NEWPORT
EXECUTIVE STE.
lXc ~esk spal'e .\ct1\'t' IMMMu/I t/ 7 days u week 11011. pt>rsonnel manaite D..tal Ofc Mqr
• airport area R t; In· ••H t>9 Gorll~ous girls 10 ~1•·11~ and outs1dl! i.alt'b F:Othub1a~t11·, l'ffi1·1l'nl
H'l>l ofr l'all Paul or •• ~~•~••••••••••••• t>ampt•r you Jal·utii. actt\tlles and organ11ed w bkpi.( ~~-t NC~n~ t'll~·~~·, ..-.Si ~~~11r 11:;a!~ as ;:11na: We offrr an t'Hl'llcnt =~ 4h~~j"d ~~~ 1~~111~~:
752 5111. Opporl•Hy 5005 \tile rt r 11 rd Mas t er salary bt•nefab pat·ka1:1• Mei.a 546 3000
FRE-E RENT ••••••••••••••••••••••• t'hurl(l' \me'ncan ~·x along w11 h tht• 011 LOSING LEASE. 111111 · 1 ' porlun11} for 1.ro I l>iNMf'CC>M/Hlkor Up to3 mos if you a<'I by ting business ~clhng oul preu · I> 1 n e.r s a 11 f~i011ul i:ureer ,:rowth llunt Harbor 25 fi11ur
Peb Isl Pnme H B or ALL i.upphc.i. and fix .~elcomt• 714 1~4s 3433 Wt't'k li73 1521 before ltt·e luc. Cum pet at I \'I! ture.1ndudin1t 2 112 11~rbor 81 ( ~t l'lt'a~e send you 1 rt· !!pm, Rt la
r.ates Xlnt exposure Otspluy ras~s. wuttmi: Jo'ortotalrelaxat1on...,1th sume~ith salarvha:.torv t uooul :.hop,pttmt·. \~I . lall110~._9fi0.~7I room t'hatr:.. f\i·.iut y J prolt'Sstonal massa~t· 111t•t111r1derlt'e to j r1t1cxiicr nl't'e:.:..in \µ
• H U NT I N G 1· O N Salon hatrdr"l'l'l> and Stt•\c 10 ti. :H8·2817 , r1I\' an ~r:.11n 1>11111111 BEACH• hydrauht t'ham •. m1r Lo1wl~ T1111111ht ~ Nl'cd Elna Sal•itl I r>onut :.. 11154 . c·wport
IOIOS/FS..ltt rvr:..)>hl'l\e~andplanb t'nmp.im"'CallMomt·a Rer.'•alMCMCIC)er Bl\d ,l'M
• • 3 PrivatA Ofrit•i•s 1\IM>. ma kl· up. ~ham puo !I~ 11122 tOO C 1_ " -I h 00 CM11t10 ~:~c·row llornl' lo.cn 1•i. • •2 Staff Areas atl( ~·r v.r ,0 . l'UIWS Would l.o\ e To I Def Rio I pcnl'Ot'I' I' art I llrtl' Ill • • Wl•tbar lalltiJI !I 5<1 or l'art\' with Yuu ' ('all s,s h
1\lailablt' llOW·l:.l Floor aftt•rti. Ht'809 l.n .lie o r S1 I I I !I / cs-,D21ecio, I \lart r~O 1201
(all 171-ll&l8 3133 Lid Partner:. for )\tart .\11y11nll· 71il·90:lti. I A. '10 I GENERAL OFFICE
Offil'e spat'e for rent. :185 in~ up to ilalt• N l' Slroni: prnr man~h·sire:. GW '1'>1'1111: & lti:ht ho11k
sq ft Sl!<'ond floor mu1·h11w :.ho11 (i ll'Jl prett~ M'nsualludy IH :J!i I k1·l·111ni: I' ..rt t 1 mt'
PreslilltOus Westl'ltfr J>Olcrtltab l'all l);l\111 da~:. lltlt•:.?20029(; 1\1011 frt, flt•xthlt· hi ~
area $1.00sq ft Mt'd1ral il4 97S ltrbl I ti-I~ ::..121
Bid&_ CullQ;t5 ti501 l'ost a Mn u 1. .i u 11 PROF. ESCORT GREATWESTERM
1lry SI IK ~ro:.:. 1>l'r mu Trish. ~9 8096 art 7pm SAVINGS
S255 Mo-Pm·att• urftc·t'
parlong k1t<'henettl' :.p1·
ll6!0 Main St llunl Bt'h
Daily Jantr ·\II ut1l 11d
114 1 071>3. \gt·nt lwfts._... Linda & Vicki's
OpporiwNty 5015 •ESCORTS• BEAL'Tll' I AN 1·ar1·1•r
\A F.OF. M f
,\\'a1I now• til-1 111411 3133 •••••••••••••••••••••••1 IJ.\t'K&RETTER onent1'tl hJ1t,t\'lt:.t &
36% R.tuni '111\N 1-;v1.;n' 24 11 HS man1t·un:.1 for J hti:hh
:-lcwport Beat·h. 11rr mt• P1'11111sula l0t·at1on. 300
lmt':il $.'lS.000 ht rt> 669-0207 I lcl('Jlt-d 'alon 111 t'."h11111
(h.\ner i20 1130 1 Outc•.ill t blJnd \ 11 SJ1tth
sq ft 2omtl'i.~1tt'.~: ~l~s. Trvst ~rmo ~a!k tl13~ OHdS 5035
F\Jm Ofrwe Nr jl;H l'I\ u· I·• .. •••••••• .. ••••••••• Center tiOO Set Fl Ila r & Sattler Mt Co Qq~rn1ght F .1t·11t11t•,. \II I\"• of ~.I :1 1, ~-7~ EH•:; . .,..'lt r~a t:. J ' -10\'t'Sl lllt'nt:. s1nt•t• 19~9 OHtce to sharl'. dwntwn SpKialilMcJ Mt
l' M Con~I rut•t ion 2..dTOs
orientt'Cl prererred l'a II 642•2171 545•061 1 for details 6-12 ... 372 d's.
PENTHOUSE
ESCORTS
M fo'l'ou11h·:.
~~~:10
\"IS\ I
ti-IO-t.023
lo~r P.irt ltme. I~ 111111!. 10
kt•\ 2 aftt•rn1wm' ~t=...k l>tann
S31i 2032
IOOIUCHPH Fut ...,011w11u11h total l'Jtl t1m1• l1•.11llni: to
h1MI,\' mas,a):t' b\ l>t:tn1• full 11 mt•. f (' hook
(;ti;.~10 e\'e:. .
()(face ~pan• for lt·a~t'.
Sl75 mo RallK1a bland
Ry allJlt 10-11 5-111 o.io; kt-e1wr fur 1110rt11.111 t'
W1 qow has $$$,f or IJ\11rS011hl.1Jd,\ fttr1lu1111,.r l>rukl•ra111· 111 N1·~1111rl
TD :. Re Loan~. 101\ 1111 1-:.ivn 1)1:.t'f St•od liu~ 111• Jc· h. I! ro" l h u 11
No l'rl'<lll • No IJ••nalt~ c-ard 1r vo~Mbl1· PO llox p1,1rtunrty. :.alan c·um
!Jennison.\s:.ot• lii:l 7311 I 177421rvuw!l27 1:l nwnsuralt· w11 h l'\
S 1wra•nt'l' Non '!t1ok1•1 ~urnish~d o 1.ai:una 35% Yield Tra¥ef 545( ttn•frrrt'<I rail l\:ll1t•.
1175-1739
I GtMral Offict
l'lerk l\t•wpurt < 'c•nll'r
OH1 rt• llJ' lmrnl'tllJlt• Oiic.•nrni: for t 'lt•rk ~ti h
10 Ke~ h> 1 ouc•h 10
l'roC'l~ SJ It·, llt·fKJI" &. ('rt"ltll"Jnb
Call 644-4460
c;t1wral
SUNSHINE
COMPANY
NOW HIRING
31 Positiot11 ilt:
•SEt'RET.\HI \I.
•OEl.I \' t-:ll Y
•M \lttn:Tt~t;
•OIU>t:H ENTllY
& <Yrm:H ,\II~: \S
$1000
Enthsh Tudor Bid!( 33.'.. Slf;.73.'i :.t·01:.11nl!d l:.t Tl> ••••••••••••••••••••••· i40 :l:'>t ~ r. .. desk~. bath. Wl'l 1111 13 3.1 (l('rt•:. l,11111 JI l My for lll'H'C ur l ' I'.\ I . I !I .. I MO EXPER MEC
bar IX't'an \'lcw ~t·1< .\cl l' I ,, n t 11 • S .1 11 l'uupolllo 1:1 l'ountm·~' l lt·m·ul po:.1111111 111 luod YOUNG PEOPLE
!ttrMOllHt
dt'<'Or S3i5 1wr mu 1 11crnard111ot'ou11t\ 1~,, SIO 1;.11 :i.il~l romm11•l 1t' 111 r tt · rRErr...RR"'O
499-5361 int 0111\ monthh 1lut• 1 ~ hrii.:ht. rt'!<JI. a1·1·urJl1• nr; " L•1g~a Oeat·h -150 & rt I )r 20'. '""'11unt I i i 11 "! & I\ pinj.! 'kllllo \'\l't•ll1•n1 17141964-5354
S.130 Sutt able fur t Sm i51-'8..~ dJ 01 19:1 tt!l:I ation ,p1•ll11111 & 01 i:.11111:1 ---------Bw. ~94 0318 • .indi52 il!JI C'-'' •••••••••••••••••••••• !tonal .ih1ltt \ S.il.1f\ (i,111•r,1l l.Jhor --'-1.-.....c~tttS/ Jabs Want~. 7075 11-1<11 ml & SlllKJ t".111 li1tlf Slur.ti:" I' I
rtr1t011tals/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mr •~melt\ 'l-IOllll!ll l'rl•Jll-t'o11111n 1'luh
2252SQ.FT. 1 Lost&FMd YuunJ? marrt•·d m••n 1'01ill t'\ltn1111,t11u11110.1l t'.111 1o-ll ~1 ltll H:ln,1111
COIONA DEL MAR I·····.................. 1<ould hkt• ••111• )Uh> ""'' • OU k 111'' r CH .. Ill J II I .n1n1 Tut ... S.it , I 1 & ~kencb l ,111 110 .1 ,.. ~·r NewportBalboaSa\lnl!i. ~-..ts 5100 \Jrlet\ ol h.in<h m.in 1'n\Jll'1•on~ ho~p \1111 t11·n o r rll t' t'li•c l.
Building. .-\1r rondt1111n •••••••••••••••••••••••• Jl~ 972 !152.'I l'\t'> .i,.k I~ JI lht• t • .ir<lt•n, 1511 1.,.,lll'l F I ICJm ~pm
mg. ratl>t't.ing. ul1h1tl!s SCRAM LETS f for lhll lill'llllt'Hl'. l..1i:ut1J Ht h l'i·rm '""'""" ~:ni f\ :ind janitonal S2250 pt•r • ~ lll'i~ li•q•I 111 1<p111 Sm.ill
rronll7hl 4' 673 ..a400 ANSWERS ~.~~~' ••••• ~!.~~ 1 .. ·.~~'.1.~',\~11~ • .,~ ll.;.::""1
• ... \rroebJ nrull \l't'm:-.-nsl;cu:HI\ OPPORTUNITY
S'll!h ll.•muw I' 1', "'"""°' ... 111 h1' 11t·r ,;IHI. Flllll\Y ll.ilho.1 II \MMEll I "k rm ~1·1<µ11rt \°n11t·1 I '-11"1k' 1'1111' "111'11 '''" l'1·n1n:.ulJ l\p1· 1:'""'
Yuu rt• .t\\rulh 11u1l'I m l..a~ ~·1rm .\ r \ H 11;•· 1'"'1111 • "'1111' l>.ull ~tit' l!t•f,, S,11 '''I!
tht'n•."'1•allt1llh1•l1111\ to ltt1· l~jlt'. mt,c· . 11n I •h~ 1 1·"~'1"''1 '11•· 1" \lt,I "" Sup1•1 l>c-1.111
lhl' houi.t• l•.tllll t•r ,rtllkt'f'OOI,\ f\ltl 3i:l:l "'"k" lhi• 01 ·111"1 c "·''' l't•NNI' 1ri:J :ri!ll "~·· ,., ··well, Yt~ mJ '.1~1 111· \ns Sen kt·. pl~nl ok l'lt11111· •d.! .1 .. ~x c·h111•kled ... but I Ill 11111 :-; II ~'.\pl'r pr..r hul
1JUll 1ni:. 11 . on ~ 11 h a I ~•II t ra111 J 11 •hilt 11.AMMl-.R . :>.llj ~r.!:lli
--------• Lost & Found 5300 I \n' St•n l'll';1, 11k
HANOYMAH-P /T
~.dtll'.1111111.ilh 11111•111t•d
1·0 llour~ flt'\ l'n·f..rr.1
t ·1.1--1l11·il \ti, 111111 ulll' I hit• \ M {'.ii I 11 1• II\
''''i"hnppn•~ • 1•111 11 llrun· •17:1 t!l.'1~
Neat. mature prof
straight rema le, non
smker, to shr 2 br. 112 bu
apt. Close to beach
S19S/mo . incl utils
536-ID!O
2 Christian Prof F 25 30
Shr 3BR, 2BA .i\pt w s m
SIOOULll. 549·7189
Luxurious suites U\'a1I
for sub-lease m one or
Newport s exclUSl\'c of
ri ce complexes :\ irport
dose lncludcs
• Recept phone
trial Rtfttal 4500 1••••••••••••••••••••••• 'l;I\ E~p.•r pl'l'f. but '"tll
••••••••••••••••••••••• I Ii Jiii :1 l ll'M '""' · n . 397~ Rarc-h 11111;0 •• , :~IH •re~.
Uke living alone. but
can •t .atrord it? Over 25
female wanted to share
with same beau furn 2 bdrm. I ba apt Costa
Mesa 1275 mo Util Pd
751·2100 or 493·9560/Lasa
Male to share spacious
Newport Shores home
Avail Feb 1st. S300 mo
. 540-96019·4 da
MIF rmmte needed to shr
3br a pt very close to
beach. $260 mo. 675·5048
MICHRISTIAN RM MT t::
2BR IBA .. E C M
S2lJ mo 63H796 Dan
M/F to shr 3 br house.
•L·111111es •Janitorial
•Ht>rreecop1es mo
•1\mple parking
• Kit l'hen ·~c·t ·\'sen
available ·
(;all. Roxanne 975 (}740
.r~111'11;5032r l~~ls ~::-' '~'~:·~ ~~l I FAROUENDFRAEDES I \11.1111111•111 Manai:t•r . \'\ .~ .. IM·nc·m·ed. mal Ufl• l'UU
11le 11.·aut ma 1nt.111wct
SQ ft l'Onnl'le l tll Call: 14 Ulll l ( ·11 .. 1 a \1 I''·' up ind bid!( w avprox \1lulh. n11 l>l't' \pl
HI t 8 h •19 h rm·d,d XlntS W ~kct~.'!l t i50sq rt orr spat·t' F'ul • 642~5611 I :..i•~n h1111u~ •• I.:! 190i
un mg on eac · ~ Santa \·,.a lot· l';1ul Main St 380 s11 fl
Sl.95 mo Sierra :O.lgmt Fraf!kJ1!l i52 5ll l 1 IUCJC LAI/Male I APT MANAGER 9> 641·132-1 lOO sq Ct 1<1th front of l_.c1st Jan 7 1n L.111 N~lt'Cl for J \en rut:c..
N........v.rt Beanh, "" iN r1re. large reur door. st•t BeJc•h Whtl l' around all .idult 12 unit 1·umplt'\ ~-..... ' """ r h h
1
h ...,. ....... f · m II n 2 br. 11 .. b.1 .i111 Newnnrt 81\d,JSO SQ ft up or mar IOC S 01> rn>Ut .,,,.,.,.n1 or JI f, ' -..... r ... <.n llH -,.,19 J\atlabll' for nlJnJ):t'r lo 900 Sq rt. ',·ail at oc. 32' -f' a l>Q t or ;oo.ioJ Ill() .,?' '"" h I ,, " ...,. '~ l' (' wit .t arj!t' rt'nt n•"u1· a i.q rt Sierra Mgmt l2W .,.,,,an ·'''e "'1 ' l.J.tot lnsh St•tterfem :"o tlOll ;39 17-12
Co64H32-I ~·ost a Mesa l~a'.)1 10 ~all'lt' l,ur~ lll1<1l \TI•.·:o.:1'0L'.,:'\1' Offict P'rh. la. .>l().93S2, E~es 616 Oti8I Warner Ed" .irch 1111 r r
1\pprox 300 sr. located 11ndustrial bldg. tlOOO .)Q Re~ard th ~ ;1~1c1 3:130. Ll\e m. help d1~Jl>lt•d
HB. SIOO tm -i-uttl rt. w spnnklers. trg rear t t'\' IW2 09M prur e~s1 on a I ~ oma n ~ d d & f d I I C~td Me!>il ~I 31<12 714 847.5079 overne.a oor enci' l10~t Gt'rt11an Sht•11 -
213 592 1636 ad)otmng pa\'ed park I •an blk. !I mo;. mJ It• •~RT FRWY mg Corner or Rl'<l~1ll & I ISlh Rt\'l'rl!lclt'. Npt llt:; ATTENTION:
Advertisin2 Sales
1-:xper newspa1)('r d1,11la' ,,il1•,111·r,nn to
handle kt>y a1·m1111h for t>t Jnj.!1' l'11a:.t ll,111~
Pilot Salar}. rnmm1:-.-wn .incl <'\<'t'llen1
IM!nents Gr111<1 h opporl un1tw' for prr~on
with caret•r .1mh1t1011' Sc•nd romple11·
resumt> to :\larJI f1·11d1•I. l'O 11<1\ I~. l'o~t.i
:'olesa Ci\ 92626 'l:o ph11cw t'.cll' pleJw An
Equdl 011ponu111t) Ern11lmn
ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT
330 W BAY ST • • COST A MESA CA. 97676
""£OU•• OPP()llfUNllY ["'PlOYEll .......................................... ··-
t·a.,u:ilt) hl't!ll~t' ue"r ·' : . . .• hlr hut ~oc1ld c•on,tder P•.RSO!'\ 1-.lllll'I prt'
OOllt'lllJHll'll l'l'd Ill I fern.'Cl mu,1 h,1\1· j!IH,111
dl\trlUJI if utht·r~l!>l' .)t'nM' or h.umo.1 , i:cl hf t.'\I benl'ft1' t11mp1·111" 1· I i~~ ~ppomtm1·nt. 1.111 1 ~alal)_l'allb-lti!lil!J l
( 'hurhe at ~9 8~ I
t-' li s abohJ:-!'ART TIME
tJl'll'tUng:. Ul L ,\ <"oont.1 1; !lpm i-:wandani: 111111 h
LEGAL SECT
•~1t11ation t•xp Se\\111irt
('l'flft'r. Mna ll r1rm Nnn
Mmker S.Hi 313:1
Mainttnance Man
l>l'pt•ndablt•, t'X
ll('n t'rl<'ed. ru1111mt' d.n~ ro1 vrf1l'e bldl(S Nt•WIJWI
llt.•ath Phont• Ii~ l 1521, !I
to 12 w1-ck da)'
M.\KF. MONEY ~hilt· .11
hom... ~t'tlt111! up JI'
pmntmenls for c·nmm I
1·;irpl't dt•un1n11 s.'1 to 520
hr, work nn rom m
Female J>rt'f ~1ti:1 ~1:us
1·uun\l!lt11,: f1r111 hJ' I C11Jl'ntn~1> for :I 5 ~hJrt>
lilll):Ollll! ntJIUI l' lll'llllh•
111 lllotl\,tlc• ;1111l11t111u' I
lO i:1 F cJllL' (',di 2 :1pm ·~ 1:121 1•\I :11:1 ,,k ''"
\ndll'<I
PASTEUP PERSOM ~1 Ila\' a V.l't•k 111dud1ni:
S;111;nhn \11 111 drafl 1
1111: IJ.1rkl!r"u111I helplul I Full t·111npa11\ lwn .. 111~
\pph l'~.l\N\'S \\~:It
11.1;0 l'IJt'1•nt1.1 \\ 1·.
(' ;\I
rastt-Up Peoplt MANAGER .'l:l,1lt:<I. pan tam~ Wnrk
~lu;,t ht· 1·nlhu.1a:.ttt ~ 15 to 2.i huur' t•t•r 1<~1·~
wtr nsllt\ .1tt•d \11ph 111 t•11·111nl(' .incl 1•0"1hh
t1l'r~un \ans Tcn111~ S.iturd.,1 ~:,p1·rh·nt·t• 1n
Shoe:.. 1250 HJ nJn1 "I ·•d hu1lcl1ni: or 1'Jl!1'
l'lt\\'\. In lllt" .'>51 330-1 rr\Jkt•UIJ d1•,JtJt>lt• \htli
• l' lo 1<11rl. IJ't JrtJ JI
MARIE-Ti-NG-
MAHAGEMENT
TRAINEE
$1200
permonttl
YCMIC)-18-23 Year
Old Ptople !'ref.
•lllCll PROMOTIO\
POTE:\TI \I.
-Sl'Pf:HllTH \l~l\li
•C.\<;11 noNt s~:s .
•l'ROFITSll \Hl:'\fi
17141964··5473
MECHANIC M ;11·i:rl'i:11r Yai·hi-
hi.11 l'lan·n11.1 f · \I
MEDICAL ASST
I' T E'I' cl lro1lf ••I•
Sonit· in' . It ltkl.11i: &
l\Jlllll! r.i~h1on t..l.11111
\ B ft.ti U:l>ll
MB>ICAL OFFICE
F \p d front 11ff11 1·,
l>l'NMl fm h1i..\ 111'11111~\
••l'fi1 ,. So1n1· hJI" offll't'
•'\I• Nl'•'<I i:nocl r1 r ..
ti1•d li.•r11·r11, ~·111111 1111
II II Jrt•.1 !I-Ii' filHl-I
MEDICAL RECEPT
lltl\I fronl nff1r1•. 1•\
111·1 \I 1•n h '.\ "" 110 rt
l°l'llll'r 1;11 11.170
\l11lcll1• ,lj!t•d t'Olllp.11ll111l I
In 1•lfl1•rh l.111\ I' fl I
ri•1rn & 1\.11 h • 1111,1111 ,1.;
S.1J ~II ari•:1 1•111,1· 111
h.1~ &h1h Hl'f n·'l11111•il
•:i3 2-111.1
:'tli•11•b I. ~:"' nrl,
0 11\ Top SS
li-12 111.1~ \ ri I!
• urJll'h ur11fr1 111 ''"un·
nrt .... ,dr'• S.1IJ I\ •I•·
p1•ncl' un 1'\lh'll1·nc 1•
l'h1· LlJ1h l'tlul '' .11 lltUJI 111111111\Ullll\
1'11111111\ 1•r \\Olli<' II dlll'
m111ur11 11'' .1 rt• 1• 11 c·1~11.1i:c1l 111 .1p11ll
Sulinlll dl•l•ltt-.cll•lll' .11
lru11l r11u11lt•r
Or;Coost Dai Pilot
330 • lay St.
Costa M•so, CA. ---------, PIX·RECEl'T. '
Work lt·mp11r.11\ 1rih·1
1l•"•'loho11w \ lt'I\ I II ES'l 11 '\
& \. ... son '1 E:-.
SIO 11100
PERSOHHEL
ASSISTANT 1'1·r~ur111l'1 '''' 1•rt"111i.: I li·pl "·" 111'<'11111~ ,,,.,
1'\p,Ul'llN1 \pl 111 h ~·Ill.int I.II 'l'I I II I'' fll 111
t,1 .. l 11p111.,: 'l1111th.1ncl
'''l'"r n•1 \on ''""1,,.,
i.11) 01:!:1h..t "1'1'11 ~· 2
Phone Ad•. Sales
f11p 'l'urt' 11roi:r.1111'
11• .•lt•I .11IJ lohn \\ ,, 1111
\111~1r1 1:, .... Ill~ r11111
11 .. ~t, I 11 lt.1hl< fw1111l1·
ltll1•11••ti·cl Ill 111,1I..1111.!
11w1111•\ C:1111cl fulun
-1 ... 1111 1•111 pln1 lllt'll\
,:,; j'jj,(t
,RES SM AH
Fw1·1 ti 1111 \ 11 1>11 k
q.01 '1> .111cl ll1•I.. I .ill
i.11; 7kt l !I "' \111.. ...
PRINTER
~~I \111)11 I.. lllfl '111,11111
11111 ~ 11111\ \1.111.1.,:1•1111·111
I l"l->11 \ It '' 11 lj~.1.1
I' I l .1-h11•1 • I I'' ,\
"knit' "" 1·w t .rl I .\l 1, 1101<1·1 i.;,) "71111 "k1h. Models Unlimited •1 ;
\l'l•rl:. I .it I ;i I l 1 .1C'l1' ' 11,, 1·11t 111111•1
ITll'll 140111\'n for ·•1!•'1111 1, 1,1 111 I ·1H""'• I • Ill Oul t.;111111! J.."lt;nllll'l1 " ;) 1111~ l't'l"~t.tltl\ .1 \IU•I 111•
MOTB. MAIDS \hh• lfl tin .1 \ .m1•l I or
121 11 ltrnt' po~tl '°"' for rluth" 'lll h ·'' I\ 111111! ~mall m>ld. t'd\1 SI::!~ ftltni: & ht• .II ,._,..,. "'llh
to\ldrt i;;:1 t~20 tthc1n"' ln\111~1'' 11t .. 11tni:
NURSES AIDES
'l:t't'll .rll ,h1fl, ( .1n 1'.11 II
S1.t oo I' t' r ~ h 1 '
I. t•' I' U U I 1 l' '.\ U r ' I ' ll1°j!bf I'\ :1:.1 110 .. p11,il
Hd .1., 11!1. \1·1<111111
llo.•,11·h •i.12 !19;\.\ E/side C.M. S'l50 + 1i
utils. 645-1688
Lady 20·30 to share 3
bdrm dplx al the beach
Skyli,hts. cable, ruur. equip d SJ00 + I 2 Uti ,
642·3331 Ken
......... ,.." P ao I a r 1 n o. ( M 631 1173 FRO MT AGE s.t9-967_1. _ _ --
FUii noor avail at 15.000 $200 Reward!
