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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-01-26 - Orange Coast Pilot* * • • • • .. IRlll11 CUii Ylll HllHDll llllY l'Aftl - TUESDAY. JANUARY 26 . 1982 OHAN GE COUNTY . C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS / Reagan won't hike taxes . ~ ......... AUTOGRAPH L. Bruce Laingen. former charge d'affaires at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran . signs an autograph for a girl at West Point where l7 former ·hostages met for a reunion where they first set foot on American soil after their ordeal. Federal spending cuts due WASHINGTON <AP > Pres ide nt Reagan will tell Congr-ess a nd t he American people tonight Lhat he will not seek higher taxes, but that states and local governments will have to take over 40 to 80 federal programs totaling $30 billion, well-placed sources said today. At the same time, the sources said, the president will call for creation of a fund. financed from existing excise and luxury taxes and . perhaps, ne w windfall profits taxes. that will be distributed to the states to finance th ei r new responsibilities. Several sources, asking for anonymity, said that tbe programs are all now financed and administered in whole or in part by the federal government. The sources, who were briefed by White House official• Monday, said the president wil11 pro pose that guarantees be' Workers return to nuke plant Plant·in New York state called safe.after leak ONTAR IO , N.Y. (AP > - Workers began returning to the Ginna nuclear plant today following an e m e r gency shutdown that was ordered when ~ pipe failure released puffs of r adioactive s team into the atmosphere. A spokesman for Rochester Gas & Electric Co .. the plant's owner. said temperatures and pressures in Ginna ·s nuclear reaetor gradually were lowered overnight by venting to 340 degr ees and 340 pounds per square inch. Thal figure was low enough to allow most workers to retu(n to the plant site at this s mall village, 16 miles northeast of Rochester. "We're still cooling down in the conventional mode," said the spokesman Ri chard Peck. "We could have switched over to the plant's residual cooling system at 350 degrees but this is the way our operators wanted to do it." Peck said that by later today the plant should reach a cold shutdown -dissipation of most heat in the reactor. "It'll be pretty much normal operations," he said. "We've got paperwork, a lot of reports to get out imm ediately. plus normal plant maintenance." 011111 caw 1111111 · Chance of s howers 20 -~-percent Wednesd11 . tonight 52 inland, 56 along coast. Highs Wednesday 58 at beaches. 65 inla~d . lillOI TDOAY A Florido woman began writing to fNndl, relative• Cl1ld clliWt'm in 1911 becouae J the kM10 1ddt like to gel .. ~ .... , --mcril. NOtll w iorittt io 2.000 "pen pala." Page A8. 111{1 . ( , A ocheSh!r• Ontario • Buff<1lo . NEW YORK PA . THREAT Map locales Ontario. N .Y .. where s team tube ruptured in nuclear power plant. Cleanup of 11 ,000 gallons of radioactive water inside the plant, and examination or the affected steam generator will await cold shutdown, he said. "We are convinced the plant is sa f e," said RG&E Vice Pres ident J ohn Oberlies. ''Things at the pl ant are progressing very well. We know it is stable." A "site em e rgency" was declared Monday shortly after one or more of the 3,260 lubes in the generator ruptured at 6:28 a.m. PST and pressure in the reactor dropp~d . Status was downgraded to "alert" 10 hours later. A "site emergency " is the ONOFRE WARNING SYSTEM TESTED -A3 second most serious or four nu c l ea r emerge n cy classifications. ''Alert'' is one step lower. ··Everything worked ; that's the real s tory," said RG&E education specialist Frank H. Orienter. "AP the syst ems operated the way they were supposed \.0. Nobody was hurt or killed." O fficials at the Nuclear Regulatory Co mmission in Washington described the incident as minor. although it was the first "site emergency" s ince the natio n 's worst commercial nuclear accident at Three Mil e Is l and n e ar Harrisburg, Pa .. in March 1979. "It might be expensive for the operator to clean up, but in term s o r public h ea lth consequences, it was not very serious," said Harold R. Denton, the agency's director of nuclear reactor regulation. <See NUCLEAR, Page AZ> Court reverses pen a ilea th A state Supr.eme Court reversal of the death penalty for a n . Orange County murderer could mean about 90 other people sentenced to death since 1978 might win si mila r revers!IJs. The state court ruled 6-1 Monday to reverse the death penalty imposed on Marcelino Ramos, a former employee at a Taco Bell restaurant In Santa Ana who killed a co-worker and seriously lnJured another employee. Ramos shot Kathryn Parrott and Kevin Pickrell in the head after makinc them kneel a1atnat a well and pray on June S, 11'11. Ramos and a co-defendant made off wltb $1,000 Ill receipt&. lllla ' Pa{rott died as a result of her gunshot wound. As a result of Monday's ruling, abo ut 90 people sentenced to death since the 1978 Briggs inltlative, which was supported by 72 _P..~rcent of the sta~ voters, might be overturned. Recent U.S. Supreme court decisions "mandate our holding unconstitutional on due process grounds the portion of the l~ statute which requires a penally phase jury to be instructed reaardiftl the 1ovemor'1 power to commute a sentence to life Im pri son ment without • possibility of parole," aaid retired Auoclate Juatlu M atbew Tobriner In a 72·Paa• opinion. (See DEATH, Pe .. Al> I• AP-NBC Poll-----'------------...1..----------- Would· you prefer that President Reagan propose tax increases or federal spending cuts to reduce federal budget deficit? 12•1. Do you think President Reagan should propose tax increases in order to reduce the federal budget deficit? Yes -24% No ti Reagan seeks further budget cuts do you think the cuts should be in defense spending or in non-defense spending? Defense __ 32•1. Spending Cuts ~~~ l11e;. Not Sure I 6% 70% Non-defense-569/e Not Sure m 12% SPENDING CUTS PREFERRED Chart shows how.1.597 adults responded on Jan. 18·19 to an :"ssociatcd Press-NBC News poll about tax increases and budget proposals. written into law requiring that money for specific programs pass directly from the new fund to whatever government will administer a specific program -eliminating t he need for states to create new taxes. during the coming year and that the transfer or responsibilities administration officials Monday that they would be consulted throughout the proposed transition period. CHANNELS 2, 4, 7, 28: One source said that most or the pqrams wpuld be proposed as separate pieces of legislation wou ld not be fully in place until fisca l 1984, which begins in October 1983. The sour ces al so s aid, ' however, that Reagan stm is expected to eliminate federal excise taxes over the long haul • meaning that the source of the <See REAGAN , Page A2> Another source said state, city and county leaders were told by NEWPORT'S NUMBER TWO? This $7 million mansion on exclusive Harbor Is land is said to be Newport Beach's Detty ...... ~ .. ClleftM ~ second highest priced home. Jt has nine bedrooms. a private beach. a lighthouse and a forest. Home price c~iling lifts Newport Beach estate number two at $7 million By STEVE MARBLE Of Ille Delly l"t ... Staff 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 Har or Tsland estate , a huge spread built in the late 1930s for violinist Jascha Heifetz. The Ahmanson mansion takes up an entire tip of the island a nd sold for SlO million. Real estate agents, though, now are shooting for the prestige of the No. 2 spot. Real estate agent Barbara Aune says !he has the new No. 2. It 's Ernest Kan!ler's S7 .million wood, brick and stone mansion on Harbor lllaad..-na.- one-acre lot is located on the oppoei(e end of the tiny island from the Ahmanson home. The place has tu own beach, its own lighthouse, nine bedrooms and a private forest. Mrs. Aune, a real estate a1ent ror Macnab-Irvine, says the place is more like a castle than a house and is desiped to look 100 years old. It's actually only 10 yean old. Kamler, an Inventor, a millionaire af¥1 a bacbeac>r, designed the place himself. "He dJdn 't even have a blueprint," Mrs. Aune explains, "he just sat out on the beach and drew the plana In the sAnd and went from Uiere." 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 surprisingly, the "Kanzler Coupe.·• But the house, she says, was hls special project. She says the two-story, 5,000-aquare-foot house is bulll with planks from an old wooden aquedort in Oregon that Kamler purchased and ripped apart. The slate used on the roof, she says, wu flown in from the East Coast. Workmen, she says, spent two years carving the doors and staircase inside the house. ''He fell that Newport was loo plastic and he didn't want all that &litter and aold," says the realtor, who sold Kamler the Up ol the island when It was little more than a sandy aplt ofbeacn. · ·-- 'the then-deserted island tip had been owned by Newport's pioneer Beek family wblch parted with it only after seeiDC and a.,.,rovtnc Kanaler's plana. Mn. Aune says that Kamler bu now left the island because "he Ukei to move around and aeta restless." She says he's looklnc for another llland. "It's a special house with a lot ol beart ID it,'' she lnallta, addln1•''and it's aotnc to take a special penon to buy it." At S7 miWon, it'll take a lot more than Juat "apeclal" to~ It. • •Orange Co•t DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, January 26, 1982 ! ·~ ~i l. r·ltfli'-• 61 'l!:l:ONTROL ROOM -This is a file photo of the in a cooling s·ystem. Monday. The plant has "Atlinna nuclear power plant control room near been s hut down and a site e m e rgency t}Jlochester . N. Y .. where a st1e_a_m--:-:::tu:-ibec:T"."_er-::;:u::-::p::t=::ed~:::'.':d:'";e~c~l-a~red~.-~P~lf:I~~~~~¥'~-.. ~g· .. -~ :cftNO TEST -Dr. Norman Loomis of Ontario. APW...._... down after radioactive steam was emitted into the atmosphere. -!MN. Y :-: reClds about his neighbor. the Ginna /?hue I ear plant C background l. wh.:.:i.:.c:.:.h....:w~a=s:.....:s.:.:h.::u.:..t -------------------i,tq' ,- ' I -·- Winds batter Northwest More snow, subzero weather keeps East, Midwest on mat 8y TIM ANoclaled Pren The Paclfle Northwe•t WH battered by winds up to eo mpb and rain that threatened to briAa more floodinC and mudlUdea, u Mldweetemera suffered throuth more anow and 1ub1ero tem peraturea. A anowatorm Monday dumped three inches of snow on Chlcaao. and a dusUnc of snow on much of the mid -Atlantic coast compounded travelers' problems on lcy hi1bways. Snow fell on the upper Ohio Valley, the eastern shore of Lake Michigan and the southern shores of Lake Erie and Ontario. Temperatures dipped well below zero from North Dakota through the upper Missiasippi Valley. ·'It's kind of an endless battle," uld Vlcld Jacobi, a aberiff'a dlapatcber In Polter Couoly ln eutem South Dakota, where blowinl anow waa clOliDC hlcbwaya Just behind the plows. Six re.ldenU Of Garibaldi ln northern Ore1on were evacuated Monday nJ&ht Lo cue there was more noodinc. About 100 resident. were evacuated during lbe weekend becauae Of flooding after heavy rains. sa1d stale police tropper Stephen White. "We're just waiting to see if the rain we're celling now is 1oing to bring the water back up," White said. "We're keeping a close eye on it." State police said travel was still llmited or blocked on sections of U.S. 101 along the coast and on U.S. 30 east of Astoria beeauae of mudslides or because sections of the hichway had been wuhed out. ln Eaafern Ore1<tn, state police ln La Grande said winds 1ustin1 u hilh u to mph were~ recorded Monday nicbt on a ? state Hi&hway Department wlnd 1au1e in Ladd Canyon, east Of La Grande. Mos t rive r levels were dropping in western Wasbinatoo state after weekend rains added to the runoff from melting snow in the Cascades, but some mountain highways were blocked by snowslides. There was a flood warning on the Elwha River west of Port Angeles o n the Olympic Peninsula because Of rain in the mountains. Copying adul~ film 'fair use' Appeals court absolves city of breaking copyright SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Santa Ana city councilmen didn 'l violate copyright laws when they copied a film shown in an adult movie theater in efforts lo close the business down , a federal appeals court says. The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Monday that the councilmen had made "fair use" Qf the material under the law. But it disagreed with the jury's finding that a film 's obscenity can be used as a defense against a copyright infringement claim. In efforts to obtain evidence to ba ck an anti-pornography ordinance, a city council agent visited the Mitchell Brothers' Theater in Santa Ana and took photographs every few stt<>nds of five films while a recorder taped their entire soundtracks. The Mitchell brothers, James and Artie -along with several of their corporations -filed suit against Councilme n Gordon Bricken, James Ward, David Brandt and David Ortiz, and their special attorney, James Clancy. Clancy belpia draft a public nuisance abatement ordinance in early 1976 aimed at ridding the city of its adult movie theaters. The ordinance, which declared cinematic depictions of some sexual acts to be a nuisance, was adopted. On Oct. 26 , 1976, the city declared Mitchell Brothers' theater to be a nuisance for exhibiting adult films and all licenses and permits were revoked. The trial jury held that each -, defendant was responsible for copying the five movies, that the use made by them was fair, that From PageA1 REAGAN • • • transition funds would dry up over several years. Stale and local governments would then have to come up with more and more money on their own to finance the programs, presumably by reimposing at the state level the excise taxes each film was obscene and no profits were made from the infringement. The city, in a counterclaim, sought a judgment finding the five films to be obscene as a matter of law and ordered their seizure. The judge ruled he lacked jurisdiction to do either. u .S. Distrret Judge Laughlin Waters Jr. also ordered the Mitchells to pay $23,157 in attorney fees, holding that the suit was "vexatious and broueht to harass the defendants." The appeal court agreed the judge lacked jurisdiction as to the counterclaim since it was moot. But it reversed the award of attorney fees saying the Mitchells' suit had not been f.rivolous. that would be abolished on the Band member federal level. A wide variety of excise taxes, including those on alcoholic I • l •d beverages. tobacco, gasoline. 8 aID OU SI e telephone service , tires, jewelry S A b ~nd other luxury items. co~ld be_ -anta na-H-~= .... mvOTv . Although most sources spoke A 32-year-old member df a of 40 programs being turned mariachi band was shot and back, others s aid as many as 80 killed Monday night in the are involved in the president's parking lot of a Santa "na bar. p_r o pos al . How~ v e r . the Santa Ana police reported the 'i ~'l=rom Page A 1 ~~CLEAR ••• Panel blocks Bergeson plan difference was behev~d-~o be victim, whose name was being largely a matter or de ftmllon -withheld pending· notification of whether overall programs or kin was accosted as he parked each of their individual parts his 'car at the Mazatlan Bar 3417 are being referred to. W. Slh St.. where he w~s t.o This morning, Reagan met perform. with Republican congressional Before he could leave the car lea~ers at the White House lo a man approached the driver·~ h4'.gm rounding ~P the _help ~e s ide and, wielding a shotgun, will need lo gam Capitol Hill demanded money, according to approval for the proposals he witnesses /sf · T h e 4 7 O -m e g a w a t t p r essurized -wate r reactor, O'.•which opened in 1969, is on Lake ~GJ)ntario. About 45,000 people live ';)lfwithin 10 miles or the plant. Tax indexing measure ·misses by 1 vote; new ballot due ·-:.1 0 be r Ii es emp ha sized • _M o n d a y · s r e I e a s e s o f 2Qtadioactivily were minor, but " fnoted that Ii ve workers had been ~'.ex posed to trace levels of ~radiation. All went home after \~howering or wiping off with a t,.,· cloth. tit Radiation was released in a 'le ries of five-secand puffs -...iotaling three m nutes within a ne·hour period followln1 the ube rupture , officials said. 'RG &E continued to check for radiation outside the plant, but Oberlies said late Monday: "We ,are convinced there are no .health problems ." SACRAMENTO (AP> -The Senate P'lnance Committee is blockinl an income tu indexinl plan said to cost the atate lea than that of Howard Jarvis. The committee voted 7-4 Monday, with eight needed for passage. But another vote was -promised next Monday. Already approved by the Assembly, It must clear the Senate by Jan. 28 to make the June ballot. Indexing Is adjusting tax brackeb to reflect inflation, so a c•l-Of-Uving raise doesn 'l push a taxpayer into a higher bracket. FromPageA1 The proposed conatltutiooal amendment , ACA34 by A aaemblywom'an 111 arian -Ber1eson, R-Newport Beach, uses the Wa1e and Salary Index rather than the California Consumer Price Index, like the Jarvis initiative already on the ballot. In recent years, the Wage and Salary Index bas been slightly lower than the CCPI. and could cost the slate less while giving the taxpayers a slightly smaller break. · California has had indexing since 1978. For 1978 and 1979, the brackets were adjusted for all The maximum radiation detected was 3 millirems al the plant boundary, the utility said. Exposure to a chest X-ray is abo ut 20 millirems. and a dose u f 600,000 m i llir e ms is ('onsidered lethal. DEATH PENALTY. • • Office sex ·bill advances SACRAMENTO (AP) - Le"islation to forbid employers rrom forcing their employees into sexual activities for fear of losing their jobs has been approved by the California Assembly. AB1985 by Assemblyman Pat Johnston, D·Stockton, went to the Senate on Monday on a 53-7 vote. The bill would ban ·'verbal or : physical conduct of a sexual ·nature" when it is an explicit or s uggested con dition of employment or advancement, or · when it interferes with work, or 'creates an "intimidating, hostile or offensive work environment." . T~e court said the law imV"'operly focuses a jury's attention on the governor's power instead of the defendant's cbaracter and record -leaving juron with the mistaken belief "that the only way to keep the defendant off the streets is to condemn bim to death." Jutb Frank Richardson said Monday'a reversal would require reversal of every death sentence since the initiative •eel Into effect, assuming the trial courts obeyed the law. · 'OblJ if a constitutional defect Is clearly and unmistakably apparent should we require such a colossal re-expenditure of judicial resources," he said. "No aucb defect ia apparent." But Aasociate Justic'e Tolllriner arauect, "A human life camtot be balaced •l•inlt the costa to tbe state of conductins a fair trial. · Attorney General Georce DeukmeJlan branded the , deela6on "outra1eoua '' and aald . • J c ................. 114,lMl.-?I ........ .., ........ -~ ORANGE COAST Dilly Pilat '\ ~-~~~~~.;+:~~~~~~~~~~~~ Robert N. Weed ~ Thom11 A Murphlne ( .. Mlcheel P. Ha"lley ......... ~ l Key Schuttz °""'9rfll0.- l(enneln N. Godda'd Jr. ~.,....., Bernerd Schulmlln ~ Chertes H. LOOI _.,..,_ Carol A. Moote ....... his t ' ' ·be would appeal It to the U.S. Supreme Court. ''Information that the governor may commute a life.without parole sentence is an important fact which the jury should have to consider," he said. Meanwhile, San Francisco attorney Alan Caplan , who represented Ramos. said he is ecstatic at the ruling. "I think as far as it went on the Bri11s initiative, it was accurate," he said. The slate court said the Orange County case was its first opportunity to consider a death sentence under the Briggs law. Tax share for counties? SACRAMENTO (AP ) -: California's county supervisors want the atate to guarantee them a portion of some state tax -a propoeal that could exempt them from future bud1et cut.a .. Representatives of the County Supervlaora Aasociation of California aald at a newa conference Monday that they are worklnc on leplalion for a "atable fundln1 source" for county aovemmenu, replacln& year·by-year approprlatlona by the Le11.tature . CSAC al80 Cot a reply from the state to a 1ult by counUet over c:oeu ol enforctq 23 new lawt. The state response denJed that the lawt, lncludln& new jail term• for drunken drlvinc, would require any -new or expanded CCMmty Mmees. • but three percentage points of the CCPI. For 1980 and 1981, they were indexed· by the full CCPI, but this year they return to the all-but-three-points formula. Finance officials say ACA34 would bring in about $160 million new revenue in fiscal 1982-83, but lose re venue thereafter because the Wage and Salary Index would be greater than the increase in the CCPI less the three percentage points. They say the Jarvis plan , would give the taxpayers a $200 . million break. Finance Committee Chairman Alfred Alquist, D-San Jose, said passage of ACA34 might cause the voters to think the Legislature was trying "another shabby attempt to subvert the Jarvis initiative." But Ms. Bergeson said, "The point should be whether this ia a beUer index than the other index." wil~ outline in hi~ State of the They sctid the victim reached Umon address tomg~t: _ into his pocket for his wallet. but The speech, lo a JOtnt sesslOfl was shot in the face before he of Congress. will be nationally could hand over any cash. Two broadcast at 6 p.m. PST. other persons in the car were not Senate Majority Leader injured. Ho~ard H. Bak~r Jr., R·~e~.. A police spokesman said they said after th as morning s are seeking a man in his 20s m!e~ing th~t as I! r~sult of the president s plan. "the poor or this country will be better off than under the ex isting hodge-podge" of programs. He would not explain how this would occur. Baker said that while federal programs would be transferred to lower levels of government, '·we· re going to see certain protections." Slates. he said, "will end up . . . at least as well off' as under current funding plans, and will have "enhanced fletibility" in how they can spend revenues dispatched by the federal government. Reagan's address on four channeu President Reagan's annual • State of the Union address lo a joint session of Congress will be broadcast at 6 o'clock tonight on KN XT <Channel 2>, KNBC <Channel 4). KABC CChaMel 7) and KCET (Channel 28). ChaMel Z will air a special report on the address and Channel 4 will air a Democratic response and analysis at 6:45 p.m. , When you"'tre i'e•dy to st~p looklng. Roi ex. Everyone wants a Rolex Oyster. A LadyDate, 14 karat yellow gold and stainl~ss steel, s 1,4 75. 8. Man's P~rpetual Date, 14 karat y~llow gqld and stainless steel, s1 ,750. C. Lady's Perpetual Oat~. stainless stttt, S845. S ·LAVICK·s ""' ......... s.a 1117 Whnf IM best sanprises begin. , ........ a.nd (714) ..... ,.,. ~ IMctl Alto ONmr Loi Angllll •Sin DelgD .... \11111 ... .t' . I I Af> ........ DUET FOR CHARITY Frank Sinatra and Opera Star Luciano Pavarotti belt out a song at a recent benefit for Me morial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York. It was Sinatra ·s third benefit for the hos pital in three years . Artist Miro gets pacemaker Spanish artist Joan Miro returned to his home in the Balearic Islands afte r being disch arged from a Palma clinic where he had a he3rt pa c emake r implanted , doctors said. The sale or 400 acres of orange and olive groves in K e rn County to a Los Angeles partnership for $1.48 million has \>een ap.proved at a uction by U.S . District Judge Leland C. Nielsen in San Diego. The land was acquired by t h e Fed e ral Deposit Insurance Corp. as receiver for United Sta tes National Bank. which was declared Cartoonist Edward Koren, creator of the furry figures t hat dress and s peak as .b.lun_a ns , h a s s_u.-e.d a ProV-i-O e-nce r estaur-an-t, c laiming it u se d his c har ac t e r s w i thout permission. Th e s uit fil ed in U.S. They said Miro, 89, was in satisfactory condition. The pacemaker, which regulates the beat of the heart through e lectrical impuls es, was implanted Jan. 17. insolvent by the controller of the currency in November 1973. Nielsen approved the sale to the El o witz O li v ar-Roa c h ·S a s low Management Group. The sale proceeds will be used to pay orr some of the bank's liabilities in the continuing liquidation of financier C. Arnholt Smith's former holdings. District Court in Providence seeks a court order barring Noah's Arcade from using the eartoon characters -on its s ign ~. mC'Du--3" o-r advertisements and seeks the portion of restaurant profits that an be attributed to the dra wings. Temperatllres Coastal Wind' llfcomlnv ..,.,111 to toul-nt 10 10 I• II.nots 111 .. ellernoon end MM.tlhwn..,ly S to 10 llnou lonlOfll ON lo ).toot -trly 'well ""°'"" CIOu<ly llrOUQI\ ton19hl w1tl'I . Cl'lenctt of Orin•• on nortr.rn wet•" ton1qnl _U.S._ su!'lmary More \nowr tttt ~Y over P4Jrt\ of tri.. M•~\:I MW! t•1n W>re•d into tl'le Peclflc No'111wnt 111ruten1nq pon1bte new ftoooing Snow fell ~r tr. 01110 V•ll•y •rwt mo,tly hol'lt '""'" 'oruo r•o•O•y 'owuo tr. Eut A few v.ow 'l'IOwers fell soutl'I •nd Hit of tlW Gre.t L•ktt. and blowlnq sno w l n tl'le Dakol•• ll•mpertO effort• to 010 out 1"41 "41••Y wMl<end •<cumulation A mhr1ure Of "'°"' eno rein tttll •<ros1 much ol the northern l nt•rmounta1n r•eton '"'o the Monten.1 Rork,., R••n spread into the P•<•flc Nortl'lwnl. -·• meny '°""' were bfOO.ed by wet"' -mUO•lidH •lier w"litendratn FOQ w•s extensive trom cen•r•I Celllornia Into M1Ut"4trn Or•90ft. end low cfouck end -IOQ were •••o reported owr •oulf•·Ontrel Tu a' Molt Of tl'le rHt Of tl'le nation l'lad felr •kit• Temll"'•luns around Ille Nlion •t 2 p m E:sf r~ lrom U below taro et Gr-F-l. N D . to IS et Brown1Vlti., Tu .. For 1odaY. 1'011..,ed 110111 snow wu fo rtcHI from tl'le nortl'lern RoCklH Into llW nortf>trn Pl•ln•. Rain w .. fon<~t Oller Ille nortl'lern •-·tl'llrds Of llW Pacific Coest •nd •crou Ille norlfwrn tnt•rmounteln r1tQlon Imo tM nortl'lef'll RP<kles. Hlohs rwar 10 we<e 11<.0lcteo from tl'le northern Plains lhrouol'I the Gr .. 1 L•kn -tr. northern Ohio Ve ttey In to ll'lt nor ll'lo r n APl>"le<l'llAM, in tl'le 10\ end JO\ from the nortr.m e .. 1 ,.,.,, across IN mld·Mlu lulppi Valley Into tl'le nor11'1wn t...-n PlelM. In t1'e ~ end IOl from Ille M>Utl'ltrn two.tl'llnh of Florid• across ttw M)Utr.rn Plelns Into \OU11'1tm c.llf0<nle, end In ,.,. .as ano 505 els.where. 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The mayor 's news secretary, Tom Goldstein, said that just before the mayor left for Spain he made it clear at a news conference that he was not Interested in running for governor. Koch has said reprealedly that he will not run for any office other than mayor. However, a New York Post editorial said Monday thi>l "New York City needs him, but so does New York State." FACES DRAFT? N e w Y o rk Ci t y Ma yor Edwa rd I . Koch is facing an a t L.e. m p t b y a..... news p_ap.er to draft him for New York's governor race. Koch has said repeatedly he is not interes ted. · .. ,, If It ,. IO 41 2• .. Ml .. .. .. 71 "' SS 13 •• ., .. p "' .. 11 4' 15 72 •2 ,, .. u se 10 12 71 .. .. 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The aam~. 2t·hour an1werin1 service may be ustd to record let- ters .to the edJtor on any topic. Mailbox contributors mu1t Include thei r name and telepho'\e number for verification. No circulation calls . please. Tell us what's on your-mind. I ' .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tue1day, January 28, 1982 • sirens tested Onofre Nuke -warning system 'fired off' in pe;.mit procedure By DAVID .KUT'ZMANN of .. Del.,,. ........ "It loundl lllul impending doom." -Voice of a bystander Actually, it sounded a bit Uke· Ontario, N.Y. Or h should have, if operators or tbe nuclear power station there had activated their emergency warning ostem M onday rQllowlng the declaration or an emeraency. In Ontario, the reactor was shut down after a steam tube ruptured, releasing radioactive s team into the atmosphere. according to federal officials. At San Onofre, about 3,000 miles away. the warning sirens wailed over the two new 1,100 megawatt reactors which await licensing from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. But it was only practice. To receive operating permits for its $3.3 billion coas tal reactors, Southern CaUfornia Edison Co. must demonstrate that its own warning system -on the plant site and in the community - functions properly. So Edison technicians "fired off'· the. three rotating sirens Monday that s tand on the Southern California reactor grounds three miles south of San Clemente. It was the first part of a week-long effort to test the effecti· eness of the utility's $2 millio system. "If t re is an emergency at the station, in which we felt it was necessary to alert the public, we would fire off the sire ns at that time," said James Dubois. Edison's supervisor -of te"thnical support services. Whe n activated in a real c r is is , the sirens would tell residents within 10 miles of the San Onofre plant site to tune in lo radio an d t e levision D.tltyf>IMl 51.tft ..... SOUNDING OFF This is one of 40 ·s ire n s located wit h i n th e 1 0 -mil c emec..gency planning zone at San 1'nofre nuc le ar power plant. Tes ts began Mondav on warning syste m . · broadcasts to learn what they should do -evacuate the area or take shelter. During Monday's incident at ·the nuclear power station in New York state, utility officials declared a "site emergency," one step below a full ··general e mergency.·· U the same type of incident occurred at San Onofre, .Ed.lion orrlclal1 said the three sireu on the plant slte would have Wen sound~. In all, there are 40 air._. within the 10-mile emert"fc)' planning zone wh!'h e ncompuaes the plant. AIMfUt 100,000 people live ln lhla -.a. which Includes the commw\.lties ' or San Clemente, San Juan Capistrano, Capl1trano Beath a nd Dana Poi nt . Camp Pendleton also is within this uea. In a general emer1ency, all sirens could be activated. Critics who h a ve opposed licensing for newly built uniti 2 and 3 a t San °'1ofre have maintained that emer1ency planning efforts are inadequate. During federal licensiht hearings held in Anaheim lut sum mer. these opponents claimed that many residents would probably not be able to hear the sirens from within U.lr homes or inside noisy places like supermarkets.' Dubois , asked about tbta Monday, said the teats woaJcl help verify the output or the sirens and the range they cover. He said utility persona'el would' take measurements following the tests to find out how well the sirens could be heard. A community respons'e s urvey a lso will be tak'en Friday. Bystanders who listened to~ test Monday described tbe sirens as sounding "eerie" and like a signal of "impendihg doom." The sirens generate a steady signal that will last for abQut three to five minutes during the tests this week. First, individual sirens and then groups or sireos will be tested. By Friday. all 40 sirens will be set off. Freeway express system eyed Bus proposal covers Orange , Los Angeles counties By JEFF..ADLER 24-hour -e-x-press pass-e n ger CM 11W Delly ...... IUff A r e g i 0 n a I p u b I i c service to nearly all points in t r a n s p 0 rt at i 0 n s y s t em Southern California through a e ncompassing both Orange network of 160 local transfer County and metropolitao Los stations and 32 major transfer Angeles within two years _ ~tations, cl.us t e red around hard to believe, you say? important regional centers. costs. documents presented-to the transportation committe~ reveal. AJroup calllni it~elf the_ Fares w ~uld r e fl ec!_ the Southern Ca I i f or n i a <tt s·u1rt:e-11 }5a ss-etrgfl h-atr T r a n sport a;& i o n A c t lo n tr• veled and the time. of day. Grayson said the proposal was really an ex t e nsion or the freeway bus service already provided in several areas. The Orange County Transit District, the Southern California Rapid Transit District and the Santa Monica Municipal Bus Lines aft provide such service. Committee says it can h appen. Dur l.n g peak p e r1 od s . a Their plan -Freeway Express con:imuter ~ight only have to Transit -is no pie-in-the-sky. wait ~5 minutes for a bus. the mel'{lbers say. according to the proposal . Speaking to members of the '.Freeway -. Express Transit Orange County Transportation w o u 1 d ca p 1 ta Ii z e on th e Commission Mo nday. David freeway's grid-like structure. Grayson , a member of the enabling a more flexiblE: and committee's board of trustees. c<>mprehensive transit service. outlined the Freeway Express By offering connecting ser'vices Transit proposal. all along the freeway grid, Grayson said a bus system Freeway Express Transit wiU serving Orange. Los Angeles. efriciently serve communities Riverside. San Bernardino and throughout our region," the Ventura counties could b e committee's brochure explains. es tablished on 720 miles of Cost of the proposed regional existing freeways in the five s ystem would be $688 million counties. through .the fksl fiv.&-year-s-.and- The syste m would provide $77 million in annual operating Freeway Express Transit, it is envisioned, would expand these existing express bus services to the whole region. Grayson said that with 200 new buses, existing freeway tr ansit operations could be expanded to the seven -day, 24-hour system plan. He asked transportation c om mitt ee members to cooperate with other counties to bring about implementation of the proposal and to participate in detailed studies aimed at im-proviniJ-region a l transit-- service. ... • Storekeeper Mark Page is wearing our classic lightweight poplin jacket with red tartan plaid lining, enabling it to be worn comfortably for all seasons. It is water and stain resistant, and has a solid brass zipper. A practical garment, available in tan, navy, red, and green. A store that offers a selection of Ane traditional sportswear for men, women, and boys .. , -------~---= - ....... .. s Orange Co11t DAILY PILC ffTuesday. January 26. 1982 mmu~rnm Court upholds p ublic school b an on prayer WASlllNGTON <AP l The U.S. Supreme Court, reaffirming its bun on organized prayer in 1>ubhc schools, ruled unconstitutional a Louisianu law permitting voluntary prayer sessions. The court. without written opinion, Monday upheld a ruling that the state law passed last year '1olates the constitutionally mandated separation of church and state . ·rhe Supre me Court ruled last Dec. 8 that stale colleges that allow student groups to use campus facilities must let student groups hold religious worship and religious study sessions there. Jn the Decembe r case, involving the University of Missouri at Kansas City, the court clearly indicated it was leaving intact the 1962 prayer ban for elementary and secondary schools. A s if to unde rscore that point, the justices s ix days later refused to let a group of students conduct prayer meetings during non-class hours in a high school near Albany, N.Y. The Louisiana law in today's dispute provided t hat local school boards could a llow each <'lassroom teacher to ask whether any student wis hed to orrer a prayer and if no student volunteered, could permit the teacher to pray. The prayer did not have to be specifically religious in nature, and was to take plae!e before classes began. The law did not force either the student or the tt-acher to pray. and previded that students who did not wish to take part could, at their parents' written request or their own ver bal request. leave the classroom or simply not participate. Local regulations drawn up by the Je fferson Paris h School Board to implement the law also provided that any student wishing to take part in the one·minute prayer session had to have his or her parents' written consent and make a verbal request to be included. Last August, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of ,\ppeals st ruck down the law and the Jefferson Parish guidelines The First Amendment prohibits governments I t'o m sponsoring religious activities a nd from hcl'oming too in\'olved in them. T h e Supreme Court in 1962, outlawed "chool-s ponsored prayer sessions in public schools. Jn 1963, it banned Bible·reading sessions conducted hy teachers at the start of each school day. llere, at a g lance. are the highlights of other ~upreme Court action Monday: F.RA ~ The . court will decide whether the Equal nights Amendment is dead ; but the timing of the re\ icw could prove a c rushing blow to pro· ERA forccl> The court said it will review a federal district judge's Dec. 23 ruling that Congress acted uncunstitutionally in e xtending the ratification d eadline from March 22. 1979. to next June 30 However, Suprem e Court clerk Alexander Stevis says the justices will not even hear arguments on che case before June 30. Thirty-five of the required 38 s tates have ratified the proposed amendment. although fi ve states la ter rescinded their action MORTGAGES The justices agreed to decide whe ther C alifornia can prohibit s avings a n d lo a n assoc iations from requiring people to pay off mortgages as soon as they sell their homes The "talc supreme court had upheld a state law barring the due·on·sale clauses, even though a I• ed~ral Home Loan Bank Board regulation allows I herrl Due·On-sale clauses require the homeowner to pay off the balance of the mortgage if the mortgaged property 1s sold without the lender's pnor <'Onsent The high court will decide whether federal regulations supercede the state law. INOIANS The court. in a 6·3 vote. ruled that the Jicarilla Apache tribe can impose a severance tax on oil a.nrl gas extracted from Hs New Me xico 1 c~cr vation. Justice Thurgood Mars hall. writing for the majority, said the tribe can levy the tax "as part of its power to govern and to pay for the cost!'> of self.government." He s aid the tribe's tax did not violate the constitutional ban on interfe ring \' ith interstate commerce. Several large oil comrianies. including Amoco, Ma thon, Gulf and Mobile. had challenged the J ' arilla Apaches' I axing system LAWYER ADS The justices, in a 9-0 rut' g, overturned a Misl.ouri Supreme Court rue ( t strictly limited the scope of advertisem ents ed by lawyers in newspapers and telephone irectories. Justice Lewis Powe ll wrote that states can regulate adve rfisements that are mis leading, but the deception mus t be proveo. The constitutional protections of free s peech require that there be evidenceo!decept.ion.hesaid. DRUGS Without comment. the justices refused to revive an antitrust lawsuit against the Ame rican Pharmaceutical Association stemming from its opposition to the sale of prescription drugs by mail. Federal Presc ription Ser vice Inc., a m ail-order pharmacy, charged the APA with cons piring to hurt its business by opposing mail order drugs. The firm's lawyers charged the A PA with trying to cor ner the prescription drug market for local drug s tor es. A federal trial judge o rde red the A PA to pay Feder al $120,000 in damages for violating antitrust laws . But an appeals court r eversed the judgment order, and was backed by the Supreme Court. The appeals court s aid the APA's lobbying for governmental action against selling drugs by mail was immune to antitrust laws uits. Fatally ill avoided AUSTIN, Texas <AP > -A quarter of the doctors in Texas try to avoid all contact with the ratally ill, says a survey by three University of Texas professors. The s urvey's findings, published in Texas Medicine magazine. also says about half the state's doctors try to avoid telling patients they are dying. ··Although 78 percent of the respondents agreed that it is essential that a dying_ patient be told or his progress. 47 percent stated that they try to avoid teLUng a patient directly that be is dying, and 27 percent admitted that thef avoid a person who is dying," said the survey, to which about a t h ird of the' 9,000-m e mbe r Texas Medical Association responded. I .... Reagan urges doubling of • • 1mnngrants WASllJ NG TON <AP I The Reagan administration has uriced Congress to double the number or immlJrants permitted lo enter the United States from Canada and Mexico each year , saying this would deter illegal Immigration. Under a plan outlined at a hearing Monday by th e Senat e Judicia ry s ubcommittee on immigration, the limits for the two coU11tr1es would be increased from 20,000 to 40,000 each. Sen. Alan K. Simpson, R-Wyo .. subcommittee chairman. asked: "How do you justify that at a time when current unemployment in North America is so high ·? Wouldn't it be more prudent to wait until our economy has hopefully righted Itself before bringing in additional numbers?" Diego C. Asencio, assistant secretary or state for consular affairs. replied, "Paradoxically, you have the situation where, in order to c ut down the lotul number of immigrants entering the United States, including illegals, in effect you are raising slightly the total leAal immigration numbers." The total allowable immigration from all other countries would remain at 230.000 under the administration proposal. Doubling the Mexican and Canadian limits would increase the overall immigration li mit to 310,000 people . The quota of eithe r country would be increased 1f the other did not use its full quota in the previous year BIG BLAZE .\I ll·a~t ~ix building~ 111 ltw his tori<' old M·t·l 11111 of ttw Cit~· of Qtll'bl't' wt·n· da m<.1ged b~· a rnassl\'t• hlaZL' '.\lonchl\ Thl' fire \\as hein~ cl1·-.<·rrbl'<I as lhl· biggest 111 lhl' la s t 15 years l'ropl•rt\ d i1magl's \\t'n· "The increased li mitations for Canada and, particularly, for Mexico would reflect our c lose re lationships with both while providing a n additional opportunity to reduce or deter illega l immigration by ope.ming a supple mentary channel for legal immigration to the Uni led States," Asencio !>aid t•s l 1mated at about S2 million. hut 1111 1n.1urn·s "L'l't' l·t•pork<I. F1rl'm l'n \H'l'l' h :1mpl'n:d h~ l hL' t•xt n •rnt• t old a s t•\ uh•11n·d IH t lu· l<'t' l'CI\ l'l'l'd h11tld11lJ.!" Asencio said the proposal "represents an additional c leme nt in this adminis tration's t•onccrtcd and integrated plan to regain control _______ u_vcr our borders .'· roans. 14.17%APR for 60 months~ 14.16% APR for 48 months. Once again, Heritage Bank is·working hard · to help the American economy. 1981 w<t\ the worst year for American- made car sales in two \ decades. So to make the best of the worst. Heritage Bank is lowering interest rates --for loans on 1982 American- madc cars. It's ou r way of helping consumers and our economy. So if you're in the market for a new automobile and are looking at an American-made car, then look at Heritage Bank for the low-est interest rates we know of. Heritage Bank will finan ce up to 75 % of cq_"ih selling price including tax and licen. e. Financing is avai lable on 1982 American- vehicle~ not included) and i~ subject to credi t approval. Thi~ offer is good until March 31. 1982 for residents of Orange and San Diego Counties only. Offer i cancellable without notjce. so . ee us now whi le millions of financing doll ars are available at the.especial rates. Stop in or caJl your nearest Heritage Bank office fo r complete details: ANAH EIM MAtN (714) 851-4100 •ANAHEIM STA DI UM (714) 851-4154 •SANTA ANA (7 14) 85 1-4149 •COSTA MESA (7 14) 85 1-4165 •AIRPORT (7 14) 85 1-4000 • WOODBRJDGE (714) 851-4141 •LAKE FOREST (7 14) 851-4233 •NEWPORT BEACH (7 14) 85 1-4161 • MISSION VALLEY (7 14) 299-9330. • For 60 mC1nlh financcng, loon mu~I be SI0.000 made pa."isenger cars only (trucks, vans and recreational or more. 1-Aa'rOEfiliSJ'DUrrBArllAII.BSA .. mCAGSIUT. Herita Member FDIC Ba AccolDlts insured to 5100,000 , .. Orange Coast OAJLY PILOTfTuesday, January 26, 1982 Soldier killed, 3 wounded • ID . live-fire session· The Army could provide no further de ta ils of how the accident took place. he said. FORT lRWIN <AP) -A training accident has len one soldi er dead. three others wounded from gunfire and a fifth man injured climbing out of an armored personnel vehicle at the National Training Center . the Army said. The accident, al about 7 p.m. The dead soldier wa s identified as Pvt. Robert G. Solonika, 20, of Salem, Ore. He was an infantryman assigned to Company B, lst Battalion, 18th Infantry, lst Infantry Division <Mechanized). Fort Riley, Kan .. Hughes said . SNOWY PASTURE Wild horse!'> graze in m eadow of snow at Lost Valley. a summl'rtimc Orangt> <.:ounty Hoy Scout Ca mp in th<' Cleveland Nat1onul Forest In S<1n Di ego l 'ount v Som e 18 to 20 inr h<·i-. of ~now ll'll latt• la!.1 \H't•k , weatllt•r officials reportt·tl Sunday, occurred during a live-fire e xerci s { at the sprawling des ert bas~O miles northeast of Bars tow, Army officials said. ''Preliminary investigation indicates the fatality .was ca_used by small ar m s fire;" Bob Hughes. civilian spokesman on the base, said Monday. Fort Irwin, in the Mojave Desert, had been used primarily by National Guard units for years until it was activated last October as the National Training Center. Its mission is to train battalion-s ized task forces and includes live-f ire training. Pol~h official pleads for U.S. help "Three of the injured soldiers received light wounds from s mall arms bullet fragments and were admitted to Weed Army Community Hospital al Fort Irwin where their condition was listed as good. "One soldier injured his knee while leaving an armored personnel vehicle during the incident and also is in good condition," Hughes said, adding that an investigation was under way to determine the cause of the accident. Units come from other posts, engage in realist ic training, then return to their horn e post . Hughes said. An apparently similar training accident last November took the life of a Marine sergeant at the nearby Marine Corps Combat Center at Twentynine Palms. in the Mojave Desert about 40 miles south of Fort Irwin. Schools fight huge debt STRATHMORE CAP> -Strathmore Union. High School Dis trict leaders knew they had fin ancial problems 10 months ago. Officials in this small Tulare County community j ust didn't know how bad the situation was. Declining e nroll m ent. poor money m a nagement and federal cutbacks eventually combined to pinch the 337-student district $120,00C in debt. With no reserves lo draw from, trustees imposed cuts last summer and borrowed from the county to keep a balanced budget. But the loam must be repaid. The school board last week outlined cuts to cover ·the debt. which amounted to about 10 percent of expenses. Languages will be e liminated for a year, physical education requirements will be reduced. mus ic and arts offerings will be trimmed, administration will be cut and a counseling program will be restructured. "We have tried to be reasonable," said board President Andy Veeman. "Al this point, we're trying to handle this·in an orderly procedure." Cuts should eliminate the equivalent of 4.-ZS full-lime positions in a district with a teaching staff or 23. said Veeman. "If we clear this up next year. we should get a balanced budget again, a nd we can take a look at reinstating some of the programs," he said. Before final details are worked out on cutbacks, the district must clear proposals with the county counsel's office because lhe district got into trouble before over improper spending. Superintendent Robert Uphoff blamed about half of the debt on previous misuse of categorical funds designated by state and federal agencies for s pending in specific areas. Penalties require reducing futur.e funds to the amount that was properly spent minus the amount misspent , Bereavement pay argued SAN DIEGO CAP) -Linda Briggs was four months pregnant when she lost her baby. When she returned to work three days later, San Diego County rejected her application for bereavement leave, a paid absence given when a close family member dies . The decision has been challenged by Local 535 of the Social Services Union with a hearing planned Fe b. 3 by the county Civil Service Commission. A field representative of the employees· union, Dee Contreras. said she will argue that the bereavement was "real and serious." "l think it's a really important issue," she said in an interview. "Leave is based on death or a funeral. She was far enough along that lhis child was a part of her life.'' LOS ANGELES <AP ) - "Please help us," the head of the Polish Ecumenical Council has said, indicating in his first American appearance he was swallowing his national pride to a s k for food and farm implements for beleaguered Poland. The Rev . Zdzislaw Pawlik, a Baptist minister a nd general secr etary of the PEC, said Monday he believes martial law and the "crisis" in Poland will end within six months. He said he is confident a national council , including trade unions and religious groups, wiJI be formed to solve lht' country'!> debt problems. "Now, we have a situation of $27 billion of debt, and we cannot buy anyth1nJ(." Pawlik saicL !.end lo Third World countries.· Pawlik s aid Pres ident Reagan's sanctions against the Polish military re~ime will not be understood by ordinary 'Wh~ the crisis is past , we will help the American people.'' "The Bible sa ys it is more blessed to S{tvc than lo receive. I don't like to ask it <aid>. but I'm pressed to do it. "When the crisis is pust, we will help the American people," Pawlik s<11d . expl<tining · "We will not send little packages to AmeriC'ans, hut we will help Polish citizens "standing in line for three hours." H e said the s a n ctions, forbidding U.S. exports to Poland while m artial law remains in effect. mean "one kilogr am less of meat per family. The rationing allows only three kilogrHm~ (seven pounch 1 ' "Th t.' moi.t tra gic food situation is espccrnlly children," he said "Then· 1s a lack of llahy food and :-.om c ca loric food ro r motht•r:-. Soml· potential mothcr:-. arc !.<1ying , · 1 don't dan· to have c:haldrcn, because I don'tsccafuture ·" Hb traµ to the United States 1s sponsored by World Vision, a Monrov1u non denominational· relief and Christian missionary o r ganization The PEC 1s a group of fi ve protes tant deno min ations and Roman C<.1thol1<: d1ur-t·he1. 