Amh1t1ous bo\·s and
, 111rl:1 10 13 year$ old. 10
••••••••••••••
: IMMEDIATE OPENING : e Motor route in Prime Newport e I 'IUl'inl(
1uth ''''lll1•111 • 111 J
fin I ,111 11111111 1)14 11\'I'
\ '' ,, • I II I I I I II I'
\\111 kcl"".er1• S.11 ~1111 ii. \lt~Hl,1\' ~I 1:1 I 11 ·1 ,IO
ld1•.1I :0.1111.1111111 1111 !'\l tt ilc·ttt 1',111 11.u h.1r.1 Im
Int c• 1 1 t 1·" \ 11p1 .ti
i\,\lj 114/KI 111•1 v.1•1•1) 'I d' \I
Rmm t need e d im
med i at ely M F
Newport Terrace. pool,
jac. student prlrd 1275
+Ult. 646·92!1
NB pre(. str M wall shr
beaut. home w adult
l1+. 13'7$. 700·08Cl_2
Prof to share 3 bdrm. 2
story tondo in Corona
del Mar. Male or remale
1•m:B
sq rt Flex abl e orrice 'use the Daily Pilot Loc!t Rox ram ti~· pit·
space rrom 796 sq rt & "f'ast Result" service tures Call · 972-lti72
work one or two t'\'l!n· I 1n1ts a week ii elllnl(
newspaper subsrrtp·
t1on:1 Trani.por1a11on up. O.C. Airport area. directory. Your
NEWPORT HACH Found ticrni. She fl blk
Lab max F'. ,vouni:, \'ll' Balbo~ Pen 673 27!10
and ronstant adult
supen·1s1on pro\'tdctl
Call 3 to 5 30PM. ask for LOC.
Minutes to O.C. Airport
•t820sq. ft Reception -
7 offices. •390Q sq. ft
Reception 11 offices &
c'OOf room Can be com·
baned ror 5720 sq rt
Avail 1mmed. F'or anro
t•all
DVM.IMC.
-1!!1~49· I 020_
Pnvate office. answering
service is our
specialty.
~all 642·5678 ext 322
SEU 1rllc 1tt•ms with a
Oaih Pilot Cla~stfll'll
\ti 1>12 ~711
4450
F 1err1er max whl. f 11\ndrea. 642 4321. ext l'ockt'r mix hlk. M wht
1
343
Sarmyed, M Shepht'rd ---... ----111 mt:<bl&bm, M Pom1•ra
man mix bl I an 1111 31i~
1
Auto Dthiltr
l2S Mesa Dr CM Wanted. no exp • nee ,
-but does help Wax & ~eR...tal 4450 pohshcar .l[ood 4'"t ving
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• rec . 18 yrs old min , r--------. Image 1\uto Salon. <: M
645-1171
Rrnmatt to s hr new service. copy machine. Babys11ter needed CM
r--beaut..l.BR, 2 sty hme telephone Avail now~ tHamilton & ll:irbor1
I Irvine. l300, util incl 545-7306 P16i2 3281
731-8630 __ cince space at 1600 W Babys1ttet. must enjoy
Ntlt. mature Mt F' 20·30 Coast Hwv 600 sq ft . pla,ying with children I
,.. smkr to shr 3 BR S52S. 212 s<i n . 1200 Call nighl per week + some
San Clm panoramic vu John : 549-2117 days O"'n trrm Cd M
ome. 1260 + u t 1 I. WArirED~ area. Colle11e student ok
.sat Industrial or cHflce Reliable w/refrrcnccs
Luxury Condo, &pace. 400 600 sq ft In NEWPORT CENTER fi13·7343
Harbor Ridge, s1r;1igh1 South Orange County tor l&bysiltcr Needed for flt. pror. 1500/plus evenmgandweekendrc [X flent Office S <ihrist lan Mom. My
7$2 '~J~ _ f\40·~434 ~k~!1ooor responsible C8 f.pace 1 ~bl:.:~~~ust Be
r. 2BR '''""· w1 Call 1te11ln11 500 to 200 square feet ,-----
in quiet M/f' H.B. S~·~ --i--Available for Lease IAIYsmll
Ocac~ an•a. Low mill's : up e prox imate!~ 3511 \'ll~lornt•rs e e Weekday hours 2::!0 5:30pm e
• Sat & Sun. 5am·7am. Minimum •
amount of eolkctin~. for de e tails l'U ll Brun· Ca rtv or e
• Foster Ouellet al 642·4321 · •
•••••••••••••• ---~-'Daily Pilat · .... · .. · · ·.. .. ·· ·.,
Advertisilg Accutt Exec.
lmmedtete openm11 for adv1•rt1s1n1ot account
executive to sell buth ~eekh & daih
newspaprr advertt~tn.11 to u ~ 1dC ,·a net} cif
re.t1a1.11 B{'('OllOl:..1 Mu~t he :.elf startl'r, wt 1ng to aeve op accounts 10 a new
territory Spare salei1 exJ>('r need~ Suln ry
P,lus romm1l>~•on (Jtncfil~ Semi resume to
Carol mson, 1>111ty 1'1lot, Po Rox 1560
Costa Mesa. CA 92626 No phone call~ please ·
Ne~pe~~~ c~!!!n11<1
display person with man•iitmcnt 111lilit1e~
I
I ITD utll incl Call Call Wm. F. Cote I Person needed to meet
ctys m 2019 1•vei1 MIWPOIT HACH (pr more Inform ation 6 yr old girl anen<'hool. ~ Primt olfi<'e spact ror , t:~ to approx. 2.4Spm
• Must be lnnov11tlv1-. t'llpablt' of ori.:un1111tlon
& lmplemenlln,: nc•w produrt prn11ram:.
• Send mume to C11rol Ohno. Ually ralnt
P 0, Box 1560, C.:Mb Mc~u. CA~ •
. I
Proltulon1l wonun leat.~.750,to2.000sq everyday. Mon-Yri .
..-a.z1rold room· r1 1v1il C h oice> ; MUST BE OEPEN·
mattta1t.1rtt1NBCon· Newport Center loca· 2075 laft Joequln Hint Rd. 1 OABLP. MUST live ~ C... do. Otu1 Vltw• 142$ lion. C1ll William F Acfotl from 11Q CANYON 1 lrithirt wallin1t dutan<'e tn.mt U..t'9rlltf111erdetalb. I to litonffrtek F;le~ll· ..... ':~,.:'eic."S:.: .&.cote Realty "'=~ 1~:rne.w~fed•bs~1 dc1.~i ~~~M1~~:'c~·1
C IWfl •.... 1w ... .,.. '.:";;'.at 11••••11!!!aft!ltr•5!!!!!:30p•m!!!!!. ~ \ F.quaJ Opportunity Employer .:
. • _::.-...:.:::1.~!i::~~~~===l!llt.._;~;:::--M2 ~71 • • • • • • • • ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • ' •. ' • •' '•
I
L VM CHARGE RECEPTIONIST
II i' ltl'ltef. t"on\ llu~p for pn•:.ltJ.!lllU' ~.t11111
Nwpl lk h ltt·ha h 1<1Y1r11JO\:.p1•11pl1•&1-.1n
nn1•1tll'CI nurst·, d1tcl1rat h,111dlt• lrn•1 ph1111t·~
lod & With ~111111·~ t'un ~lu~t h1• l.1 .. h111n 1•110
l al' I l\t r s s I 1111 l'. I 'l'IOU' Op\>' l 1 mi ·"' 1;..12 ik).I I 1 ann•111e•111 1111 I ht• r111ht
'lur.;mi: J.l\'l'"lfl H1rha11I Ot11·llt•lf
LYM Salon ~nu \1•v.111111
7 :J & 3 I I :10 l'orn 1111,11 I 1•ntt•1 Iii \ It
NH an•a l'o.~ Jll1tut11· Iii I "~"1111• """ 111ciiI"11pl1· 'mile~ nl'ecll'il. , Int -h1111hl.1ll\,11-, 11 ... i.. 1h1 benefit~ C.tll ti-12 ~.it S..·1 "" 11111 ti"" 1111111 11\11 \ l'llPI
EXECUTIVE
SECRETARY
LOCAnD IN FASHION ISi.AMO
Big 8 CPA firm located in
Fashion Island Le; seekin~
a professional sec retary.
Typin g 7 5 wpm ,
s horthand 100 wpm .
ca pable of workin g
independenl'l y, we ll
organized and ve rsatile .
Competiti ve s t artin g
sa lary and exce ll e nt
benefits .
CAI.I.FOi~
·~ 14)-640;9200
EXT.247
EOUA&. OPPOATUNITV EMP\.OvtA
ALL JOBS FREE
~..W. OFACE
2 ynrs rollea" and u
m ilth aptitude nr1•clt-d
to JOIO top N~wport
Buch Corpor11tfon No
lyplnR 1s ntcessary l>ut
company would ltkr
s omt k i nd o r
accounting experience
This ts an entry ll'vel
pos111on starting at
S800
m;;2~;~r
WORD NOCISSOI
TWMll
I ) t-ar 11ener11I office
expt'rience and r111r
typing wall land you
\artety posrtron with
1n1eres tcng Irvine
publtshang company
G real opportunity to
team word prort>ssor
Salary $850 UIJ
Rita JolltlOft
752-0301
SHll'PIHG Cl.EU
Entry lel'el po~tlton for
1·h~an cut person with
good driv1ni: rec·ord
Good adva nt·e ment
11uten1tal. excellent
b~nt'f1t s Start1n11
salary S750
Rita .....
752-0301
ACCOUNTING
CLWC
2 )Can general
acrounllng experience
needed lo Join ooe of _
lr \'lne 's f 1ne$t
compan1e~ Friendly
atmOl!phere an beau11ru1
s urroundings Salary
51100 up .; unusually
Rood benefits
RitoJoMIOll
752-0301
ACCOUNTING
CLUk
Expenenc•ed person for
s mall orco un 11 ng
depurtm1rnt tu handle
ar counb payablt'.
acrounl:. rccet\able &·
ll!lht pa)·roll Somt
EDP ? btg plus Salary
to St6K
Rita JohMoA
752.0301
TWt&
Import.int !lie~porl
Beach compaO) seeks
bright trdtnt'(" ~ho ran
11pe a t 40 "Pm Co mpJn ) o rre r <;
e~rellent bcnef1Ls and
great p111e n1 1a l
Stjrting salar) S6i!i
Rita JolltlOft
752-0301
DA TA PROCESSING
International ln 1ne
h3srd rompan~ ~eeks
1nd111dual with
t>~ perience re\ 1ewmg
nut put. mai:nN1t· tape
1•1 n trol a nd
t·o ordin,11100 of rerx1rt.~
l'l1 nu, po:.111on ofrer~
Jn i:'l·t'llent :..ilan . fi month rl'\lt'I<~ and.ha~
.1 :111;1) 1<~k ; 30am to
llpm
Rita Johntofi
752.0301
SECRETARY
LtJ?ht hackRround rane
1r good lyp1s1 a~ there as
J lot or dtr laphonl!
Compan) has beaut rful
v rftcl'~ 1n f"a ~h 1on
lloland and has an
"' r etlrnt l)ent>r1 t
flJt'kJ)lt' S<ilJn lrom
S!llMI up .
Rita Johntofi
752-0301
ACCOUMTANT
2 years publ1t·
arcounltn~ back.iround
with one of tlw big 16
f>relerred and 4 year
de11ret• 1n accounltnl!
This 11os1tt0n ts for
mternal audatnr with
maJor holdtnit romp;my
orterm.i a tremendous
ad\' aMement potrnttJI
~·~c·ellenl benl'f1I~ and
~1.1rtinic salar) to '261\
CalCtny
752-0301
. TB.UIS
II D\'l' Sf\ era I opentnRs
for r ·q>enenced ll:ink
and Sa\ '"lo?' & l.oan
Telle n Good
oppartun11y for .1dv1n
cement Jnd rxrellent
btnef1ts c•c.,., ,
752·0301
CARRY
FOX
AGENCY
I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. January 25. 1982
!~?~ ..... ?!~ -~~----...-----------"1:..,., .... ...... .... .w '!~ ..... !~!! ~~~ ..... ?!~ !~~~ ..... !!~! ~ ............. !!.~! !.·.~~!~ .. ~ .. !!~~ ~ .............. !!~! .................. !!?.~ ................. !~~! ;;.;;; .......... ;1.tl
'_!II ______________ _. llCllTAIY T'&.IPMa. P\lrt'brfd Pit 81.111 pups, 'i:1:1.;!~t~lin~':!!t Pltl'Ob. Amatont . Yo1 • SAtelAIL ........ •••••••••••• .. ••
A ue11llve Hum1n Resourres Monf11Ct Com1J1ny In rrr,_.,.uw..J..~US lllwuow.1100. AU. •upplltt and fix Wf2 C11" • z Perrhe1 N.H •llp Up to f3 P\ntopowerw11r11ltr ••MOHASSU• • '
Mana1tr will have thf opportunity to Nrwport Burh ho ~)~ PftlOll whh~::; }41·9610 II.IN hlrl!Mlhl1 080 644 6829 Wat~r.:o~r erZ~d~ 0 $11m 7S4 1820 uCAI "'" ..... tS labll ~h 1 res ulta·Orlented oPmina for 11 ~tiretuy trlephone ulta n U111a Ai»o. lovublt1 10 Obpl1y fUfl, waillna &°'91M IOtO SlipForreit lift wide to WlletlDn•n tHO You c·an Now Buy or daparlm•nl Ill med ll meetina with aood Olflllnl<lon porlenre Apply In IT1> old female. g1n1er room cbllra. Beouty ...................... 32 ft Iona 1250/mo ··.······~~··,··.····:·· l.4'Ut' lift)' nt'W t'llr . " " 5klll~. t')'ll for 1m·ut1t<'f penc>n at IMO Plact'nll11 t'Ob' 125 961_82111 Salon hairdryers and BllboiCovn&?S·llS6 :m :AP JU.P 80 ( J7 fort111n or Ovrnollri. al employees' needs. Skllla l'n merit ' attention to dtli1I Avec M AKt: ao.dtn Ret pu1>5, hydr1ullr rh1lrs. mlr .., • ..,,._. - ---V8. I-Ow mile1111t'. white ~ptr ,.,m Di~t·ounl~
c 0 mp e n 5 ll l i 0 n . be n e f Its . Non smoker, ul11ry Tlll-:RA PIST I nhnl thamp lines. sho!S ' l"Ol'S,llhtlveund planhl fbmnaton Hudman ' ... Sterett '°'° With blut top 1~300 Ptrson11h ied St'f\ tt'fl, OrKa nl1a lt0n a I be ha v lo r and St.IOO.Call : K•l••. Uevelop~nt Proaram. ~dAl96.:.MS 76i4 Abo, make-up. shampoo Pede Co .......... ••••••••••••• 644 ~ Ocllvt'I")' lo Home or Of
communlc1Uon would be helpful. _ fi!Q:~ t• time Member ol SmWhtPoodltMlx.110 and halrproclw·is Ex«llentfln111handcon· MWilly's JeepSt11 W11n nrl' <.:allthuck Cohill
Progres.,l ve, dynamic company needs SICllTAIY tr:wd11r1plln1ry t•um Loves Kids CAlll 63le:~ dltlon rz.soo or beat or llJ SJOIACE XJn1 COnd C:ood OH M1 Auto Mlltr 731 2400 ... a lake· charge. humanis tic leader. J\ill·lirrw. cheerful. tx NI.YT ' fffihn\ bkgrnd. 848·7117s after II, • rtr 491·6329 Monthly bo1i1t ' R v lmiOBO G4Hstp ..,_._. t7H
Ple .. se send resume and salary perlt'nrcd 1ndlvldu11I ~~lcp~~f 1{.r8 11 ~ P/ia~·~5i~ ,,.. .. ,.. 1045 1 11t«a1e for any size. 24 ,.._ t560 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'" with strong typing & p''"P ~5780 ....... •••••••••••••••• AllCOMPllSSO lbomla oonsole. walnut hr atc url t y , r rel' •••••••••••••••••••••• MIW&USID requirement.s lo: !lhorthand talt'nt5 want vr t.: • •'rec! Shellie Setter Mix. 1 hp Binks. with eun w/bmch 11000. Pete launching ' washin a l>Jck up, •• ton, 4 sp . All-A IOMIOi!
Box 1002 t'Ci. Apply in person with TIU SHVICI Female t t mo. needs yd. eG/080 536·9832 _,!47 7«615SHll24 ~ri vlleau Newport v.s en11 St ,500 080 Orange county's oldest Dally Pilot l't'Sume to: Mr. f'uente!> Trainees ok. A1>ply 641>-4871 --Story It Clark Pl aoo up· Dunes. U31 Back Bay I ~·'7003 eve111wknd!I ' lt'adlllg deult1r~h1p .. Costa Me.sa. Ca. 92626 at Robt!rt Bein, Wiiiiam Newport Tlrt Center, lllwlllh:::t t0-50 J1cuzzl J.806 P.Ortabh: rlabl, walnut flnbh. Dr. Newport Such-170 Ford 1 Ton Flat Red. 8 er 0 re y 0 u b 0 Frost & Assor. 1401 3000 F:. Cont Hwy .•••••••• .. •••••~••••••• Whlrl~I b11th . neur brand new St500 644""510 Good <:ond w/new Trs anywherc.l'omtln&seto
Recept . Buuty S11lon m
C:M. nt'lll 11ppe11ranl·e '
fnendly • mu~t • C 1111
00·4012 JQ!'. a.Pit
~ail St .. N.8. CdM ' I new J.c..~MO>lt46 -183.9381 Radials, PS. & PR 11956 1.111 "lhe GTV6 and lilt -**I BUY * * MOVING -Sanyo refri g, ~ IOtl 080 494-0039 Spidt'rVeloeel SAUSMIM SIC'Y/IXIC , ~SITTH , Good Wied F\lrnlture Ii 175. Hitachi TV. ISO ....................... Tr• f Uf..._ bll Datsun vu. lungbed. IEACH IMl'OITS SIU.PICASSOS for prdtlg101.1s t.ui:una lcirtT1me. F.ves,S111 Appbances OR I wlll Ot!sk rhalr. 125 . Sony f"orSale:HeadSkis,Bln •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• xlnt cond properly 84110oveStrttt,NH. IYPHOMIE N' 1 1 d On ITEK Ouiad Npt &ellorSELLforYou tuner.' apkrs, SlOO 10 dm~. Poles, siie 150 AircNft ti 10 mamt $4tSO li75S85!1
752 0900 lilld~hl'rworldrumou~ mt:~:t :~md:~c~<~ llt'111·h Nt!ar JW MASTllSAUCTIOH ' bike 5.645-0803 $.'50673·0829 •H••••••••••••••••••••·111D·t -.,u klngc ab l~Harbo~Blvd.CM
artlats 11.000 wk In Pr()(l!Ssional manner & ~~~f~ c~~12 8~:2 ~r ~jM6!6.1 Ul0tU Eltt. guitar. I pirkup sl;. --.;.,.,_. ,.._.W..t.d ea,:p~~nsht'il. 5 ~pd : 31 7170 lec~t Good clental orgamu
llonal skills, SO WPM
and good spellet. Ex·
ceUent working rondi·
t1ons and fringe! btner11s
~-~16Dana
tome potenllal. Leads lop level skillsa must 9~M-6PM' . ~ solas. New. S98 Lov· w1sml amp So~ndli ... • 1095 '771'210, loaded. OC: AP ~ 494 9'J,l4 dJi. 6 • -
furnished, new c·ar ' IWtdter p lfl ~ 188 SI great perf for beginner 500 hrs min Call Paul or --IMW t712 Hawaii vacation inrl'n • c l'ypist--esuts "*'O teperii, 960 Honda SO nds work •••••••••••••••••••••••JI 714 752 2266 '75 Chevy 1.u'" blue •••••••••••••••••••••••
•lhfC... Full·lime, must know
diets, Conv Rosp N B area. frtt rnt!dical. den
tal 'llre ins. C.11 · Jant. 642.1KM4
RE. Sales
CAIEEI
OPEN HOUSE
COST A MESA I
NEWPORT
TUESDAY
JANUARY26.1982
7:30PM
CALL MISS RICH
714-645-0JOl
Call today and get all the answtrs to what a future
in residential Real Elitate sales could mean
to you
live plan Mr l'o11plr. 1714lll3l-ll03l Part Time Wanted For SI! EA<.:a JlY 957·57oe ~·Chris496 i458 LOSING LEASE. QUll m. . or w wh11e shell. r rpt ~.
,. KING INNERSPRING -. t111g bus111ess. selling out 213 629-502I mags panels am rm 61~. Sec'y/0,.r...._, · Mon-Wed-Frida)' 1-;XTRA FIRM mallren Redwood hot I ub. II AU. supplies and rix· ~ ·,93 6.W5 •
SalesPart·Time M.....,. I tluil1firactors0fflceo set. never used. worth dlamhe l t<r ~Xoo40· RwO luresincluding tl10 '66 i,ton 6 ryl • spd
BUOY VIStT Exc11l11~ ''areer opp ty ta I Lee at 873-807 IS.'IO. sac S248 dt!I. Never ~!"!....". s.. Display cases. wailing ••••••••••••••••••••••• mags aood t'orld S9SO W~AStl*iTOM ror bri ght entr~et_u· TYPIST/llClrT used queen sz, worth ............., room t'hllirs, Beauty is SJX PAC 8' Cabovtr 49ot.3284: Un~n ' Hamilton & person interested m in· (}ppor1unity for bright. Ol!I. cash only. S218 del 1.5 gaJvaruzed p1.,ei.. 12· Salon hairdrytrs and camper. Hydro j:irks, , :-
otht!r people you will St'e 1 ernat 'on a I tr :iv e I, dependable stU·starlt'r Usual)}:_homt', 754-73SO long, 2" ms1de diameter. hydraulk 1·hairs. mir· 110 hkup $500 1bs1 ti.\ Ford Pirkup w ut1llty on the money yuu ran I languages & young peo· 1) pe liOwpm al·curatcly. -------s 1o 1 ea loo · 0 r .••
1
rurs. shelvt'S and plants 548-SOtll aft 5: m b l' d . I 1 k e n t' w ,
make as a Los ·Angt'les pie Rap1dl~ expanding aµlllude (or rigures. galvamied pipe . .s<> rt Also. make up, sh11mpoo S2,3S010BO 548-08.'12
TI mes cirrulation del't European based student good phone personality MUST SILL Call 540-8278 and hair produets Mae.tlld llaft 9 I 40 .64 ~.Ton Good Trs Rblt
field rep Many peoplt-exrhange program. & bl' able to h11ndlt• Mahogany double bed Antlqu_c:_ radw, 7.cni lh l'allG31·9754or ••••··~··~····~··•••••• Motor Sl300 ae~t Ofter 00 the pit circulation lo1·ated, In Laguna hea\'y phone trarfH· with mattress Moon S500 Nt·w l'rafts m!ln arterG,898!illO'J CimatlJ, r1t~ b1~s" red. AllStk 971_2590 Ask •·or
sales program eurn tteae.h, 1s, st>ek1n g . a Pleasant workin g 1·ond1 shaµed mirror on ht:ud Router~ 4 100. ~:lt-t·t TV Rollo dean. 7~~ SleveAfternoons
rrorethanS200a wcek pe rs on str~ng 111 11ons1nC:.M.Please1·all board Cords$100559·9~9 HIAshr 1091 . . 9570 r worlti g . 1 . r w secretarial skills but ~armella ~S-2600 ~080 631-7797 art 6 -· • eo _ ... M XK ..
or n JUS o·a c anxious ltl rapidly US· I 1--c t ~·················.~···· ~ ..... • •••••••••••••••••••••• hours earh day 81gnlng s u me man a er 1a 1 Women with trans1>0rt<1 -. -"-· oos tl2 l'olor Sanyo, 19 re Xlnt. cost 1700 now n l''ord Mon v.8 Auto up new _Times ~bsc·rlp· responsibilities !hile de t!oo to hooseclt'itn. part ~ngLo! Oask HS2all T0reek. CC M~lp m>tr rontrol. G wks old. S475. 839-1949 good cond · p ,5 Cali t1 ons 1ntheirrom · r "h .. t1me.$.\.00 1hrlyMu~tlll' . Ye l. 00, a S'l700follpnrc:SaveS3002yrwurr l'OSt8S625 L.. Todd91'J8.4116·r11 munlties. We pay hourly ~ 1~~ r~m ~~111~fn~~~u. fost. thorough & tdfl Dbl 8d St, S800 10' 6<'h, Ca l I 714 .975 14 13 or Will )Ut'nrl~·t' $495. i\lso ~:-;-/
9
I SO . a em wage+ generous 1·om e un . •a nent Oianl' 7 1 ~ 14SO. Twn Bd, S30. Kng 97S.t485 12" GF. t•olor Slll5 Call 74FOHOVAN
missloni ir yoo have a & Germany .. Stutrng 91"1!nti6 Bd Compl.Sts0.645·1l355 113r<XJ2!i ••••••••••••••••••••••• Good rnnd . \'II cng , l · & sala ry $16.000 + .--': " t979HONDAXL:ISO mags pancling&refrig ~::k ~:/~:1:;rn~c~ilh benerits Sendresumi>or ~M <.~u<t J l:f~d i gre1en 2HPELEC.MOTOR Montgomny Wa rd~ 1600 miles. nice bike Sl.200 .PP846-l543 ·
people! talk to us ahoul letter to. A S.S.F. .. 228 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '.:;::J ~ ~6 ~9 x nl Complett ly enclosed. AM f'M stl'rt'O 11honu. 2 5. 545-9579 art 5 m_ ---W-'.......i
9
HO this great P time OP· No. Coast Hwy, Laguna Mii 1005 t ,, · -·-Dl/4'0volt. 3ph ~m spe akt'rs. SS S '77 YZ400 Dirt bike Good -.-
""""unity Call .. 0n Fr·i Beach. CA. 926SI ~· 8' lOOISe ~·uow bark sora. $75/080 536·91132 bT.l 0018 condlt"ion..,,,,,. •••••••••••••••••••••• ~' '"1 • ~ -----•••••••••••••••• ••••• •• I\... I bo ' ..,.,,.,. ..... ~ YOUR trtH361 ext 1204. SEC'Y /IECEPT ff "" sz 11 Y x sµr , Plonttr Rc•1'1t'vcr SISO. 642·442£ ,...., .,__
Sal ~rson wantedfo~ -.1th book~eeping skills *, JOO/~S~A •TO ·h *r :,!!:!~.,.,both 2 mo old '11 ft. ol pant!led dr3pes., and Garrurd turntable 73 Hooda CB 350 Fair GOOD USED CAI! . r "~ d . I nllques out 0 .,,., ......., n oor to ctlllng orr $.<J() • • Anythmg considered. 111 ivewoi:rien sshoe llmt' .x-~ reSUf!!t'S Cliw lntenors. 711 W l"ont;mp glas· ·n1·1d wtitt! xlnt cond w11h ll.\ll!li2 I ing Windshield. xlnt 1977thrut980 dt!pt_. m Fashion Island 10· C & R Constru<'.llon, 17th11A2 C.M.642·7712 . ~ '. a · . 1 rond.,$0.964-7958
P time . upt<r pre l!iBS Sunland Ln . loslu "' -I corree & end table rods~S250~4930379 tiJrrard turn l.ibll· w11h --~
terred. 64G-7810 ~Maa CA 92626 AITTIQ E WALNUT Worth S1200, lake 1400. VW Bus Heavy Uut) c•an & dU!-1 l'O"t'r Sli5 I JULIE H S -"RETA.RY-ERVl,_C_E-'-ST \TIUN \T I 4 PC BDRM SET ! 673-4743 Luggage Rac·k 1125 I l\111bi3670S XX O OX X LO v r. "'""' ' ' sm Eves, 673-8199 t'·d , ....... ood • d-67~ .... ., • . OOXXOO Jc 2daysptt wl'H. Laguna TENDANT P llmt: Ap ,--. -. 1 u e-ll·ucu, g ton · --"='"""' llt•aullfol I A (Ir TV. 'l OAVIDY • ,Acctg. orf1re. non plyShellStat1on l7th& trlgwall clock rhime~,1100 Dinellt> St•t -.·s 1Ramset,lt9:>.Elt'.imin11 )rwmt t'rl'c't1t'I T\ ----
1 smolttt PO Box 1134 lr.ine B ~. onental vast S7S j duurs. I& Porta potty. shell $175" t:a1am11ran.1 John'i. · 7 111 i.o,,_,,c.-y • . . ' -' ---' • 631 5979 S20 M7-l!J97 ~: · ' ·1bo· h II I '78 XR75 HONDA •Beach 926:12 _ r,·ice station Allt'n -• _..,, .16 sai at 0 · Sansw Tc•:it Dirt bike xlntcond 292S fiarbor Hh•d -=-=._=== ... ,..y dant, exp .. rer. req . prd ntq. oak sewina c·ab .B.E :AUT ~POSTER 18; kmgsize waterbt'<l,I A7JOO Ht't'I to Rt•cl S.'>Ot SJ50 • 646.8127 C.:OSTA MF.SA 229llH bor Bl d ~·-age~ & up dav shirt w mal'h 1175. Antq oak King si wall'rbt:d. mo 12&. 4!18 3282 R11•hJrd 000tl7J-lll2l -'-----j]
9 2501" CostaM:!a.CA~7 Someone! who doesn't Sun orf 9 hr d;n · table S.100, l.•mp SIS. uonlessmall,htr.linens t!~:t!me~~ 1·79 Kawasaki KX 250
1
• '!JI
miftd woning for a hv· ~s wk + comm, NR Antq oak c hr S4 0 & bt!dsprd. usl'Ci. 1 .vr. J F.F.PS-<;overnmt'nl, Mtw 13"ColorTY Xlnc Cond. Must Sell WE PAY
AnEqualOppty Co. j t:ir~~r:!~~~~ iiskj M4·i151 11.5!;39'22 xlntt'OOd.S275 W1llhdp Surplus 1.1sterl ro1 1MemolHOntrol.S275 S5C!1080.7~·28fl7_ -
Restaurant. Nowacrept·1 glrl omte. Expr or ~:RVICESTATIONAT Anlique oakHoosier.xlnl mov!" a sHmblt• S3.l9GOO,Sol~forS4-tOO 9552272963733.'I '72.BM~ R7S5. 18.~ TOP DOLLAR inc appll taliou ror new tn.lnee. 642.9237 TENOANT. P T l'\ en t'ond, $250. lll90 c·IO<'k. ~·1]60 -For I nr~ <.: u 11 131 :111 loah & M.tH ong. m1. xlnt cond. moo FOR USED CAIS
Sandwich Shop. part -ings & wknds. nt'at aµ 1150_~8127 Amer Oak t·~rio r ab. 93!·~961 fat 2239 ~.t firm. 642-1882 ALAM MAGMOM
time help. Hours 10·2 SICllT AIY pearant'e & handwr1t Applcm1Cn 10 IO ~urvt'd i:lass sirles S47S f'ridit. S7S. 22 Sun•1\•al ri ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tr~ Utilty t 110 S IU
PMExrellent pay.152lS EX~Tl~G front orfic·e ing Ap11ly at. 2590 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 631·5979 -I ne $7S, lov1· s1·:11 StS IG..rtl 9010••••••••••••••••••••••• ~fa~it,r~~v~
Springdale. Huntington Potll~ioo in photogra,PhY Ne~rt Bl , C M__ HARBOR ARF.A 2 IX· 7' sofa S200. Corkt 11il ~11-~3 ....................... lITILITY TRAILER COSTA MESA
Beach lbetwffn 8olsa &: stucho Typ_ing and hght ·pping ReCel\'lnR APPLIANCE SEl_lVl<.'E table blto lights with car Top Carrit-r Jo'it11 All! C.top lo•! 1!96/bst oiler
McFadden) bktpa, skill! required. Clerk.Some Expeneni·e Webuyused1pphanc-t's St00,tablt"lampl30.t•all Cars! Only Ust'd Unn•, i:! rt Game Fisha Evns.45-0418 549·43_0_0 549·14~7
SAUs.IOATS 642·293.'I for a I. Rl'quired but Wiii train w~ sell m·ond . guar $59-7~_art ~Em -~ ~.1-1322 ribt-r11lass boat S.175 Aalto s.rwc ,.... WE IUY
Boat sales experienre West i\irport ~rt'a M F ~ba~rt!!:__ _549·3077 Two Maplt' hutrhes SSO & 64ti :l86ti I Acc...!;.n 94 ClEAM CARS
helpful. selling advertis-SICllTAllY/EXEC. 40hrweek ~-5344 Rerriger ator 1220. 1150. Dresser S30. Maple FAN powertul adJ I •••••••••••••••••••••• TRUC.,S i..., space to boat owners Personnel / Advertising rt'arhe~ (;r Christ 1 an Freezer 1200. W11sher1 din tbl.2 Iv~ s:IO. 25 1·0 fl heighi 5·.9·. 2· bladt', S7S lotfl. Power 9040 AND "
;;"comm'I. Hottest new Dept has opening per Pre-School . p time. dryerll3Sea.W/WSIOO. ss. ~· hke no refer 96HIOOll •••••••••••••••••••••• ATTIMTIOH
marine magazine. Xlnl expansion . Nwpt Brh Mon · Fr i . 9 -Ip m 646-SNI 14SO, case S20. Mapll' l'lfH FOR BOATS MG inromr Potential. Draw nitantlal services r1rm. 963-715S; 536-1112. Wshr. clean .5. dryr, l_bl_Y!I ~S4JI 968-6813 WU
against comm after Good typing, shorthand. rlean -.S. Rt!fri&. clean Waterbed w1dwrs. m1r 2 Pr. rrutches 112 SO ea 536-119 I OWMllS
tr a 1 n Ing pe r i o d . exptr req. Non -smoker TeodMr FF SI.SO All work &ood j r ors & ta b in l' t s 640.1146 tO' CJ:'et\S Tahitian. hve· TONNEAU COVER ~i M7·9327 Call 640-0123 between Coocl..tor S48-8513,548~ New-$1 200. sell $3:>0 aboilrJ shp avail Call, Fits MG's. '71 '81
Sales girl, outgoing & ~2. For N ... Proflt b· !love 4 bumt!rs ' oven. I 83!!:~3 _ -Judy Of" Harvey 642 4fi44. M Never used. S75 { . ....,.I 18 Id cltHCJ• Pro•r••· 1as.whitt!S7S. lsofaSetteeL-shape l3rt 1Mhc••••• tiwn .9AM&5PM · aria631-7797 lvemsg J~0~~r/~1r~~ p!~ Place •P to IS ™-4SO&ull for Ch,!js l Beige woven hkt' nt'w W..ted IOll 17 rt Whalt'r, tis HP .1
·-a.-
CONMElL
CHEVIOLET
~ H.rl••r K . :
I l "'r \ \! t _ .... \
546-1200
tlGHIUYH Top dollar.. for Sporh
&
CREVIER BMW
1'e bcltirlca '12
IMW'a AN Jten!
A few remaining '81
Models & Demos are
still available' We
spec1abte in. Eurovean
dl'11very and nawles.s
pre.owned BMW's
Where Customer J
Service Comes Isl ! -
Sales-Service-Leasing•·
208 W lsl. Santa Anl
1714) 83S-3171
_<!_losed Sunday~
1982
MODB.S
HERE
HOW! • Clleck ow CJOOd
Wctbiof
DIMOamd
9UAUTY Pu.OWHED
AUTOMOllUS
aswel•olllet' .. .,....... .. .., ......
CtlorC...a. ' •
TODAY!
SALIS • SI.VICE
LEASING
SADDLEBACK
IMW
2t402M.U~
,.WY,
MIS~YllJO
Avery Pkwy oH 1·5
831 -2040 49S-49.c9
Closed Sundays
time. St!cond Glance. Secretary J•-M Sl .. ilfl la 22 ru ft WH tin-hse.!s:J?:ibi36261 ~iJkh••;;;·;;;t·~~ .. ::i·l tra1ler, radio ro'er~. UTEIOOYWOll
2122 W. Ocean Front. NB bee. Secret~ tta.t la Yaw C... relria. frost frM. side by ~·h & rhair to mat<·h -rondllion also :.,,, 1 center ronsole $6500 Up to 5()'", olr sour body Cars. Bugs. Campers 1'---------
675-3361 Ell'Clron1cs <.:o 1n lllllity. Teedt..,.... side,127S/olr.673-4084 I' loose cushions l.1kt' rklthln1t s1x't'!l I 2 . rirm da 752 7733. t'V s~ti'!l'!.te.536-9832 --------~Laguna Beach has an .. y"...._........_c--. Relria.2S cuft.s11w11re new. santr11·l' SISO 997tki79 645--031S HARDTOP FOR FIAT
Sales immed. opening avalla "'4 Sal -.. ..,... maker, gm. like nu StSO MB·Drl _ 'I I JET SKI I ~PIDER Good c·ondi
JOINASUCCESSFUL. Ille. If you are an exp'd SBOO C'n 1j'rC: 968-~13__ _ r:EVER USEO Ronks Mink.. Only used~ hour~ S1700. IH)!_l._S225.673·639_l
NATIONWIDE ~if ~r~~7 ~i~~ f~~ l113145Ju4 --Refrig. Admiral. 20 t'U (I. 1200. Qn b_drm $540. ..~.':'!"!'!~ ..... ~~.~~ IJiH905 ·74 Olds 98-wrttked Will
SALES TEAM l70+wpml & able to de-dean IZ80. 642 672' side glass top dint'lle $225, t\crordion sat· S2SO. bt•:.I • • St'll parts. motor anrl Be one o( over 600 1n-al with """Pie tartrully. E AC H ER I nrant Xside mattress box springs llahan madt· fruntahni 13 lost.Wllaler I lransingoodcond ~enl sales a'enls O"V Development Program. . --Twin S80. roll sro. Qn Xlnt rond Nc>w 40 hp 962-7520 selling products o the handle correspondence. p time. Member or BRAND NEW Sl:Kl MORF: ~ ! 770·0901 lk ~u beg. books 5411 1:192 Men· L'nder warranty i -
9t4's . .\udi"s
Ask forl' C: MGR
JIMMAllMO
VOLKSWAGEN
18711 1~at•h Blvrl
Ill NTINGTON HI-: \Ctr
842-1000
WE MEED
YOUR EXOTIC
& IRITISH CAU Thos. 0. Murphy Co .. a stat typing. p~ones & a transdisr1phnar~· team Maytag washer & dryer Ou· l k . bed SISO l'rombone. K111R :Ill Con $.'l900or bc>st orrer ... ~for C'....t~
Pioneer in specially ad· variety o( admin. duties. S""cial ed & Spanish S71!Q pair 673·5477 a 1
1ng shz . r' d · ' t't•rt Tenor "'lnt nm1I Mitrh Hrt'c:r 5-111 9001 --~-call us' Some accounl· .-~ . · • ·. sml & gt> 1· e~t o wr~. . · . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• vertising since 1888. ing or .bookkeeping ex important Call Jac·k1e CCMMMftaHOllCalt rugh1 sland.S:lOOfor:lpr ~hde.nawlt'ss with t•on ,J\i r1 (iranrl Flanb , IM PO RTANT --------
ne Most &citiltc) ,_.Of Yow
IMW hrchose Or
L..GHC_...le
MclareftlMW!! e., OrL•os• ly 0.. """ ,._, I c114,s22.533i.. I ORANGE COUMTY'S
I OL~EST ~~oup!:vfd; sr~e~~~ll'eed per. desired. We orrer PQ1?~6·5760 Sink, stove, rernfo! S40 L~ash. 720-036:1 (~~~;~ mull's $.'>00 luadt-d All or 11~rt DO<'k NOTICE TO ~EW~nT
calenders. specialty excel.pay &benefils 1n· TECHNICl1\N I 49-IZ7f6 ·,·ooch&lo\•es t•at.nuh-1 1 mooring t atalina READERS ANO Kl
items and executive cludingour Ceramit· Cap3l'1lor St-an, 17 cu rt rrost rree b\•bt.'1ge.S..S0011r rorrl'e I T~Y-ha 1\va1I Assurnl'_ luan AO\"ERTISERS M DTS
gilts to their customers 4DAYWOIKWEEK Mam4a<1urer needs an refng 6 mo old. S.100 tbl.S250 720-o.11;3 Studl'nl. Good \'oncl ' Xlnt terms Sfill .000 The _price or item~ ~' Sal~Sen 11•eLeas1ng -
Thi . bl Company is located 2 f)J111 ~velTechnman Orig~ Dk ood bd s I SISO 644·1096 979·~ adverll~ed by \'eh1 l'le l . --.. ·· . I J:V""f\/CAR\!ER sis your oodg OP· mi fromCoast Hwv &8 Chemistry. Ph ys1es. 545·1037 kw . ~r~'·· pc. I --18'Century all,·arnished ' dealers'" the vehicle NewµortAt'arh-l'L/I
&
~s~ !~d gconli~~~d mi from 405 & 5 Frwvs Electronil'S Background R ( . H . t sl~S~~ S47l I t' new. Office Fwrllltwe I I da.<ISIC w full ('U\'('r 352 class1ried advertising ft-12 9-105 l tr'<I I c ~.lllt. AIAI
Please tall ror appt Helpful pay. Com e ngerator. otpoin J ---. ~..... IOI Olds enR Mo s I ~l'll columns does nol in ' l'L.A..l.J '"'-..1"-t: 1Av1n
income from repeat or· Te loni c Berke 1 e y. me_nsurate with f.x Wht Sm. UNUSED QIJEEN tn;o 1 •••••••••••••••••••.••• 157~ 673 9321 · I elude any apphcabll'
1
··tWl' moAdeHI TT0,E11Dta.~ ·n.. ·~~~~ ~. ~.:;~ ders. Commissions are per 5 0 n n e I o e p 1 penence. Call for Appl _ _64~6625 &x Spnngs & Mattress Burroughs 9500 with auto
13
. 0 _l w-.
1
,0 h taxes. hren~e. transrer .,.. , M n
pald immediately H you 714 494 9401 546-2490 licyct.s 1010 Cost S675. Sell $200 reader S4. 9SO . Ru r DU) 00 "113 er. " p. • rees. finanre charges. \' o I ' o s c· a l I u:. 'iO BMW 2002 Xlnt Cond ::~u~';1~rr:ire~~~(:~~ . . It ••••••••••••••••••••••• s:i110 I roug hs 9500 Wllh elec start & steenng reesror airpollutionron-TODAY !~! I ComplRbh Snrf.FMSl ·
John E Morrisse)'. Ttlesll·~ MEN'S SCHWI NN !Rattan-r-nd d; set w 4 rEas~ette. usodt'd s4.9so ~ 673·9321 trol devire certirications · Tape ~ Spd. Shpskn~. ~ci . &LADIF.S'3SPD l l'ane chrs S200 Rattan co Air Pr oc-ts Inc 48'11 Pacem3ker sport or dealer documentary t'oHr. SH50 OBO . ~c!,:~~J~r~~ ForClass1r1ed ,\cl Immediate opemngs lo s.50ea Cash. 720-0363 etagere f15 Antq tbl !1..1.411.11·8111 risher. ISK W 11 en . preparation charges un-1
1
St6 i973
Green Valley. Arizona .\CTION "-ork pleasant eve hrs Girls Nish1k1 12 Spd-set. s:icxi..11r 720-0363 <Xrice. like ne"·' side arm loaded w elect ron1 rs. less otherwise sperir1ed I TOYOTA·YOLYO "ii 3201 . a ,. . ~ u n r l. t"": •
85614. DaTi~1~~lot :i~~ ~ge~c!o111:,~· Touring Hand le Ba rs COM PL 8oi\t SET ~~1~~~1~~1evx~r c:=~~~· ::~: 1r0~15rar~1~-C:~~ 1?.>'tht> adv!_rtiser .... ".,...11•• am rm bra
•\D \'ISOR 1PM.966·01SI . ~~~!!!'w Sl7S 645"4199· Oblbed.Sprs,$100 desks lmelal;t wood ). r1sher Pvt 1598 1821. ~ 9510;. Cttfewore I HSI l84~da~!> Ha,·e somethinJ? ~ou 64251\ill "··llth1~n .. s·rastw1thDa1I.' ~_,.,__ 673-116;19 (' d I & "U1.J7•0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""H•·•lOJ wuo.uu r-.:. 9715 ~ant to sell ? Class1r1ed -"' ,., re enzas mf ta '"'! "" 6' Camper w Bubble Win I -..,... • ~do.it -.;ell 642 5678 PllOC Want Ads msert l rule n Ann corree I able. -.'00d1. 7'x4' Teak 1·on ~·Egg Harbor Sport Fis <lows. Wht & Red 116r, •••••••••••••••••••••••
( (,
) )
'tf ewspaper
Carriers for foutes
in Huntington Beach,
Fountain Valley & Newport Beach
• Gooclltma ..
• Super Trips . ...... ,,, •. CALL
CIRCULATION
DEPARTMENT
Illy Pillt .
842-4321
20" IMX llKi desk and lo boy S250 rerence tbl w ll bloc her, Sleeps 4. Twin Eng, 842,9463 Top Dollar '71 c.ri. $100.
, Redlint. w/Takagl I pc earh.962-3597 fabric: swivel th airs. Must See To Appreciate ,._; --
1
-Poi.id st.J.2252 crank, shotgun seal, hvy chrome base <.:all Steve Bes t 0 r re r . W 1 11 ......... •
du t .v r i ms . a 11 o y or Linda 751·627 1 Consider Tradi'na For CliMH:i 9510 ·72 Capri 2000 Air. l'J56. b I u n " For Your Car' gd cond SIOOO or bst ars/seat camp . ..,.,or JM 2113 Copier w1stand. Real Estate Private ••••••••••••••••••••••• JOHMSOM&SO.. ~9772 best offer 536-9832 ontempurary Parson Sl200orbestorrer Part . '175-4797_ 'UTTIEST U..C•Merc~
insert i rule Olnlng Table Oak Par-_964·95041962-0105 -~ .... / '57 T llRD Dcbm
Rarers Wanted! Morning quet Top W Ext. $200. Smith Corona Elec Like ~ • 2626 Harbor Bh •••••••••••••••••••••••
training 20-30 miles. 752-90til neww/rast!. SIOO, .. ~ ........ !~.~~ ~~,;~, ~~Mesa ~40·$fi:lO I '$Vio1~~3r1. .t ·da 760-0327 eves 851-3922 Y"'CHTI .... '-IOOISUKZ) Premi um pri1·cs ..._. .............. ~ 1025 "' ~ paid (or any ust•d t•ar 1111._.,M.....,... MATTRESS& Apero 200 bond rop1er COHSULTAMTS tforeittn ordonie:.t1l') ••••••••u••••••u••••• BOX SPRI NG Good cond. 11200 Will Charter/Power & Sail in good rond1t1on MOW 25• /FT Pd s.u>. Sell S2SO. acrept 1200/dwn 1100 Npt. Bch 675-2960 See Us First ! + tax 411 mo O f; I.
Redwood 2x6 &erlting. ~ yr warranty. Pillow !!I>· 67~8S89 "Your Year Round , 1!~llll~•Rlll!P.l~I Cap 1·os1 S4964 He~ 4·~' long; also redwood Comfort 964-8008 10011M Ql•rterServirL _ _. \.Jlue S2~111 92 Total'
&fencing JLol mweostr pKriecne TYPIWllTHS. lotfl. WI tHO ~~••rJ••l "e~!es s~~o:s 1 ~u ~·:~~ u 8 r 121 Chest ol drawers. SSOO to '900 Valut now •••••u••••••••••••n•• 11
ime 64i-981S. $12.SOea. '9.95 + tax & strv1re Santan1 35 6 bags, fully i--••••••-1 Otoh\er.· Ordl'r Youn.f
Olympus 01111 ·1 w/ 640-1146 Ask about Word eqq'd. Volvo diesel. .Tod.a:v!· . ·.1. I chrome body. USO mm Procesaors 164 .17141640-4925 ltw11Me.e6.W
lms+Olympus7Stol50 12131702-8670 ..... c d · lfl7n..~uW.d toomlens•uae.$350. "Symphony" Vict rola -orona o. moonng. Thrtt lops, full powu, • .,.,. .,..7., Cabinet. Xlnl rond a· APF.CO any paPC!r copier Fernando St. Bal 4 ryl _.. h 1 C
........ " d s 900 r Id -ooo ..... ~1... -~ •1ff •· omplett!t sora, mulli-rolored W/stan . 1 nr s. ....,, ,v, .. ~ .... .,=----! C New bldtt •/polished velvet541·7095eve. prof set-up 975-1262, Laur Good Race restored In Senior lass WllUY
brus plu.mblna fl~urn. 4-.......... 1055 751-'341 R«otd. 2Salls. Ctr Rlts. in Ila division o( t'Om· l/SJo:D CARS & TR lJ('KS pdSllOO.~llS51$. -_,..-M I 0 petition Serioos in-COMF.I NOR 955-2272/983-7333 u••••••••••••••••••••• any Xtras 1 tS . q\lriesonly CA LL. f'O R C & Selling Everyt hing. MEl'ALDESK• ...::9'1!M~'/64~-----1 FlllAl'HAISAL -,~,.. 111 IO"'O Sofas. tables, desks. SECRETARY DESK lD MacCrtgor 25'. fully 76M5n Cormirr-Detillo ·-• • kitdlenwue. 551·9553 Ri1ht: dr1wers. Left : equipped, S7900 or bt!st "!!!!!!!!!•!!!l•!!!ml!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I •••• •••••••••••••••••• 1 . ty-writer Op•n pull ... _ cv -F CHIYIOLIT Vlvllu Th7rl1tor 285 Sofa 9 good tondltlon "" . "' u-11""-·--·-.. AUit.in Huly. 100·6 111211 BEACH Bl.VI> nllh ISO. Vlvltar 75.205 Country print. brown lyJ)('Writer Is ready to ·::-.~.,./ Needs Paint' Tunt-up. HUNTINGTON R•:ACll
Cnon mount 1100. 'tones!J00.644-7183 ,o.SJ.2S.96UOOI 9071 hi in h111e. SUIOO 1474017w
lkertl 00. S73·0IZ2 I......., 1070 ........... •••••••"•• .. lt'lnn. $40.0812 549.l)) I IMO '• .. ••••••••• .... ,...... 1017 BOAT SLIPS FOR RENT ?ICAf COMY
...................... jParrot. dbl yellow bead. ••-=::.:•.:;;••••••• ~i.2~.~~:·· 30'. Eldo. OH nr ownu, POISCHES
EESHOND ..... AKC., ync. ti me wtcase • ~..!~J .. · • newp.tnltoblgllf,lt bid· WAMTID Champiltt. ,.,,, Pett playpen. Sic. S85e a saroao. 646...:..~ Ml.,..iw.t.• .., ttt•t
1 how . P 't pt y . 1 Findlft~e11a ' ra1e • dbt yellow head. Da1 wll, montbt41-o551_--:---
21.3/9'7·134hfU • , .m. Yl'&. time •lu ge • WANTED : Slip. 0 . ~ ,66 1~1111· :..11" \luflt'l ,,11 .. it
.rt Pia 'hrt'lfr Pu,.. 4 ,f' H uy H71 = Sic. MSO. 3 cbuae for au of :=.. .1 TulM •• 1h11111 nm•· ll
Mclntha. AKC. -EA '•-•H••••••••u••H•• , 4 eHa 'race m1111lf . 47' rutter. "'II ,._......,, ..__. O(f•r. :-ti11h·r ,11111 1t•a1I m Ow
1 msoa • m..»i -_,, .. 11.11h 1'11111 n 11:-!'1l••ct !n4).._. 1 "'•COMP 157·• ,.___,, .......... _._., c-.
----.,._ -"" !'.,11..i 11h1'"t ~I!'!' )illfl DOBERMAN PUPPIES S hf, I pllaM SO 111. AMAZON PAllOT lt'Sall Boet Sllp. Sl&O per dilima. Aft Ntw Puts. Mt1tl'lan11l11·' .1rnwttrni: 111·)\ T1lflt'I 111111 hi1111:hl tt 'I~~ -1 ~:!is.=~ T~~~· ~h tar,. .::t:D uoo. mo. 11_-6. l1tl et.tr~ ln. Etc. t~· 1·11m111111: "hu.:" 111.... ltir II 11.'1 '°'"' 1•,111 ~··'* ._ .. m... 1115 leteat Tn•·•P· \t'ilr Ir ~1111 h11\1• a \1111r 1ulh1 an11 ltitl\,~ DllmU& m... : Mttrid Conurt, ST ' s11, aullablt . CIU, Oa • 4"·Ml. 1·am11t'f' th:ir~ not ~1·1 •14ht·r th1n1:11 thr•lhti
....
9720
.... lflvr '°"""""'to I.ti! .._.,,...,. """"' Harbor. ,., .... 94711. lift+: u l .. I. 111•11 II nu• l>;i11) 1'11111 r1.,.,.,,~ .L ...... iii.-..~~!!!!!!iif!ll!i~~~::=:::=:::=:::=:~~~~~~=:!~ ~~==1.Ja~--~~fitd~ldll~.1~~1t~w~•t~l~J:::;;~-~ ,._~.,.~~· -::::::Jj!!ijj!!~.JIG~ ... ~b::~~~!!!!!!!!~!'ililil11j~""~h~a~l~'l~~~~~1r~1~:1~~~·1~_J~~~~~·~t~·~~11:1>a~3tei~~~1~---:
I•
12 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. January 26. 1982
·Mot. ln\porled ..._,, ,..,...w Alltot • ..,,, W ......_,_,,rt.cl ...... ..,,.w ....._ 1_,1.w AIMI. U'"9 Altel. "* ...._ UM4' ~.~ ......... .. •.....••.•.......•.•••• .......•............... .........••••.......... ······················: •..................••..• ;~~~~\................ ................••.•... ................•.••.. . .... ~ ... .