10 Poland --- In r ejecting Mrs . Briggs' c laim last September, the county said: "Absent the record of live birth, miscarriage does not meet the definition of immediate family." The maximum paid time off for bereavement is three days. Mrs. Briggs, whose time spent recovering was put down as sick leave. insist "I was not sick -I was grieving. I felt it was my child, my baby." United offers seven friendly flights to Denver every day. All for a great low fare-as little as $119.50 each way with round-trip purchase. You must purchase your tickets 14 days in advance and stay through a Sunday. Make any changes in return reservations at'least 14 days in advance. or return on a standby basis, or the entire discount is lost. Seats are limited. Fares. restrictions and schedules subject to change. For reservations. call your Travel Agent. Or call Unitrd at 537-7521. Partners in Travel with Westin Hotl'ls . An application for bereavement pay was approved for her husband Stephen, who also is a county social worker, but rescinded and put down as sick leave when his wire mentioned that In her letter of appeal. Archie C. Garcia, director or county personnel, said that "histor ically, t he purpose of bereavement' leave is for the individual to attend' services and prepare for services. Since there was no live birth, there was no death." But, Garcia added, "certainly r would not be foolish enough to attempt to determine when Lile begins.'' · Briggs said the a1reement between the county and the San Diego County Employees• Association refers to "death or funeral. "I was planninl on bavin1 lbJs child H part of my family," said Mrs. Bri11s in an interview. "My child died. "Either it's a child or not, one way or the other, but let's decide." The ~han _.son Brtan, 2W And now when you fly round-trip to Denver on United, you get our Free Wheels DeaJ. too. Alamo will have a rent-a- car waiting for you. The first day's on us. Offer goed until February 28.1982. and subject to car availability. Gas and taxes not included. OptlonaJ collision-damage waiver is available. Call for details. To Denver LHve Arrive 7.10 a.m.(L) 10:23 a.m. 7:20 a.m.(0 ) 10:22 a.m. 10:40 a.m.(L) 1:44 p.m. 1 05 p.m .(0 ) 4:00 p.m 3· I 5 p.m . (L) 6.22 p.m . 5:55 p.m.(L) 9:00 p.m. 8:55 p.m.(L) 11 :57 p.m. 1 L > lAJ4 Anl<'in I 0 l • On1ario Flythe friendly skies of United.~~~ Call Ullted or ~'Ihlvel Agent. · .. --· Orange Coaat DAIL V PILOT/Tueaday, January 26, 1982 Recall campaigners shOuld 'Weigh words In recent limes there has bee n a growing tendency for dlssallfied citizens to vent their wrath by seeking to r ecall elected officials. Last week a judgment iA Orange County Supe rior Court so unded a warnin g f o r ove rtealous recall campaigners. The court awarded $75,000 in da mages to forme r San Clemente mayor Bill Walker and forme r · vice mayor Donna Wilkinson who had s u e d m e mb e r s o r a hom eo wn e r s g r o up f or defamation of character. The two charged that four me mbers of the homeowne r g r o up, a lo ng with forme r councilman Howard Mus hett. had wrongfully accused them of "lack of responsiveness to the public and abuse of city funds" durin' a campa ign that resulted In their recall tour years ago. The court apparently agreed that the plaintiffs had indeed been damaged by the attack on the ir pe rsonal honest y a nd integrity and ordered the five defendants to pay up. The recall procedure can be of value in removing an official who is not doing his or her job, or is betraying the public trust. But the recent judgment makes it clear that intemperate re(llarks or invalidated c ha r ges ma de duTing a recall campaign may prove costly. even if the recall succeeds. Citizens conte mplating such action should be very sure their words are measured and their charges backed up by facts. 'Bugs' rwthing new The disclosure that President Franklin Delano Roosevelt also bug'ged the Oval Office, even though for a brief pe riod and unde r different circumstances than Richard Ni-xo . still comes as a surprise if not a shock. But the n his to r y is no t always kind to preside nts. The revelations about FDR. appearing in Am erican Heritage ma g a z in e , say 14 pr ess conferences and seven or eight conversations were recorded on film in an 11-week period in 1940. The president used a microphone hidden in a desk drawer or la mp to try to minimize misquotes. While the disclosure revealed no major historical findings. the inc ident points up again the difference between. the way FDR could operate either in private or without public comment and the public lives those like John Ke nne dy. Lyndon J ohnson , Nixon , Gerald Fo rd. Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan must endure. The change, of course, is the m o d e rn co mmuni ca t io ns industry. A Roosevelt, who overcame incredible physical ha nd icaps to ser ve in public offi ce. could continue a liaison with a woma n friend without public knowledge or reporting by the media. A Roosevelt could rock the system to try to pull the nation out ·of not a recession but a depression. Even today ma ny --historians f-eel it was-World War- 11 . not the New Deal. that pulled America up. A Roosevelt could conduct a foreign poli cy that even today cannot pin the responsibility for Pearl Harbor. A Roosevelt could win thi rd and fourth terms as president. A Roosevelt co uld m a ke m a j or_ agree m e nt s a nd co n cession s a t Casabla n ca. Que bec. Teher a n and Ya lta under circ umstances s till not cl ear to the world. Implied of course in the latest bugging controversy is what we still do n·t know. Wh at ruture surprises await us? Roosevett·s e ldest son . Ja mes. of Newport Beach. says Nixon .. wasn't as bothered as my ra th e r b y th e e t~i c al co n si deration s" or the recordings. Given the difference in Whflt constitutes accepted political and personal ethics that 30 years have brought -not lo mention the gre at leaps in usage of electronic gadgets -history and historians will have to judge that. Workplace rules backfire If your employees tended to "sleep or lie down in the work area," wouldn't you be upset? If your e mployees were prone to .. wash or dry their ha ir a ft e r re po rting for work." wouldn't you be a ngr y? lf your e mployees r ead nove ls "or othe r no n-business materials." or played cards "at th e ir d esk during workin g h o urs," wo uldn 't you be concerned? And. if your empl oyees used the "brown mail to distribute pills, marijuana or a ny substance or item not pertaining to county bu s iness," wouldn 't you be worried ? Gary Montgomery. personnel manager of Ve ntura County Social Services, ,,-.swered "yes .. lo a ll or the above. No t onl y t h a t . h e did something about it. He ordered that it be stopped. But in this sometimes crazy world of ours. t he wrath has fallen on Montgomery. not the malingerers. The employees. who had to • sig n a me mo acknowledging receipt of the order . weren't too happy. Two uni on s lod ged complaints. One of the union officials even call ed on Montgomery to resign. Never m ind l h a\ som e employees spent much of their duty hours polishing their nails o r e ngaging in comple te ly unrelated work activities during t he course of the ir wo rking hours. The unions charge that the accusations reflect on a ll the 600 employees . Montgomery says o nl y a sma l l nu mber a r e involved. The unions acknowledge that so m e o f t h e c l a im s a r e legitimate. We believe Montgomery was upholding t h e m a nageme n t duties and responsibilities with which his position is charged. He was. in fact . looking after the ta xpayers' interest. We downright applaud Che action he took ·o pinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views ex-pressed on tn•s page are those ot tneir authors and art 1sts. Reader comment is 1nv11- ed. Address The Daily P1to1, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92b2b. Phone (71 4) 641·4321 . Most secretaries want far better jobs. but not Jobs as top bosaes. s,eclflcally, 84 percent of those q~eried 1aid no, \hey woukln't take the presidential pqalUona even if &MY were to qualify. They J111t wan& tO mpve up the ladder to be aal" managers, public relaUont direction, or whatever. But, 1ay tbe researcbera, the aecretarlH ORANGE COAST . Daily Pilat generally agreed the chle! executJves had too many headaches. Ta~n lesa tlectricity to run a • ceilln• fan than a ll1ht bulb. What area of '°"r body 11 least senalUve lo chemical irritation? Surprlltnlty, 6t'1 the UnlnC of your a\()maeb. Thomes P. Haley Publisher T1'omas A. Mii,_lne Editor Barbara KreltNch cffw~~EdMor ----.·• r Charity goals forgotten WASHING TON -The charitable foundation s that solicit our contributions to battle this or tbal disease all start off as noble enterprises designed to e~man suflerinC. But someli~es 'l-bese or1aniaatlons Jose sight of their or,1inal 1oals. They become more interested 1n-guardlhg their causes and in perpetuallnt the bure aucratic structures that have grown up around them. •Consider the case of Dvera Berson and the Arthritis Foundation: Eight years ago, at the age of 81, Berson was in almost constant pain ftom arthritis, a disease that a fUicts 31 million Americans. Then, on a Florida vacation, 1he eased into a swimming pool and began trying some slow and gentle exercises. Her pain subsided. Suspecting she had hit on something, Berson continued ber water exercises over a nine·month period. The excruciating pain she bad suffered for s ix-and-a-half years disappeared. OVE&.IOYED AT ber own experience, Berson was eaaer to share her discovery witb other arthritics. With SMder' Roy, abe wrote a book, "Pain-Pl'ee ArtlaritU." It described 3S simple, slow water e:aerdaee Benon bad de=, streuiq the frequency and di.ad e that broulbt the best reeuJta tr.a ber procram. Tbe Arthrltil rc.ndatioo, instead of •elcominl ber di8c!overy, jumped alJ over ber. It lumpeli her in with artbritis quacks wbo peddle everytblnc from worthleu "mlraele .drue•" to copper bracelet& ··u cures for the diaeue. Foundat,ion press releases attacked her and her book. Foundation officials pursued their campaign against her on talk shows. Eventualty1 th~y brought pressure to bear on the 0001fs publisher, Simon & Schust e r . The comJtany slQ.Pttd Q . .-J.-1:.-•• -.-1.-•• -. -~ promoting the book, and it is now out of print in this country. Peter Malhon, a vice president of the Arthritis Foundation, told my reporter Sharon Spivak that his main concern was with "exa ggerations" and ''Implications" both in the book and in the promotional advertising. He also c:Jaimed that 7 or 8 million arthritics have rh e umatoid arthritis or deformities that prevent them from doing the Berson exercises. Berson replies that she herself suffers from rheumatoid arthritis . BE&SON SUSPECl'S the reaJ reason for the foundation's vehement criticism is its connection with its offshoot, the American Rheumatism Association. llany professional rheumatologists are members of the Arthritis Foundation, and the foundation recommends that arthri tis v i ctims first cons ult rheumatologists for treatment. Another charitable group that seems to have de veloped bureaucratic a s tigmatis m is the prestigious American Cancer Society. It raises $180 million a year for its highly publicized campaign to find a cure for cancer. Much of the society's contributions come from corporations. And this, criti cs told m.x. r e orter Atonica McKeMa, is why the ACS restricts its publicity activities to generalized exhortations to donate money and to an anti-smoking campaign. The cancer society, critics suspect, doesn't want to endanger its corporate contributions by pointing the finger at industries that pollute the workplace and the environment with carcinogens. So it doesn't use its tremendous clout to publi c iz e s u c h hazards a s formaldehyde, to which thousands of shoemakers, pathologists and textile workers are exposed daily. HEALTH EXPERTS working on a union-backed screening program to detect bladder can cer in a Georgia chemical plant were stunned when the local cancer society chapter not only didn't support the program, but tried to discourage participation in it. When the National Coalition Against the Misuse of Pesticides wrote the ACS for help in lobbying against proposed federal regulations that would weaken controls over the deadly chemicals, the society never even answered the letter. And when Sen. Mark Hatfield, R-Ore., and Rep. Thomas E. P etri, R-Wis., asked the American Cancer Society to support legislation that would eliminate tobacco price supports, all they got in reply was a form letter signed by a former society president. GOof-offer ponders measure of work We all have our own ways of goofin g off when we don't feel like working. I personally have a dozen ways to keep from doing the things l ought to be doing. Some of the devices I use are heavy-handed and obvious . Sometimes, for instance. I'll just decide I'm sleepy and take a nap, or maybe I'll convince myself I ought to gel something to eat first. There are other times when l find very c'ever ways to keep from doing any work. For ex-ample, if there's a job that needs to be done around the house, I'll inspect it for a few minutes and decide that to fi x it properly I need a specific tool or fastener that I don't have. Once I've convinced myself that I don't want to do a sloppy job and that l can •t do a good job wit.bout the· tool, I am happy with myself for not doing it at a ll . ONE OF THE best ways I have of not doing any work is by deciding I have to go somewhere. For instance, I'll 10 to the hardware store for that tool I need. Once I get out or the house and start driving around town, visiting several different stores, there's almost no chance l 'U gel back home a1ain in time to do anythln1 worthwhile. This propensity I have for buying things with which to do a ob and then not doi ng it. accounts for all the different tubes of unopened gl ue I have. It accounts for all the storage hooks I've never put up in the garage and all the screws. nuts. bolts and clothes closet I~'' -AID-. Y-RDD-"1-Y -~ fi xtures I've never affixed. Sometimes when I go to a hardwar e store I think to myself that they don't have much of a stock compared with what I've got at home myself. All this is a long introduction to telllne you about a fascinating story you may have missed in the papers this week. It was a very small story. It s aid that a group of British truck drivers were going to strike because of a new clocking device owners were going to install in the trucks. The device is called a tachograph and it automatically records the speed and the. number of hours a vehicle spends in motion. The 10 nations in the European Common Marke t association have passed a rule requiring all t rucks weighing more than three and a half tons to be equippe4 with tachographs . Well ' I'd certainly hate to have a tachograph or anything equivalent to it stra pped to me to record how much of the day I spend working, but I can't help taking some peiwerse deUght in seeing it put to use in trucks You can bet you haven't heard the last or this, either , because the Teamsters union here in . the United States is going to erupt in smoke when someone suggests putting tachographs in trucks here . Truck drivers have ways or not working whi le they're on the job that r ve never even dreamed or and a device like this m ight blow their cover. IT WOULD BE wr ong or me to suggest that everyone who drives a truck goofs off. because you see too many honest truckers working hard. But I think it's safe to say that there 's a lot of stolen time in that industry, and as a result, many things cost more than they should. If you buy a suit, a newspaper or a loaf of bread , a big portion of what you pay goes for trucking costs. If you pay 78 cents fo r a loaf or bread . lbe deli veryman who brought the loaf to the store gets more of your money than the farmer who grew the wheal. There's something wrong there . Muppets. ch~ at first In New York City a few years ago, r e porters fol lowed o ne sanitation department truck for five days and found that the cre w actua lly worked l.n average of three hours and five mb!utes a day. I wouldn't want to throw any rocks without knowing for sure, but don't you think it just might be possible th a t a t acho graph here and a tachograph there, "tached" to a post office truck, a sanitation department truck, a police cruise car and a few thousand t8·wheelers, mtght cut down on goofing orr among the experts? 9ontrarv <>patioRf· -The Muppets are bori creatures 1lfte rthtrftrsl mett!Hg. -The fut.tllty of smokin1 "low tar" cigarettes llet in the fact that U.ey contain dote• of chemical additi+es, whicb the mak..., rel• to ldenUb on the ~ •• •'tr• HCnt." (Low tar bat .,.... .... !) -C in wle are utl.S..ltlc would be and·Calbolic too, tr U1eJ had happened to be ta.a Protettantt. -The dumbeat bu1aia you can buy Is a cheap flubllpt. -At leut half of all people in the "creative'' end of 1dvertJ1lnc have aboU't as much creativlt1 11 an .. ~w.ora.-(:tla why esenem require 1uch swollen 1talf1.) While It la true that doctors' lncom• averase twice that of lawyen in this country, it la equally true that no doctor can set neart1 •• rich u an unprincipled lawyer can. -Between two suc h obnoxious. busybodies as "Mrs. Olsen" and Robert Yount on the TV commercials, one Is tempted to stop buyinc coffee and Sanka in favor of tea . -The irony in the PalesUnlan·lsraeli conflict is that the Palestinians resemble Jews more than Arabs, and until their ejection were re1arded enviously by their Arab nel1hbon for their education, indus try end competiUve achievement. (And not much liked, either.) -AlmOlt all men who play lbe 1ame suffer from the delusion that Lhey _are better poker playen than 'they are - and \heir naJJy 1ooc1 opponents are eare!al to say nothlna to diaeour11e lb.la eoncett. New Encland ia a nice place to visit but I wouldn't want to live then, what with all those earthquakes. A.8. -Caspar Welftberser hu the ~deft eyes I ~ve ever Hen on a teJevllion Mnff, wMle Qenent lfatrfrn ttltr-._ ___ _.._._..._...,lliiiliiiiiiliiiillll_iiliii_ir-' hottett. ("Som~ MY tie world wtU end· =-~~; 1•.,. _..... .. .....,,. ..... .. 'I~ ~-......... --' , ... ,_ ... in f.....,, -s Mftte tn lee ... '') ........ ..., .... , ""' How much for college? Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, January 26, 1982 Oral contraceptives cancer protection? ! C HAPEL HILL, N.C. <AP ) -S. Hulka, Lloyd S. Chamble11 and durln&orfollowln1menopause. Scientistl say \bey have evidence that Bernard G. Greenberg, of the P hysicians frequ ently prescribe oral contraceptives contalnln1 the University of North Carolina School of estrogens for menopausal a nd hormone progestin as well as e1trocen Public Health a nd Ors. David G. post·menopausal women to conlrOl auch can help protect women from cancer of Kaufman and Wesley C. Fowler of the sy mptoms as bot flashes a nd the uterua linina. llNC School of Medicine. depression. But both doctors a nd The study , publis hed In the-M s . Hul~a. a professor o f patients have bffo concerned about Journal or the American Medical epidemiology, said the find1ngs do not recent reports llnkinl eatrocen with an AasociaUon, indicates that women who mean that women should begin taking increased risk of endometrial cancer. d on't uae combination product oral oral contraceptives In hope of avoiding "With all the publicity about lh11 llnk contraceptives have at least twice the endometrial cancer. rlJk of developing endomelrial cancer "That's because endometrial cancer and the appropriate concern that lias asthOlewbodo. i s even l ess common th an the followed, there may be a tendency for The protective effect of t he uncommon s ide effect o f ora l people to suspect that any kind of contraceptives increases the longer contraceptives, which is the occasional hormone might be harmful," Ms. Hulka they are used and decreases once they formation or blood clots," she said. said. "But here we have shown that have been discontinued, according to ''Normally, this cancer is a disease or progestin actually has a protective DEAR READERS: There are very few services that have a price range of Jl2S to a lmost $10,000. The annual charge of a college education, however, faUs into that category. For example, during the 1980-81 school year, a student could have paid $9,200 for a year at Harvard including room and board, or as little as $125 for tuitlon alone at the University of the State of New York Regents External Degree Program. the report. older woman after they have stopped effect on the lining of the uterus. 11 C 0 LL A A ED Estrogen is the femaJe sex hormone. menstruating." The s tudy involved comparing Speaker Pro Tern Progestins are a group of hormones Instead, she said the results s upport information from 79 patient.a who had Leon M cCarth y,· secreted by the placenta and in the the belief of some scientists that had end ometrlal cancer with D-San Francisco , ovaries. progeslin hormones should be a part of informaUon from 203 women who bad wears a neck brace 1 __ A--u_th--ors--o~f ~th~e_s~t~u~dLy~a~re.;....;;D~rs~·~B~a~r_b_a_r_a----_a_n~y--e_s_tr_o~g~e_n __ r_e~p_la_c~e_m_e_n_t;__;,t~he~r~a~p~y:__--~n~o~t~.-------------------------- in Sacramento these days on advice of his doctor as result of a s lipped disc. The National Center for Education Statistics bas gathered cost information from nearly 2,000 public and private four.year colleges and universities in the United States. The report includes tuition information for both undergraduate and graduate students whether there is an in-stale and out-of.stat~ tuition charge, and the room and board fees. Although the report reflects charges for the school year 1980-81, it is helpful in comparing costs between schools for the coming years. For your copy of "College Costs," send $2 to the Consum~r Information Center, Dept. . 222J , Pueblo, Colo. 81009. Fire 'waste' D_EAJl READERS: I• tbese days wltea everyoee la tryla& to make houses more ener&y emdent, tltere's not muclt potat uslag a heating source that Is oaly 5 percent efficleat. Yet many ~le do Ulat when .U.ei. 111se aa Gpelfftreplace: -- It's a fad that 95 percent ol the heat either ioes right up lite clalmMy or Is ued to heat tile cold air drawn into the room. Aod on cold days, It may take more heat to warm the cold air than the fire can put lato die room. In that case, an open fireplace cu act.ally cool the house rather than warm It. · T here are ways, however, that a fireplace can be made more efficient. The U.S. Department of Energy bas a booklet with many suggestions and charts to help you determine whether it is worthwhile to use a fireplace as a heating aid. For your copy of "What About Fireplaces?" send $2.25 to the Consumer Information Center, Dept. 172K, Pueblo, Colo. 81009. Alien rule changed DEAR READERS : The U .S . Immigration and Natur alization Service (INS> will no longer require aUens in the United States to report their addresses to the agency each January. The requirement had been in effect since 1952. . However, all aliens residing in this country are still required by law to report a change in their addresses within 10 days of such change to the nearest INS field office. Such notification should be s ubmitted on Form AR·ll, which can be obtained from any INS office. The annual address report requirement was eliminated by Congress from the Immigration and Naturalization Act. Congress left subsequent reporting programs to the discretion of the attorney general. INS says dropping the registration will save $1.2 million annually. • ____J • • "Cot o problem" Then wnte to Pol \. l Dunn Pot uni! cut red tape. getting "" the answers and action you need lo • solve 1nequ1t1es m golJf'mment and n bu.nnt'SS. Mail !J<Y"r questions to Pat · Dunn, At Your Sennce. Orange Coast Daily Pilot. P.O Boz 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. As man~ letters as posStble will be answered. but phoned inqu1ne& or letters not including the reader's /ull name. address and, business hours' phone number cannot be considered This column appears dally ez· cept Sunday., · · Duke U. assured by Nixon DURHAM, N.C. <AP> -An attorney for Richard M. Nixon says the faculty at Duke University will be told if Nixon supporters decide to build a private museum near the Duke campus. T he Duke faculty senate had asked to be lold..in -ad\UUlC~.-plans for a Nixon museum near the campus. The faculty in September r ejected plans for an on·campus museum , s aying it wanted nothing at Duke to glorify the former president, who was graduated from the Duke Law School in 1937. "If there is going to be a museum placed in the area, t he Academic Council, as well as the whole world, will know about it," said Nixon's attor n ey , Stan Mortensen. Mortensen confirmed that several Durham si t es had b ee n co n sidered ·for a museum. The Duke faculty agreed by a narrow vote to accept a library without a museum, but no decision· has been made on whether the library will be built. -HBwoman selected · Patricia M. Nerio, daughter of Art M. and Lilly Y. Nerio of 17122 Marina View Place, Huntington Beach, was selected for the Navy's Nuclear Power School Instructor Program. Upon entering the program, she will be commissione d a lieutenant (junior grade) in tbe Navy and attend six weeks of Officer J ndoctrination School in Newport, R.I., and then report to the Navy's 1Nuclear Power School in Orlando, Fla., f o r duty as a n instructor. FELIPE RDUR•S I Flaml_nco Guitarist . Blue Beat Cafe January 27th & 28th 9:00 p.m. 107 21st Place Newport Beach, CA (by NewPort Pier, behind The Ritz) 675-3333 SENIOR CITIZENS $1.00 Hearing Tests Set For Newport Beach ELECTRONIC HEARING TESTS wil~ be given at Newport Beach Hearing Aid Center Tues., Jan. Zlth, Wed., Jan. %7tla, Thars .• Jan. 28th t A.M. to S P.M. 1 Hearing tests" will be conducted by a Hearilll Aid Specialist, who la llcemed b5Callfornia State Board of MedicaJ Quality Aa..-ance u a Aid Diapenaer . . Anyone who hu troub e hearing or underst.nding is welcome to a tfilt emploiyina the latest electronic equie-:nent which will determine his or bier particular Jou. You wtll see a modem hearing aid 10 tiny it fita totally within the ear. NEWPORT BEACH HEARING AID CENTER 1880 West Coast Highway Newport Beach 64~116 -. ---cAlLFOR ANAPPOINTMENT To AVOID W AJTING ----------------------------------· • I ST.ORE HOURS: ' DAILY IO AM TO 9 PM 3333 SOUTH COAST PLAZA COSTA MESA -------------1~ -0 -0 BUER ST. NOTHIN& , HElD BACK ,.... "' :-4 SUNFLOWER AV. • N ~ALL SA _FINAL_ ,. l ~· Orange Coa1t DAIL V PILOT/TuHday, January 26, 1912 . , Eddie. Elf pe~ pa:l to 2,000 . Florida woman writes letters to children in the U.S., elsewhere • PALM BEAC H , Fla . <AP > -China, Japan and Australia, get a friends. ltmlghtbetosmllemoreoften, Generally speaking, children don't 1et monthly letter from Eddie Elf. be polite, clean, honest or any or the much mall nowadays, but there's one One child ln Virginia corresponds myried qualities adults try to lnaUU in indl vldual who ls getting a lot of wilt) Eddie, not knowing that his rather, children. And a drawing dresses up attention by writing personal letters to who is in prison, signed him up. each letter. youngsters around the world. Mrs. Feick said the elfin pen pal's Mrs. Feick keept track or Eddie Elf's Eddie Elf hasn't been a pen pal for letters represent a unique experience friends. When there's a birthday, a long. It was In 1977 when be made for many modern children. special note from their pen pal is him self l<nown for the first time to "Letters to children are personal and included. Nancy Feick, who now spends much or they make them ree l important. She makes certain the lellen are her time working as his helper. Now~days, youngsters generally dc;>n,'t mailed the same day of each month so "Eddie came to life one night when I receive m any lette rs . Maybe at s they arrive when children expect them. was remembe ring the letters I had because the telephone is so handy." .. Eddie Elf ts ve ry dependable . received when I was a young girl. Most She also pointed out that the elf's Children count on him." orthemwere fromrelaUves,"saidMrs . letters are always hand-addressed. Th e r e's a s mall c harae f or Feick. a Lexington, Ky., native who has "Children know the difference." corresponding with Eddie Elf, but that's spent most or her life in this affluent The monthly letters are printed on never included in the children's letters. community on Florida's Gold Coast. col.o red . s heets or pape r. They are Mrs. Feick said that information goes "So I wrote a few letters for Eddie to written an a bubbly style and manner under separate cover to the parent, relatives' children and those or friends easily unde r st ood b y Eddie Elf's relative or friend who sponsors the of mine," she explained. friends. who a re generally between the youngster. The reaction was good : Mrs. Feick's ages of 3 and 8. ·'There 's no money made on Eddie ability to "touch" children caught on "However. Eddie does have some because he's not for profit. I th.ink every quickly. She said youngsters receiving a pals as old as 14," she added. child should have an Eddie Ell. It's a lette r each month from Eddie Elf began There's also a little surprise girt with friendship they will never forget. If a s ha ring that correspondence with every letter, although the U.S. Postal child moves or goes to camp, Eddie Etr friends who, in turn, wanted their own Service requires that it not be more goes with them. He's the same friend .. ............. I\ I ELF'S HELPER -Mrs. Nancy F eick of Palm Beach . Fla .. began writing ~ friends. children apd relatives in 1977 because s he knew kids like to get ma il. too. Now she writes to 2.000 "pen pals." letters from the newl y found pen pal. than a quarter-inch thick -a penny, who never changes." No w, with the help of advertisements comb, bookmark, eraser a nd other such in a few small magazines, some 2,000 item s. children around the country. Latin E ddie Elf also sends a long a moral "Eddie ~tr works day and night," she. said smiling. "but it's for love. I tell my husband this is my volunteer work." 1 '1 ~~,'· Columnist honored y, I nH ~::: by college Cypress College has named Los An ge les Times columnist J ack Smith. an Americ.ana Award winner . · CoHege Presid'e nt J ack Scott said t hat Smit h a nd several others will be honored at 8 p.m. Feb. 20 at the College's seventh annual Co mm u n ity a nd Am e r ican a Awards Ni ght in t he ca mpus theater. The Community and A m e·r i ca n a A w a rd s Night program began as a w ay to m ark the l country's bicentennial. f.I Celebrities and citizens ' from local communities who have contributed lo the American way of life are honored. Reserved seat tickets ar e $5 a nd may be purchased through the coll ege' Com m unit y R e latio n s O ffi ce . " Inform a tio n m ay be obtained by telephoning the office at 826-2220. ext. 322. Forest workers sought Plenty of pure, clean mountain air and lots of h ealthy wor k a w ait volunteers interested in contributing their time and musc le t o th e welfare of area national , forests. The Trabuco Ranger District of the Cleveland Na lio nal F o r est is looking for volunteers to help clean and maintain trails; make campfire • presentations; man the visitor center ; assist with wildlife ha bitat manage ment and tree planting; plus a ssis t with other n ecessary activities. Persons interested in volunteering for service proj ects in the Santa An a mountain a r ea should contact Maryjane Harris, vo lunt ee r coordinator for the fore s t di s tri c t , at 836-2144, or wr ite P.O. Box 12610, Santa Ana 92712. Backlog cut LOS ANGELES (AP> -The backlog in civil cases in Superior Court ,t t: declined :n percent last ., ,,, y e a r , a uthor it i e s reported. 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V\lells Fargo Bank • • • .. • I : Daily Pilat TUESDAY, JAN. 26, 1982 CAVALCADE 02-3 COMICS 04 ' STOCKS 07 -------·--- Erma Bombeck's desk may be "unstructured," but she knows where everything is. See. P.age B3 . ~o 0 Former .country boy now caterer to the stars . . ,. ... w ...... He arranges wild party surprises for dignitaries BEVERLY fULL.S CAP> ~e was so poor as a country bo in Arkansas that he had to bo w a pair of long pants froo\ his best friend for his high school graduation. But today, 56-year-olcJ Harry Finley is 'THE society florist' of the Los Angeles area, as he calls himself, as well as the arran1er of some of Hollywood's wildest party surprises. Among Finley's s tellar cliente le are Lucille Ball, Ann-Margret, O.J . Simpson and Lynn Swann. "We do aqylhing for money as long as it's legal," said Finley, a chuckling good-old-boy from Texarkana and oper ator of Flower Fashions, along with partner5 Fred Gibbons and Doris Finley, Harry's wife. Often that "anything" has nothing to do with flowers. Rock star Olivia Newton-John was the unhappy r ecipient o f one birthday present delivered by Finley·s firm: a n ugly spider monkey. The singer offered to pay Finley double what he received for de4,vering it if he would taJce it b~k. the caterer said. the best." This includes the hosts of sever al presid~ntial parties, like actor Peter Lawford, who once hired Finley and Gibbons to design a party for then-president John F . Kennedy at Lawford's Malibu Beach home. Finley and company once arranged an anniversary party for then-president and Mrs . Gerald Ford in Palm Springs and {>repared the Beverly d 0 anything for money as long as it's legal," says the operator of Flower Fashions and caterer deluxe. ' We Wilshire Hotel for a gathering in honor of then-president and Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson. They also fixed up Chasen's restaurant for a dinner party for then-president and Mrs. Richard M. Nixon. a trace or sell-consciousness. Discretion, he added, may actually be the best part of bis' technique. "You asked a bout prices before and l wouldn't say," be noted. "We keep things secret that are supposed to be kept secret." The one price he would reveal was "more than $1 million" for a winter wonderland theme al • 1973 Las Vegas party in honor ol Frank Sinatra's re tu rn from retirerqent. Finley and Gibbons -one· cil Finley's Sunday School students when Finley was studying to be a Southern Baptist minister - gave up a budding flower business in Texarkana in 1965 and headed to Hollywood to become movie stars. H owever , aft er a fe w disheartening roles in·television westerJlS , Finley and Gibbons returned to the flower business, opening their store in 1956. For Finley, flowers were nothing new. "Wben I was in high. school and college, I worked in the afternoons in flower s hops, basicall y because I was a lousy student. It was called vocational guidance at the lime. It was to give all those poor kids in Arkansas something to do ... CAf'EEA BLOOMING Once a poor boy in Arkansas, Harry Finley is a top society florist in Beverly Hills. with bis partneri. Here he handles one of his fancy floral pieces. The firm also caters to leading . pe rsonalities at parties and weddings. It was Finley who staged that lofty wedding of then-Fifth Dimension s ingers Marylin McCoo and Billy Davis Jr. The couple said their vows in a hot air balloon 200 feet above the Century Plaza Hotel as the Dimension's t}.it, "Up, Up and Away," blared from below. "Just like a Hallmark card,'' Finley said, "everyone wants So what have they got that any other florist hasn 'l got? "We Uke to think that it's our s incerity , our c re-athrity, originality," Finley said without Finley said when he opened his Beverly Hills store he used his partne r 's convertible to deliver the flowers. Tod ay, 32 people work for the shop and 15 trucks make delivene~ Argentine masses revere memory of Eva Peron Thirty years after her death, 'Evita' evokes strong emotions in followers. BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) -Thirty years after her death, the image of Eva <Evita) Peron is confoundi ng the passage of time almost as well as her meticulously embalmed body ly\ng lifelike in a Buenos Aires mausoleum. Most Argentines, even those born after s he died of cancer at the age of 33 and at the peak or , her power as the wife of President Juan D. Peron, regard her with emotions ranging from LEADER-Juan P eron. who died in 1974, was Argentina's president during turbulent years after World War II. Eva Peron wa s h is charismatic first wife. Later he married Isabel, now in exile. HILD 'OWER -Isabel• Peron succeeded her husband as Argentina's president after his 1974 death but she was ousted by the military two years later. respect to reverence. The woman who vowed to o bliterate the oligarchy is sUll deprecated by those of the elite who recall her harangues to hundreds of thousands in the Plaza de Mayo in Buenos Aires. But even the young rich -those who never fell the sting of her tongue -recognize the force of he r personality and to a certain extenf admire her will. The women's branch of the Jus tlcialis t < Peronisll Party, the la rgest political force in thls nation of 28 million. has deemed 1982 "The International Year of Eva Peron·· and launched a campaign to counter what it calls the ··injury" done her image by, principa lly. the hug e ly s uccessful musical "Evita •· the ;ame o f endearment by whicb she was popularly known. • A dozen women Peronis ts, some wearing their hair pulled back in the light bun favored by Evita, spoke of her al a news conference. "Evita lives, and cootmues being the standard·bearer of the P eronist revolution," said Alicia de Lopez. who was seated beneath a portrait of her idol larger than those of the late Pres ident Peron and his last wife Isabel adorning other walls. Mrs. Lopez said she saw the Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber musical in Denmark last year and was ·disgusted by it. ··We are o ffended by its presentation of Eva as immoral and m ediocre and by its negation of history," she said. The musical, which ·shows the poor. illegitimate young Eva s leeping he r wa y to s ho w business success and political power, is banned in Argentina. Mrs . Lopez said the military government is considering relaxing the ban and allowing at least some of the musical's hlt songs to be distributed here. ··If they le t any or that pseudo·artistlc absurdity into the coWl l as · take to the streets with more than they bargained for," she said. Peroo died' in 1974 and Isabel succeeded him as president, only t.o be ousted by the military two years later. The military 1ovemment is for the most part anti·Perooist and as such no bil fan of Eva. A comparison ol current and Peronist-era school curriculum · la UluslraUve. Durtn1 the fint Peronist re1ime (1948· 1955), nearly half the 1rammar school readlng primer was devoted to emphashing Eva Peron's benevolence. She distributed at her personal dJacretlon the funds or The Eva Peron Foundation, winnlnl the heart.a and political loyalties ol children, the needy, dlaabled and old. All public. worken bad a day's wa1e1 tithed to the IUnd each year. • • The book has pictures or her giving dolls to IHtle girls and scooters to,,boys. One lesson is called "The New House." A boy writes Eva telling how he lives in a s hack. ·'lie soon got a new home, comfortable and sunny," the lesson reads. These days. a student could complete secondaty school and, unless his teacher chose to supplement the recommended curriculum, would never read the name Eva Peron in a text. Julio Gon z al e z Rivero, national clirector of intermediate and secondary instruction, said teachers are free to discuss the subject and assign readings on it .. It is another period of history and we treat it objectively," he said. .. But she 1s treated in a social rather than a political context." His personal opinion of Eva? "You have lo recognize she brou g ht a bout some social ·'But she knew wbat she wanted and had such charisma a nd force. You have to give her credit for that," she s aid. Argentina's poor came to look upon her as a modern·day Mary Magdalene. Every July 26, the a nnive rs ary of her death, candles are lit in humble homes n ext to p ic tures o f the ruby-lipped, blond Evita, who des pite her bitterness toward the wealthy assumed their · trappings of jewels and furs. Catholic Masses are said in her name and wreaths laid at tbe· e ntrance to the c rypt in the Recoleta Cemetery -ironically the oligarchic burial ground - where she lies. Peron, whose request that Eva be canonized was rejected by the Vatican. paid Dr. Pedro Ara a reported $100,000 to restore and pr eserve the cancer-ravaged body. The work took almost a year. When the corpse. after an odyssey that took il to ltaly and Spain that . She from "It was really bad luck Evita died. We need her now .. lifted up the country nothing. " · advances. But you also have to a dmit that ... there wer e censurabl e episodes, like the burning of churches." During the 1950s, the Roman Catholic establis hment became increasingly critical of Peron's restriction of civil liberties and persecution of non-Peronists , and the strongman's followers s acked and burned a number of churches. "It was really bad luck for the country that Evita died. We need her now,'' said Cristobal Alvarez, a SO-year-old truck driver. "She lifted up the country from nothing. ln that time, people bad jobs and money. -,. following Peron's ouster in 1955, was returned to Ar1entina in 1974, the deceased former first lady looked to be sleeping. Ir Argentines don't agree completely on Eva's true nature, the feeling is ,practically unanimo u s that Isabel , currently living in exile in Spain, could not hold a candle to her ln terms or strength and charisma. "Isabelita, poor· girl," said truck driver Alvares. "It's not even f air to make the comparison, but she was the opposite of Eva. The people surrounding Evita did what a~ ear. Isabel was manipulated by everyone." At Peronist g1lberin1s. when the splrit geta flowina. it ii not the exiled president conjured '-P TIMELESS -The memory of Eva Peron, who died at 33, lives on in the· hearts of Argentina's poor 30 years after her death. Men, women differ Argentina is Ln the midst of a recession, with unemployment higher than at any lime since 1972. Real wages fell almost 20 percent last year. Alvarez said that as a youn1 man he listened to the speeches Peron and Eva would make from the balcony or government house to crowds that sometimes numbered a million. by the loyaliata. • They chant: "Se aientel Se •n driving _errors.· "She didn't n~ notes. U alJ came from inalde," be said of her tirades a1aln1t the prlvlleged in which she offered to supply torches to bum down Barrio Norte -a rich residentJU.nel1hborhood. Monica Rodrilffl Barrios, 28, lives ln Bardo Norte. Sbe la a1alnal Peroniam .and said En must lake some ol the blame for the Ill• tbe ropultal and ultra ·naliona tat doctrine brousht the country. sienlel Evita_ eata preeentat ''.-.--_!fl . We feel it! We feel ill Evita is present! 'Islimd& shaken PALMER, Alaska <AP> - A •lronl earthquake bu shaken a spanely populated area ol tbe Aleutian Islands 750 mUea aoutl*eal ot Anchoraae, but no damale was reported, accor int to · tbe Alaaka Ta\lnami Wamlna Center. Tbe quake, estimated at 8.2 on UM Richter scale, struck eo mil• s'outheaat of the Island of Unalaska Sund•Y evenlna . SACRAMENTO (AP > -Men aad women involved in fatal auto accidenta lend to make dJff•rent drtvtnc erron. state HHardMn say. 'l'be study released by lb• t\ate Department of Motor Vehlcl• aald people w\tb b9d drlvlq recordt an more apt to be involved lD fatal accldentl. -But It found that tbe mtn b8d ·more vlolatkml, acddtDta and lllceue rwtrtctiom. Tbe1 ... ~old•.r and tend.cl to be mare toltea lD po1 .. 1ion ol cODdltlmaU or lnvalid licenses. 'Tbe moat common male 'viola_Uonl were speMin1. unsafe 'pualna or overtakina. income\ readinl ol U,. or tlpala, ad equiplDelll Ylolatlom. Ilea W ' ,more often been clrtnklq, Wtl'e vneUnc at biper 1peecla ..... \be acddent occurred, and died more often u a result. Womm, t.be study said. i.-. -to accumulate motUY •P""''ll and llO and •tnal violatkm. If ore tr.an men, U..1 .,.,.. IUUCr ·"'not ll'aatlQs t.be rltht4'·WIJ. ~ 1 • I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, January 26, 1982 •ANN LANDERS etiOROSCOPe •DR .. STEINCAOHN ' APW ...... GOING OUT -Arthar and Theresa Punvko l am up between s torms to shovel away snow i om their south Minneapolis home. ~More than 40 inches of snow fell in the Twin Cities area in the last week. -* ~ • I f 00 • ~ C) ~ • >< .-m • ~· I 4 , •(in ik si>en' sivt not tUgh in price; reuon- able cost; cluei6ed advertising. ---~~ ·- .Pilat 642-5678 .. J I,\ FREE! Now that the holidays are over . . . ... --------- LOSING WEIGHT AND KEEPING IT OFF A free seminar featuring Lawrence T.P. Stifler, PH .D., director of Behavorial Medicine for the Institute for Health Maintemence, Boston. Thunday, January 28, 7:30 p.rn. Loyola Mwymo.t Auditorium 480 South latavla, OralM)e for reservations or further information, call the Orange County AFO Medical Group, (714) 776-n77. SHUTIERS CUITimQUAIJTY SHU 11 m Designed, Finished Installed ~ ~8 Years. Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters " FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON· THE MARKET TODAY •.• AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! ca11(714)548-6841 or 548-1717 HElllWOOD MA•ACTmY 19n Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa. CA 92627 , Claims take ·time DEAR ANN LANDERS: Now that wiater la upon ua, please tell your readers moat insurance companies tey their best to handle the claims aa f aat and aa fairly as po11ible~ J work for an excellent eompany and know how bard they try. You would not believe t.be impatience_ and downrilbt rude talk I have to put up with every clay. People scream in my ear about how expensive their policies are and bow lon,g they have been paying on the premium, and they want their money NOW! I ask, "When waa the accident?" The respon.ae: "Laat 1\leaday." Please explain to your readers that it takes Ume to process each claim -that every statement, including reports from the--pl>lic• and witnesses, must be investigated to protect all parties involved. Insurance companies cannot dole out money instantly. like they do in the gambling casinos. I realize you must respond to readers with crushifl4 problems first, but J hope you ·will consider this letter "educational" and print it. -A CASUALTY IN ERIE, PA. DEA.a CASUAL TY: I do ud I sbaU. naM.t for &a.e llaon COU"le. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am expecl:inj in March. My husband wants to _ n~me th~. chil" (boy or girl) with two initials rather than a name. He thinks it will be distinctive. I don't agree. I went to school with a boy whose name was C.R. I recall several arguments with teachers who insisted on knowing his . REAL name .. The poor kid said he dido 't have one. He was off on the wrong foot from the first day, and it wasn't his fault. Any opinion? -EMBATTLED IN ALPENA DEAR AL: Initials are distinctive, bat tbere's aaaally a gender Identification problem. U you clalN II a llrf, ·IM wW forever be u.&ed .-tM .. ,.. ftll 11 year beat ar.-. pomt. DEAR ANN LANDERS: When, if at all, should one check on a gift that bu not been acknowledged? I have grown sour of gift-giving. My income is limited, and so is my energy. It is a financial sacrifice to send a nice gift - then there's the time to shop, the gift.wrapping and the wait in the line at the post office. AJso tbe insurance isn't exactly cheap. J 've sent Christmas gifts, wedding gifts, shower gifts, new-baby gifts, even new·home gilts. Not only do I not hear ii the gift was liked, I don't even bear if it was received. What is a person to do? Check by phone? (This isn't free either.) How long s hould a person wait before asking, "I wonder if you received my gift?" I have always acknowledged every gift -and promptly -but I'm beginning to think I'm a freak and that gift-giving isn't worth the trouble anymore. What do you say? - MAYBE I'M FOOLISH IN MISSOURI. DEAR MAYBE: Give Ille recipient two montlls . If you don't receive a• acknowledgement, telepliMNle or aelld • registered letter to au If u.e gift ... received. <Some glfta do 1et loet la &a.e mail, so cloD't be baU.fal aboat blqUrta1.) Explain di.at It was wared ud If lMt yoa would like to pat la a claim. U &a.e &lft wu received ud tile reclpleet la embarraued by you call, cloa't feel guilty. She <or be) deserves tbe red face. Pisces: Success due Wednesday, January 27 ARIES <Marc h 21-April 19 ): By reading between lines. you obtain clues which ultimately lead to major discovery. Focus on secrets . s pecial files a nd information pre vious ly out of reach . TAURUS <April 20-May 20>: Emphasis on friends, powers of persuasion, ability to influence people a nd an intensified relationship. Business transaction works in your favor and you could be considered for promotion. Put ideas on paper. ·. GEMINI <May 2·1·Jun e 20 >: Promotional campaign can ~ successfully concluded. Family reunion is featured . domestic adjustment occurs and money held in escrow is released. Taurus. Libra, Scorpio persons figure prominently. CANCER <June 21 -July 22): Good moon aspect coincides with long-distance communications , plans fo r j ourney . spiritual evolvement and realization that lone liness can be vanquished. Pisces, Virgo and a noth er Cancer figure in s~~nari.o.,,..'Ier.JllS will be .darwed.- L EO <July 23·Aug . 22 >: Avoi d temptation to s kip essentials , to seek unnecessary shortcuts a nd to throw caution to wind. Concentrate on basic services. chores, respons ibilities a nd potential. VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22 >: Maintain low profile, finish rather than initiate project, welcome chance to reach a wider audience. Focus on publicity, coordinating efforts with one whose ideas may clash with your own. LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Highlight independence. originality and talent as an HOIOSCOPf BY SIDNEY OMARA original thinke r . New deal indicated where depe nde nts a nd basi c ex pe nses a r e concerned. Past favors a re returned. SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21 l: Learning process is stimulated by teaching -you regain sense of direction and come to terms with fa mily me mber. Focus on s peculation. excite me nt , ch ange and roma nce . SAGITTARIUS <Nov. 22·Dec. 21 l: Di versify. gi ve full rein to intellectual curiosity, make inquiries and open lines of communication. Focus on travel, relatives and the recovering of a lost notebook. Support comes from s urprise source. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19): Obtain hint from Sagittarius message. Requests -'Wttl' be-1Utntled'" rr -submltted-i ptoi>e....-·- form. Answers to questions are on the way. Some revisions are necessar y, you'll be asked to locate a more suitable structure. AQUARIUS C J a n. lid-Feb. 18 ): You benefit from quick changes. special notices and adjustments in cost of living. Member of opposite sex finds you fascinating and makes no secret of it. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20 ): Success comes through personal appeals, special appear-ences a nd the initiation of a pioneering project. You locate lost objects, make valuable contacts and you'll be at right place at crucial moment. Experience chilling t DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: Is there sucb a coadltlon a s allergy to air condl"-lnl! I love summer but hate air condtticMllD1. T rou1 HIAL r11· DA. PETER J . STEINCAOHN I 1affer whenever I go lnto an alr·condltloned market, reataurant, theater or beaaty ahop. f get so chlUed and ancomfortable I mast 1et up and eate. My frteadl dlllll I am pecalla~r~. ~. ~---...,.Do-:E=-A~R--=-M":'.R~S-. -:H:-:--. :---=1-=-· m--w-a-:-i:-:t i_n_g-for Mrs. C. confirmation, too. DEAR MRS. C.: You are not alone . Thousands in movie theaters. restaurants. etc., are busy changing seats when they find themselves in either direct or indirect .. r~nge.of.air concUUoning blasts. l 1l11ow of no solution other than prevmflve tllerapy -trying to stay away from the area or ajr currents. Those who are imm'\ine to the cold can't imagine how much discomfort air conditioning inflicts on the susceptible. DEAR DR. STEINCROllN: Sometime ago I read a• article wlllell reported evlde•ee that U1e co•tl••ed •ae of al•mln•m pot• In eookl•I eauaea for1 ........ ud aedlty la .... , IM•fle. ., llnt ..................... ,all my....._. ....... Her; I'" _..M to wait fer,.,..... mann.au.. -•n. H. DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: Helf! At 39, I developed two patches ol paorl .. oa each elbow. lt'a miserable and •llllOtly. But my doctor tells me to lean to U~e wttll It. He baaa't even prescribed an)1bllll for lt. Can't uyoae help? -Mn. F . DEAR MRS. F .: There are new. and often effective, treatments for psoriata. I suggest you visit a dermatoloelat. U.e ol special local medications and ultra•lolet light may offer relief. Dr. St-.Cf'Ob w.lccmw1 qwatiou '""" Mldnl. H• CGMOC.CIMOft'.aU ..... ...._ .. • 10iU _.... t1'oN of ,..,m ...,.,.., • UIU coi.n.. ,.... ..,. ...,,_. eo,.... • ... ., lfa• °= .Ptlot •. P.O. 8oz JM, CM&ca Jluo. . ' --·-- "Ah! What a lf'Ml day to be alive, and, as it turned out./or excess prolita." HERB MEN OUR MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO . .Storm jokes flood mail Some readers in these parts objected to storm jokes, but most or them come from storm eountry. A joke, however bad. in the face or adversity has been a trademark around here since the '06 firequake (si1n on Markel: "Eat Drink and Be Merry -Tomorrow We May Have to Move to Oakland">. I like the s ign in. the window of Patrick's mud-spattered books tore in Fairfax: ''Boy, Do We Have Dirty Books! "But We Won 't Soak You For Them." Paul Bacon liked this line in a San Francisco Chronicle news story: "In the reassuring daf light, many or the men. women, chi dren and a nimals or Sausalito's endangered neighborhood were philoSQJJblcaJ and even.. cheerful.'· W~e but in Sausalito would you find a philosophical dog, perhaps a St. Bernard. puffing a pipe a s it contemplated the wreckage? AS I HA VE SAID for years, readers or this column are the finest people in the . world. It takes more than a killer storm to keep tftem from Namephreaking as witness this damp note rec'd after the waters went down: "I phoned State Farm Insurance to report two feet or water in our Scotts Valley home and found our agent's name to be Don Soakup! Hysterically yours; Elize Winby.' · The spirit that won the West. WA.JlE OF THE STORM: I 'm not s uggesting the Golden Gate Bridge be closed permanently to auto traffic. but what a 1>teasant city this was without commuters. All those parking spaces! Not to mentitJn tables available immediately in restal.ft"Dnts . We must face the facts. however: Commuters made this city what it is today -a mess . . . First night or The Big Stotm, Dorothy Hayes of Santa Rosa announced breathlessly to her 12-year-old Danielle: "they've closed the Golden Gate Bridge!" Danielle: .. You mean the water , :-is THAT hl,h?\' AR SO: In San Jose, Or. Arthur W. Anderson, Jr .. found himself behind a station wagon inscribed "Bay Area Map Supply" with license plates "ST MAPS" and a sign in the back window reading "Don't Follow Me -I'm Lost Too .. " • llMA IOMllCI ATWIT'S ENO Filing system out of order A clean desk ls overrated. They're promoted by the same people who spread rumors that neatness signifies an orderly mind and ranks right up there with clean finge rnails and godliness. My desk may be "unstructured," but 1 know where everything is. Trust me . My expired library card is right her e under the desk blotter along with the sales slips from Christmas 1978. That stack or folders over ther e o n t h e floor i s label e d MISCELLANEOUS. My reference books are right here under my reet ror easY. access. Personal correspondence is in tbe Easter basket on . the chair ·a nd in ca se I need a throat lozenge here they are right in the drawer next to the holy card of Pope John. My ··Gooct Morning, America" scripts ar e ·neatly arranged under the quilling frame. on that chair are notes for my next book, and that entire sofa holds column ideas . TWS DESK ORA WER here holds a packet of summer poinsettia seeds, a· wooden pig that holds a recipe in a c lothespin. a ke t c hup pack et from McDonald's, a column by Garry Wills on J ohn Lennon and a picture or a baby s ucking on a stuf.fed animal. I have not the sli ghtest notion who it is. And in t hi s-drawer is a piece or used carbon paper and a pair or prescription glasses with one lens missing. My husband visited my office last week and compla ined there was no place to sit. He said 1 should get rid of some of this junk. I promised him I'd clean out the center drawer in my desk . but I couldn't go through with it. I couldn't throw out the rock with my name on it that a retarded ch.ild from Illinois bad made for me. I COULDN'T THROW away a certificate for a free ice cream cone. or the picture-of Barbara ijowal" and me taken in a d ime store. or the one earring, or the balloon from a carpet store opening. ~r my stamp that reads. "ERMA BOMB ECK. LOV E GODDESS ... or a book of 15·cent stamps. or the sewing kit. or the badge that reads, "IF WEARER IS FOUND DEPRE SSED. ADMI N I S TER CHOCOLATE IMMEDIATELY.'' I did throw a way a business card or a man I'd never heard of from Columbus. Ohio. My husba nd poked his head in my office yesterday and said. ··Listen. give me the phone number off the card of that attorney in Columbus. Ohio. I asked you to file ... You know something? That didn't even surprise me. POT SHOTS BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT DON,T WORRY! YOU'VE NEVEA YET MADE A WOUND IN ME THAT HASN'T HEALED. ~-, ·' .. , GOIEN ON BRIDGE ~ ·~-' --------. ..-1 .. ~ BY CHARLe5 H. GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF ' , Lt;. c1112 TrMiuM Compeny Synd•cet• Inc from the average player. split :J..3. declarer would have hearts split evenly, he would ~ither vulnerable. South This hand from a team match been home. But the fat.es have drawn the last trump dais. illustrates how each type were unkind, and declarerland claimed. But when West NOln'R would t.atkle a diamond slam. still had to lose another heart, showed out and, fortunately, • A I[ t 2 South's decision to go on to for down one. could not ruff. declarer was ~I 'It slam was dubious, although The expert declarer at the able to ruff his ·1aat heart in <> 7 54 he wu undoubtedly influ·.other table &190 won theclub dummy, cro.s to his hand •A 14 eneed by his partner's ill-in hand. He realized im· with a club ruff to draw the WEIT EAST co1t1idered jump raise in mediately that he would have tut trump and claim h.ia •It 16' . • Q le diamonda. South's eoncentu. no chance f~ eontraff.-if s~.-· -~ 14 ~ K ltlS tion of atrenath in the dia· the heart fineue failed. and What If West ruffed the <>II 0 ttl mond suit means that, that he wouJd have to lose ace of heart.a on the third • J It~~-• Qftl despite its high point count, one heart anyway. But with round? Then declarer would 8vu • n his hand was riddled with careful timing he might be have been down one no mat· •II loten. lnat.ead of launching able to avoid a second heart ter how he played the ha.ndl · ~ AQH fato BJackwood, be might loeer if the suit apUl 4-2. At .<> AXtll• have been content with bid· trick two he led a low heart • KI ding five diamonds and leav· from his hand! Th bidding: iag it up to his partner to A1 the cards Ue. this aim· Bew • JM C-... dte ....... .... ..... ... 'dec:ide on slam. pl• play rendered the ........... ~' Claarlee l 0 •-1 • .... Weat led the jack of clubs defenM helple11. East won'Geru .._ dte ...... F• a I ~ .... 4 0 •-at both &ablea. The average the heart and retlll'ned a _,, ef "W...... o,..a.· '4 MT PMI I ~ ,._ declarer won in hand, drew·club. knocking out dummr'•iL••••·" .... II.IS l•· I NT •-I 0 P.. trumpe, troeeed to the king ace. Declarer drew two ~ ........ " ean el &M. Plfll ... of ..... and took the heart roundaoftnimpaandcroeeed ..,,.,....., P.O. lea ISi. 'Ot-eial a.I: 18* ti • · nae... When that won. he to lhe ldng ohpadee. He took N ....... N.J • ..,.._ ...._ 'l'he •llfll'l au &aupt coaUaued with ace and a e~uJ heart. nn. ... and ..... ,.,.we a. New .. bllMeill~ &Mak ....._nt.11ano&Mi beart. Had heart.a eubedtbeaceofhearta.Had,, .. 11•11h Orange Coat DAILY PILOTfTuesday, January 29, 1982 WELCOME BACK AGAIN Former hostage Robert Ode was greeted Monday at Stewart Airport; N. Y .. by some of his fans before the lesan..e Ir U.U-Sttttt A Dining Tradition Since 1922 Serving Lunch & Dinner Reservations Suggested 645-7077 Two Days Only! New, origin• wlld I• oll painting• b ~ANCY ... exprHtl" anlmal pel'eonallll•• ... "people with fur" SOUTH COAST PLAZA HOTEL (Belboa Room) 666 Anton Blvd/Costa Mesa (E•1t Bristol ott t-4051 Saturday end Sundey Januery 30 & 31 , 1982 11 e .m . -4 p.m . 011 P•lnt1nos baaed upon CLANCY'S 1981 /82 PHOTOGRAPHIC SAFARI tO INOIA and NEPAL • wilh emph•s1s on .. Tigers In their natural hab1t11:· No Admission Charge " all onglnal, unique paintings shown tor sate. Exclusively presented by: M Clancy Inc .I Box 11 / Sotv•no. CA/93463 PROTECT YOUR VALUAILES "-•' I ... , ...... Insurance and Documentary Photography 754-6630 ---~.if§~ hllyPllll Classifieds ~~ Ga f erra 3GV. ~-rran\ \fl\ 11\ aC COV,l\3C. ~ f lf\ brown. a\r . /\. do""~" ""\res. \CC ..,..,nd 35\Cl t ass. e ..i...lO f or ~s.pd· f-c\ cO" ~er ~ a. n\ara'. 1\~.49(» 1~\>3~ t>t'· S\2;.,,n.~ or """ '' Sold thru Piiot In 2 days. Ran 1 week In L.A. Times with no results. Very Impressed! ',. ~~~I@642-5678 charge it ~-by phone From South Laguna & North County call 540-12-20 toll-free. BE AN ICE SKATING -~ ~~!. at an / I ' ICE CAPADES CHALET -. NEW CLASSES STARTING • REGISTER NOW for internationally famous Ice Capades Chalet Ice Skating School. Whether you've ice skated before or never ice skated in your life, one of t~ese classes is for you. •·BEGINNERS WELCOMEl • 2701 Harbor Blvd. Harbor & Adams Costa Mesa 979-8880 -------ENROLL NOW!! PUBLIC ICE SKATING EVERY DAY. LOTS OF FUN FOR YOUR MONEY, ONLY A BUS RIDE AWAY!! ore cluck Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tutlday, January 26, 1982 TllE FARllLt' ClaCIJ8 by Bil Keane b! "Spring doesn't come till they run out of snow." 10 n· • \o lo Ii· '0 " rU , Jn . 9( '<J r' br . , 'er n< I "' by Brad Anderson "Thank goodness tor remote control." 'tOO KNOW, GARFIELP. TO MAKE IT THROOvM TMI~ OLl7 LIFE, VOU MAVE TO 0E A LITI'LE CRAZ'I MOON Ml'LLINS MM ... MOST OF TH~ ONES THeY HAD LAST YEAR, PLUS SOME NEW ONES T~T ARE u~ . EQUALLY AS <5ooD. ACROSS 47 GMeOUt 1.._.. 500CorNYC 5 Ollcomfh time tO Lind point 51 eon.um.. 14 Aole'I 52 NcJn.iWO .,.... 51 °"...., 1nem -eo TlbM monk 11 ....... • ' Outltendlno -1rSclft ~ M Allen 'Pl 2 --15 OtOWlng out ,. ,.. ...... Cepe 20 ~ 17 Wl1tlnd l..UtflCI II FftflCtl 11 DolMll'9 upper n Tlllt 11: 11o1-. I WOfdl ee f°"'*'Y 21Tlllle_., 27TnlS.._. ..... S4 " .. ,111Mdln --·· .,...... 37 ....... ........ ,.., •••cu.. 41C.. -.a ...... ..... ac.11...., .. ,...,. ·==- UNITED Feeture Syndlcelt Mondty'• Puz:de Sotwed . .... . . . •IGGt:OafiE by Virgil Partch (VIP) -...../ ...../ - • "I've re1lly got to do something 1bout th1t toot ch1lr." DEl\~IS THE MENi\CE Hank Ketchum by Ferd & Tom Johnson HEY,· Nor BAD ! I NEVER THOUGHT I1D SEE TW DAY J'I> RATE HoME- Wof2K OVER~ IH' TUBE~~~ \~ • PUNtT8 --·-~ .. l'VE NEVER MEARO (fJ OF AHVOHE r:r~IN6 IN TME SNOW ... --~ ,_,, TtMBLt:•£EDM T~E MOT~S HADA PICNIC THIS MONTH AUNT FR.ITZI SAID TO GET RIO OF EVERY THING WITH HOLES IN IT I 1 ! v '•Yt()W, 13/Rl)IE! HOW COME lfQ..J.J(}ST WA~. -C/..l//i2P .4>JO TWJ:ET WHE.IJ r>U:V'Re /Al me UQJ....~ ,4)oJ() .SllVC:I GRANO OOEie4 WHEN ~l----'111 111E:'V'lf?E NOT.~ SL-IM PICKIN1S IN "rHI! POC'S 1'RASH -rH 15 l!!Vl!!N I NcO ••• • ,.,, J ·1 ~~ ~ ~ .by Ernie Bushm1ller .e<:...,•E U'u,, .. ,..,,L,E AZ.. by Gus Arriola ALW.A'-15 HOUJaAC.K A LI TTLE SOMETHW6 AR,.,"(. IA)O ~I (":,L)'1:5f I WAIJTTO 6TAV IN TUI! HOU61! • /llOT60 QV Tf/E RO<\Of' by Tom Bat1uk DID l MEN'f!ON LACK Of ~5PE.Cf? f"AM'<~ A LO'f, NDAA\Atol~ 'IO\I JIJS'f l(NOCKEQ ()1.)1' M~ C~'fk..f 1.f.~Sts! by Kevin Fagan '400 ~t. €~OM ~ eotl1M:.1 \lM~'S ~t ---~ ' Qrange Coast DAILY PI LOT{Tueaday, January 26, 1982 .. How to handle the boss Counselor gives tips to employees at OCC seminar By STEVIE TRIPOLI °'"" o.lly pti.e ..... The key to getlina along with bosses reflected m uch or the range or probl ems discussed by Aru. Participants' descriptions or t heir bosses r anged from "just plain meao" lo "obsessive, erratic and lazy," "opinionated a nd int imidat ing" and "the worst.·· and the s ituation. Taking those factors into consideration can tell a person wh ether the best action at a giv.e n time 1s to confront . n e g o tiate , wi thdr a w o r compromise, he said . Two Avco executives move up your boss Is to adapt to his or her style by learning more aboU.l wha t t y pe or person you're dealing with, says psychologist and counselor Or. Charles Ara. Ara conducted a seminar on relations with the boss titled "How to Manage Your Boss" at Orange Coast College last week. The relationship between boss a nd e mployee is especially s ignificant to the e mployee because "the boss is a very s ignificant pe rso n who ha s power over your job, money and upward mobility," he said. T h ou g h boss-e mployee relationships in the workplace were mostly discussed, Ara told seminar participants a boss can a ls o be a m ate , c hi ld or ''whoever is in charge." W ha l ever the case, Ar a re p e a t e dl y s·tressed t ha t communication is the key to good relations with a boss. and knowing the boss is the key to com m unication. Although just eight people a ttended the s e minar, the problems thev cited with their Telescopes closed TUCSON, Ariz. I A P l -Two 16-inch telescopes are being shut down and a 36-inch te lescope will gel only limited use because o f the impac t o f NfiljoQal S cie nce Found a tion budget cutbacks on Kitt Peak National Obser vatory. Ar a , who s aid his earliest bosses were church pastors during his 15 years as a Catholic p riest, described eight bas ic cha racteristics from which he said a ll bosses' personalities are drawn. In eac h cas e t h e bosses' personality is comprised or four of the characteristics, he said. They are either 1 introverted or e x trove r ted , perc eptive or . intuitive, sensing or reeling and thinking or judging types. The behavior associated with these personality characteristics make for several basic types of bosses, which Ara described as the ma nipulato r. the money motiva.to_r_,J he by-the·book type, th e n i ce g u y , th e carr ot-and -stick type.and the paternalistic type. • Knowing w h i c h f o u r character istics descrjbe your boss can help in knowing when and how to approach the boss and how to sell him or her on your way of doing things, Ara s aid. "You've got to realize that he or she is also a hum an being with needs and values. Theo you can get your needs to meet the bosses' " be sai When there is a conflict. Ara s uggested adapting a style of "confli ct resolution" to the boss NS.ti .. Ara outlined a set or basic rules to govern all relationships with a boss. They are: Communicate. • Manage time with the boss so It is productive. Always be assertive without being aggressive. Act like an adult, not a child or parent. when dealing with the boss. Don 't t ak e thin g s personally. Learn the vocabulary the boss responds to. -No surprises: let the boss know <in a general way> what you're going lo do. Ma ke it Jcno wn whe n problems arise, something Ara referred to as ''never hide an elephant. .. Ove r rate rathe r than underrate your boss. -Develop a tea m relationship with your boss. Building re po rt BAKERS FI ELD <AP> -New construction declined in Kern County last year because of high interest rates. but it still was the t hi rd best year for building in history t he Board of Trade reported. Permits were issued for $241 million wo r th o r construction. NS tlJIJ "IOITIOUS 8USINESS "'on16us IUSINESS NAME STATEMENT NAME STATEMENT The followln9 per\On• •re do1n9 "ICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATIMENT T"• followlnq per1o0ns ue doing b•,.ln .. s .os: Du•lneu ••· VAL ENT ERPRISES. JlO w B•v TM loll-1"9 !Mr\Ofl\ 4trt dOlnQ l>u>IMU•• KA' PEN"Ncy I NNS !ROY AL SUtTES l W ESTC H ESTER VILLAGE. L t o . 1010 Newporl Ro•d, CCKI• Mew. C•lllorni• 91617 TH£ CA ltMA ·SA H 0 LI NG SI., CO\I• Mesa. CAt2617 :>ROUP. IU'2 H•le Awnue, lr•IM , Vlr9ll Almon l0<k6lwy. 1046 E Cellfornl• t2714 O<unfronl, 8"1bCMI, CA 9?661. S.nOy S.ndll"9 a. Au ocietH, Inc . V I rq lni • Loe k• be y. >OH E MH•yn A. Phtl•n. M•n•91n9 Geon•r•I Pertner. W•\tc"•'ter Vlll419e. Lid , •JO South Gleuell St'"'· Or-. C•li10rn1• 9-. • C•llfomla co•11oution, 165'2 H•le OcHnfronl. 8"1bCMI, CA '2661 A .. nue. lnrine. C:.lllornle 91714 Thh Dusi,,..• I\ <ondu<lfd by •n l hh bll~MS\ I• Londucted by • lndlviduel corPOr•liotl. V A. l oO•twv ""' buSinns •• conducte<I by • llm lled P4111ner\hlp s.nctv 5.lndllnq .. Thi• ····-· ••• file<! Wllh .... As-l•IK, In<. Counly Clerk ol Orllno<> Counly on -.Vyn A PMl6n By: R A 5.1<\dllnq_ Oec JI, 1•1 Thi• U4tle<Nftl ••• filed wolh IN C°"nly Cieri< ol Or-CA>unly on PrHidHll ,.,,_ T"I• mt-I •~ llltd with Ille Publl-Or-CMSI O•lly Pilot. Oec ii· I'll County Clttk of Or•~ Counlv on J•n J, n. 19, 2-. 1917 IJ3.t1 ""11 .. J ...... ,,, ... 1'112 ~11U11 Publh .. ed Or•ngt Co"'l Delly PublllNCI Or-Co.ul O•lly Pllol, '9JC '9fa Pilot, J•n 12, "· U. FeD. 2, Jen ,., Fa 2. t , "· 1"2 42H71------------_,_ .. _2 ___ 1_2U1 _____ _ f'IC'TITIOUS 8USJNESS NAME STATEMENT T lie lottowln9 "'"°"' u e dol"9 bu•'""' •s: THE VISUALISTS, loCJI IM90ftla A•tnue, C.,,...,.. del Moor. Celllorni• '2US Jetterv J. Sch.,.ler. loCJI 1M9onl• Avenue, Coron.-dtl Moor. C.lllorni• '2621 C•rol Lynn Tr••I•. loCJI 8-fl•• A•tnue, CorONI Ott Milr. C•llforn•• t?•JS T"I' tousintH I\ conduc ltd by • qener•I 1111--"IP Jeff Sc ....... , T"I\ •l•-1 ,. .. lllecl with I "ICflTIOUS 8USINESS NAME STATEMENT Tht 1011owln9 per\on " cloln9 1------------ bu•lnM\ ••. NORLIN PAPER COMPAN Y, 601 Brook•lt w WAY, Co.i• Mtu. Ce hlorle m1' Denni s Ar t hur Norf1n. •O• Br ook•lew W•Y. Cosll M•'•· C•lllorn•• '161' Thi$ Dusi ..... I\ Condl>Cled by M 1n<llvld1HI. Oenrus A Norlln This \t•tHnf"'I w~ hied w1tt' thit Counly Clerk ol Oranoe Counly on Jenuery IS, 1917 ,.1,, ... Published 0r<l"9f' Coa•I D•llY Po101. J61\ "· 1•. FtD. 2,' 1'111 ]JI 11 "ICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATEMENT T ht tottowlnq ~'\On\ •r~ dolnQ bu\trW\\ •\ TR ES BI EN SOI A•en•de V•qu•ro, S•n Clemen••. C•htor"I• .,.,, L•rl L McCullOUQh. S24 Bluctborcl Canyo n Roaa. L•ouna Bea c h. Ca1tlornla tus1 JaCQ11ie S•u l 110 C•I•"""· l •V""• BH<fl. C•lolornl• t16S 1 This ~1,,..1 II COndu<le<I b y en unincorPOrllted •s.«i•llon other t11•n • partner\tllp Laro L M<CullOUQt> counly Clerk ot <><•noe Coun1Y on PllllC •TICE JM1116ry JS. 1W'I ,tr'l1t• ----------- Tf\t\ \ ... te-nwnt w~ t.tftCI wtlh IM County CJrn. ot Or •ncie County on J•n1141ry IS, 1'111 ,111tSI Publl•hed OrMIQI' Co.nl Daoiy P1101. Publl•hed Or-CIMl\I Dally Pilot. "ICTITIOUS IUSINESS J•n 26, Fell. J, •. 16, 1"7 •U .-, NAME STATEMENT Tht to11ow 1nq H r\on 1\ doinQ J•n I', 16, Ffl) 1 " 1'111 l?I It bU\tn•\\A\ DIAMONO SIGN COMPANY, 110' ViOoro• SI .. Cos•• Me••. CA..,.,, ~ICTITIOUS IUSINESS JOlln Kimberly l<A!iell, 3121 Bo\lon f'ICTITIOUS 8USIHESS· NAME lTATEMENT Wo . C°''"""°"'· CAt,.1' NAME STAT EMENT The follow inv P•r•on h doinq ,_!,h•i'~·~I nns ll conduct..i by •n The l ollowln9 otr\On '' doln 9 -·nns .. , . ·-· ..,_ Du••~• a. A S4 LLIVAN AOVERTISING CO.; Jom K K•Wll SIR ROGERS LTD. 270 E 17111 SI • B. SULLIVAN PUBLISHING co .. c . This , ... _, .... 111..t will\ Ille Cos••-· CA t2U7 HUNTINGTON HARBOUR MARINE; County Clerk ol Or•nQtl County on Ooneld L R09<!r\. 160 Kno• SI , O. BIORHYTHM INSTITUTE OF Dec J I, 1•1. Cosl• M<tw. CA '2617 ORANGE COUNTY. >OOS W B•t-,.,, .. , Thi\ bu\onn• " <ondu<le<I by en Blvd . Suile UJ. N-port S..o<h, CA PublbN d.Or-CN >I Deily Pilot, lndlvlCIU•t t2'6J l41n. S, U, "· i.. 1"7 Jtn·lt Oon4tld l R_,. Hvlon l(uhannl Svlll••n. "40 ------------• Thi• >1•1-1 "'"' liled wllll ,.,. S.lmon Lane, Hi;nllnvlon Beech. CA C9unty Clerk ol Oranqe Counly on '164' PIRIC llTIC£ Oec JI. 1•1 ,.,,_, Pubhl!W!CI 0r""9' Coa•I Dally Pllol, Thi$ bu\lntu •• conducled by '"".._"" -wile t Hulon K S..111•"" T"j\ S111t-I WM hied wllh Ille Counlv Cl••k 01 Or•nqe Coun1y on Oe< 31, '"'· ' .. ,, .... Pubtlihed Or-Coesl Delly Piiot, J•n J, 11. 19, 2', 1"1 S.J4.ll l'IC'TITIOUS 8USINIH MAMIE STATEMENT TM loll-Int IMf'!IOftS Me dOlnQ tKnine"'"' COASTAL AREA PROPE RTIES, >» Merine A•t , Sit 6, Balbot l• .. lld, CA tM2 lr¥1nt Fl..-nclel CorPOr•llon, • C•lllcwn141 corpor•lion, m M•rlM A .... Sit.•. BMbM """"'·CA '2662 T Iii s DuslnMs 11 c onclu< led by • corpor•tloro. lntlne FINn<Nll Corp. L-ls S A_.,m.n, Jr ~· T"I• ,.....,._, wn fflfd wllh IN County C"'11 ol 04'""91 Coullly on J MI. II, 1"2. .. ,.,. p.r~~::!~ .~·,:~J:t..c:.·1~ O•llv ,,, .... Jen s. I?, 1'. 16, 1"1 S6104t SP$19M ltOTlca cw TWUST•E·s SALE .... """' .. 011 l,__.,, F ....... y "· 1"1, •• Piil.iC •TICE lt:JO A.M., IMPEltlAL BAHCOltP, • ----------- C•lllornl• Corporetlon •• cl11ly "ICTITIOUS IUSINESS -'11"'9 TNIMe ~ -.,..,_, NAME STATEMENT to l>MdolTr'Ultl'KoNaclF__.,21, Th• 1011owin9 oenon "cloln9 "" H !Mir. Ho. m17, booll l3'M, bll>lntUjlj! ..... JO, .. Olflclotl It•-· u ecuted YOU'LL LOVE AT FIRST BITE, by! MOHAMMAD OAOASHZADEH 7131 Edlnqttr, Hi;nllngton B .. ch. C• 8ncl EHTltAM N EJAOHASHEMI '2~7 DAOASHZAOEH, ---wHe •• Alt Cttln. !toll Wntl•kt Cir , i.iM ......... ll'\lllOr(SI. Ill Ille .tflct Huftllnqlon Bff<ll. C• '1'47 ., 1M C-y lte<cwcler of 04-.,._ Thi• """""' " conduct..i by en CWlllY. Sl•t• of C•lllornl•, Will ln<llvlduel SE bl AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO Ali Ctlln HIGH EST 8100Elt "OR CASH This \Ylemenl ••• tiled wllh IN ,,.,._.. .t time of wle In l•wfvl County Clerk ol Or•~ County on _, tf .,. Unit• SWIHI .. : tM frl>fll •f IMPEltlAL THltl"T Alld Oecembff21, , .. , "11t>M LOAN ...ildlflt •l 102 West flr$1 Pll t Str••I. Tvslln, Calllornl• ., .. 4111 Publl•Nd Oran11t CIMl•I Dally o rlelll. tltte -Int.rest ,.,...,... to Jen. S I?, 19, 7•. 1..-i 11~12 8ftd -lleld by II -w lcl Deed of Tnnt Ill .,. _,~ '1-ted In Mid Ceufl4y ... SUleWICri-H . -----~-----n. EMt ... ,_.of .... Wftl >10.0I "ICTITIOUS IUSINISS .... tf .. s.utll .... ,_.of 104 41 of NAMa STAT•MENT ,. .. ,.,.._I'-. M ,.r fneP re<orded l ht followin9 per110n• ere dolne Ill e-tl I, ..... 11 tf Ml-II-bu\lneH M- M8" '" tM .. flee.,, ... c-ty 01x1e ·s CHILO CARE , 4 .. 2 ltK_..tfMlotlc-.tf. d 111 Fl•1u 1•r Circle. Irvin•. C•lllornl• Tll• Urfft •ff••n •11 • er n 1u <-............ II -..y, ef .,. Lawr.nct S"ipp 4ltt Fl•9llar Jack M. Trapp h a s been named president and Wllllam Palgult executive vice president of Newport Bea ch·based Avco F i n a ncial Insurance G roup. Trapp be c a m e AFI G vic e president in 1965 and moved up to senior vice president in 1977. Prior t o h is p ro motion to president . t he Mission Vie jo r esident served the firm as exe c utive v i ce p resi d e nt. • P a I gull. who a lso Ii ves in Mission Viejo, joined AFIG in 1973 as assistant vice president. He became vice pres ident in 1977 and advanced to senior vice president in 1979. * Philip S. lnglee h as been a ppointed president and chief executive orci cer or Liber ty National Bank, a full -service bus in es s ba nk no w be in g organized in Huntington Beach lo s pecifica lly ser ve local bus inesses and professio nal fi r ms. Jnglee lives In HuntlrigtOl'I Beach. * James McLachlan has joined Ne wport Beach-based Golden West Airlines a s s enior vice president of technical services. He has previously served with United Airlines, Transocean, Cal Eastern. Flying Tigers. World Air ways, Unive rsa l Airlines and wa s recentl y se ni o r v ice p r e s i d e nt f o r Br a n i ff International. * Nancy G. Morris ha s been , .. , ,, ... ,,, dncrllllecl •boV• •• ClrCI• Irvine C•tll.,,.;ll '2714 ,..._ • W! "'c:-.-. c.u Di•I• b; p1n_4ttLf.J.un~u..~._,......::..,.-;;_-:-~.--::..:.;:=::..::::~;...;::;.=::.~"'-=-':r-'--.--.- rtlt. Irv-. ~ifonll• '2114 "AMII ITATIMaNT Tiie lollowln1 pers.n Is clol1141 llUtlneu a : 0Ult£L ADVEltTISINO, 7172 ~t Oi'lve •ti, Irvine, CA '27U. Ml< .. •I C. Hlrlll, 270I Ll9"111Gu• b-. C.,_ ... Mir, CA 'ltU, Tiiis MINtS 11 c-IM -,, 111 IM1¥IW.1, Mkllllot C, Hlrlll Tiiis ltleen-t wet filed wltll Ille c ... 111, ,..,_ of 0.-411199 c_, ... o.c. ''· ,.,. ,,,... ""*"'-'Or .. Clest Deity ....... -Jiii, I, 12. 1'. M, tm J6>1 .. I l'ICTITIOWl llUlfNIH llAMll ITAftMallT Tiie f•llewl119 pers.., Is cl•l111 "'"'""' "' ANIMALS·4·PeTS, UtS W. Mef 41Mt1, s...41 AN, CA"*· , ...... Dell• .............. "" PMlrlM, CllU .._,CA ... . Tllll MIMM It <~I-11\1 811 lftdl¥ ..... Jll'llR OllWlt4I ~ ...... Tllft ......... -""" w"9I "'9 C-f\' CW\ ef Of ..... c-ie., "' Dec *'· ,.,, .. ,,_ ............. Or .. (Nit Deity ....... Jlft, I, tt. 1', 1', ttlt 5'1MI Tiie u*5illl•d T ....... _ .. lfM T"I' buMnel I• c-tea by •n ...., ,.._...., fer _., lrlconw-of ""lncor_ .. .., -l•llon olhtr lhMI ................. °"'"' ,_ • .,.,, ... ,sllcp. ........... If_.,, ...... _..In, IAwrel'IC:t Shipp S.W .... Wiii • ~. llMIC wit-Tiiis st•ternenl •n llltcl wllll ,,.. cewet1Mil cw _,.,.,,, ea~•H or c ounty Cler• of Or•llft County .,. ~. ~ lttle. ,_....-,., JMltUtry U, 1'82 -._ .. .,,_,_........ ,, ... '""' .... -tf .. -01 .__ PIHlllMIH Or-c.o..t Oeily l'llot :.=. C:-~,...Iii :: =:r. JMt. 1•. 2•, ""'· 2. •. ,.., uo"2 ...,eltUI. If -· u.-r -..,._ .,, -... MN 0... II TNlll. ,_., ,_ ... -r-.. lllq_ ._. wf .. T'91119---.. •t------------1,.... ,,.... .., Mid Died of Tr.... l'ICTITIOUS 8USINEU fer ........ '~........... llAMl!ITAT•MINT le•: ..... ,. Tiie fol~ ... .,.,_,,, ere dOlno T .. '9111fkWy ...., .. Id o..41 81 llllnlllflt n : Tr tttl Mr•tel•r• flH<ttte• 11111 HOLIST IC NU Tlll T IONAL ,..._.......... 0 1 f • ........ P ltOOUCTS, l TO • Dnltll Pl ... , no Deel•.._ tf DINlllt _. 0....... Newp•r-1 Ct nler Orlvt , N••Hrl .., .......... ..,., ........ k . .. 9"<11, c. . .,..., o.fMlt .-i 11ec1teo1 t• ..... Tiie Oe¥1d Or....,,., o.Mr•I Pei1Mt', _.., ....... < .......... N811<• el a t ,._, Ave., 1..1eYN Ille«"· Cl. Defltllt _. 1i.11111 .. tell .... ta.SI ,..,... IR -C--..... .. ..... JK ll Utlllr, G.-el Pef1114w, Jf1 ,,...... .. ....._ ,., .. ,Ave .. ueuw 1e«11, c.. m .u 0.1 ,,_,.,., ,_ Tlllt ....i-Is <....,ct"' llY • tw.ltl~ IANCOlllP ll!'lllM ~. . .... ,....... , .. """· .. ........ (. v....... 0-el '-""* ........... Tllll ............ -Ill• witll 1119 t•-. ~Or. C-ly Clerti el Or .... C-y ell .._.,..._CA.11·1"1 J-rylt,'1lllL Tel: C"ll...... ,,...., .......... OrlllSI CMlt Deity P1181. f>Wflllllcl Orltlllt CllM Oel11' Pl ... Jell .... ,.., t;•. -,... J .... "· ........ .,, •. ,.., ,.,., For additional detafl1 concem- ~ ~lal offer, call (71-4) Mid ask for our IRA ll)edalllt. We11 help you select the best pa. for~· named sales manager for The Newporter , the 313·room resort hotel ·in Newport Beach. She li ves in Irvine. * Thomas 0 . Beaumont has become marketing manager or the com me r cial/i ndus t rial p r o d uc ts divi s ion ro r ITT Cannon in Fountain Valley. * Robert 0 . Bly has been named assistant vice pre sident a nd secondary marketing director or We s ts ide Fede ral Savings & Loa n Association of Seattle. Prior l o join in g Wests id e Fe de ral. he he ld a s imilar position with Downey Savings of Costa Mesa. * Jac k Kai ser has been a p pointed cus t o m e r ser vice re presentative al the Laguna llills office of Central Federal Savings and Loan Association. Ile ha s been a res ident o f Leis ure -world for 1tie fast f'ive years. * Bruce G. Brown has become product ser vice manager-we.II se r vice for t he Irvine-based Cryo~e ni cs Division of Air co Inc. He lives in Corona . • l Robert O. Liu, senior vlc:e ~:J president or Nissan U.S.A., r dis tributor or Nissan and Dat.aun , •. c a rs and trucks , bas retired art er 16 years with the company. • , * Pa tsy Lac roix has been , a ppointed to a n exec ut'i\'e • position with St arTel Corp., an '! I r v i n e -b a s e di tele communications firm. A .. resident or north Tustin, .lls. ~­ LaCroix was formerly employed ~ by General Telephone Co. 'j· * Gary Pyles has been named •' ·. national sales ma na ger for ·~ T u s tin -b a se d W estern h Pe ri phe r a ls. a divis ion o r ·~ ... Wespercor p. * Donna Morosco is ntanager or Bank of America's new branch at 32356 Pacific Coast Highway a itd Vista-de.I Sol in-South ·-~· Laguna. The Irvine resident I previously has worked al the bank's Santa Fe branch, the City Centre branch in Orange and t was assistant m anager at the t . Corona del Ma r and Mission . Viejo branches. t ~ If The Bid1For Your Solar Hot Water Exceeded The Gas Company limit -CAU.US- 501.AR DAYS 12131 355-1015 1.C.S. COHTIACTOI ~· ~ -\. %* J STIER CJTY STATI ZIP TEllPHONE•~~------~~--~~~~~~~~~~----- I l. Orange Co•t DAIL y PILOT/Tuesday, January 26. 1982. ' . Sit. Y!ft"" l!AOLE - B eac h ·ba se d M o n ex International Ltd. and the Royal Canadian Mint have joined forces to produce the Silver Eagle. a n ew I -ou nce pure s ilv e r investment product. The coinlike Only Answer Page offers you all this: • Inexpensive·· less than 75C a day. In got. minted by the Royal Canudia n Mint and initially marketed through Mo nex. features an American Bald Eagle design by Albert Earl Gilbert, with a map of the United States and Canada on the reverse side. • NI C '144tSEf ti .. I' '8I MARKVI ON SALE WJTll TilfS AD •i.7.450 Lo k • Callforn1a's largest paging agent. 0 • Wide-area coverage-15,000 square miles • A location near you. plus field representatives at your beck and call. • 'TAX. I.II • Ill 110(' ~lll! •6()(JM • 24-hour service We never sleep. -M • -----• -• -ere--. Free uhnmrted beeping' oeflveiy and full maintenance I • Ou.antity discounts . • Keep in touch with home. office. answering service. $ · . school. kids, babysitter, etc. Save tune. gas and money 1'0000 Call today tor llteralurt and a fret demonstration! I~ "The better beeper" • ' ~ fU~Sl\IER Pfl(]E m rare 131-1111 • 953.51a2 •• co ms can get you. $ J0,000 1982 --13,000 1983 16,900 1984 21,970 1985 ---28,561 1986 37,129 1987 48,268 1988 62,749 1989 e1 ,573 1990 106,045 1991 ---137,858 1992 Rare gem-<1uality Ms-65 U.S. silver dollars are worth six times today what they were in 1976. Nearly SO°'o appreoation per year. rlf, in the next five years. they apprecrnte only )Cl°Q per year. $10.(XX). will net a $27.129 profit. ln ten year.., $127.85 . And. sinre openmR uur doors m 1976. not one of our dlencs has ever enjoyeJ le than a 30% rcrum per year Quite a.n achievement. especially over the last twll ·years when bullion. stocks -even real estate -were extremely soft. Not even money market funds or T-bJls offer 1ha1 kmd of rcrum. The secret is finding che right coins And Hannes Tulv· mg is one of.only 18 rerog- ni:zcd silver dollar experts in the country. We specialize in all U. S Call1oll·free 1·800-252·9161 Or call informatlOO for tile Answer Page othce nearest you AQent IOt R.c!oO RNy Cotoo< MV> iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiii~ WE'RE A LOT MORE THAii ~A Bill Oii YOUR -•ll .,_,,., .... ... ......,,., , ... f1fftov1 Se1c:o11• 11tc'•' ~ ..... -...--., O<Olec:tiOn '_ .. _ -1-. lo a..oc.. _,.,.. Qlon. Wiien ....... -"' Oft -~.--...... '" • _,, 24-l!our•-de1 ceMnl _.,.. II "-~ 1M1ca•• lire. burglery .,. -... -Clll .. POllOe Of ... .....,_ SI,_ ___ _ UL illled.0Vt-- Cu1I-~ (llMllfy lor e llubl• dlocounl Oft lllelr -AndlO __ _ "'-'• rMDO"M II-e••n ..... --.._ elllOenev. •• re comoutert11no our -Bui ·-"'· .,_, -IO 5-W.14 -oelhftO -lot 21 .,_. Attd loday -,. Ille-."' Ille MC""4y -!fl ,,.. --""" -10 000 cue•°"*' 1nc1u111no • .. ..,. ,..,. oi b19 """ ,..,. .. ,.,911, .,..,_ and ""''"'wool•~· To !WI DUI ...,... eo.A our S.00.. -l lllllOfl -•e 0< _... by °"' ,,.. -· •• 2481 N__, lllvdO.. ...... Iii\ SEACOAST \I ~CURn:v SYSTEMS 2488 NEWPORT BOULEVARD• COSTA MESA CALIFORNIA • 92627 • (714) 642·3490 PICTITIOUS IUllN•H NAME STATEMENT Tiie follOwinll --•re 001119 llUSIMUM STANFOAO W EST, l tlO Commodor'e Ad., N._-t BHCll, CA ""°· Jese pll N . Sltnlord, l tfO C.ommodor'e Ad .• N.--t a.ecll, CA '2*. Louis J, S-.i, 17420 Wnt Ovter Orlvt, OM..-n Hel9flll, MtclllOM .. u1. He .. n A Da&Mtt. IU1 ~ t.a11e, Newpo<'I 8ea<ll, C•lllornlal '2*. Letl .. J. S'*"lord, T .. So. Gullay Aoed, o.a..-n Helgllts, Ml<lllO.,. •US. Tiiis -iness 11 c-..Ci.ct Oy • ......... ~. Jo.pf\ N S~forcl Tiiis s..-nt wn flled with ,,.. NIM-tnel PICTITIOUS aUstN•H N.t.ME STATEME•T T tie lollowlno person' are dol119 builneuas AVALON 8'fl01(ERAGE COMPANY, "corooute Pl•H. Sull• 2'0. Ne~ BH<ll, C.. ~ AHOCleted ...... _ Company. Inc, Ca Oriew•r• COr"DOrallonl, 1l20 ., .. , 2'tll St'"'· V•rnon, c. '°°13 Tiii• ~'""' It condutled by • corporation. AU«i<tled 8e~­ C-Y. IN: N....-M. Nell«!, VlcePr .. ldeflt Tlll1 st.I-I ••~ llled wltll llw County Cl••' of Or•nve CounlY on J....,.rylS,1~ P11117t 11t•LL a M.t.N8 LLA A"••-: ........ kllw*tMr'CI l'ICTITIOUt IUllNUS N.t.M• STAT•MENT Tiie fotlowl119 person• are dolno llllJ!neun: · TH E JOHN 8 0HLS OAGANIZ.t.TION, ltMJ M•cArt,.ur 'Blvd., SllU• O S, lrvlne, Callfor"I• '27U t!IESTEAH EXECU TIVE SE AR CH. I NC., • Ca llfornl• corpor•llon, 1'662 Mec . .t.rtllur Blvd., Slllte 42S, lrvlne, Callfornla fZ7U Tiiis llUtlMn Is conduct.cl by a corpor9'1on w.Jtern Ell*<uilv• S.«ell, Inc JOM llolllt, PrMldtn1 Tiiis suc-1 •M llled wltll Ille County Clerk of Or-Covnh Ofl J-ry 22. 1'12. MALGO\MI OALY ... ........,. .. u. r...-c gold and silver coins. And we offer senous investors managed. personal rare coin investment portfolios, com- plete with 60-day money-back I Collnly Clent .,i Or.,.._ C-IY on J ...... 1'12. , ... ,,. ...... Slers, la,.. Lee,........C. . ..., """lisll9d 0r*"9t COHI D.ily Piiot ·-~ ...... -..... Offtce ... ,,,. .....,.... ..... ~.,... 'policy and grade guarantee on each com. Gall us at (714) 851·8202 fbr a free informanon packet . Or return the coupon below Consuhanon by aproin1· ment only. I. '440Cf MacAnhur Blvd -·----·"-.......... 1. llCWpsr .... ,.......,. .. u. .,.c......,.on .. P•tOHke._Z-. ~e.edl,CA'*' Pt_,. PuOlltlled Orano• CoHt Dally Piiot, J.,, ll, 19, 16, Feb. 2, ' ~ -~---- NIM.ftM PICTITIOUI IUllNEIS NAMa STAT•MmNT Tiii foll-1119 --· are dOI~ buSIMH M: .t.V.t.LOH MANUFACTURING, It Corporate Pin•. SUIM JSO, N ... port BH<ll, C.. ftMO Atwci.i.CI .. w r ... GINfttMtny, Inc. Ca o.i--corporetlonl, J110 a•• "-'• "• ..... e.. _,, Tiiis l>tltlneu Is conducted by a cor-•llon. ... .-~ ..... r ... c-..1nc:. ...,....M. ......... Vke f'rftidllftl J~. It, 2', Feb. J, •. 1'12 l2.S-t2 l'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS HAM« STATllM8NT ""'1611 Publltllld 0r.,. c-•• Oalty P11o1, Jan. li, !'ft 2. t, 16, "" •tt.a ....!r!s~0~~·"9 S>e•M>nl .,. doln11 .. ICTITIOUS IUllNllSS BAL HAAIOA LIOUOA, SIO E"I N.t.ME STATEMENT Batooa .......,ard, k lllOa, Ca llforftla Tiie lollowl119 perM>"' ••• dotne Ed A s...-n MU E u P•I,... butlneu as. ... .,.,..,.: .,.....lm.'Callfornlat916. SURFSIDE SERVICES .t.GEHCY Alclla rd C. -~. MU E. La INC., e Cellfornla cor-allon, 167(> Pelma ·--'-Im "•llfornla s.nta AM Ave., Sulle I, C•~ -M, .,.. • • ..... 0111. !)dJ. ' T 111 s Ou.st"*" Is conducted by L'91• M. lkAIW, 2M2S s_... Cr-. Ed A, Strvtllers El Toro, Cellf •», Tiii• • .._ •• "'" wltll Ille All9*1• AllOflmo, NJ Merle Ortw . COlllllY Clerk of Or•noa County en Rlversldt, Callf. '""· Dec, JI. 1'11. Jolln Nllefmo, ,.d Merle 0r1 .... PNllFl'a" Ee<NW '-"'"" ltl.,_rt*, Cailf. '"°9. U>fflc.e In 11• Tiii• llUSlness Is c-uct" by a P17'm Pu1111-. Or ..... C:O.tl Oelly PIM, J•n. S, IJ, "· 't. t• IJl-4 5-ttldt Servi< SJ .t.911\( y, I llC. 1.IOle NI. llUllter ~ Tiiis '*"*"*" -flltd wltll IN covnty Q..,k of Or•,... Covnly .., Dec. at,'"'· I ' Suitt 320 . 1-NcWpon Beach. CA 92660 I flits stet-•• 11*1 wlffl 1N .------------ p,,... P\11111""° Or .... C.-tl Qelly Pli.t C:~ty c ... of Or~ c:-ly ... J_,., n. ,..,. I (714) 851-8202 I I I ' FR.EE } INPORMAllON PACKET Pllt .. )HU.a...,.a'-1.A • 1a...-.1WMMak .... ._. ..................... ,.. I ue-......ea.,.., PW4 .... Or ... c..t1 OtllY Piie! I J .... It, ........... "'2 >IHI "IC'TtTIOUI IUIHl911 ........, .. , ... '" T,.........,.,., __ ...,. lNll-•= P.t.ClflC: WOOOI AltOCl.t.TH, ,. QNM "'-'. Slolts ... .._. ta.kfl,CA,..._ h " I I I ·I I I I I 09fl N. Vlslre, ~al P~. ,.. Git.ti~ ....... -·.......,, IUe<fl,CA .... -· -' ~A. MW1tll, -al P.,,.._, ____ ,.-.., ___ .. _ .. _M ___ ",I ,_ o...l S..... Suits 111,......,, I PlC'nTIOUI llUIJ•etl ..,...,,,.,.."' Tiie fallewl"9 ,.,..., 11 dtlllt ""'-•: MOTIVATION AMOCIAtlS, ... , ow Mitt ....... I~. c.lfllwMS "714 ........ ,, ...... ~ .... , OtCI Milt~.'""""· Cellfw .... .., •• Tiii• ...._. •• t -.ci• .., ... I lllfl\I....,, • I ...,.T . .._ I I· TMt........__ .... _. .. C.-ty C._ et °'..,.. e-.ty "' I l L1it1N pt;;; I ~,, 19• 1•· • .. il. OP!a I '"'• I ......... ~ C..Delft ..... • ---·-. - --- -~ J_ ........ :.i:.,. .... ~ IM<tl,CA ...... Tiii• ....,._It ~tsel Illy a .. ,.,. ... ~ ....... O.N.V,_. o-91,....,,., '"" .......... -"'"' ....... c:_.-., °"" " Or-. c-ty "' Je11.1.1•. " .... •1 ...... c.tt. . ........, . ....... -........ '' r , is: _ _,,... ....... .......... CA ·-, ... I ..... ~ ..... C .... Defir ""'-'-"'"· .. ,. .. . ... J .... S, 12, It,•, "!I_ M- PIC'TtTtGUI IVlf llli II MAM9 ITATUdMT '1M fOllOWlnt Ptr'Mlll ert ...... lllu•IMH•: SAND 001.LAR l'IH.t.HCIAL COUlllT, Moll71 INcfl .. ..-.. Sui.e ... "'°"'......,....,.,ea. *41 ""' 1 . i..uc-, •t ,,,., Cltt lt, HYlltlfttletl teKll, Ce, ftM o.1-.N. Lue-,, ... , .......... .......... v .. ...,, ea.""' JSM9fllM L.A.._, 11'11 •. ..,.,.,., ""·· .._. .... ., ...... c.. .. ,.. Tlll1 ....... It ceNu<-.. Illy • .............. --ldetsft .... , ... ... WM...._ ---··"--TMI .......... -, .... wttll tM C-ty Cltr1I .. °' .... CwMY M ~,, ..... _ ,,,_ ~Or-. Cltlll ............ .Hiii. s. tt, ..... "" -- J ::,o9. -·---·--• ----.-.~-.. -------------------~~ Phone regulation ·aue P Congressional panels rush bearings after settlement WASHINGTON (AP> -The 1overnment's settlement with the American Telephone & Tele1raph Co. has br~athed new ll f e lnto a long-runnln& con acreaslonal debate over telephone r egulatlon. But whether that wilJ result In a new law any lime soon is another question. In wha t one congreulonal istaffer described as "a rush for h eadlines,'' four different subcommittees of the House and Senate have scheduled hearings this week on the settlement. All are joslHng lo obtain as witnesses Assist ant Attorney General William Baxter and AT&T Cha ir man Charles L. Brown -the two who signed the proposed settlement calling for AT&T to give up its loc al telephone companies. rate hikes, he says, but AT&T must lltill be prevented from u s ing its r e venues from regulated long-distance service t o subsidize Ill entry into competitive areas. The settlement is before U.S. District Judge Ha rold H. Greene, who has promised an in-depth review and established a timetable that puts off for at least three months his decision on whether to approve the agreement. By publicizing that view, particularly in an election year, House aides say the Colorado De mocrat may have gained a new political tool to take on AT&T. And it is clear that AT&T, after agreeing to give up two-thirds of its assets, is in no mood to accept restrictive 1egislation . Congress could modify the terms ol any settlement with legislation, but it has been more than six years since the House and Senate began their unsuecessful struggle· w update the 1934 law that still governs telephone regulation. The AT&T settlement calls for the giant telephone company to spin off its 22 wholly owned local operating compa nies, whic h carry assets of rou ghly $80 b illion . In exch ange, the government would drop its 1974 antitrust suit against AT&T and a 1956 consent decree that has prevented AT&T from entering unregulated markets. Rep. Timothy E . Wi r th, chair man of the House commumcations subcommittee and a key player in the debate, has already begun asserting the settlement makes legislation "essential." Not onJy must consumers be protected rrom unreasonable ·'I th i nk the outlook for legislation has diminished s ignificantly," says an AT&T official who asked lo remain anonymous. •'The main thrust of legislation as well as the thrust of regulation al the Federal Communications Commission over the last few years has been how to free AT&T from the constraints of the 1956 consent decree. OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS 1 NEW YOAI( -CAP) Cl-Cp ... S Horlllh NASDAQ .-.11oM COlrTle 11"-II Hyattlnl U.0-1"9 11'9flHI 11H ColoOet V. II· IMS lnl • and IOWHI °"*" • COMCIH .,"' •V· lnlrelftd market rntt.en as of CmlSllr ""' IS lnt.i 4 p.m. PrkH dp nol CmwTel IJV. IJ lnlr<EM 1nc1uo.r.tallrnM1U'll ConPep U 2~ 1,.1mtG1 ·mark-or comm. Cordis 20 ~ tnBkWV. I~* -...,,. CrosTre u.i.. 1 1-s.vt l Steck Bid Asi; CutlrFd s _,, IV. ams• IAEL Ind 10-. 10\l'J Cycttron S Sl4 erlco s AFAProt 11"' 13 Dta Des • IJ\l't IJ~ lflJFd 1'AVM Cp •Yo • ..., 0.ylM s 12\lo 13•1, oslyn , Ae<uray 7"' 711. DBffr Mio ,..., a lsSI p4 · Addl111W '°"' 11 Deklao n U '.t. Katvar Advltou "°' J..., 0.IC.nl' 11 11\lo Ka,...n 1 AllBlll s lt\o'o 20\loa O.weyEt J J~\'J ~== !:l~~inc ~ ~~ 81:~H! u ,,..., ice::lie1 Amtrea IN 11 Do<ull S 22,,_ 22~ l(lm•ll Afurn 3 11,.1' •Yo DollrGn I~ 1614 l(lfltlnl !fn'c!:' s !~ !;v. ~r~~~ 1714 17~ KlootG AMlcros ~ -DunllD s ~ m;: ~~:J:v ANallns ,,.,. 14 Durlrn s 14Yo 14\1> l(ullck• AOUasr ~ "-~alnVnc I~ U\I> Lancetn AltesMo S>llt .... EconLaO '"" 16\lo ~· .. AWeld s 1' 20'IJ l!IPHEI ICMW II ~o A-II.• '"' .-. ElllerB• ~ •v. 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PCA 1111 _,.. 21'-PaMB '"' ,_,. r.oa• ,; .... 7114 p:::it ~ th P-E"I 1w. 12t1t Pw.ir ff,,_ ~1-P-Eap 's:v. 1614 .... ,,, • I~ IM\o Pelllllll JO flt .:: l'tlllaNat ""' 17\lt :::;~~ I ~It ''-' PlollHll 17 11\IJ Pi.sttM ~ 7\lt PosMI 4Jl.lt 4S PresGM 2tV. 1'\lo PrsSteyft ,.-., 20 Progrp l\oli '"° Plv~C ~,. Pw18en 1S14 I~ PutDCap "'-~ ~krCll """ 12'11i R ... nPr ~ 2f AO<llm S S"-Reymnd D'4 M Reeve s =~ AMdEa lS"",. AoM y .. ""' :::':" *'°ti"-SMl .. r !'\It 1l't S.IKO '"'° IS~ SIHelGd :: 4 SIP~I 4 S'n s~ t~~ • -46 S...:Mer 21Slll ,;.,,. t=' s I~ ':.._ Sflwm111 I~ ltV. SleraA1 s ._ . ~~::. IJ~ 13 SwEISv '~ ~ st ... dyn ... '~" n\(o~· 1$¥1 ""' ~ ! NASDAQ SUMMARY ''The pr11matk polltleal question then became, 'How c• you free up ATarT wills it• monopoly on local dlltlibuUae without inbl bl tin1 tis• competition!' " "What tbi• c o n tin u• d . • • W b at t b I 1 a1reement bu done la to wipe out the local monopoly u nu as the 1951 consent decree, which we believe remove. tbe orl1lnal reuon f0r l•«lllatJon." T h at view appears to be shared for the m<>1t part by the Wlrth'a counterpart In the Senate, Robert Packwood, R-Ore. Packwood baa said it might be wise to place ln law a revenue-sharin1 meebaniam that preventa loca~ phone rates -particularly in rural areas - from rising out of band. But he doesn't share Wlrtb'a concern about the need for strict regulations to guarantee fair c ompetition between the stripped-down AT&T and other companies. William Diefenderfer, chief counsel to Packwood's Senate Commerce Committee, told a seminar in New York last week t he c hances of a bill beinl enacted into law tbls year were slim. Assei:ting that Wirth appears to be interested in protect1n1 "p eople who don't want to c o m p·e le w i t h B e 11 , • • Diefenderfer said he tbou1bt ··Bell will be in a posltiOll to block that type of legislation." The company'• arguments will likely be favorably received by senators ·who think AT&T is a lready losing too much by s pinning off its local operatin1 companies, he explained. ' 2 J N-B .......... GlhyO Ayer1* Petllfdr llH<O Ovrsln O Un~11 Stew54 s c:.....n TOIMMn Sun Tee 3.'t:!:' Tr-.La ClftllCTm Garcia ......... M•lfll<e 8r9dr pf Int~• Parl'I"" NlylWI S ::x~~d RadTCll N-YuM t RotnAtn CmpVld T,..,..,_ un Utll °" ~ . ' I • Ill> J\I> • "' , . "' 414 + .... , .... - J\IJ • -lt14 • I 1"' • "' JV. + 14 10\li • I ,_.. • \II 7 1-16 + ,.,. ~ ..... ..... + \It , .... "" ~ • 14 U'!'t • '"' 2 • ~ . . "' • • 14 ,..,. . '~ ·~ • 14 JY. • Yo ·~ ..... OOWMI Utt Ole , .... -'"" '"' -" '"' -... M -\It Pct. Up ,._. 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NY .t.lrl CplftAlr J.._ f\oli Gr,eyAdv 71 76 NlckOG C.reCp IS 16 Glll"ISI IS 16 NICOiet C..rltl..-~ • GYNdYfl .:VO 1"-Nl.tlll A CllrmS , 10'-<t 1°'41 HamlPt ,..,._ 1"'1 Nletsn I Cllr1HOU s -17 HardWk• Rt 414 NoC••O• CllmLH u """ HrpRow 1214 12't NwtNG• ClletUll 17'N It !jeroGp 3114 Jl:V. N•ttPS Cti11• f,J~ ff narilNI ~ 2114 Noull Clrtlco "-1 He<IWIO t "6"9 17,,_ Nucrp t CIUSoGa t11t ._ Helmlhc 2t\ ,.,._ NutrSy 1 CIUUIA •:WV. M\lt HenrdF 2'\IJ J6:v. Oc•-r ,:U..rUIB J2.\li Jl\lo HOI-2 ~16 J'lli ~llvyM ~larkJ~ __ 2•1,1; 2S\lo Hoover t '°"'··°"~~~ lMUTUAL FUND '°"" 12 E11Rp Uf.MO ~ .-, 19 JOY> MCIC .. m.• 29Vo Mflt :.:·~ '""' 1.-. lrwTeft'I JIS,MO 20 20'4 ,,_ If ...... .c: .. '""°° 20\'t 20... :..:. . -JV> J4 Cftl•Et . . tn,IGO I~ lfw 14 1414 ,,. .. , .... ' 170,400 ,..... " :.: . ;..; ._ Mii CrosTre 161.MO tMto u.,. • ,.,. u,,_ _.. P~Ptu . 1s1.-:n. J\4 -"' .,_. .. Nucrp s . lft,000 7"' 7.,.. • .,._ 11"' 12... FtUllCp lJ2,_, 21\1> 21,,_ -Vt " 12 n 14 u " 17 " " II~ II,,_ I~ I~ AdveMllCI .. • .. .. .. .. . .. , 211 JO J2 J2\i. DecllMCI ................. .. 7~ 714 Unclla"91d .. .. • • .. .. .. . , . " '"* 'Total 11.-. .. .. ....... . ""' ""' N-111"'5 . • .. .. .. • • • • • • .. . . . ll ,, .... N•w lowt ................... . ,.... ,._ Total w191 ................... . "" 7'11i, I.GIN II 2,1,. n u .. ZJ II 24 , .. JS u ...... 2' Gvl Sec U3 Hllll<O 7.0f HI Yid t,DS l1 """" '·" ~= Fer~kl c .... ..., lftToCI Ull S<ISfl S Fr..SU. DetS"" lnlRftfl lfttT .... Jetln"" OrefT'rSl. ScllwtlB Tomi()"" .t.rcllle~ Bio.._ wt COflsOll O NuE,..., ~-­J -"' ,.,. -"' u -J •14 --IOY, -l\IJ 7Vt -I •• -2 . -~ , --I.cl -20 2 \II ' " . "' •"-"' ,.,. "' •Ill \It ,.,. "' ------ Orange Coat DAILY PtLOT/Tuelday, January 2e. 1982 8 ~\ "'' .. ~ ._,~ Computing auto expenses (TltU ii Ow ....,.,.,,. Of o 10.port N1W1 oa laow fo _.,. on vour 1•1 incbmt toswa.J If you ute your car for bualDla, you may overlook an eatY tn-euutni proeedUN, especlaUy II you bouahl your car ln 1•L In the put, many ol you have taken the lazy method permitted by the Internal Revenue Service in filwinc the deductible toet ol runntn1 a business car. You determlDe the number ol muea you uaed tbe car for bualneaa dw1.n1 lbe year. The allowable deduction la then computed at JO cent.a &>4't mile for the llrat 15,000 miles ol bualaeaa UM and 11 centa per mUe thereafter. Th1J ellmlnates the need to prove aJI the drivins expenan. Tbla procedure bas becom e leaa • °-attractive because the otnclaJ increases in the mileage ..,,. allowance over them --... --.. -llfl--~·;;z years have not kept up with actual cost!. For inat'.ance, the IRS kept mileage allowances for '81 at the same level as for '80, When you compute your car expenses, make aqre to compute them both ways -your actual coet.1-vs. the deduction allowed under the IRS formula. It may pay to use your actual coats, though that may require more record·keeping. If you bought a car for business in 1981, used or new, there are rules under the '81 act for computing your depreciation that tilt the scales even more in favor of deducting actual costs. Here's a rundown of these new rules . Regardless ol when you placed the car in service in 1981, you can claim depreciation for Ul81 equal to 25 perce.nt of the cost of the car. Thus, if you bou1ht an $8,000 car in November '81, you claim $2,000 in depreciation for 1981. For disposal of your old car in that same month , you can claim your costs for the old car under the pre-1981 rules, plus the costs of the new car (figuring depreciation of $2,000). And regardless of whether you use the optional or actual-cost method, you are entitled to a 1981 investment credit of 6 percent of the cost of the car you bought in 1981. Jn l981, the IRS changed the rules on bow many ydrs you could claim a 20-eent-per·mile deduction on the first 15,000 business miles each year. For pre-1981 years, this could be taken for tbe first five years of the car. Alter that, the car was viewed as fully depreciated, and only 11 cents per mile could be •claimed on all business mileage. Because or the new po$t-1980 rules that perm.it cars to depreciate over three years, the I RS says jhat for car expenses after 1979, a 20-cent·per-mile a llowance up to 15,000 miles a year can only 'be claimed on up to 60,000 miles. Jf you drove 15,000 miles or more a year, you would reach the 60,000-mile total in four years. The Treasury bas indicated that the 60,000-mile limit would apply to post·l979 expenses, regardless ol how much of the five-year useful life limitation was used up before 1980. This would mean that you col.lid continue the 20·cent-per-mile deduction even thouah It you were given a rebate as an lncenUve to purchase a new car in 1981, you don't have to report the rebate as Income. Tomorrew: SaJes tu deducilou. STOCKS JN THE SPORIGHT 091! J!IJJ~~' f !~1!~1t ·~ for MonMy, Jen ts. STOCltS ,JO Ind °r::n :t.';s ~ f:':'s-~ 20 Tm Dt.lf >OM nuo l40.JI-1 n IS VII 11Xl.1S 1k7S 101 .. *·"• O.t:a- .. U 5a m.a nu• m.64 m ... -o.tt '~" >.-..• ., I Tre11 "4,1'0 Pct. Up a4 Up Jl.1 Up Jl.0 Up 16.1 Up l:U Up t.4 Up t .J Up U Up •• 7 Up ._. Up •.J Ult ... Up ... Up •·« Up S.• Up S.S Up S.1 Ullls •11,M 'J• U SI• . . . S,4SJ,• WHAT STOCKS DID •' NIEW VORI( I API J.., 1J To<Ny QI p,..., J ~-,(] '°" M 1111 10 IS. NEW VOIUC IAPI Jen. ts METALS ..... , c~ ,,.,. <•••• • _,.., ............. LeM ~mlllll• ...... . Die 0-0mlllla • ............. . .. <t • ,m-1 ~ I ~· • I ': u ... " .... .,.,. ......... ""-* ... •• D ,.nc-. ....... 11.'r . I• ....., ...... _..._ "--DM.•.,..,a .11.Y. 1i1 • rl• H_,.& "-•_, .... per 1...,-•. GOLD QUOTATIONS....., ~: _.,... ,. .. ,. un.11. •"·'" L.-...: .,..,_,....,...,,.as,.a1J11. Pertl:ll'1M .• Ma. ......... :-.. ....... lllrtdl: La.....,. un.•,,. u..•-. .iCl -··---..... , & M-: -ly Mlly ..... ll•I un.as, •11.as. , ........ , .... , .... , .-Dn.25 •• aus. lo;! ........ : .... , ..... , ..-·~ () sa...11 .• au1. • Orange Cout DAILY PfLOTtrueeday, January 29, 1982, NEWARK. N.J . <AP > · -In sympathy for the financially ailing cities of Newark and Paterson, members of the North Jer sey' District Waler Supply Commission have voted to give up their Febr~ salaries. . Both cities are· members of the district., Newark faces a $2 million deficit this fiscal year; Paterson Mayor Lawrence "Pat" Kramer bas asked the City Council to approve a budget that would require aJl employees to take an 11 percent pay tut or fa ce slver' layoffs. The voided month's salaries will return about $2,000 lo the commission, Chairman Frank Orecbio said. The commission also ordered an investigation Of other ways of saving money . • ,Petal11ma :rejects ·project • PETALU A • etahuna voters have rejected a 581-acre 'realdentlal and Jnduatrial development at the baae of the· 'SoDoma momtalm that ..,me enYlronmentallata eomplalned would bave , tanaed tbe area into a 'Sllieaa valley•.. I Returm showed that, with a 51 percent voter· turnout, more than 55: perelllt. at ... TOten, ........ .