.,.._ tu .._.. t1Jt ..,a••.._ '740 M9 '742 ~ ........... !?!~ !~.!!!P!!.: .. : .. !?! ~ ............. !!.1.~ ~:~~ ........ !!~. :.:·;;;~:t""r''r·::·,.·o··,~· •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• I ~ ,. ~r •
li it• 11111 140Z, icrul 'Ill RX7 GS.'"· 11unroo1. •75 450 SI '&i MO ~w rain!, Ttr('•. ~I COUNTY'S '7t IUS 1!~4 Ru r k Sk )'~~k , 511 us RIST! Bluo. Coed 11701
•·ood Stt 10 11pun•1· ~ apd. c•••· new BtuA w blu• int a .. Battery. Rtauh1lor. NIWIST 1Mu_..., to 1pprt't•1111.. t 111·~ .. 11!.~~1• Wt h1vea1ood1fitttion Or Beat Call Evu,
Dlllr! tll31G:fi 1'lltl9.. l~relU'• SIOOO ~?-~IMll 11~. rn.1m7 prfrwl (0 Gtrwr~tor. Slartn. W1r Aulhorlud MUit Hll moo or bl'•I • D'04'""""" o f NE w ' us£ o ~-
s .. 11 . $11 .110 0 r f>, lllJ. Uu1rh. Throw oul S HARU Ut:ALtrn <lftt Mltrh Km•r 63 IJulrk ~ Sabrt. low ~roi«U' '8Ul111tan1,. Vt. auto, fW t7JS ~ o~ r1 I 54118001 ml . lld rond MUST ' 1 al d'· b .. mi.11 ..... n1. lll'('I' t rut..r, ~~ SL'IJ u;ooonou9 I""" art. ur. Jll, .. c , .... ....................... -Tarhomttt'r. Spt'ed '11 1>1uhl'r, iiu nrf . r. '.,, 0 -1 .. """" C...., orit rond 13000 0 80
Ar1v11. 21Hrt• lut1l lrlj . WANTED MB7.4SO SEL. Oml'h•r, $17~ 'runt• Ull . ....L I AM/FM , t'llU s:i~oo. 'Ill •:lt'l1ru, good C.'Ulldl ...................... ~7«~'!------
Wmly . 11 .000 1111 ,1111 wlll trud" my 1974 '~ $2717 lh·~l oi.rcr ~ lllllO 9()(•1• Yam Kl'OOlt'r Uflt'CIWIWr. no lll't'ldl'lllS. '68 XJ\7 0 Strltli Spec. '81 Mu1t1n1. V•I, auto, 1•01111 1 S6 .i!OO rt n Rolla Royt•e Silvu 451ill •19B372 ~l·IJMJ tw0-431111111t l800 Ed _, ... _, h I 752.:l'IQI Shadow t-;u·t•ll <'ond ~ ' 1.,.... MOOF.I ., , n.._., c rolllt! ena. ntW pant. mint rood .._. 9744 ._ "' BUS fuel tnJ r1·bll c.llec ft 15 wn whJ1, tltt aunroo(, lt!00/080. M4 eM$ 'TU •'1111 l< lf1 nt•w Int. S 3 6 · 0 0 0 v II I u ~ Ht:RE NOW''! ' f '1 """"""""'"""'' '7'J Monie Carlo, n t'ed1 ori ..ic> 1139-$243 --nc" tn& 13000 ftrrn 16'47VEl.7.I l'all 700 8702 ~·M"c"'e"r""'"'11°•1111 Sain Servk•·l~ulnic ~na. •unruo · • t•r t·u. work 11100 'U MUSTA ...
1115 ~ • .. s XI . "' Ill Wlbl lntr um goo.~ C~PLAtlMfi • . I ......-.. tn • vi. lo miles, rht r"". 6i 2SO n1 lon<l Lu 4 sp. 11uto ovcrdr. nl<'l' SADOLllACI '7• vw B~ Xlril .. ,1.. C 11 .1.c7 _M2_1i42 __,.. .,
M1 Rru Gd MOOO 0110 "at. nc1~ i1"me work. ns1 SU1.1.•u ,·~ .... •rM• ... 7L., • " ..,,.. •1111••1111111••••11•• orl1 own tr I S,000 . .._.. 9727 ll:B-8.\37 • " v -........,.., ~ ... ..., WI' spec-rallie in loses 16 Monu 2+2, 4 ryl. 5 is D~ood t'Ofld, runs S.*5ev wlrndl.
--cir 631·5682 31·2040 4tS.4t4t 96041131 fur the bustneu u sixt. Konis, SPoiler , lo well, /bfstofr 1 --1~~~~ ~~l~:li ~~ ,....;,.. t741 ,.,..._ f761 V.W '73 C11mpt'r. G11ud t~uUv•fi prolessionut mt 12459. 760·8708 144).5267 '68 Muat111& ronvt, SSOOO ~1·2323 · · ' · · ~11•11•••11•11••11•11n 11•••••11•11•11••••11•• cmd. l3500. ..... s.tectioll '78 Malibu Cll5$k S/W I '74 Monaco. 2 dr, air, or bnt offer. lmmir. l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~s~~~·~n~.~~~Y~•td~.~~~·!u~~ca ~11~000~ ~1ta2 owntr Grea1 sh a pe ~~ ro~! 110001~d ~~~~-·~~~~~
Good rond S3200
<194·3988149H682
urho t\nW · •-lt&S~2 8174 D...v'-t 't°---
• Gray, w Pan•h tnl llhr. Sl.500 b~l off ti40·1H22 15200 ORO !IG . IO~S Mowta ~! 12~l_681·2613 'llOD50PICKUP
S'antaAna 714/95.U414 ;:1· ;~/~0~11~~ ~K ~!'!'-~t 2'2A4 h • •• NAWi~~ '77 Montt Carlo Arr. ~IOOorbestolfer pp POI SALE '79 XL Arrord. full)
eQUIP . snrf, lo mr, xlnl
1:9'.)d ! an. 4 67~~~
--7~62& Ponct.. t750 '78 Ct'h ra GT. 5 s pd. _ Pwer, Sir. 8rk. Perfect ~53l8or947 2743 71' Pinto halthbark.
---11••11••11••••••••••11• 1 Uf\b k f k {' \() I ( ~ rond I owner S2595 cltan, 4 sl)ffd, new ltrH.
~Honda Acrord 3·Dr
5 spd. ofr. lo m1 Scl500
673·6708 or 83 l 3849
Merudn htn 9740 'W ~E Super dean. i:d i2 914 Porsrhl' part:. or ae · 11 '" 115, am d llli7 VW Squarebar ,/ ,, ,,/ • F.ves. 642·8874 Days ,,_.. 9t4 luagagt r arll ,aood
11•111111•••11••••••••• mech l"Ond. Reg 1111s woole New '74 2 O reblt ~ tllpe Xlnl nin · Newm11ine, 11200· /1<\' Hui•• lij-.1 12.!;!l 681·26.!!_ ~··111111•1111••••11•• transportation car. $1200
Ml ......., ~"""" ••a""'" Guur no maJOr re11111rs 964·8008 77 RANCH ERO new • ,,.. .. ,.,.. ~-·-""!.':_<NOJ Webers. many ti<lras SOOO PP "~I 2252 ,,.,,,,\..,., '•·"'""~' ·71 Vega. re-built en11. . '080 ·-_.M ... _ '7S 450 SL XI I l" d Judv6424012 ' " h ..,,.,. b f ll[es~shocks,$2000080 . 642-!570Jeff ._ ft'Ctuwl . .n on · 1-,_ . IHurris> il Bu& Rbll Ena . Nl'w n('W eater ,,,.;.,.,1 sl or ~~9~2688 631-7797 Maria
'81 Civic. 4 dr. w1ll trad<' to ONW Rblt Eng Moving. Musi 'S7 Porsehe Spttt•dslrr :iO<.:orooa Ruos wdl Pnt, 'frs. f1awll'SS Cond '67 Cadlllu· Limo. Good tl4Z 7471 c PRI FOR
for older pickup + cui.h ~ tfH? Sep II! 1
64
19
4·7
5
266
00 Pri V;&le Replit•;& SllSOor best orr 12450 6'll 3982 Shapr Malle OH er '78 Monie <.:arlo, snrf. one s~ereoitape Dti~~~· ::{' V6 Pinto Hatchback W11
PP,968·5747 Compare House of Im _!ft~ _67~ 1()17or6311013 • 67532041\ -• b739.'il0 Days 642 4429 owner $3,600/olr ·, " · 1n wreck. Body 1nd
ports Direct lease and 60 Must ~ell ·10 wht 914 Al nn YctlTo 9772 F.\•es S41H37~afl 6 grired forqwrk sale. re frame dama&t All else
is Sta Wgn, Good rond mos sermble pymls 78 450 SLC loys . a m rm r as:.. i9 t:urona. lux cd . 4 dr. ....................... . utll eng . S 1.200 OK V8 141.000one mil. 30MPC S2100 080 AT AC PB PS 1111 whl •'821t........&-D•VUIL..• 62 Impala. 2 dr. good 1!42_2219 ......., ltans •. ridlitor . """-'~---· D 1 a I 2 I 3 o r s.TIOOtobo llJS-3786 · ' · ' · #I VOLVO DEALH -• -h ond H h b d -.... ~ • ""' 714 MERCEDES 1s 213 Milan Brown, ---4 spd. 4 spkr !IM FM INORANGl"CCHIN'rY ' V6 AllOs>tions 3700 M1 mer" ! rg esl 1 u.colll tt45 pump.verygoodwhls & JolJMr 9730 or714/637·f333 26.000 Miies Porschf928 61~, RF.D ! slereo. xlnl i·ond. I • Garage K'ept !...ike New der' 67~ 7961 ....................... 11res. no broken 11lass.
....................... -PcrfeC'I 29K m~ S·~rN'•ke nu ~r. PP. ~250. !l.S7-4544 SALIS. SERVICE Lisi. $19.500 ·57 Ckevy 2d r Hr dtp. '76 Unroln Town Coupe. Interior good Reds
'UXJ64.2. lt7'MEICEDES 675C6000allD6e7a5n9929 Leaseor:4J.makeofr. VcAsw.. 9770 AND~ING ••539·141t •• ~~or besl. ()(fe r ~,e:.r. immar S3200 a vaihl. A greal dteasll~~r
2K Mi. Leather lnl. "'Ill ,. ; · General Auto Leasing ....................... OVF.RSE'ASl>El !VERY 9917 ..,.,."""" mer an1c or par s • · · J Lo ded M s II' HNI 240D 714~73·4311 '00. '6S VW left & riRhl · f"XPER,TS ' c_... "n i..;guna VB. Auto. 2Dr. i9 Mark v C'artrn. xlnt Must sell all together
frans8ferred. u~7 .seoo Sunroof, easselle & ' '66 ~L. xlnl cund. new door. ·73 1er1 door SS-0 ' ....................... Mags. AM FM. $425 rond S8.500 $700. make ofr Call
Day 966-1202 E ve, speedtrans (39403) mlr. new 11re~. oew e;arh Westem style whl f.AIUllCf '68C-rol27 4~3233284 171415482661 968-~all7.30 m __ ~ $12,'50 paint Ask for Mary '70POISCHffl4 nms for Super Eketlll VOLVO 4spd Ong $2500or~st ttt. ttl2 M ,.50 '73 Hatchback. f sdp.
Maida 9731 JIM SUMOMS 6_73·1~_aft tiPM 78.000mi. am1fm in dash ~ea 5411-9744 1966 HarbGr Blvd 5-*6 1171_ _ trC8'J good cond! runs well' ••...................•. IMPOITS MG '742 radio.$.1200 ·i.i Rabbit. AM f'M l'ass. COSTA MESA 0..roltt 9920 1rn't77'00
• .. :x0
co·Ni>° ;i;'c;~;:Gh;a·:;;~d~~~;~ ~7348.l~f.L
1301 Quail St ....................... 964 ll008 snrf. nu I irts. $7500 6 ..... 9303 54;. 946 7 •••••11••11 .. ••••••••11 T TOP Rfll'K $11750 nu rad i a Is $ 3000 '78 Pinlo Wgn 4spd, 4
Nt.-.:WPORTBEA<.:H . ~!41!2'673•0322 _. · ~ •lr..dMew 'll •ALL OPTIONS• ti44-678.S ' cylinder.arr.casselle.
833-9300 ATTIEHTIOM '72VW BEETLI'.: ·111 Volvu GL. 8K m1. al~ Ciwv~Clt••Hte WlITW TAN INT '72 t:o~t. V ti eng. 4dr. clean.S49-12S6. l....tt 9755 EXCELLENT l"ON D xlrus! Superb auto 2Dr -'c1.1.ocLI l'P 714 SSI0731i MG ....................... • Sl4 500 Don63103111 cv • --•· air. ps. gd t·ond S9SO ..,._.... t960
0 '6A.lir.IS '62 Renault Gardena S300 S2600 -' . ·
1
Air ("()ftd . pwr steen1111 l'orvelte '81 $299 mo Call Lon s.;1 0672 ..................... ..
f'or Class1f1ed Ad TONNEAu"cov fo.:R Best m 11r 848·8695 'IO 245DL WlllJOll & br9akei.. t1l1 wheel. ell· S7SOdeh\ ers411 mo ..,9 Zephyr Villager wgn. ·74 SAT RN
ACTION Fits MG'~. 071 °81 646 IMSO •61,...._11 YW, 4 spd OD. xlnt rond 1314 68191 dose lease. glass lop. VS. loaded. lo mi. prof Radio. buter, ps, A I
SNP IT i Y8lf -.. Call a Never use<!. S7S '756 Good rond. runs good. Zl.000 m1 $9,900 e\e~. Mow ()Illy $55'1 lru spokes. loaded marnl $4900 540 3836. sba $l~ 838 5180
AGll'fl Daily Pilot Maria631·7797 h·emsg ~~~~ ........... , new tires $1250 080 wknds8.Sl·L34S HOWilD Clt••ro&e+ $ll.400tROll~J1P0aymenl 759 ~-_ '74 Plymouth Station S~t AD·\'ISOR I 492.7313 ---i7 VOLV0264 Dove Quail Sis I r 1 Wagoo. good engine and
642·5678 ~ . '#l DUL(R IN U.S.A. VW KJT CAR Air, loaded. i<lnl . NEWPORT BE:t\CH Crneral Auto Lea:.rng Mlst919 9952 bod ·~ 997-8679 __ y~~= Little 1s H111!1 L'.lu:.s1(wcl K....,. 631·2991 133·0555 f 714·67_!4111 _ ~11111111••1111•,•1111" ---4104 • d 11 ti ~CAR\/ER NEEDSWORK .S500 --~---I 65 Mustang. pmed 10 P.tiac ft65 ~'~--~-=~:,~. Just ffiO\t'tl anlu town ~
1
?.,,.5 .... ~~etu'·~~~ .. ~1 ... ~~ft·s l"-Jl , __ 54~5.~73·14~ __ ;1Volvo.2dr. 4CY Good a 11 ~our a(l\'ttrt1:11ni: Clas~1111,t :11her11s111i.: 1, sell Call wknds unly ...................... .
• • • • Tht•n 1:1•t a1·11ua11111•1I 1.~~with b~.: r~·adl·r~hip mm Cond. Runs Well Ideal rlollar i.:11 larlht•r' l.1~t J l"-·tlt•r WJ~ tu tt•ll mu rt• 644 2027 13 Ponuac Grand Pnx.
-.-..... --tiai "1th .lht> l'lal>l11f11'll ,\1b ancl biu r·~ult·' T" nlJt··· , ..... 2nd Car 494 2647 HIUr bu~uw~:. t'\ t'I'\ llJ\ lltWI<' about lhl• ~ttn u·t• ---xlnt rond. Sl .250 0 80 ._::llOI Th h ... "'~ ~ v,. • ~.-At((i"""°"OHll" u ac:lt• .\our ol<I stufr fur 111 1lwCIJ~s1f11'tl ~t'tl111n 1uu ha11. to uffrr hk Maktt \Our l>hu11p1n1: S48--0ll32. unUIO ~ USU lllU'4illl4 t') rt>l t' casre't "a\ 1our !'lass1hl'<I Jd. •·all "*"""'""'llK"1' .. ,...,.,... I new i.:001l1l'S wllh a F\n<I wh.lt rnu wanl in ul 1h1~ "''"'~PJIH'I JINlCJI uur lo" rah·:. 10 t'll!!terb\ Ul>tnl(the D,111\
· ---to find Jtl!il the 1~?'' Joel 1 •oda\ 642 56711 ClOStO WNOATS --1 0~1fled atl 642 56711 p~I) P1I01 i.:1ai.s1freds tH2 Stii!l ila.'. t;l2 5tiill Pllor ('la<,1f1ed \d~ \l{!!t Ad _Help~ ~2 56!! WJnt \cl Rt»Ult~ 612 f>li711 : ~en 11·e:. ~Oil ne.,, '
MATCH THE NUMBERS ON THE
MA" WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES
0 • • • ATLAS CHIYSL.a-Pl YMOUTH
2929 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa Tel 5'6·193" 3 blocks
south ol San Diego Freeway off Harbor Blvd Complete
,body shop Sales Service. Parts Service Dept. open
· Monday lhru Friday 7·30 A,M to 5.30 P.M. and 8 A.M. to
5 P M. on Saturday
HACH IMPORTS
848 Dove Street Newport Beach Tel 752-0900 Ca ll us.
we re the specialists lor Alfa Romeo Peugeot Saal> &
Maseral 1
THEODORE ROllNS FORD
Modern sales. ser111ce. parts. body, pa1n1 & tire depts
Competitive rates on lease & daily rentals 2060 Harbor
Blvd . Cosla Mesa 642·0010 0< 540-821 t
G) JOHNSON & SON UNCOLN MEICURY
2626 Harbor Blvd . Cos1a Mesa. Tel 540-5630 57 Years
of friendly family servace -Orange County s oldest Lin·
coln·Mercury dealership
• SOUTH COAST DODGE
2888 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa Tel 540-0330 RV service
spec1ahsts , custom van converStons
NEWPORT IMPOITS
3100 W Coast Highway, Newport Be1c h. Tel,
642-94051540· t 764 The Ferr an HeadQuerters
NEWPORT DATSUN
888 Dove Slreet. Newport Beach. Tel. 833-1300. At the
triangle of Jamboree, MacArthur & Bristol behind Vic·
toria Station. Sales. Service, Leasing & Part1. Fleet d is-
counts to the pubhc.
• MAIERS CADILLAC
2600 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa. Tel. 540-9100. Orange
County s largest Cadillac dealer Sales Service. leas·
ing
• DAVID J. PHILLIPS IUICX~AC-MAZDA
Sales • Service • Leasrng
24'888 Ahc1a Parllway
Laguna Hills 837-2400
f1i) CHICIC IVERSON POltSCHl-AUDl·VW
415 E Coast Hwy .. Newport Beach. 673-0900. The only
dealership an Orange County with lheM three great
malles under one roof I
• ALAM MAG NON PONT1AC·SUIARU
2480 Harbor Blvd .. Costa MeN. Tel. 549-4300. Sal .. ,.
Sefvlce, Leasing "Mr Goodwrench."
0 HOUSI 0. IWOITS
MllCIDIS 1941 ...... ---·Lee-.t 8862 Manc hester Blvd,, Buena Park (on Santa Ana
Freeway). Take ~each Blvd. offramp -aharp right on
Manctt .. ter.
DIAL MER-CEDES (213 or 714) '37·2333
IOI LONGPRE P'OHTIAC
13600 Beach Blvd .. Wes lmanster. Tel. 892·6651 Orange
County's oldesl and largest Pontiac dealership Sales.
Service. Parts.
• SAIL CHEVROLET
900 South Coast Highway
Laguna Beach
'°Cllrry'• ... It ..... fw ,.., ..
SALES HOURS. Mon ·Frc. 9-7. Sat 9-5. Sun t0·4
4941·1131 546·9967 • SANTA AMA DATSUN
2001 E 17th S t1'9el, Santa Ana Tel. 558·7811 Your
Qngjnal Dedicated Dalsun Dealer.
• MIRACLE MAZDA
We've movedl Our new location is 1425 Biller S treet,
Cotta Mesa. Tel. 545·3334. S top by & v111t our brand new
lhowroom and see why we're the 11 Mazda dealer in
Southern C.litornia. Sales. ServlGte, Parts and Leasing .
• AMAH8M MAZDA "°"" o.c. ....... De-.r ....
kee '-"Ice""-c...N
tl01 S. Anaheim Blvd., Anaheim ~1820. Just north of
Santa Ana Frwy. on Anaheim 81Yd. Cell 1.11 f1rsll
"WE A~E HARD TO FlNC>--eUT WORTH ITI"
• 28402 M?r~~ .. 'JkA~A~,kwy. exit
We offer what no IHs• compeny or b1nk can.
1. Ultra•modern MrviGte dept. for ht cleas efter sale
MfVlce: 2 Factory 1uth. fllClllll• &. body shop: 3.
Ellminetlon of the middleman --teeaing dealer dlrKt.
131·2040 41Mt4t
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, OR TO BE PLACED
ON THIS. AD, CONTACT YOUR DAILY PILOT REP.
'
COST A MESA DATSUN
2&45 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa. Te l. 540-6•10. Serving
Orange County for 16 years 1 Mile So. 405
SUNSET FOID. IMC.
(Home of Willie lhe Whale) 5440 Garden Grove Bl11d .
Westminster Tel 636-4010
• FtlANIC PROTO LINCOLM-MERCURY
Servace and Paris Deparlmenl always open 7 days a
weell 7 30 AM lo 6 30 PM 848-7739
0 CONNK.L CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Meu. Over 20 y .. rs MtV lng
Orange Counlyl Sales. teasing, MNk:e. Cell 54~H200:
sc»elal p1rts llne: 546-!MOO; body shop line: 754-o400.
• • ROY CARVER ROUS ROY~W
1540 Jamboree Roed. Newport Beach. M<MM44. Sai.t.
Service. Parts And Leasing
• MM UASI..-. IMC.
730 W. 19th St .. Costa MMa 8427194'
S.V. tr~. energy & frustrmtlon. Call ulffor all of yout
leMlng needt, We ..... all mak" end models o'l ca,.,
tNcb&v--.
J
I
I
I
"' I
,
1111111 ClllT
MONUAY JANUAHY I'• l 'll\.1
Irvine woman
rescuellfrom
fire in condo
By J OHN NEEDHAM
01 Ill• Dally Pllot s ... 11
An Irvine woman was listed in
critical condition today at UCI
Med ical Center's burn unit after
being plucked rrom her burning
condomamum during the early
morning hours by a UC Irvine
student.
Palriciu Mars hall, 28, was
discovered tnippcd inside her
hom e a t 14 Claret at about l
a m today by Steve De Salvo,
23. and a companion, Sonia
Gerlitz.
Oran g l' Co unt y Fi r e
Department s pokes m an J im
Sims i.aid De Salvo and Miss
Gerlitz wrre driving past the
condominium block, located in
Woodbridge , when they saw
Mi ss Marshall 's residence in
fl ames.
Sims said De Salvo , a
biological science senior at UC
Ir v ine , the n heard Mi ss
Ma rshall calling out for help
from inside the condominium,
now nearly engulfed in flames.
and re -entered the building.
De Salvo I.old fire fighters he
found Mi ss Marshall near ly
unconscious in the ups t airs
hallway, where she had taken
s he lte r after being unable to
escape the burning building
down the stafrs. ,
Sims said De Salvo carried
Mi s s Mars h a ll o ut of the
condominium and onto the front
lawn, where s he was treated by
paramedics a nd ta ken to UCI
Medical Center in Orange.
A hospital spokesman said
Miss Marshall is suffering from
s econd and third-degree burns.
• * • • •
Y• llllTlll llllY PIPll
I J
OHANC1lCOUNIY L ALHOHNIA <''1 C~Nr s
Sims said the couple stopped
their vehicle and obtained fire
ext1ngu1s h c•r s 1ns 1de the
co mplex The) the n tried to
enter lhl' burning residence to
put out ihl' fir<'. b~1l wcrl' driven
back by flames
Sim s said a neighbor or Miss
Marshall's, Lewis Sangerman.
also attempt ed to e nter the
reside nce lo search for othe r
occupants. However, Si ms said
(See FIRE, Page A2)
FIRE SCENE This was the re m ui n~ of an t r\'i nt•
condominium after fin• gutted the ~t ruc·l urt.'. nitil'all~·
Delly,. __ .., •k-·-
bu rning its oe<.·upt.tnl. who w;,as carried to saft't~· h~· two
pu~S l'l'Sb~· who fought tht·ir way through th<.1 flamt>s .
Nuclear plant mishap spews radioactive steam
ROCllESTER. NY 1AP1 A
s tea m lube ruptur ed in a
>rimary cooling system at the
Ginna nuclear powe r plant in
Ontario. N Y .. today. releasing
radioa ct i ve s teum i nto the
atJl)Qsphcrc, a federal official
said.
being cooled with extra water.
he said Richard Sullivan, spokesman fOr
the Rochester Gas & E lectric
Co .. which operates the plant Radiation was released into
the atmosphere from 7:09 a .m.
to 7:42 a .m .. PST. and the wind
wus blowing from the northwes t
at 14 m,J?h, the t-iationaJ Weather
Service reported
He said radiation c hecks
s howed the "dose rates " to be no
higher than back_ground level. or
what could be expec ted tn
nature. The reactor was s hut down
and the pla nt '"appt>ars to be
fa irly s table ," s aid Gary
Sanborn. s pokesm a n for the
Nu c l e ar Regu l ato r y
Com mission. The reactor was
Monroe Count y Publt c
Relations Officer Cla re nce
Rasset! said the release had
been "isolated and terminated."
"Surface conta m ination is not
expected to occur.·· Sullivan
said in a late morning status
report. "The plant s tatus is now
stable."
"Further radiological releases
are not expected to occur," sajd
" , ... :~'t1~1''Y''
. f/\
NEWPORT'S NUMBER TWO ? Thi!> S7
million mansion on exclusive Harbor
bland 1 ~ said lt1 he :'-Je wport Beach's
,_
o.lly -....... •Y CMrlet ~
~l·cond· highe:-.t prttl1rl home. I t has nine
bed rooms . H pri\'alt• hl'ctC'h. u llg hthoust.>
and a fon·"t
Home price ceili~g lifts
Newport Beach estate number two at $7 million
By STEVE MARBLE
or•~· D•llY Piiot s-.H
The house price derby in Newporl' Beach
u:.ed to be pretty s imple.
The top spot on the list belonged to John
Wayne or rather his former bayfront house
which sold for about S.S million.
But that was s everal years and several
million doll ars ago.
-The top s pot now Is he ld by Howa rd
Ahmanson's Harbor Is land estat e, a huge
spread built in the late 1930s for violinist Jascha
Heifetz.
The Ahmanson mansion takes up an entire
tip of the island and sold for $10 million.
Real estate agents, though, now are
s hooting for the prestige of the No. 2 spot. Real
esta te agent Bar bara Aune says she has the new
No. 2.
It's Ernest Ka nzler's $7 million wood,
brick and stone mansion on Harbor Island. The
one-acre lot is located on the opposite end of the
tiny i$land Crom the Ahmanson home. ·
The place has its own beach, its own
llahthouse, nine bedrooms and a private forest.
Mrs . Aune, a real estate aaent for
Macnab-lrvine, says the place ii more like a
castle than a house and is deslfned to look 100
years old. It's llctually only 10 yean old.
Kanzler. an Inventor. a milllonaJre and a
b11chelor, designed the place himself.
"He didn't even have a blueprint," Mrs.
Aune explains, "he just sat out on the beach and
drew the plans in the sand and went from
there ."
She claims Kanzler is a former student of
the late architect Frank Lloyd Wright.
She says Kanzler also designed and built his
own car . It was called, not s urprisingly, the
"Kanzler Coupe."
But the house, she says, was his special
project.
She says the two-story, 5,000-square-foot
house Is built with planks from an old wooden
aqueduct in Oregon that Kanzler purchased and
r ipped apart.
The slate used on the roof. she says, was
flown in from the East Coast.
Workme n . she says, spent two years
carving the door s and staircase inside the
house.
"He felt that Newport was too plas\ic and
he didn't want all thal. glitter and got.,," says
the realtor, who sold Kanzler the tip of the
island when it was liltJe more than a sandy spit
of beach.
The then-desert ed Island Up had been
owned by Newport's pioneer Beek family which
parted with It only a fter seeing and approving
Kanzler's plans.
Mrs. Anne says that Kanaler has now lef\
the island because •'he likes to move around
and gets restless.''
S he says he's looking for a nother lsland.
"It's a special house wllh a lot of heart in
It." she insists, adding, "and it's going to take a
special person to buy It."
At $7 mlllloni it'll take a lot more than j ust
"special" to buy t. .
There 1s "no danger to the
public al thi s time." said
Sullivan.
The pl<.1nl. located uboul 18
miles northeas t of Rochester
near the s hore of Laltc Ontario.
was shut down a nd a "s ate
emergency," the second highest
n .u c I e a r e m e r g e n c y
classification, was decla red .
Area fi re departments were
m obilized. No residents were
evacuated but non-essenti al
personnel were evacuated from
the plant site. said Sullivan.
About 45,000 people li ve within
10 miles of the pl ant.~Rocheslet,
the third largest c ity in New
York state, has a population of
a bout 300,000 , a nd it was
s n owing at the time of the
incident. the weather service
said.
Sanborn said the tube leak in
the s t eam ge n e rato r ··(;;.
apparently leaking al about 75
gallons per minute." Ginna bas
a hi s t o r y of s tea m tltbe
problems . according to records.
Sanborn said· the reactor vtliS-
being cooled with extra wa~.
called "makeup' water , .. aJMi
apparently was not overheatiQi.
A reactor coolant pump, sbul
during the initial eme rgency.
had been restarted and was
a1dmg in the procedure. he said.
49er fans 'violent'
Stabbings , s hootings mar San Francisco celebration
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) For
the faithful San Francisco 49ers
ra ns intoxicated with triumph.
the giddy hours after their team
captured Super Bowl XVI was a
· · ~ia nt Chris tmas morning"
lh'al. for soml'. turn<>d lo
confrontation~
Arter the 49ers be at the
('anc1nnat1 Bcnl-{al:. 26 21. San
Franciscan!> gree ted the first
l·hampionsh1p in their team's 36
years with u street celebration
as jubilant :JS any since the one
unleashed by the end of World
War II
2 Newport
projects face
council action
Newport Beach City Council
members are scheduled tonight
to tangle with two deve}opment
controve rs ies. both h aving
drawn stiff opposition.
One or these is the $100 million
Ne wpo rt Ba nnin g Ranc h
project, a proposal to develop an
old sheep r anch with offices,
homes and industrial buildings.
It will be the fifth time the
council has tackled this issue .
T h e seco nd expec t e d
controversy on the agenda is the
Newport Center expans ion plan.
The council, on a split vole,
a l r ead y has approved this
project. ll r esurfaces in a
different light this evening.
<See NEWPORT, Pa•e AZ)
But as the jubilation wore on.
t he re were rep<>rtedly several
slabbing and shooting incidents
and police clashed with some or
the thousands of celebrants in a
botlle·throwing m elee in the
North Beach section of the city.
Scor es were hospitalized with
mostly minor injuries and there
were no fatalities
About 100 people were booked
ror investigation of drunkenness
be fore violence erupted. said
Inspector Joseph Toomey.
"Now San Francisco is No I
in two things being weird and
football," s aid Rick Tas ker. as
he hung out a car window and
blew on a whistle near the North
Beach intersection of Columbus
Street and Broadway, jammed
with about 6,000 celebrants.
Horns, firecrackers. sirens
and church bells echoed through
t he city above lhe s hrieks or
fans. tens or thousands of them.
who poured from bars into the
streets. forcing police to close
o ff m ajor thoroughfares and
divert buses.
In the fas hionable Un ion
Street tirea, thousands danced In
the street as a rock band staged
a n impromptu concert, playing
"We Are The Champions" over
a nd over. Othe rs commandeered
a Municipal Railway trolley bus
a nd danced on top a s 49e r
s logans we r e painted on Its
sides.
At Union Square. celebrants
ha lted the famed cable cars.
''There has been an ongoing
conrrontation for about three
and a halt hours between police
Runway conditions
'poor' in crash
BOSTON <AP> -A Delta Air
Lines pilot reported conditions
on a Boston airport runway were
·•poor to nil" 37 minutes before a
World Airways jet hurtled
across it into the sea, the head of
a fede ral crash Investigation
team said today.
Patricia Goldman, a National
Trans portatio n Sarety Board
member, heading a team of 10
investigators, said the World
Airways OC-10, F llaht 30
carryina Z08 people, w as the lut
plane 8chcdulc d to .use the
Logan lnternatlonal Airport
runway Saturday night before
additional clearing.
"I'm not certain" whether \he
pilot had been warned or the
conditions, s he said.
The warning came at 6:59
p .m . Saturday from a Delta
DC ·8 pilot. who was not
identified.
The p\ane cam e to rest up to
it"8 wlnp in Boston Harbor after
railln1 to stop on the runway, ln
freezing rain. The plane broke ln
two, but no one was killed or
seriously injured. Tbe lM
p as•cnge r s and. 12 c r~w
<See DC· tt, Pa&e Al)
•
department personnel a nd the
citizenry," said police service
aide Mike Conner today after
t he North Beach fraca&,
Dozens of office r s were
di s patc h ed from o uts ide
dis tricts to he lp q u e ll tbe
dis ruption. wh ich began to
s ubside cirter midnig ht, he said.
A bout 40 o ffi cers received
minor injuries. he s aid. Toomey
said this mo rning, however, that
the number of officers injured
SUPER BOWL
COVERAGE -Page C1
may have been much s maller.
"It's sti II a little conrusing,"
Toom ey ltaid. "Some or these
guys might have been hurt -
hut not t oo bad -a nd we
haven't got the report."
In apparently the most seri<>tis
oolice inJury, Sg. Al Bierman's
right arm was broken when he
fell during the bottle-throwing
"a nd somebod y j umped on
him." Toomey said.
A harried Central Emergency
Ho s pital dis patc he r . who
declined to give his name, saia
t he re had been h alf a dozen
s hootings and stabbings am id
the cele brations Another•s ix
were in stable condition after
treatment at Mi ss ion
Emer~cncy for s t abbings.
broke n bbnes a nd o ther
<See ROWOl', Page AZ>
ORAIGI COAST llAT"ll
Low clouds and fog late ··
tonight a nd Tuesda y
morning. Variable high
c l ouds and cooler
Tuesday. Lows tonight 42
to 52. Highs Tuesday 62 at
beaches, 701nland:
llSIDI TIDAi
A rtaMwl!r ho.a acclaim for
"Brideshtad Rtvbfted ,"
which rtaumes if s ll·port
series on tt levmon tonigM.
Set P•86·
,fa • • • • • • Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 25, 1982
~ortgage ruling Will have ·big impact on Coast
WASHINGTON <AP> -The the rulln1 and many other
.S. Supreme Courl 11rHd--owner1 •e watttnr-tO-SR"'lh•
t 1 ay to decide whether states court's decision before trylna to n prohibit HvlnlC• and loan sell.>
soclaUons rrom requlrln1 Such due-on·Hle clauus In
pie to p~y off mortt11ee as home mortca1es are common
n •11 they sell thelr hornet. nationwide. They require the
. The justices said they wtU homeowner to pay orr the
Mar uguments that such a batance ~ the mort1a1e If the
litornla law is superseded by mort1aced property la sold
era.I re1uJaUon of the aavinc• wltbout prior consent of the
d Joan Industry. lender.
(Such a ruling will hue A 19'16 re1ulallon adopted by
' mendous Impact alOl'll tt.e thtt Pederal Home Loan Bank
~ange Coast. Some loans' have 8 o a rd , an ind e pend en l
en assumed in anticipation of r~ulatory agency, allows such
lue Chip stamps
r Reagan home?
PHIL SNEIDERMAN
tMD_..y ...... S&aff
In his second attempt to
purchase Ronald Re agan's
l'acific Palisades home,
Huntington Beach real estate
~ent John W. Saunders has.cut
h~ cash offer but has tossed in a
bonus : 1.5 million Blue Chip Sl'amps
,.Newport cops
hunt suspect
t_it~ weapon
._Police s pent the pre-dawn
hours Sunday combing Newport
Beach for a bearded man who
tQrrified three people by
pointing a gun at them, pulling
the lri~er and then pulling it
again when the weal)On didn't
C\r e.
"Nobody was Injured in the
attempted robbery late Saturday
an the Newport Heights area of
Newport Beach and officers said
they are unsure whether the gun
was loaded.
Malcomb Crump told police he
\()as standing in front of his
h~use with his wife and a friend
~·hen a thin, unkempt man
walked up, pulled out a weapon
end asked for his wallet. '
Jie said the.gunman pulled the
l'r'i~ger oo the we_apon but that
nothing happened . Other ~lt nesses said the would-be
l'tlbber pulled t he trigger a
second and then a third time
i>Q inting al each of them in tum.
pmcers said the man ran off
after his third try. ·
.\tpollce s aid they spept several
h'o urs searc hing bars,
restaurants and motels in
Newport. ..
Cooling off
period seen
for Tuesday
That warming trend that
q'llade Southern California the
t'nvy of the nation over the
w~e kend is expected to cool
Tuesday.
The forecast for the Orange
Coast called for s unny skies
1 o d a y • bu t s I i g h ti y coo I er
tl!mperatures on Tuesday, said
?'at Rowe of the National
Weather Service'. ~."You'll see variable. clouds
tihd not-so-warm temperatures
t<S morrow," she said. Highs of 77
.today were expected to drop to
t1ie mid-70s,on Tuesday. Beach ~~mpe ratures today were
expected to be about 68 degrees.
Callin~ to 65 Tuesday.
Overnight lows tonight will
range from 45 degrees inland to
50 at the beaches. ·
Cockfight
closed down
MART INEZ <AP> -More
than 100 illegal fighting cocks
have been ro11nded up in a raid
on a remote farm as officials
.Cracked what they called "The
tlawaiian ConnectiOn."
=.: A caravan of county offioials
:cfloved in on the farm and seiz~
130 birds after a chase across a
.muddy barnyard.
:: A'ntone Morais, caretaker of
the farm about 20 miles
northeast of San Francisco,
watched the capture or the birds
be admilled training.
Saunders, ·ln an interview
today, insisted his bid is
legitimate.
"I'm offering $1.5 milJion," he
said. "I consider that a very
serious offer.
"The reason I threw in the
stamps was because I thought it
might b e fun , a bit of
tongue-in-cheek. But then again,
the Reagans might need thel'Jl.
They may have some books that
have been sitting around for
years, waiting for some more
stamps."
The R e agan house . a
five-bedroom, four-bathroom
structure with a panoramic view
of Santa Monica Bay, has been
on the block for the past year
with a $1.9 million asking price.
Saunders offered that sum in
August, but he was turned down
when his financing terms were
deemed unacceptable. He
wanted to pay $300,000 down.
with the balance due with
interest seven years later.
The 39-year-old local real
estate agent lowered his price
by '400,000 this month because
of reports that the Reagans
would accept a s little as $1
million for the home.
Saunders said he mailed his
new offer, which stipulates a
$200,000 down payment with the
rest due in seven years. on
Friday to the Reagans' real
estate broker.
Jim Wilt, manager of Coldwell
Banker's Brentwood office,
wh.ich is handling the Reagan
sale, said today that Saunders'
offer had not yet arrived.
As a result, Wix said he
couldn't comment on Saunders'
offer. But he did acknowledge
the real estate man's skill in
attracting attention. ··He has a very effective
publicity person," Wix said.
''The last time he had an offer,
he sent it off in the mail and
promptly went on the 'Today'
show to talk about it.
"If everyone's gullible enough
to go for it, well, that's their
business."
Saunders.. hjmself, however.
insisted his trading stamp offer.
is not j11st a publicity ploy~ He
said his firm has been offering
trading stamps to all home
buyers as a way of showing that
real estate is still a "blue chjp"
invesment.
The 1.5 million stamps offered
in the Reagan house bid would
be worth about $1 ,500 in cash or
perhaps double that in
merchandise, said Saunders,
who said he formerly worked for
Blue Chip stamps.
Saunders adJTlitled he still has
not personaH~ vl~~d the
Reaean home. He said be
became interested through
photographs in a brochure and
because or the name value of the
property.
"It just started when I looked
al 90me pictures of the home,
aad it's just sort of snowballed
from there," he said.
Slunders, a bacbeJor, said he
wotiJd hire an elderly couple as c•~takers for the Reagan house
11ftt11Ulhl spend weekends there
htmffff; if his orrer is accepted.
Reagan'• addreaa
on /our channel,,
Pres ident Reagan's annual
Slate of the Union address to a
joint session of Congress wUJ be
broadcast at 6 p.m. Tuesday on ·
KNXT (Ch a nnel 2), KNBC
(ChaMel 4), KABC (Channel 7>
Rnd KCET <Channel 28).
Channel 2 will air a special
report on the address and
Channel 4 will air a Democratic
response and analysis at 6:45
p.m. Tuesday. ._
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat . c .................. 7141142.1171
AM OtMf d1111rt1ne"'9 M2-4U1
Thomas P. H8'ey ............. a....~o-.
Robert N. Weed ~
Thomas A. Murptune ,_
Michael P. Harvey ............ Ondor
L Kay Schultz ~-a.
Kenneth N. Goddard Jr ~~
Bef'nard Schulmen c......
requiremenis to be written lnt<
morttliie9ontricts-. ---
The nqulreme nts allow
lenders such as savings and loan
associations lo then re·lend lhe
money at the prevailing interest
rate . Because of climbing
interes t r ates. that means
greater profits for the lenders.
For home sellers who intend to
buy a new home , the
requirements often mean that
n e w mortgages at h igher
interest rates must be obtained.
Several Calif9rnia residents
s ued sa ving's and loa n
.USQ,Cialinns th»t excrclaed ~h•ir.
due.on.sale options.
The residents charged that
such clauses in their mortaage
contracts violated a/California
law.
A state trial judge, handling
the cases as one, ruled that a
federal luw. the Home Owners
Loan Act of 1933, and the
F ed e ral Ho m e Loan Bank
Board's regulation s uperseded
any state law that might govern
s uch contract provisions.
A California appeals court,
however . reversed the trial
'¥dee •nd rttled~ttre'-!tate
u w governed.
Th e slate Supr eme Court
refused lO hear appeals from
s o vlngs 1rnd loan Hsoclalions.
In three Reparate appeali, fil ed
w!_t.h the nation's highest court,
luW)'ers for savings and loan
associati.:>ns throughout
California urged that the state
co urt's "er r o n eo u s and
dang e rou s" rulin g be
overturned.
·•Failure to uph old the
e nforceability of due-on-sale
clauses may threaten the
HEROIC Orange Count,\· fir~man S(•ott
Nelson talks to Steve DeSalvo ~rnd Soni<i
DfAfY ...... ,_ .... k .. f'll IC~
Gerlitz. DeSal\'o r~scut•d Patricia ~1arsh<dl
from her burning tnndominium in I n ·1m·
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
From Page A1 From Page A1
NEWPORT PROJECTS • • • FIRE ...
Critics of the Newport Center
project have put together a
successful referendum drive.
leaving Council members with
the choice of dumping the
project or putting it to a citywide
vote.
FromPageA1
DC-10. • •
The council's job tonight will
be to set an election date and
decide what it wants to say
about the project in the ballot
wording. ·
Some critics of the Newport
B a nnin g Ranch project .
meanwhile. have put council
members on notice that they
may go lhe referendum route if
Miss Marshall was alone at the
time of the fire.
Sims said the cause of the
blaze is under invmes tigation.
He said the fire caused an
estimate d $80.000 worth of
damage. It took fire crews about
'15 minutes lo extinguis h the
fl a m es, Sam s s aid No fire
personnel were injured.
the d eve l o pment pla n i s Purse with $1,625
a pproved as submitted.
members scr a mbled down The Ranch plan calls for stolen in Viejo
em e rgen<'y chutes a nd waded cons truction or 238 homes.
through waist-deep water. 430.000 squa~--fe-e or-omc~ -A Mission 1ejo woman
Several p assenger s s aid s pace and 300,000 square feet of attending a party al a Laguna
afterwards that the runway was indust rial buildings on vacant Beach home told police someone
icy. But an airport spokesman land west of Hoag Hospital. stole her purse containing St ,625
described the runway as "safe... The land -owned by Beeco during the festivities
Ms. Goldman said attempts to Ltd. and the Newport-Mesa Ellen Peterson told offi cers
salvage the plane could take a Unified School Dis trict -is the purse was taken during a
week or lO days because of tides inland of Pacific Coast Highway party at a home .on Griffith Way
and since the landing gear is and dotted with oil welJs . Saturday night. He r pu rse,
em bedded in mud. She said C ritics of the project want minus jewelry and cash. was
Id d 'd t d homes built at a less dense ratio. found abandoned under the
n nc aTitablli y onhe-l era
nvings and lo11n induttry and
the availability or credit to home
buyers," uid an appeal filed on
behalf of the Pan American
Savings and Loan Association.
The Home Loan Bank Board
a lso asked the court to resolve
the issue. "ff allowed to stand,
the Cali fornia ruling will
serious ly impair the federal
government's errorts lo control
federal s avings and loan
associations' mortgage rates,"
government lawyers told the
justices.
High court
to decide
ERA status
WASHlNGTON <AP > The
U.S. Supreme Court said today it
will decide whether the proposed
Equal Ri ghts Amendment is
dead.
But the timing of the court.'s
review could prove a crushing
blow to pro ·ERA forces.
According t o co urt c le rk
Alexander Stevis, the justices
will not even hear arguments in
the case before June 30 the
co n gressiona ll y approved
deadline for ERA.
The justices, agreeing to
s peed their deliberations to
gr ant review, said they will
review a ruling by a federal
jud ge in Idaho that the proposed
amendment died three years
ago.
U.S. District Judge Marion
Callister of Boise ruled Dec. 23
that Co n g re ss acted
unconstitutionally whe n it
ex t e nde d th e r<.tlification
deadline from March 22, 1979 to
next June 30.
Callister's decision also said
that state legislatures are free to
re sc i n d previo u s ERA
ratification votes.
Although the judge's ruling
did not block the ratification
process, feminist groups view it
as a major psyc hological
s tumbling block to a final
sax -m onth ratification drive.
In today's brief order. the high
court said it will decide whether
Callister was right.
But the court's orders did not
inc lude a ny tim e table for
hearings. Stevas said he did not
expect the ERA case to be
argued this court term , which is
expected to end in elirly July
That means the chse would not
be scheduled for argument until
next October. at t he earliest,
a nd the controveri.y could be
moot by then.
Meanwhile, Judge Callister's
ruli n g hangs over pro-ERA
forces as they strive to gain
additional st al e r a tification
votes.
If ratified, the ER A would
become the Constitution's 27th
Amendment and ban
discrimination based on sex.
The E RA ratification drive
s uffered setb ac k s an the
l egis latur es o f thr ee
non-ratifying stales Georgia.
Ok l ahoma and Illinois in
recent weeks.
offi cials wou eci e 0 ay wa nt less industrial construction whether to remo' e the craft by bleachers at Laguna Beach High ff l "t d building a ramp or with the help and no offices. School on Sunday UD ers Cl e
of barges. There also is disagreement LOS BANOS (AP> _ Three
Investigators were to talk to between developers and critics Thieves gel gems men h ave been c ited for
the cockpit crew. including the over proposed roads. park land Burglars entered a Laguna investigation of illegally hunting
pilot, today. He was one of four a nd drainage . Beach man's hom e over the two wild bo:lrs in the foothills
people still ~ospitalized. Beeco has agreed to bankroll weekend. taking jewelry and southwest of this Merced County
"A pilot · or co· pilot. stunned, S4 million worth of roadwork as other ite ms valued at $2,365. community. Six caged dogs and
walked pas t us, and he was a_ cond ition to the projec t . R ichard Stoll returned to his a s laughtered pig were found in
s ay ing, ·1 couldn't s top the iocluding construction or a new Weymouth Place home to nnd a the back of a pickup when the
plane , I couldn 'l s t op the road that would run parallel and screen removed and a window men were stopped on Highway
pl ane'," J effrey Car r. a college west of Superior Avenue broken. 1~2 west of Los Banos.
student from Attleboro. Mass ... -----------------------------------------
said after the accident. "He was
in a total state of shock."
Passenger Debra Carr of
Sandwich re ported the runway
was "sheer. smooth ice. just like
a skating rink" as she walked
from the wreck.
"My information is the plane
hit an icy slick and skidded. But
that's what the Nation a l
Transportation Safety Board is
trying to find out." World
Airways spokesman Michael
Henderson said..
FromPageA1
ROWDY • • •
celebration -rel8ted in}uries. a
nurse said.
·'They are taking care of
people as fast as they can and
admitting them to the floors as
fast as they can," said nursing
supervisor Cathy Nichols at St .
Francis Memorial Hospital. "All
the rooms a re filled ."
Poli ce said dozens were
arrested for disorderly conduct.
assault or resisting arrest as the
celebuUon grew morti frenzied
late at night.
Visit prole8ted
Put yourself ona91eat pair ol skis.
'
RC!9-
-the most suc-
cessful ski in
men's downhi 11
World cup
Chart• H. LOO. ..............
C.ol A. Moor9 ._._ ... ,'
MANILA, Pbillpplnea <AP) -
About 100 Jranlan students
protestin1 the visit of Iraq'• vice
president bumed the em11es °'
Iraqi President Saddam Huuein
~ and U.S. President Ronald
Reagan ln a nolay
demonstraUon today.
...... Shoe & Ski SchOol ZIN w. c.-Hwy. ~...-.CA
.,,,.,,~
• • • 4
APW ........
BENEFIT CONCERj F rank S111t1l ra ll'an!' rorwarcl f~r a
ft'\\' \\111·ds from C111gt•r Rog(;•rs al a l'l'tepl1on in tht>
Rainhm\ Room of , t•w York ':. Ro<"kt'felkr Cl'nler. Tht•
l'l'('t•plwn Sund a~ ni.g ht follmvt·d a c·ont'l'rt ·\\'Ith 1.uci;.1110
Pel\ arott1 al Haclio Cll\ :\lUSll' llall ror lht· :\h•mon al
Slo an KC'lt t·nr1 g ('ann·r <.·1·nlt•r 111 :'\t•\\ York
Yank 8 ritai1fs h ighest paid exec
U .S b o rn Ri c hard
Giordano, a lrecidy reported
l o bl' the hig hest paid
executive in Britain. got an
increcisc last year that took
his annual ~nlary from the
equ i vall•nt nf S507,5 18 lo
S892.177. Bnl1s h Oxygen Co
lntern<1l111na l ~aid in its
annuc\I reµorL
"The company certainly
A judge has t•:-.tal}ltshed a
conservatorship to handle the
affairs of British pup singer •
Sheila Ro<>sa ll . 1.1. ho has
St'vere allt•rgics and needs
ex pen!'.1vt• treatment t o
s urvive
li e r lawve r . Le onard
Curry. told ·Sonoma County
S up e ri or Court Jud ge
Ke nneth Eymann that Miss
Ross<.dl .. 1s s tuc k a nd
Ronald Reagan's longtime
political s tratl•gi st. Lyn
Nohiger, donned his Mickey
Mom.e tic and brought out his
irreverent sense of humor to
bid farewell to fcportcrs as
he left his While Mouse job
Nofzig er . des c ribed by
thinks h e is worth U\e
m oney ," a com pany
s pokesmal1 said.
Giordano. 4 6, wh o
reportedly likes to ·be known
a s "Di ck" around the office,
became chie f executive in
1979. He formerly headed the
U.S. company Airco until it
was taken over by BOC in
19711"' •
s tranded. penniless and in
danger of dying unless she
obtains proper treatment."
M 1ss Rossall, 32, is allergic
to hundreds of synthetic
items . from televisions to
s having cream, and needs
oxygen treatments, antigens
.and speciall y treated organic
food to prevent a llergic
rc<.ictions
White House De puty Press
Secretary Larry Speakes as
·'the only me mber of the
ad m inislration with enough
guts to dress punk," left the
White Hous e to make hi s
living a s a po{itical
consultant. writer and public
-;peaker
Wllh hh1 brolht1r looking on
and u doicn protei;t eu
marching OUL'ilde, lh Rev.
t'rHk a. Hal(( wH in11t11lled as the »evunth president or
Ltt..foyne Colle&• In
Syrllcu.t•, N.Y.
mP rolher, Secretary ot
Slate AJexander M. Hall J r.,
and their sister, attorney
R e~1na H aig MHedllh ,
joined in the cl'lebrut ion with
a c rowd of 3,000 at lhe
J esull run , l ,800·studenl
Roman CathOllc college
The prot es ter s
demonstrated agains t the
secretary of slate outside the
Athletic Center where Lhe
installation took place, but
Haig appeared relaxed and
s hi e d from di sc u ssing
politics or foreign policy. He
conveyed to his brother the
regard s o f Pres id e nt
Reagan.
Actress Shirley MacLai.ne
s p e n t l h e w e c k' e n d
vacationing al' the country
hom e of her long-time friend,
former Aus tralian foreign
affa irs mini s ter Andrew
Peacock, the Melbourne Sun ·
reported
The couple travele d to
Peacock's country hom e in
southwestern Victoria , where
they s pent the week e nd
sunning and strolling on lhe
beach, the paper said.
The 47-year·old a ctress.
whose films include "Being
There," ''The Apartment,"
"Irma La Uouce ," "The
Trouble With Ha rry ," and
"The Turning Point ," is
vacationing in Australia.
VACATION ING A<"I l'l'!'\:o.