=project Down •. ,., Rueb. i l PropaDIDU ~tbe plan 1 • Aid tbe bl ....... part, wttll a tarae IOlf eoune, ... .. bouainl unita I would bave improved f t• m p I o '1 m • D t 1 GP port u a I tt • 1 a ad 1 · booated lb• local ~· • I • i ! f , I I ! :' f ' r .. ; / I; ,,. ............. ··-....... . .. ...-··· -~ita Jenrette regrets capers Congressman's ex-wife 1a11s she wouldn't do it.agcdn I ! : ' ;' : . ' : i . . \ ; '· I ; l \ JOOs 5mg Werning. The Surgeon General Hes Det rmin1d Thet Cignne Smoting 11 Oqerous to Yi Hllhh. 9mg • • to Vl8It Africa ... . :r.('. UlTM U6HTS 100'11 6 ... V.9-5 .._~••I ... ~. U ... --..",. ci91J•llr.f'C. ~ J ---·-~·-........ ---¥ ~ -.~ .... --~ -· ·--. ------ llllJ PUil . J TUESDAY, JAN.16, 1982 The Trojans have dipped into Edison High's ranks for. an assistant coach. For the story, See 82. • AKINO COMMAND Estancia High 's Jeff Gardner has been in charge of the Eagles' basketball for fortunes for two years. The All -Cl F guard does it all. dribbling, looking for the open man and scrampling defense . Small wonder he needs a break {lower center>. At 5-10, Gardner IS Estancia's big guy 49ers had soIDe pla.ys left over . . . He's dominated Eagle basketball games for the past two years without being fancy.about it Big guys get you fired. Liltle guya win you games. By ROGER CARLSON i)e ... !>MY -SUfl s ··- Dominance is Kevin Magee jamming the ball down the hoop or Bill Russell swatting away an attempt by some 6-10 opponent. But don't try lo sell the theory lo Estancia Hi g h Coach Larry Sunderman. Sunderman might agree such feats are eye·-0peners, but for winners, well, he'll settle for the athlete who has been doing just that (win) for the past two years al Estancia -Jeff Gardner, who isn't a threat to be making any fancy dunks and doesn't figure lo swat too many shots away. But when it comes to dominating a basketball game, well, this 140-pounder who can stretch to 5-10. has been controlling things for the past two years with his ball-handling, shooting, dribbling, passing and defense. "Steve Van Hom dominated games for us recently with his inside strength and wing shooting," says Sunderman. "He was O!ilr big guy at 6-5. "But I'd say Gardner has probably dominated games fqr us as well as any I've ever had in my eight years in the Newport-Mesa district." An example: t . The Eagles w~n the Laguna Beach and Las Vega~ Invitationals -and Gardner was MVP in both occasions. Gardner's role (or best value) comes late in the game when Estancia has a lead it wishes to protect, and it's a time that is his favorite as he takes on the opposition one-o n-one, with yo-yo movements while dribbling, wasting away the time and eventually drawing fouls while bis teammates are stacked somewhere, drawing the other four players' attention. "I like it when we spread the floor and I can do my thing," says Gardner, who turns 18 in nine day$. "That's when I get to score," he adds, alluding to his eventual trips to the.free · throw line after being fouled, keeping the Eagles their lead or extending it. The quick little guard has hit 89 of 112 atte mpts from the line (79.5 percent) and he's a 54 percent shooter from the field, although he still isn't shooting enough. However, 9.8 assists per game ( 167 in 17 games) is the result. There are times when Gardner is s imply too team oriented, going for the assist, rather than the shot, and it's something Sunderman baa been trying to correct. The Eagles are 6-1 in Sea View League play as they prepare for the second half of lea~ue competition in the tightly-knit championship and CIF 3-A playoffs race. With a 14-3 overall record, the Eagles are trying to put together back-to-back: sterling efforts after Gardner led the Eagles to the CIF 3-A semifinals a year ago. For it he was named lo the All-CIF 3-A squad and Gardner is well aware that team efforts can pay a lot of individual dividends. "I figure if the team does well I'll get my recognition." says Gardner. As for goals. he says : "Just not lo play poorly and to be a factor, to have something to do with the outcome of the game." An example: Gardner's two steals in the opening moments Friday led to a l2-2 first quarter lead at Newport Harbor and the Eagles never stopped. It hasn't been all gravy for Gardner, when you're a 5-5 freshman and in the midst or one of the better groups to come along in several years, that's not suq~rising. "I was really frustrate d as a sophomore," says Gardner. "l didn't know If I wanted to continue or not." Sunderman, however , along with Bill Wetzel, who was the freshman basketball coach at the time. saw the potential and were making plans. "We saw him as an eighth grader when he played !cn.-1'eWinkle Junior High against Rea." says Sunderman, "and he was really tiny ... but by the lime he was a sophomore (now he's 5-7> you could tell he was the heir apparent to Tim Krohnfeldt." ·'There are three things that are so i mportant.·· continues Sunderman. "That's natural ability, command of fundamentals and attitude, and I'm not so sure the las t one isn't the most important for Jeff. "From Day One it has been we, never me. And he's a kid who respects others and has their respect." If anything, Sunderman would like lo. see his prize guard become a little selfish in terms or taking shots, and Gardner says it's one of the things he's working on. As for collegiate future. it's hard to tell. Maybe it's with a Division I or II school with baseball (he's a standout shortstop for the Eagles>, maybe it's with basketball, but not on that level, players of Gardner's size are usually ignored. "There has to be a place for him (in basketball)." says Sunderman. "He's a role player that runs the show, someone to orchestrate everything and he knows the game." Al this point Gardner is leaning toward a baseball future, maybe beginning at UC Irvine. PONTIA C, Mich. CAP> - Super Bowl XVI was so good, many left he re hoping for a rerun. Whal are the chances of the Champion San Francisco 49ers and Cincinnati Bengals having a rematch next year ? "They're a team that will be back," 49ers Coach Bill Walsh said of the Bengals. "They're too good. I don't see the AFC with a team to beat them." And San Francisco? "WE 11IINK we can Improve in the draft and make a run again," said the coach. "But it will be tough to repeat in the NFC. We have a lot of good teams in our conference." rr t he 49ers do make It back, they will have some ammunition that was never used by their potent offense· Sunday. '·A lot was left over on the play board," Walsh said Monday before leaving for home. "We couldn't take advant.age or some of the things we had planned." Poor field position through much of the second half restricted the 49ers' attack. San Franci,sco survives pandemOnium "Backed up as we were~ we had to be careful,'' said Walsh. ··We couldn't do some or the things we wanted to. They had field position and all we could do was stall them, make them use the clo:ck." (, OVIERWHEbMED -San Francisco 49ers Coach Bill Walsh and his Super Bowl champion team were greeted by a crowd of more than 240,000 rans upon their return to the Bay Area Monday. Super Bowl champions welcomed by biggest crowd since World War II ' I BUT 111E 41EllS did plenty in SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -For people who like to consider theJPselves laid-back m e 11 ow a n d sop" h tic at e d s a~ l"ranciscans sta1ed a Wild bon:ieconi1n1 for --U.~Hlllier--BcilWt-rlramplOll San P'rlficlico 4ters. A tum'illtoous crowd estimated by police at about 240,000 jammed lhe downtown financial dis trict and all the streets leadin1 across town to City Hall Monday ia tbe largest street demonstration the city ~-seen since lhe end of World War II. Police said there were some injuries and at least one stabbing, but no major Incidents. Deputy Mayor Hadley Roff said he lhoueht the crowd exceeded 500,000. "We're deallnt ~ a total unknowable, and the numbers l"ew Into a monstrous siae," Rott said. Spectators sat or stood dan1erou.aly on the ledtea of tall office buUdiqa. Otben shimmied up traffic U1bta, trees, street siens and lamp posts. They blew red plastic trumpets, tooted wlu.tles, honked horna, waved pennants and toued around small footballs. When the parade ftnally becan ID the brllllant late aft•rnoon 1uublM, the skyscrapers lit up like 49er gold and expanse of Market Street forced the the first half, constructin1 a »-0 business in the financial district came to a parade to change its route and take a 'lead, the lar1e.t lnterm\aion hatt in ce~~atioo ~the team's ~~11 __ jd~e:to~u~r~to~th=e~aw:a~r~~~P:~~s:m:ta~~~·~a:t~C~itly-~m~apr~i~n~m~·~s1u~~~*~~~~-victory ov~Cin.cinnatt Bea1a!a. an en don 1rlmly to fisht Sunday at Pontiac, Mich. It was the 49ers' gathered. off a Bengal comeback for a fir st Nat ion a I Foot ba 11 League Thal is where most of the trouble began. 26-21 victory. championship. Thousands of spectators sur1ed against "We demonstrated areal Head Coach Bill Walsh, 49ers owner police barricades in front of City Hall ·character," Walsh said. "ft, wu Eddie DeBartolo Jr., their wives and while the playen were presented keys to typical of previous sames ia Mayor Dianne Feinstein sat in a 1934 the city. Police on horseback charted into which the offense and defenn Packard convertible ahead of seven the crowd and helmeted officers used their took turns brinllnl us back." motorized cable cars filled with players as clubs to keep tbe spectators back. In the first half, it wu the eer the parade inched throu1h the crowd. offense spearheaded bJ Leading the way was a band playing rock "I hope it's another 35 years ~ore we quarterback Joe Montana, 90ted 'n roll on a flatbed truck. win another Super Bowl," said bne the Moel Valuable Player, wbo ''Unbelievable, unbelievable," Walsh distraught-ofncer. directed the team on two TD said several times as be reached out to At least one sta,,blnc wu reported in marches -one a 92-yard drive shake thousands of hands. Tbe players front of City Hall and several spectaton which was the longest ln Super were hulled and kissed in an unabashed were trampled In the cruah of bodies, said Bowl history. outpourln1 of emotions. Tom Shafer, a dispatcher at Central In the second balf, ft •8' the The stunning roar of the crowd cascaded Emerpncy Hospital. Most of tbe lnjurin, . 49er defense "1alcb 1ta1H a along the motorcade for more than an he said, were minor cuts or druc brUUaat aoal·llne ltaad, dlllYtna hour as the players came Into tbe view of proble~. the Beqala after CIDetaltfbaa new segments or the crowd. a llnt-and-eoal from tlM a.,.,.s Tons of ticker tape, computer paper and Altboulh at leut six police and more line. • confetti drifted down fl'Om 1t11crapen, tby 100 spectators were feported llQund, creatlnl at least one full nieht's work for it appeared to be leu violmt tbeD tlM "Thia wai • creat •ietorJ the city's sanitation crew. incidents which occurred &mdaJ nlcbt &-. over a ftDe team, a_,....t teun, A blockade of bodies across lhe wide (8ee WELcoME, Pap Q) Che ttm• • Pa-11 Cl) · ..... ..... , --~··----....... .~ Orange Coaat DAILY PILOTITueaday, January 29, 1982 r-------------------mollllll"!-~---------------------------------------------------------------- Paralyzed player given a new. role From AP dlapa&elaet JNDIANAPOLIS -A northaide m fndlaaapolis restaurant hat been donated to the Indiana Un1venlly Foundation, and former Indiana basketball player Landon Turner will become ill co-manage r in char1e of banquets, the university announced Monday. Turner, who would have been a senior on the Hoosier squad this seuon, was paralyzed from the chest down in an automobile accident last summer. He was released from Metbodlat Hospital several weeks ago, althou&h he is still undergoing regular thefapy trealmenta. "I'm very proud to have this opportunity. I'm very thrilled," Turner said of his new job with the Wall Street & Exchange restaur.nt. "I'll work as hard as I possjbly can, and I want to thank everyone for their help and support." Quote of the day "This year when we came to play tbe Mets, I pointed Red out to one of our younger players and be said, 'That litUe old guy ls Red Smith?' 1 said to him, 'Don't let his size fool you. He bas a Nolan Ryan fastball, a Sandy Koufax curveball, and the league be plays in ia the best there is'." -Cincinnati pitcher,.._ Sea.er, al a m emorial service for sports columnist Red ~ who died last week. Sulliman. Whalers nip Chicago Doug Sulllman posted bis first ~ National Hockey League three-goal ' game and Pierre Laroudle added a power-play goal midway through the final period to lead the Hartford Whalers to a 6-5 victory over the Chicago Black Hawks Monday night . . . In other games, Bobby Smida scored three goals and assisted on two others to lead Minnesota to a 9·2 rout of Toronto. The North Stars scored three times in the lint seven minutes . . . Kel~ Crowder'a second goal or the game at 11 :08 of the third period lifted Boston into a 3·3 tie with Calgary. Bengals get a heroes: welcome"~oo Tbousanda of 1crlamln1, O pennant·wavtq tau, obUvto. to UM . 1now and 1ublreelin1 a.m,.,atur.. Jammed Fou.ntaln Square to welcome home the CinclMall Ben1a11 Moaday. "Thll really warms m y heart . • . to ... all you people here," Coach ,..,...... Greq told tbe c rowd which came to 1reet tbe l•n1a11 followtq tbelr 21-21 defeat to San f'raellco ID Super Bowl XVI . • . Back Jackson meets the media today . Outllelder-d11l1nated bitter II ,I ••Hie .laCU., who aireed to tenm • wltb the Aol'•ll lut week, met tbe media at AnaMlm Stadlum today. Jackaon, 35, joint the Aqell after ftve y .. n wllh tbe New York Yank"' and more tban a few squabb&el wltb owner O..p l&elallftWL Hla ,..iatloftlhlp with Steinbrenner wu to be qu11tkmed by reporten today. and Jacbon In Pontiac , 8111 Ball, aupervilor ol operaUom and (:Mrdinator ot eweata al.---- Superdome, 1urveyed the scene of Sunday'• 1ame - )ndlcated over the weekend that be would dl1cu11 hla past . . . OuU~lder SC.ve ll••• .. aequlre4 f.roa-the Detroit Tl1e r 1 I n an off-1ea1on trade for C•et Le•o•, 'ha • •lin e d a one.year contract with the Chlca10 White Sox. The amount of tbe contract was not dlaeloMd. Kem_p, 27. had and tbe estlmatea ao tone of trash left. "Nobody would believe this," Ball said. "I don't mean to be unkind to buma nity, but people are ..... •lobs ind people wllh money are t.he wont of the bunch." . . . By lbe time lhe final gun sounded, the avera1e spectator probably had shelled out about '90 at the Silverdome. And that's only it he or she was fortunate enouah to purchase a ticket for the S40 lace value. Parking ranged from $5 to $10 at lots near the stadium. Souvenir caps coetln1 ... 95 were sold to protect fans from 13-degree temperatures outside the Silverdome ... The manager of a popular Las Ve1as sports book estimates that $50 million was bet ln that city on Sunday's Super Bowl. Oliveira·s recovery a 'resurrection' S~O PAULO, Brazil -Joao m Carlos de Oliveira, the world record holder in the triple jump, is makin1 an "excellent" recovery from bia near-fatal car crash last month and probably will walk again, his doctors say. However, medical e xperts predict that his days of albletic competition are over. 1 Oliveira regained consciousness just after Christmas and immediately underwent a series of operations. Doctors called his recovery a •·resurrection.'' On Monday. Oliveira said his first words since be was operated on for a broken jaw. According to a hospital spokesman, the athlete asked for pajamas to replace the hospital-issued waistcoat. Oliveira, 21, was critically injured Dec. 22 when the car he was driving smashed head-on into another vehicle going the wrong way on a highway in Campinas, a southeastern city 60 miles from Sao Paulo. The other driver died instantly. Oliveira was taken to the Penteado Brothers Hospital in Campinas with fractures in bls skull, jaw, abdomen, arm and leg, as well as punctured lungs and massive internal bleeding. He was in a coma for four days. .1AC•1CN1 a .277 averaie In 105 sames last year . Three of five Boetoo players eU1ible for salary arbitration thh year have reached a1reement wltb tbe Red Sox, the American Lea1ue club reported. Only third baseman Caney Laufenl and shortstop Gleam Hoffm• have not come to terms. The club said a1reementa have been reached with pitchers Mark Qeu and Cll•ek aat.ey and catcher GaryA.Jh•H. Williams, Seattle down New York Gu froltama scored is points :. and 1lx of hla Seattle teammates • scored In double figures as the SuperSonica beat the New York, Knlcks .. 113·99 In the lone NBA same Monday nl&ht . . . Referee Earl Strom of the NBA has been round innocent ·or rePOrtedly telling Detroit'• J.U Loag that be would call a "make-up" roul to compensate for aUe1edly missing a foul against the Pistons' guard , the NBA said. The investigation stems from a Jan. 5 game between Detorlt and· Philadelphlr at the Silverdome . . . A lucky bettor put down $2 at Hialeah Monday and won $382,3".80 -the largest $2 payoff in American racing history, track officials said. By the end of the track'• working day, the bettoT hadn't turned in the Pick Six ticket to collect the money ... Britain's Jockey Club was under pressure from bookmakers Mo nday t o invest11ate a controversial three-horse race in which the firm favorite was suddenly pulled up by its rider -after completing only half the course. The jockey, Jim Wllaoa, said his horse, the favorite Little OWi, was pulling sharply to the left during the first five furlongs. Television, radio TV: No events scheduled. RADIO: Basketball -Milwaukee at Lakers, 7:20 p.m .. KLAC (570). 1luskies tQp Oregon; now 7-1 in Pacific-IO Seventh-ranked Kentucky survives; Notre Dame upsets No. 11 ldaho in OT From AP dispatches EUGENE, Ore. -Steve Burks and Dan Caldwell scored 18 points each for Washington Monday night in leading the Huskies to a 76-70 Pacific· 10 Conference basketball victory over Oregon. Oregon made 60 percent of its shots In the fi rst half and tied the Huskies 44-all at halftime, but couldn't get the ball lo drop early in the second half. The victory gave Washington a 7·1 conference record and 14·3 overall mark. Oregon Is 3·4 in the conference and 8·8 on the season. After Oregon's J erome Williams hit a layup with 17 minutes to go, the Huskies shui the Ducks down without a ny points over the next nine minutes. Washington went into a ball-control game and used free throws to stretch its lead to 66·54 with 3: 11 remaining. Oregon could get no closer than six points after that. Kentucky 76, LSU 65 LEx.fNGTON, Ky . -Melvin Turpin scored 20 points and Dirk Minniefield added 17 as No. 7 Kentucky whipped Southeastern Conference rival LSU7~. Turpin pumped in eight points as Kentucky jumped to a 10·2 lead after four minutes. The Wildcats widened the margin to 44·31 at halftime and withstood the outaide shooting of LSU's ~ard corps in the second half. T~ victory boosted Kentucky to 13-3 o~rall, 6·2 in the SEC. The Ti1en fell to 8-7 and 5-3. Georgetown 72, Yll8nova 51 · IANOOVER, Md. -Erie Floyd, wbo leered bia 2,000th career point, and Erie SmiUa eombmed for 3S points to lead tbe ~ attack u tbe Hoyu defeated Db-ranked \'Wuova 12·51 in a Bil East C.oaf~ l•~t:·. Smith aeored DiDe OI bil 17 polDtl la lbe flnt half foe lbe Hoyu, wbo bad mt three in a row alter Winninl 13 atral&bt. ~ ii now IS-5, includinl a 4·3 record in tbe Bia Eat. Floyd, wbo ftnlabed wttb 18 pointa, Pat Ewtn1 and Fred Brown scored four pointa •Piece durtnc a 16-t Geors«own s~ that 1ave lbe Hoyu a S-43 lead wlth ieven minutes remaininc. Villanova. which bad won five of ill lut six games by a total of seven points, was led by Stewart Granger and Ed Pinc~y with 12 points apiece, and John Pinone had 10. Notre Dame 50, Idaho 48 SOUTH BEND, Ind. -Notre ~me rallied behind 17 points by freshman guard R . • an to upset 11th-ranked Idaho S0-48 in overtime. Idaho hit 14 or its first 15 shots from the field and built an 18-point lead in the first half. But the Vandals, who suffered their second straight loss alter 16 consecutive victories this season, scored only 10 points in the second half of regulation play. Notre Dame's John Pauon sent the game into overtime with a baseline jumper with 18 seconds left. The Irish held the ball for the first three minutes ol the extra period unW two free throws by Rowan gave them t.heir ftnt lead or the game, 48-46. The Irish got the ball back on an Idaho turnover. and Rowan bit one more free throw for a tbree-point edge with 48 seconds to 10. Brian Kellerman, who led the Vandals with 18 points. then scored to make it 49·48 before Notre Dame's Bill Varner added one more free ttirow. The victory, coming on the heels or Saturday's upset or Maryland. lifted the Irish to S-10 for the season. Warriors on road to~t PASADENA -Woodbridge High's basketball team is in action tonight. starting at 8 o'clock, when Marshall F unda mental's Eagles provide the opposition at Pasadena High in another stop on the Warriors' free-lance schedule. Woodbridge enters with an 11·5 record and the No. 3 ranking in CIF small schools circles, while Marshall is ~e No. 5 team. It's WOOdbrldge 's final or 17 road games before the Warriors open their home season Friday against Vincent Me mggial. Will Leonard haunt Duran? Sugar Ray to be. at ringlide BY BD 8CHUYLE& JR. --. aJ...-.,... When Roberto Duran ftlhts for tu. future Saturday n!lht, he wut be H mlnded of the put. Su1a.r r;tay Leonard will be at riapW. u a television commentator for Du.ran'• eball...,• agalqst Wtlfred Benites. the World BoxlDI Association junior mlddlewei1ht champion, al Caesars Palace in Lu Ve1u. "MY PRESENCE will affect him," Leonard said by telephone from Pboenlx, where he i. training for a d e fe nse of the undisputed ANALYSIS .tijfi welterweight title against Bruce Finch Feb. 15 at Reno, Nev. "It will remind him of somethln1 he doesD't want to be reminded or." On Nov. 25, 1980, Duran, claimln& he had stomach pains, walked away rrom Leonard aad the World Boxing Council welterweight tltle lo the eighth round or t heir scheduled IS-round rematch at New Orleans. The macho man of boxing, "Hands of Stone," bad quit, and he said he would not fight a1ain. "Duran, traitor," was painted on a buildin& in Panama City, where he lives. A national idol bad feet or clay. DURAN CAME BACK ... and for only one reason. He wanted a third fight against Leonard. Since returning, Duran has won two lO·round decisions, before getting the shot at Benites. A victory would make him only the seventh fl1bter to hold titles in three weight c.lusea, but more importantly to him, it could set up a third Leonard right. "It depends on how he wins ... whether it la 1 economically feasible," said Leonard, who baa earned about $35 million in the ring. But, Leonard was asked , what if public demand for a third fight "snowballed and it resulted in a ton of money for you? Why not?" "Exactly," replied Leonard. U a lhlrd fifbt did take place, Leonard should win. It would be for the welterweight title, meaning Duran would have to get down to 147 pounds, giving Leonard an advantage in strength as well as speed. The junior middleweight limit is 154. BUT IT WOULD be a big risk for Leonard. A Duran victory would raise a lot of questiou about the fight in New Orleans. Leonard doesn't need Duran to make money. He can get a couple or million for filhting anybody, and he can make a ton of money in a rematch with TbolJ)as Hearns or in cballenliftg Ma rvin Hagler , the undisputed middleweight cha mpion. Besides, Leonard feels Benitez will lake care or the Duran problem . Benitez, who at 23 became the first man to win titles in three divisions since Henry Ann1tron1 in 1938, is a marvelous boxer who previously bel4f tbe junior we lterweight and welte rwei&ht cha mpionships. His only defeat in 44 bouta came when he lost the welterweight title, beiJll stopped by Leonard with six seconds left in their fipt Nov. 30. 1979. It was Benitez· first fight in eicbt months. \> Basketball scores College .... WHlll"91on 76~ 70 Cll POIY·,..,.._ '2, lAVer,,. 77 hcMft S.n Dle90 St 51, Air Fiw<e S7 wyomlft9 a . H-•ll" S.allle Pec:lfk 71, E. _,,.,.. ... w..... Akron 1S. ci.w•-St. 11 (otl E vensvllle •. O.trolt " Kanses n. Alcorn St . .0 Loyola, 111. "· Bvti.r 7J NOtr9 De,,.. 50, ICI-41 lotl Otllo U. 10. Aacltord S4 ValN ral'° JS, 54. Fr•n<IS, Ill ... s...... H K-\IC1ly .... E . K...Cucky 62 G• Sooll11ttn•7,Cent_y .. (o0 Kentucky 7', LSU •S ., SW Loulsl-71. 1.Aoislana TKll St M<N-St.10, An..,ws Sl., Ne•~"· Wl'-·Pat111kle IJ NW LoulSIMI• "·SE L.oulslMI, 1S Soutll Carollna 101, s. MIMIHlcll>i Devi"-n, VMI St VlroJnl• TKh 13, St loub IS E TtnnHWe Sl 9', W. C-OllN f2 lot) W. ICtfltutlly 6S, CM.._ S7 A-la<NM St. S7, ,.,....... S6 <•O Ttnn.<N"--a. Clt-165 FIOf'lde St, 101, St. lAO'I 7' Va Commonweallll 11 . S MIHIUlppi .. . ... c;.or ...... n, VIII-a" 8uckrw41 ... Get~ .. Falrltloll Olckln!M>ft IOt. Lon9 1s1enc1 u . 100 WHt Vl1"91nla n. Mffwctlullltl160 .... , J4, lycomlft9 .. Syra<.,. ... P9M. St .. St 8-luA JO. R.,.._" JI Loyola, Md. '2. SC P'•-1\, Pa. 61 SI Jolln'I t1, s.ton Hell 15 Hotstra '5. Oii--. U ....._, Htrdl,._Sl....._ 41. ~ 4S Alce 42, SMU 40 L•,..., ti, Tuas.,..r11"91on '7 w ha.H St. 7&., r .. as.s.n •-lo .. High IChool • ....... L.Mlm E-•-.S,IC.,_.,,e . Purnell is headed for USC College basketball JOHNSON • SON Edison assistant to handle offensive line, tight ends By ROGER CARLSON °'_......,"" .... University of Southern California fQOtball coach John Robinson made it official Monday - he has added Russ Purnell to bis coaching staff. The long-time assistant to Bill Workman at Edison High School will handle the tight ends and • assist Hudson Houck with the offensive line. "I'm very, very happy,'' Purnell said Monday after m eeting with R obinso n in t h e afternoon. After two years as ·a graduate aaslatan-t at Whittier, he spent one year under Dave Holland at Corona del Mar High before moving into the Edison camp. Purnell became known by the USC staff because of the premier players cominl out of Edison High the past 4·5 yeafs and as Houck continued to visit the Edison campus to look at one athlete or another, the bonds became closer with Purnell. Purnell's nine-year stay with the Chargers and under Workman bas found Edison posting a 78-20-1 record (45-5 the past four years), but even more importantly' in USC's eyes, tdlaon has produced blue chip players. A1nong lbls year's cropi in which USC bas shown great interest , are fullback Dave Geroux and linebacker Rick DiBemardo. Btg Sky Conference '*"· -• L P'Ct. •• L M INflo s I .m " ' .... 1-Sl 4 2 A61 IJ 4 .rtS ......... ,._ J 2 .... 12 4 .7• --> 2 .... 10 7 .. 9e1M$t. ~ ·~ .. • .... -.......sc, •• 1 It ... w.i-sc. , . .m " '.m ..... ,_ 0 s .• • ta .m ONo va ... y c::t•renc:i... • L P'CL W L M MurrayM. J I .11S t> 4 .JU ""·I("'"'"' 7 I .11S " 6 .JU M~T--• 2 7SI IJ •• 7'S ,. ...... St. s > . us • 1 .m "::f.-st J s .JU s ".m T-Kii > s .SJS • IO .JJS Avttln PMy , . .!SI 4 , • .m ·-.... 1 • .HO S II .JU E. IC ... tut·ky 1 1 t2S • 12 ·"' MIMOUlt Y•lley g:r.tere"f:.. l • L "'" • LM ••MllY • ' . ~ It 1 ... TlflM s l .714 ,, I .MJ '"' ....... s t .71• " . ..., I Presents ... Bia hat Conference c .... -.. L P'Ct. • l """-VIII-• • I ,151 IJ > .11> C-Clk UI 4 2 ... J 12 > -St.Jeflft's J 2 ... 12 > .. Ge«tetowll J J ..MIO u s .m SyrK-J > ·* 10 • ..as ..._Cal .... J 4 .•2' t 6 .SJI 5elOft Hell 1 4 .100 t .... p,.,,io.nc • I s ... 7 t • .m Ivy Lemgue .. c.t. -w L P'ct. w L ""t. COJ'Mll J 0 t.000 • • ,.Qt 9rown t 1 .. , 2 " .IS4 HerverCI 2 I ... , • 1 • .u . Pete the ••Greek .i Veit , I .. , J • .m PrlncelOll I I SCIO S 1 ,0 1 COlvmbi<t I 1 w. J .4'1 ....... 0 , .000 s ••• De""*"" 0 J .000 s • -Matar Independent• • t. """' Picks Of O.Peul " I ... , 0.'I''°" 12 J .IGO '.The Week M.t,.,elte u s .722 ......... 1.aveo-n .... , .... Or.._ 10 s ... , Hor'91TuaSt. II • M7 ····=..,. II • .IA1 W.111 11 • M7 .......... SL . %...':'°' .. 'T ll be working with ind ividual tec hniques, blocking and passin1." adds Purnell, who was a prime candidate for the open slot.at Ocean View Hi&b, but backed-!!!!=:-=:;;::=~=~~i!'!!!!~~~~~!!!!!!;:=::~=-""~~fiE~ purauedhi:i. roJana Titans pegged No. ·1 4 , .m " t I -I .• II ... , .......... St. 11 J ·'" J .. ...... 10 7 .. s .m ,..._ 10 1 .. "Off the field it'll be m ostly w l th TUCSON (AP> -College buebAll coaches say breakin1 down the Cal Stale fu!lertoo will be the nation'• top team in co m put e rs , " a a y s 1912. ·~<1~1 to the first preHuon poll by Purnell, an ualatant al "Coltesiate Baseball" newspaper. Edison for nine yean. More than 125 coaches from all parts of the RUii 11\MNeLL · • w lt b Ed hon country voted at lbe recent co1Je1e baseball meettnc Bannln1 tbla year and the Hawaii trip coaches' convention in Houston, Tena. comtn1 up," continued Purnell, "it's a litUe Hawaii WH tabbed No. 2 and defendln1 difficult, but opportunities like Ulla don't pop up at champion Arilona State third. tbe perfeet limes." Ranbd fourth wa1 Stanford, wltla Mlchl1an The opeatni on tbe USC stan came about Mb, Clenwoa &lxtb and Oklahoma sua., Frtlno .i.n defemlve coordinator tl.C. Slocum ~eked State, llllaiaippl St-. and Nellrub roundloc hi• bap for Tampa Bay under fonne1' USC Coach out the top 10. Jobn McKay. ' The top • included Mlaml, l"la.: W....,,. FOlter ADdenoa, wbo bad been wilh UCLA Mlchl1an; South Carollaa; Texu M•: Jl'lollda and the llaml. mned from the tlOt ead aru to Sta'!i ..,..._; • .-.; Lamar; Br1111am Y_,, tlM .,.... wblcb opened the bole for Purnell, and v1rctma Teeb. ,.bo WW allo eoatl1uM la bit a.aeblq eapeelty at ArllOfta State Coacb Jlm Brock sald Uae ldlHD with U.S. Oovenunent eacf trafftc: aDd top.rated Tttana will field one Of tlM blet·bitbl 1 1afet:Jbatbemon:U.Dp. t••m• ead .. b•v• superior pltcltiDI plua PuraelJ, a A ·JHr·olcl HuaUaftoD Beacb outat-.., newcomers .••. ..... dmt. plQM football M ff...... ...cb "I dOn't He 8JIJOll• AllW t ... • ....... r," Bl'A£t I HJ1:b. ~ Cout CoUue lltd "1atttMr eon.... --......... addH. ' \ S.11 ..... , . ... 1 ' .. S..1111'1114 ... t • .J.1t Cre""'9ft t s •• , tt .2'I ....... • ... ,.,.._ .. I s .'61 1 • •• N~WltmlflllO" • • •• W. T .. ftll. I I .Ml • • •• C I 7 • •• J ..... -7 •... J ...... c-=rncie T--M • J • A1 .... 111.~Clrclt • 10 .... s.c.,.. ... • II ,JS,) ......... .. "811tt ..... vir.-r.a T.,._ .......... Clllc ..... lt.L.wl• L I W L t"St. W L N. ~';!'\::''-' • IS.-• I ... It ' -• tO ·-• t ... , ti I -v....., .... • tO •• It.-It I -p.,..~ • " .Jtl I t ... " ' Ml Nlt ..... k a ' .Ill a'.-• I .• ~·· • ti .ns . .... " I.-Tt• .. 1111 ......... • ,, .m . .. ·-. " .. Utk•C'""9 t t• .tie New PartssDepartmeti Boan Now Opeo.8:00 am -1:00-pm Sana,daya NCOLN. ME 1888 B...-bor Boaleriid. Coeta tlcaa R C U (714) 5IO-WO From Page C1 49ERS' OFFENSE ••• • I the be&t lo lbe AFC aad the second belt ln tbe NFL," said Walsh. "Thll wu one of lhe>1e unJque yeart ht Super Bowl hlatory when both teams had beaten •• • everybody. Anybody you mlthl thJnk wu u aood had a •hot and couldn't beat them. Clearly, you bad the two beat teama in 18'1 In lbe Super Bowl.·· • -Walsh aald he wun 'l surprised al CinclnnaU'a ~ T half comeback after San e8Dl tennU FranclJco had bullt it.f bll lead. "You just don'l co out and h I ~---Dl~)Uor .thf! world cht_rnplonshlp 88 new 00 and have a cakewalk, nt Aid. A revamped and expanded version of team tennis Is comlna to Anaheim Convention Center Ulla summer as the California Orana• have announced plans to \Ule that raciUty ror seven matches in July. . t Team tennis is entering Its eeond year or a rebuildln1 l"Oc!eu and the league bas been· expanded rrom rour teams to eight in 1982. Expansion teams in Chicago, Houston, DaUas and Phoenix join the Oranges, Loe Aneeles, San Diego and Oakland to make up the revised Team Tennis League. · Oranges' general manager Brett Hunsaker has announced that the club will play at the Con vention center against Chicago July 18th, Houston on the 19th, Dallas on the 21st, Los Angeles on the 23rd, Oakland on' the 24th, Phoenix on the 28lh and San Diego on the 29th. The Oranges will get a slight jump on the added competition with the first drart choice at the league draft. Montana accepted the Sport Maaazlne MVP award humbl1. "I TAKE this award in honor of the whole team," be said. "It was suc:h a team erfort." Montana s aid the 49ers realized that this represented a spec ial opportunity for them. Remember, t heir Bay Area neighbors from Oakland won the Super Bo~l a year ago and then turned into also-rans in 1981 . So San Francisco wasn't about to waste its shot. "There have been great players who never reached the Super Bowl," the quarterback s aid. "We felt that this was our chance. It may never happen again. We wanted lo take advantage or it. .. But Montana s aid he fell the 49ers would be back again in future Super Bowls. ·'I would like to think we could dominate if we stay healthy and keep...things our way. We 've got the talent to do it. .. - Especially at quarterback. ........... DRIVE TO VICTORY -Lanny Wadkins appear pleased with his opening tee shot Monday in the final round of the Phoenix Open. He definitely was pleased at day's end. His 65 gave him a 263 total and his firs t tourney win s ince 1979. Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Tueaday, January 26. 1982 . ~ ............ From PageC1 WELCOME • • 1\e 11pontuneou11 celebrations roll6wing the victory. In those Incidents, four police i.nc.I more than 100 people were inJured. ut least seven were stabbed and one jewelry store was looted, p<>licc said. "It could've been a lot worse than It was," said Lt. •·rank Martinez. "Our official estimate is about 240,000 people overall were out there today and when you get cr o wds Ii ke tha t , anything can happen. Right now we're not aware of any real serious injuries. l think most people just had a heck or a good time and a few people got out or hand." The stabbing victim, with a stomach wound, was reported in stable condition by workers at Mission Emergency Hospital. Sailor soccer team slips by Sea Kings Bob Talamo. Kurt Lohse and Tom Gotuzzo each scored goals Monday a fternoon to spark Newport Harbor High to a 3·2 victory over Corona del Mar in Sea View League soccer action. SAYS IT ALL Sa n Francisco 49e rs linebacker Craig Puki wa ves Monday's headlines· from a cable car during their Supe r Bowl vi c tory parade in San Francisco . Sunday's 26-21 v1cto r v over tht• Cin c innati Bengals was the 49ers· fi rst Super Bowl win. The win upped the Sailors· league record to 3-3 . CdM received a pair of goals from Vince McGuiness. The Sea Kin gs' record in league now stands at 3-2-1. Little on the comeback trail With back problems 'behind her, she's looking forUXlrd to Industry Hills When the LPGA makes its closest appearance to Orange County and Mesa Verde Country Club this year, fans will have to trav'el up the freeway to Indusiry Hills to take in the Olympia Gold Classic March 11·14. ~ This one was shortened to 36 holes last year because of heavy rains on the weekend and Sally Little captured first place with rounds of 71·71-142. four-under par on the Eisenhower course. She's looking forward to returrung to Industry Hills and was on hand this past week for an impromptu conference. There is a new hotel racility right at the course <Sheraton) and she stayed ovemi1ht. _ r "Wait unW I tell the other girls about the facilities here," LllUe said. "I can't believe it. With facilities like thla, the players can't help comma here." Her aolf 1ame wu better earlier in the year lD 1911 than at conclusion but sbe feela abe hu overcome a blick probJem and is ready for another bi1 atart. "When I played here last year, I was playtna very weU. But th1np went down tor me when J pulled my blick out ln the middle of the seaaon. It took me 2~ months to feel like I was aggressive a1aln," she aaid. WREN ftlE WOMEN'S &EMPEa Open was played in Costa Mesa each of the last three yean, LitUe was one of the gallery favorites. She fmisbed eighth in the field last season at Mesa Verde CC. "I came away from l~st season feeling I didn't accomplish what I set out to do. I had practiced a lot and did a lot of exercises to gel more distance on tt)e drives but had to play my normal game again when I was hurt," Little says. "The extra distance is really helping me, especially on the par-5 holes. It makes a tremendous difference week after week. Otherwise, you have lo give up so many shots to the longer drivers like JoAnne Carner. "I felt I had to get more leg drive into my swing. I hadn't been aggressive enough off the tee. I used the English method of too much arm and tried to hit it like a lady but now I'm doing more work with my legs in driving the ball." GOLF HOWARD L. HANDY Her one complaint about the Eisenhower course at Industry Hills last season was on a par-3 hole whe re she said it was impossible to get to the green because or the pin placements. ''I was actually hitting short and chipping up to try and make a par." she recalls. "To me that's notA11olf. They tell me they .have changed that situation this year." Bill Bryant. general manager of the course and Laguna Niguel's Roge r Belaneer, lbe club pro, say the course will play at least one shot easier this year. And according to Sally. that will suit all of the players just fine. * * * IF YOU DIDN'T KNOW IT already. this is the week of the Crosby Southern Clambake. a 36-hofe endeavor Thursday and Friday for young touring pros who fail to make the field for the San Diego Open. With Frafik Beard; a veteran or the tour and winner of 11 events including twice at the Tournament of Champions , in the field, the sponsoring 552 Club and chairman G·ene Baum are ready for another big G&llle suspended RI C HMOND , Ind . CAP > -Th e Earlham-Findlay men's college basketball game was suspended Monday night with about six minutes to play after the father of;a Findlay player collapsed. !' Dick O'Dell , 43, of Arcanum, Ohio, suffered an apparent heart atu~ck , said John Hennemyre, who coached O'Dell's son, Randy, in high school. Hennemyre was at the game. 0 ' Dell was taken to a Richmond hospital, he said. His condition was not released. event. Last year Al Ge1berger played at Irvine Coast CC and the list of top money winners fro m s ucceeding years is a lengthy one. The fi eld will be paired sometime Tuesday and the opening round will take place Thursday provided the weatherman copperales. And all money collected from the even1 goes to Hoag Hospital through the 552 Clut a worthwhile charity, indeed. • • • BOBBY CLAMPETT IS ONE of a new breed of fe arl ess pla y'e rs ·on ° lhe Tournament Pl ayers Association (TPA> tour which also includes Laguna Niguel's Mark O'Meara. John Cook, Gary Hallberg and Fred Couples among others . 0 ·Meara was named rookie of the year in 1981 and Cla mpett has this observation about the former U.S. Amateur star who graduated from Mission Viejo High: "Mark has a ·beautiful feel around a course ; he ma nages himself very well. He's tougher on himself mentally than the rest of us. because he expects too much of himself. He's probably the most natural putter I've ever seen. partly because he ha s s uch a beautirul a ttitude about putting." Clampett also adde d the names of Richard Zokol a nd Steve Jones to the li st or young players who wil l be heard from in the not too distant future. From this group will come the Jack Nicklauses. the Arnold Palmers. the Tom Watsons and all the other top names of t he pr'o t.Qu r • • • FOR THOSE WHO ARE interested, the LPGA tour gets off the ground ttiis week at Deer Creek CC in Deerfield Beach. Fla. with the Whirlpool championship. Then it's the Elizabeth Arden Classic in Miami, the S&H Golf Classic in St. Peters burg and the Bent Tree Classic in Sarasota. Incidentally, the winners of the first four tour events las\ season in order of the a bove list were Sandra Palmer, Sally Lillie. J oAnne Carne r and Amy Alcott. OUTSTANDINC Wadkins reverses the trend VALUES I MEW 198ZYW RAlllT "l" SEDAM Super economy with this o ne! Fully eQ1.1pped including a 4 speed transmission. tinted glass. radial ttres and rrorel (Stk 307n (01613). Phoenix Open victory snaps three-year winless string PHOENIX (AP) -It was almost predictable. He'd been down for a while. It was time for Lanny Wadkina -whose career has flowed up and down in a steady rhythm -to reverse the trend. He did. He broke a three-year non-winning string with an extremely impressive, six-shot victory Monday in the Phoenix Open golf tournament. He played his last nine in 65, &·under par, his last 36 in 128, and the tournament in 263, 21 shots under par on the 6,J.26·):'.ard Phoenix Country Club course. and th~ _lowest. s~re on the tour in at least thret: years. · · AQd lt could be just the start. "I tend to gel 'em in bunches," Wadkins observed. His record supports the statement. He won twice in 1973, twice in 1977 and twice lD 1979. And, he's won blg ones, lnclud1n1 the PGA · · , M-'Pourttament P+ayers Championship, the World Series of Golf. He's Rustlers I ace LACC LOS ANGELES -Golden West Colle1e's bid to bounce back into the Southern Calltornia Conference bliaketblill race suffered a bil jolt Friday nJpt when vlsltin1 Cypremi slapped a 75-87 loss on the JlusUers. Coach Jim Greeolield's squad will try once a1ain to move closer to the .500 mark wben the Rustlers face host Loa A.111eles CC toni1bl <1:30). owe . 2·4 ln eoft't'erence play but an lmpreulve 14·7 overall, currently la in Mh place In tbe SCC atandlnp. Lot Anples CC, 1·5, lJ comiq off an 81-72 aetbact to touah Santa, Monica. Ouard Tnalett Hattiop leads tbe Rustler attack. AltbcMICb be WU beW to juat 11 polo&a by Cypre11; the sophomore sharp ·•hooter 1tlll boutl a 19.1 avera1e. Teammate Darin Bowen carrltt a 17.1 averap lDto the 11me. .. . -.,.: " --~-- finished as high as third on the money-winnin& list. SOVTBUN CALIFORNIA But it's been lean times in the off years -as s .. w dep&la/lacltetl Conditions LUts/chalrs well as painful and frustratina. He's had gall Mountain Hi1h 12·18 pow/pp 4L bladder problems, torn muscles in his rib case Holiday HiU 12·18 pow/pp 2c and, for the last two seasons, tendinitis in bis left Sid Sunrise 18 pow /pp FO hand. Ml. Baldy 24·36 pow /pp 3L SAl.EflltlCE s5999 Last year. for example, he won only $51,704. Mt. Waterman 36-66 pow /pp JC MEW 191Z 'fW He went beyond that total Monday, collecting Snow Summit 36-60 pow /pp FO SCllOCCO 154,000 from the total purse of $300,000. Snow Valley 48 pow /pp FO co upe . s speed The last injury may have turned his career Goldmine 36 -I pow/pp 4C transmission. metallic around. It forced him to change his grip so that he CENTRAL C1'LIFORNIA pa Int. rear window no longer gets the club beyond horizontal at the June Mountain 63-82 pow/pp FO wiper/washer. alloy lop. Mammoth Mountain 119 pow/pp FO wheels, siereo cassette and morel (Stk. 3235) ··1 used to be kind of throwinl the club at the China Peak 48·72 pow/pp FO '(01 77651 ~ ball. I'm more in control now. I think I'm a better Dodge Rid1e 8'·108 pow/pp FO SAU PRICI player ror it," he said. He's also cbaD1ed his NOaTHE&N CM.IFOJtNIA $ I Q 4 9 5 putUn1 style. "I've chanted the whole thin1, the Mt. Reba 14-144 pow/pp 7L wbol~ setup. I'm more uprilht now, don't ~ lhe~---lK~i~rk~wood:=~....,....---~1~44~·!240~----!po~w~/;p~p~--?:F~O~---.Ji:~=i==iiii~~=ifJ---'-forward press, and I pt thtoqtrthe ~· Whale Watch HeavenJy Valley 85 pow/pp 21L Tahoe Ski Bowl 8'·132 pow/pp 2C ·Ski lncllne 42·54 pow /pp 6C Squaw Valley 80-132 pow/pp 20L Donner Sid Ranch 108-156 pow/pp 3C Alpine Meadows 180-216 pow/pp FO Surar .Bowl 181-252 pow /pp 7L Conditions: hp -hardpack; pp -packed powder; pow - powder. Lifts/chain: L -lifts; C -chain; FO -tull operation. IAlllT COMVHTllU 2 Door. AMJFM stereo, metalllc ~int, sports steering wheel, white s1dew81I ttres & morel (Stk.~)(00327'9) Uat ftrtce SI I, I 65 Dhcomt Sii 70 SAl.lflllCI 59995 NBA ... ,. •• a. .. •··~· LAlll- Saet11e .......... ~nSUlt ........ 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REMIND '{OU5SELF TRAT ~EW W \L.L P-.E..CA \.-l- H OW 'YOU 010 IT IF YOU W fN , e>l'T THAT EVE~Y ONE WILL REMEM~EP.. '{OUR.. e>AD SHOTS Vl\JIOL.Y IF YOU L.OSE: • NOTIC• OP TIHllH•<s SAU ... "'..,. Otl F*-V IS, 1m ... lt:JO A.M., Pacific S•t1tl ... I Ce r ... u llon. I C•lllert1la <••ll'•••tlet1, •• ttlll'f ............ T ...... Mflttllr ---•• Otatt .. T,,.. ,_.. ~ '· 191', H "'*· No. S41 ""'* ISHJ, Pt9t Ill, °' Offklal ll«OttK, HK"'9CI 11-1: J-• ...,. FIMM, .,. Utlfnerrlett mlln, as ln&IDr. In IN Offle• ol lhe C-ty R~ el Or ..... County, St•lt el c..tl*-, WILi.. SEL.L AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIOOI!• F°" CASH , .. .,..._et time of .... ltl ta ... ul ,._y °' W. Ut1lled Stain) al ~ t11t ....in_,, ol l a,.ytn Tille ln-4M• G.,.._allon, 1•00 North 8r<M1dwa .,, S."ta Ana , Calltornla. all rlOfll, tlllt and lnte<MI con .. yt<I 10 and n.,.., held by II under tald Ott<! Of Trull In Ille P'-rty •llualtd In w ld County end Slale dt\CrlDedel lot !O ol Traci No. Jtn, '" Ille O ly ol Co.ta -· as per m.., r1te.o<oed In Boo .. 174, Pao•• H lo H of MIKell-. Maps, In Ille olllu Of llW Counlv Recorder of .. Id '°""'Y Tiie •lreet •ddreu and olh•r cOMmon ~llon, If .,..,, °' .,.. real pr-'1y dHt'.tlbtd a bove I• 1111rported IO e.: 10.0 El Camino, Costa Mew,Colllomle. lllOTte• Of' l'll..IM CW A~TIOll l'Oll CMA .... CWOfll'tC• LOCATIOlll Tith 8 le ......... ,_ ,.,..le -. ~ s.c.... s.s.u .. , .. ·-.... • ...,. ..... ..., IN ,._ .. S..W..,. ..-1..-~.--F-al Savi• 4lfld ~ Al-1-11 .. ., Seti 01990. 701 9rM41w•y, S... Ole .. , Catllor"4a, Mt fllttt .. .,..ik atltfl wltll IN F-al -~ ._ ... rd "" _......Jlttl ,. < ....... .... 19c:etlotl of Its ottk • -lee .... at 16U s... Mlewtl 0r1 .... 1610 s... M'9WI Orlw, ,._. IM<ll, Or...., C-t'f. Clllfwnl&. Aft ___ ..... ,_ ..... - .. Ult "'91k at._ Y-c--11 m.., ltltc11H. tiut art no! llml-lo, l"9 ... llc-·1 rec-°' ,.rlormeno In l\elplno to ,,_. '"" crtdll -of llJ toe.al commuftlllei Four cOPIH mvst be rtetl ..... Ir( "~WlllOry A..,.C, Fette••• .. _ LOMI ...... ol , ... Franc:IKO. MO Cllli.tnla 51.-.t, -· Olllct So• 1t41, St " Francisco. Calllernla t4120," by P:et>ru••'f U. lttl. An -1-1 JO MY• to Wllmlt (_,,.....,....., ....... _._ ..... tuell ,...,... 1, rectl.,... in "'".,.. -., :';,~ ..... Y A...,i _,, "~ n, Any--... t WbSllflllal llfOl•t ,...y ,....,.. an .., . ., .,.,,._1 .. Illa The tollow1nQ oe,son ti do•no buunfl\\•' Tiie "'*"'9Md Tru•I" dl!IClelm• tny llablllty for .,., 1ncorreclneu of Iii. slreet -HS -olhtr common c1ts10,..t1on.11 ... y, s-htrelft. -11ca1i... as Ml lortll In StcllOll SU.Jell. F0t a prolftl lo bee..,.._.. 111•st•t11la l, It m ull be wrlltttl, l'lctlwel an time. -c-.lt1 .. -J 1 PLUMB INC. 710• Aedl•nd\ Or , Nr wpart Burn Ca ~..O I TO lkE OEFENOANT A clvll Jay D. Tarnow•k• 130f Reot•no• compl•lnl nu been lllrd by Ille Or . NtwpOrl S.Mll, Ca '7..0 plaonlltt llQ<llMI you If YOU '"'"' 10 Tiii• bu•lnt"\• is conllutted by an oefend 111h 1-w 111 '°" must, wltllln ll'ldlwldu•I • d•Y' etter '"'' "'"'"'°"" 4l '4Ntd Jav D r •'now"~ on yov, flt• •1111 tllh court • wrlllen Tiii\ llal•""'"I w•s Ill~ w•tll lhe rr~'9 10 Ille t omt>lelnl. UnlHS you CounlY Cit•• "' Or•nll'! <.ountv on do .o. four oelaull will be entered on J41r1uary I~. 1~2 appllcatlon ot Ille Pl•lnlilf tnd lhls FlltOO courl m ay enter • ludOm•nl •o•ln" PubtiV..., Or•nqo CCM \I o .. 11y Pllol you lor tlw relief clem•ndtd In the Jan It 2• Ftb ) • 1'92 )QI 87 comp1411n1, wh lCll could rnull I• ci•rn1sllmtnl ol wa~'· to tno ot montv or proper I y or otllor rtllel PUBLIC llOllCE • •eQue"eo 1n the complatnl -------------OATEO March17.1'91 FICTITIOUS SUSI NESS NAME STATEMENT Tf\t foltow ll\Q per\on ·~ do1nq buolMUIOS' RAINBOW SPORTING GOOOS, 11'1 E Isl StrHI T uuon, CalltornllO ,.,.., 8ruct S Sw•ncull Utt E hi Slrttl, Tu,lin C•l1torr11 .. ti.ti) Thi• llU••n•u " conducted bY an Individual LEE A BRANCH. c ..... BY J, Oeora, OellulY MACKEY & ALl'a a T IJ7tl .,_..... °'' .. · HllFI-, SMrmaft 0..J, c.tittnll• tl4U ltUI .. , .... Published Or-Co.t\I Oallv PllOI, Jin J •• Fri> 1, t , I•, 1'17 07·'1 S.ld Mle wlll e. m-. but wllllolll cowt na nl or werrenl'f, ••P'Ht or lmpllatt, '994fdlno 1111•, ~.or encwmt>ranc-.. to PIY IN •-•lnlno P'lncloel wm ol Ille nolelsl ~ .. ,.., by Mid o.d °' Trv!ol, with l_,.trHI llltreon,., __ " lt1Ml4note1t1, adwenc~. II any,...-Ille'-'"" 01 .. Id ~ °' Trust, '"'• ,...,_ al'ld upenMt of Ille Tru~" and ol lht lru•I• cfffltd W s.akl OMd ol Tr"'t. lar Ille -•H-bly Htlm.led lo be. t214.S4S •1 The -k .. ,., under Witt OMd ol Tru•t llt rtlofort •••cwt•d a nd dellwtred lo tllt .,,,.n..,... • wrllltn Otcteratlon of Oeleull -0.-CS lor Sa lt. •nd • wrlll•" Notice of Oeleull and Elt ctlon to Sell TIWI undtn lo,.d caused u l41 Notice ol 0 1fau1t end Et,,<llon lo Sell to t>e ritcorded In .,. c-ty -r• Ille '"' pr-rt• ls 1oc.e1w . Dale. J_.., II, 1"2 Pac Ille Sentlftel Carp .... idTrv!offt tN ,.......,., II • ......... ,., ol t11t ,._ ...... lltol•: JI ... ..-<Ilk ,...tiffs aet«leel lo In.,. lf'Plk•lltn o r In Ille .,.uc ... l't CtMm11ftll'f .. ,.,ct..-; )) lacb. ln<llldltlo any r•I•••"' ece .. omlc or llftencla1 .......... 11 .... •111<11 ........ ,, Ill• "°'"t; -41 .,., ~-efflKts on r-Ot ..... U41on or <-11¥ Wlll<ll mey ruun from .,.,, .... , of t,,. -•k•tleft. You....., .............. k•ti..- all cem ....... J lllttt et lht F-•I "--"'-~ flf Seti Fr-IKt, --.... -" _, .. h ..... -.. .., I-,,_, ,.,..k clhc ........ II - 1w1 ... any ~ ~-....... ._.. proc-, ctlllal IN 5-Nl-V A .... t el tllt ,.., ......... L-I- OI S... F•Mcltca. ............ °" ..... COnl Oatty l'llOl, J-ry la, -F*-Y t. 1"2 ,...... NHL le...._ C""'-111 J .. , Ml 0 •• ,. ,. J4 A ..... " ta M M .., ,, Yanks, John A n ~ 41 ,. 14 u 1J J I .a n .. n "'°9111•0,.n La1111y w.-""-u..-6' INM•-JN " II .... J.,,.,........... " ........ ,. .. Mlua • .._ut,.-1t•MM t1t at odds ., .. ""'' ....... ,,,.... , .. , ... ~I '-•"Y fff11111, t nA ,,..,..11,.,_,,. Morr•• H..,.llily, t t2,400 ., .. ,....._m l'wuy l•I•. tt.41! IHJ'4~tn OA W•IWlfte.tt.411 11..._..,.,_,n Jim s•-. .,. .,_"......._.,,, TOM l'11rtMt, 17-....... 7Mt-11J kott Sl._,11.-0 1)~47J Jolin C•, tl.-0 IMHJ.70 tta Crai. S...._f, 16.000 ,.,.,.,,...._,,, ,...,, Kiit, ..... ,, .. ,....._1,. 0....,01....,,,,,,. ,,...,....,_,,, NEW YORK CAP) -New York Yankees left·hande r Tommy John h as flie d a grievance that could result In hi& becomlna a free a1erit. U,I . Pro Indoor ChalftP'on9hlp .............. , .................. .J•Y Ha ... tl.flO ,.......,,,_t11 o.or .. •r<11tr. u,a10 n .11.......,_tn Scott HO<h, IJ.110 11......,...._117 H•lt 1,..111, tl.110 ll'47• ..... •ln Bob Co h en , a lawye r representing the ve t e ran pitcher, said Monday that the grievance~ which was filed laal Wedneso ay , Involves the contra,ct offer that J ohn received from the Yankees In December. Tim Ml'l'Otlt Otf JGflen lltrlek, .. 1. I•; ICt•ln Cll',.., def 8'1an Gottf•'"· ._., .... Chip Hooper°"' ,...., Flemlne, "'· >•. W ; Steve Olfltofto.I R.,,.."' KrltMMI, •·t, ).a, ..2, SMtd'f ~¥troet Vlll<a Van li'41tt.n, 7 ... ... . 11011 0-lnt o.t li'aic.I Potl••· ,,., •·I ; J•fl 8°'owl•-dtf Her Old Soltmon, •~. •4, ,., Frtcl C-'tl, U ,l lO ...... ..,,.,._m Tttf'f -..,..y, .... ,0 , .. ,. .... ,._,11 a.-c;11der, tJ.110 '""•'·,.-m 1111 Kr..,_,, t.J,110 >o,.....