Shi rley M ad.;.i11H.'. Ii . :.pent
the weekend \'acat 1011i11g a t
the c·ount n hnml' ol \ncln•\\
J> l' iJ <: 0 l' k I 11 \. I l' I 0 I' I a
Au:-.t ral1a
Fog due tonight
Coasta l
Extended
forecast
"I Al!Mlnv
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A\l°t#Vlllf
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rot ol lht' 1o0Utr.rn and ustern U S Cltvtl•nd
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slain ano sc•ller•o over New F•lrbanks Enqland Rain was u.,..;t.a o .. r Harllora Norlh~rn C•ltfornla. the Pacific Htltna
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Low clOUO. •ncl 109 •lono lht co•\I.
w llh • downlown LO' llnQelu , temoer11ture near 70j I~ ,,,_. tore<a\t
for $04.llllem c.111orn1• on I IHl\day
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Tahoe Valley 0 ,,
CANADA
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TUESDAY
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Secono hlQll 10 S• p.m. • O
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Tell us wh11t's on your mind.
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Orange COaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 25. 1982
PRISON VOWS -'l\\o t•om ·1<·H:cl munlt·n·r ....
S;.sh rtna· :\1 PC:t rh. :-.<.·rnnd rrnm ri.l.(hl. and
Alfred Ludwig. right. \\'t•n • murried ;it
J t•fft•r son P<.tns h ('orrl'l·l1onal l't•nlt·1· 1n
Gn·tna. L.1 Performmg lhl• t·erem on~ wa-.
&P W ......
Rt•\' Emmitt .\d<t Ol!'\. w hile w1tnesse:-. were
lkput~· (;rcn ·t· Andt·r~on . l<.•ft. ;.sn.d bride's
mutht•r. Oons '.\'fonato. Ludwig said he and
h i:-\\ 1ft'. hoth -.t•ntcnn•d to life he hincl ha rS-
ma~ Ill'\ t•r hn· togt•lht•r as <.1 \\l'dded couple.
' -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1
I
Oh! For some Vegemite
CMimporter hopes to introduce Aussie spread to U.S.
M e ntion Vege mite to a
displaced Australian or New
Zea l a nde r a nd a dreamy,
faraway expression may come
o ver their faces as they recall
wha t , to them. is an obsession
ak 1n to our pred ilection for
peanut butter.
Ueyond what they could
r.a r ry here in their s uitcase or
acquire in special ··emergency"
ration packs. most Australians
or New Zealanders were as
likely to find Vegemite in the
United States as they were a
kangeroo.
But now the Vegemite drought
is over. according to a Costa
Mesa importer that has some
30,000 six-ounce jars of the stuff
sitting io a warehouse waiting
for a distributor.
Diana R Todd and J ess Dines
of Australas ia Ventures not
only nope to appease the Uown
Under trans plant s but also
convt•rt the masses to the health
and diet wonders of Vegemite,
as applied to cr ackers. grilled
cheese and meats. soup, stews,
g ravies, milk. g rated carrots.
rais ins and chopped nuts and
.. cooked mashed brains."
"Prior to this venture," said
Ms . Todd as she sat surrounded
by c rates o f her beloved
Vegemite, "Kraft of Australia
had set up emergency s ix-pack
ration packages with handles
m arketed for overseas addicts
And even though this s tuff is
heavy, l.i S A ·b o und Aus -
tralians arc legendary for
never leaving home without
clutt•hing their jars and tins of
Vegemite to tide themselves and
fri e nd s over th e rough .
Vegcmite-empty'road a head."
M :, To dd , a n ative o f
Au!>lralia, has been m arketing
Aus t rallan products in this
co untr y f o r 13 ye ar s
Rut Vega m1t e 1s a r e al
cha llenge. · ·:-,ome Ol:.'tract0rs s ay tnl:.'
creamy, tangy , dark brown
yeast extract tastes like coal
I a r . ax le g r ease or dried
J l
, j l
J
a nchovy -flavored varnish," the
Los Angeles Herald Examiner
reported Friday.
Its acceptance was slow even
in Australia when it was first
developed by chemis t Cyril
P e rc y Callister in 1923 to
compete with the British export.
Marmite.
It is claimed to be the richest
known dietary source of vitamin
B complex a nd is an excellent
diet s nack as well as a fl avoring.
Babies in Australia with their
faces and fingers smeared with
the brown paste are as common
as ja m-s meared tots over here.
"In our family it is primarily
used as a breakfast spread on
toast," says Michae l Uurgess.
s enior Au s tra l ia n trade
commissioner :tl the Australian
Trade Consulate in Los Angeles
"It is something that one must
put in one's luggage. Pe rhaps it
takes a n a cquired tci ste to
appreciate it, but we hope it's
accepted here "
Ms. Todd. who has ulready
begun notifying thousands o(
delighted Australians by mail
that Vegemite is here, s aid . a
s ix-pack sells for $12.25, plus
$2.50 for shipping in California.
A single jar costs $2.84.
"One tl\lng must be stressed,"
s he said. ''You must approach
Vegemite with the thought of ·a
m ere s mear.' ll is to be used
s paringly, not piled on 1n gobs
like peanut butter. The initial
taste should be on buttered toast
or crackers. and then you go
from there. At first. your face
may frown . but your body will
smile."
Patricia Thornton. president
of the Australia Ne w Zealand
American Club in San Diego
says, "Ah. it's something we
grew up with in New Zealand
We associate 1t with good family
times. Ydu long for it if you
can 't get it. but Americans
might have trouble with it at
firs t I've seen people taste il by
the s poonful. develop a stncken
look and practically choke Oh
God. that's not the way to do it.'\. .
FDR still esteem ed
NEW YORK <API Nearly
four decades after his death, a
majority of Americans retain
favorable opinions of President
Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
In t he latest As sociated
Press·NBC News poll. 63 pe rcent
s aid they have a generally
favorable opinion of Roosevelt.
Eleven percent said they have
an unfavorable opinion of him,
and 26 percent had no opinion.
In the poll, 1.597 adults across
the country were contacted in a
random, scientific telephone
sampling. The error margin for
a poll with this type of procedure
is 3 percentage points either
way
Next Saturday m a rks the
1 O O th a n n iv er s a r)c.. of the
Democratic president"& birth,
and November 1982 marks th~
50th anniversary of the first of
his four presidential election
v ictories . He died in 1945.
shortly before the end of World
War II
In tlte lates t poll , more than 60
percent in every age group said
they have a favorable opinion or
Roosevelt.
F o r exam pl e, among
re s po nd e n t s aged 18 ·24,
favorable opinions of F'DR were
he ld by 61 percent, while 8
pe rcent said unfavorable aod 31
percent said they were unsure.
Meanwhile , among res pondenl5
aged 50-64, favorable opinioll,.'i
were held by 69 percent, wilh ~9
pe r cent unfa vorable and 12
percent unsure.
Old fashioned, romantic dinner-dancing is back in style.
. .. and the Grand Pon.age now offers you
an evening to <.:ompctc with your favorite memory.
Soft tinkling dinner mu k .
clqpnt candlelit table sminp. the grandeur of ftarni~ tableslde cookery.
The ultimately danceable Fred CarroU 'Dio is featured
Thursday through Saturday 7 to 12,, and soft piano other cvcninp. V..let parking.
TH E REGISTRY HOTEL
IHMCMI Mx A.nhut 8otllf("\af\I ( "14) 1~2·f'"1"
0• .............. ,.' '"""""'""' llorlt.r ,, ....
l •
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 25, 1982 Hl l'
Tension grows
f
for Poland
Parliament
By The Associated Press lime since the Impos ition of
martial la w broadcas t his
sermon nationwide. A two·day Parliament session.
t he first since martial law, has
started amid increased security
in Wars aw, P ola nd . Som e
obser vers said the arrival of a
brigade-s ized contingent of
police in midtown Warsaw this
week e nd might also be in
preparation for opening of the
untV'erstty and Feb. l price hikes
that will quadruple the costs of
some goods.
"Brothers and sisters, pray
for those who suffer, pray for all
detainees to be quickly released,
lift up your hearts," he said at
Mass in Warsaw's Holy Cross
Church. "We must lift ourselves
from the depths by ourselves."
HIGHWAY WASHED OUT L'ndt•rminL·d port 11111 of I hl·
ttaslbound lanes of Inte rstate 90 west of Sn0<1u<.1lm1t.• l'a~:-.
summit in Washington forms wat L•rfall ro r Ola Ii i<.• Crl·t·k Ttw
<·n ·1·k 11um1Jl'd Ion:-. ot n ><·k <.ill<l dirt wa~hing out portion:-. of
th<.• h1ghwa~ ·.., shoulcll'I < 'll·c1nup <llHI rt>µair:-. nf th<' ~tatt•~
rnain l'HSl ·WE:'~I h1gh\\<t~ an· <·xpl·1·11•cl to tCJkt• a Wl•ek
Official sources s aid leaders
favor continuing li mited reforms
in the nation's factories to allow
some worker self-management,
but faces opposition from some
hard·line party leaders.
The orimate said the cleriy is
negotiating for the release or
the thousands still interned and
organizing help for them.
"We are not keeping statistics
of achievements," he said. "We
must. however. add that the
efforts by the church are not
without fruit."
Flight data unraveled
Acceleration eyed in fatal crash
Allowjng laborers to have a
say in running their factories
wa s on e of the princip a l
demands of the now·suspended
independent Solidarity union.
Government spokesman J erzy
Urban, in an article in the s tate
daily ijepublic, said trade
unions will be allowed to exist
but act according to their name.
"Thus they will s top playing
the role of political opposition,"
he sa id.
Urban also de fe nded the
m artial l aw r e g im e 's
requirement that workers take
loyalty oaths -a move strongly
condemned by the influential
Roman Catholic Church.
"Sometimes these operations
are painful,'' he said . "Yet
people should pay a good but
mod e r ate price for t he i r
beliefs."
Archbishop Joseph Glemp. the
spiritual leader of the nation's 32
million Catholics. called on the
Poles not lo despair Sunday, and
the government for the first
Glemp did not call for an end
to martial law but told his
countrymen to "follow a path of
truth "
"l n lhe fervor of conflict and
struggle. one must not defame
the authorities or the ruled,
s peak untruth a bout them,
exaggerate flaws. pass over
m erits. make them look
ridiculous," he sai.d. .•
the tone of Glemp's homily
was more moderate than past
s t ate ments and considerably
milder than a letter he signed
last week with members or the
Polish episcopate. The letter ,'
which Glemp mentioned but did
not read during his homily, was
read from pulpits nationwide
Sunday.
It ca l l e d f or "the
re·establishment of the normal
ope ration of the s tate" and
accused the government of
"actions v io l a ting human
no bility a nd confinin g civil
rights" which it s aid we re
"preventing a n ational
agreement."
WASHI NC.TON CAP) Federal
investigators said today the flight data
recorder salvaged from the Air Florida
jetliner that crashed into the Potomac
River showed the aircraft failed to gain
adequate acceleration as it took off and
never rose more than 337 feet. ·
But the investigators said they are not
pre pared to say why the Boeing 737
failed to accelerate s"fficientJy in the
minutes before it cras hed Jan.-· 13,
kiUing 78 people when it clipped a busy
commuter bridge and plunged into the
river.
"Jl would appear that the aircraft
was not acceler atmg as il should have,"
s a id Francis Mc Ada ms, who is
overseeing the investigation for the
National Transportation Safety Board.
But the board's chief investigator,
Rudolph Kapustin, said, ··There are just
too many possibilities to speculate ··
why the plane fai led to accele rate
properly.
McAdam s r evealed th e fir s t
information from the fligh t data
recorder to reporters at a U.S. Coast
Guard ha ngar at National Airport.
where lhe pieces of aircraft wreckage,
strewn about the hangar floor were
being examined.
Court gives Indians taxing 10K
Tribes may collect levies on resources from land
WASHI NGTON (AP > -The U.S. Supreme
Court, giving the nation's Indian tribes new and
powerful economic leverage, ruled today that
tribes can collect taxes on natural resources taken
from their reservations .
By a 6-3 vote, the justices said the J icarilla
Apa che tribe can impose such a severance tax oo
oil and gas extracted from its reservation in
northwestern New Mexico.
Wo r ld, a private group that advocates a
conservative foreign policy, Kissinger bemoaned
th.e l~ck of even the "beginnings or a consensus"
within NATO on s uch topics as East ·West
relations, Central America. Africa and the Middle East.
Ray, wife attacked
lie also said lhe recorder showed the
aircraft llfttd off from lhe airport
runway wl'll hcyond the normal takeoff
point. but he added that how far has yet
to be determined
A number of witnesses have told
investigators they saw thl' liftoff at
about the 5,200·fo<>t m ark of lhe runway.
A norm a l lifto ff du r ing s nowy
conditions. a~ were present Jan 13.
wo uld have been aboul 3,900 feet .
mvesligators said.
The critical eockpit vo1cc rct'order,
ulso sal vu~ed from the bottom of the
Potomac Ri ver last Wednesday. was
still being analyzed . MeAdams said
The invesllgators were also examining
l he tape of 1·onversation between the
jetliner and lhe airport control tower.
Kapustin said it had already been
determined that the pilot did not speak
with the to1Acr after he began his
takeoff roll
McAdams said thl' infor mation from
the fli ght data recordcr,Jias been sent to
la boratorws at the Boeing Co. 1n
Seattle. wht're it will be fed into a
computer in efforts to re-create the
plane·s Jes!> than a mi null! of flight
lie said that the Air Florida jet
reached a speed of 144 knob. nor mal for
liftoff. but that the takeoff speed was
not reacht•d until we ll beyond the
normal li ftoff poant. Once airborne. the
jct increased its speed to only 147 knots
and quickl y began to lose power.
gaining a peak altitude of only 337 feet.
At t he point it crashed into the ri ver,
the plane should have reached a n
altitude of 1.000 feet to 1.500 feet
M ilitary di vers . m eanwhile .
contmuaj lo !>carch the water for ~mall
pieces of planl' wreckage Almos t all of
th-e maJor pi e.eel'. induc;lin g both
engines. havt· been rl'covered. Di vers
recovered lhc body or an infant during
the weekt•nd, the la!>l of the 74 plane
passenJ?cr~ lo be rl•moved from the
river.
··Based on . . the conception or Indian tribes
as domestic. dependent nations, we conclude that
the tribe has the a uthor ity to impose a severance
tax on the mining activities . . . as part of its
power to govern and to pay for the costs or
self.government." Justice Thurgood Marshall
wrote for the court.
NASHVfLLE <AP> -James Earl Ray and his
wife suffered minor injuries when an inmate
struck them with a metal ashtray stand during
weekend visiting hours at the Tennessee State
Prison , Warden Jim Rose said .
HOUSE Of
TAILORIMG
AL TERA TIO NS FOR
MEN & WO MEN
Plane ~rash probe set
Rose said the attack Saturday on Ray, who is
serving a 99·year sentence for killing c1vil·rights
activist Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., was not
, racially motivated.
SO COAST PLAZA 540 8491
lowpr LP••I by CorouH•I
•Ht
t 'IA)SEf)l'T
LAREDO. Texas <AP> -A twin·engine plane
was ci1vmg at an estimated 45-degree angle when 1t
crashed between two r unways and exploded,
killing all seven aboard. the airport director says.
Anti-bugger vows refund
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MagnoWa It Talbert near Stater. Mnet
• Nation al Trans por tation Safety Board
fin vestigators planned to inspect the cha rred
wreckage of the private plane today to determine
why it plummeted to the ground Sunday morning.
LIVINGSTON. N.J . <AP> -The manufacturer
or an Sl8,000 anti-bugg ing unit has a gua rantee for
the country's 1,300 largest firm : if his device
doesn't detect a listening bug in their company
within 60 days. he'll refund their money.
II~ S.\l.E \\'ITI I Tl llS .\I I
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THE PEANUT BUTTER,
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WEIGHT WATCHERS®
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r
Mortgage rates going up
WASHIN GTON <AP > -T he nation's
homebuJl<1ers, having just completed their worst
sales year since 1946, are getting more bad news:
interest rates on federally backed single-family
mortgages are expected to rise again.
The De partment of Housing and Urban
Development has announced that interest ceilings
on home loans guaranteed by Federal Housing
Administration will climb on Monday from 15.5
percent to 16.5 percent.
Soviets return to Egypt
CAIRO. Egypt <AP> -The foreign ministry
said today that 66 Soviet technicia ns were
returning to Egypt. It appeared to be a move
toward patching up relations with the Soviets,
strained when the late President Anwar Sadat
ousted hundreds or Soviet advisers.
A foreign minis try spokesman told The
sociat.ed PreH the advisers ·
the high da m at Aswan and at several iron, steel
and aluminum plants built with Soviet aid In the
1960s.
Kiaainger wb NATO unity
WASHINGTON (AP> -T)le North Atlantic
Treaty Organization gradually couJd disintegrate
unless its member nations achieve 1reater unity
on dealing with global crises, says former
Secretary or State Henry Kissinger.
Speaking Sunday lo the Committee for a Free
F• M Actiln
Call
Dair Pillt
Al-YISOI
&42-511l
\l'K ~11:1:11111\\' l'\\\11"
'"" ''""'""" 1'11'11 "' I H 11.l(KJ 11 l'ICll I. 141·U 14 Mii
I "" l'Kll I • .Wt7 I •11
Harry Augenblick. president of lhe electronics
fi rm Microlab·FXR Inc .. says industrial bugging
is a larger threat than mos t companies
acknowledge. Microlab estimates there are 100.000
listening de vices currently planted in U.S.
corporations.
11\1 1,1 I ti ~ I \\ I II io; "!."
IM N !'I.I.I •;:111111< ""° O'l1l.£ll8 08 MU; DI"\' llR L l:ASI:. A I
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IN ORANGE COUNTY
3 TOWN a COUNTRY, ORANGE
)ohn RObe.1'Powers
CALL OR COME IN TOOAV
-JANUARl-~
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January 31, 1982
INTRODUCING
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from
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8H•HOI
WEIGHTS WATCHERS.
-
'.
H/F Orange Coast DAILY Pll.,OT/Monday, January 25, 1982
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t-P
f TIU Lt llw Ntll o/ o 10-parl N1W• °"how lo mw o,. uour JMJ incotM taze.1.)
The tax ruJea on deductin1 an office at &tome a re 1
tough on taxpayers. But last year, the Tax Court ~
and even the Jnt.emal Revenue Service -took a
more li beral vlew on some ot the requirement.I.
One o f the tou1h rules to m e et for an
om ce·al·bome deducUon bas been t.bat a "port.Ion of
the dwelling unit" must 'be used "eiccluslvely" for
busines9.
The IRS has treated tbla as meaA101 t.bat an
entire room had lo be devoted solely for bualness, or
at least a portion of a room physically separated
from the rest of the room. For this reason, It barred
an office-at·home deduction by a c'olle1e profeuor
who prepared his lectures, etc., In his bedroom,
which had a desk. chair, file cabinets and bookcues,
but also a dresser and bed in another area of the
room . The IRS claimed that the room bad a aplit uae:
therefore it failed to qualify for an otnce·at-home
deduction .
But a 1981 Tax
Court case pointed ~ out that the "portion
o f '' the building
d idn't necessarily ~ J"
~~~~ ~es;ro~::S~~ IYllll PllTll~-z
had s hown tha t a .3,.. _
sep a rate part was
used exclusively and on a regular basis as his office.
Th e r efore it qualified for an office·at·home
deduction.
This can be good tax news for many of you who
use part of a room in your home for an office.
Another requireme nt is that the office at home
must be the principal place of business of the
taxpayer. Here again. the IRS had taken the tough
view that an individual can ha ve only one principal
place of business, even though he carries on two
separale businesses from two difrerenl offices.
Thus, if an individual had one principal place of
business in an offi ce in the city. while he had a
different secondary business that he ran from an
office at home, the office at home couldn't qualify,
even though it was the principal place of business for
the secondary business.
But in 1981, the IRS relented. ll agreed that an
offi ce at home that is the principal place of any trade
or business, even a secondary one, qualifies u a
principal place of business.
Thus the individual taxpayer co~l~ deduct the
cost of his offi ce at home to run his sideline business.
The ruling is logical and favorable to taxpayers.
U a residence or a vacation home is rented out,
the expenses allocable to the rental period can be
deducted with certain limitations. Bui if the rental is
to a member of the family, the IRS holds that the
owner is still viewed as using the dwelling unit few his
non·deductible personal use -even though be is paid
a fair rental charge by the relative.
Because of the complaints r aised about the IRS'
tough attitude. Congress in 1981 changed the law to
have such rentals viewed as deductible "outside"
rentals. This change is retroactive to aH post· '76
years not barred by the statute of limitations.
So if your deductions were disallowed by the IRS
under the previous rule -or you didn't take them
because of the unfavorable attitude of the revenue
service -check now whether you can obtain a
refund based on the change in the law.
If you (regardless of age) sold your principal
residence at a profit after July 20, 1981, you can defer
tax on the profit if you buy anothe r principal
residence within iwo ·years <instead of only 18
months) at least at a price equal to your selling
price.
E ven if you sold it before July 21. 1981, if your old
18-month replacement period expires on or after July
20. 1981, you get an extra six months to buy a
replacement home .
Tomorrow: Business auto expenses .
'Gold metals quotations
Gold
By The Associated Pr"s
Selected world gold prices today:
London: morning fixing $373.50, off $3.75.
London: afternoon fi xing $372.00. off $.5.25
Paris: $367.48, off $4.21.
Frankfort: $375.01, off $5.01.
Zurich: Late fixing $370.00, off $7.00 bid; $373.00 asked.
Handy & Harman: only daily quote $372.00, off $5.~.
Engelhard: only da ily quote $372.00, off $.5.2S.
Engelhard: only daily quote fabricated $390.60. o(f
$5.51.
Metals
. . NEW YORK <AP) -Spot nonferrous metal pnces
today:
Copper 77~·80 cents a pound, U S. destinations.
Lead 30 cents a pound.
Zlnc 42·43 cents a pound, deli vered.
Tln $7. 7016 Metals Week composite lb.
Alamlnum 76-77 cents a pound, N.Y .
Mercury $400.00 per flask.
PlaUaam $.1S6.00 troy 01., N. Y.
Silver
Handy & Harman. $7.805 per troy ounce.
Goldcoim
NEW YORK CAP) -Prices late Friday of told coins,
comp.red with Thursday's price.
Kna1errud, 1 troy 01., ·$396.2$, up $2.00. t
Maple "'ar1 l troy 01 .. ··~· ~p $2.00. Mexican 50 peso, 1.2 troy oat, $478.00. ~p S2.:50 .
Autrtan 100 crown .. ~troy 0 1., $37S. 75, up S2.00
Source· Oeak·Perera
..
Ora• Coat DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 25, 1982
Mfla .. Hut'fH't IAUI T.S...._ .... , '!'.o. M•vice ~MY .. .., ......... , ..... ~ .............. .._,._. .... ti trw1 Wl&.1. UI.&. Cll IFllD
Actor's kin accep_t __
$65,000 settlement
LOS ANGELES <AP > -The
aurv lvln1 family of comedian
Freddie Prlnze. who died In um or a
aelf·infllcted gunshot wound, has
accepted a 985,000 settlement In a
suit acainst one of his doctors.
· '1 'm very happy that everything is
over," Prlnze's mother. Marla
Pruetzel, said Sunday from her h.ome
In suburban Van Nuys.
"To tell you the truth, I wanted lo
go to trial but my daughter-In-law
decided not to, so I went along with
that. In a way. I really think I have
to say l am glad that the whole
nightmare is over, because It's been
four and a half years now."
Avalanche camea
hiker to hu death
SAN GABRIEL (AP ) -A
19-year-old hiking in the San Gabriel
mountains with his girlfriend was
killed when an avalanche of loose
gravel, snow, and rocks caried him
300 to 400 feet down the s lope.
Ste ven Weiss of Arcadia and
20-year·old Rebecca Griffin of
Upland were hilting at about 3 p.m.
Sunday in rough terrain in the
F.alling Lear Spr ings area near
Glendora Ridge, about three miles
west of Mount Baldy Road when the
avalanche struck, said Sgt. Mark
Thompson of the Los Angeles County
Sberifrs Department.
Evangelist injured
in three-car crash LO~ ANGELES (AP > -A
19-year-old woman, injured in a
three-car collision
that also injured
evangelist Oral
Ro be rts and his
wife, wa5 re lt!ased
after treatment at
Lo s An geles
County -USC
Medical Center.
Tami Moore. of
West Hollywood,
HHRn was treated for
face and leg cuts suffered during the
accident. She was released from the
hospital Saturday night.
Roberts, 63, of Tulsa, Okla .. was
riding in a car drives by his wife,
Evelyn, also 63, westbound on
Fountain Avenue in West Hollywood
when the accident occurred, said
California Highway Patrolman Ken
Gazaway.
The Roberts' car veered across the
center line and struck Ms. Moore's
car head on, Gazaway said.
Midair crash probe
'could take montru.'
VICTORVILLE (AP) -Federal
authorities. say it could be months
before they determine the cause of a
mid-air collision that killed both
occupants of one small plane while
anothe r made a successfu l
emergency landing.
Pilot Frederick W. Freeze, 67, of
Lakewood and his passenger, Cletis
M. Minniear, 70, of Yucaipa, were
appar ently killed immediately
Saturday when their single engine
111111mc11
plane plunged Into a street In lhe
Victorville business district,
breaking "Into a zillion pieces," fire
department dhlpatcher Ron Jen_klns
said.
I
Police chief flayed
for 'sabotage' talk
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Loa
Angeles Police Chlef Daryl Gates'
suggestion that criminals posing as
Soviet Jewlsh immigrants maSt
sabotage the 1984 Olympics had been
criticized by a police commissioner
and a Soviet Jewish community
leader.
Reva Tooley, the president of the
Los Angeles police commission.
accused Gates of "unnecessarily
whipping up fear."
"It is my belief there is no basis to
speculate that Soviet criminals are
systematically using the Russian
Jewish community of Los Angeles,"
Ms. Tooley said on Sunday.
Homeowner lotteries
hit by prosecuton
LOS ANGELES (AP )
Prosecutors have moved to put a
crimp in the operations of
homeowners using lotteries to male
houses with otherwise hard-to-find
new occupants by filing a S2 milliQn
suit against one such operation.
The United Stat es Diabetes
Foundation of Palm Springs is
running an illegal lottery and a Palm
Springs hoUSI( at stake is worth less
than the $2.5 million claimed, state
and Riverside County prosecutors
asserted in the suit filed in Los
Angeles Superior Court.
UC Davis Medical
Center threatened
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -The UC
Davis Medical Center In Sacramento
is in serious danger of losing both Its
state license and accreditation,
according to univers ity Vice
ChanceUor Elmer Learn.
Learn told the UC Board of
Regents meeting i.n San Francisco
that the state Health Services
Department and the Joint
Com mission on Accreditation issued
66 citations to the hospital in 1981.
U FW to boycott
Dole label products
KEENE CAP> -A boycott ot all
products marketed under the Dole
label was announced by Cesar
Chavez' United Farm Workers, who
have been on strike at the West Food
Inc. mushroom plant in Ventura
s ince November.
The UFW said it was enlisting the
s upport of other unions in boycotting
markets that sell Dole products.
Chavez accused Castle & Cooke,
the parent company of West Foods
a nd distributor of Dole mushrooms.
bananas and pineapples, of adopting
"an unyie lding posture " i n
negotiations.
THEO~::N:. BEANE. Point, ~a ln~ermenl al Wilcox. long-time resident or A ~c ension Cemetery Corona del Mar. Ca. passed resident of South Laguna. O Connor . Laguna Hills away arter a brief illness on
Ca. Passed away on Sunday. Mortuary d1reclors. . January 21. 1982 Mr. Wilcox January 24. 1982. Survived GENTILE -was born In Oskaloosa. by his wife Florence . WALTER GENTILE I owa H e att e nded
daughter Janel. sons Tod resident ol Costa ~1esa, ,ca. Os kaloosa lliah School and and James Beane. Mass of Passed a a on Januar) 23 " Christian Burial will be on "! y . ed .~ 1.;niversily of Iowa. in Iowa 1982. He 1s surv1v by 11 ... Ci ly Iowa He \\ 11 a Tuesday.January26.1962al wife V1rg1n1 a SP:-.-1ces veter~nofWorldWarll:-.He
9:30AM at SL Edwards Monday,Janu;i:-y 25.1982al resided in Southern
Catholic Church. Dana 11 . OOA M al. H arbor California most or his adult L~wn-Mount Olive Chapel life. Loved ones surviving
-----------with Re".. Bruce Kurrie. him include his wife Mary .J
r ""' Presbytenan Churc~. 0~ lhe Wilcox. his sister Elizabeth
,_Cl llOTHHS Cov~nanl . oCCi c i .ati~g . J Wilcox or Colorado
-.L. llOADWAY Services under the dtrecllon Springs. Colorado, brother
MOaTUAIY ofHarborLawn-MountOllve William w Wilcox of
1 b~:.~o~~-=Y ~g.~~~ry of Costa Mesa Newport Beach. Ca. and his
642·9150 ilOFFMANN daughter Linda Silvey or
IALTtlHGHOH
SMITH & TUTHILL
'WISTCLlff CHAPIL
4Z7 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
646-9371
LEO M. _HOFFMANN, a ~=~~r~:i :e~v~:e s~I b~
AT l'Ul&.IC AUCTION TO TH• HtOHllT llDOla l'OR CAIH t .. , ...... ,._ ...... "" ....... _., ..... ~..._, ... r ....
..... .... ..,. <-... ...... -
..... " .. ..., .... 0.. .. TNll ... .,,.~i'r' llNe,.CIARY : AltTHUR I , M&RTll&. e11f M•R IL J . MlaUI&.. ..................... .... ---~ "· "" .. ....,, .... .,,.,, Ill ...........
Offlclel .......... ....-. fll .. .._.. •O-. Qwltyj ........
., '"''' NKrlh• .... '•"-'"' ~I Tiie te11f t•lerref tt 111 tllla ..,.,. ........................ .. (el...,,.., ~ .. Of ...... ,,
-.cri.M•--.: l',11,CIL Ir Ullll Ne. U. 111 IN C~ty ef .._, ...... c...My .. 0r .......... ..
c.llMntle •• ..._ .... •ecr-.. Ill .,. c.....,.._ ,...,. ,..,... .,
()(...., .. mt, lft .... ,,.,, ..... I
114, Offl<lel ..... ., M1411 C9Wlty. l'ARCILI: A11 ~ -e!IMY~ Ct/Ill IMMM1 ••_..t11 c-llllN
1M 1111«•1 111 Mii le IN C-ArH Of ~ I.,, Tree!~ .......... ...
fllef In -.. 174, ,. ... , at •• ti lllCNllW, Ml~ ....... fft IN Offlee ef .. CNlty RecW419t fll Mlcl C-ty, .. _,, ......... ~ lfl .... At11<1t tllll ... "OefWU-'' ef ... Declet ....... c-11. CeNMIMt ellll RHltk'*-,_.. .., Qc-.,
2', mt. lfl....,. nttl'\,.... •.,, Offlci.1 It«-tll ..W Oeull4Y CTM
''OIKteteMM•·>, Md •Y ttft'Mltl ..... lflt ___ .... ...,....,
EXCll'T THfREl'ROM 141 ell, .... lftllltr•lt -eti.r llyfrMe,..._t, ...............................
""'' .. -'•• Mtrv. •• ,__ 111 IMlr-Of r.-. l'ARCILS: ........... ", . _,, _,., lt/ett pet'llcwler1y wt ....... 111 Ille Arttcle tlllltllf "E-•" et ... Dec leret1011 111tftr lllt leclltll He•lfllltl Ill -II Artlclt ......... et foll-a: "UUllti..", '"Sett--EncrMC ........ t" ..... "G-Al'N ··-"'· 0 S•• hle11f Otl•t. Newporl .. ecll,C.A
"Ill • Sir"' -• 0< -dul111ello11 la allow11 •N•t, 110 ••tr•llly h 111•••" •• to 111 C-ple-t O< COtr9CIMU)." Tl>e ..... flclety ......, Mlf Dtef ef Trwl,
llloy ,..._., • llnecll or,... ..... lfl IN ellllllelltlll HClll'ef llltrellly ,
llerttMtn •me-Mii .. ,.,..... tc .........., ........ -o.c ........
Of o.f•lllt -~ for Sl!M· -,wrllt ... MCICt Of -II -ef tlec:tioll
It CMIM Ille ~ IO wll Ula pr-ty lo aatlsty Mid GllllieetlDM. ...., ....,..,.., ._ 1111dlnltiftM ,_
..... llalle• .. _,, ..... ., ....... tc
Ille Re<erdld Oc._ 12, 1"1 " IMlr No. IS.. lft ..... 1GS) ..... 1004, 1M
Mid Offklel Rec-..
Self Nie wlll Ille-· 111111 wllllOul covenent or warrenty. ••PF•U ot
lmpllef, ,....,flll9 , ................ Of
~..-alle ... to ,., ............... ...
prlftclpel ...., ol Ille MtoOl --lllY Mid Deed ol Tndl, wl91 IM-I at
)ft Mid ...... _..,.., ..... eoM ... fl ..,,, _, IN ,....,. tJlf Mid o.ct ol TrUll,
'"" cl\er .. • ...., .. _ .. , of 1111 Trual .. -Of 1111 Irv.ts tr'ff..., .., self Deed ol TrUll. Seki Nie will Illa
Mid ... , ...... ,. F*-Y ••. ,. •• z:• ,.m .. e1 -~ Av-tftt•enc•. le h Clvk Cefl4et • .,...,,..,
-E"I a--A-. lft IM Cll'r
olOf ...... Al 1111 lime of -llllUel pWllcetloll
....... Mlle•, ... lotel -Of I .. 11npeld llleleftct Of I ... 011111 .. lltll
IKllrM lll'f llw --rtlllM dHf ..
lnKI -... .,_ "-· ·-e11d efve11cu la iso.to.n Tc
............ II• _,.,. llllf, .,,_.. -· cell 11,.l a1 ...... Doto: J_., U, 1"2 T.0. ~RVICE COMPANY
esNlfTr\IAM
..,_Mc.Mlllloft
~s.c--,
O..CltylMl •• W..1
0r ..... CA ......
(7141 ...
Pulllll ...... Or ..... Cont Delly .......
J .... u .... 1,1, ·->»a
NOTICE CW TRUSTll'I SALE T.S ..... ll·S. On F.-y 17, 1taet 10:00o'cloc.k 1.m . al the froftl EMrMKt of SAFEC9 ~~~~~·mi:. ~"W.!' ~: County of Of-. SC•• of C.11~. SAFECO TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY,• <,,,_ellOll ... Trvtl" u-r Ille l.OftO F°"" Security L..lnd Contr1<1,, ta.<uted Illy OCEE RITCH and BEVERLY RITCH. --wllt " jolm 1-b • ..c:wWd J/SllO
" 00<--.,., In -13"). P99f' IS.I of Oflklet R1<0<dl In Ille olllct ol the Recoroer ol Or1n11t
County, C•lffornle, by r ••son of Oel1ull In IM pey,,_I or perlorma11et 01 obltQ1tlon1 stcurtd lhtreby tncludll'IQ IN lire•<" or cMleull, notice
ol "'""" wu recoraeo 10/S/ll u oocvmem no. 4>t71 In -1ou. ~
1'47 ot Mid Otllci.1 RtcOf'O,, will Mii ti puOllt •1Ktl0n 10 ,,,. 11'91Mtl l>lOeor lo• cull In 1-"11 money ol Ille U11Uoo Stain, wllllOul '"' cov•"•nt or wtrrenty, exp.-Of' Implied H to litlo. PO,_llon. Of' tflC--H. lot lht purPOM ol P•Y'"ll olllll9ellon'
secured Oy WtlO LottQ "°"" S.Curlty Laftd Conlrecl. u.. lnlttHI con,,.yOO lo Hid Trvstoe .. Mid Lono Form Security uno Contretl In l)+'-rty
tlluettd lt1 "'9 C-ly of O<-. Sltlt
ot C•llfOl'rWI Oftd OH<tlbeO "; Loi •. 81o0 A of Trecl Ho. U., ea _,, °" • maco rec.-1n -21,
1>999 34 ol Mltcoll..-M-. In Ille
ofllct 01 Ille COUftly rec:ordor of t .. d <ounty. Tiit -Id NI-• end tsllrneto Of
CO\ls, ··---edVIMOf H tf Fdlf'uery 17, 1"2 It U",Q ... ; uld amount win Inc,.._ untll dttt• ot Wit. Tiit 11ru1 tddren end olller common do'\1-llOft, If '"Y. of IM real pr-rly dn<rlbeCI 1oon Is P11rl>Ol'ltcl 10 l>t: UNKNOWN
TM ~IGNd Trvstto dllctelms eny llalllllly tor ..,y lncw~trwu of .,.. ,,,..., _, -~ ,_
Mli9"1Uon, II ellY. "-" ••lft. Detect; J_., I, 1"2 VENOOR: ROBERT C. REMICK -MYRA T. REMICK, hulMNI end
wilt ADOREU: 207• 0."'81 Aw .. Colla Meu, CA •2'17 Telephone 1714)
.. 2.JJ.47 SAFECO TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, a C.,._ellon TrvslM ADDRESS: JOJ W. Jiii 51,..t, Sen 8ernerdlno, CA '2"°3 Tei-.-11141 .... HJ, 8r· Kay H-lck\, AHl\lent Se<rttery PulllllNd Or ... Coetl Oelly Piiot,
Jell. II, JS, Ft&. I, 1"2 1»42
P'IHCl•OTHHS
SMmtS' MORTUA&Y
627 Main St
Huntington Beach 536-6539
34-yenr resident of Balboa held on Wt!dnesday, January
Island. Ca. Passed awwa y ,on 27. 1982 at 2:00PM at Pacific
January 22. 1982. He as a Vi e w Memorial Park
mer:nbcr of the Holy .Name Chapel, 3500 Pacific View Society al St. John Vianney Drive. Newport Beach In
Catholtc Church aod 8 lieu or flowers the family
veteran of World War I, U .~. has requested contrlbuUon11
Army. He Is survived by h•si to charily or donor'!I choice
wife Florence. son Elwyn E.
1
Pacific View Mortu arv or Carson. Ca .. 1 grandson directors. . "°'1(1 TOCR•OITORS and 2 great· a ra ndsons. 01' IU&.K Tl'AMWIR
-
_,..
PAClftC Y•W ~, ...
CemttefY Mortuary
Ch1pel-Crematory
3500 Pec1f1c View Oflve
,..._Port Beach
644·2100 -
NICO.MICK MORTUAl•S Laguna Beach
•94·9415
Laguna Hills
768-0933
San Juan C.p1strano
•95·1776 ·-
M•MO' LA.._MT. OUYI
Mof1uery. C.""tery Crematory
1625 GISl8f' Ave .
CoslaMesa
0 ... ~~ .....
.. 11eca. • ..,_.,. u.c.c.1 Recitation or the Rosa.i;y Will _.,. --NOllCO h hettllly 1lvt11 lo lltt be on Tuesday, January M. ,._ ..... K cr•dllor• Of HOWA"D K. KIM ,,,.
1982 al 7:00PM at St. John &.•OALHOTICI SUNHEE L. t<IM, Tr ..... _ .......
VI. anney Ca'"oUc Church. llom• address " '"" M11lkrry u1 NOTICE IS HIRl8Y OIVfN INll An11uo, City OI lrvlM, Covnly ol Mass of the Resurrection ,,. 1o11ow1111 !Wms et,.,... ... •-Oretite,Sle4ttf C .. INrll4•,1Ntew1i
will be on Wednesday , :;11:.;::-:.'::'c':::;'C:-.. : •••11•••• •• •t1o111t•111o "''" 11
January Zl, 1982 al lO:OOAM tor• ,_1911 111 emu.,,..,..., ,,., ;',~~.:,:M!!. 5~1'.!.!:.1.;
at St. John Vlanney Catholic .. ,., aoy•1 ••••" "''" 0111•11 "'° E. c.it ... f'I«•. Apt. H·ll, c.1ty Church. Interment services •1c1c ... ..,. •• .,.. Sc""""' .. _..., or ,_.....,_, c:-t11 ., orMtt ......
a• HolySepulcher Cemeteru 81'"1'· •ov • 81•"' sc11w1n11 ot CIMINMl411. • . '· Sc:remlllltt 9kYc;le, 9oy'1 ltecli Huffy TM ..,..,,.,, to lit tr-~,.. la Services under the direction cr11INr 111<.,cte, ...,., o,_ 1c11w11111 ... ,._. 1r1 ~" .. 1 All '*' 111 i4I BaJt.z.Beqeron Smith & It Spd. lk,.c•~tot'• 11ec11 ""'!'t. Jr ... .L..!!~--~.,,_..
Tuthill Westcl~rr Chapel ;~t~:=,i:c:;!<~':.' !r,';: ~~o~~o~:: Mortuary or Costa Mesa. (),. .. ,. ,...,,., su,,.rey l lCY< ... *''" .. ,...Vie°""-.... 2. Clly
648·9371. ScHter, hrflllHtd, 1)4tld Celtt•f ef N_,..,.. Wdl, County of 0r.,.., LASKOW Wofflllt ......... Oeld -Sii-...... , C..lflll'lll,t.
AL ERT LASK OW e .. '"41.............. '"' .... -1re111l•r wllt •• B • NOTICS IS 'URTHeR OIVIH tfltl c_,,..... "'or ~ ... ,. .. , ..., resident or lrvlnf', Ca. "11e -.....,.. -,........ "'' .. "..,_.,, ,.., •• tt:• ...... et Passed away on Janu1ry 24, _......., ... """"'w!Wll-won•N MUTUAL e1c.-ow
1982 He l5 survived bu hl1 m '"' ........,. • •tc•• " coo. Aftll: Merit"' -.. .......... • ' lflit ...et<t, .. l"t. eMr9tl INll Wflt -........ 1t 1•1 $. YorM ltretl, wlle Lllllan. Services wlll be 111 IM f!Mlr, tt...,. •-·or 111 ... 1u1i.. "'• TllllClll,cetlfwllle .... held on Tuesday, January cttr of e... ..., 111 M11<11 c-.,.. T~ .. '"' .... ,., tMlfll cte1M1 26 1982 at HarbOr Lawn ~vt111111•MN«P11t•1<-•len 111 t11e _,..,...,.,.•,.,...It ' . ...,._ .............. -.... ,.~,,,.., Chapel. Sttvlca under lh• .,..._:.._..,,,_._ · '-'•• .. -••Tr_..,_, dir ection o f Harbor "LNUH ell ....... _...,....,._..,...
l.awn·Mounl Ollv• Mortuary a.11 ,...IClt .., "" ,..,.,...,..._ ,., ... oett ~
0, C·Otla M-· 540-55M "'*.._. Orlllll OM• 0et1r ,.,,.., YHr• •": -.. ... LCO. • ,,..._.,.,, ._ .,. ... , J-y '· •• "' ll ~ ...... , ••
FRANCIS K. WILCO X, 'f'nd what
UOl·ltl2. Franclt 'II .
1
Dolb-l'lkllCl.,.lfltd1.
A~•lll'W*' ,., ....
'"''-'"'i•~ i..w ••-Prt .....
W1.J•1"''-· Tr•,ft•
SlmcES
M'H,...t>lr"'1UI'\
OOLOYMlMT &
mPAIATltfl ................... ,.., . .,....
M 'tll'•"'r4• ......... ..-..,... 'ii. t
lfflCMAllllSf --"'"'(tn ..... ,..f'tttJ\ t •• , ... ,-4tW,..,.. ...
l 4ii0 0... .,.,.,.,(,..
t'\.Ml(tin c., • ._ .. ~ llonn Mo.iwMW (.et.A\ ""..,.. l.l\NGl''S ........ , ... ~.~
M1w-tOdf9Y<i. ¥. •fll•trf M~ .. ltu.lrWfn'l'lh ofr~ tVfn • t.Ja ... ., .....
c.~~'!C.: ........ (' ...... ~··N-dl K..# ~~.O...tt••• """"' WTS &MMINE
£llllPllENT
w..,.. Metlct: THE ~EAL
ESTATERS All real estate ad·
verllaed In tbla newapaper is subject to
the Federal Fair Hou•· ---------1 ina Act ol lMI which C....-UVIM61
m1k• it ille11I to •d· Tired of yard work ? verdae "any preference, "'...,. a new Ufe atvle? lln\ltalion, or dis· ,_,.. ' crimlnation bued on You will love thll Im·
I II · maculate 3 Bdrm COii· race, co or, re 11on , domlnlum . Discover aex, or national oriain. .._ ..... ~ It ... ould be for or an lnttntlon to make ..,... "' ...
.-acwsm -HAllOI vn ·
First time offered. Qulel park-like
setting. Huge rear yard 179 ft wide . Rm
for paddle tennis and pool, or great for
an orchard. Picturesque cul de aac
street. 3 bdrms and Family Rm .
$379,500 including land. See anytime.
644-4910
WISLIY M. TAYLOI CO .. UALTOU
21115-.......... ~
M'_r#.,.'POIT-CM!, M.I. '44o4tl !
any such preference, you to ave 1 carefree
llmltatlon1 or dis· Ufe for only SlU.950. --------criminatlon.' C NOW, MIWLY MAllllDI . ... ........... .......................
>Hll ---
1bls newspaper will not ltnowinf IY accept any advertising for real estate which Is In viola· tionollhe law.
BtlOIS: AdTtrtfaen .... ~ ...... .., ... ...,.... .... CclMFIXEI
$225.000 Uniq ue beach cottage
needs paint. carpet and
ima&inauon! Excellent location Motivated
owner will help finance Walk to beach! Hurry.
call 673·~
You will be dellahted to
et11.enlin your friends ln
that youth oriented com· 'munlty with 111 the
amenities. pool, tennis, lake and a better wa y of
ure to start your family You will love the Oak
plank entry and thick spice brown ('arpeLs. art gallery walls. S197,SOO. IYOWMll >e ---------.... mo --
,..,.. .... ~.n.
DAILY PILOT•-• Wlllty fw ... fint
ltlcorrtct huertloa -,.
:: ........... w. ... . ................. ; ... . THE REAL
ESTATERS
!:! "-rd I 002 IB.OW MAR Kn! ~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,. 4 bdrm home in Costa
MM HEAM HOUSE I Mesa Won 't last at
WITH CH "'IM' Sl.20.000 I \'r home war· • !"" • , ranty oWner.ass1sted You .II love 1t here. Am emu. Call 979 ~370 Dlglish Tudor style. lov ·
ely tree lined stre~t. LL$'rATE pride or ownership fl"t neighborllood and an as· sumable loan or $14,000 REAL TORS al 1211', interest Fu II
prire on this 3 Bdrm 2 ST ART SMART
bath doll house is IMCOSTA MESA
Slot. . Call 646·7171 Assume $81.000 '" loans
-Bltlfs Lease option 2 br.
wide greenbelt. $139,500
Bkr, 644·0134.
... ;
TIJPW .,.EIMS" Beaulirul triplex near :.~ South Coast Plan
Owner will cauy finanr·
-1ng al 12•,. P rice !': S21118,000. Exrellenl . ex· :: cellenl location <.:a II
~-·Ml ~ E •DESERTED
•tO I •IARGAIM : MesaVerde'sflnest! Va
:; I cant, owner wants out!
-Large J Bdrm. 2 bath
: home. Fam ily room.
-brick fireplace. quiet I tree·llned street Close
to shopping. call now.
:: S46-2313 t ~rnitt1 1
..... -HAllOl llDGE
::: An exquisite offering
::: Elegant & spachious 3
1 tt• bdrm + family ome ...
::: ~e~s~meo;'~a:~t,•::i;~
-coastline. ocean & night
al Sl32 mo Family room
features coiy fireplace~
J large bdrms Sparkl· in& clean condition Only
'"'·""' C•~ '"U t!Wt~
.,. ........ I Cele ), •Hkl a. I
' 175·55 .. :.J!)'
SO MERS ~;T ··1\",
Ot'hghtful 2 Rr 1·ondo
close to So Coast Plaza
& airport indust rial area Beaut1rully de· eoratt'd. Great starter home $147.950 7SI 3191
COLE Of 11awl'Ot'T MAL TORI
uuLc-•M•r· c-Ml-
.75.5511
LA9UISTA
$133.000
A great oprortun11y prired we l 17.c-l ow market Owner wants
fast sale & will help
finance. 3 Br 13• Ba. charming floo rp lan .
751-3191
675-3411
m-631-1266 We have a brand new Vu
phone al RE/MAX and
we art> loolunl( forward to assisting our heanng
impaired friends with
their real estutt> needs
call Anne Mar(;asland.
agt . between 9·5.
'ITV 631·1266
ISLAND'S MOST CHARMING SGL RES.
3 bdrm + loft, Frnicla
doors & windows. 'iaelol appointments tbruou~
214 Amethyst. Open Sat
~~=~ ~~~
MEWPOITHeTS Custom near new a goraeous lhruoul Cape
COO 4 Bdrm . family rm,
formal dining rm, • brick frplcs, 3 deckl
w ocean peek $46S,OOO 6 terms.
. JACOBS REALTY
67M'70
HaH• ~ ou rt>all toc1lly 's
Cl~s1f1l'(i Ads• If not .
b\OU n· m1ssmi: lhl' best uri:ains m town 1
HARBOR RllliE -FIDOI MANOI
110 YU OF ..,. Oc.-I "'1Jil .......
M19Atlt_,..., I .... •• .....
tWa 5700 14 ft. retld1ue ...... .._
wltta 4 bed. .,_,, .._. .... r&.
....... t.L ra _,:::er: ..... Mite_.. llapl••· tw I .,... ....... Ii•• .. al ... fw ...
pertk...,. ......... ,, • tit. 1M1t tr..._ of tllh Lo.is XIV W..-.._.
UJ00.000 ....
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC
RI.At ESHTf
14 .,, w l "'" tt .. ~ N,.,..,.~1 A.• ... h
6Jl-1400
c1-. M.01011 Aw
li•tt-w l.Lmd
'1U ...
mE
110111 ILlllS ca.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
llG CAMYOM
Ughts. Prestige, com· ::;: fort, lu.x.ury & security
:;; Reduced. now S6tl5.000.
-10wner financing>. Agt. = ~5660. --=: SMIWON S·
VllWTOWMHOMIS I Master suites. View of
Ocean & Night ll&bt$.
~el Area. Parks, open
• spaces. $137 ,000. :<Int
Fin. Hal or Pat Agts
7Sl·990S, 673· 7300
New Lis ting -Beautifully
Upgraded Dover Unit -Single
Story 2 Bedrm 2 Bath + Den -
Bright. Cheerful Decor -Special
Wall Coverings -Shows Like A
Model Owner Will Carry
Financing -Call For Appl To
Show. You Are Invited To Inspect.
$425.000.
®
Sl0,000 OWM!
FIXEI! Bar11aln! 3 Bdrm 2 bath. pool! Owner extremely rrolivated ! $118.500 total
price Call for more de·
talla. 546-2313
THE "REAL
ESTATE RS
:;: o.,,..,._.., for s•
mi • 4J Linda Isle · Newj>ort ~ Beach Custom :l~ waterfroot home ·
11~ priced far below market ~ ror qllck sale. MAI ap.
::: pralul S4.4 million ·
r1• Reduced to only S3.6 :: mllllon. Seller will carry
YT• 30yu.r f111ancin& It lO':t-. ~~ Room for 3 larae yachu.
11• Indoor/outdoor pooltspa :: with retractable roof. ~~ Underaround wine
ru• cellu. Segarate auest liiiilliiiiii••--•
:: AND mai ·, quarters. i~c "'ILE
t111 World's most romantic ,.....'""" "'
. --
:: master suite overlook· Localed in prestigious
;: in& entire hubor. S9Y&lus. this 3 Br 2 Ba
m1 Broker consideration. with formal dining room
To aee call Rick, Bkr. and family room has _ mneo-72921nyUme. fabulous mountain and
dty liaht views Good financlnc ortered by motivated owner. -.i • .. -····---··-... -· ... ··--·····-· ..... -... =~ r. ,.I j e ••'f' · I : -''° I· : -,. {.. I
5 Busine~~~en :
: If you art do i ng I ~ b11•1nt•• under o
: Flctlttotu Buaiuu
:;: -.ornt p are rtqtdrtd
ctd 000
RC ~-tyk)rCt)
COMt•'CIAL 2 atorel, t block to ocean
m~ down. Owoer will
cany baluc1. IZ65.000. .... ..,~ .. .....
•'1~1 ....
·--.......... ,.
RESIOEHTt4l REAl ESTATE SERVICES
. f#o POI OHi CDM
Live happily ever after in this cozy
owners unit & receive rent on the
attractive 2BR + den rear unit.
Soth for just $289,500. A.5$umable
loans too!
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
bv low f8"'1ntU olld
Pro/tssfoM ·Codt. Stt ------iimm•tf'!1'00 le l2Ull lo../ . I flCllllOllf Bt1tlllfU
MACNAB · JWWE __
To pl1ce )'OUf messaae before the rttdla1pubUc, --·
Nomt S1011mtnl ·and
Ila llf U pu bh•lttd . f ~r
/owr "°"*"''w IOHlcl.
Wt al '"' DAil. Y
Pll.01 CGft Mlp '°"" boc". CGU tlw L£GA4 .
F• Ad Actila Clla ..., Plllt
AeAlTY
HA ..... Beautltul "Kw·
inatan'' wtth panoramic view • BR + fam rm. Great ftDllldq. DallY Pllot
Cl•tntd. 941.wr1
Df PARTM£NT °' ~---••lluHJJI Sit. JU /ot . ,.,.,.,, .,.,., ...
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0 H A N (, l U H N I Y t A l I F 0 H N I A ;,> 5 CE N TS
-Irvine-Woman
'rescliellfrom
fire in condo
By JOHN NEEDHAM
0t ... o.ii, '*' s-
An Irvine woman was listed in
critical condition today at UCI
Medical Center's burn unit after
being plucked from her burning
condominium during tbe ear1y
morning hours by a UC Irvine
student.