__m Mlt.e O...ICI. ta,e10 11**11-111 Bruce1..1.ua..u .110 11,......11-211 Cun I' Slr4"11f, U .OIS tt·10-7..._t1t Ru C•l4lwell, '2,0IS 11.,._._m He said the salary proposed by t h e Ame r ican League champions constituted a cut from last season 's pay that was more than the maximum 20 percent permitted under the basic agreement between the c lub owne rs a nd the Major League Baseball Players Association . Howeve r , the Yankees are sayin g it was within the limits or the basic agreement. HOIMrO 11-.i., '2~ 1'*11•1 t)t c .. vtn '"'-· u,oas 1•47...,. m 0<1n H•llOOtMll, it,OIS 70-70-714 7-17' Women·11ournament , ........ , $ ...... l'IMI Marllft4 N••••tllO•• def Al'ldrt• J ...... .. 2 •• ~. (Nevratllova wlM '30,0001 Tom WtlU.Olll. •U•s IMMMO-t11 J.c-R-.u .oes 11-10-11..._,,. B ... Cr•'*'"'· U ,OIS 10.11-11-11' Women'• touma,.,.nt , .. c:111c ... 1 ,.,..,._s-.... way,.. Levi,,,_... ,,..._,..._.m Jim Otfll, 11,610 tt-71-10-27' o .. 1e1 Gr.,_, tl.UO t1*1Mot-Ut Jim Colllert1 tl.lJO ... ,1.10-10-• Helene Suilowa Oef Mime J•u,.,...t<. 74, 4·t . 1·~. Kallly Rinaldi dtl. flloHl'f" Fa lrbenll ...... 44, .. J, Pam Ce.••• del. Sll4ron W•""· 74 . 14, Ano.ea L....O Oef. Mlclle .. Toor.-s, .,., ..,J, •·'· 80b 8y"*I, tl,:UO 7l*7Ht-• Lon Ntei-, 11 .. uo ..,...11-1>-• J.C. SMad. '1..3JO ,,.,.......__. oa .. Elchtle.'11". ''·"° 10.724~7,_,_ B•rrY "-"· "'°'° ... ,~11-•1 Kt llh Fer9<1t, •1,050 70-104 .. 11-•t Alltn Mlller,t l.()jO 74 ....... IO-•I Bii Call .. , '110f0 7t*714t-•I Oon Ja,.....,, t t.OfO •-744 •1 BoO E••-.. tilt 64-10-7).1>-a:t Ml-• Swlllven, ,,., " ... *7>-211 Gerv Hen-., t1tl 10.10-1u a:t R-r Melltllt, t711 12·70-72..e-211 Vlcior •4IO<llado. •111 74*71*-Jl2 Tom Jtfll!IM, J7tl 1-.11..,_211 Jollnny Miiier. ~ 7~70-7+-Ja Jolw> M-y, ...S 724 7·7"1)-Ja O•n POhl. ~ ...... 10-1+-m V•nu H•<ll,.•. ~ 14*71·70-ta Rober I T"°"""°", l6tJ 71 •7 ·11-7S-.. High school IDCC.r aovs Nt~M-J,C• ....... M.trJ CorONI dtl #Nir ><Otlft9 McGul,.H 2 Nt wPOt1 H.,llo< >eorlno T •larno. l-. Pnll Hancoo,...., 11·114t-7•-:IM G•0<Q<t a..rn,, "'3 ... n .11·17-.. The dispute apparently is rooted in the fact that ea ch side is interpreting the salary John received under the terms or the three.year contract he signed in 1979 in a different way. I( the two sides do not iron out their differences, the matter would go to a hearing before baseball's arbitrator. Raymond Goetz. If Goetz found the Yankees violated the maximum cut provision o f the b asic agreement, the 38-year-old John. whose record in three seasons with the Yankees is 52·26, couJd be ruled a free agent. Goluuo Field hockey u•~ •. StMa ... v .. tey, Unl•~lly 1<0<lr19· Fytlt) JOM\ Monda(:_~•nHctiona aALl ---~ CHICAGO WHITE SOX SiOfttd Ste_,. Kemp, outileldtr, to•-·Y•M conlra<I. CLEVElANO. INOIANS -Au l9neo Anoelo LOGranttt, fir" baHman, 10 CIWlrlestonof lfw ,,...,,..,,....1 L•-...._. LMIM CINCINNATI REOS Sl9r1ed Paul MO•k•u •nd MIO l •Cou, pllcht"· lo OM·y•ar ~ontrec15. Stont<f Ceu• Ctcltno, ovtlletder.10 I lour·year conlr.c:L ST LOUIS CAfllOI NALS -R•ltlned c.1y1en Pin' to -.. , ..... ._, OI .,,. h•nL•-t<OOTSALL ,..........._..l_ DENVER BRONCOS A.-un<t<I Ille rHIQnellOtl °' <>-"oe M<F-n, dlr4'<1or of public relallon•. Named Clla<llt LH , d1•4'<10< OI puotl< relallOtl• Named Nl<- Nlcotau ofttnM,.. ba<-llelcl coach HOCltEY _ ...... Mecu-, LH9'lt DETROIT RED WINGS -R•calltd Ae le •n Cloutier, deftnHman. f<om Adlrondttk or Ille Amerlc •n Hockey L••oue GO&.LaGE MISSISSIPPI -Named Ron Mcc rone aul•tant loolbtll coecll. PURDUE N-C~ler C-'· Ray "Tommy wants lo stay with the Yankees," Cohen said. "He loves the Yankees and he lov~ the New York area ... Tommy wants to be with the Yankees the r es t of his ca r ee r . But, a pparently George CYankees owner George Steinbrenner) doesn't want that ... Hill Bergesch, Yankees vi ce pre sid e nt for ba se ball o pe r ations, said the major league management's Player Re lations Committee is handling the m atter for the cl ub. John also has fil ed for salary arbitration, but the Yankees say the pitcher is not eligible for such arbitration because there is in his contract an option Lbal the club has exercised for the 1982 season. i 1230 l Sherman -Jim Colletto au1Uen1 looll»ll Cote lie•. SOUTHERN llLINOIS Nemed law Hart--kdlr«IOt. The players association, on behalr or John, has filed a de fault notice in the s alary arbitration matter. . •tc:ltOW "'°· .,.....,K tllOTICIE TO CllEOITOaS 01' aUl..lt TRANSl'IER ANDW ltllTENTIC>ff TO TllANSP•ll ALCOMOL IC ••vE•AG• LICIEtllll tSto .• ,., u.c.c . .-J• ,_, .. ,., NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 1 ... 1 e blllk tr.,.sler of.,.,_,.., pr-ny •nd • trensfer of II-ll«nw •• abOul 10 Dtm-. __ _ T,,. ,..mH, m.lltno add••n. -ZIP C ode H umotr of lhe tlcen"9·1n-tr-ftro~ •r~ AICHARO M. CASOUEIRO,-Httl $11¥ P•rll 91wd • IN1nt, CA '171J ELDEN W 8AIN8RIOGE, 11111 y Par .. Blvd, lrvlM, CA 92713 The n.,,..,, mlllllft9 aOdress. ZIP C-Number -Social Security or F-•I Tu Nu..-rs of Ille lnle<>6od tr•n1ferMt .,., · SUK CHANG YOON 170 Ricci. alnul, CA'"" ISS• ).ti 17 lt17 SUNG HEE YOON 110 R•ccl, alnut. CA ttm CSS• ).46.)7·ttnll Tiie penon•I properlv 10 be rantlerred Is Olh<rlbtd In 99M••t H 11 Ille 1100 I" tr-. ,,...rc ... ndt .. , -llH, llnurH, tQUlpment, ~Ill nd ,,_ °' IMI urlaln bustr10, nown •• SALIJlµ<IE0'1. S.ICI pe,_I ~., 11 localecl et 101' Nortll Tvtlln Awinue, An•helm . AtH01 TIM atc-ik be .. ••oir ltc.,.,. to i. rtftllt•red ,, de><ribtd ., 41-4t$111 Otl S.le ... , A Wint Ealifto Pl.ct!, and Is now IHutcl I• Ille followift9 m lMS: ICl2I "°"" Tustin Avenue, MMlm. CA9MJ2. Tiit total coMlderatlon tor Ille ransler of Mid ...,..,,..1 P<'-11y and lcenu h ,,.. 1um ol $11,SOO.OI, ncluttln9 lnvenlO•'f tlllmattd at S00.000, wl\ICll con•hlS Of Ill• o11aw1no: IESCall"1'10N IKll .......... . m•ncl-lobe replllC.ed Ir( cw. .. m•ncl-tobe . AMOUNT $ S,000.00 tS,000.00 rtt1l.Cad Ir( Cetl\ • . , , to0,00 nst•llmenl note to Mii.,.. . • SJ ,000,00 It 1141 -• ..., by ,,.. Otrtlei lllt ~ .. Ion for tht lrensi.t t"-...,.._, -tM llctnM h IO .. ltt only •lltf' 111e o...r1,,..111 of lcollollc ••~er•o• control has pprowed ,,.~ trentfer . TM p._..:t trensters are lo bt onwm....-.S. -,,. -chaw prke <ons..,atlon Is 10 e. oe1<1 on or tier F-....,., 11. 1'92, In ac, ........ 1111 lht prowhlonl ol Calllornla uslntu and P<oteu lon' Code, C.11* Ml PElllOlt COUaT CW CALlf'OllNIA COUNTY CW I.OS UIOaLES In llW M<lllt< of -RIGGLE Minor A pertOn -SllOUld ee de<lered lrtt trom the custody end con1ro1 Of hi\ partnl or parenb, ••it• CITATIOlll -............ ,_ .. _., ~ ... ~ ----tA•AHOONMENTI (Rt• AOOPTIONI To BRIAN REX PICKEn -lo ... per'°"' c1alm1,.. to N !tie tetller or mot._, ol Mid minor --UI -.. ntm"9 By order Of tlll• Cour't you a re "ereby cll.O """ •-r belot'e tht Jud9e PtHl<llnQ In Oeoer'lmeftl SE C of tlle Hlow entll1"9 coun 1oc:a1tc1 al UIJQ N.,,....MI 9twd., N-al .. , 0 111., on Ftb~Y tt, ltl2, el t ,00 AM. of 11111 dey, lllfn -lllere lo oftow c-, II anf yov ll•we, wlly Mild person thoulO ftol be dK141Ad fr" lrom Ille con1ro1 OI Ill\ .,.,.,u 11C.<0tdlnQ lo tlle petlllon on Ille ...... In. T,.. P"itlon llltcl herein It for l"9 purpoM of lreetno the wblt<I chlld tor placement tor adoe>llOtl. 0•1141: Hoo. JO. 1911 .-J COrt«en C-yCt.'1< 8yl...CoWman ~., •k .... o. o.eltt 0.. Clt'f ....._, W-. Me. t• Or•net. Cllltornl• t2MI (1141 ....... P\11>11-Or ... Co<l•I Oalty P ltot, / ..... S, It, It, 26, n17 . MIMI fllCTITIOUS auSfN•U ·-· STATIEMatllT T lie loll-lnO per"""' art clolnt ""''""'": HI. l CRE A TIVE MANAGEMENT CONCEPTS, 1041 WHl<ll" Or . aJll, Newport Be.ell, CAtl'60 H~tal 0.1 C-11.,.h, Int:., • Calllornla c..-a11on, StSO c..,... Ave .. • ))S, Woodland Hiiis, CA t1Jt1. Tllh llullntt• i. conducted by • corporation ...,. .. ,Cos, suna101 COURT Of' THI STATI DFCALll'ORMIA FOil THE COUNTY Dl'O•AllOI 1•Clvk ~or1 .. W"*-s.MaAM.CAtlltl PLAINTIFFS: JUNG HAE KIM ANO TAEYOUNG KIM OEFENOANTS. BRUCE E PREDMORE, KEN $TEINHAUSEN, EXECUTIVE CAR LEASING ANO DOES I THROUGH X, INCLUSIVE SUMMONS CASa NUMAE• n9177 CC-MllMllM..-J2"1tl • NOTIClll YW Mw --· nt c .. rt _., •• .... ,.., .,... • ...._. .-...... --·-~ wllttltl • •Yt.. ...... , .. _ .. ._ -·-· AVISOI UIMtt ... ..._ -........ al ll'I-...... -lttir <-• Utt. sl• ••"••<la a ,,..,,., 4•• Utt. ......... ............. Le ... l~maci..._..sie-. II vov wl\11 to --lht ad•IC• ol any •llorno In 11111 m.ner, "°" thould dO •o promplly w 111•1 your w<lll•n ••-. 11-. m.y be tiled on lime. SI U'19d ..._. Mll<ttar t i c-10 de un ·~ an e>te awnlo, dellffla 111cerlo tnmedlallmtnle, de o l• mat1ere, !IU ;._, .. •w rite, sl llay •19""•· f)Ulde Hr reQISlracla • llempo. I TO THE DEFENDANTS.: .. civil complaint hU Deen flltd 0 ¥ the plalnlll~ -"'" \IOU II You wKh to ciel•nd lhK ltwwll. you must. wltlll" lO dos ..... lllls 'U""''°"' IS Mrwd on yov, file wllh lhl• <ovrt • wrlllen resoon .. 10 ,,. comptatnl. Unteu YOll do '°· ..,_ cle4M>l1 wlll ee tnl-on apptlc•tlan ol "" plalntlfh • .,.. this COUl1 IMY ........ ,.........,.., •oalnlt 'fOU ror lhe rtlltt oemanCIHI In lht complaint, which could ruull In o••nhhmenl 01 w•on. ltklno or money ot pr-rly or olhtr rellel request.cl In "'8 c_,...al"4. OATEO. FElfllUAR Y Jt, , ... ROSANN GOOOARO. Ofp&lly 001101..AS M. IOOTM Att..-.. 'fllCLIW 1.-......... ~·· S..U AM. CA tl1tl T .. : 17141--Put>tlsfttcl OrMOI (OHi Oatly PllOI ~·n. '· 1~1· •• ~. 1"2 11t-',? .PIU Illa SUNRIOlt COURT CW THE STATE Otr CALll'OltNIA F0tt TMa COUtllTY OflDRAllGIE 7t1Cfvk c.MW Dttw Wl!ll. _..AN. CA ftr.I PlAINTIF'~: JUNG HAE KIM AND TAEYOUNG ICIM OEFENOANTS: aRUCE E PllEOMOAE. KEN STEINHAUSEN. EXECUTIVE CAR LEASt*> ANO OOES I THROUGH X, INCLUSIVE SUMMONS CASe lltUMa aa DW7 (CMMllMllM-Jft!Pll NOTIClll Yw U.. ._-. Tiit c"'1 -ttK._ ..,.._t -·~ .,_ ........... --,.._. ...... ttayt.. .... -... __ _ ...... AVISO! UIMtt M II• .............. El ll'l._1 ...... .ie<lttir c•tra Utt. •I• a11ttlt m<la a ,,. ••• , ••• U•. -........-... -.... Le• la ·----..... . II yov .,.,, 10 -k Ille ad•IC• Of an allorne y In !!Ill matter, you shovld dO •o promplly Ml that YOllf wrlllen re-w, If eny, ""'Y t. llled on time SI ust•-· \Olkllar •• ConMjO de un •b09ad0 tn Hie awnto. -rl• l\eurlo lnmedlatemente. de ota mener•~ "' rf'IPYHt• .writ•, .i h•Y al9una, l>Wde 1er regi,lra<N • llempo. I. TO THE OEFENOAN TS A clvll complaint has t>ttn lll•d by Ill• pla lftlllfs ... .,.,, .,.... II yov wlSll to defend 1111• tawwll, yov m.nt, wllllln lO dao tit~ lhl' lUtnl"noM ii Wrvtd on you, Ille wilh !his court • wrlllen ruponse lo fhe <omptalnt Unl•U yow dO Ml, YOVt default wilt tit tnlered .., IPll4k •llon Of Ille plalntltf5, 4l'CI lllK coun may..,. .. • ludO<'Mfll ..-inst yo;, tor Ille relief d•mandtcl In tht compla int. wlllcll could result lrt 9unl ~m1nl of ••~•. leklno of mono or properly or olMr rell•f ,.,..,_.,.., tn u. comptelnt DATED. F"""'9fy2t, llltO. ROSANN GOOOARO. o.puty OLASM. 900TH •tt-vetu.. , ..... ~St.,s.1'9m 1Nt•A•CA911't Tel: 0141.a.- Put>ll"*I Or'MOI Coesl O.lly Piiot J an. s. H. ''· H. 1~ t_.., l'ICTITIOUI SUSINIH t<~~~!~:.·:::s Brute S i.w.,..ull Tl•I' •l•1tmen1 w•s Ille<! wllh lhf 1------------- 8ySlle l(efly AvtllorlLad S19NtUrt lt7' S. Sepul-Blvd fllCTITIOUS SUllNEH tlon• 24070 ., -· ., the ofllu °' COMUllent1, IM ._arclUltftt Vk e Pt•'-1 NAMalTATIM•NT The lollowlno OtrHn ,, doln9 Tiie lot-.... ""'°"' •re .. ,~ bllilneun· Covnly Cl•rk 61 Or•n~ County on JenU<1ry n 1'111 F tttU1 PubllJ"ed <>-'°"" Daily P1101 Jan ,,, Feb. 7,' 16. I°"? SSA·f) PUlllC MOllCE l'ICTITIOUS aUSftlllESS MAMIE STATIMeNT , Tiit fallowlno "''°"' •r• ttoltlt l'IC'YtTIOUI I USltllHS 11u,1nesJ as: N-IE ITATaMIEtllT THE AOltlAN COMl'ANY, 101 a Tiit IOllOwlne Hrton ., OOll\9 1111'1 Str .... No. "'°· C•ll Mot.a, litllllMH 4K. c.fl'9rnl• ..i1 COUNTY C l'IE M IC:Al , 40t I . MH A«I ... , '4J St. Cl•lr ....,...,,, COiia Mtt.t, CA '2U7. Stl'9fl, Celt.~ C .. lftnll• tttllt J«k "W" Oollef\11 .. 40t M40Mile, "'"' I . Ad#let1, "1 St, Clalr c .... Mtte, (A fHf7 91rHt, t..u ...... c.llMn\la .... Tith ~' ~ ~..-•t1 ell Ttllt ...,.._ It c...-.Ctett a-, • ..... .,....... .....r ............ Jen w. Oollalltt• • M. ~ Tlllt ,..._. wM fil9d willl lht Ttl .. .....,,_. -filW Wlltl tllt C-ly CIWfll .. 0.lftile COlllll'I' .,. COVlllY ( .... ff Or-. C-y en DK at, 14111. Jen...,., tt. tw:a. ... ,... .. ,.... .......... Or .... Coe\! Diily ....... ~ .... 0r--..<Ceut Deity ....... .,..,.. S, It, "· ._ 1W2 ttt1-t1 Jlft K , rr-..1. t, 1e.. ,.. ,,.,.. LOI A .... lfl. CA -.S nm n ... 1201 PubtlofteCI °" ..... COHI Dally PllOI, Jan Jt, Feb J, t , 1'92 flf.'2 11-• STATIEMIENT lie escr-der, whO .. name ..... The lollowlno pu..-n' ••• dol"O ddreu ,,. UNtTEO BUSINESS .,.,,lnesu~ ~NVESTMENTS, INC .. IC72t A-• ENGLISH ANO ASSOCIATES fetvd ,. Pa t amour11. CA t 07U, IHSURAIKE MARKETIN6 INC., Ot>IU4-7070, (714lt»-17SO. Suite 3000, 4000 MacArlllur Blvd.. Ctelm5 wlll be ~tpt~ unlll lht Newport llH<ll, C•lllornlo HMO u crowholder 1, not II led ol lhe E~tl.i. -At-lt1" '""''tnct Oepar1met1I of Alcollollc h•••-M a r k e 11 no Inc., I Ca lllornla G ... ll"Ol's ~val f1f tllt 1r1nster al c orpora tion, S111te JOOO. 4000 !Mlle-. MecArtllllr 91vd., Ntwporl Btacll, So l•r •• .. nown 10 ,,.. tnl•ne.d Catlfornl•'"60 ltr•Mle...u ti.e tl<a-·lftl•nHtl "'Thh IMl\lne1is"i"J conelucted by • tran\ltror' UHd Ill• tollowlno ,..._.11ot1. adttlllot1at ouslntn "•mu a11tt E"""th' ._. Httf'HMt wllflln Ille llw• •s lelt l'tlllC.W-Jr .. v k• fl'rtsltttllt Tlllt tle..,_,t -lllttt wllll , ... CIUllly Cltftl of 0. ..... CCHllllY Oii Ot<1mMr JI. 11'1. "'~ l'ut>ll-Or ..... CMlt OaUy l'ltet, Oa1att· J-y U1 ,..,, a kllarCI M. c_.,.ll"O t:ldltl w. hi--~,""""""' 5'1*C ...... Y-Sunl._.Y_, """" J .... s. n. tt, •. 1WJ 1-.. Tr~ ,.., .. , .... Or .... CoHt Oelly 1'1191 Pubtlll\IN Or ..... '°9tl Oatly l'ltot, J on. 2'. l'tlt, t. t, i., 1"2 JIM, l'lCTITIOUI Mll••N NAMll STATe•NT Tiit ltll-1111 _.,_ Is tttltll ..,.i_, .. , •HC AMOCIATll, 210 A_._ Ott MM. 141110 IA, S.n C .. -W. Ge1"9r't111•1t Cll•ltll11• C. Henrlek, 11n1 NttllMI ...,. °''"· L....,.w NllWI. CAlll""'6e...,, Tllh _._, It c...-.C• IY • . ........ ..._..... Olr'tlllM c. HeMletl Tlllt ......... ••fl ... •1111• °""'' c.-.. °' .... ~· Ill HllWMY•.•· ...... "'*' ..... Or .. c.111 OlllY ...... ,.................... -- ' Jen.16, 1'1:1 •»41t l'ICTITIOUS IUllN•IS NAMS STATIMH!T Tiit ltlltwlnf IMIO•n ,, CIOltll ...... Kl..M & AHOCIATIS, 4t1J etlllf ·-· _,,,..... a..tll, ..,...., Sotll• Tllto Mlllltf, 16112 CM-I -· "-'""°" e.Mll, Cefllonlt. Thi$ ttet...-t -..s flied with I._ Count., c1er11 o1 Or-c -tv on J ....... "., ... _. Publl1lled Drano« CoHI Dally Pilot, J ..... It, It, lt, Feb. l, "" ,.,.., bustnen41S: VALE NATIONAL. ALLENTOWN M O NA RCH WAR EHOUSE BUSINESS SCHOOLS. ARIZONA PAaTNEaS, !Ult_.,.,, Awnw, A UTOMOTIVE I NST I TUTE , Garden 0-, Catlfaml•...., N A T ' 0 N A I.. I N s T I T u T E 0 F CONTA I NEa SU l'P lY l!l E CTfllO N ICS , SKA ORO N COMPANY, INC .. • Ctlllornlt COLI.EGE OF BUSINESS, TAMPA corpor .. lon, Gtfltral Partner, IU71 T E c H H I c • L I N s T I T u T E • Western Awtt111t, Oaretn Greve, I( E NT UC KY CO l LE 8 E 0 F t-etllo<nt.ftMS TEC H NO LOG Y , ARKANSAS Tlllt ....iMst I• t:-.llKlott W • COLLEOI OF TECHNO\OGY. llmli.ct ..,,,.,... NAUOl!IAL tNSUaANC;S C.oMPAHY; CONTAINllt SUl'l'l..Y ••1 91rcll Str .. t, .... Mfl 8t.ch, COM I' ANY, INC. Cllfl ....... '*'41 "*"s.Hunt,Jr.,.,...,.,.. Nee ,..,...,., S<llooll, inc .. • M¥"'9-...,Mt'-UI•, -H::et!'tet"'I• ~tt .... '141 e trc1' (AllLtO• I HAllOl&.aY Strett, --1 .. .ell, C.lllOrftlt A L_ ... ___ ..... .,_ .......... ..c.ri-r..... Tiii• bllslnen II Confttlt<I by • .,.MMA,...~ ..... ,_ corporatleft. .............. ~.... NICanltttnt Ttll. ......... -fl ... wl9I .. """''·Ille, c-ty Cten., 0r-.. C-'Y ... Jtff .. yA.erHI Of(, t , "91. Tiiis '1-1 wa lilt« wllfl 1t1e l'tr111' Cout\ly Clitrtl If Of.,... Gount., on Ptl!MltMf Or ... c-t Oelly ~ Ot<.t mi. )1, "'' , , ... s. "'"· •• ,. .. ..... "'*'.,,.. °" ... ca.fl Dall¥ l'llet, .. , .... .......... Or1119t CMll Oelly ..._ .... s. 11-"· ... "" .. ".., " t ,IAft It la.F ... t,t,lw:I ~ -· OrangeCout DAILY ptLOTfTuHday. January 26. 1982 ca Senses tingled in Second Stage of[ering -~Billboard picks top singles, LPs lrTO•TITUS ............ 41 South Cout Repertory'• SeeoDd Staie ta much Uke the IO'lrmet Motion of a aupermarket -a amaUer area of tbe 1tore eatartn• to the more di1crlmlnatln1 1hopper. While the main1ta1e productiou appeal to the eye1 and ears, the Second Staie alma for the senaea. So lt was with lhe last Second Staie 1how, "True Wost," and SQ lt remalna with "Bodlea,"lfie West Cout premiere of Brttllb ptaywri1ht James Saunders' lnvolvin1 treatiM Oft human motivation. n la an en1rouln1 study of two avera1e married __ _,_...._,~=~~ .......... co upl es ractns. lnn contruUnt fashions , the con1equences of their .................. . extramarital affairs with one another. The lnfldellties occurred six years before the play opens, and ruptured the friendship of the foursome. Now one couple have retumed from a stay in America and a stint of trendy therapy - whicb has altered their psyches significantly - and are invited to dtnner at the home of their former lovers. The resultant confrontation is less a dred&ing up or old skeletons than a collision of contraaling methods or dealing with them. By barely raising their voices, Saunders' characters enact some thought-provoking fencing that leaves no one unbloodied -but, by the same token, no one vanquished either. It is superior theater, sensitively staged by Richard Gershman who focuses on the subtle, human qualities of his characters. The cast functions as a smoothly paced ensemble, even though the bulk or the dissertation is performed by one actor -Lawrence Pressman as the guilt-embittered husband, a school headmaster whose emotional wounds are exacerbated by the imminent death of one of his students, clinging to life after a suicidal motorcycle crash. Pressman wrings an eloquent performance from his role of the sarcastic, heavy-drinking member' of the quartet, splendidly balanced by Christina Pickles as his hi1Jbly sensitive wife, whose unrestrained desires orilJinally Ignited the situation. Miss Pickles conveys the most natural responses of the four, and her personal purgatory is played out superbly. The visitors -Matthew Faison and Tandy Cronyn -represent the emotional antithesis of their hosts, a couple who have successfully swept their anxieties under the rug, albeit only after the\ husband's nervous breakdown. Faison splendidly radiates the confident demeanor of one who has If it's got wheels, you'll move it faster In a Daily Pilot classified ad.call 642-5678 and a friendly ad- viser will help you turn your wheels into cash. . . Che¥\J has the ..... to make tNs HolW., Season the funrwst ever! ~oaat1 ~ao~Cira~o ''"', ... ~,....-""'~'"""In•~• H ........ A ... -..,. J-~. Cll-l•lllY ltltllll,..~, wttl .. lly , ...... IA'lllM, ......... llY Pewit• JefllL""' •'-m_..., ........ .. .,......,, .,._. .. Ntfllly .. ( ... Monde'll 91 •.• -~~ ••• p,"' di ......... 1 ... Wit S.C-M ... of itolltl C..tt --11trY. HS T-C-.. Ort .... CMte Mew. lt-l~t ~t.-> TM• CAIT AaM • . . . . . . . • . •• Qwl .. IN "l<ILlet Htlefl .......... ••• .• , ................... T-¥Crefll'ft Oevlel ...... , ............................... ~, .. ... Mervyft ................................. , , , ... IA-•,.,.._ re ached his own nirvana, wbUe Miss Cronyn delicately shades her interpretation midway between her husband's bliss and the neurotic Insecurity of her friends , a study in finely etched understatement. --The play does not end so much u 1l1s ~ut orr. an emotional plu1 beint pulled from Its attachment to the audien ce. and thls is discomforting as it is undoubtedly meant to be. Saunders realizes that life does not resolve Itself at the final curtain . and neither does his representation of it. It 1, an evening of quiet fascination for serious theatergoers, a play whose levels of meaning seep gradually into the consciousness. Performances continue nightly e xcept Mondays at 8:30 through Feb. 7 al the Second Stage or SCR, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. • CALLBOARD -The Mission Viejo Playhouse will hold auditions for "The Deadly Game" next Monday and Tuesday al 7:30 p.m. in the Forum Theater on the Festival of Arts grounds in Lateuna Whose file hit ~ R ...... A. M:r;i lk*d Mllb l v.-... -~ c. ..... »---...··'-• .. ~ -· .. ··~·--·· NOW PLAYING -.. n TOM MUiTt•T0111Uctt OMll8l Brea Plaza EOWilldS Saddleback Edwatds c.nema C1nedome 529 5339 581 58d0 8411 03118 634 2553 COITA •U 111'1• Edwards South~ Plaza 546 2711 El!Willd5 Woodbndge 551 065!> , ., ~Ailii llCCPTID 'Oii'"" -.wl I MOYIE RATINGS FOR MRENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE Ille octecM al ,,_,_,. 11 lo - --·-... lll'ltMl\I al ...,.,...,,_..,.__,o,,,..,._ .tiL1. DH AHO 1111 fll"'S R(C(IV( ™f SEM. OF ™E "'OTl()f; PtC ruRC ClOOE OF SEV REGUlATIOH REIJS IPG) At Shows at 1:00 No ECZll'lllmV s-tre NoP-. Sir John G1el9ud OUUUOlSOF RM IPGI At 7:00 .. t :20 I Rlcherd Dr•vfun WNCmi LIFE IS IT NIYWAY1 IRI At c:::•:::O:O:l::2:0:::10:::4~0::C:~ I P•ul New""n A_.,..IEOF MALICE IPGI Sllowt 1t 7:00 t :20 ~IRI 7:15 a. l t)O -~ -------- , & "1' f.;on~:'i'X ,.rtii;t!,' IUUDIEllS OF THIE LOST ARK IPG) At Sllowt 11 7:00 •lits No aconomy SHtln1 FIND VDUR NAME .. 2 TICKETS WORTH $30 70M I PARTY TIME ,_ Lawrence Pressman I right > expounds on his philosophy to (from left I Ta ndy Cr o ny n , Chris tina Pic kles a nd Matthew F aison in a scene from "Bodies .. a l South Coas t Repertory . Beach . . director Dick Nicklin will be casting five men and two women for the drama, which opens March 26 ... *BARGAIN MATIN•ES • Monday thru Saturday All PerformancH IMfore 5:00 PM (Exe.pt Speclll E11gagement1 Ind Hll!Uys) l A MlliAUA M All Muodo ot losec1011t LA MIRADA WALl<·IN 99•·2400 -C.~·-lWf~ .. TAll'S",._ '"'·"'···-- P.__ • _.,,NLD "ABSENCE OF MALICE" -, ....... a; ....... LAKEWOOD CENTER WALl<-IN .... __ ........ _ .. ON OOt.OEN PONO" CNt .-. .............. ,_ -C llCOTI • rmc>TMt ""'1'D1t "fA""tNI • .,.. ........ kM~t-=• LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WAllC IN focullV Al Del Amo 211/614-9211 . --·---··RA1ou11 Of n. LOST AAK" ---CNt ........ ,. .. -.... --· "SHAAKY'I MAQIN&" 1111 ....... .,... ... - ~oculty ot-Conoi-ooct 213/531·9580 ..,.. ..... ,,,..,....,..,.... ... I ... _ ... _......,.__..., __ ---------_.,. ··AEDS •. !NI ·~~-~1;11 _, __ ··SHARKY'S MACHINE" •1 11:11. --· ""· - ... -_ec.::-_:.-- .. ,.AOTI•" .,_ ........... - -----1 ··AMDEMOF THE LOST,,,_.: , .......... .,.. .. .... -------''CHAAIOTS Of flM'• "' ... I I .. , .......... _...,. -Soutl'I Cooal Hlwoy Ol lfoodWO'f 494-1514 ••llOCJEtN "90•1.lMI" tN1 --l'lll.fM-Ml.ll11,•1eo- ••NjNIE TO flYI .. 4111 --.--.. ,.-... _,,, ...... _ • -t.NICMTlll•---"AT\.ANTIC CtTY""" __ ,,,., ... "''··------ ... """ "'' 0 ... •8·15 S., \_,.6:QO ) ... l\4:M li8 :41 IMPORTANT NOTICE! C .. 11300RIN UNDER IZ fRH! HllH< ant W••-• .., IMu J11 5; • St! Sun ""' 4:30,. Ctt*-R ~•YOU-Alt \.. ~ ilADIO 1$ TQllll ~ I If Ml ~ w MOIO Will< Olf11()11 ACCU$GllT fllOSIT10ll -tMIO~ P!l!QMll t•~S Ill O!! lM ~ ANA .. llM ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN '•••"oy ti ol l emon St 179·9150 --.. E~ILPElk' "' -··THE FlNAL CONFLICT'' "' -"MANIAC MANSION" 11t1 CINI II SOVNO 8UI NA PAllr BUENA PARK ORl'IE IN Uncoln A•• •••I of Cnon 121·4070 \1ncot" A•• we.-: o• «nott 12h4070 '1·111111• $on Ot990 ,,..., ot tro9,~unl (Sol llDT-·---"OEATH YALUY" 1111 -·:MOTl!L .. LL" lltl Clll( HlCSuNo "iTAATAIK" .. ----"-""·1uu IQUAD" .. , .. FANTAllH" 1111 CtN~ fl ~NO _,_~·--··· "TH! •OOGUfS" .. , -"THEY CA• FROM WITHIN" fll ,_ ,_ --TO TIU n. fMa "GHOST STOAY" 1111 -"THE HOWllNO" 11111 --·--··ouTH ~LI.IY" 1111 "MOHL HILL" 1!111 962•2411 CtN( fl SO\lfllO --'"1;tf;;f J 11\ve CNt lllA---·--.-... TAINS" (Ill ··OH OOl.HN ~ND" tN1 "-119 -"ITIA CAAZY" t•i "HIAVIN CAN WAIT'' "' • Clllt " SOUllO CIN( ·fl SOU110 -----fll _,__. __ _ "THI flNAL~NFLICT'' 1111 ··119 ~TION" 1111 "L.00telfll" .. .. MAN~ ~N" 111 ClllMt SOU110 A 1t .0.. ~-.A LA HABR A llt<IO '~ M--·---''Ofe-OOLM.:.""°'' ""' - ._,. .. ,. " ._ • ..., , ..., .. ..,. "HIAftN CAN WAIT'' .. --1--ll--..,.U.IEllUCTICm,....rl'tlrndm.tl-R-1 ... 1111-171-1162 DretMd To t<ill (RI '-A•• ORA NGE OQIVf IN . . ~ .. -MISS IO N O~IVf IN . -·--·~--"'-=:;"' o •'fMI CIMNGl•Au. ""9r' .. =-=-Cf,Jr: l'IHlt O~••" IN) T";-a=r" C-NMell """ CNI By TM Auocla&ed Prell Tbe followlnt are Billboard'• hot record hlta for the week endlna Jan. 30 as they appear ln next wefk'1 iuue of Billboard magaiine. HOT SINGLES l. "1 Can't Go For That" Daryl Hall & John Oates <RCA ) 2. "Waltlng For a Girl Like You" Foreigner (Atlantic> 3. "Centerfold " The J .• Geil s Band ( EMJ·America) 4. "Physical" Olivia Newton-John <MCA> TOP LP'1 -- - - l. .. , .. Foreigner CAtJanticl 2. "Escape'' Journey <Columbia) 3. "Freeze-Frame" The J . Geils Band (EM I-America) 4 . "Hooked on Classics" The Royal Philharmonic .. - 11 I ..,II" -EV!NIG-.;e;o. •• (J) aJ 8TATI I CW THI lHON AOOMa1 Prealdenl ~ del!Y«s ' Jtle ~ Slate of the ,Union addrMS 10 A jolnl Miiion ol Congr"' al lhe CapjlOI. • CHAA&C8 ANGlLI I ~..:==. HAWAII~ • l<OET NEW88EAT 8"CW. • "Pfeeldent Aeagao'e 6111e , Ot Tile Union Acldrea" !~..aw * * "Ooyble Tro11ble" (hi87) Elvls PrHley, Annen• Oay A young Bttt- 1111 h•l••U becomes anrac:1ec1 10 a famou1 Am$1Can pop~ ($)MOYIE * * * "Blac:kboatd Jun- gl9'' ( 19551 Glenn Ford, Anne Francia. A ~led young INC'-allempll 10 rettor• 0<<1-. 111 a ttig-city training school where leen-eoe lawlessness and violeoee have laken root 8i 15 (%) MOVIE • • ·~ "FOOlln' Around' ( t980) Gary BuHy Annelle O'Toole. A naive oountyy boy lrles 10 wtn a bHUlltul, sophl1t1caled cellege coed awey from her anobblsn llanoe and l1'lf equally uppity latnlly. 'PG' 8:30 8) WELCOME BACK. KOTTER '1\) 8U81NE.88 REPORT Q!NEWS 0 AOC> STEWART Rock music's reigning male se• symbol 11ars In lhls concert, taped live at lhe Forum tn Los Angeles. slnolng many ot 1111 hit sin- gles as well as cull from some ol hit albums 8i41 8 (I)' C88 NEWS SPfiCtAL REPORT 1 D DEMOCRATIC AESf'ON81 /ANAL YM I N8C NEWS REPORT 7:00 Q HAPPY OAY8 AGAIN Richie plllQ8S freedom ol 1he press above lrlendahip when he plans lo ewpose Fontl4l'~ t>eel llver phob11 1n a lronl page 5tofy 8 A8CNEWS 8 YOU ASKED FOA IT Featured "Glf1tta Calch- 1.!!!!" m M•A•S•H Frank complains 10 Gane<· al Barker when 11awtieye is 1pP91nled Choel Surgeon . •• lhe 40771h ., JOKER'S WILD fl3 OVEAEASY 'Living Alone" Guests Marion Blaustein, Larry Roth. Laverne Gulltoyle, Jack Kaufman (RI Q 81) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT @) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT Tony Danza ol "T .. 1 gowts up rots ambitions 10 be a world champion boil•• (8 THE MUPPETS Guesl Teresa Bre- I FAANKll AND FANS -When singer Frank.le Avalon performs al Howard's Leopard Lodge, J e nny proves to be a big fan in ··Happy Days" at 8 t.onight on KABC (7). 7:30 9 2 ON THI! TOWH FM1uted1 • IOOlt •• an 1flef·achoot computer training PfOOfMI; A - wllO prk11cM Ille 811 ot decofatl..,. P8'>« maki11g; !WO SalvadOrlan retugMe who -reunn.d with their mother. 8 LAVERNE & SHIRLEY &COMPANY L1verne llnd Shlri.y help Squlggy pua • written driving IMI to Iha• he can kHp h l1 Job •• the ~. 8 EYEONLA. A visit to the opening ot"A Day In HOiiywood, A Nighl In The Ullraln." II CB..UNTY 8UU.8EYE m M•A•&•H Slumped by • crouword puzzle, Hawkeye tldlos • Navy buddy !Of help bul Illa call le lnt~-9d as a medlc:al -gency. • TIC TAC DOUOH SI MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT '1!) HEWS CJ) P.M. MAGAZJHE Meet • person who talks to anirn.la. (!JI YOU ASKED R>A IT Futured· "Gl11He Ca1ch· I " Q1 FAMll Y FEllo (C)MOVIE 1t * ·~ "The Cal And The Canary" 11g391 Bob Hope, Paulette Goddard. In ord., to collect the4r 1nh«1tance. a flln'lily mull tpend lhe "!ghl in a haunled hOuM. (Q) NM 8A8KET8AU LOI Angeles Lak ... S VI. Miiwaukee 8Yck1 8.:00 8 CJ) SIMON & SIMON D Q! FATHER MURPtN The financial Mure ot lhe orphlnage 11 left In the hands of 1 menially slow orph1n. (RIO U MOVIE • • * "War Wagon" p067) John Wayne. Kirk Oougles. A cowboy defrauded of hi1 gold-rldl land plan• a ljMCial type ot ~ wllh the help ot a gunslinger, an Indian. a drunk and a lhiel. · 8 9 HAPPY DAYS Al COt\V1noft hlS dl61anl cousin, singer F11nkle Avalon, to hHdllne Ille 1nnual Leop11d lodge muslcal e.travaganz.a. O 8 Tl4E OOCTOfll 18 1H Ch1r1es Schulz, Doug Oldhan and Ille Glllher T rlo ara lea1ured In a tC>I" cl•I about 1ee11no gooa at:>oul yOUIMll ano your a1111u0e •-ard olhe<L • P.M. MAGAZIHE Wayne, SuNn Hayward A gtOUP of Wo<ld War II Seatie. I• Ullgned 10 rapalr ml141ary 1n1lallatlon1 dangeroully CIOM 10 ene- '!!J t«tllory. • l.RONEARTH "The Flrtt Forests" David Allent>orough IOoka a1 1111 ways plant Hf1 OVWCAml lhe dlfflcull problem 01 migration from sea 10 land. i> NovA "A Field Gui<N To Roget Tory Peteraon" A l>Of1••11 ol the man wllOM ti.a•· selling guld1booka on ornilllok>Qy have played • plvolal rot. In lurnlng bird watChitlg inlo a mau aport lspr-led.Q CB)MOVIE **in "Zulu 01wn" ( tg801 Burt L•ncasll•. Pel•• O'Toole Thi Englllh wsge • blttar struggle aga!Nt Ille Zulu nation In 1gth- century Africa. 'PG' ())MOVIE * • • "Flral Family" (1980) Gilda ~ner. Bob Newherl Th1 sexually repreued dsughl., ot lhe country's W91rdest prlal· denllal t1mlly compllcales her lllher'a allsmpll to conducl thl alfat1a ol slate. 'R' 0M<>VIE •• "The Rlturn" (19811 Jan-Michael Vlncen1, Cybill Shepherd A •-ch Klenlls1 and • llw enforce< lafl In love while 1nvea1iga1ing eome strange geog~ lrregu· larllles taking place In a smlll town lhal has recent· ly been vlalled by an at141n spacecraft CZ) AWAAD8'THEA TEA 8:30 8 0IJ LAVPNE & SHIALEY Carmine &udlllons tor • part In a mualcat about lhe Nfe ot Rodly Gtuiano o • AU IH TI4E FAUil Y Archie has no ldN he 1s 11¥1ng o.ng..ousiy when he rlpa up a chain letter 8:00 8 (J) LOVE AT FlAST s.GHT A burglar llrilles larror 1n10 the ,_,, ot KAien and causes her slghtlesa hus- band 10 ~llon Ilia man- hood. D MOVIE "Riding Tall-': Andrew P""9. Giv-r McCorrnl!U. 8 Qll THREE'S COMPANY Cindy hlrM on as a part- fiml maid 10 make some e•tra money 0 D CMl.OMH ON TI1E AUN M Jeck LOl'don .... out 10 ..... ""WWne °""" . ~-a. ....... · t:IO·TMI~ ...... Ua:CWtJ'° ITATS ti# fMI UNION ADOW (J) MOYll • • ''Hurrlcanl" ( 1g74) l.•uy Heom•n. Martin ....,_ A~IWlril ltltough • Ouft C-t 1own wr111111111g llAVOC on the 1'-of ... rl"-d ClliHnl CO)MOYll * •• * "Altered 81•1 .... ( 1H0) WllllMI Hwt, 8IW Brown. A Hat111rd ~­ tllt'I OtMtlc t1ruoture 11 lll•ed ~ he conclucla mln<l-e.11p•ndlng ••P41f'I• I "*111 wllh llolallon lankl end powefful hlilluclno- 'R' 'TUBE TOPPERS KCET 8 . KNBC 8 . KABC D and KCET D 6:00 "Statt! of ~he Union Address." President Reagan dell vt!rs the aMual State of the Union Addr~ss to u joint session of Congress. KABC 8 8:00 "Happy Days ... Singer Frankie Avalon guest stars. See photo at left. KHJ e 9:00 "Children on the Run." A documentary about the millions of child refugees in the world. KABC • l~; "The-Youn,est Victim: America's Sexually Exploited Child." A re port on sexually abused children. t:41a DBIOCMnc WIONMI ANALY811 / Nee NIW8 M'°"1' tO:OO ••••• NIW8 THE YOUNCll.8'T ''T Uf ntng Ancf Review'' Tilt Hogan. A group of rnanlll VICT». A.....-cA'8 1199 turn, 11ts1"1g lurn '""I pat1en11 are murde,.ed llXUAU.V DPLOfTED parallel turn ere o.mon-acoorcllflg 10 thelt lndlvtdu- CHILD llraled. (A) al IMtt. 'R' A rapor1 on HXUllly ID OAPTIONB> MIO 00 MOVlf 1buMd ohlldran. NIW8 • '-'"Tl1• Stud" ( 19781 9 ~ANNOUNCED 11:.16CH)THl!l.AITAWAA08 Joan Colllnl. Oli-Tobi· CB)....,,..-; 1HOW u A waiter advl!nCM hie • • • "9 To 5" (1980) DaYld Slelnt>erg hOall an, cat-by tlMplt>g wllh Illa Jane Fond•. OoHy Pinon. In_.,.., parody ol Ille· bOU'I wila .• ,.. ThrM working women \/IMd eward1 allow•. 1:10 e MOVIE 11ba4 againal lhe4r aubfu· * * "II Couldn'I HllPC*I gallonbyamalect1auvinl1I -....cJHT-To A N~ Guy" (1g741 t>ou. 'PG' P1ul Sorvlno, M lch11I (S)DOTTIEWUT lt:008 8HANANA LNtned. "Special Oellvery" Dottle Guell: Zll8 zaa Gabor. g NIW8 w .. t and Kenny Rogers 8 0 'AHTMY ISLAND 1:30 9 MOV1f per1orm some ol her auper An amneala victim •bout * * ~ "Ride The Wiid hlt1, Including "Sorry," to lnhlfh S20 mllUon and Surl" (1084) Flblao, Shel· "Leason tn Laavtng" and two dllldten Meklng to ley F1bat ... T Koo .. reunite lhelf' parents hope -;:,.....,1ea. r Y 10 -lhelr dreama lut· 1:.4& CZl MOVIE ..,, MOVIE 1ill9d. (RI * * 1t lo\ "Break., Morant" '* * * "Coal Miner's G MOVIE (t980) Edw1.rd Woodw1rd, 01ughlar" ( 1980) Sluy T J·-~ T .. -p•-. Austr·"-s " T L **~ " he Ma1111g Sea· -""'" -· -p1ce , ommy ee , aft• ~-·-,,.1~ 10 , ...... 1 on J Bued L ton ' pg51) 0-Tierney. ·--·-·..,..,, ..,., onas. on ore11• Jo/\n Lund. England's aide In the 8oer Lynn'• 1UtOblogu1phy. A • Lova. AMENCAH Wat decide 10 llghl Ille young gill lrom • POOt STYLE Boer guer!llH on lhe4r own family '1 rural t<an1ucky fY\ lerme. mAtrles. much Olde< local ~MOVIE 2:00D INT!RTAIHMIHT bOy wno ..nglnaera her rlae * * "NEA" ( 1978) Samt TONIGHT t t d I ' .. _ -•-Ff'9y, Ann zacnan.a A 0 • ., °'" n ,,. mu-. T"""' DllUI of "Till!" indualry. 'PG' know-11·111 •--ager end• ~., l0:06 CZ) MOVIE WOtldly publllhar w11o 111... glve1 up 1111 amblllona to * * "The Altum Of The ,...., In tova delpi11 • dll· be • world ch1mplon Secauwa Seven" (t980) t..-.nce in NOh o•her'• boxer. Mark Arnotl, Gordon v1ew1 find lhey can'I live ~~"' C wlthoul eactl other. 'A' -....,,.~ lapp. The member• ot . 12:069 (1) WKAPIH ••• "9 To 5" (1080) group ot college lludenlS aNaNNATI Jane F"onda. Dotty Parton. ac:llve In lhe prolast move-Jennifer flllS In IO..,. with Three working women m1n1 during lhe '601 re ...... againll t .... , ""b)u· h t an allrac:llve bul flnanc1ally ...., ,._ -011 ., °' • weekend lnaecull repairman. (R) gallon by a mile chauvinist reunion. 'R' bo••. 'PG' ........ e ._..... 12:ao a a TOMOAAOW -1v•-._..... Guests lormer Iranian 2:21 9 HEWS e INDEPEHDEHT 2:30 D .-... NETWC)M HEWS pr1ald1n1 Abolhan1n e ~ I PflE8ENTE Bani-Sadr, 1ourna1111 * *'At "Tile Red .. ··~ And AMENCAH Plerre Setinge<. "lhe Hep-,......, Pl.AYHOUSE py Hooker" Xaviera Hol-The Cowboy" I 19501 Glenn "King Of Amerlc•" In lander: aotor Omar Shsrlf Ford. Rhond1 Ftemtng 1915 (R) CC)MOVIE • 1 youno. •trong-U MOVIE • • "Superdorne" ( 1978) willed Greeic Nllof jumps * • * "T..... w-i~~ .. Ship In 111-York Harbor, ... --·~ 01v1d Januen, Donna roop1ng lo make • new Mte (19401 Gary COQ98f, Wal-MlPt. A lanatlc: will 11op •f tor hlmMll In America. Q ter Brennan The 1yrannl-nolhing 10 keep • lootb•ll (!]) BARNEY MILLER cal Judge Roy Been Is con-leam from winning lhe A drug pulhet, 1 photogra-fronted Oy lhe ~ut Super Bowl. pl\9f whO lures women into "Wes1erner " (.{) DOTTIE WEST a park tor larcenous pur-m MIKE DOUOl.A8 "Speclat OeliY«)I" Oollle poaes ind a man· W'>O CohoSI Ben \11re1n WMI ano Kenny Rogers claims to be Jesus Christ Guests· Lota Falana, Lar•y 1)1(1orm aome ot her IUP8f enliven,,,. 12th preclncl Wllaotl. hlls, Including "Sony," 11:00 D. CJ) 9 a NEWS • INOEPEHDEHT "Leaton In Ll8Vlng" and 8 SA TUAOA Y NIGHT_ NElWON< NEW8 "Amatic• TrllOgy '' Host· Chevy Ch-. 0.-1: D MOVIE 2M e NIW8 9illyJoel. •'It "Th• lncredlbla 2:169 MOYIE f/J Ko.IN< Shrinkil1g Woman" (10801 "ThrM Corned ..... (1974) 8) THEJEf'f'EA80N8 Liiy Tomlin, Cherles Gro-Ted BlsMll, Jackie Coo· e 8ANFOAD AHO IOH din. A aurburbln hou_. per A psyohlalrlal deals • oeac raVETT wife finds hefMll SUddenfy with 1n alghl·year-old '"'•.,..._...,. getting ltnalfer as her ,.wei thelf; a,,..,, Is pla- 1.\U_, .. ~ unconcarned husband 0ll4ld wllh guilt felllngs * * • "Ubat" ( 1g5gl Olivia look• on 'PG' aboul 1111 wife, a police da H1vtlland, Dirk 12:40(1) MOCLOUO -oean• receives lhe help Bogarde. A man 111empls McCIOU<I ~ trete ol a 1>eau11tut crlmtnotog111 to prove he has ~ wherl kldn1ppar1 111rea1an 3:26 • MOVIE llblled but n.iiM hit cue ICJltlllNI gltlfnend (A) • •*'.\-;-,Sword Of Sher· when he hu 1roubt1 12:66 MOVIE wood Foresl" (1961) Rich· 'l!'*'"bertng detllls * • * * "8eckel" ( tll64) ard Gr-. Peter Culh· ~ ~~ To 5.. ( 19801 Richard Burton. Pel er Ing. The Sheriff of Nolllng· O'Toote 1<1no Henry 11 ot ham Ind his evil ..,, Ate Jana Fonda. Dolly Parton England cl.uMs wllh lhe cNlllnged by Robin Hood ThrM working woman Arcn~ ol Centatbury and hll men. rebel agalntll their IUOllJ· durtng the t21h oenlury 3:30 (H) ntE YEAR TMAT WAS: gallon by a male ct1suv1n1s1 l:OO., MOVIE 1M 1 celed pfty1lclan t•ll•• under "" wlt'f • llOtt'IDly dtfofmed "*' wflOM ,,.. ' t• then had MM _.,,, In dl4lllC> ".... 4Nlhlt>lllOna. • 'PO' (.Z)MCWll •• "the Devllt" (1971) v.-AadO'avit, Offvef "-I. DuMo lfte ''°°' In ''-· I ~ prleet II ~-'°' "" alaged ~ wltll the d9vll "' UlinO • """'"9ry for l.ucl\11-I OUlplMM#M, •:oo• MCWll • * "Dlpvty MtrllMI" (IMO) Jon Hell. ,,_ LlrlQIOfd. A 4MPU'Y nw~ Mel """'' down • pelt of QYMIN\gera and 1r1 impOtt· ant rajlroecl ,.,,..,, eMCM1 -ra-ciii • Fotlal" ( t179) U00 T oO· naul, Mlc;fl4ll hm1u1t A niOll!Club owner UIM to Pfec>er• 1111 1tan•ve111ta ~for a viii• by 1111 IOll'• 11anc1•'• l1th1r, 1111 rnorala COt'Nnllab.., ol Fr11ne9,'A' 4:IO ! ::."'""'WU> • "Klondike F-" (1980) Jeff Eael, Aod Ste!Qat, The young ~ London NII °"' to Nik Illa fof111n41 dut. ~ :::' IMh. 'PG' * "Blood 8a1rle<" ( 1080) Telly SavalH, Eddie Albert A border palrOlman 1r1e1 lo bring llndowner1 whO Ir alfle In illegal alien worker. lo jUallcl. M'edn~•da11'• Da111 h1u~ IN~~·~• -MORIH- 8:00 (') * i • "Sunday In N- York" (1064) Clltt AoWI· 90<>. J-Fond1. Alter being jilted by her boy· friend 1nd 1t1veling lo New York 10 Yilll her brot,.,.,, a young woman conlklata her posltlOn on virginity &:30 CC) * * "O.ys 01 Fi.ry" Narrated by \/Incant Price An tnveatlgallon ol the chlHlng even1s ol dellh and desltucllon sre s1ud- led. , 9:30 m •'At "Hot Stio1s" ( t956) Bowery Boys, Hunu Hall The 8oys get Involved wilh a phony kidnapping 10:00 (.cJ * *'It ''The HOUM 01 Tile Seven Hawk•" ( 19591 Roberl Tlylor. Linda Chrlllian When I paaa.,,_ gar is found dead on his Ship , • Chlrl•• boa• skipper dlacovera a ll•anott map 11111 lead• to I hidden Nill fOflUne. (ij) **'It "Paplllon" ( 1973) Sllve Mc~n. Ouslin Hottman. A pair of O.vlt:a llland c;onvicll spend their time planning ll'lelreseape (S) * * * "Clddythac:k" ( 19801 8111 Murrey. Rodney Dange<iield The Oatnenl· eel ground1-kaeper of a sw1nky counlry club wages war agaJnll lhe goptiars inl'labll1ng hiS lurt 'R' 8'*1t 1t "II To 5" (1980) Jane Fond•. Dolly Pinon Three working ""omen rebel aglllnll lhet• aub1u· g11lon by a m11e Chauv1n111 bosa 'PG' 11:*1 CC) • * "Death Cat On TheFr-•y" 12:00 8 *it * "The Man Wh<> Had P~ Over Women" ( t970) Rod Teytor, CatOI While • ··~ ··o..ry ()I A-Med Housew1fe" (1970) Carrie Snodgress. Richard Benja· men, •••• "Town WllllOUI Pny" (19611 Kirk Douglas, E G MarShalt 0 * * * "&ot~. Can (%) • '.4 :.HOWng .:,. Tiit ..... (IM4) AIM ..... ~ Uloll. A 1-.: ..... men II M0Mt IO IMtn !NI I "'UtcMt lie CIOll'Wni0.0 le llMuf IO IM ~-1100 (8) * ..... "My 8ody- gu ard " ( 1'19) Chrle M11ta peao1, Adam IWdwtrt The -~Id ... Chlo1go high IChOOI 11'19«.. frllndt ...,_ ... ICllOOI MC .. t Md ~ ., they eland up to the °""' e1 pig wllldl heel per. • MOUled them bottl. 'PO' Cl) * •• "Suncleir "' ..... Yoill" (1"4) Clllf ACINr1· IOtl, JtM Fonc141 Afler being jllt9d by ,..., bo)I• • ffiatld 111'9 1•....ill1o to New __ Yclf!t lo ---._.,., a Youno -CONiOlr'I ,..., pollllotl on virginity 1:at CC> * * *"' "6c#1_ .. ( 1932) Paul Munl, 0-ge Aetl. A amall·tlme hOOd· llMTI r1e11 to the top of the heap during PrOhlblllon 1:41(%)*111 "PllrQ" ( 1g7&1 s-Penhellgon, Ro«>en Hetpmann Though In a del9 coma, 1 YOUllG man ii aUM able to Nik r-. for wrongdoing• by utlleUhlnO his ~ p aychoktn•llc powere. 'PO' 2:00 D • • "The Rlturn" (t9811 Jan-MidlMI Vin· cent. CyOlll S~d. ,. ·-en edenllll and • 1-enforcer f.. In lo¥8 wNle lnves1igatil1g -air ange geograplc irragu· larllles taking place In • small lown that hU r-1· 1y ~ vltiled by an ....,. apacecratt. S:OO G • 1t * "Glrls Of PIM· sur1 Island" ( 19S3) Leo Gann, Abby Dall on Thi peaceful Pac:otlc !eland Illa or en Eft9~Sh ldlolw end htS daughters II dllrupled ~ 1500 MatlnK. ~ • •~ "Ouncan'a World'' ( 1g1g) Larry Tobi· as, Don Morrill A young boy who IOves anoneta encount1r1 ob111cla1 wherl dMllng with humans as he 1nvestiga1e1 the cauae of en e•plosion near • nalure museum 'G' ***'It ''Brlaker Morent" ( 1980) Edw11d Woodward, Jacil ThOmp.. aon Aullrauans conscript- ed 10 flghl on Engi1nd'1 side In the Boer War O.CIO. 10 light the Boe< guerilla• on the11 own I arms 3:15 * •'> "Sllanl Scream" ( 19801 Rebecca Balding, Yvonne O.Carto Sevatal college 11uden11 t1ka rooma In I lorebodlng Old houae where a g11Sly ano shll unM>fved murdlf wu cornm1lle<t y1ara eertter 'R' 3:30 (ll * * H•wk The Slayer" ( 1981) Jack Patance. John Terry An advenluroua young man enhs 11 I he Aid ol a band ot warriors 10 llghl his ttvll uncle, the ove<lord who -Hied his lather and 11 hOlding 1r1 1bbeaa lor r •n· sorn 4:311{.C * *'At "The House 0 1 The Seven Hawks" (19591 Robar I Taylor. Lind• Christian When a Pltaer\· ger la found dead on hlS ship , a charter boll , skipper dlscovefl • 11range map that i.ads 10 a hidden Nazi fortune. 4:45 (ZJ • • "t<agemusha" (1980) Tllsuya Na6.adll, --itutbm amizalcf 4· 10ol<-11llk1 thief takes over and carrlel out Ille raspon- slbltilles of • J1paneM warlord WhO was ul'll•· pecledly killed 10 provide h4s 11e1i1en1n1s wilh more llme 10 enacl lheH defense 'PG' 5:00 0 * 1t "Tile lncredlbla 1 I ' I ..H TI1EYEARTHATWA8: 1 1981 I Patrick O'Ne&I hOSIS this I look at tlwl most memeor- A dOCtor wno trNIS cnll- dren with hypnotll; a '50s nlghlolub In 01t1u: Chef Tell ....-es Johnny Mann hosll • doc· umen1ary about the mil· ~ons of Child reflJOMS In boll 'PG' •*'"'"Paris Blues" (19611 Palrielt O'Neal llOall lhla 11:15 (0) MOVIE Sidney Politer. Paul New· look 81 Ille moll merneot· •'At "Lippa And .~M~cc~·~1n!:!.·_· -~· __ ...,,....,. • ..,A,_,.,.-t,,..,..,1...,0~1~A11t11"'•tne-.,r'"''r-lr--.i:if0Yiiilaortlie privlOUS- You Spara A Olm1?' 1 t9751 Oocumen1a1y Directed b~ Phllli M."'or;:..a:::..--- 1mpac: o I ()epfes- Sror1nk1ng Woman" L!.iW-.--~· Liiy I omfin, Charles Gro-__ ...::a=b~ ev_wU2Llll!l.J)fm yea• 0 TI1E WAY IT WAS ch.nl sauce. Paula NelSOn on hOW 10 sett your house •t~ • MERV ONR'1N 8t AMENCAN Pl.AYHOUSE lc Luiz, Paul 1n Pllll romance two gl•ll Thomes Two 20th-cenlury on vacauon ri}' MOVIE cowboys atlempt to llva by CC) MOVIE • * * y, "The Elephanl the rough-anel-lough eth· * • "Phob4a" ( 1980) Psul Min" ( 1980) John Hurt, les of the Old Wesl. 'R' Mich1e1 Gtaaer. Suaan Anlhony Hoplclns. A deal· 11:30 8 CJ) ALICE ''°" upon d1tteren1 HQ· ments 01 Ille In Ame<ica differs ltom Ille avarege working min to big-lime criminals. din A surburban h0Use- w1fa ttnos '-Mlf suddenly getting smaller H her unconcerned husband looks on 'PG' t953 • 54 NHl S1anley Cup Phlyolls: Oetrolt Red Wings Vs. Monlreal Cana- dlena" CHANNEL LISTINGS • ••~ "The Fl,ghllng Sesbee_!" ( 1g441 John "Seguin" The lraglc life ot unaung hero Juan Nepo- muceno Seguin, one of lhe lead«s ot Ille TallU revo- lulion, Is dramallzed. O el I.ff ON EARTH A bag luH of money IS left 11 ...... , Oiner du"no the breaklul ruah (R) D Q!TONIGHT JOHN DARLING by Armstrong & Batiuk .-~----------------------....... "The Flrst Foresta" O•vld Allenborough looks 11 lhe w1ys planl life overd.me lhe dilflcult problam of mlgtllion lrom -to land Guest host· Joan Rivers. Gueall: Mike Connors. Alp Taylor. 'r'ON ASOVT US GR.l.901NG A EH"T'E. 'TO ~Al, VOH N ~ SOUNDS GREAT, Pl-~NTMAN ! DO 'V'Ol.J WAN"'T TO OET OUT OF YOUR COSTUME~ Q ICNXT ICBSI C!) KNBC INBCI g l(TLA tlnd 1 ID KABC IABCI 0 ICFM B ICRSl 0 KHJ TV llnd I CD KCST tABCI C11 K Tl\I tln<I) 0 On T\I l 2 TV H HBO c <C1nem.l1I • (WORI NV , N.Y 17 (WTBSI E tESPNI S IShowt1meJ 0 Spo111qti1 ~ST An OF THE UHIOH AOOAE.88 Presldenl Reagan datlvera Ille annull Slate ol lhe Union ldOress lo a )olnl MSslon ot Cong.-. at 11141 CapOol 8 9 A8CNEW8 NIGKTUNE • CNUSALERT "The Agony Of Easl Alrl· c1" The plighl or ttltving people in Eut Afrtca and wh11 some Atnatlcan• Ate doong to help ere docu- mented. IE KCOP T\I tlnd I fE KCET CP6SI ~~OCE !PBSI 8 IC.able News Nelwor~J (t)MOYIE * "Klondike Fevet" ( tg801 Jeff Easl, Rod Steiger The m> LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE • CA08S-CQUNTAY SKI l\JcRaney's private eye is an outlaw But private detective on TV's 'Simon & Simon' has sense of honor By J ERRY BUCK APTeN¥W.'ffr ..... LOS ANGELES Gerald McRaney .says the private detective he plays in ttre"'eBS series "Simon & Simon" can best be described' as an outlaw. •'Rick was once on the wron1 side of . the law,·' the actor s~s. ·'He w scealtng cars ana thmgs like that But he's a decent sort of rellow. Once he has a job he does it well, but he'd prerer not to hrieone. "J1VE Tll)ED to imbue Rick with a sedse 6f 'honor that a lot of people may not ,understand but is unmistakably his.'' McRaney says. "One thina a~t Riek istheHte hes •el') few rules. He's a simple sort of fellow who tries to live his life as sim,Jy .as he can -and he keeP.s ~tting in1~rrered wt th.•· · M cRaney stat.a in the CBS aeries with Jameson Parker, wbo plays hla strait-laced brother and partner in • hand·te>-mouth detecUve aaency set ln San ~o. The sbow first WU let. ill the Flortd1 Keya1 but was moved to Soutbun Callfornl• for econo01lc reason." before lt became a ffrlea. The ft how alts at 8 tonl1ht on KNXT (2). 1 1The pd mar y tMn1 ii the r e latlons blp between me and JarnelOft," llcRaoey llYll "Thal IOt8 au the way thn)UO the cut. T!lls l9 t.M ; first time since f was in repertory theater that I've worked with an ensemble cast. I'm good friends with everybody in the,, cast, and that hasn't happened in a long, long time. "NOT LONG AGO we had a s~ne that didn't-work/~ hetttaHs; '-'We-put-- the actors in front of a camera and we lmpl'ovised." McRaney, a native or the Gull Coast area of Mississippi, says he knew people like Rick when he worked in the oilfields in Louisiana and offshore in the Gulf of Mexico. "I worked in a repertory company ln New Orleans ror four or flxe ~ean.'' he says. "OUr seaaon wu 26 weeu, and in the off-season I'd work on the rip. My first job was a surveyor on the offshore rigs. Then I was a mud.Jo11er on shore and offshore." IN lt71, THE aEPEaTOaY cosnpany folded and McRaney moved to Loa Ancelet. "It was an amaain1 spirit, but workJn1 relrional theater didn't pay enoup to keep body and souJ tosetber," he sal'· Mc Raney says b1s parent& had read in a Miulutppl newspaper \bat Hollywood caatln1 director Raf1'1ey Kini wu ~m Gulfport. He cont•d•d 1?1n1, ~ho bel~ blJn tel an apat. He jollled an acting class taught by Jeff Corey. When Corey directed an episode of ''Night Gallery," he hired McRaney. That job got him into the Screen A.ctors Guild. "It was almost a year before I got another job," he says. "I got a part in ·Gunsmoke, · and after that I did one a year or ee Years.-was actor to be in a showdown with James Arness before the show went off the air. I played a gunslinger who got into a gunfight with Marshal Dillon. I died a lot on that show.·' MdlANEY DID A LOT or guest work on television series and played a lawyer in the ehort lived series •"'f'he bw . .u..-w..--- was in movies such as "The Bell Jar" and "A Small Circle or Friends" and TV movies such as "Women at West Pointj" "Anatomy of a Seduction" and "C•ll e and Son." "I WU ln 'lloota n .. Let'• HY the Klan ¥Oted me man of the year," he says. "I played""• 1uy who •trapped a guy to a tree ano set fire to blm. 8Ut tM guy eot his reven1e. I was up ror the role u the helicopter pilot In 'Mapum. P .1 .• · and be eot It. Tbat wa1 Ro1er Motley." McRaney Uvea in MaUbu wttb bla ton and daulhter. and he recentJy married an Hplrina screenwriter . ~ ......... F'RllNDI -Gerald McRaney <rl1hU or CBS' "Simon & Sl~on" says hi• relationship with Jameson Parker. who plays hla slrliltlghl·l.ced "brother and partner ln lhe show. is the same oft camera u it ls on the set. "We're the best of friends." llYI MtRaney. I • BEING MODERNIZED T he ba ttles h ip New Jersey is undergoing r enovation in d ry dock in Long Be a c h in prepa ration for 1983 duty with a Navy ta sk force . T he New All"W~ Jersey will be fitted with cruise m issile la unc he rs a nd othe r ne w weapons. a l cost of S326 million. Acid rain in Sequoia? Pollutants traced in Southern Sierra SEQUOIA NATIONAL P ARK CAP> -Acid rain has been detected in thunderstorms over Sequoia Nationa l Park in the southern Sierra Nevada , researchers say. Storms last summer and early fa ll ofte n were "quite dirty,'• said Larry Banc roft, park resource officer. A monitoring station in the park. one of six in California, showed acid rain with pH factors as low as 3.7. P recipitation contains acid rain if the pH falls below 5.6 on a O to 14 scale of hydrogen-ion concentrations with 7 considered chemically neutral. ·'T he big winte r storms seem to be relatively clean .... with a pH of 5.5, but in the summe r a nd early fall it drops a full point. t ha t is 10 times more acidic," Ba ncroft said. Acid rain also was r eported last s ummer at Mammoth Lakes farther nor th in the Sierra . T h e Sequoia park researc he rs found ozone levels higher than state standards on 30 of 65 days between July 23 to Oct. 10. They hope to measure the extent a nd severity of ozone d a m age to ponde rosa and J effrey pines in Sequoia park and adjacent Kings Canyon National Park. The state Air Resources Control Board says most pollutants over the southe rn Sie rra co m e from the a d jacent San J oaqui n Valle y. a lthough some d rift in from the San Francisco Bay Area, Bancroft sa id. Public jobs on decline B OSTON <A P > P u b li c j o b s i n Ma ssachusetts. which h ad been g r o win g rapidly, d r oppe d b y 43, 700 since st ate voters ena cted the tax-cutting Pr opo s it i o n 2 'h, a cc ording to t h e Division of Employment Security. Howe ve r , the da t a s h o w e d p ubl i c e m ploym ent, based on No vembe r fi g ures. is s t ill up 37,000 in the dec ade, pea ki n g at 364,200 in 1979. It was 283.400 in 1972. llllTH llTICIB Many failing test for prison guards BEAl'lfE 5<'rnces undt.'r the d1rC'et111n THEOOORE E BEANE. "r II arbor Lav.n Mount OhH• resident of South Laguna, ~lo rtuaQ of C11i.ta ~fosa Ca. Passed away on Sund ay. ~411 ~~f>.t. January 24 . 1982 Survived llOfo'FMAN!'l ---b y h i:s wife l'loren cl!. I.ED ~-tt61-'~ .. daughter Janet. son., Tod 34 \ear re:.1dcnl of Balboa and J ames Beane ~1asl> or Ii.land. Ca Pas..,l'd away on Christian Burial will be on .January 22, 1982 lie was a _ _5ACRAMENTO <AP> -· Ha lf of the wome n and 10 percent of the m en applying to be prison gua rds a re failing the state's new physical-fitness test, offi cia ls h~ve told a Senate committee. ( Tuesday, January 21), 1982 al member of the lloly Na me 9:30 AM al St Edw:1 rds Soc1l'ly al St John V1anncy Catholic Church, Dana Ca tho lic Chu rch and a Poi nt. Ca Interment at veteran of World War I.US Asce n sion Cemeter~ Army He 1s survived by has O'Co nnor Laguna II Ills v.1 fc rlorencc. son Elwyn E Mortuary directors. of Carson. Ca . 1 grandson The test is supposed to measure the strength, endurance and agility that may be needed for prison work. It has been given to about 60 women and 340 men since October. DaJe Terra, a n analyst for the state Personne l Board, said. He contende d that in a lmost a ll ca ses ·•applicants who couldn't pass the tests could not have perform ed the job." GENTILE a nd 2 iireal ·J(randsons WAL t ER G ENT 1 LE Hec1lalion of lhc Rosary will resident ol Costa Mesa, Ca he on Tuesda),, January 26. Passed away on Januar) 23. 1982 al 7:00PM al St. John 1982. He is survived by h!s Vianney Catholic Church wife Vi rgi nia. Ser vices Mas!> of the Resurrection Two hundred current guards showed just as high a failure ra te when they took the test; Terra said. Monday,J anuary2S,1982at wi ll be on Wednesd ay, 1 1 . o o A M at 11 arll0 r Januury 27. 1982 at JO·OOAM Lawn-Mount Olive. Chapel al St. John V1anney Catholic with Rev Bruce Kurrie: Church. Interment services Presbyterian Church of the at I loly Sepulcher Cemetery Cove nant , officiat in g. Services und er the direction -----------.of Baltz· Bergeron Smith & The tests are not now required of gua rds, only o f applicants , but Terra said Corrections Dep artment Dire ctor Ruth Rushen wants t o require guards to pass the test once or twice a year. One par\ of the test that was particularly difficult for women required applicants to carry a 90-pound weight for 220 yards, turn around and carry a 45-pound weight back, s imulating the hauling of a body on a stretc her , Terra said. ..... ClllOTHHS l&LllOADWAY MOtlTUAIY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642-9150 1.un1HGHOH SMfTH & TUTHILL WISTCLlff CHA,IL 427 E 17th SI Cosla Mesa 646-9371 '1HCl..OTHHS SMITHS' MO!'UAIY ___ 627 Ma1d_s1 Huntington Beacn 536~39 Tuthill Weslclirf Chape l Mortuary of Cosla Mesa 646·9371. l.ASKOW AU BER T LAS KO W , reside nt of I rvine. Ca Passed away on January 24. 1982 He is sur vived by his wife Lillian. Services will be held on Tuesday, Ja nuary 26 . 1982 at llurbor Lawn Cha pel. Servit•es under the cl1rc c li on or Ha r bor Lawn Mounl Olive Mortuary of Cosla Mesa 540·SS5-I Wll..COX F'RANCIS M. WI LCOX. 1908·1982 . Fra n cis M. Wilcox. long·lime residenl of Corona del Mar. Ca passed away after a bner illness on . . . The committee, in a hearing on health and fitness programs in state law enforcement, got a more encouraging r eport from t he California Hig hway Patrol. A 2-year·old progra m of regular checkups and fitness regimens has resulted not only in apparent increased overall fitness among patrol officers, but a lso in lower ave rage blood pressure and a decline in heart ailme nts, said John Voss. an assistant chief in the CHP. Representatives or a prison guards' union, the California Correctional OUicers Association, told the committee that many or the health problems were caused by job stress, and said any health and fitness program r equired by the state should was born in Os ka loosa , Unions will play an important role in deciding I o w a . H e a t t e n d e rl the scope of those programs. Oskaloosa High School and T erra said that the state can set fitness University ol Iowa, In Iowa standards for getting and keeping a job in lbe rACIHC Y•w Cit y , Iowa He was a · lb CHP I h d d MIMOllAL rA11 veteran or world War 11, He prisons or e , as ong aa l e stan ar s are Cemetery Mortuary r e 1 1 de d n s 0 u th c r n properly job-related. Chapel-Crematory aliComia IMILGl..hla aduJ..-t ---=l\:vUl way_s _to achieve the standarda -the 35e<>-Pec111c V1ewOrr ....... -11.-1·"1re. Lov~ ones surviving amount of time allowed, incentive and penalUea - Newport eeacn him IMI~ his wife Mary J . are to be worked out with unions tbat are beini &M-2700 Wilcox. his slater Elizabeth chosen ln the state's first collective-bar1ainin1 J . Wilcox of Colora do electJons. . McCOIMM:a MOHUAllH L1gvna Beacn 494·9'15 Laguna Hlll1 768--0933 ) San Juan C.p1str.,, •95·1776 * ... L.A ...... .cf. OU¥I Monuary • C.me ,.,., Crematory 1625 G1s1et Ave . eo.taMeN ~SSS4 0 '~--............. ._ ... --~ Sprinaa. Colorado. brother Terra also said California prison 1uards have Wllll1m W. Wilcox o f about three times the.dlsabiJlty rate of 1uards In Newl)Orl Beach. Ca. and his otheT states. dau1hter Linda Silvey or He Mid doctors designed the fitne11 test.a aft.er Ca n o e • Perk C a . A Memorial service will be current priton 1uarda were surveyed after about held 00. Wednelday, J anuary 900 "crltlcat incidenta" in priaon .Ork dur1n1 Ute 111 1911 at t :OOPM 1t Pacific last fiv• yean. V e w Memo r la I P a rk Nearly hall UM lncidenta lnvolHd phyalcat Chapel, 3500 P•clnc View restraint of a prtaoner, which was auccaahll Drlve, Newport Beach. In two-thlrdia of the tlme, Terra Hid. Nurly lieu ol flowers the family one·foutt.h involved quick deelalon·maldq ratber bat req,ueeted conlributJon1 ... ..a.. ... 1 at tl ........ ____.ul 1-. tb to chartly ol donor'• choice. uaa.n .,..., .. c ac ·on -ra""' aue"._' -an P aclrlc Vi ew Mortuuy bait the time -and another one-nft.h lDYOlftd dlrtcton. runnlq , usually for abort dllt.lnca. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tue9day, January 2e. 1882 'DEATHS ~llSEWHERE SANTlAGO, Chile (AP) Eduardo t'rel, 71, a rormer 91Wldent or Chile, died l"riday. Frei won the pr e•ldency In 1914 by deteallng Marxist S11lv11dor Alle nde In an e lec tion hailed 1n the United Stale• Ml a victory for WHtern deQ)OCtilC)' •icnneut IUSl•eM ..-n., .... , , ... ......._..,_.,.. ... ~~.M 0 , O•ANOa COUNTY, INC., 1"7 Y9111 a-. c .. 1 ........ CellferNe .... . lh11ll•J .",.,,,,, ... '"'" • C.111••• ~....... '"' L.eteoi Avet111t, Cffl• Mtt•. C•llltr11lt ... ,.. Tiii• ........ , I• CtNlllC ... ~ e c..-tlltll. "~Y ,_,,, ... , lllC, "" ... w ........ , "''~ Tiii• ....._ -lli..f wltll llllt ~-y CIHtl el OrM99 c-y t11 JM t, 1'11. ,_ PUBLIC NOTICE • I ' t ' ...... ----~-----NOTtCa OP Db TH 0, HTICllWT•UITH'llAU MA••• L. SCMWOll• °" ,...,,_., te • ._ .. 11·• .,.,, AND OP ~aTITION TO ~ .... ~:: .. t.~~~~.~~= AOMINllT•lt •STAT• ~111111, •,, .... ,er M NO, A-1111,S. ,,,. ............... ,............. T 0 a I I he I r I cer1th1 a... " ,,,.., ouc"'941 -. • v•Nc•NT J.1&1•AU, • _,.., beneficiaries, credltort -· _.,.... ,.,_, •· '"' • end contingent credlton of lfotlr11-..e •· •"· 111 .._ '*'· Merit L. SChworer and ,... •4'0llklel ._.,. • ., °" .... persons who mey be e-1,, Callllnllt, ..-flWWtM .. I I I "'-o ... •• ,,11 .. "" •• IHl9fk otherw se ntereated n tht evc•ltft;: c.11. ..-.i ,_, ~ wl 11 and/or t1tate: ~::::,. ': ,,~,~c:8 Ttt•• A petition has been flltd ,,,..,,_. c.....-. 1tu ... a1 m by Thomas L. Schworer I~ D ET R 0 I ,l., ( A p ) Pwllllthff ort1199 co .. t Delly ll"llol, Jlil/I, it It, i.. ""'· t, 1. .. 1~•""Mrwt.1111111t c•tv.,._. the Superior Court of ..... ce11twN1,a1•...,r11M.ttett• Or•n~ county requestlnt ,,...,.,1 ~ .. _._...,.~11 h t ..___ L SC...._ .. 11n .. , .. i. °"' ,, Tru•• '" t1to t a ,..,.,_s . ..wvre. ~· .,...... 111 .... c-it• .-be appointed as persona1-WUllam V. Luaebur11 69, a 1ttJ m.a ro rm er p resident u f , American Moton Corp .. died Thursday. , .... '"',... .. ? Cl1Yet1,..,1M. representative to SAULT STE. MARIE. Mi ch. CAP) -Carl 8 . ltockm1D, 86. founder of the ceremonial World War I Orum and Bugle Corps, dfed Thursday. The group was created in 1960 and included veterans who served in World War I. CORONADO (!.P> 0. William Goepa e r , 70, believed to have fired the fi rst shot ror the United States againsl the Japanese In World Wa r II , died Tuesday I BUNNELL, Fla. <AP > A woodcutt er born into s lavery on a Virginia plantatio n more than a century ago has died at age 119, one d:iy after he was placed in a convalescent home for the first time Ike Ward w as bo r n on Christma s Day 1n 1862. when Abraham Lincoln was president. l'ICTtTIOUs av ..... .. ...... r"" ... ~' Tiii tollowl ,.,..,. '' "'"' llutfneUaa: l!ST AT ll"l.A .. N INO INVESTMENTt 0 00 "c.tll«fll• llmltH ...,._. .. I~ O.ie St., Fou11l•ln ..,.,...,,CA.,,. Carmt" ~r94Mrl<ll Gllllo, , ... , 0•1• 51., F-ieln v.11.,, CA.,, .. This lllltlntts 11 <Oftdl.t<tH 11111 • llmlleo P«tnor""i>. CM,,_ Frederl<k Gllllo '"'' ...... -......... wltll ..... C-ty Clertl ol Or-C-W Oft Oe<.t , ..... ''n•n Put>llalled Ore110• Coe1t OellJ Piiot, Jan. 12, "· K. Fell. t. ·"'2 ,.,.., l'ICTITIOUI aUllNl!SI NA.MS STATIMll:NT Tiie loll-Ing perao111 are .. ln9 """'""' .u· l & l ENTERPlt lSl!S. -Tr.,._ w.,. c .. ta MeM. CA nu•. Oavlo c ~. • ,,.,.._ Wey, Cott• MKe. CA '26211. Cll•rl• Jo l ... , ... T,...lon Wao;. Coll• Mele, CA '26». This t>u.slnH• Is coft41u(lecl t>y • -··· ...,,,.."flip. Oewld C. Lang Tllll ltai.n-t w.u tiled wflll N Counly Clerk of Oran119 GounlJ 011 OK. Jl , t•t. "''""" Pul>ll"*' Orante Coell O.hy Pllol, Jan. j, 12, 1', 26, 1"2 '42>-11 1.tt ... Tr•• 619'· .. .--• • administer the estate of ....~111 .... ., .......... au n •• M1tu11e11 .. 111 .,.., •• Marie L. Schworef' (under 1tecer•110t.,..e-otv.Ge1Ntnllt. t h e I n de p e n d • n t ,.,.....,. ..,...rtm, ell "" ........ Administration of Estatei .... tll eMIW*_.,... ~" 111 ...,. _. .... ltM •• •...,., Act>. The petition Is set for soo r1tt, 11u1 w1111e111 '"° rltflt •f hearlnv In Dept. No. 3 at ::::nac~~ .... ~.~T.!:: 700 Civic Center Drive, ,.., • .-..,.rec..-~ 11. mt West. In the City of Santa '" •-..,,, ""'I "4 •• Olll<t•• A n a c a 1 I f o r n I a on "~:,,:-_...,_of, ......... c""' February 10, 1982 at 9:30 •• ...... ,_.. ""' .... •• .,,.. a.m. conducteo: Arda tl'I M. Scl'lwall, IF YOU OBJECT to tht T""'"· <1° ~tv .._ L-. vrantlno of the petition ~.c,;~-~1,.s=~· s..ue *· you should either appeM 01rec11-10 ,,,. ..., • .,,_,.. at the hearlno and state ;::•~,:':,..-::'.:4.,..t>y=:~ • ..:;: yo~r object l~ns or flllt 10 ••rs ,,..... ,,,. ""'' P111>1•co11011 of written objections with the '"''"°'I<•. court before the hearln9. Uld wl• will .......... wlltlolil Your appearance may bt covenenl or werr•nlJ, upre11 er tmplf••. n 10 1111 ....... 0 1.,, ., In person or b y your a11<11mweM" 10 wt1a1y IN. -4' attorney. bala11u duf on the 1101• or ne111 I F y O U A R E ~ H(!lrltCI by .. Id 0..0 ol Tr111t, '9 wit: . llU,SU.U . ., ........ lollewlne c R E 0 I T 0 R 0 r a u 11mat•d cotu. n 1>•11H1 •11• continvent creditor of the ••~..,, .. at ""' ume o• -1t1111t1 deceased you must file pu1>11ca11on ol tllh Nollu •• S••e: your claim with the court ll,204.U. oa1ed: J_.., u, ,.., o r p res e n t I t t o t h • F1n1Arner1canT111t pe r sonal representative 111 ... anu c..._v . t h t .ca111orn1H.._...... appoin ed by t e cour o...0r-rod within four months from A_1,..0t11eer the date of first lss...ance "'e:.11 "'"" Stroe• of letters as provided In ~;,:,,;1f""101 Section 700 of the Probate P111>11111ec10r.,,.. coHt 0.11, "'"°'· Code of Callfornla. The Jen."· 26• FH>. 2• "12 iau; time for fi llnv claims will ,_.1111( not expire prior to tour OCEANSIDE cAP > Theodore K. KrugJak, 70, an author and forme r repo rter Who ran the USC I---....,.... -.. ,-,-------I l'ICTITtOUSaUMNHS months from the date of the hearlno noticed above. journalism school unlit "'ICTITIOUSaUllNHI NAMSITAH ..... T t · · 1974 d · d NAMl!ITATIMINT T ... loll-"'11 --·en dol"9 YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court If vou are interested in t~ esta te, you may fi le a request with the court to receive special notice of the inventory of estate assets and of the petitions. a ccounts and reports described in Section 1200.5 of the Call fornla Probate Code. r e Ir Ing In • I e Tiie loll°"'lno i>erMH11 are doing bvllMll n : Tuesday bvsl11eu es: COUNTRY wooos AS$0CIATl'.S. CENTURY COUAIEA SEAYICE. 1000 Ou.al sv.t. Sulle HO, N--1 S A N DI EGO f A p 1 lUJI PeMO Oe Velen<I• l •gu,,. IH<h.CA...O. "Ills, Ctllfcwnle mSJ 00fl N. Vlelre, ~•I P-. Wr 1ler·ed urator Ra mon G•ll l. 0oncoe, 1111 t111 s1r .. 1, 1ooo oue11~ .. 1.s..11eM.N-port Jose Sender, 8 1. who won wes1m1ns1er,C:.llfomlatt.a a .. cll,CA...O. the Spanish National l'n zc Mohe........:t Mehdi Ol•l•le. so Dennis A. Man in, General for literature an 1935 and v.as ~.~~~::.T!";,;;1v•. No. c. Gi.nc1•••. :::~ ~=·· s..11e *· nominated for the Nobel T111s .... ,,,..n •• <Oftduct•d t>y • TM• ~I• <ondWCllcl '' a Prize for L1tt>ralurl' an the oenere1.,.rtneot11p llmhedpe,,__.p 1970s. died F"r1day Tiiis ~~!.;...~: 111.o ,.1111 1,,. g::.~~~~- Cou111v Clerk 01 Or•noe county °" This s-t '"" flied '"'"' ""' SAN FRANCISCO 1AP 1 o.cemt>er 11. '"'· c-tv c1en. o1 0r.,,.. county .., Counl•ss Suzanne de 11"•7t1• Jan.•. na. Robert N . 8roxoft, Attorney at Law, UOI Park Avenue, Balboa Island, California t2HZ. 675-5460 Tes s an , 98. who wa s Put>lllMd Orano-Coe•• O.lly Piiot, !f~MlllH.~ J•n 1'. ta, Fet> 2, '· 1"2 ,,..., • _ _,, honored for furthering 1-----------1A'--ll".......,.1ec--. F r e n r h A m e r 1 c a n _.., -,.,......_.c.r.w..._ I . d d F' d ..._ llllllllK ... Mtc .............. ,.. re at1ons, 1c ri ;iy. New,.,tlMdl.CAtlMt Published Orange Coast Daily Pilot. Jan. 19, 20, 26, WESTFIELD, N.J 1AP1 S huhs l Hs u. 89 . a diplomat who represented China 1n world counci ls before and after World War 11. died Thursday. AMES, Iowa IAP1 - James H . Hilton, 82. president of Iowa State University from 1953·1965, died Thursday after a long illness. "'ICTITIOUS aUllNIU NAMa STATIMaNT The toll-lftil per'°"' ••• Ooj119 bvslMU es. ....... Put>lls-o ...... CNtl Oelly Plitt, Jan. 12, It.». F.-, t, 1"2 2t9-12 EU ROPEAN PAINTERS, JS61------------ Cosl• MHa SI., c .. i. -· c.. m21 PllJC llllC( Vleolmlr B .. 1111, J~ c°"a ~t-----------St.. cos~ Mne, c:.. ,,.,, l'ICTITlo.n a41SINIU 1982 33-4-12 NS-16371 NOTSCE OF DEATH OP Jlrl A ...... J5t CO.le Mew St., NAMS ITATla.NT Cost•-.c..mv ™ toj_,,.. ,..,_ ••• .. ,,,. JEAN C. CRAWFORD Tiiis business Is <-<l•O l>J • -lMUM' "' ANO OF PETITION TO ........ =::.. .. k OOMfNION·SUNFlOWElt, • ADMINISTER ESTATE l>J M. 11 .. llk Joint V-llA, lm2 5k"'9•k Circle, NO a 1117"'7 Tiii• 11a...._1 Wiil 111.0 wllll "'-Sul•• C. '"""'°· c.tlfor-nlt mi. • ,... ca • Cou111y Clerk of Oran99 Covnt, Oft Dominion EqulUea c.,_..elon, a T 0 a I I h e I r s • Janu••J u.1ta. Calllornl• corporellon, '''° V•n beneficiaries, creditors ~,.,., Karmen An-. N••PGr1 h•<ll, and contingent creditors of PutMllMd Or-Coe•t Delly Piiot Celltornie 93IWO J•11.1t,,..FH>.l,t,ita m..a Sunflower Pr-rtln , 111<., • Jean C. Crawford and -----------ce111or1JI• ,.._ ....... um Sllv-11 persons who may b• LOS ANGELES , A p 1 ... ll'flC( Cl•<••. Sui• c. •rvi.... c.i._. 92714 otherwise Interested in the Re t a Sh a " . 6 9. who •-----------~::, =:,..~~ <_<,.., 11' • will and/or estate: i>Orlraycd the housekeeper l'ICTtnous aus1N1ss ~r p,_111n, •nc: A petition has been filed on lhe TV series · The NAMI! STATEMIENT o-ra1 Part-by Cynthia Jean Crawford Tl•• followl110 pe 1 rson ls •olno BP~= It. -ltt, in the Sunarfor C""•rt Of C:hosl and Mrs Muir .. ;ind 11us1nenes, ,... ..... appeared an Wall Oasnc~ ·s w1Lowooo COMPANY, No. 1 Tiiis si.~ •n 11-•'"' u. Orange County requesllng •·M llr~ P<ipinns." died Jun Berun• Courl, Ntwporl IH<ll, Cou111J Cl-of Or ..... C-y on that Cynth i a J e41 n Cal llomle ..>ecem11er 31• •tet. . Crawford be appointed as II Al•11 K.....,_,, _, Wnt •JOO So., "'""' s.11 L•u cn,, ut.11 .,,o, Pu1111si..a 0r.,.. eoe" o.11y Pliot, personal representative to MOSCO W 1A P 1 Varlam Shalamov, 74, a Russi an writer w ho t•hron1cled 11re in Soviet labor camps 1n a book C'nlllled "Koh•ma Notes ... died Sunday · BALTIMORE 1AP 1 Cornelius W. Kruse, 68. a retired prore-;sor al Johns Hopkins Uni versity for 36 years and a p rore •~o r cmeritUl> or environmC'ntal health sciences at lhe un1 vers1t \''.s School of Hyg iene and Pubhc Heallh. rl1ed Sunda) Identity of jurors withheld t"'RES NO <AP ) Names and addresses or fe d era l gr a nd j uror s sitting in Fresno will not be released in the future a s a security precaution , a federaJ j udge decided. U.S. Di s trict Court Judge Edwa rd De an Price issued a special o rde r ba nning the release. but added. that he did not bel1eve he had the legal a uthority to withhold the names. Pi c tures of the 23-membe r jury we re pubUsbed for more than 20 )'ears until Price prohibited the -practice last year. The state's four other· federal courts do not releue informalion on juro rs without a court order. Pri c e c l ted recommendations from the Judicial Conference of the United ~~.Illes to s upport his polic y change. T111s i-i""' '' c0ft0u<1.o ..., en Je11. s. 12. "·•· ,.., '~ administer the estate of 1nc11·•~: ... K....a--Jean C. Crawford. I rvlne, Tiii• ,,.,_, WH llleo wltll ""' PllJC ll'flC( Ca li fornia , (under the Cou11ty Cltrll of Ora-CIMllllY °" I n d e p e n d e n t January u.1~. ..,.,., "''CTIT10U1au11NHS Administration of Estates Pu1>11.-0r.,. eoe.i o.11, P11ot.. r 11. ::.=1~!"!:.':,111 .. Ts .. ,,,, Act>. The petition Is set for J•n "· 1•. Fet> 2. t. •ta ,,..., 11u1l11Hu s: hearing in Dept. No. 3 at PERSONAL B•LL ll"AYING 700 Civic Center Drive SE1tv1cE, , .. , Av••-• Terr .• West , San t ·a An a, c~'.:::We.CASm~~· , .. ., A•Jem.,.. Ca I If or n I a 9 2 7 0 1 on ~•cT1Tiousau11N111 Ttrr.,C•~Mne.CAmv. February 10, 1982 at 9:30 NAMl!STATIMeNT Tllla ~I• coftduceH lllY.., a.m. 11v!.';.:~:~•.owlno parso11 h 001n1 hwllvl~.:.,.. a. SINltl IF YOU OBJECT to the (II JAY NA AUO CI ATES· Tiit. ·-... lllod -"" grantino of the petition, E N T E A T A I N E Rs. I J I J A y C-ty o.ni ol °' ..... c_,, ... you should either appefr MILBURN, S.01 WarMr AYO., Svlle Jen, t, 1"2. l'I--at the .._.,,,·no and Stat"' SI, "unllnoton Beach, Ce . .,..., _ ,,.... • Je"'" Milburn Sm1111, "'2 Paclu• 11"11111111-or.,... coest 0.11, your objections or fll• or . Hu,,.1nv1on Beach. C• . .,... ~•i.t. JM. 12. tt, ,., ,. ... 1. written objections with the 1,,:1~·.~~""· •s c-•.o "' an •m 111.c court before the hearlno. J-MJ1-...5m1.111 _.., _ Your appearance may bt This ttat-• Wiil llN<I wltll t... ~ llllllllK In person or by your cou111v Cl••k 01 Or~ County on attorney · January U, 1"2. ,ICTITIOUS aUSINlll . .. ........ MAMSSTATIMaNT I F y 0 u ARE A Pu~ 0r-. Coe.SI Delly Pilot Tiie followln9 per"'" " •o• ... c R E 0 I T 0 R 0 r • Jan-<•.,., FR. t. •.•ta m..a t1vtlnttu1: contingent creditor .of the El OOAAOO WINE & SPl"ITS, ,,, .. E• Toro itoe•. E• Tore. deceased, you must file ce111orn1• .,..,. your claim with the court Antonio J . Ao j ... usu or present It to tht "''CT1T1ous1u11N•u .... ,.,.,.,, ... , Et Toro, ce111or111a personal representative NAMI ITATRMINT t>t•. The IOllOwl119 t1erso11 •t Ool119 Tiiis .....,,..., Is c-IH ay an appointed by the (O"rJ buJlnen itt· Nw11vi-..1. within four months from VIOEO P\.US. MSI w-r AYO.. ,.,.,...J, ltol• th d t of fl t I Wt• , "· """''noton Bee<h, ca . .,.,., T111• · •-t •• "'" w11 .. .,,. e a e rs ssuance All an o. 011 1111911am, 1on COUfllY c1eo o1 0r..,.. c-1v ... of letters as provided J!' va1e1111,.. Of.,""""""°" 9toc11. ca. Do(. JI,""· Section 700 of the Probate n ... 7 "'"""..._. ..... wwa. Code of California. The ,,..,,:.:_:-w-J •s (Olldll(t ... , .., :::.«::=:mn.1111 Ume for flltno claims wlll An .. 0.0111....,_,, '" __ .,.....,,.,, not e>Cplre prior to tour Tiiis stei-1 ••• flied with ,.,. .. ,,..., th f th .. _t f Cou11ly Cieri! of Or•n-Counly on ~ llllllNd Or ..... C I Oell Pl~ mon S rom e U4I e 0 Januerv u. 1ta. -Ja11~ s. 12. "· i., ,.., 091 Y 1n':tt the h,earlno noticed abov-. .. ,.,,,. Put>llsMd Oreno• Coa11 Oelly PmJC 1111( Pilot Jen. 1', ta, Fet> 2. '· 1"2 ,.,..., ----------- YOU MAY EXAMIN! the me kept by the court. If you are Interested In tM estate, you may file a request with the court to receive special notice of the Inventory of estate assets and of the petitions, ac counts and reports described In Section 1200 of the-eatlfomt..-Probaw Classified Ads are the answer lo a auccessful 1araae or yardsalel It's a better way to tell more people I Code. ' Wlttmlft & WtttmH~ By: lt ...... 11 It. Wtttmaa Attorney at Law, 177U r-t lrvtn• a1v•., Suite .t, ll"111111111M ore..-c-• O•llY Tustt~ Celtforftta ti ... "11tt, JM.11, It, .. ~-l. (J14) T~-tlSS. •• ..,... Publllhtd Or•nve coi,., NU 11111 Dally Pilot, Jan. 19, 20, M, --------.J912 307-12 1 ..... ~~--..... .._--~---Mll .. Measles caaea decline SACRAMENTO <AP> -On.I)' D> c .... of m•ul• we.re reported ln Ca.Ulomia last 1ear, a record low, says tb• 1tate Departmmt of Health Servlcea. There bad been 1,0ll cues ln 1•, and ao cua ln im, tbe p,.vtoua ndord low. Meaal• e .... were do• approaimatelJ • perffnt utlonall:r, Ute depmtmmt ,........., ' Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tutldly, Jenuwy 21. 1912 , The marketplace on the Orange Coast .. : 642 -5678 N t arly half of all Dady Pilot rl'Olln• have uatd ths clas~/if'd section to bu11 or sell a product A.Anaunrt""'n4' c.,,.,. Lfol"411 ..... i...i • r ...... Pf'f'NllNlt• s.n.i ci.i.· y,..,,,. SEIVICES Strvtu 0.rtc1•> EMP'l.OYMEMT & PICPUATIDM Stflioah 1Ml~MM J ... W1ialtd • Htlp Yo 1no<1 II 6 f MEICHANDIS£ ""'-' ~· ..... A-tr:.~= ~IM~nab CatTWr•~ 6 f41\11pmtnt Cat> """ rr.. .. v ... ..... _, Cu ... S.k -~c ..... '"'tlr1 Lnretor• II~ -·-ktttt~•·••t"d •l&W(•l lftW'vmeM1 Ofllot ...... t:qi,lp ''" :..-:~~a:.: s,onioc~ a ... ~-·• BoJ ~-.r .. -..H1f•.5tffl'O HATS & MAllM£ £0UlrM£Ml 0.-eJ lo«.t . .N It• 'rh tU: lloau 11 ..... [qwp a..&P.-tr e..H Rtftl 0 .arttf ->S.11 loehShPo 0..i> .. ,,..=•S.:1 ..... .., TUIMITATIDM Alm•ft C'..,.ttn.511• R"" Dtittnt Ct n =~.:-.... ...... KMt.S.~ R"" Tttllitrt y,.,,. =*::-i.ru G•Mt•f Al!TDMOlllE A.llJqun (lbt•h AHtuUN 'tl••tC'ln ~t~~:~~M' Trw\I v-. \wtol..H .JlAC AIAOt Waftted MITIS. IMPHHD C-•l All411-• ~·· M9U.tfulo H W c.,.. Ott.-°"' IW>• f'«r.n ,.. .. IMolO• Jil.rw•r ''=M\;"4t ~ ...... ir.,,f'dn, ..,., Jiii ~~ , ..... ,. Ptw ... ........ -It ui. ll•;o ..... SI .. ::::,. -r.,. ... ,,..,.... v.IU•••·n v .... AfTIS. IO ~··· AITIS, WS£1 c-r.I .ull: 9*t ~= uw.""' INJ .... ~ .... J C.•fll< ~ =r , ........ i.twl• ""'-' ..,.,.,, :::.:&... ,... ,.,_ ....... ,_, .. , .. "-......... •• ·-.... .... ·-... :: W llw'1Metk•: :: All r eal est ate ad-,... v e r t l s e d I n t h i s :: newspaper Is subject to :: the Federal Fair Hous· •• In& Ac:t of 1961 wllich :::: makes It Uleaal to ad· •• vertlse "lily preference, := limitation, o'r eris · :: crimin1tion based on race, color, religion, •• sex, or national origin, 1J110 or an intention to make :: any such preference. -limitation. or dis · \: crinun1Uon ... ·-:: This newspaper will not :: knowinflY accept any mo advertising for real : estate which is in viola· :,_U=on=-"-m~~~e~l~a_w~·------=•-------- )IOll mo ,,. ,,. sa -~ --1'91) llCD - .-ii -~ ---------~ -----IDrl ------... -------- 1111 ... "'° ,,. ,. . ... llll ... - 0$19 -----tilt --,,., WM rm """ '711 •f7U rn• '111 ,,. '7ZI V7Zi '1ll tlll 1l1l mi rm fl» fl• flfl ,, .. 9705 tHT fl• mt fl» fl1' fl)! t7W = -"'1 f7lf rm ----1111 •17 --*1 -----------•1 ---... THE REA!.. ESTATERS IUILD 3 UNITS! C.OW.try setting! Exist· in& 4 Bdrm 2 bath borne plus, room to build 3 rmre units. Excellent tulden ~araain. Owner wlULhelp[with fin1ncln1. •1s .ooo. call now. 5* u l THE REAL ESTATERS Uttle Miii Muffet sat oa THE REA L ES TATERS ,.Mrtt. alona came • = ..t ~ad In Ult Pllol Clu 1Ule4 .............. .,. ftl't Met _, •llt lt W ••. You Cll HI ,.. ..,,.. ... Iott ., .., t•t111 throq• Pllol Cl111trltd '9WTOWlllOt• ......... vt.w ti CklM • "'* ....... . _AM.,. ... ... --.tut.•. KW ........ M CANYON CUSTOM B en.. .CU COU1¥ VllW Elegance & digntty in this Majestic Colonial Mansion located on the 8lh green of golf course. Top quality craftsmanship thruout with finest woods, abundance of im ported marble.-crown moldings, 6~ baths, air cond., 3 wet bars + more . Luxurious mstr suite plus 4 oth er bedrms with private baths, banquet size DR, f am rm and billiard rm . Call for appt to see or a color broc hure . $2,150,000 including the land. Financing available. WISLIY M. TA n 6t CO .. llA&.TOIS 2111S. .............. Ml!WPOIT C&ml. M.1. 644-49 I 0 arr TUITUIOCI •LIM Hollyhock Plan w/beautiful spa, 3 BR, fa m rm. Assume 11 J.st & 2nd TD & owner will consider a third TD. Over 2,400 sq. ft of living area. $289,000 Natalie Benjami n 752·1414 <P44) AlMOMt .. JOY-Almond ls the color scheme ol thb immaculate "better than new" 3 BR condo located In t he heart of W oodbridae. You will loft llll 1u1b yard. $115,000 Toni Morris Layfield 551-8700 (P45) Ocean & jetty views. Marine room, 4 bdrm, 3 bath , 3700 sq.ft. $1,385,000. LIDO ISU Het.m Prime Lido Nord b~yfront. 5 bdrm, 5 bath. L~. L.R. 2 boat slips $1,500.000. . - Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath + large ree. rm. beam ceilings, $420,000. • LIM»A ISi.i IAYFIONTS Main channel view from 4 bdrm, 5 bath home with pool $1,495,000. Lagoon view from 6 bdrm, 5 bath, playroom, dark rm, den. $1,350.000 ! CAIMATION COYI Spectac u)ar bayfront view 4 bdrm. 4 bath, 2 ooat slips $1 ,900,000. BILL GRUNDY . RfALTilR ) : . ' . ' • •• • '. ,. f I S f ,.11 I! · r 1 1 1 . , ~...,G_L,..._l T_H -f J . I I I r . : ·~ CUJSK 0 lREALTY '75-3411 COLE OP MIWPORT MAL TORS Htl•.C..tltwr. c.._ ...... 8 75·5511 A PETE BARREn . REALTY 1022 • •••••••••••••••••••••• OldC..... .. Mw 1A11 YACAMT LOT 13 z-So. ef Hwy SH0,000 '75-1 771 .-sAYllDI 3 bdrm, 2 balb, frplc. dbl 11r 11e. A·l cond. 11J415j)O. Owner will II· silt 111 ftD1t1d n1 . .., Mcc.Nlt, lltr. 541.7729 10%DOWM 131/a%1MTMIST ............ ••••••••••• IWltlllllllllHll" . MO ~AUFYIM6!1 MUST SH! 3bdrm, 2ba, llOG sq. ft.. Prof. decor, ocean vu, ' resmdeled kitche~ 1/yr Br w/Po01/1p1 + city old carpet tbrou bout, Utes. A1111me 11.78%. llS0,000. OWC Al D for True value 1429,900. 4/yra at llS20/mo . Won 't lull Patrick 1-==-==-';;..:.;;.;'----- Demand E. Side area or ... enore. 758-1221 •~-' &.&...&... S.A Country Club. Call ' -_.,..... Jerr <Aet l' 11 1•1 • ....... •••••••••••••••• 413-3116. I r. ' .......... . FwWt 1100 * MISA YEI DE * "" st bl rr 12 • ~ ooo ......... •••••••••••••• Wlnf POOLANOSPA i:.a 11 • ..... • .._-~~~!""-• SpaclolJs 3 Bdrm. 2 ba. 4bdrm, 21,,ba. lrg yr~. ,. Beautifu l area. SJ.S.000 S207.000 assumable 13 ' •EXCITING* dn. Asking $240.000 llt.642·5161; 640.8107. lat• S. Sl60S/mopymt PP Agt. Canal Front, Newport With or without rurn. 760-7089 Shores. 4 Br . Den · H · ,._ _______ ml 125,000 down. Owner will 3tx64 Greenbner m an 1• cany. Must sell! Make Laguna Hills nicest S CMl!~Jk~:!d will clfto erbe! The~is. ~~ ~~~ star&:~1•.tP.tl finance this 4 Bdrm ac · gen · Beautirul 24x60 Keywest Costa Mesa Norfh home or~2.805. Hm . 2Br. 2Ba. This is , nu quiet cul de sar •----... ~~ the best in town. homP is looking ror a MIWPOIT CUST Me wport .... family! Will consider Move ripht intp this Beautiful Belair M .H. 13~loanfor 7years with bea uti ul cond o w/fmt kit.12xl9llvrm. 2or, down ! Fu ssy -Decorated in the finest 12x10 Mslr Bdrm Encl move fast buye rs . cl taste. Included in the patio. Nr Hoag Hosp. $149,900. Call ~0.1151 purchase pnce is over $24.500 •'I:. HERITAGE s 1 o o K w or t h o r c:&.ASSIC furnis hing s . Great MOllLEHOMI . REALTO RS c:&.EAH & AllY! 3 bdrm with separate family room and bath 1399.SOO with great financing ! 631·0680 'Sm Chulh I 07' ••••••••••••••••••••••• -n ,. • ......_ MOTHIMa DOWM tts.~......,,,,Da~~ New large 3 br. O<'ean 'view SU90./mo. StS·ttll 2 .,:fa:'.'fla~=age, OCQ...Oln cozy (pie, n earby 3 bdrmMH.sac. ll.S.000. ac:boola, shops, fwys. Va· tennl. Approx ~ mo cant,readylor occ1.1pan· rent. 4'8·1360 a nd cy. SW .GOO. 844-1395; --1 Rick. SALES 2706 Harbor. Ste 206·A 540.5937 HEWPOIT H ACH High vis ibility C·3 Ocean \•1ew 120 ft fron-tage Use existing bwld· ing <i 4000 sq. ft. or build 10.000 sq ft. Owner will carry. S715,000. 631 7300. RHltor Select from multiple un its. Terms available lo slit your needs .mr aJijJm .. 714 641-0763 2925 College A\'e <.:osta Mesa. CA,. APftlYAWl , ....... _____ _. 6M:ll'1 W.AM ltlO llftMl1111ACI llni..nlt.Y Part, 3 BR, ·-••• .. •••• .. ••• .. •• Near new 4·plu . 2 bdrm._.!_~UI each 1111it with n,.ate, ent!Oled pado, &arqe. Mi'N lit. l»oa cash flow. Now SJ.51.5'0. Blll Gruuy, Rltr, l'JUlll. 4 •w I .. 2\.; BA Condo, fee, walk UVI IN ONE aad rent "" to tdaools/tbotll. newly the otllet! Attractively Sunny. ll&bt·n·brt111t clecs., beaut. ll'ftftbell remodeled duptu Md .. oa ·U.. IMrlret are 1 , s l $ t . o O O , _... an-an oveh i1ed willl brick froat, stde· ..,_, .. OWC, Avail. le1U11Sallla Ana HeiPts. ~ ar Pat J::..· 1-11, 11.r OWlltl' Sll:ft74 Ualacorporated aru. lat tllro1~ Xt11i 1-... 1141 Great rtlltal '='*'· locldan · lea Ulan 180 ~ ............... =-~ 11.;:J paea from ti .•.• AW ,..,.. .. ,;.,,._.; •om1 .• Rt11t1t1t'=t PwALllt R'' h• tot•J. = .. .::~. ;::~·= .,................ ..... Call ... ~ ...... Onr 1111 l•· ~.... .... .... "'Ntlm ·-----· ·ltll. ''"·';"· .,.,. C.M.T• .... 4 .... Xllll ftaUN. •. 11Mm/l·MMlD Orange Cout DAILY PtLOT/Tuttday, J1nu1ry 26, 1982 ·..,._... ..... 0111rW•111te l"-"u.tw.ltlttd MMttu.tw.llhd U.full•4 'Cyb ... 4 Afalw ... Ulllin. Af .............. Af lwlh...,.., ••••••••••••••••••••••• W-..1 JtlO •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• • ••• :::,•••••••11••••:.•••l·~··• 1:klia sM:::I• J4ZI ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • L. • .._.. •J •••••••••••• ,.~ ....... -lJJJ ,.__.,_.....__ JJJ .. •T.. JJJJ..., ''rt •• a6t ....................... ,. __ .. Mrr llJJ Colt•Mtt• 3124 •-..._, lHl I ..... • ........... ........... ....... .............. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........... .......... ;.~i;;~ •••••••••••••••••••••• Pvt party baa 132.000 to ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••. ••• •••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• S.Cl\AlA Are• •••••••••••••• ••••••••• ••••••••• •• •• • • ••• •• • • • •••••••••• •••••••••••• 1Mldenll11vt1lot• In veal in 4·plex +In vu, pvt bell, new 4 br. 3 ba condo, many New 2 br, 2 ba condo, ~ C&ny<lft . 2 Br 2 Ba. 3 Br. 2 Ba. a/c. POOi, sec l .... J NMt 3 br 2 ba 2nd floor * * * f Corou4tllhr IOK aq ft Ora111e Co. Cu not delw, 2ear1ar, Zbdrm. amenlllea. $100. Oya :1iI;.'= 1~~· MOO ,,..,7r:':1k, al\ 11t11. no peu. P.P IUO. Old ci>M. View, z aun· ad.du. no i>ets. SS:M t I I. J. MUll'HY • IU lwtWt/(Oftdo aite carry nt1allve. Prin· 2ba 100 mo. 7 8312. m.m; ev1MH43t • · aaz. deeb, bt1ma, fpc lt'15. s.o.~s a. Jwalpero Dr Pv~ btach 1('ceaa. clpal,• only. 833 9628 2 BR, 1 BA hou.se, trpl, ms. 2 Br lardentr/wtr ,..,.Ytley JJl4 Seavlew lrl 4 Br, ocean Beaut. Zbdrm condo, Avail Feb 5 Richard • &lidedllluH-2 BR up· COltaJfna s.toua orinc only By mt • pvt. back yd, 8 "101 (>d . ctiil , no pets ........................ vu $1600/mo. Patrick, prime S.C Plaza loc. a.l&'iOda Pft'bllkony, newl dee , You are lht wlnner ol ~ ~ --Private Party Lookl111 leut. ~ mo to mo, t;'11de 548·944 I or • • :! bdrm, 2 ba, fpc, 7:11-1221 waterfalla, struma, 840-7~hvea. ~ adultJ !20 ~20th h•o free tlcllell <l30.00I Tennb1 T11e Only Lot In For Home to Buy on '82S/mo 81$·4315 or ~l-4171 dble 1ara1e. Blt·ln &II Balboa Island Waterfront spa, pool. 1800/ mo 3 Br. 2"" Ba lJO.O aq. fl. ~lOO value to the Cyprua Cove. San l.eaM <>Piion BackBay m.ms Rem>d. 2 br 1 ba aar kitchen W mo. t $725 3 Br. 2 Ba. Yearly ren· J!ill!13-9019 j675-0540. ~~le .2 blocks beach, Eutald 2 e'"l"ib ~ SUP£RCROSS Oennte. Acroe1 from N 7--c.hl MeH 3zz4 Crpb/ driil.' Coupie 00: SO. IMl"3S4 Lal. . Mo. 770·o.147 Mew 6 1 ... "'5imo. Inc Ida 11Ul1 . ll82S E~n. ~pt ''E ~.. · at An~rn?'~lum Both Tennis Court• • Wanted Duplex, 4·plex ....................... ly.NoP$U.P50.6'15·0097 .. SPYGLASS Ttnnil. apa, view, full Ol>enffowltSat.12·3,322 831·17~ __ JANUA.RY30 Clubhouse. lat Time Of, ownr live In 140,000 dn. C l Prollertr. 2 Br 1 Ba. Meu Verde. 48R, 28A. •-.....•lttlCll l240 Ocean~ nlchl view. security. blt ·ln Marauerlte. Days tiean lie b chelor apt T lalm ticket• call (ertdl Firm at llM,000 H.B. below Slater PP house In blab traffk fli>lc, Blt·ins. Avail Feb .. ••••••••••••••••••••• 4bclrm. fam rm, 3 car bookc11e. Santa Ana. 7»-l»I. Eves 8'4·2S1I. $325 ·mo ~ltns. Ca ti 6~2 c5678 u t. '27 2. ~--n Ir Company 1111).90 atta ol Wes~slde Costa lit. 50. 646·1"5 4 H= ~ R~NT d I car. $2200/mo Eves· 857-2914 14Nl7S ~1158 ask for Dave or nckeu miiat be claimed .... Mesa. Terrific tor Anti 2 BR 2 BA Pentrldge ardll ~ · · ,r.r,, 7tJ0.0607 T .. 1 br, be&mJ. stove, refri1. Pam by Janull)' 29 1112 t1=Dtwt, ....................... ~~C:h~w1i~i~~nt!~& CA>ve Sl25/mo, l yr lse, ~ we~~es5's.1~. 2RR Condo Adult 4itC:ke4 llZI J:1~·1l!0 ~\j'll1 •ei ' 1530 mo. 2Br. l 118a * * '• 2400 ...... ,. .... d X1nt 'artin Wilidts· Warren only , agt entnofce Complex.2BANrHoag ........................ Corona ·SM5/rno Mc' twnhse, adults only, rflt.0 ll't .............................................. cU1Sfemode~in1tosuit: Ml·2100 4BR Condo. l"1BA. 1625 1625Mo.lllt,Last&Dep. DELUXE end unit, like 2208 'Margue.rite, carport, balcony/patio.!~~!.~: ............. . , .. City U.. C...del Mrr l 112 Approx. 900 aq. Ct. tx· Sii PA.II D•YI rro Lst LaJt & De No No • 7611-7633 new 2 BR. 2 Ba frpl , 675-3747 lndty rm, no no do.gs. efficiency condo with ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• e l uding the yard 38t 181 t Pets 768-7633 P Harbor View Homes 2 POOi. gate, many xtraa. j Br 8a d 1 will consider rat Call pau OPOIJ llitrhenette H5.000 UPCraded 2Br 2ba. ya.rd, SSOO / mo HI 544 2 · • vacan • new · Br Den frplc, llirge TusUn·S.A line. S62S. No 2 con o, enc ·gar, ror appt. •ft $10,000 dn 13% int on b11I carport, n o dogs 'TT0.56.29 • • ' cpta ~J'l)I&, lg yd, $750 Exclusive ~ B 2'n Ba pl. swimming pool, jacuzzi, . 775·1.580 751·0796, adult.I, S'17S mo. TSL MGMT 642-1@__ COUMTIY CLUI or will take partner /mo. A 67:!·1181 · mo. er S49-20tZ spa, tenrus, sec. gate. 2 car 4arage. private 760-8290 WT SIDE U¥1M6 642..o671 IHdl 3140 II OMI OF Sh a r P 3 b r 2 b a Cbe beach S850. Mt 5 Io ca t 1 o n , i n c I d s ftl hualh ~ Otarming separate cot· , Bachelon. 1"2 bedroom Palm Spnngs 167 700 THILUCIYRW pool/spa,. bbq. gar, 1162-1398 gardener pool service •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• Lage. Newly decorated, ~7S rro. l Ztir, I t Ba apta&townhouJes. f\amished Tennis Condo sioo•&ra~~~u:;·s~;· Rent ln Costa Mesa's c~rpet, drapes. new CHOOSE YOUR CRPTS Av a i I.' Feb Is t. .......... 3706 near beach. 2 BR, 1 BA twnbae, yd l balc·o ny · From 1000 644-1900 on Golr Clu b Ori ve. lf.WforSale! Nicez stry. NEW EST gated 20 k 1 tcr en U~i /dmo · Act by Feb. Jst. 3 br, 21; /rro 770·0347. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1750. 7 ~ ,:t ~~s :.:~ ~~~~i M> FEE! Apt. " Condo 714/~9544or56a.3ll3. 3BR 2118a Fam Rm Townhome VILLAGE lst/ast. ep ba.2sty,S850/mo.2br.2 Blurrs Condo 3BR, Balboals.3Br 2ba,sbort 673-JOl last ' rentals.VlllaRentals. BKR. Ftplc, Din Rm, Waler.; c,OMM\JNITY. 2. 3 Br 5.56-7650 ba, $750 /mo . Super 2"7BA, New (;rpt/Paint. or to.ng term. Frplr , eo.t.MtH 3124 TSLMGMT 642 1603 675-4912 Broker. 0.ofC~ Gardener.$750.847·~ 2"t 8a. t600-1800 sq.ft.or ....,TW'lllone beach' near.shop ping 2 car Gar. Frplc. $980. spacious 1800 y rly ....................... 2BR , 8 Sud PT Oceanfront ror Winter PMqctt, 2550 Ntiiportlta 316t ~~o~~~~ry.ln G:::::r 3 bdrm, 2\.\ ba, view, loc. Call960-2471. Wkdys. J!;-~-Eves & 673-8121 NEWLY DECOR. HOl' l 'co1~ ~a~~r, ~s Rentals Furnished &t •••••••n•••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• suite. din inf. rooms' $7915. (213) 582.4194 Beath Townhse 3 Br 24 wtnds,............., .... ,...... 3707 dl Br. baas pd, lencAldglat~ h e aling Paid b Y W\fum. Broker. 675·4912 **601 TOTAL EAm'BLUFFSHOME ......... b · I Close to S C. Plaza, ba, 2 car. 2 bills from ••••••••••••••••••••••• /was er, poo · u s landlord Cov 'd parking UDO VIEW Gorg 2 BR . '"""' urning irep aces. beach. 50/mo. 968·9110 Ba "'-I ( ly .... .,. ....,., """" · ' 4 br, 2~ ba, view. Jae. micro.wave ovens, 3bdrm. 2ba. fam. din &t IA.YFIOMT enc or. urn. yr • ..,'"' ,_.....,,,,, W a I k lo sh o P 1" n g fp, adls, MlllU PAYMENT Sl350/rro.64CMillll pnvate patios & yards livnn Bricldncd yrd.2 4 Br 2\-t Ba Bonus rm, 2 story, 4 + bdrms, 2 incl util Call aft 6. 3BrTownhouse 1465·$476 Olive Tree, l000/mo675·6359 UUW" 3BR38a Blwrscondo. Gardener provided cargar,Sll00992 Carna Famrm,3,lOOsq.rt.nr baths. firepla ce, 67>~--Newly decor gas pd., 21.00C-OllegcAve BalboalslandWaterlronl 'TX.gross! 15 houses. all Sll50. Dottle Johnson. Elegant living only IS lion, C.M. !)40.6140. Gr~r l..ake. 11095. eves gorgeous view. Pier and BAY FRONT AG E , encl gar., pool. dswhr -~ 7367 _ _ 3 Br. 2 ea Yearly ren· run as apt. complex. ~1966-675-6000 a . minutes from Fashion C:U.,tom 2 br w/work -840-6203 slip. $3000 ~r mo. Avail beach, pier, prkg, 2 BR AdulU.642·5073 Large 1 br. 1 ba, oldl'r but tal /mo 770-0347 Positive cash now. Call UDO lSLE chrmg 4Br Island. 7 minutes .to S.C shop gar, Kids, $4~ 4 BDRM 2 BATH, (en<·ed Feb. l. $750 . I BR. $600. Adlts 2 Br. I Ba Apt clean. $360. mo + Sl'CUn· 1 Bdrm apt, stove. frig, for details 2''28a, lg sunny patio. Plaza or 0 C.A1rport. OCRENTALS 750-3314 Ylil'd. gatio, f7~/mo Ulil pd. Till May ?7. 303 Newly decor. Gas pd. ty. 2459 Elden. U111t 1 plling On Peninsula \\b(wfhrldge upgraded. Sl300/mo Bill Just east or Newport Stop l.ooking!family ays 891·1947 E. Ed ewater. 1-871 -2866 end ear .. pool, dshwr. CalJ tenanl for appt to 67~061'2 aft 5 Grundy b15-6161 Blvd. 'so ~San Dleao 3br,patio.onlyS42S eves/wknds760-~~-eo.t.Mae 3724 Ad&&lts.642·5073. see. After s wkd ays Hu BR 3 BA be h Reilflj Frwy. Starting at S900 a OC·RENTALS 7S0.33!i BEAIJJ', 2BR 2BA. Min •••••••••••••••••••••••Spacious 2 Br, 1 Ba. S395 642,1357 Sat & Sun all ge 4 · ' ac 551·3000 Decorators Bag Canyon month. 631·5439, 24.73 Och, lots or Xtras, l'an I Furn. apt., ulll paid, 3 Br l.\12 Ba.~'><.. Laun-l!1 Aviil 2/5 elose duplex, year.lease, Townhome. 2BR. 2.BA. Orange Ave Costa oc:.RENTA LS be ( 8468782 eekl I ~ ~ . Isl & las t . water 1~Barra110 Ph).lrvln~ Formal Dining. SllOO M a .. 1·5brs,S200toS2000 _urn. 75 · -415Br.2 Ba Family rm , w y, . dry ac.,Jl(!Oi.548·9556 NEWPORT HEH,JiTS garbage paid,'900.avail Mo. A 646-0295 es 751).3314 Open 7·days 3 br, 1..., ba, recently In Dining rm 1 block rrom 6421334 nu: VICTORIAN: New-lge I bdrm, I ba 31012 Feb t213>376·4S09 or O.ofse.te 2 Br enclsd garage 3bdrm.2ba.ram1lyrm. sul ated!fenced yd,2car N.H. H1.gh School ........ a.acll 3740 ly decor. 2 Br w/gar , LaPerleLnS395,nodogs (2=13=)396."--_ml88 ____ _ rr.,.rty 2600 H...s .......... td Adults,nopets.s.525/mo. Mesa Verde Nice fami-gar Rids welcome. 1st 11000/mo Ag e nt ....................... newcrptsltdrapes,blt· 700-0159 LargelBR Utilpd.Spot- ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... 773 W. Wilson.631·4889. ly home wlfplc Bllin rro + dep. rroo Avail S41·S032. ---H.l.'s FINEST ins, patio. Adults Call HUGE less. Qwet $4SO 2421 E CA.10 SAM LUCAS ~ JZOZ 4 BR. 2 BA. adults/no stove, OW/GD Im mac Feb 1· 963·1329 Spacious house wllh Spanish F.Btate Living ! bet~~ 1:5P~.636·4120 Like a house. 3+2. rear 16th st 645 4718 MDICO ......... •••••••••••••• f:5 ~mp. r~t~tu mo. No yng singles. $775 FANTASTIC RENTAL! swimming pool. 3 Br 2 Beautiful park· like sur-661 G--..Y!_ctQ!l.!!__ S47.Q yard. P<IOI. sto•e. rl'frig, Steps to bea._ch-1-.3-B-r, lbdrm condo. brand RENTALS 19th.s.WJ"~~;~0899· near w/gardener 557 ·6853. ~ac. exec. 4 Br. 3 Ba. I Ba Family rm frplc t roundings Terraced 2 BR. I BA, newly dee. pet Ok S750 Dn ve by 1·2Br, bothfrplcs S77S lt new, I blk to harbor Yearly-WeeklY·Winter E Side 2bd th 494-2330,831·31~ bock to beach. S900 2 additional ut1hly pool. Sunken gas bbq , encl.gar,adultsonly no 141 Melod y l.n •A, $650 per mo I m · J\111 price, S6S.OOO or 11 2,3,4 Bdrms. Newpori rm. new .ru· E.side cute 1 Br cottage. 7~9293. bdrm s Nie t' I y sparkling fountains. SG-1819 642·3957 __ maculate 573.2507 avail. atS34,000 Terms Beach&Balboa. ou\ (ormal din . yardarea S41~+sec , BEACHbungalow !lrg landsr aped , au.lo Spacious r oom s 2 Br 1 Ba downsta-;;; ~/<-M-u NEW·BEAC_O_N_B-AY- avail.494·S778Darrell. JACOIS REALTY brea (ast nook . 2 car 875-2040 l+br.appl,ONLYS450 sy,nnklers. $1250 mo in Separate d1mng area 2248 Cankon Dr 2 Child welco,;r.'2,...bdrm Lr~ 2br. 2ba, vu. deck. '-:~ ZIOO ll PIOPEITY ~d, grdnr. 1675 ~~~~~:t1r~~.1 b;;·.~:~li J~·~b~~~~ren:~~~~ ~:':vf~~~en6e;o~1l~~f~1 ~~eklik; kci~~ieent s& ~~~ ~ierr~oM~~~: ~~o.d'ra~t.~tfd~y PN~ ~~w~'::tie~n~lc~!i .... :::::!:............ MG6R1S7•3 LH~m~BR1/~~~r;:;~d utll incl. No pets/kids very clean. 1650. Isl. ~6l88.0ffice 759·6S~ ~:i~~en~~lk lo Hunt Co 641-tJ2A rats dogs 5495 water a, bch, dock $1050/mo yr. DUPLEX. 2000 sq rt · 1 . 675-_. __ Residential Area CM 252 Knox St Drive by last.stt. 960-1662 llG C .. """YO""" 1 1Bdrm.furn,1485 Fire pl ace, pool , pvt ga.~ pd. J.S E. 18th near .!}' 835-3S35; 673-3116. house from canal N.B Brand New, Carpets. first 752·6499 2 br + lge master. 2 ba. """ " patio, dishwasher. on Orange. 172S. Upper 3br. 2ba 639-0291 · ~ 3 Br. 1112ba. rrplc · 2 Drapes. a, pain l E,s1de CM 3 Br 2 Ba. $800 farn rm. lge yd. S650 Lu x u r i o u s l h r e e Adults. no pets E1slde, all in X·lrg 2 Br 645-2708 or 960-3989 duplex. block to beach, hi ~s11jcargar.patio.l2671 A I· Throughout Every prrm.CallRbtMilliken Willcons.opt.tobuy bedroom , two baths UtihtW?s Free' gardenapts Froml560 beam ceil in gs, trg Want a tax s e ter ·. e lard GG. . 536· 1453 631· '"""'Ail. 968-8243(536·0831 Richly decorated. Muted SS7 2841. P-'-' 31•6 balrony, yrly rental my 1112year new tnplex I Room & Window 3 Ca r -• .,, 73 '"6 t<'•1 t 3000 r t -A ,,, .. or exchange eqwty ror .... l.a.d 3Z06 Gar Fenced Back Yard. __ 0"'"~'!!.. . .,.,,, ones square ee · 1 LA QUINTA HERMOSA 2 Br. Adult, beamed ce1I· TSL M mt 64z.t.,.,,, condoor!Owner After 71 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gardening Service. ~ Overlooks 10th tee of 16211 Parkside Ln, 1 blk I iJl&s, serve bar. refrige, 2 Br 2 Ba Coodo. Po<>I. 714-76().0734 Balboa island Waterfront Orange Tree. Water H.ti °" 3242 goU' t'OUrse. S2S90 month W o( Beach, 3 blks S of lot.s o( wood No pets ('l'lc. 2 pn vate patios, 3 Br. 2 Ba. Yearly ren· Pets SubJ.e"l to Ap· DW Yearly lease Call! Edinger 2.256 Maple St $420 mo ground level 56~ +de STOP!! tat. . Mo. 770·0347. proval. lm~ed Ore .,_,.. lZ26 ~;-;i•;••e:•ii•:·~·~·;r.·t 631·n>O,Realtor. 1 147-5441 'S41J.73S6,673·8803. ..2051t 730 11sl,ss1·4985 .. Take time lo relax .ind Bayfront , beach, 2 Br 2 $1250 Mo. 957·8974 ....................... waterfront Townhouse 2 EHt!MuH 4---8 f 1 1 J .._. .l7 Jbt. Zhi. uppu._4. plu., spa fl o 11 s fl! 1' f n ~ •t ~ ll '11 111m· Ba. 12a E. Bay front. Westsfde. 2 BR. -1 BA. titrfm . po o I. s Pa . Br 2 Ba wet bar. rrptc 1 s d 642 5~;:1 Y ••••••••••••••••~•••••• adults. no pets. SS2S. llJ> 3 br extc duplex, Eastbluff Pool, ~ulel, pie "1th Dail) Pilot B~lboa Island. 11200 closed gar. renced back skylights, spec ocean & many up.grades ~ef~yar · · or luxury studio, spa, TV, 1040CValenc1a 54S·7983 bit.ans. encl. gar. Small Pleasanl area! Single CJass1r1ed Acts 1\nd 1r winter. 11400 annual yard. patio, washe r vu, 11200/mo 7S.~20. 1100/rro. 714/675·71'71. _ -----, -maid service. phones, AllSIDlCOMFOIT cbild ok Nr PCH & Adult No Pets ssoo1mo you have something to Herb, days 213/478·3577. dryer area. carpeted & llJ&.8631. L-1....... 3•44 BLUFFS 3 br, 2 • ba, Sll5 wk. 499.2227 Lar· 1 BR d Mala a. 730-6590 __ 644-4i67 11 11 r d I dr ped ts $475 mo H· h ......_ 6 t den pool good toe ~ ownstairs 1 2 8 OE'e oas:sifi!c, td-Vlse;__li_ CHA.IMINGSUNHY S.:~:i??o.5'29 a\t ,some~cnl( ~ou • .!!.!!. .. ~ .. ~ ... .!.J-tlo00:-A-gt-ett·6!68. Nt.,.e.eclt mdryatio. tp;-d1w. g:a,;,:iea"n~~682 .. ~1!: leactl~MI ---:t-Br.~ Ba. cuttagr.Very "" d 0 st'tll. · hrssrfll'd WOODlllDGE 644-0134 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool, spa. car port. no c do o 661 1537 2BR 2BA Yrly Rental 642·5678 private. @50. b1S· 1018. ~l!!!!le Items fi.12-Sfi78 au~ 0 II we 642·5671!. 3 Bd condo. ground Cir Westchrf 3B;:-r r +sml OCEANFRONT 2' 4 Br. pets~ a~ults only 1465 (~ ~265~ (Collect) . ,, \ ~ 1 I N 0 w s 8 0 0 . • ·•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• wut. be;iut decor. lrg ore New cpts/paint. ~~W'~~e~;Jieekly/ ~ ara 549 • 2447 BR2baapts.New cpt;&.5.59-lfB2,Afier 5PM · • I pauo are;i, S675/mo No S99S.646-6789 631·2177 y. · · drapes. S450 mo No Lovely grou nd rtoor 2 pet s Craig1Suzan .~.Heights• 3 bdrm 2 Want _som~thlng xlra per New decor t\dlts. pets Dana Pacirir lne bdr~. 2 ba condo Com· •• 8-DA y WEEK SPECIAL • ~~c&J7ri1omo 251 ~~~.n c:m~le~ly 75 no ts 833-8974_ 493-S>Ol,S:ll·9310 __ ~~~~::::.1 .. :z:wport • G -rum ? 85. Mo. 76().9117. • 3 Br. Condo nr SC ......... leach 3140 646 41'21 8 Days • 3 Lines • a Dollars Bluffs. real Lor & Plau, S.A Pool . spa, ....................... urw n.. ~\"", '---2-B_R_ • • Decor! 3BR. 212BA., garage 1750 MA.Jtl ... S WA.LI "'"'" ""ean ae w · e ltseasy topla ceyour 8-0ayWeek Class1f1edbymall and 1l e 1Twnhome,neow3br-,3ba. Fam Rm , s itoo . ~3232or64l-1460 2&3Br.Townhouser\pt ~211 ~g;s.=~~sPb I . pauo. gar. Park, pool. ]!i0-&184, t!S·59JO_ -Br 1 Ba, gar attached, Yard, single & double =H h B 1 • costs 1ust sa -thats only a dollar a day• To q u alify for this • JaC. $975fmo.833·90S7 2 BR . 2•,BA Condo AdullS, no pelS, S47S + car garage, near Hunt rt l'lg ls 2 r • special o ffer you mus t be a non·COmmerc1al user o ffering Newport Terrace Gar. SecurilY,646·?723 Harbour. Children OK Ba yard, enclsd garage h • IEMTA.LS Carport &t P a tio. Br Adul ~. No pe t 5495 /mo. • merchand1sefor s ale up to S800perad.andt epnc emus t • 12sr.1Ba S700 s1001mo . 631 ·5800. lydec.st~;~!T~~.ne~~j ~.IBrtri·plexTron~~·S722. be 1n your ad The cost s tays the same whether your ad 2Br,2Ba S85-0 64S-!199,or(213 )347·2544 MS0.979-4410 it. new carpels drapes. Brand new deluxe lbr • needs eight days selling time or JUSI one • 3Br.2Ba S85-0 3 BR 3 Ba Bluffs condo. Mesa Verde, 2 br. new mini blinds Slater rondo, cpl drps. rp. end • Le Ra1!0f Rlty833·86i)O 11150 Dollie Johnson. Beach, S37S Water & gar w elec optner, • crpt. drps, paint Qw et t t • · Ran cho San Joaquin. 760-1966~75.0000a •area. Cul·de·sac 147s gasMpd 891 7490 art 6_·30 s orage. poo "' Jar e Use one word an each box About 4 words make one • view of gotr coursl' 2 sBRFAMILYHOME ::n~'::sapao': 498-1'36,966.1465 P ~~o 673s i12. •. classified line o f type Mi nimum ad IS 3 lines Pleas e onnt bdrm. den. 2 ear l(ar 4 ba. !gt yard. gardener merits FURNISHED PALM MESA APTS 3 II TOWMHOME -- • ~-f40-5}24. S1700/rm_646 5!15J 1 1561 M-a Dr F ed ds FRl'LC Bachelor Apt 11Blk to plainly Ind UNFURNISHED. .. .. , enc yar . . • lkh Partly Furn SIOO • • 2 :r~n~::r.~wup B~:Ju Cs:1~m~nt:rm. 31 Oakwooo also otters 2 Br. unrurn. S42S 28a. EnclsdGar NEW C.1earung Oep $2?5 Mo • r:-----------------.-------------, .. Adults only. Call blwn aiOOMo _ _!483775 67J.2145 • graded Single story l _ -~·260'7_ _ 'AllUtihtielP•id 9-4 546-9860 ----Laree 3 bdrm. 2 bath. ir-c.__....... 3176 • I · I Full)' s hutt e red ,canal Front. Newport ·1mmedlat1 HUGE Bedrooms frplc~at10. garage --iimr • f'lreplal'e Atnum Nt>ar Shotes, 4 Br + Lt'ase or Occuptncy Ground Floor Fully XJnt 67!1 9132 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • I • pool and tennis option to buy 11500 mo ·s1Mllllonln C l d 8 :11 -• -,.--2Brl1t 8a,garage.laun· S975 t mo No pets Tennis. pool, walk to Recr .. tlon ar~e e .ui (;5 2 bdrm: 1'7 ba. S375 dry blk to beach • I • ...,,,,.,,,,., -beAA .. Agent 646.1n•4 or SUP R Location! er +$375 aeposil. Gas pd ~imo 974-7225 , ,,.,.. """" '""'' '" And Much More• SO Adults. No Pets S38S Nr Beach Bl & Mct'ad · • I $ I 00 • UliYTowaCe.tn-&IS-Z!m_ ---For a montn Of a Ille· Mo Apply Apt "E" den Ad It s no pets NI CE 2 BED RO 0 M I • New2bdrm + den.Jba. Blurrs ma&nH1 cen1 lime Modelsapendaoly 568-Wilson646-4477 1193-4i194 apartment with view or • I 0 IO • Plantation shutters. at harbor/ ocean vu. Jbr. 9am106om Aaultsonl~ A.V.A.IWUHOWI Deluxe pool~xtra the ~ol( cou~se. hills. • I 1 . tached gar Avail Im· newly redec Kids/pets nopels Large I Br Pool 41 laun· larte 2br. 2 ba, bllns., c~~~1:d t~nr~'~e~~;rt~ I • I mediately Kay 644-9060. 116.s. 675-2967 dry AdullS, n~ pets. 1415 dlwbr. l i., mil.es beach enclosed carports. 'all • 13.20 • PM673·8585 Private co mmunlly o ( Oakwood + $265 deposit 931 W. Adulta. no pets S4~mo lxaltins. laundry facility • '. 1'5.IO L.,.. leactl 3241 SE AVIE W, 2. 4 Br Garden Apartments 19th St.548-0492. 5.16-8362. -'"4 urnt modem spanish I • ••••••••••••••••••••••0• ::O~~ ~u!lyn e~wr~e~ Newport BNch/No. Newly decorated large 2 t Br. w/loft . I' 2 Ba rrptr. style building 2 adults • I • J BR 2 Ba EM ERAL rrurrowaves. 2 frplr's & 880 lrvme Br. with patio. pool, 1 pool, Jaragc'.$475 L~un· only No children or pets .. dd $2.60 for each addltlonal llne for 8 times I BAY 1 sty. nr beach . IOY· wet bar. Sl400 & Sl700 a (al 161h) garage, kids OK. no I dry fadl nr shopping. pleas $450 per month. • I "' • e I Y S 12 0 0 m o rronlh 644-S403. (7i.)645-1104 ~Imo 641·0763 184741156. Auilable February. • I • 213-286 1471 Beaut. 2bdrm t'ondo. Lrg I bdrm condo. patio, Ca 11 o "'' n er ( 7 14 ) Nlgu'il Shor;8-3 Br~Zba lllwilo.tSHp NewportBNch/So. f:"me S.C Plaza loc. wuhldry, rrpk, fc:I & 642.-"-"·0_.l.38_. ____ _ • I I h G d 3 b b $1'900 1700 16th SI • t · • ome ate g uar r, a. . (Oovtrai '6•hl aterfalls. streams , {:'aJ~· gate. c ose o ... how.ts ....... td • I Publlshmyadfor8daysstarting • Privacy Adulls BruceJohnson675·0941 (71"JMM1t3 spa, pool 1800 1mo 6/mo.new.ssso. wU.tw•~ HOO I 1850 lease Owne r PUJSHexec3brw/gar (1141673·901~675·0540 968-5632. .. ................... .. • I Classification 499-3638 fri>k.pool.nowS695 2 BR 2 BA d vt c H A R M I N G s E Aw I ... D • OC·RENTALS 750-3314 ' ' rapes .. p BACHELOR N B h n N OCIA.MPIOMT pat io , two s t o r y' "'"' .... yd U I Pd ~~ .. < VILL GE • ame • ~Hr Security .• , mi off Newport Crest townhse. VBSAIWS Cll'JIC)rt laun rm, pool. ~...... r . h ..,..., A pvt bch. (ishing pier, newly redec. 3br 212ba. Lar!!e Bachelor. Nicely ulil pd, I child OK , Mo.536-2216 Neiw 1&2 bdrm luxury • Ad dress • 2Br.adllsonly,nodogs, Walk to beach. tennis, furni s hed . Man y S460/mo. first. last + F\arnished,Unfurn 1·2·3 adultapts in 14 plans. I • • S8SO 17141499·3816 pool, spa. Mlru ocean vu. llll!nities. 1625. 645-1045 dep. nr Harbor & 19th St. Bdrm A pt s . Gym . Bdrm ffom S490. 2 bdrm City Zip Phone C.1ean2BRHouseNrBch Avail FebChl .. IS900d /mo I Lg 2Br, w1view on Seemanageratl976Ma-Jacu~zi. Sauna. pool. Crom SS70, Town house • • Sm Yrd. Gar, Kids & yr lse. 1 ren ok. Se.ashore Dr. nr 46th. un· pie, Apt. 1 or T or rall tennis . vo 11ey ba11 , from S640 + pools. ten· • Check or M.O. enclosed 0 • Pets OK! so 494·2576 S45-Ma7 til &-15, s.sso mo 673-2986 642.2966 basketball. game room I nis. wattrlalls, ponds' Best rental in-Lag~ Lovely Guest Hse bfrBAM land 2 bdrm trailers Hunt.Sch 846-0619 __ Gas for cooking & heat· • Cha ge my ad to . • n..., h' Ch ~new lmmed Ckc. 2BR . IBA Sl6S to 1260 + SlSO , 28a, liv rm din rm, 1ng paid From San r · ""'ac · armin · · on Cliif Dr lst/Lasl + .,_ tw.tt securiLy. no children, no + &ar. 1 mi to heh $475 Diego Frwy drive North • • ly remod. 3 br. 2 3 col· Cl Pep 1§25 645-2179 41Lt 04-.A pets 642·91~ 133 E. 16th. rm 85G-l396 on Beach to McFaddtn 0 -* Exp. tage Walk to beach & -· -· -=•--,..,_. M -,..._ w M r dd • liiiS4 11' • shOoPing. Sl200/mo Call Spmciw Eest1Wf ....................... """'a esa · l Br w/frplc , pool, encl """"' est.on c a en BillWedmore.~l-8700. Corido 3BR. 2~BA End .._..._.. ll06 Sinile Mom. 25, w/4 yr. gar, nr shopping. $395. to Seawind Vi llage • 0 • # Exp . • MONARCH BAY Ter· Unit. Fam Rm, Pool ........................ old son seeks to rent 8474156 1714)893-5191. • race. Beaut. home + moo Mo. 833·2009 Days, Balboa Island Water· hollle or apt. in Costa la.IW• 'WUAlftM A8h • furnishings. 4 Bdrm. IJ40.8379Eves. ftont. 3 Br. 2 Ba Yearly Mesa by 211/82. I am t•ti Jl•z f\am & unfurn f bdrm L -----renta1'800/mo. 77C>-0347. steadily employed, ·•• ~ II ii d II • r=-:.::-.-:;.-WE"'7LL-PAY THE POSTAGE-:.:.:.:: •• ~----, • ~~~rOntHomes lnc. IMMACUL.ATI lbdrm laii1e apt. with rtsponslble. depend•· ·-.;;;d;~r;~t;~·t;~·;ia· ~nl~es ~Ji.