Patricia Marsha ll , 28. was
discovered trapped inside her
home at 14 Claret al about 1
a.m. today by Steve De Salvo.
23, and a com panion, Sonia
Gerlitz.
O r ange Cou n ty Fire
Depar tment spokesm a n J im
Sims said De Salvo a nd Miss
Gerlitz were driving past the
condominium block, located in
Woodbrid,ge, when they sa w
Mi ss Marshall's residence in
flames.
Sims said the couple stopped
their vehicle a nd obtained fire
ex tinguis h e r s ins id e the
complex. They then tried lo
enter the burning residence to
put out l he fi re. but were driven
back by fl ames.
Si m s said De S al vo, a
biological science senior at UC
Irvine, the n he ard Miss
Mars hall calling out for help
from inside the condom inium,
now nearly engulfed in flames,
and re-entered the building.
De Salvo told fire fighters he
found Miss Ma rsh a ll nearly
unconscious in t he upstairs
ha llway, where she had taken
shelter a fter being unable to
escape the burning building
down the stairs .
Sims said De Salvo carried
Miss Ma r s hall o ut o f the
condominium and onto the front
lawn, where she was treated by
par amedics and taken to UCI
Medical Center in Orange.
A hospital s pqkesman sa id
Miss Marshall is suffering from
second and third-degree bums.
Sims said a neighbor of Miss
Ma rshall's. Lewis Sangerman.
a lso atte mpted to e nter t he
residence to search for other
occupants. However , Sims said
<See FIRE, Page A2>
FIRE SCENE This was t he remains of an I rvim•
condominium a fter fin' gu_lled the str uctur e. triticall~·
o.11y ... ..,. _..., aro.r11 !'...._
burning its occupant. y,•ho w&.1 s carried to saf<>t~· h~· two
passl'rsb~· who foug ht their wc/~· throu_gh t he f1&.1mt•s.
Nuclear plant mish'ap spews ·radioactive steam
ROCHESTER. N.Y. <AP > -
Ra dioactive stellm was released
into the atmospher e for 93
m inutes today when a generator
t ube ruptured at the Ginna
nuclear power plant in Ontario,
N.Y .. ofricials said . Som e
workers were evacuated and the
reactor was shut down.
A ·:site emergency." the
second high est nuc l ea r
emergency classification. was
declared at the plant, about 18
m iles northeast of Rochester
near the shore of Lake Ontario.
There is ""no danger to the
public at this time,'" said a
utility spokesman.
The plant "a ppears to be
fairl y stable ," s aid Gary
Sanborn. s pokesman for the
N u clea r R eg ul a t o r y
Commission. The reactor was
being cooled with extra water ,
he said .
Ra diation was re leased into
the atmosphere from 6:09 a .m."
to 7:42 a .m. PST, and the wind
.-was blowing from the northwest
at 14 mph, the National Weather
Ser vice reported.
No residents were evacuated
but non-essential personnel were
ordered from the plant site, said
Richa rd Sullivan, spokesman for
the Rochester Gas & Electric
Co.. which operates the plant
named Co t form e r board
chairman Robert E. Gi nna.
M o n roe County P ubli c
Rel at ions Officer Clar en ce
Bassett s aid the release had
been "isolated and ter minated.··
"'Neithe r s u r face
cont ami nation nor further
ra d iological releases wer e
ex p ect ed lo occur." said
Sullivan. He said radiation
checks showed the "dose rates"
to be no higher tban background
level. or what could be expected
in nature.
About 45,000 people live within
10 miles or the plant. Rochester.
the third largest city in New
Yor k state, has a population of
a bout 300,000, a nd it wa'"S
snowing at l he tim e of lite
incident, the weather service
said.
Sanborn said the t ube leak in
t h e s t ea m ge n erat o r "ls
apparently leaking al about 7$
gallons per minule." Ginna ~
a h ist o r y of stea m tu be
problems. accordin g to records.
Sanborn said the reactor wu
being cooled with extra water.
called "makeup water," ana
ap)>arently was not overheating.
A reactor coolant pump, shut
during the initial em e rgency,
had been r esla rte!i a nd was
aidin~ in the procedure, he said.
49er fans 'violent'
NEWPORT'S NUMBER TWO? This S7
million mans ion on exclusive Harbor
Is land is said to be Newport Beach"s
Delly ...... -"CJMrtff ....
s econd highest price d home It has nin('
bedrooms. a pri\"ale beach. a lighthouse
and a f orcst.
Home price ceiling lifts
Newpor t Beach estate number two at $7 million
By STEVE MARBLE
Of Ille Delly l"llet Stll"
The house price derby in Newport Beach
used to be pretty simple.
The top spot on the list belonged to John
Wayne or rather his former bayfront house
which sold for about SS million.
But that was several years and several
million doll ars ago.
The top spot now is he ld by Howard
Ahmanson 's Harbor Island estate, a huge
s pread bum in the late 1930s for violinist Jascba
e1 e . ,
The Ahmanson mansion takes up an entire
tip of the island and sold for $10 mUIJon.
Real estate ag ents. t bou1 h. now a r e
shooting for the prestige of the No. 2 s pot. Real
estate agent Barbara Aune says s_be hu tbe ne_w.
No. 2.
It's Ernest Kanzler's $7 million wood,
brick and stone mansion on Harbor Island. The :;_ __ .__..,w......,..-lm is located on the 'WO'll• •ad ot tbe
tiny island from the Ahmanson home.
T he place has lta own beach , its own
lighthouse. nine bedrooms and a private forest.
Mrs. Aune. a real estite a1ent for
Macnat>-lrvine, says the place la more like a
castle than a house a nd 11 deslped to look 100
years old. It's actually only 10 yean old.
Kamler, an Jnventor, a mlWonalre and a
bachelor, destined the place himself.
"He didn't even hne a blueprint," Mrs.
Aune explains. "he just sat out on the beach and
drew the plans in the sand and went from
there."
She claims Kanzler is a former student of
the late architect Frank Lloyd Wright.
She says Kanzler also designed and built his
own car. ll was called, not surprisingly, the
"Kanzler Coupe.''
But the house, she says, was his special
project.
She says the two·story, 5,000-square-foot
house is built with planks from an old wooden
aqueduct in Oregon that Kanzler purchased and
ripped apart.
flown in from the East Coast.
Wo rkmen, s he s ays. s pent two years
carving the doors and staircase Inside the
house.
"He felt that Newport was too plastic and
he didn't want all that glitter and gold," says ,
the reaJtor, who sold Kanzler the Up of the
island when lt was little more than a sandy spit
of beach.
'Tile t,..,..h_e_n-·d"""e_s_e_r-te_d,........,i_s,...la-nd til) had been
owned by Newport's pioneer Beek family which
parted with It only after !leeln1 and approvln1
Kanzler's plans.
Mrs. Anne says that Kanzler has now lett
the island because "he likes to move around
and 1ets restless."
She says he's lookinl for another Island.
"It's a special house with a lot of heart In
it," she insists, adding, "and It's 1oin1 to take a
s pecial person to buy lt."
At $7 mUUon, It'll take a lot more than just
"special" to buy it. "'
Stabbings, s hoot ings m a r San Fra ncisco cele bration
SAN FRANC ISCO IAPl -For
the faithful San Francisco 49ers
fans intoxicated with triumph,
the giddy hours after their team
captured Super Bowl X Vl was a
··giant Christmas morning"
t h at. for s ome . turned to
confrontations.
After the 49ers beat the
Cincinnati Bengals 26·21. San
Fr anciscans greeted the first
cha mpionship in their team's 36
years with a street celebration
as jubilant as any since the one
unleashed by the end of World
War II.
2 Ne wport
project s face
council a ction
Newport Beach City Council
members are scheduled tonight
to tangle with two devejopment
controve r sies. bo th havi n g
drawn stiff opposition.
One of these is the SlOO million
New p o rt Ba nnin g R a nc h
project, a proposal to develop an
old s heep ranch with offices.
homes and industrial buildings.
It will be the fifth t ime the
council has tackled this issue .
T h e second ex p ec t e d
controversy on the agenda is the
Newport Center expansion plan.
The council, on a split vote,
a l r e ady has a ppro ve d thi s
project. It resurfaces in a
different light this evening.
(See NEWPORT, Pa.ce A!)
But as the jubilation wore on.
ther e were reportedly several
stabbing and shooting incidents
and police clashed with some of
the thousands of celebrants in a
bottle-throwing melee in the
Nort h Beach section of the city.
Scores were hospitalized with
mostly minor injuries and there
were no fatalities.
A bout 100 people were booked
for investigation of drunkenness
before violence erupted. said
Inspector Joseph Toomey.
"Now-San Francisco is No. 1
in two things -being weird and
football," said Rick Tasker, as
he hung out a car window and
blew on a whistle near the North
Beach intersection of Columbus
Street and Broadway. jammed
with about 6,000 celebrants .
Horns. firecr ackers. sirens
and church bells echoed through
the cit y above the shrieks of
fans. tens or thousands of them.
who poured from bars into the
streets, forcing police to close
off major thoroughfares and
divert buses.
In t he fashion able Union
Street a rea. thousands danced in
the street as a rock band staged
an impromptu concert, playing
··w e Are The Champions" over
and over. Others commandeered
a M unlcipal Railway trolley bus
a nd danced o n top as 49er
s logans were painted on its
·sides.
At Union Square, celebrants
halted the fa med cable cars.
·'There bas been an ongoing
confront atio• for about three
and a half hours bet ween police
department personnel and the
citizenry... said police service
aide Mike Conner today after
the North Beach fracas.
Do ze ns of officers were
di s patc h e d from outsid e
dis tricts t o help quell the
disruption. whic h began to
subside after midnight. he said.
About 40 officers received
m inor injuries. he said. Tooipey
said this morning, however, that
the number of officers injured
SUPER BOWL
COVERAGE -Page C1
may have been much s maller .
'"I r s still a little confusing,"
Toomey said. "Som e of these
guys might have been hurt -
but not too bad -a nd we
haven't got the report ...
In apparently the most serious
p91i ce injury. Sg. Al Bierman's
right arm was broken when be
fell during the bottle-throwing
"and somebody jumpe d on·
him." Toomey said. _
A harried Central Emer gency
H ospit a l dispatche r . who
declined lo give his name, said
there had been half a dozen
shootings and stabbings amid
the celebrations. Another •st.x
were in stable condition after
t reatme n t at Mi ss i o n
E m e r gen cy for s tab b i ngs,
broken bones a n d oth e r
<See ROWDY , Page AZ> ..
DRlllil CDAIT lllT"EI
Low clouds and fog late
t o nig ht a n d Tuesday ·• C~0_..0__.di..,,.•tl;i;-• ~O~l;:;;:;ol.-;S;;;----DH>ming. ¥ariab1~ high c l o ud s a nd coo l er
Tuesday. Lows lonlghl 42
to 52. Highs Tuesday 62 at 'poor' in crash beaches,70inland.
111101 TIDY BOSTON CAP) -A Delta Air
Lines pilot reported conditions
-&---.IWLLiH&\IWD....UtPllin.;i;utUKJl.)'...We~
"poor to nil" 37 minutes before a
Wo r ld Airways Je t hurtled
across It into the sea. the head ot
a federal crash investigation
team said today.
Patricia Goldman, a NaUonal
Transportation Safe ly Board
m ember, heading a team ol 10
lnvesllgators, said the World
Airways DC-10, Flllhl 30
carrying 208 people, was the lut
plane sche duled to use the
Logan Inte rnational Airport
r unway Saturday night before
additional clearing.
"I'm nol certain" whether the
pa o a n warned e
conditions, she said.
The warntn1 came at 6:51
p.m . Saturday from a Delta
D C -8 pilot. who w as not
identified. '.
The plane came to rest' up lo
its wlnls in Boston Harbor after
fallin1 to stop on t.be runway in
free1lnc raln. The plane broke In
two. but no ~ waa kllled or
seriously injured. T he ltl
passengers add 12 cre w <See DC· 1t,.Pa1e AJ)
A mM10er ltitU acc&alm for
BTideahead Re-oislted,"
which re.tumei Ua JJ -port
H N I on telmfton tmdghl.
SH Page IM.
• 1 rvine woman-
res~ued from
fire in condo
By JOHN NEEDHAM
Of Ille O ... y Pllet S'9ff
An Irvine woman was listed in
critical condition today at UCI
Medical Center 's burn unit after
being plucked from her burning
condominium during the early
morning hours by a UC Irvine
s tudent.
Patricia Marshall, 28, was
discover.ed trapped inside her
home at 14 Claret at about l
a.m . today by Steve De Salvo,
23, and a companion, Sonia
Gerlitz.
Qr a ng e Co unty Fire
Department spokesm an Jim
Sims said De Salvo and Miss
Gerlltz were driving past the
condominium block, located in
Woodbridge, whe n they saw
Miss Marsha ll's residence in
fl ames.
Sims said De Salvo, a
biological science senior at UC
Irvine, then h eard Miss
Marshall calling out for hel p
from inside the condomln.ium,
now nearly engulfed in flames,
a.nd re-entered the building.
De Salvo told fire fighters he
found Miss Marsha ll nearly
unconscious in the upstairs
hallway, where she had taken
shelt er after being unable to
escape the bur ning building
down the stairs.
Sims said Oe Salvo carried
Mi ss M a r :s h a ll out o f the
condominium and onto the front
lawn, where she was treated by
paramedics and taken to UCI
Medical Center in Orange.
A hospital s pokes man· said
Miss Marshall is s uffering from
second and third-degree burns.
'•
•
Ylll lllEllll llllY 1'11111 ..
OHAN GE-COlJNl 1 L A L If OHNIA ~'>CE NT S
Sims said the couple stopped
their vehicle and obtained fire
extingui s h e r s ins ide the
complex. They t hen tried to
enter the burning residence to
put out Jlle fire, but were driven
back by flames
Sims said a neighbor of Miss
Marshall's, Lewis Sangerman,
a lso attempted to enter the
r esidence to search for other
occupants. However , Sims said
<See FIRE, Page AZ>
FIRE SCENE This was the r emains of an Irvine
condom inium a rter fire gutted the struC'ture. critiC'a lly
0..ty ,,_ ,_._., •ICMMll[....-
burning its occupant. who was carried to safe ty by lwo
passers by who fought their way lhrou~h the flames.
Nuclear plant mishap spews radioactive steam
ROCHESTER~ N.Y. <AP> -
Burs ts of radioac tive steam
w ere release d into the
atmosphere today for a total or
three minutes when a generator
tube ruptured at the Ginna.
nuclear power plant in Onlario,
N . Y .. officials said. Some _
workers were evacuated and the
reactor was shut down.
A "site e m ergency," the
·s e c o n d h i g h e s t n u c I e a r
e m ergency classification. was
declared at the plant, about 18
miles northeast of Rochester .
near the shore of Lake Ontario.
There is "no danger to the
public at this time," said a
utility spokesman.
The plant "appears t o be
fa irly stable," sa id Gar y
Sanborn, spokesman for the
N ucl ea r llegulat-o~y
Commission.
T he reactor was being cooled
with extra water, he said.
Radiation was released into
the atmosphere in five-second
puffs , totaling three mioutes'
worth. according to Jack Bryan,.
public information officer for
the s tate Disaster Preparedness
Com mission . T h e re l eases
occurred over one hour, said Jay
Dunkleberger, director of the
Bureau of Nuclear Operations
for the state energy office.
~ Earlier, tM-National Weather
Ser vice s a id" rad iation w as
released into the atmos phere
from 7:09 a.m. to 7:42 a.m. PST,
and attributed that information
to the state OUice of Disaster
Preparednes8' Tbe wlftd wa1
blowirul from the northwest at 14
mph, the weather service said.
No residents were evacuated
but non-essential personnel were
ordered from the plant site. said
Richard Sullivan. spokesman for
the Rochester Gas & Electric
Co., which operates the plant
rnf'm ed ror ror mer board
chairman Robert E. Ginna.
Monroe Cou nty Public
Relations Office r Clarence
Bassett said the release had
been "isolated and terminated."
Neither surface contamination
nor further radiological releases
were expected to occur, said
Sulli van_.,..He s aid r adiation
checks sflowed the "dose rates"•
to be no higher than background
level, or what could be expected
in nature.
About 45,000 people live within
10. ml fes o(lhe plant. Rochester,
with 300,000 people, is third
largest city in New York state.
The leak was in the primary·
pressured water system. which
ca u sed som e radioactive
m aterial to get i nto the
secondary steam system and
caused the secondary system to
have a pressure buildup, saJd
Barbara Thom as-Nob l e,
spokeswoman for t he s tate
health department.
The pressure forced the
em ergency release valve lio o,1m'-...
Co let out the pressure, she said.
Dur ing that process, she said,
the radiation escaped.
T h e second ary syst em
normally contains rela tively low
pressur~ non-radioactive water
which turns w steam from heat
from the primary system.
49er_fans 'violent' __
~~~_._S_t-abbings, shoo~ings mar San Francisco celebratfon
NEWPORT'S NUMBER TWO? -This S7
million m a nsion on exclusive Harbor
Is la nd i~ said. to be Newport Beach's
~ .... ,_..,Ola __
second highest priced home. It has ninr
bedrooms. a private beach. a lighthouse
and a forest.
SAN FRANCISCO (APJ For
the faithful San Francisco 49ers
fa ns intoxicated with triumph,
the giddy hours after their team
captured Super Bowl XVI was a
·'g iant Chris tmas morning"
t hat , for some, turned to
confrontations.
After the 49e rs beat the
Cincinnati Bengals 26·21, San
Franciscans greeted the first
championship 1n their team's 36
years with a street celebration
as jubilant as any since the one
' unleashed by lhe end of World
War II
2 Newport
·projects face
couheil action
But as th!'! jubilation wore on.
there were reportedly several
stabbing and shooting incidents
and police clashed with some of
the thousands of celebrants in a
bottle-throwi ng melee in the
North Beach section of the city.
Scores were hospitalized with
mostly minor injuries and there
were no fatalities
A bout 100 people were booked
for investigation of drunkenness
before violence erupted. said
Inspector Joseph Toomey.
"Now San Francisco is No. 1
in two things -being weird and,
football." said Rick Tasker, as
he hung out a car. wind,aw and
blew on a-whistle neartne North
Beach intersection of Columbus
Street and Broadway. jammed
with about 6,000 celebrants.
Ho rns, firecracke rs, sirens
and church bells echoed through
the city above the shrieks or
fans. tens of thousands of them,
who poured from bars foto the
streets, forcing police to close
off major thoroughfar es and
divert buses.
department personnel and the
citizenry," s aid police service
aide Mike Conner today after
the North Beach fracas
Dozens of o fficers were
di s patche d from outs ide
districts to he lp quell the
disr upt ion, which began to
subside after midnjght. he said.
A bout 40 officers received
minor injuries, he said. Toome~
s aid this morning, however, thal
the number of offi cers injured
SUPER BOWL
COVERAGE -Page C1
-.l1 + .. may have been much smaller.
"It 's still a little c_onfusing,''
Toomey said. "Some of · these
guys mjght have been hurt -
but not loo bad -a nd we
haven't got the report."
In apparently the most serious
oolice injury, Sg. Al Bierman's
r ight arm was broken whe.n -
feil during the bottle-throwint
"and somebody jumped oo
him,'· Toomey said.
t Home price c~iling lifts
Newport Beach City Council
members are scheduled tonight
lo tangle with two development
con troversies. both having
drawn stiff opposition .
One of these is the $100 million
Newport Banning Ran c h
project, a proposal to develop an
old sheep ranch with offices,
homes and industrial buildings.
In the fashionable Union
Street area. thousands danced in
the street as a rock band staged-
an impromptu concert, playing
"We Are The Champions" over
and ove.r. Others comm andeered
A harried Central Emergenc)'
Hos pital dispatcher, who
declined to give his name, safd
th ere had been half a dozen
shootings and stabbings amid
the celebrations. Another•six
were in stable condition after
t r eat m e nt at Mi ss ion
Emergency for s t a bbings,
b r oken bones a nd othe r
I [ Newport Beach estate number two at $7 million
By STEVE MARBLE
Of llM D ... y ...... Ste"
The house price derby in Newport Beach
used to be pretty simple.
The top spot on the list belonged to John
Wayne -or rather his former bayfront house
which sold for about $5 million.
But that was several years and several
million dollars ago.
The top spot now is held by Howard
Ahmanson's Harbor Island estate, a huge
----'!'pread tluilUn..the. late tn>s for vioUAiat-Ja~ha
Heifetz.
The Ahmanson mansion takes up an entire
lip of the island and sold for $10 mUUoo.
R eal estate agents, thou1h, now are
shooting for the prestige or the No. 2 spot. Real
estate agent Barbara Aune saya s he ha1 the new
No. 2.
It's Ernest Kanzler's $7 mllllon wood,
brick and atone mansion on Harbor llland. Tbe
one-acre lot la located on the oppoatte end of the
~~-tf--tttr\O'"t!tlmMH'nHn-tl~Mrlrnslllllllnhome.
The place baa its own beach, its own
ll1htbouse, nioe bedrooms and a private forest.
Jira. Aune, a real eatate a1ent for
Macna~{rvifte, HY• the ~ la more Uke a
castle than a home and is dellped to look 100
yeara old. It'• actually only 10 years old.
Kamler, an tnventor, ~ mlllk>Mlre ...,s a
bachelor, desiped tbe placeblmself.
"He didn't even have a blueprint," lln.
Aune uplalnl, "he just Ht out on the beach and
drew the plans ln the sand and went from
there."
I -I
She claims Kanzler is a former student of
the late architect Frank Lloyd Wright.
She says Kanzler a lso designed and built his
own car. It was called, not s urprisingly, the
"Kanzler Coupe."
But the house, she says, was his special
project.
She says the two-story, 5,000-square-foot
house is built with planks from an old wooden
aqueduct in Oregon that Kanzler purchased and ri ped apar:t.. __
The slate used on the roof, she says, was
flown in from the East Coast.
Workmen, s he s ays, spent two yean
carving the doors and staircase lnside the
bouse.
"He felt that Newport was too plastic and
he didn't want all that glitter and gold," says
the •realtor, who sold Kan.zler the Up of the
island when it was little more than a sandy spit
of beach. .
--'<l'fH~1hen dasert:ed tslHd tip had been
owned.by Newport's pioneer Beek family which
parted with it only after ahing and approvin1
Kanaler'a pla.ria.
Mra. Anne aaya that Kamler hu now left
the island because "be IUrea to move around
a_nd 1eta reatleu."
She HY• he's looklnt for another laland.
"It's a special house with a lot of heart in
it," abe lnlista. addlna. "and it'a toln1 to take a
special penon to buy it."
At f1 milUoni It'll take a lol more than just
"special'' to buy t . ·
'
It will be the fifth time the
council has tackled this issue.
T h e second ex pected
controversy on the agenda is the
Newport Center expansion plan.
The council, on a split vote,
aiready has approved this
project. It res urfaces in a
different light thjs evening .
<See NEWPORT, Paice AZ>
a MunicipaJ Railway trolley bus
a nd danced on top as 49er
s logans wer e painted on its
sides.
At Union Square, celebrants
halted the famed cable cars.
"There has been an ongoing
confrontation for about three
and a half hours between police
Runway conilitions
'poor' in crash
BOSTON (AP> -A Delta Air runway Saturday night i:>efore
Lines pilot reported conditions ad~l~lonal cleac;tn,1 ...
<See ROWD~, Page A2)
ORAllil CUil 1111-11
Low clouds and fog late
tonight and Tuesday
--mor'mn . aria e 1
c loud s · and cooler
Tuesday. Lows tonight 42
to 52. Highs Tuesday 62 at
beaches, 70.inland.
·liSIDI TDllY
on a Boston airport runway were I m not cert.am whether the 'P"-~t?-minutes before-.--pllot had been "••med of-the-·
World Airways jet hurtled conditions, she said.
A r~ hGa occkaim /or
"Bticlubead_Revi ''
which resumea if• 11-pori
aeries on te~ tonlgM.
See Page EM. across it into the sea. the bead of The warnln1 came at 6:59
a federal crash investi1atlon p. m · Sa~urday from a Delta
te am said today. D C -8· pilot. who was not
identified.
Patricia Goldman, a NaUonaJ
Transportation Safety Board
m ember, headin1 a team of 10
inveaU1ators, said the World
Airways DC·lO , Flitht 30
carryinc 208 people, was the lut
plane scheduled to use the
Loaan International Alri>ort
The plane came to rest up to
its .wtnp lta Boltoa Harbor after
falllnl to s top on the runway ln
treealna rain. The plane brolr• ln
two, but no one was ldll41d or
aerioualy Injured. The tH
pa11en1ers and 12 crew
(See DC-11, Pase AZ>
t JI
..
t
' I~
I
Orange Coaet DAIL V PILOT/Monday, January 25, 1982
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Office at home
rulings eased
fThU ii ttw rizth of a 10.port ,me, °" hoto to Mave °"
your 1911 income tan1.J
The ta.x ruJes on deducting an office at home are
Lough on taxpayers. But last year, the Tai Court -
and even the Internal Revenue Service -Loot a
more liberal view on some or the requirements.
One or the tough rules to meet for an
office-at-home deduction has been that a "portion of
the dwelling unit'' must be used "exclusively" for
business.
The IRS bas treated th1s as meanin& that an
entire room had to be devoted solely for business, or
at least a portion of a room physically separaled
from the rest of the room. For this reason, it barred
an office-at·home deduction by a college professor
who prepared bis lectures, etc., in his bedroom,
which had a desk, chair, file cabinets and bookcases,
but also a dresser and bed in another area of the
room. The JRS claimed that the room bad a split use;
therefore it failed to qualify for an office·at·home
deduction.
But a 1981 Tax
Court ease pointed
out that the "portion
of " t he build ing
didn 't necessarily
mean a separate
room. The professor
had s hown that a
separate part was
SYLVIA PIUll ~
used exclusively and on a regular basis as hls office.
Therefore it qualified for an ortice·at-home
deduction.
This can be good tax news for many of you who
use part of a room in your home for an office .
Another requirement is that the office at home
must be the principal place of business of the
taxpayer. Here again, the IRS had taken the tou&h
view that an individual can have only one principal
place of business, even though he carries on two
separate businesses from two different offices.
Thus, if an individual had one principal place of
business in an office in the city, while he had a
different secondary business that be ran from an
office at home, the office at home couldn't qualify,
even though it was the principal place of business for
the secondary business .
But in 1981, the IRS relented. It agreed that an
office at home that is the principal place of any trade
or business, even a secondary one, qualifies as a
principal place of business.
Thus the individual taxpayer could deduct the
cost of his office at home to run his sideline business.
The r.ullng is logical and favorable lo taxpayers.
If a residence or a vacation home is .rented out,
the expenses allocable to the r entaJ period can be
aeaucted W1tficerlain limitations. Buf if the rental is
to a member of the family, the lRS holds that the
owner is stiU viewed as using the dwelling unit for bia
non·deductible personal use -even though he is paid
a fair rental charge by the relative.
Tomonow: Baslaess •ato espeues.
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