· A .. I • 631•1400 BLUFFS, 3 br, 2 ba con· frplc, brand new. ble, ~t hive llmlttd ccuu, swimming poof, 1 __ , NO P""T •cE 1 oo, rrpk, 2 pvt patios, 675-8611. m>ve·m funds. Please Ule roof cobble stone ._ 4000 • I 11111 v" " I • a..,....,.. 1Z5Z use ~ 2 pools, adults. ca11MS-l203 al\erji:OO. llnlt oft channel adja. .. .................... . • I NECESSARY I ••••o•o••u•••••••••• m>644·1559 ..... , ...... Jl07 2 8t "50 I chlld'OK No ceat tO tnarina Uniq ue 1.aci: Beach Motor IH. : 1r MAILED : e Exec 4br.~ba.famrm.3 Excl111lve are. a, Harbor ....................... pets. 2563 Elden Ave. 2BRlllO/mo :"5e 0i.a~:~1!1c~::~t • 1 INTHE O • ~arcar,v~,nrocean. View Hilla South, $350. Utll Pd. lBR, 6'7$.ID'14 '7Jl·50ZZ 'Waekly Klt~hen •· UNITE.O ST ATE.S ~ Im. 974· . charming 3bdrm, l~ba. ~ 411 E Bay Ave. uST•-1 ll al a' bl t.ow' i t • a .......... 1-tn...1.o. 3267 walktoFalhioulaland• Jtak$47·1W,542·0190 --........... 41 av e •o er 9 ,. -•-.. b h Gr d I I -Count17 Wood&: Lar1e l .. _................. '1tes. 494.5214 •• ! BUSINESS REPLY LABEL > •• ·;=·~'-'jE~:· =~· .. 1:~f.a7·nJ~o: ·=·~l~P~!: ~~O::t~1~!~tin:~ 1.=.n,.,~ •. a1,~.t;':1~i 8:!::i.,.1 "Kltc:n:et~:. n f'lllST CLASS PUNllT NO IJ C~lA _,.(SA, (Al.lf'O•NIA ~ yard!. ;.,.,e.. Kida. •tmo. llO 21st. St. .... lat/Int + ""vt1l. Ot'taft rront.115-114' • 111o 0 • pell welcome. ~5-2000. C-.. Mrr llJJ ~ Mf.42!62, Eves • mo.•·7222. Room and bath. Feni. • POST A0£ WU 1£ 'AO 9" ~~SSH • ALent oo fee "::;.::J ... -.............. Wknda MS·l:Ml. OCIAM ..OMT It 0 0 I m o II a 1 'I • i o ftlla Coe1t Dilly Piiot I e -· · It S'11!P TO OCEAN. Moat -niUtl ......... _ •-< re,._.. ;..a BR 1~ ba, fam rm, 28rdm2Behomeonthe cMrmlnslnoldCorona I llclllldet&lltepartment mnd ·--e .... • -I ·1y P1·1at • I study. fplc , view, l'72S Bey with HclUnl view• 2 er. 2 ... f11>lc ocean •e=e bulldl•I In t.•rn• 11 II I per mo . Ul ·600 of b lend• and main view from dec ll . ..,,. 11-.n...ttocatonln Bayfroat,nn•ba,peol, • G • : eva/wknds d\lnnel. Comm. tennia, •Imo. Cell Antltony lt~f.ilJ laadtta.114 =· J~~::~~ li!i.:!;.::= beec•. • I • 1 w...art.... JJ6' beatt1a • •oct1. ~ dQI N2>57ST, eves • , ... "'*· Pool•.,.. ~a,' nbt. i•rate, .... Oltod..-...;;;.::.=--='----• I lox 1580 ~ • I 5 ................. ~for mlJ .... P a1.-. Covtrd~erkles . ei..ater. 1.e ... ••lJ. ... ~·~a!::: • 330W.l1ylf. I LUIUIYIAYflOMT •YOU rlr·'° . .... -···•CMffDr .... ,.IA.Pwtlll.• I Co.t. M •••• CA a'Ml21 1 • Jlr.111.wttUootalt•· haftaid'vlretoolftror Dl&.-.a .... Pl utll. •••I lel. • ... I • Aull. aow . lluJ .-toaell,flaceanad lSl&.1111.a ...-• --~Wl!ll, acnp!Ua. PHO llo. fn lhe Da ly Pilot · l ... , ... • I . -~m.n a..... le<'llon a•HA --.. -.. a , •• ••• • •• •• • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • Wiii CIDMa.tm NAc18*! HJ·MTI .._ • ..,.. W!t!la.. gtM Dolb Pilel ClaulfW ( " ... • p 0 3 $ 5 225$ 1$35506$ Orlftll Comt DAILY PtlOT/futlday, JlnUllY 21. 1112 .. !.~:..~ .............. !!.!~.~.~ .. : ..... . Nallll ~,.... PlMTU61TUCOO r ~ llltllH Chrhtllll • "' ap. Uc. dl41. ...... No.leb&oo .. L 1JJ .. !! •Jtdtf!5·30lO Wlllt Undentuda Your a.did. lei. llef1. Color -...JMMUf lllAIONABLE cl t. a I a u · . d I • -..u Dtclt n p I I 'I ALL JOU 1 ....... t 1tt1m clean. PROMPT. PREE UT Rw/Local · llMW i-=:.:w=.•B;:;;P:...Al=NT::.=l.N;.;;G.;;__ -••••••• .... •••••• fera Colar brt ... tentn. wbt ALllOtT!V!RY EQaf C.iaculaa Haltpr. SPr..ctALI INT/EXT, Drtlinecltartdfrom SLO •:rid M1t11rt Babyallttr npta • 10 mln. blt1cb. •SPICIAL• UPAIRNllDED. s.lf·ltuter . $1.00 per !'a*all. wrxNs.t313 PlwnblaaRepalrs I ?' MI ...... ................ . MTDOftlATD/Llc'• &.-......... . .......... .. ... .....i .... .. ~ ............... . INIUTIJAL~ 6CU'M1NO ol f abrin P\'tetl&Jmate1 NI-MM I~ ::Std, :t~?S::.:.M, ~·,:;,:.d':;,;,~cJ::~ c....,.. AQydWrhud·tlttpptd DAVE145_.7&7 hr. Affluent Homu I'm Small-My prices f'ne•t.lfUlt42·8033 --· area ...,. ..... .,. G Ii ~;~............... or n1l11td, Slt.75. A .............. 664118 art 1maUI CdM, NB. A~PLUM BING 6 ..,. .... ~· ..,_ ... b i..... r··11 -: <:W" .... iaar. • m. ~-..... Allo.IS T b Of Cl I SCRUB A DUB t.nll& NG ft•p J _ .. •••••••••••••••• --· -YIOUA1j, ... ' .... Crpt repair. ..,.__,""" OllC ... n· "..................... . . Exp'd. RonffJ..8477 ....,. -c.. A R ...Cl PlltUtm,wk..U,cwer· ti .. ,. e2. Do work •PAITN~RSHJPS WWI, 711W.17th~t. HAllDWOODrLOORS f'r-of.Houaetleanin& GLM pl I REPLACE SU.Im **~** •• CTOIY aittl•vhome......,. ' --.. tAJ CM 8421712 ............. 11~ 1• ....o "'-1---'-J a .. •631·5011 · ::fuo aal RI All Slut Installed. _ .. I "'I • R •. $31·0101 r-d by AUorney1 . . . .. ...... ....., c ... an.... Allll WWli "'-n..-u ..... ·u79 .. -.... M .. DOITNOW I n~. llDd aud U24aa1 vwo. · " -nqmy •111• GnltPric•,lll~ Mltun woman to care Nolteam/NoSbampoo -.rltel. 5$7·5700 ... •1 w · · a.-T• I.Ill. rree..i. u1.aa1 .................... .. ...... S..-. fGr)'OUtcbUd.myhome. ll.aln&peclalltt.Fut C....W....__...._ ..... ••••••••••••••••• ...... .. ..................... CUSTOMINT/EXT PIOPllTY lit v .. ou11 PUot 1n1111t1oe11PN2•80'72 ........ t -1.,... ----. TIHS ........ •••• EXPER. PREPARER EXPERT SER c MAMA ... IMT ...................... . a-.a~ N~-.. • r""' H . _. -HH•••••••••••••••••• ' • •••••••••• VI ,.. -• • 1..-ALL9ft _.,,-..... ~-.. Haul It Enrolled lo 9ractict .. au..r. ... .,. . .,., •11 ••tallvt I I qi:/ c:-.t/C .. r:lft Cro•,o mo 111: d l ~ 1. Topped/removed, U · mnO~al~i:,;,~T~~~ before t.be IRS. Quality l.DW RATES 0r..,. Co. area. IS yn AUKiodlGu..-•t.ed ~•.1.-edJJJ -••• .. ••••••••••••••• ••-•• .. •••u•••••••• mant ea, wa un 111 pertdean1JP1,lawa1re· n..i.... at-M ........ u ...... 1• N\J.BIOOK 545·1175 experience Callforlafo. Rtla , • ...,.17 __ ,.. hr all you Med to know TH~PSON'S cablaeta. Bardwooo novlled. 751·3411 .,..'-... serv. 142·7631 .... ... ..... -.,. 0 ~·~NS INT NG and -------· ............... _.. II v. ......... ,_. t ood ·~~ PA I rales. ,.., .... _,,_ • Tlla '= --ruPtty,ca OONCRETECONSTR ... ..._... ow pro. WHYNOTONEO•' DUMPJOBS t4•1 '1 Int/Ext Raid/Comm HJ.1112 ' -.-..\Alraauc " •I MI 714181$.9162 Uc.ta1U S42·Mi2 blems.l3MS28 THEBESTtShnmona ltSmalllfovingJobs ....................... Acoustic eellin11. Refs, ~ptMrV.fYHeat. ............................. Drywt1 GardeDla 646-6684 CaUMIKENf.1391 BRICKWORK: Sma ll lic'd. Freeal.837-2637 L' 'rtlr1 Ohutltf7~140I Piil Qtrllea, Wis, Fla. c..r..kTll .. u&UUN06DUMP Jobi, Newport, Cotta PA.INTrnNEEDS ••••••••••••••••••••••• y-•---'-~ 8lllllll Complete Set·up ........... •••••••••••• ............ ••••••••••• ......... ••••••••••• ~OLaodlc:1pell1iol. "" R f ~ JD HoraReflAlthta, ·-~ 6,_n lw S.0-SUf lllWICIC&SOM l:lwell'aCtramicTile DRYWALL/ACOUSTIC Rsid/Comm.Cltan·up. JOBS.uUorRaody, Meu, lrvlne. e I . WOR.K-30yruxp.lnt ~ kit bl:. ...................... . · · WldenSincelt47 tloon·Sbowers ·Tubl l4 yruxp.~llyUc'd& LtHaullft .S41·M• 1Wl·MZ'7 ~3175· /ext.AcousUccellin&s. Fme iaea, ca 0 · •ExpertTreePrwWl1•' =:tTu Prep f« &~•-· d li ~·i .... 2 &•-lnaured 532·5549 ,.... __ Bri .. lt .......... ..., """'·"-P·•·•'·• •• 7.51.., Ua · &4>08M CommerciaJ Landsca- •• -·II b.utl· .._.. ....... remo e DI ....., IM••·-. ,..._,_., n.....-Bu••-aas,· ,..."'""'UPYOUI "'CT .,,......., "' .......... , ..,.YNI ........ ~.,. -P"" .._ Doon wind J DRYWALL TAPING r .... u_ """" .... w.. __. "" Compl. yard construe· Kiteben cabinets built or Servicea 9S7·Ull -w.am day or COY.;. Free:i'R/.~~ o CllldC.. Alltextures&acoustlc ~~aExl.~s~ptr•· ~DAY~ Y:~d/1:ra\e lion, pool de elks ' ~=~~.~:e~aa':e ! rbeeflut1ni,1ulbed1'a1re~t.?..'e~ JAYE TREE CARE ew. U t31CllN2 · 5411·2170 •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• Free .. t. Kevin 676-llON c 1 01• c ·up. c. on rue · encloeures. Loca refs. Uc. -u ,,.2......... a 5 n JOUll. 4" Complete service aad c. SJ I 'o/iWK Gntd. Prol. Service at 125.131-1993 (ZOrs> 66&\l2 __,. ... -yrs exp 642-86al rindbl .,.._.... ROBTSTE!NBRONER, u ..... _.t .II. Cb"'•· .,,..,.... s.-.icH Prices Sure to Please. Haullna/clean·up, dirt, Hsepaiot.ing-coll. grad · 1_... stump g g. lO yrs ~ ........... •••••••• GEN'LCONTRACTOR ~ ~bool "-~• u::: ...................... &2llSb/7·9& W/E. abrub/tree trim , etc Hart llaaoary. Brick, 7 yrs exp. quality work. •-••I I/ .,_. exp. Uc. Ina. 640-9308 ..,....jor, proll. lfrvsice <!" Uc. 1-.63 64S-64S& -er"" ....... ~ E.M. Dtalgn tit Cberlt Gardenlng-Co mpl. Junk,truh.11&•.4914 B_lock. Concrete. Ref. Low at D 646·11168 •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• TteeTrimillg, clean I.IP•. • app cs. teves FINE HOME Cle•' I SenlcH P 1 c It a g I n g I S H clean up 6 tree haulin1 HAULING .,"':° b Uc. 31121N. 644H597 r es. ana COM .. 411CtAL M<dhy service free est. Ap.Strv.~·1514 IMPROVEMENTS ....................... MTL /PCB Harvey forusableil.,ema. •-t k~ude~I las MlllOftryourSpecialty! Mike Shill Palnllnc Af. =STllAL 641-7556 Tony's Tree ~ Additions6Remodelini Hanlilon.545-3'101. Micbael!WS-67'4 if."om";:.C.n;;~117~~ e. Clblee';i qduiclt, d~penjdb· ~e'!a~~ ::,~.1~5.;J;o DIUMG! ..;;Servi;.;;.;;...;..::..;c;.;;.e _____ _ ............ ••••••••••• · • IMMACULATE m.dric.. Gardening Wanted Thank you, John. · e 0 any 9 ze 0 · 53.1-28> Turn lost or unused Tl"""-'-AUSl'ATE PAVING M --11 •--· ~1·2004• or Into .. bl _ _, ct....•-·tina. "'riping . CQ ~ Ill _,,kn ....................... Mowklg, ed&inf. raing, TftPESfSHRUB TRIM space a wor .. a e ..................... .. -""' Home 1'7S:fl~Offi ELECl'RICIAN priced s w up I I F "" ....... ,..,.. area·rooms divided. Credentialed former ~.Comm./Resid. =~ 1 ces rilbt. ftte esti;.te on estimates.n 64S·437~ eo~ ~arag~&YdCle~~·~1 ......................... tiANciNG.Sloii\oi:L .. drywall. drop ceillnes' teacher Administrator . . t397312 645-8181 PEP GIRLS cleaning larporsmalljobs. ~737 eus . · •ABC MO VING·Exp., Slri . di trim carpentry-to com· 17ynexper.Kd(lbr 8th COllll. RESID. Lk 13a9:2 770.MS-4 service. Homes.Offices· Uc. 13116621 673·03S9 H di .... c... Senlct pro(., low rates. Quick, v· r..'C'· SC 0~:~~ pletion. Call Tom or Jett er•. Corona cfel Mar. Joe Campanaro Asphalt ..... _u ... UCOMSTI. A .S48-0663 RESID/COMM'L• JWWW ....................... carefuhervlce.SS2·0410 151 · at661·21113or493·3886. 644·U47 Paving A: Roofing. C"" h f 20 yrs exo. Do my own ••~•u•l••••MH••••••• Companion Aide. Desires •"'I """"Vt~• UC. PAPER HANGER • ....._ Resllffaciaa. repairs. UJtom omes, ram· Ca•ecton. .. ...,... '#Oft. ucrd. Al646·8126 rpen ry · as~ry Uve-in Position w/ Com· -_, ~ Bonded ' cuar. No job ........ ..., Wlildtw C ....... sealcoat, • t ri Ping. ~ re~li~ebl:. ~renlc.b ....................... Roofing . PlumblllJ paUble Person. 833-1471 Top ,Quality. Special loo small or loo large .. R.•E•P·~~·RS•••ro••R••L••ESS••••• •·.~~.:::~·Su••::h~~:·1·n··~·· -.a9 AM /eves. .-.~. s..y g ..,. "' pa 10 tt-•-.&. UC'D ELECTRICIAN Drywall . Stucco. Tile care in bandUo&. 2S yrs P\'eust Ton 898·2728 . tu ....,. ...... "" w., --------1 covers. 848·3652 All pb•·-.~li", bond ...... ' Qual. won . Rus. rates Rermdel. J.B. 646-9980 If uecll .. t exp. Competitive rates p • .:.._ Shingles, flat. 30 yrs. Call Sunshine Window Drhewl)'I, Parking Lot -" """ ....................... Noovtrtlme. 73CH3S3 .., _... exp. Free est. 770.2725 OeaninJ. Ltd. 548·8153 Repain, SeaJcoating. C.,. .. • exper. Free est tit advice ~est. 63l·50'72 Tom General Maintalnance Want a REALLY CLEAN ...................... • S6SA1pbalt ••H•••••••0•••••••••• AllmConst tMllte) TOPQUALJTY Repaira6Dttoralln& HOOSE? Call Gingham STARVING COLLEGE •BRYANT'S• l•AtlSOMLY! •RESIDENTIAL• Uc631·4199 nNE n NISH WORK 497-5322/499·4863 Electrical work at •Quality• Ray 640-514• Girl. Freust. 645·5123 STIJOENTS MOVING Walloovering Removal AU Types, 646·6463 Avg 1 sty S30: ava 2 aty ...... .,. ....................... AGG RESSIVE legal fell"Mlllatioo, law of· nc.. x bn. 545-8422 ... _ .... Reroodellng/Doors bung ADD'NS/REMODELING Reas. rates. S31·5M5 HOME UIPROVEMENT ROBIN'S CLEANING COlft~~ced. 1. !.12Al .:~· AU 642'1343 BALBOA ROOFING CO. ~. Cluia 957·8388 Rand 720-12.iOCdM Pl L' 'd G El . c:~ i I ' R . 11-•· ,_ .,.. """'' ----18~ 1beonl oofi g Ith ClearViewWindows ru&n RENOVATING . ans. 1c eorge ectncour..,....c a ty' fP&ll· .... tenance Service-a lhorou&hly WATCH US GROW! .--,...,_. Yr in co. w XlntSttVice. free est . "nan PiJmer &Sons ~7-6932 Clean, quitk, dependa·I Heating. carpt"ntry. cleanhouse. 540-0857 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~onJtructaon rebates. Compl. int/ext & cusl Additions. r~model ~. bit. Wedo any siiejob. ' elec. Ule. Free est. No !xpertise Housekeeping STARVING ACTORS PLASrER PATCHING 673-67~, 673-8229 Ken 673-9018 cabinet.s.25 rs.645-3H9 home improvement. •631·2CXM• I job too small. 645-2811 Suppliesfurnuhed MOVINGCOMPANY Restuccos. lnt/exl. 30 HuberRoofing-alltypes. HOWISTHETIME C\JSTOM ADDITIONS windows, doors, patios, •-Co -'-CM. Trustworthy. 957-11003 ~=: ~!'~W~'wsU>M~~ . Neal. Paul 545·2977 New-recover·decks fix job seekers to check Kitchen remod drivewa ys , re ·.._. • .. --, Neatpat.ches&textures Ucll411802.S48·9'734 the Daily Pilot Help ...... ••••••••••••••••• Sky lites. Refs 8111 plumbing. etc. Lie ••••••••••0 •••••••••••1 Ben's Home Improve-Quality Work. Dependa· Visa. Uc/Ins . 673-0MJ Fneett. lfJ·t4lt Wanted rlass1f1cauon. If 1'IPl.OM YOUI CAI 646-0Cm 378711. Pb 960-0635 BEST MASONRY ment bit. Refs. Call Pam & ,...... Krwtort looft. the job you want is not Imtead ol WU. 40 mo. Minor to Major Repairs. . TILE. UNOLEUM I Service. All jobs. big or Bob Dwight. 673·7012. ....................... ED'S PLASTERING "Quality RooCmg ror there you might con· Wl'ty. 'lsz.5007/752-0892 Remodeling. Doors u YGI:' re looking for a bet· Greg67~ small. 964·5Z:U HOUSEWORK DONE l'me painting by Richard AIJTypes Int or Ext. F\ne Homes.'' 645--0104 sider oH erin g your PIOF. POUSKJNG . IM2·89Sl. 848.2464 ler ~· you won't want Carpet & Unoleum For Repairs, pa 1 n ting. BY J APANESE : Si.nor. Uc, Ins. 13 yrs of 64.\..8258 Free est. Sell with t.:ASt.:! services with an ad in Service at your borne or to ll\l$S the employment Home , Van & Motor carpentry. Christian. re· Professional. Call Yoshi, happy local customers. WANT ACTION' ll's a BREEZE the Job W a n t e d bllllneu. lllck 675·034• ·Sell idle items 642·5678 colurnm in Classified. Home. 84HS95 Dave liablelllr1·9262 u..sms Thank you. 631-4410 Classifed Ads 642·5678 Classiried Ads 642·5678 category. Phone 642·5678 I ~ .................... . l'i'j;' /l1111umr, week l.y. 1 Br., 1leeDI 4. Balboa "'*-la. trs.- PlllllDrtaa area (llon· ...., OC> CGedo 3 BR 2 ~1.furn. •/atrium. =uws ttaal1. Daily. ••_.17 rates u . 1U.SH·H01 ...... ,., 1111'. Nlill c-lo, 4 Br. S .. NtrtMW. ... ,_., .. . t.r .,. .............. . Mrole"-MCMYON .... ,. ........ Ml-Im I • . r L r .. " I I.. ,. ,. .. . " ! • " l • BALLET• Tl# • JAZ2. • TRIM TO N«rHM • AEAOllCS • CHILDREN • TUN& • ADUl TS M9w'tl'I ~~·I· . t T•iOor~I...;' l: "''.?.~ ........... ~ .... Lwn How to Ute Wang, IBM ose & Oflpla_ywriter Xtroxeeo Ctl (714) 5558 hrt. t.11h •• sf • .,. WM MOii MOMIY ' Become 1 Word Proce.lng Sptclalltt E)(cellent career Opportunltltt ' WORD P .. OCESSINO ANO INFO .. MATION '2232 s.E.ltrfltol-'S~L~ .. Ana. Catf!O'r -·;.-..,-.w.;._-......;-~·· ...... -.. .,..,, afternoon It p.:1:-ln• ·j,~./ ·1.oo ·' 10 I. I St. 5-HI 17141 54J.9495 M'I! ltt61 Flnandal Aid PMframt. Accrediled by the Accredltlna Commlulon of the Natlonal Auoclation of Trade 6 · Techn:lcal Schook. AIMricu Alrliof. Sable Computer Traininl a. Doberman Placbir, -="""-------Jyn okl. Gtetle. 55MDI TIUSTOMCB .............. To aa u aide• bu1lne11 ,,_to~i.ome,lov· eable lloue Cat , ......S. llllll keep In IM!ulc ..... 7 n.-ti okl kitten1 ma&., Ila.a, free to aooa born&... 5.1MW mgr for retired U · '8xlm t Hll · tallive 6 family. Boole· .. ••••••••••••••••••••• kHpiilg, lyplnf' bank· * * I BUY * * tw.w...., 71 Wmltd 1100 ~ w Wiiied 71 HefpW..tM 1100 tw.Wlllltd 1100MllpW.._. 71H,.._W.... 11H ~fin!. b°aue,,~1!~: Good usec1 Fumlture • ~•••••••••••••••••• ""'•• ...._ _.... 7100 Miia ........... •••••••••••• ~~••••••••••••••••••• •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• --·••••••••••••••• 714 "····""16 N"""'t B"h :Jr.llan"-.-OR I '"'&011 ••••••••••••••••••••• a;.-i ••••••••••••••••••• ~................... -'"V"ft·Wfl I =.!: " • "-'~· W' All!'O 1DTMAN Dcrow/Home loan ex· E Medical/Backotfice 'AITUPBSOM leltf~ TypUt OISEU.forYou i pertwe. Part ume to ,_ .... u... PIT exp'd in EKG, 5 da.yu weelr lncludin& ~ll·tlme, must know A creative Human Resources Patt·nme Wan~ed. For MASTBSAUCTIOM c1C:a~:,~~~';'J:f c:! llart.p /br&SG-1201 'la•arwrtt. INJS Veni·Puncture Sat':::{i· Art °'he1r1:i· =);:vme~~i. ~e:: Manage~ will have the opportunity to auM°':~~~"6}~~!: t4Htff.IU·fHI mature and e1t · IB•ALOHICI NewpOrtSa BeacbPA1enfY· ""4ml ~l ~be.nlms: tal6lifeins.Call:Jane, estabha. h a res ults -o r iented ~Leeat673-6070 »aotu. New.•· Lov· perienced. Excellent 1Yrria1 fr ll1ht book: lary ~en• 00 ~ALOfflCI A,pply: PENNYSAVER M2·11M4 d e partment aim e d at meeting Women with transport•· neats $88. Sleeper•, ;:rac~ ~Saddl .bca~ keeplnf. Pa~t /llme , and~7.1m'~11n 'd f'ront office 1660 Placentia Ave., Restaurant. Now accept· e mployees' needs. Skills in merit Uon to houseclean, part KJPllNC. FAINCTONERRYS~~·:~~ 8111 -e aca Noa.Fr , nex1ble hrs. penon for busy uroloey C.11. Int appUcationa for new · b f · t time, ~.00/hrly. Must be BM I S U B A R U 845-&al. • otftce. Some back office Sandwich Shop p art co mp e n s at 1 on , e n e l s , fut, thorou&h Ir effi· EXTRA Fllllll mallrel• DUNO. •-t10fflce uu,~~.~~wport ~ ::J.JO:::itt~~· PIX-llCB'T. ume help. Hours 10·2 organ izationa l be ha\ ior -a,n1d rien t. Diane 1u 1 ~1~:~c=i. ,::i;. ae.t.mi Newport Center cater, small firm. Non· RB •• ·...,.. , Work temporary jobs PM Excellent pay: 15215 communication would be h elp u . _-. ........ -97 ..... 66.._._____ UHO queen u, worth IAITSllTa H . area .... 7·.....,.. cklletohome. Springdale, Huntington Progress1·ve dyna m1'c company needs Penan needed ce u Immediate. sm>ter. StS-3733 ~ .u llC-VICKI HESTON Beadi (between Bois a & '-. . d Mad•... S389. cash only ' SZll dtl. 6 okl . la.ft to meet ~I for Clerk with ----· 6ASSOCIATES McFadden> a take-charge, humanis tic lea er. • ...................... Uauallyhome, 754.7350 1'?! to 111 er2•c.~. ey by Touch to ..... c--ST Busy front office. ex-540-o.oo o ... all Please send resume a nd sal ary ••••• IOOS1._ ______ _ :.... approa. : .... pm Prottll Sales R.....,....s & -"'"' ~d only , Newport ...,., 1• d II , i '-VV' ~ Or Count led . . ts to •••••••••••••• •• • • • • • •• ....ST SILL ever~ v· OD· r . CtedltCudl · anae . ye ro-er.844-0lnO. PllSOt•• Allis ... Mgr& reqwremen . : t)o lg wall ck>ek/chimes MUS E D!PEN-Ctl 4-4460 mecbanical manufac· l-L ..... ST...... •~Ptni•tl Box lOOO r;oo., oriental vase 115. Maho1any double Md DABLE. MUST live lurer has an Immediate M1111111r/C._. -.-•"' _. wttb m.attreu. Moon witl£n_1!.~ln& distance Coif SLat bor P /T opening for an ex· PartUme,30liours. ~rson::/~Adv~rt\is~ln~ =~a':f .;;:,t~:St r~taDMaily PCilot ,__ _.63 ..... l .... ·'11.--.... _____ shaped mirror on bead• to ....ooeueet Elemen-oraae , perienced Machinist. Contact Kim Dennis · · bedmamic•havegood \.NI) esa, a.~ Antq. oak sewing cab boerd. tar" School, Wood· Private Country Club. Must be able to set up '73-5081 expansion · pt. c /. ~p w/mach Sl75LAntq oak liGOOBO 631-7797 afU bri e, Irvine. Please Call: 644'·5404 8:30am· and operate all machine Models " Escorts. Fem Financial services firm. women's wear back· table S300 amp SIS. cal 552·0461 a fter 1:30pm, Tues·Sat. shop tooling, nreferably ()ily Top SS. Good typing, shorthand. 1 round. Experienct> Antq oak ch r $40. ~· Oak Hall Tr", s:-. 0 ff I C I .. -"" ed ... tt' g exper req. Noa·smolter. need only apply. Salary Sales-rsoo wanted for SIC'Y. ISYSr 151 3tZ2 _.... en ce-era ex...,. .. enc tn se mC 642.4152Aft12. 641M11Z3bf'tween9·2. +comm.Pleue callor attrartivcwomen'sshoe '~ • $350. eSt,'200.0alt !!l!!!!!ll!!!!!ml!!!!!!!!!m!!!I!!. Typist. F rr 8am·Spm. up and operatin\. CN ......_.,. lted come In to: Apropo, 129 dept. in Fashion Island. for prestlg1oua Laguna ~ueoak ffooejer, xlet Dbl 8d St, SBOO. 10• Bch, 111!!!!1!~~~----Perm po1ltion. Entry milling machine. ill be I mr .... MY. Stlet Fashion Island, N.8 . P /t1'm•, ax pe r. pre· Niguel land develop· , szso. 1890 clock, MSG. Twn 8d, S30. Kng BANKING level, 40 wpm. Small required to work from Needs ta I attractive Top_ sports proerams 0 E "' .. me n t c 0 en p 1 n y . pso. 646-8127 BdCompl, JJSO. 64S-'3SS ~an y w /goo d blueprints, sketches and ~/women for agency locatedacfj.JohnWar.ne 1144·~.E. · · ferred..64C).78IO. Pl'ofessjonal manner• Antq oak matching din Couch. 8' gold/&reen BUNCH MANAGER lsAM642•9363 verbal information. Ap· a.wcnments.548·77&2 , Airport. Crowin& f rm SAUS-IOATS SICllTAIY toplevelsklllsamust. tbl, 6 c hrs, burfet. ~crushed velvet, xlnt IRL FRIDAY. Balboa plyinpenonorcall: Nursin1 I needs 4 reliable peo~le Boat sales experience Someone who doesn't Mdler,•Hk Karastanny:.493·9686. ~.1195.646-2279 Penluula. Type, Non-......_.~~ LYHCHil(H , interested in malt ng ~lpful. sellina advertis· mind worting for a llv· 1714)831·8031 *m'mc" IOIO temp. glass inlaid Sal . Med Ins. Super Coata Mesa.CA.92627 Nwpt Bch . R ehab . steady employment. •comm I. Hottest new ing if you're worth it. 3 HARBOR AREA Worth Sl200. take $40i. amtr~Good Siiitls, Refs, 164011onrovaa 11·7 Relief, Conv. Hosp., money. Good future; 11111pa~toboatowners in&. Raises without ask· SIC'Y'411CIEl'T .!.'::'•••••••••••••••••• coffee " end table. Ddail 1613-3591 (714)642·au'7 oriented nurse dedicat· 557-7660. marine ma1a~lne. Xlnt girl office. Expr. or with book eeping skills, APPUANCESERVICE 673-4743 MIATWISTllM HOU•--i E.O.E. llJ F /H ed" with smites. Con·j _5 • ...,...... ~ potenUal. Draw trainee.IW2·92l7 (/time. Send resumes W ... ~used U -=.::...:.o.;=------ ISLOOll....._ __.-m:; t t M SI ..---•" a111nst comm. a h er to: C & R Construction. e...., app aoces Hide·a·bed, good cond "9 Pwm.DDlition2S hrswk ac : rs one . Exper'd. on AB Dick t rain i n& p eriod SICllTAIY . 15115Sunland Lo .. Costa -W~sell recond.,guar. SlOO. Dinette set w/6 fOI WDllS I plua. Jlant. Harbor bef t1.,t •c• M• fW2.llM4 ' 31lOCDand ltelt. Call 88M500; 557·9327. Immediate open1n,. Mesa, CA. 92626. appliances. 549·3077 cha.in, 165. Porta.potty, Due to our ~ontlnued lpm.173-Wl Rita De Pend ab I e ' ex . Nining 646-7811 f.S(Mike) Sales-earn extra USS parttlme, for church tn SERVICE STATION AT· Wahr, clean 195, dryr, ... szo=.:.:..:. SS:=.7;...·1597='------ ll'OWlb. we are seeking HOUSBEIPH ~:fi:Sb~~I~~~ LYM ....... part time or full time. Costa Mesa . 9 · l TENDANT. P/time .. Ap. clean SBS. Refri~ clean ANTJQUEWALNUT •iadivkhaa.I • S 11 D a n d M o n . Beach. Phone 644-1526 9 7-3 " J..U:JO Conv. Hosp 360 AB Dick, top quality Call167-1164 weekd~ys . Ability to ply Shell Station l7lh & FF SlSO. All wor good 4 PC BDRM SET f I ...__..a. tol2--'-d .. s NBarea. Pas.attitude• wort-•u. llaaaiement work 1ndependen~ly . Irvine.NB. S48.SS13,S48·«1S MOO Evea,673·8199 or a 8 RAN C H ._eeping and child ~ • 1n.ille1 needed, xlnt .....,.NB.......... 646-4652 19-1 Mon·Fri) ,Stove 4 burners & oven, MANAGEMENT posl· care Lagu na Beach MAKE MONEY while at benefits. Call: 642·9044. respon. · ·"'!"-Sales •· SERVICE STATION AT· BEAlIT. 4 POSTER tioa in our MISSION Area. 1141·8700 (Eva) h · ttl P/T cashier, eves " JOIN ASUCCESSFUL. TENDANT, Ptr even· gas,whiteS15. Kin& sz waterbed, mo-Vl""'0..-1-. ...ia-, -.-eves and ome. se na up •P· ,..._,__ ......... Call M ~--·•YJUIC "'"" •-.. _.... t 7~ask forCbris tionless matt htr linens °" ......... .....,. '""'' _, paiotments .for comm'I ·---.:.515 "IDI ......... no esp., rs }l'ATIONWIDE -·-• -.... • w ...... s. nea ap· • • wedl:ends. carpetclearung. SStolZO ":"" .• Bower 675-2790 wkdys SALES TEAM Personnel/Advertising pearance " bandwril· 22 cu fl West inJbs e . & bedsprd, used l yr, lcleal candidate should H~~ Cooll hr. work o n comm. Expel' d all shifts. Co!!v. g.5 ee one of over 600 in· Dept. ~as opening ~ ing. Apply at : 2590 refri&. frost free, side by x1nt cpnd. S27S. Will help possess 2 or more years flmt....,..Rarbor. Female ref 963-t34S Hosp. Nwpt. Bch. Bnng deoendent sales afents expansion . Nwpt Bch. rt 81. C.M. side, ft7S/ ofr 673-4084 move . a ss em b It of previous experience week. 6~~:212te?~~~ your smile • join us! llALISTAn selling products 0 the Flnancia~ services ft.rm. Teacher for Christian Relrig, 25 ~u rt. s ts wt ice -=15""7_,·1""760"'------ ••superviaor in the re-Rita MAMA.. P\"ee IQjr. med., dental •••-Thoa. D. Murphy Co , a Good typma. shorthand, Pre·Sch ool, p /li me . maker. gm. like nu S450 Amer Oak curio cab. tail or rmancial area. · lil'8St be entb•iastic • •lifeinl. Call: "2·1M4. -. pioneer in spttlalty ad· exper req. Non·smoker. Mon. F r i 9. 1 pm 968-all curved glass sides. S475, You will be responsible l"-!!!!!!!!1!!111----i se!f·~tivated. Apply in We are woud that we vertiaing since 18.88. ~a2.11 640·0123 between 9Q..715.S; 536-'ltl2. · BRAND NEW 631·59'79 fOI brandl admJn.lstra· anee c.on: Vans Tennis <lftce baYe Reh a nre.,ful Throl!Chour salesforce . ..-Ma~washer•dryer 2-=pc;:o..::...::7;;..;.sof ___ a_S200 __ .Coc __ ltt_a_U lion. personnel manaae· f SS , 4250 Barranca NEEDID track record In the we provide imprinted T..._. $700eair. 673-5477 table bltn lights withf ment and outside sales • • • lrviae.551-DM. IMMEDIATELY ~ leadl "Fine calenders, specialty S1C11T••y C11 .. lla StOO t.abl 1 S30 11 ad.ivilill. Has ope nings for ~u&f5. llamia! marlet ... aa jlterna and executive -For M...,rofft h· Ca •11 ..... C.b . e amp .ca Moa»blle sales reps in ..,...,.""' lea ..... , wlaDelCltwoMditioltal I llfta totbeir customers. Mong11e Company in r. Sink. stove, refrig. 140. 558-7256a1t 5pm . We offer an excellent Huntin1t on Be a d1 llaciretor 1 ac , Wia6wldlcNt '":.(':-wtlD wallt 11aia is your liil op· Newport Buch has C •••• Pro•r••· 494-2789 Two Maple butches SSO • salary/beoeftts package brwtL luide sales. no 16'1 PlaCeatia C.M. ......... to ill .,..,,.._al partunily for &ood com· opening for a Secretary Piece •P to I 5 Sears 17 cu n frost-free ~· Or~r S30. Maple alon1 with th e op-proapectin,. attractive MmlCA&.ASST •-111'Jlr at .. 1,hre, nJoy , ....._ and continued with &ood Ol'l•nization J•••M Sludl•i t. refrig. 6 mo old. S360. din tbl, 2 lvs S30. 2S cu ft po r t unity for pro-~~aft on1 package PIT. Esp'd front olc. ..!!!¥~~-...!..... worltl•.I ud bau Income from repeat or· :11:ie~To~ort!c~:~:rr. Hlmt t. y_. c... OrigSSSO. s/s. gm. like nu refer fesaiGn&l career growth. """'·-:-,. u I com pens a· .,_ ,__ lt "-6.L • -. ..._ _ -....,.. 6lllN to ,.rn • den. Commluions are -, , ... = 545-l03'7 S4SO. bk case IZO. Ma pie tioeduriilCtraining. Ex-\~· ra...io. bf:M, ftCTGI t .. ;Mft•I lriq wlaile plidimmecliat.ty.Jfyou Non-smoker, salary .. f".:.-...__ • Refri"erator. Hotpoinl. tblw/door$40.961-6813 Please selld your re· ceUent fnn1e benefits l .::tJr-'lenite 'ro•idl•I nullent wallt -----.a-ce and Sl.100.Call: Katie, -.. ---, Wh • Waterbed w/dwrs. mir· sumt with all•"' b15' tory lnductini company paid · · •ft1 M tr ...-to Mr clients ~-·· 64C).a50 ..._ c.a-A,,,..1 t. Sl75. • · • -, delltal. fl Id d .., u tW . a career contact: sBoO:-C:. ""' .. 645-6625 r 0 r 5 "' c a b I n et s inconfidenceto: ment pot~ttat v~~~ ..,_6 , , I :.r::to wO:"f: = ~.::f&15~d SICllTAIY IJl314 J. 524 New heavy duty ~;:~200· sell·S350. .... s.t.11 auto u/cerience • OPPOITVMITT tarlllllott!J!tilldi u-. pleue caJI 8111 So. Camino El Greco. Sll,000·$13,otO New EACH E R-lnfant Whirlpool washe r" Safa/SetteeL-shapel3ft .. M•lllr ~ w::fec!e:i~:; knocks often when you te Ian M..-i • , Cale for a ccmfWeallal Green Valley, A rbona pl.ti offlce. General al-Development Program. deyer, ~· S58-0233 Beiaetwoven like new C-.1...:::. n-experienAed a·n. l&Se result.getting Dally lll"D t Liii PIT lllUnlew .... rm. BlA fic:e duties . .Call Janine' P/time. Mem ber of ConvedtOfl Oven Broiler .673-6261 -VR .. PilOC Classiried Ads to DI at r h • . r . . c SlOO cau aft 6 Dtllle divtdual if otherwise reach the Orange Coaat --· tC.-.1.. •--···· Part·Time at 540·6055, outal transdisciplinary team. . . er pm Couch & chair to match S..... llUAli&d. market. O a D I! R D g s K -.. 111ea1 y BUOY YISIT ~Bl dA1aic,r1e1 • .,..'nfl)M ~A_ed.c•11 Sp,an~~h ..... "li646-~ loose cushions Like CA.92111 hr appointment. call Phone642-5671 CUSTOlll!I SSRVICE Ir liavestlllftlt W/W~TOM ...,...,. v .. 20?,". , ou._..,,t, a : ac.1e "'xlS .ttonm1crowave new, s acrifice $150 Oaarleat54J.8909. PERSON E LlnColn 6 Hamilton 6 ~546-5780. oven, hke new. 1200. 548-3002 opeampinL.A.County. sense of bumor1 1d cm the money you can M•n ·Ceramic Cap acitor llcydts 1020 S200, Qn bdrm SS40, GW F.C.S.alsohas ftmd. m-1=~ ::s · 640-~ mherpeopleyouwill see S.C'y/0,tr...... ClAN 646-73Q3 ...-NEV~E-'-R""-U-S_E_D_·_B_u_n_ks )ell idle 1tearu 1>42-5678 beaefita, com=tttive n.ke as a Los Angeles Ex .,. "' 't ll•nladunr needs an ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• glus top dinette 122'. n ......_., i d Cl IDJ car&r opp ,Y &tt.ry Level Technician. MEN'S SCHWINN 1111• p•11t · salary.Call648-nc:.noMIST mes rnTII at on epl ror bn,ght enerJel.•c Chema'stry Phys a·"s rMltresstbox springs : ~ ... , wu-... I ................. "···: fieJd ~. Many people person interested In tn ' ' • & LADIES' 3 SPD hill Sl!O, ruu $90, Qn -•-" --1111111111111~---1 for prest11lou1 salon on the p/t circulation ternational t ravel: Eltttrooics Backaround ea.Cash 720-0363 .MORE !'770-0901 SA..._S 'AITTIMI who~ people• can sales program earn languages & young peo-Helpful. Pay,. Com-Girls Nishiki 12 Spd. Dual king sz bed SI.SO· AA/EOE/11/F ; l.lul~ t'.J-~~ie~f~~/obu~ ~u~t t_ 1!~hi~~0~!~: ll'l>re than S200 a\ week pie. Rapidly expanding mensuratt> with Ex-T~uri ng Handle Bars . amt & lge chest Oi dwrs'. : NH I la.ti ~ ,,,_,;n•• for• 3-S sharp .,.:lous. Opp'ty for ad· for working just a few European baaed student perlence. ~II for Appt. Ukt> New. Sl75. 645·4199. ni ..... stand S300 for 3"" ~ ::::;--~=-mature -1e ;'°ancelnent fOl tbe rlfiht hours eac.h day signing exchaniie proaram, 546-3C90 ~ c:;b, 720-03sJ r · !!!l!!••••!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!lf • l:x-r. newspaper display salesperson to --,. ..--r .., new Times Subscrin. 1 t · L fr T=~ BEAUTICIAN·career : ba~ k.., acc:ounu ro,· Orange Coast Daily to motivate ambitious penon.. RlchardOael ell iTons in their co ,;. oca e an 1 llDI .. :• insert a rule 8' couch• Joveseat, nub· on._ ....... baa'ntyUat ._ ~, d 11 to.l3 yrolda.Call 2-Spm. Salon, 200 Newpor t -·-' Beach. is INk ng a --·-'t z-• ... XlllCE byt.n.1••,•cnnpr.Coffee ......... • ~ Pilot. Salary, commission an exce ent ...... ties. We pay hourly per 9 0 n s t r 0 n I In v -.._. ... _,., m111icurilt for a hl1hJy benertta. Growth opportunities for person • N2-ml. ext. 343. A•U or CeaterDr .• N.B. w11e + generous com· secretarial skills but Immediate opepioas to Rtdllne. wtraltagi l pc lhi, IZ50. 720-0363 klcaled •aloa in Fashion with career ambitions. Send complete : Andna. Recept . .'Beallty Salon in mlsaiom. If you have a anxious to rapidly 15. wort pleuant eve. hrs. crank, shotcun seat, bvy ~wood bdrm set. 5 pc. Island vie. Sandy : mumetollarjiFendel,POBoxlSllO,Costa: CM.nutap,earance• neat app~arance" s ume mana&erial ::.:aon·Frt.mosellia~. dut y r ims , allo y ltiJll.shebed,liltenew, --.. Mesa CA. 92626. No phone caJls, please. An : l•lllllll-----•I friendly a must! Call kDack for talltlng with respoasibilities•hllede· ly wa1e. call 1 · bars/seat clamp. SSO or ~.673-5477 •1th•r Part time, typin1. 10 key. 2 afternoons per !.. week. Diann. Equal Opportunity Em~yer. : ~ti'!!·'· w''orL 645-40l2for !J!Pl. people talk lo UI about aling wtth vlaltln& ltU· lPM.ll!HlSl !>tit offer. 536.9832 UNUSED QUEEN BED. . .._ a 1...e1 11 I.bis 1nat p/time op. det1U from Scudlaavla TalPMOMI SAW 1n1ert i rule Boa Springs " Matt.reel • lS to per week, Cood™I O::aaiza· partmity. Call Mon·P'rl, 6 Germany. Starti•I F/Tpoeitlon open for as· Racen Wanted! Morning Coet, 1675, Sell S20G. eveeinp and possibly lional akilll, 50 WPM 95'7·Dil ext.120t. sa I a ry I U , too + aert.ive person wiOI past training 20·30 miles .... m. ......... 37.._10 ..... .__ ___ ~ $311-2032 IOOll9ll Part-time leadln& to full-time, F /C book· keeper for mortgage brokerage ln Newport Beach, 1rowth op· portunity, salary com· mensurate with ex· perience. Non·s moker preferred. Call Katie, --~IAMS IOI aettiae 6 weiabt iml bnltlt clink. Crow· inl co. with opp 'ty for aullttantlal advance· ment. 13. 75-14.SO/hr. ltartig. 145-1711. Counter Kitchen1 P rr , Ruby 't Sanawi c h Sakm. Aft 3, 845-1100 Dllve17 /SaJes Call aet... 11-ZPll. Hl=llJ'J ORANGE COAST DAILY PtLOT 330.W. IAY ST. •COSTA MHA, CA. 12f2t •• • o\H EOUAL Ol'llORTUNIN lMl'lO'l'lll • :..-..·-···-····· .... ········ ............. ~ ••••••••••••••• • IMMIDIA Tl OPBIMG • • Motor route in Prime Newport : • Beach area. Low miles; ap-e proximately 350 c us tom e r s . • e Weekday hours 2 :30-5:30pm. e Sat&Sun. Sam -7am. Minimum • amount of collectin g. For d e· • e tails call Bruce Carty o r e • Foster Ouellet at 642~1. e •••••••••••••• • ,. ...................... . . . . . I I . . ...... , . Drher nHded Im · ~ .. ....._ lar-rlaanilrl 1"m ill be. Bela~ 6 ••II 1no•d. Part· U.-'-llttt, Wld, Fri. Ml--.llkl••··' . . .. . °':!'.I!~ ~ n., ":rett o.&a 11.; ~A , . ~ ...... ~f Employer :. • •• •• ; .... ·.fl~ I e e ••• e I I 1 e It I I I It I t It I •tttlet•'t Saturday. Experience in and good speller. Ex· ·Pioi>I ho ed P 1 benefits. Send raume or telepbont> sales ex. days 760-0321 eves Rattan rnd din. set w. 4 ad buildln1 or xa~e ceUent wortlniecondi· ft.."'· n~ heop e letter to: A.S.S.t: .. 228 perience. Alf.IY io S ~nlbs old. 10 speed cane chn, szoo. Rattan tmilillpytowC::ftrllllableand. b11~·. Uonsandfrtnae oefits 0:J~YwPILOtt.; ~:..£oulcAl!?Z·1La1una ~C11atl660 acenlia . bike,woman's,Sl.SO etqere, 175. Antq . lbl .. 557-6318 Dana °"~ · _, · "ve · · 1 645-5960 .... ._. 7"" ,...., • cunitel.Y under pressure SERVICE DI RECTORY ·sell uunp fast with Dally I ...... -pr. ...,........, necessary. Salary de· UC9'TIOMIST / Is all about! PUot Want Ads. Want Ads Call 642·5678 Boy'~ J ~ · Va r s i t/ COMPL. BDRM SET pends 00 experience. 'AIT·TIMI . Sclnnnn Bike, xlnt con . Dbl bed, s pcs. SLOO. The Daily Pilot is an 9-2. Man·Frt. Won while ~ 080. Call after Spm 673-1639 equal o pportunity kids are at school. Monday thru Friday ~Ann colfee table, employer. Women and Anlftr phone, type, file. <714> 962·•74 desk and lo boy. szso minorities are en· Constructklo ltaowled(e ..... Mlhri.I021 eech.1&2-3597 courqedtoapPIY. helpful. Call 111-0llO for (, <C> ) ....................... Bdrm set, 5 ~. whit~. aibmlt appticaUons at g 'l -· MOW JSc /FT good cond. Sl75. Da front couter. Redwood 2x6 ftecltlnc. 768-1213, ev 645-0276 c...t -use the Dally Pilot 4-Z' long; also redwood Contemporary Pars9ft PW fencing. Lowest price ~Table Oak Par· ••o ._It "Fast Result" servl-J · K ~~ ._, • '"' guar. 1m or e n qutt . W/Ell't, szoo. C .... Mel&CA. directory. Your an.rtlme,646-9885. 752-91111 People who neoed peoplt> should always check the Service Directory in the service ls our New bidet w/polishe d 1•-!1!11~1111111!11111&1-- ll>ttialty. bras plumbing fixtures, MA17RESS6 pd 11100, sell~. BOX SPRING (;al1 642·5111 ext. 322 . ~2272/963· 7333 Pd f330. Sfll szso . DAJLYP!W_T __ •------,. EXECUTIVE I SECRETARY -tOCATID '" Fu-~rswe~-==-­ Big 8 CPA flfPl located In Fuhion Island is seeking a professional secretary . Typing 75 wpm_, shorthand 100. wpm, capable of working inde.,endently, well ·organized and versatile. Competitive starting salary and excellent benefits. CAIL flOI APPOllll •R 1714164~·­ IXT. 247 ICIA OMlltUNITY lliA&Mfl ------------- arr1ers for l'outes in Huntington Beach, . Fountain Valley & Newport Beach • Good Em, .. • s .. ,, Trips • &real Prfzts CALL CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT ..., .... , 842•4321 c-,. & Z yr warranty. Pillow I .. ! n 1 It IOJO Comlort.114-W • ~ ..................... . 'Vivltar Thyristor 285 "Symphony" Vlctrott flash liO. Vlvitar 75.21115 Cabinet. Xlot coocl. • Canon mount 1100, sofa: m11ltl·oolored SeeakersllOO. 673·0IZ2 W.19e\'·•.---~' >tYlllPiiS"OM-1 with Wicker: Almost new • c&-ome Body. l.4-50 MM &1• top dinin1 tabh, lAn +Olympus 75 to 1$0 ntdlin1 bucket din. 1ZoomLens6 Caae. l350. 1o¥e teat, foatstoola Ii' 640-2776 boc*c .... eo.sm '1~ •• 1141 ft'Glt free retri1 ms. Dia .................. taMe •. 1 lltllll • ..., ONO Pupa. AkC. SSS ta. Dreaser 171.. Otamp sire. M/F. Pet 6 Otltra + 1maDt1Wej • 1 h o w . P v t p t y • IS 6 IZO. Xlat Coed; 21Jt•M34Saftlpm. 1.,.aT=--·595-=------ Wlte ha Ttrritr Pups. 4 lloria1 · lluet Sell · Mondlt. AKC. DIG EA Ele1ant 1t1111ttd 19" !714) ._ ...._ 2S" clr TV 11•. DOB!RMAN POPPIES Sofa/lovtat1t, orl1. M ..... NC ........ n••·•• C9ft"1uc1 ,.~, .. Jff II o.i.u.. n mos oN. :::_ -...0:.:-• ~ ............ '"" IH. PM ...... ::= ~·.SIP ...-.. ll•M ... .... Pw•al Pl 11111 ,., •· No juk ... . .,......... ..1 .... , , .. .. ..... .. .. ....i..,.r_ .--.. .,, --· , • Cll Orangt Cout DAILY PILOT/T&;Mday, Januwy at. 1182 ' I 1' j r • • • • * Ylll lllJllll llllY Ml ruE ~1DAY JANUAHY 2h 11J8:.? OHANGE COUNTY L AL II U HNIA :.?'>CE NT S Briggs 'outraged' by high court Former state senator /lays weakening of capital punishment law : 81 DAVID IUJTZMANN °' ..... .,""' ..... Forme r State Se n. John Briggs, who promoted a 1978 initiative t h at e xpanded CalifomJa's death penalty laws, bitte rly assailed the s tate S uprem e Court to day for invalidating a key provision of the capital punishment law. ''I am outrage d that the Supreme Court once again has acted against the best interests or the people or the state of California. "I am hopeful that the U.S. Supreme Court will ove rturn this monstrous decision or that· the Legislature will take swift action in amending the law," the former Republican lawmaker s a i d t h i s m o r ni n g f rom Sa cramento. A spokesman for District Attorney Cecil Hicks said administrators in that office we re waiting this morning to receive a copy of Monday's state high court opinion to understand its fu ll and immediate effects. Justices, in a 6-1 decision, struck down a part of the law - known overall as the Briggs initiative -which requires that juries be told that convicted killers. in the penalty phases of the ir cases, could .1ave their se ntences commuted to life without the possibility of parole if they were not sentenced to death. The s tate Suprem e Court ~ade_ its ruling on the basis of the vrange County ~uperior Cou•t death sentence handed down in the case of Marcelino Ramos. The 22-year-old defendant was co nv ic te d for t~e 1979 ·execution-style slayint' of the night manager of a Taco Bell restaurant in Santa Ana. The jury in his case was told, o ve r the o bject ions of t he defense lawyer . that Ramos co u ld h ave h i s sen t e nce commuted by the governor to per mit parole if he was not sentenced to die in the California gas chamber at San Quentin. However , the state high court said that particular instn·ctioo to j urors was unfair to" the defe ndant because the governor is empowered to commute death sentences as well. · · BasicaJl y, any sentence can be modlfied by the governor,'' s aid Chrfs Stro ple, a ssistant public de fende r In O r ange Coun.ty. S t rople said the Supre me Court ruling was not unexpected. because the panel last summer solic ited the co m me n ts of lawyers around the state on how they felt about the Briggs law, named for former St ate Sen. J ohn Briggs, R-Fullerton, who a uthored the successful ballot initiative in 1978. Strople said it had been the consensus of defe nse la wyers that t h e con t r o v e r s ia l <See BR.~GGS, P age A21 Reagan .. won't seek higher taxes WASH I NGTO N (AP > - Pre sident Re aga n will tell Congress and the Ame rican people tonight that he wi ll not seek higher t axes, but that st ates and local governments will have to take over 40 to 80 tederal programs totaling $30 billion, well-placed sources said today. At the same lime, the sources said, the president will call for creation of a fund, financed in part from existing e xcise and luxury taxes and possibly from ot he r sources, that will be dis tributed to t he s tates to fi n a n ce t h e i r n e w responsibilities. Othe r congressiona l sources sa id m eanwh i l e t h at the AP-NBC Poll------------------------- Would· you prefer that President Reagan propose tax increases or federal spending cuts to reduce federal budget deficit? Tax -lncrease~17 % Spend in~ Cuts -~2 % Not I Sure 11 °/o Do you think Pre sident Reagan should propose tax increases in order to reduce the federal budget deficit? Yes -24% If Reagan seeks further budget cuts do you think the cuts should be in defense spending or in non-defense spending? Defense No Not Surell 6 % 70% Non-defens~56 % Not Sure -12% Nuke emergency over 'New York plant cooling off. after radioactive leak ONTARIO, N.Y. (AP I - Officials at the Ginna nuclear p l ant t oday can cel e d an emergency declared 26 hours earlier when a tube rupture caused an internal leak an d r eleased puffs of radioactive steam into the atmosphere. "The em ergency is over ," said Ri chard Peck, a spokesman for Rochester Gas & Electric Co .. the unit's owner. canceling the nuclear alert, the third most serious of four e m e r gency classifications. The alert classification had been designated Monday night , 10 h o u r s a ft e r a "s ite emergency." the second highest level, was declared following the rupture. •'There is still a lot of work, but the plant superintendent dei er mined 'we are not in an I " p k e m e rgency any more, ec said. He said the unit was into "the recovery phase," with workers having returned to the plant. The unit still needed to be brought to cold shutdown -a low-pressure, non-boiling state for the reactor's water system. Officials said today midmorning that the process was continuing smoothJy and the temperature was expected to be brought be low boiling, at a bout 200 degrees, "within a day." J ohn Oberlies, an RG&E vice president , said that a residual b eat r e m ova l syst e m was sta rted about 4 a .m . PST and that temperatures and pressures within the reactor continued to fall. A "site e mer gency" was decla red Monday at the plant 16 miles northeast or Rochester shortly after one or more of the 3,260 tubes in a steam generator ruptured at 6:28 a.m. PST and pressure in the reactor dropped. Status was d owngr a ded to "alert" 10 hours later . Oberlies said temperature this morning in the primary cooling system was at 329 degrees, down from an overnight reading of 340 degrees. "We are convinced the plant is sa f e," sa id R G&E Vi c e Preside nt Joh n O b e rlies. "Tb in gs al the plant are progressing very well. We know it is s table." A "site e m e r gency" was declared Monday shortly after one or more of the 3.260 tubes in t he generator ruptured at ti ::as a.m. PST and pressure ~in the reactor dropped . St atus was downgraded to "alert" 10 hours later . A "site emergency " is the ONOFRE WARNING SYSTEM TESTED -Al LEAK SHUTS DOWN VERMONT PLANT -A4 second most serious of four nu c l e ar e m e r ge n cy c lassifications . "Alert" is one step lower. "Everything worked ; that's the real story." said RG&E education specialist J'.r ank H. Orie nte r ... All the syste ms ope rated the way they were supposed to. No body was hurt or killed." O ffi cials at t he Nuclear R e gulato ry Comm ission ln Wash ingt on descr ibed the incident as minor. a lthough it was the fi rst "site emergency" s ince t h e n a tio n 's wors t <See NUCLEAR, Page AZ) NO TUT -Dr. Norman Loomis ~f Ontario, N.Y .. reads about his neighbor, the Ginna nuclear plant <background l, which was shut APWll4l 1 dpwn alfer radioactive steam was emitted into the atmospher~ I ' president would propose turning an uns pecified a mo unt of r e ve nue from t he exis t ing "windfa ll profits" tax on oil over to the states for their use in fina ncing the programs they would ta ke over . In addition. the Capitol Hill sources said , the president's recommendations would include a bout $63 billion . in reductions in benefit progra ms. not including Social Security. over fi ve years. Several sources, asking for a no n ym it y , said t h at t h«: CHANNELS 2, 4, 7, 28 programs are all now fi na nceo and administered in whole or in part by the feder al government. The sources. who were briefed by Wh i t e House officials Monday, said the president will pr opose t hat guar antees be written into law requiring that money for s pecific programs pass directly from the new fund to whatever government will administer a specific program -e liminating t he need for states to create new taxes. One source said that most or the progra ms would be proposed as se.parate pieces of legislation during the coming year a nd that the transfer or responsibilities would not be fully in place until fiscal 1984. which begins in October 1983. Another source said state, city and county leaders were told by administration officials Monday tha t they would be consulted thr o ug h out t he p ro posed transition period. T he source s a l so s a id , however, that Reagan still is expected to eliminate federal excise taxes over the long haul. meanin~ that the source or the <See REAGAN, Pate A2) . °"" """ -"'CIWlrtn ~ TOPPED Dr S<J m mv Lee ··r rowns·· former stale senator 0 (•n nis Carpenter wit h <1 tam·o·shanter durin g a roas t in ~ewport Beach Tough roast E x-solon Carpenter lambasted By TEVE MITCllF.LL Of, ... o.lly ~i.t St.ft "T his is t he m ost pitiful roast J 've e\'er taken part in." quipped 4t h District Court of Appeals J ustice Robert Gardner. And the just1c·c was right. Nearly 250 m ember s of the 552 Club. Hoag Hospital's suppo11 group. gathered at the Marriott Hote l Monda y night to roast former state Sen. Dennis Carpenter during a $100 a plate fund-raiser. T he t hree-hour lam basting of t he s ilver-ha ired . pipe-s moking former senator was la de n with bad jokes s ome ethnic in nature a nd r iddled wit h riba ld re membrances of the form er F BI agent. And a ll t he wh ile . Carpenter sat s miling at the dais. puffing on his pipe a nd scribbling down notes for his eventual re buttal .. He was pl'Oud of his military career:· s aid Judge Gardner of Carpenter ·s 1946-1948 st int in t he service ··Of course those were not t he most terrifying years in the history of the Unite d States ... Referrin g to his years as a federal agent. Gardner said. "He was in the F BI. Bi g deal. Every g uy with a low dra ft number went into the F BI. .. And as to Carpenter's several marriages. the judge quipped. ··Dennis Carpenter has had more fa milies than Charlie Ma nson .·· Others were not so kind. Tom Riley s aid h(• was pleased to be at a function CStt Ex-Solon, Page A2> OCTD to levy transport tax? Propo$al f or needed funds.approved; Now up to voter For the fi rst time, the Orange Co u n t y T r a n spo rtation Com mission has approved in con cept a pro posa l to seek legislation which could empower i t lo levy a cou n tywide transportation tax, if approved by voters. T h e action is ai m ed at providing the money needed to p ay r o r t h e c ount y 's Boyce waives jury trial on escape rap By The Associated Press Con vi ct ed sp y Christopher Boyce made a brie f cour t appe ar a n ce t oda y in Los Ange les, a n d his attorney waived hJs right to a jury trial on charges of prison escape. Boyce, who has been mute at _previous court-appear.an~ remained silent today while hJs attorney told U.S. District Judge Lawr e nce Lydick tha t he preferred to proceed without a jury. However , confus ion arose w h e n attorney Wi ll ia m Dougherty of Tustin said he wished to "stipulate to the facts" of Boyce's escape -a procedure which might make a trial unnecessary. However, Dougherty reiterated Boyce is pleading innocent to the char1e. Boyce detailed his escape in interviews with New York Times reporter Robert. Lindsey, whose book on Boyce, "The Falcon and the Snowman," ls betn1 made lnto a movte. Lydick did not tmmedia\ely rule· on Doupert.y'a requeet, and attorneya took a rece11 to confer on their further 1trate1Y. .. transportation requirements into the next century. A pp·roved un a n i m o u s ly M o nd ay by t h e f ive transportation commissioners. the proposal is one that often has been publicly discussed by the panel. It was adopted, with little discussion. as one component or t h e co m missio n 's 1 9 82 legislative program. Also. the panel approved a re lated proposal aimed at. m o difyi n g the Cal ifor ni a Cons titution to p e rmit the imposition of certain local taxes with the approval of a majority, rather than two-thirds or the voters. Although lhe pa nel approved l h e concept o f levying a trans portation tax, no specific taxing proposal bas been settJed up o n . ex pl a i n e d Na nc y Coss -F i t z wat er, t h e co mmiss ion 's go ve rn m ent affairs coordinator. She called the commission's wi~ · · it_oacLocusLit.roke.'..' approach, a nd said a m ore detai le d tax p r o p osal is f o r t h co ming . M rs . Coss-Fitzwater s aid a financial study to be completed in Au~ust Radioactive 8pill reported in lab BERKELEY (APl -fwo University of California studenu we re exposed to low levels ol radio activity w h e n they a cci d e ntall y b r o ke the p r o t ective coverin g on I radioactive subs tan ce In a laboratory, unJveralt.y omcta11 say. . Althoueh ll'acet ol the lron·55 material fell to the lab floor, nobody wu contaminated and monltorina deYic" showed the leak wu very minor. would go a long way in defuling the county's financial needs. A l r e ad y , co u n ty tra ns p or t ation p la n ners estimate close to $20.4 billion is needed to pay for the county's tra nsportation needs t hrough 1995. But st at e and fe deral doll ars for transportation will fall rar short of the projected cost and locally generated m o ney will be n eed e d t o complete the program , she said. Mrs. Coss-Fitzwater s aid the county's trans portation needs most proba bly will requime a r ange of taxes to rais e the needed money. She also pointed out that the Los Angeles t rans portation com mission already has t he authority to levy such taxes. 111111 CUil 1111111 Chance of s howers 20 percent Wednesd ay. Lows toni_ghH2"iotan~a1 coast. Highs Wednesday 58 at' beaches, 65 int~. liSlll TIUY A Florido t00man began writing to frindl. ttloliw• and chUdmt '" lt17 ~ ahe knew kida lilie to g«t mail. N"'° the wriU• to 2,000 "pna pall." Page Al. 111{1 ------···----------------- "a • • • • • °'"!! OCNlt DAlk Y Pk.OT/Tunday, J•nuary 28, 1182 ,H~avy _rains pose threat in Northwest NEW YORK . , .... __________ _.,. rf PA . • tir--------~--~ ~':;r HREAT -Map locates 0 Pntarlo, N.Y .. where steam n•.lubc ruptured in nuclear q power plant. P.l ,"{ h From Page A 1 !NUCLEAR ••• (' com merciaJ ncltlear accidmt Ill 51l_hree Mile Island •ear 1Jiarrlsburg, Pa., in Mareb 11'11. _., "It might be expensive for tM pf.Perator to clean up, b41t a. 0"/-e r m s o f p u b 1i c b e alt II ,;fonsequences, it was not v.try .,#erious," said Harold R. Denten, .,,,. ......... ...... • Tiit P1clfte Nortbwnt wu betttred by wtnda up to IO mph ... ram.._ Un1teMCI to. brine more floodtnc ud mudalidtl, u Mldw...,,.n IUlftrtd th.roucb more tnow and 1ub1tro t•m&Mr•tures. A anowstona Monday dumped three incbel ol 100w on Chleaio. and 1 dustin.I of anow on much of the mll-Atlantlc eoaat compounded travelers • problem• on icy hl1hway1. (Related photo Pase 82> Snow fell on the upper Oblo Valle7, t-.e eaatern abore of Lake Midlilan and the IOUtbem •bores of Lake Erie and Ontario. Temperatures dipped well below &ero from North Dakota Jlarou1b the upper lliaaisaippl Valley. "It's kind of an endless ~attle," said Vicki Jacobs, a aberllf's dtspatcber ln Potter C..ty in eastern South Dakota, •bere blowinl mow was closing · lltci.ways just behind the plows. 8ix residents of Garibaldi in Dtrther• Oregon wet&. lhe agency's director of nudeer t feactor regulation. bl T h e' 4 7 0 · m e g a w a t t :>1pressurized-water reactor, .which opened in 1969, is on Lai.it 1.Pntario. About 45,000 people live. ~ twithin 10 miles of the plant. tu 0 b e r l i e s e m p h a s i z e d 'KMonday 's r e leases of :),Cadfoactivity were minor, but n noted that five workers had llillen · :. evanated Moeday night In cue UMre was more flooding. About 100 residents were evacuated dw'tnl the weekend because of pgodiag a.It.er llaeavy ralns, said state· poliee tropper Stephen exposed to trace levels of 9·rradiation. All went home after 5'fShowering or wiping off witb a !)l<!lOth. s1 Radiation was released in a s eries of five-second puffs vitotaling three minutes within a tiPne-hour period following the J1tube rupture , officials said. (l\RG&E continued to check for ztradiation outside the plant, but otOberlies said late Monday: "We are convinced there are no health problems." The maximum radiation detected was 3 millirems at the plant boundary. the utility said. Exposure to a chest X-ray ls a bout 20 millirems, and a dose o f 60 0,000 mill i rems is considered lethal. ~~ From Page A 1 • • • ·<bj n s truction to jurora o n ·'rlcommutation of sentences was • J'>' ·constitutionally defective." Gm stations probed/or bad nozzles A crackdown on service station owners with defective recovery nozzles bas resulted in the lockup of 28 pumps in Oranie County. Tbe noules were ordered shut last week by South Coast Air Quality Management District workers during an inspection of 8 ,000 service stations in Southern California. By Monday morning more than 100 pumps bad been ordered shut in Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino counties. No exact fil-.ree were available, said Air Q u a 1 it Y• s po II es m an Jeff Schenkel. Wectnesday was the first day tlaat inspectors could issue criminal eitatlons to service atation owners who fail to comply with re«(Uests to repair defective llOUlel, Schenkel said. ",1< The assistant public defend« l!l ls aid lawyers also believed tile llsjury instruction "unnece .. tUJ unde r cut" the chance of a Service station owners who l) convicted killer being l'V9 1 attempt to use maUun~tionin1 ')~life sentence without possi~ ...,..ps onlel'ff for repair could ,•for parole. t ,,.,, fau fines up to Sl,000, said CI n the penalty pbue of'-'.~ ~~ntel. X'capital case a jury cu dadd• ~LSaMe 1979 the recovery 'f neithe r to se~d the defenddt ..,_tj .. 119 laave been required in au "idSan Quentin's de ath row er -.n a.,Calltornilt service stations. ~him the life sentence widlMt _. Ail'Cluatity officials claim that parole.> , ti!• aoutes have successfully 1rn The only justice who d' ~ , ~l,, ~ m o v e d 6 5 t o n s o f 1> tin the Supreme Court's ..... h ~ecarbeaia fNID the air daily 6t Monday was Mat b'rtr o, aM be!f recoter 77,000 1aUons !I' To briner. who said as maay aa 'OD 1asolitle dally. 1fi90 death sentences in all ceuld Schenkel said that the r •. be reversed under the ruU.g. iupectors a.igned to Orange, Pi ' This was assuming that tbe San Bema_nMno •• ~ Angeles instruction was given to juries ia a!l~ Riverside coun~es hope to _all capital cases since the Brig15 vtsit a total of 80slallons a day. law was passed by voten in By Thursday~ the last day 1978, Tobriner said. figures were available, about 300 Strople, however, said some calle.rs bad phoned a . newly judges, mindful that proviaiofts established phone lane_ to of the Briggs law would net complain about defective survive a constitutional test, n<>1zles In their area. The toU refrained from telling jurort free number is (800) 242-4020. a bout commutation of life sentences without parole: Tax share for counties? SACRAMENTO <AP> - California's county supervisors want the state to guarantee them a portion of some state tax -a proposal that could exempt them from future budget cuts. Representatives of the Co.nt7 S upervisors Association of Ca 1 irornia said at a news conference Monday that they are working on legislation for a "stable funding source" lbr county governments, repladftt year-by-year approprlatlom by the Legislature. · CSAC also got a repl7 from .. state to a suit by counties Oftf' costs of enforcing 23 new ..... The state response ddiell' ._. tbe ta • ncludint aew Jt1 terms for drunken drl...,, would require any new • expanded county aervices. . Band member slain outside Santa Ana bar A 32-year-old member of a mariachi band was shot and killed Monday night in the parlcin& k»t of a Santa Ana bar. Santa Ana police reported the victim, whose name was being withheld pending notification of kin, wu accosted as he parked hia ear at the Mazatlan Bar, 3417 W. 5th St., where he was to perform. Before Ille could leave the car. a snan appreached the driver's· ,16de and, wt.Wing a shot1uo. demantlld lll09ey, accordin1 to wttneaea. They uid the victim reached Into lllt poca.t for bis wallet, but was .-ln tM face before he ewa. Mad owr any caab. Two .... pe1•111 lllH:he-car were not ~Nill. A police apokeaman said they an Mlld:a1 a man in bll 20a. 09'ANGE COAST .· 11ily Piiat ca...-... ... .,.,, .. , n--...n .. ..., ., '"' .... ......, I White. "We're just waiting to see tr the rain we're 1eiUn1 now la 1oin1 to brinl the water back up," Wblt. aa.kl. "We're ktepln1 a cloae eye on It.'· State police aald travel waa still limited or blocked on $20 Inillion collected for center The Orange County Music Center reeeived $20.6 mllllon in contributions las t year, including more than $2 million ln cash, it was a nnounced Monday. The contributions of cash and pledges pushed the music center over the halfway mark toward Its $40 million construction goal and will enable the performing arts center to collect two major cash gifts. Calling 1981 "a banner year for fWld-raising," music center chairman Henry Segerstrom, s aid that the cash contributions far ex<:eeded the James Irvine- Foundation's nritching fund challenge. Last July the foundation contributed $3 million to the Costa Mesa performing arts center, with the first $1 million contingent on the ability to raise another $1 million in cash by Dec. 31. Also, the Segerstrom family's $6 million pledge was contingent in part on the ability to raise $1 .8 million during the year. "The cash commitments from individuals, corporations and f oundations were mos t gratifying," said Segerstrom. , Segerstrom said that one or the priorities in 1982 will be meeting the second part of the Irvine Foundation's challenge, which calls for receiving another Sl million this year if $3 million in donations is raised. When completed in 1985 the main 3,000 seat theater will be only the third in the nation capable of providing theater, symphony. opera and ballet , according to officials. A second 1,000-seat theater is also planned. In addition to rai sing fund s for the construction of both theaters, officials have also been working to raise $19 million in endowment funds. From Page A1 REAGAN ••• transition funds would dry up over several years. State and lt>cal governments would then have to come up with more and more money on their own to finance the programs, presumably by reimposing at the state level the excise taxes that would be abolished on the federal level. A wide variety of excise taxes, including those on alcoholic beverages, tobacco, gasoline. telephone service, tires, jewelry and other luxury items, could be involved. Although most sources spoke of 40 programs being turned back, others said as many as 80 are involved in the president's proposal. However , the difference was believed to be largely a matter of definition - •whether overall programs or each of their individual parts are being referred to. This morning. Reagan met with Republican congressional leaden at the White House to begin rounding up the help be will need to gain Capitol Hill approval for the proposals he will outline in his State of the Union address tonight. The speech, to a joint session of Congress, will be nationally broadcast at 6 p. m. PST. Senate Majority Leader Howard H. Baker Jr., R-Tenn., said after this morning's meeting that as a result of the president's plan, "the poor of this country will be better off than under t-he existing hod1e-podge" of programs. He would not explain how this would occur. · Baker said that while federal rosrama-would be tunafelTed to lower levels of government, "we're goin1 to see certain protectiona. '' Stales, be said, "will end up . . . at least as well off" as under current fundlnt plans, and "Ill have ·•enhanced llexiblllty'' in how they can apend revenues dispatched by tb4: federal aovemment. ~ Trade eyed TOKYO CAP> -Prime llinlater 7.eako Su1ukl, ln bl1 flnt policy ~b of da, bu pledled to opeo tbe Ja,_ mariet to ••H lntenaUonal trade friction and bead off proteetlonlat action by the Uatted StatH 1nd Europe. Suauki •PGk• at ltle opea1n1 aeuioa ot tbe lab utlanal Dlet or Parliament llondaJ. aectlona or U.S. 101 alon1 the coast and on U.S. 30 Hit of Aatotla because of mudslides or because &ecUona of the hl1hway bad been wuhed out. In Eastern Oregon, atate police ln La Grande aald winda gustlna u hillh as 60 mpb were From PageA1 recorded Monday nllhl on a atate Kllhway Department wind 1aure ld'.Ladd Canyon, east ol La Grinde. • Moat raver 1eve11 were dropplnc ln western WaahlnlloO · 1tal6 alter weekend ralna added. to the nmoff from meltln1 aoow EX-SOLON ROASTED • • • honori.ng "m y good and longtime friend Pa ul Carpenter. re f ernng to the c urrent Democratic state Senator fro m Cypress. He said the forme r Army man "won the good conduct medal at the Ba lboa P avilion and the s harpshoot ing medal at the Fun Zone. "I'm glad he wasn 't a Ma rine ." said Riley. himself a retired Leatherneck general. Newport Beach Mayor Jackie Heathe r s aid that. frankly, she couldn't believe Hoag Hos pital was honoring Carpenter. "You set back health in Irvine 20 year s." she said of his past efforts to establish a competing hospita l in that c ity. Carpenter's law partner. Stuart Spencer. continued tbe barb session by bring ing up the cattle ranche r 's childhood: "Denny was not a pretty child ." Spencer began . "When he was 4. his mother took him on a train. One of the passengers told her. ·Madam. that's the ugliest child I ever s aw.· .. Dennis' mothe r complained to a conductor about the insult, Spencer said. and the under standing conductor a pologize d and offered he r free passage for the remainder of the train trip. "And he re·s a banana for you r m onkey ... the conQuctor purportedly said. nad jokes. -One roaster s aid Carpenter once prepared a report for the governor. whic h began. ··w e h a ve not located the light at the end of the tunne l. but we do believe we have located the tunnel. .. Basketball buddy David Bake r . a Newport Beach a ttorney and unsuccessful Irvine council candidate · "When we played bas ketba ll I didn't know if Billy Barty ha~ gained 20 pounds or if it was the Pills bury doughboy oil the court. .. -Dr. Sammy Lee. a Korean ear doctor and former Olympic d fvi ng champion. presented Carpenter with a tam-o -shanter and a ha lf dozen bawdy one-liners. Hut the s miling recipie nt of the insults had an o pportunity to respond to his attackers A sampling: On Jackie Heather: "She has set the ERA back ai least 20 years . "She's a lso running for re -election. I say. let your conscience be your guide. On Judge Gardne r : .. 1t·s a n easy cop-o ut to s it on the bench when you're a crummy lawyer. But he's 70 year s o ld. I hope I'm in bette r shape than you appear to be ... On Sammy Lee: "He·s the s mallest ear doctor in the United S~ates. He can personally go inside the ear with his tools and all ... Of Paul Salata. em cee of the evening's roast. "He is the least articulate and least educated m an in Newport Beach.·· Budget 'trimming' must for recovery WASHINGTON (AP ) - Federal Reserve chairman Paul Volcker said today the nation's economic recovery could be threatened if the R eagan administration and Congress fail to complement the board's tight-credit policies by trimming the federal budget deficit. ··An inaCiequate balance in policies can add to financ~al s tress ," with se ver e consequences for homebuilders, s ma II business es and others badly hurt by high interest rates, Vo1cker said. Vo lc ke r co mmented in testimony b e for e the congressional Joint Economic Committee. Many have blamed the high interest rates of the past two years on the Federal Reserve's policy of keeping a tight-rein on the nation's supply of money, whic h makes it difficult and expensive to borrow money to buy goods to finance product.ion. Volcker has said repeatedly that the policies are necessary to keep inflation from rising ever higher. He said today that "price expectations have calmed and there is some evidence that the underlying trend of costs is slowing." But he also said, "We know there is a deep-seated public ins tinct associating large deficits with inflation." . \I/hen you-re re•dy to stop looking. Roi ex. In the Ca1cade1, but aome mountain hl1bway1 were blocked by 1now1lldea. There waa a flood warnln1 on the ltlwba River weal of Port An1elea on lbe O lympic Peninaula becauae of rain ln the mount.alnl . Santa Ana' wins round on filins SAN FRANCISCO (AP> - Santa Ana city councilmen dldn 't violate copyright laws when they copied a film shown In an adult movie theater in efforts to close the business down, a federat appeals court says. The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Monday that the councilmen had made "fair use" or the material under the law. But it disagreed with the jury's finding that a rum's obscenity can pe used as a defense against a copyright infringement claim. ln e.fforts to obtain evidence to bac k an anti-pornography ordinance, a city council agent visited the Mitchell Brothers' Theater in Santa Ana and took photographs every few seconds of five films while a recorder taped their entire soundtracks. The Mitchell brothers, James and Artie -along with several of their corporations -filed suit against Councilmen Gordon Bricken, James Ward, David Brandt and David Ortiz, and their special attorney. James Clancy. Clancy helped draft a public nuisance abatement ordinance in early 1976 aimed at ridding t he city of its adult movie theaters. The ordinance. which declared cinematic depictions of som e sexual acts to be a nuisance, was adopted. On Oct. ·26, · 1976, the city declared Mitchell Brothers ' theater lo be a nuisance for exhibiting adult films and all lice nses and permits wer e revoked. DC-10 pilot knew crash inevitable BOSTON CAP> -The pilot of a World Airways DC-10 jetliner that slid oCf a slick runway into Boston Harbor has told investigators that as he landed he cried out to the control tower, ··w e·re gcJing off the end." The World Airways jet's approach to Logan International Airport had been normal. "but h e <p ilot P et er Langley ) realized the runway was slick when the aircraft wasn't braking ,·· s aid R o bert Buckhorn, spokesman for the National Transportation Safety · Board. There were no fatalities and no serious injuries among the 196 passengers and 12 crew members, although three people remained hospitalized today. "He found he wasn't slowing when he used reverse thrust and braking. As be approached the end of the runway. he turned to ·the left to avoid hitting the runway lights ... The aircraft continued to move at a high rate of speed," Buckhorn said. He said the speed was about 50 knots, or SS mph. E~ryorll"wants a Rolex Oyster. A ladyOate. 14 karat yellow 9.old and stainless steel, S1,475. B. Mans Pe~tual Date, 14 karat yellow gold and stainless steel, s1 .750. C. lady·s Perpetual Date, stalntess steel. 5845. SLAVIC K'S ""'.....,.,!Ira tt17 Whttt dtt btsr sWYprists bt.gin. 'llhiln ...... (714) ....... ~ lled\ --~ ... .__.,.,Dllgs•LAl\111g9 • I ............. HEAA~T GI~ -Actress Faye Dunaway, who opened Monda)'. mght m t~e Br~adway production ··The Curse of An Achi!1g ~eart .. r ece1yes a heart pendant from friend ~erry .o Nelli during a dinner in New York following the f1rst-mght performance. Artist Miro geu pacemaker Spanish artist Joan Miro returned to bis home in the Balearic Is lands after being discharged from a Palma clinic whet'e he bad a heart pace maker implan\ed, doctors said. The sale or 400 acres of orange and olive groves in Kern County t o a Los Angeles partnership for $1.48 million has been approved at auction by U.S . Dis trict Judge Leland C. Nielsen in Sao Diego. The land was acquired by th e Fed e ral Depo sit Insurance Corp. as receiver for United States National Bank, which was declared Cartoonist Edward Koren, creator or the furry figures that dress and s peak as hum a n s, ha s s ued a Prov ide n ce r estaurant. c l a imin g it u sed his chara c t e r s without permission. The s uit filed in U.S. They said Miro, 89, was in satisfactory condition. The pacemaker, which regulates the beat or the heart through e le ctrical impulses. was implanted Jan. 17. insolvent by the controller or the currency in November 1973. Nielsen approved the sale t o the Elowitz Oliv a r -R o ach -Sas low Management Group. The sale proceeds will be used to pay off some of the ba nk 's liabilities in the continuing liquidation or financier C. Amllolt Smith's former holdings. District Court in Providence seeks a court order barring Noah's Arcade from using the cartoon characters on its s igns , menu s or advertisements and seeks the portion or restaurant profits that an be attributed to the drawings. Dr. J•llH a. KrenH1 dean ol ttie UC School or Medlclne, wu named H flft.b• c hancellor of the uc.san Franclaco c1&mpus. Krevana, 57, wH appointed to the potl at a aalary ot $72,500 by UC pre1ldent DHld 8. Saxon. Saxon. who made the 1&nnouncement at a meeting ot the Board of Re1e nts. Issued a statement sayine Krevans provided strong leadership In the recruitment of mlnorlty a nd women students and stren1thened community -related programs. Mayor Edward I . Koda was flying home from a 10-day vacation in Spain to face a newspaper-inspired attempt lo draft him for the goverhor's race. The mayor 's n e ws secretary, Tom Goldstein, said that just before the m ayor left for Spain he made it clear at a news conference that he was not interested in running for governor. Koch has said repreatedly that he will not run for any office other than mayor. • However , a New York Post editorial s aid Monday th?t "New York City needs him, but so does New York State." FACES DRAFT ? Ne w Y or k C it v Mayo r E dward i. Koch is facing a n a tt e mpt by a newspa per to draft him for New York's governor rare. Koch has said repeated!~· he is not interested . Slwwers predicted Coastal ChanG• o1 -... w.-soay 2t percent. co.u1derable <loudlnen tllrougll-y. coestal '°"" ~. 1n1-n. Coutal •lligll SI, Inland•} W.tter S4~ Elsewr.re, tout-u ly winds S lo 10 _,..b lonlQ!lt. WeSlerly s-1 I to l fut. Mo1lly cloudy thro11911 tonight wllll <llano of drlu le In northern w.teri u.~. summary Rain fell loclar on Ille already 509QY Nor1hwesl, -re rains - Extended forecast SOUTH E RN CALI FORNI A COASTAL ANO MOUNTAIN AREAS -Tllursday tllrougll Saturday· Con•lderable <loucllneu T""rS4ay becoming feir latfr In pef'lod. HI~ Tllursday "IO u In <OHt.11 a reH and 40I In ..-.;,,, Warming 4 Ill I C1e9rffS ln r In Ille pef'lod. L-1 47 to SS c-1 Mellom, -JOI and IOwer ~In mo....taln1o. Smog Tiie SoYlll Coa\I Air Quallty Mana .. ...,.. Oistrkt PA<lk i.d QOOd air q.,.llly fOr ail ••••• for today. TM Pollutant SI-I'd Index was u~ted to be 42, Ille AOMO wkl. ~ ... -.... ·16 .32 22 s -.1 a ... , , ~.o•• 'IJ o .• 44 34 .01 10 49 tnelllng snow c-flOOllS dyrlnt -----------Ille Wffk-, and ......, blanlP.eted FalrbanilS Harttonl Helena H-IYIY Houston lndnaplls J acUnvlle Jl~HY ken1 City Las V99aS 40 2t ,. 70 SPOl<ane l YCIOn TYIH 14 • Walfllf111(n Wlclllla 47 26 ,. 11 01 41 20 m11<ll of lht mlO.Allanlk coast, Ille T ~~~LC:!:. River valley end Ille. emperatures 74 .. 24 ·2 °' ., ..., HI La ~p WHlll.._,.,,, C~ ,,_,.laiM were 1111 wllll -Iller MIOWSIO<m •nd some mountain ro•d' wer~ C'-<!. SIP.les were c loudy over Ille nor111ern Plateau -Ille nonllern -central Roo!H loday, and lelr s-les p"'vlllled acr-Ille rfll of IN nallon. -re snow was forecast lawr In Ille day over lfle lower Great L.altes - Offr Mont-. wllere II was expected lo tum lo rain. ~was U PKled to rucll from soutll-Montana 10 nortllem UIMI, a<l'Olf Ille norttwm plateaY, and from Washington llWOU911 noftllenl California. Sunny lilies '"ff forecast for m11<11 of Ille fftl ol Ille nation. Temperatwes early toc»y ranged from minus U deOrffs In G lens Fall1, N. Y ., lo 10 Ink~ We$!, Fla . California ..., ..... _, . ........... Albany Albvque AmarlllO Anc:llor- A$Mvllle Atlanta Atlante Cit)' I al II more lllrmlngtwn lllft'larck lloiM Boston Ir-wile luffelO Cllarl1tn SC Chorlst11WV c,...,._ Clllce90 C Inc: lllMll c ...... _ c~ O.l·FtWtll Denver Des Moines Detroit 0..llltll El Paso NI Le Pre. ,, 2 6l 21 SI H • .7 SO IS SI 17 u IJ 12 I .OS St 24 . ~ 40 J4 .01 to ' tO ., 17 12 Jl2 SI 4 Little Rock Loul1ville Mempttls Miami MllwaYk• MP!s-St.P Na.iowllle -Or.._ NewY0<1t Norlolk OIP.la Cllv Oma Ila Orlando PtllieCIPlll• .._..,. JI • ,,. 45 • pm_._. .Of P11•nd,,,,. .11 Pt•-.°"' .OS RN!dClty ,tt Aono 10 .. " ·2 15 ·• 1' ·S ,, 2' 4A 3a 11 .7 17 • 4 •• '7 JI Rk-S.llLob S.ottl• SI U...ls SI P· T •"'IN SI Ste M¥le 21 ·S JO • .. 37 $6 ,. 34 • so 21 H SI II _. J ·II SI 11 7S 4t 24 17 Jt 24 S3 ,. 26 l 7) 47 " 12 7' 41 14 , ,. ·I• S4 " 42 " 57 41 u 21 41 32 SI 4J 32 4 11 so II -11 SURf RIPORT We're Listening ••• CALl~llNIA ........ Ii.id .. " Blyllle SS m e........ .. m FrHno St 41 Lancaster .. m LOI A"90I" 71 50 01 Mary1vllle 4' m Monterey O m NHclles .. m Oakland SI n PalO Rotiles .. 4S 07 R9d llluH 44 41 11 Redw-City S1 U Sa< r arn«110 41 42 Sallnas 5' 41 San oi..o •7 St San Francisco SI SI' CM CM Santa llarllera •2 m SloOton SJ 4t ..., Tllermal 11 m . ll•fll-" J'I lllOltar .. 20 10 llly111e 73 41 · C•lallna 6' 50 .SI LOfl9 Beach .. 44 Monrovia 7S 4J Ml Wiison U U HeWPOrt Bffcll U 44 Ontario 10 '1 Palm SprlnQS 11 oil Pasadena 11 36 Rlver\ide .. 0 San Bernardi,.. 10 42 San Gabriel 14 43 SanJoH •• 31 ' Senta Ana 12 o Senta Crvt •·> 4l Talloe ValleY S7 IJ IideA TOOAY •~Pm. ~.7 10.54 p.m. 4.0 WaDHHOAY l'lr•t t-. >:411 a.m. 2.0 l'lrsl llloh t :U a.m. &.• Se<Ofld iow 4:5' p.m. ~.s So<-lllQll 11:2'p.m. 4,1 Still t tll S: 11 p,m., rite• WodMMSoy6:Sla m. What do you like about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like., Call the number below and your mesaue wlll be recorded· transcribed and dellvtTed to the appropriate editor. ' The aam,e 24·hour answertn1 service may be used to record let. ters ,to the editor on any topic. 'Mall box contributor• must Include their name and telephone number tor verification. No circulation calls, please. . Tell us what's on your ·mind. J Or•noe Cout DAILY PILOTtrueldey. Jenu1ry 28, 1982 ·Onofre smens lested Nuke warning system 'fired off' in permit procedure By DAVID KUTZMANN O( .. Ooltyl't ........ "II aoundl like Impending doom." -Voice ol a byatHder Actually, it sounded a bit like Ontario, N.Y. Or lt s h o uld hav e , if operat-0n of the nuclear power station there had activate~ their e mergency wa rning syste m M o nday f o ll o w i n g th e declaration of an emergency. In Ontario, the reactor was shut down after a steam tube ruptured, releasing radioactive s t e am into the atmosphere , according to federal offi cials Al San Onofre a bout 3.000 miles away, the ~arning sirens wailed over the two new 1,100 megawatt reactors which await licensing from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. But it was only pract ice. To receive operating permits for its $3.3 billion coastal r eactors, Southern California Edison Co. m usl demonstrate tha~. its own wa rning system -'on the plant \ site and in the community functions properly. So Edison technicians "fired off'" the. three rotating sirens Mo nday that st and on the Southern Ca,lifornia reactor grounds three miles south of San Clemente, It was the first part of a week-long effort to test the effectiveness or the utility's $2 million system. "If there is a n emergency at the station. in which we felt it was necessa r y to al e rt the public. we would fire orr the s irens al that time." said James Dubois. Edison's super visor of techn ical support se rvices . · Wheb a ct ivated in a real c r is is, .\t he s ir ens would tell residents within 10 miles of the San Onofre pl ant s ite t.o tune in to r a di o a nd t ele vi s io n o.lly ~ .... '"'" -SOUNDING OFF This is on e of 40 s ire ns locat ed within th e JO -mil e em ergency pla nning zone a t San Onofre nuclear power plant . Tests began Mondav on warning syste m . • broadcasts to learn what they should' do -evacuate the area or take shelter. During Monday's incident at the nuclea r powe r station in New York state , utility officials declared a "s ite emergency," one s tep below a full "general emergency ... U the same type of incident occurred at San Onofre, Edilon officials said the three sirens ob the plant site would have been sounded. In all, there are 40 airena within the lO·mlle emer1ency planning zone which encompaases the plant. About 100,000 people Jive in this area. which includes the communities of San Cle mente, San Juan Capistrano, Capistrano Beach a nd Dan a Point. Camp Pendleton also is within this are a . In a general e mergency, all sirens could be activated. C ritics who have opposed licensing for newly built 'Wlit.I 2 and 3 a t S an Onofre have maintained that emer1ency planning efforts are inadequate. During fede ral licensing hearings held in Anaheim last s um m e r . th ese opponents claimed that m a ny residents would probably not be able to hear the sirens from within their homes or inside noisy placu like supermarkets. Dubois . as ked about this Monday, said the tests would help verify the output of the sirens and the range they cover. He s aid utility personnel would take measurements following the tests to find out how well the s irens could be heard. A community response s urvey also will be taken Friday. Bystanders who listened t.o the test Monday described the sirens as sounding "eerie" and like a signal of "impending doom." The sirens generate a steady signal that will last for about three t.o five minutes during the tests this week. First, individual sirens and then groups of s1rens will be t~ted. By Friday. all 40 sirens will be set off. Freeway express system eyed Bus proposal covers Orange, Los Angeles counties By iEFF ADLER Of tlle .,.. ........ SUft A regi o n a l p ubli c tr a n s port a ti o n sy s t e m e ncompassing both Or a nge County and m etropolit an Los Angeles within two years - hard to beHeve, you say? A group c alling i tself the So uth e rn Ca l i f or ni a Tr a n s p o rt a ti o n A c tio n Committee says it can happen. Their plan Freeway Express T ransit -is no pie-in-the-sky, the members s ay. Speaking to members of the Orange County Transportation Commission Monday, David Gr ayson, a m e mbe r or the committee's boa rd or trustees , outlined the Freeway Express Tra nsit proposa l. Grayson said a bus system se r ving Orange, Los Angeles. Riverside. San Bernardino and Ve ntura coun t ies could be es tablished on 720 miles of existing freeways in the five counties. T he syste m would provide 24 -hour e xpre s s pas s en ger service lo nearly all points in Southern California through a network of 160 loca l transfer stations and 32 major transfer s lations j c lus te r e d around important regional centers. F a res would r e flect the distance a p1assenge r had tra veled and the tim e of day. During peak periods . a commuter might only have to wait 15 minutes for a bus. according to the propos al. ··Freeway E xpress Transit w o uld capita lize o n t h e freeway's grid-like s tructure. enlfbllng a more flexible and comprehensive transit service. By offering connecting services all along the freeway grid, Freeway Express Transit will efficiently serve communities throughout our r e gion," the committee's brochure explains. Cost of the proposed regional system would be $688 million through the firs t fi ve years and $77 million in annual operating costs . documents presented to the trans portation committee reveal. Grayson said the proposal was r e ally an extens ion of the freeway bus service already provided in several areas. The Orange County Transit District, the Southern California Rapid Transit District and the Santa Monica MunicipaJ Bus Lines all provide such service. Freeway Express Transit, it is envisioned, would expand these existing express bus services to the whole region. Grayson said that with 200 new buses. existing freeway transit ope rations could be expanded lo the s e ven-day, 24-hour system plan. He asked trans p ortation co mmittee members to cooperate with other counties to bring a bout implementation of the proposal and to participate in detailed studies aimed at improving re gio na l trans it service. Storekeeper Mark Page is wearing our classic lightweight poplin jacket with red tartan plaid lining, enabling it to be worn comfortably for all - seasons. It is water and stain resistant, and has· a solid brass zipper. A practical garment, available in tan, navy, red, and green. A store that offe rs a selection of fine traditional sports~ar for men, women, and boys ... 1028 Irvine. Newport Beach. C•lifomia. Phone 642-7061 ' H '-' Orange COMt DAtl Y PtlC rtrue.day, January 29. 1882 ' rnillUUUJ~ React~shut~kak America attacked by Pole Radiation at Vermont plant said at low level WARSAW, Poland <AP) - Gen. Wojciech J a ruzelskl sot Parliament's approv•I of martlaJ l•w after declaring tut military control or Industry will contlnue Indefinitely rtnd some civil liberties may be restored by the end of February. VERNON, Vt. (AP) -Workers •t the Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant tod•y be1.n lookin1 for the source or radio9ctive steam th•t leaked into an enclosed area of the plant, promptinl a reactor shutdown. The reactor stopped producin1 power •round 9 p.m. Mond•Y ni1ht, said spokesman Steve Stoll. Plant officials had noticed a "wisp of steam" leaking from a moisture-separation system a few days .ago, Stoll said, and ordered the shutdown •fter control room operators found the leak had worsened. The leak did not pose any immedi•te health and safety problems, but the reactor had to be ahut down in order to track the steam leak to its source. he said. "We're not wearing masks or anything, we don't have to suit up," said Stoll. "It's a low level of radiation, and it Is enclosed in the turbine building." Sam Collins, a Nuclear Regulatory Commission inspector . based at the Vernon facility said the leak had not yet reached the level at whi~h the NRC would require the shutdown of the 540-megawatt reactor. "It is the plant's decision to go off line at this time," Collins said. The shutdown came in bitter cold weather and officials of Vermont's largest electric utility expressed concern about the costs of replacing the electricity generated by the plant. Haig, Gromyko continue parley GENEVA t AP > -Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, after an unexpectedly long initial round of talks, sat down today for the second of two scheduled meetings on the troubled state of East-West relations. No details were immediately announced. The opening session,~at which Haig had said he would express Western "outrage" about the llRllllFS military crackdown in Poland, lasted two hours and 45 minutes -45 minutes longer than planned. No explanation was immediately given for the prolongation, which surprised some observers. Haig on Monday had said that Gromyko's publicly expressed unwillingness to discuss Poland's internal affairs could produce "a very short meeting." Treaaury bill.yield climbs WASHINGTON CAP> -Yields on short-term Treasury securities rose for the third straight week in Monday's auctions, hitting the highest levels since last rail, officials said. About SS billion in six-month bills was sold at an average discount rate of 13.53 percent, up from the 13.102 percent J an. 18. Begin survives ouster bid JERUSALEM <AP> -Prime Ministe r Menachem Begin narro~ survived a motion or no confidence today over his government's handling of compensation for Jewish settlers in the Sinai desert. The vote was 55·52. Thirteen members of the 120·member Knesset, Israel's Parliament, were absent. · Home builders hear bad news LAS VEGAS <APJ -There is no "quick fi x" for the ailing home building industry because lenders are skeptical of the government's ability to check inflation, the chairman of the Federal Reserve Board said Monday. Paul Volcker issued the rathe r gloomy forecast to officers of the National Association of Home Builders at the fina l session of their four-day annual convention. Auto sales contitwe dip DETROIT CAP> -Car sales by U .S . automakers £ell 15.8 percent in the second 10 days of January from the same period last year, pushing sales to their lowest level for the period in 21 years. The five major domestic automakers reported Monday they sold 129,794 cars from Jan. 11 to Jan. 20, compared with 137 ,000 in the same period last year. Because there was an additional selling day this year, the percentage comparison is based on the r ate per day. College shaken by blaat CAMDEN, N.J . <AP> -An explosion ripped through the basement of a community college's on l y building and hurled debris through classrooms, but a student says panic was the cause of many of the 46 injuries. Two people were injured critically in I- Monday's blast at Camden County College, authorities said. Ho•t~ge• via it return •pot WEST POINT, N. Y. (AP) -One-third of the 52 former American hosta1es came t>.ck in the cold and snow to the spot where lbey tint touched U.S. soil one year a10 after their c•pUvity in lr.n. Joseph Sublc Jr., one of the 17 ex-c.pUves to return, said the return trip Monday ••• a way or "closinl lbe book" on the '44 days of captivity. (Related photos A2 and 83.) Tax di11uion Boo/• TRENTON, N.J. (AP> -The st•te Tax Divlslon bas sent letters ol apololf to 31,000 busineuel after lncorrect CCJl'POl'lte lneome tax bllls were sent out when a ~ Soofed up. Sidney Glaser, diylaiOD director, said ht. peraanaU1 bu reeeiYed II ~ calla frodP' IDll')' t.wtn•1men and acewnt...,, a.....-said lt is tbe IQaelt m~e be bu known the d~rtment to make with corporate income tu. Centrai Vermont PubUc Service Corp. relies on Vermont Yankee to meet one -third of its demand and Vice President Thomas Hurcomb said replacement power would cost 10 to 20 times as much as electricit y generated by Vermont Yankee. Stoll said the steam apparently was escaping from a moisture-separation unit, which reduces the water content of radioactive steam before it rushes lnto the plant's low-pressure turbines.· The unit has a tank that gradually fills with water, and when the water reaches a certain levjll, a valve is supposed to open and drain the water back into the reactor core cooling system. The size or the leak has not been determined because "lagging," or Insulation, covers the holding tank, Stoll said. "It's bard for us to tell the extent of the leak until we can shut down and get a look," he said. "It isn't causing a problem now, and we want to make sure It doesn 't. We're taking a conservative approach." In Ontario, N.Y., Monday, a tube rupture sent puffs of radioactive steam into the atmosphere. triggerlrtg a plant shutdown. Owners of the plant declared it safe. Roch~ter Gas & ·Electric Co. officials said they hoped by midday to achieve a cold shutdown -a low-pressure. non-boiling status for the water in the reactor. ' '·. RED DEAD Mikhail A ndr eyev ich S u s l ov. responsibl e for preserving Marxist doctrine as the Kremlin's top idealogist. has reportedly died at 79. Judge beaten in robbery SAN FRANCISCO <AP1 -A S uperior Court judge was punched in the face a nd robbed of $27 in the lobby or his apartment building, accordin g to police. Judge Ira Brown of San Francisco was approached from the rear by a man who threw his arms around the judge a nd demanded his wallet as Brown entered his apartment building, police said Monday. H e also attac k ed U .S . sanctions a1ain.st Poland, sayln1 they were desi1ned "to paralyze the Pollsh economy.·' The o£flcial PAP news agency sa id the p a rlia m e ntar y resolution approving martial law Monday was a prelude to a new bill which "will be ready to be employed whenever the need to proclaim the state or war, or martial law, should arise." Some observers said the resolution appeared to be aimed at proving the situation was "normal" in Poland, and might a lso be designed for Western consumption. T he morning dail y Zycie W arszawy cautioned that both the Jaruzelski speech and the resolution should not be viewed as an end to strict regulations in Poland. "One can probably share the view expressed in the house that., as rar as healing and Cine-tuning the econo m y is concerned and a lso the war on crime and dislurbances of public discipline, certain elements of marlial law may stay in force ror some Lime to come·· r ns. OUT OF JOB? Donald K .. Dc k e" Slayton , las t of seven Mcrcurv astronauts ~tall active with the ~ational Aeronautics ;,ind S pa ce Administration. expects to lose post as director of wace shuttle te~t 14J7%APR for 60 months~ 14.16% APR for 48 months. Once again, Heritage Bank is working hard to help the American econo~ 1981 was the worst vehicles not included) and is subject to credit approval. year for American-This offer is good unt il March 31, 1982 for resident~ of made car sales in two Orange and San Diego Counties only. Offer is cancellable decades. So to make without notice, so see us now while millions of financing the best of the worst. dollars are available at these special rates. 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WINS AGAIN Barbara Mandrell receives a kiss on the c~eek from e~tertainer Johnnie Lee after he presented her with the favorite fema le country vocalist award at the ninth annual American Mus ic Awards Monday in Los Angeles . It was the second consecutive year Miss Mandrell won the <J ward. Three sailors die in Navy accident SAN DIEGO CAP) -Navy investigators searched for a Freon gas leak today that left three sailors dead and seven others hospitalized on the world's first nuclear-powered guided missile cruiser. A Navy s pokes m an said the three victims were overcome in the forward air -conditioning plant of the USS Bainbridge at the 32nd Street Naval Station's Pier Five. The inc ident occurred when two lnembers or the ship's security force entered the area on patrol a bout 5:30 PST and "keeled over," according to Na vy spokesman Jim Mc Donough. Airline lays off 1,500 LOS ANGELES <AP> -Continental Airlines is laying off 1,500 employees and plans to seek work-rule concessions from those remaining as it struggles with a 1981 deficit expected to reach S60 million. a s pokesman said. Continental also eliminated 12 vice pres idents' positions and is considering cuts in routes, flights and its 73-air craft fleet, said spokesman Julian Levine. Tbe furloughs affect 14 percent of the Los Angeles-based carrier's workforce and follow 700 layoffs last fall. Levine said pink slips were mailed Monday with a Feb. 3 deadline for completing the reduction. Adults-only policy fought SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -The ability of family members to live togetflf:?t is aTurfdamenliil - right of privacy. the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in a case involving an adults-only rental policy. Tbe court on Monday returned the case to a ,U.S. District Court in Los Angeles for hearings on whether the policy can meet the consti~utional s tandards for' equal protection and due process. The suit was filed by Robert Halet, father of a child, who claim ed the adults-only policy violated his r ight to live with his family and that it was racially discriminatory. He sought a ruling that the policy was unlawful. He also sought an injunction prohibiting such a policy. Soldier dies in war game& FORT IRWI N <AP) -The Army is investigating a nighttime training accident in which gunfire killed one soldier and injured three others as a battalion fended off a simulated attack by pop-up targets .. Pvt. Robert G. SoJonika, 20, was killed in the exercise about 7 p.m. Sunday at this sprawling desert base 40 miles northeast of Barstow. "Preliminary investigation indicates the fatality was caused by smaU-arms fire," said Bob Hughes, a civilian base spokesman. Senate panel kills anti-a-.ortion plan SACRAM~NTO <AP> -The Senate Finance Committee has killed an anti-abortionist plan aimed at public colleges and universities. The 5·5 vote Monday rejected SB1233 by Sen. J ohn Doolittle, R-Sacramento. It needed eight ---vn1h>s-for passage. - College and univer s ity s tudents are now • charged fees to pay for a variety of school programs, including he alth and s tudent body services. Students can avoid paying only if they can demonstrate financial hardship. Doolittle said students who opl>Off abortion on religious grounds have a ''fundamental rilhl" to withhold payment or school health fees which finance abortions or abortion-linked services, auch as off.campus referrals . Ria blll would have prevented the school• from refuain1 to admit students who declined lO pay the fees for relilious reasons. But committee chairman Alfred Alqulst, D-San J <>11e, said the bill conructec1 with the state constitution becauae It ··mandates a pro1ram on the colleges." Representatives of the University of Callfom ta, the California St.ate Ublveralt.y system and the state's community coUe1ea oppoted the bill. saying lt would force them to hire new clerks and devise forms. Orange Coa1t DAIL y PILOT/TUHday, January 26. 1982 H /F ~•. ~ogers tops music awards J LOS ANGELES (AP> - Kenny Roaers. downln1 a roster of competitors lncludln1 the late John LeMOn, emerged for the second year in a row as the bil winner •l the American Muslc Awards. Rogers, who last year took four awards, was voted beat pop-rock male vocallst and h.ll "Greatest Hits" LP received favorite album honora In both pop.rock and country cateaortes durin1 Monday ni1ht's live two-hour ABC telecast. LeMon had been nominated as favorite male pop-rock vocalist and "Double Fantasy." the album he made before his death with his wife Yoko Ono. was a favorite pop-rock album contender. While not present al the Shrine Auditorium ceremonies, Rogers was able to convey his gratitude via live satellite transmission from Atlanta. . ·' l go to 13 awards shows in a row. I win nothing. I leave town, l win two," he said wryly after picking up his second a ward. Rogers was not the only winner to say thank-you from afar. Soft-rockers Air Su~ply, who took the favorite pop.rock group award, also rejoiced on a satellite transmission from their , native Australia . Air Supply also was featured in a tribute to Australian music s tar s that in c lud ed performances by Olivia-Newton John and Rick Springfield. The only multiple award winner to show up in person was Lionel Richie. whose duet with Diana Ross, "Endless Love," earned fa vorite single awards in ' both pop.ro c k and so ul categories. "I think I'm dreaming. This couldn't be happeninc." Richie said backstage. Earlier In the month, Richie 1ot rive Grammy nominations for his roles as producer. composer and singer on "Endless Love." Miss Ross was not present, but .. I hope she's jumping up and down ... Richie said. The American Music Awards are basically a popularity poll1 with winners being determlnea by a survey or 30,000 persons chosen to reflect the geographic dis tribution, age. sex and ethnic origin of the U.S. record-buying publi c . Nom i nees ar e d e t e rmined b y t h e top performers in year-end charts of the record industry trade magazines Cash Box and Record World. The awards go to the favorite male, f e male a nd group performers as well as favorite album and s ingle in each of three categor ies pop-rock, country and soul. In addition a blue-ribbon panel of music industry figures each year chooses the recipient of a special award of m erit for contributions to the musical entertainment of the public. In what the show's producer. Di ck Clark . describe d as a moment .. you couldn't buy," this year's merit award winner -Stevie Wonder sobbed o p e nl y a s Ri c hie. Ella Fitzge rald . Quincy J ones, Teena Ma rie. Ray Parker Jr. and show hosts Donna Summer, Glen Campbell and Sheena Eastona gathered around a piano and sang Wonocr'11 11ong "Isn't She Lovely" with "she" changed to "he" m Wonder'is honor. For the (lfth time 11n,e the 1ward1' Inception In 1974, Wonder also won the best male soul vocalist award. Other soul awards winners we r e Stephani e Mills for favorite female vocalist , Kool & the Gang for favorit.e eroup, and Rick James' "Street Songs" - whi c h includ ed hi s hit "Superfreak" for favorite album. Willie Nelson was a prominent absentee winner in country categories as favorite male[ vocalist and for his hit "On the Roa d Again." whi ch s hared favorite slngle honors wUb Anne Murray's "Could I Have This Dance." Barbara Mandrell wts named\ favorite country female voealiat for the second year in a row. and the Oak Ridge Boys wer e tabbed / for favorite country group1 honors. 1 Pat Benatar was voled1 f avorite pop -rock fe male vocalist. ,, Major Long Beach project planned I h •• LONG BEACH CAP) -A b il lio n-dollar waterfront de"elopment adjacent to the Queen Mary in Long Beach H a r bor is p l an ned by a subsidiary of the Wrathe r Corp .. com pany o ff icia ls ha ve revealed. Wrather Prop e r ties Deve lopment Inc. has asked approval in concept from the L o n g Beac h Por t H a rbo r Co mmission fo r eventual developme nt of an l , lOO·slip marina, three hotels with 3.000 rooms. a major office complex. expansion o f London Towne Shopping Village, restaurants, parks, fi shing piers and other commercial and recreational developments. W rather entered a 66-year '1 agreement with the Port of Long i Beach in Septembe r 1980 to i lease 45 acres of land adjacent to the famed Queen Mary. a , restored cruise s hip, and to 1 lease and operate the ship itself. 1• The company also acquired an 1 option to develop 245 acres of IJ water surrounding the site. .. We have never looked to the •· s h i p itself a s eco nomi c justification for the level of ' investment required," Jack Wrather, chairman of tbe board of Wrather Properties and of the parent company, said Monday. "But we have considered her to be the crown jewel of what will '- be the most exciting project in • the United States " I I \ Free ear fora~ whenyoutly United round-trip to Denvec United offers seven friendly flights to Denver every day. All for a great low fare -as little as $119.50 each way with round·tr!R pu.rcllase. You mus.t.purchase_ your.tlckets ~ days in advance and stay through a Sunday. Make any changes In return resetvations at least 14 days In advance, or return on a standby basis, or the entire discount Is lost. Seats are limited. 50 each~with round-trii> purchase. Fares. restrlctions and sched~es subject to change. For reservations. call your Travel Agent. Or call United at 5l'Z.-15.2L.eartners in..Tra~eLw.ith..Westin Hotels_ - - To Denver Le.ve Arrive 7: 10 a.m.~L) 10:23 a.m. 7:20 a.m. 0 ) 10;22 a.m.· And now when you fly round·trip~to Denver on United, you get our Free Wheels Deal. too. Alamo will have a rent .. · car waiting for you. The first day's on us. Offer good until February 28. 1982, and subject to car avaiJablllty. Gas and taxes not included. Optional oolUslon-darnage waiver ls available. Call for details. 10:40 a.m .(L) 1:05 p.m.10 ) 1:44 p.m. 3:15 p.m. L~ 5:55p.m. L 8:55 p.m.(L) 4:00p.m 6·22 p.m. 9:00p.m. 11:57 p.m. Flythe friendly sides of United Call Ulited or }Wf ThMI Agent ----· _.s;:._....._ ... ,._.,_ .. .., .... _ •• _ .. _~~-- · School officials estimated that ~ bill would cost about '100.000 to admlnilter. Fani Cod.: YE 140 , ' I" --· Dilly Piiat _TUESDAY, JAN. 26, 1912 CAVALCADE B2·3 Erma Bombeck'saeiTC may-~0- be "unstructured" but she knows where eve;.ything is. 0 lllTlllTll 1111:1If1111111 VllllY COMICS 84 STOCKS 87 See. Page 83. Gunmen hit Huntington in string of .5 holdups Huntington Beach police are searching for s uspects in a string of Ii ve apparently unrelated robberies, that have occurred since Thursday. The first occurred at 2 p.m. Thursday, when a man armed with a revolver robbed the Mr. Toy store at 10088 Adams Ave. According to police, the ~unman fled with a $108 skatebOard kit but left behind a bag filled with mo~ey from the cash register. At 2:55 p.m . Thursday, an9ther gunman confronted a 28-year-old woman who was getting into her van, parked in a shopp~ng center lot at Garfield A venue and Beach Boulevard. Police said the man struck the woman and attempted to force her into the van. The woman was able to escape when the gunman had dirriculty operating the standard trans mission, officers said. The van was found abandoned several blocks away. In a third holdup on Thursday, a 29-year-old woman came home to her Cameron Lane apartment and found a young man with a gun waiting inside. Police said the intruder forced the woman to. lie down on a bed while he ransacked several rooms. The gunman fled with about $6,000 in cash and jewelry, police said. At 7:50 p.m. Saturday, a man armed with a blue steel revolver demanded money from a counter employee at Wlnchell's Donut House. 7598 Edinger Ave. The man fl ed with an undetermlned amount of cash, police said. In the filth incident, a 29-year-old man who had ju.st arrived in Huntin1tori Beach from Colorado in search of employment, was robbed as he was walking along Pacific Coast Highway near Lake Street Sunday ev~lng, police said. He told officers two men in a green Pinto asked hlm for ~ light, then forced him into the car at gunpoint. The men allegedly took an undetermined a m o unt or cash from tbe ne wcomer's wallet. Huntington Beach police Lt. Merle SchnebUn said no arrest.a have yet been made in the strinl or holdups. ~~~~~~~~~~~~----1 SWIFT KICK -Topping off an exhibition b y h i s Hunting ton Beach Karate Club, director Gary Pitts put. his best foot forward and down through 180 pounds of concr.ete. By breaking 20 inches o f brick he set a world record. This was his first attempt at such a feat. but he expects to repeat it on th e ··vou Asked For It" t e l evision s how . Th e club is under auspices of the Hu-nt - ington Beach YMCA. Dem- o n s trations were at the H u n ting t o n_ Center Mall. where Pitts autographed pieces of the broken bricks f o r spec - tators. UCI \Vastes OK'd for sterilization UC Irvine Medical Center officials have received approval to resume s t e rilization or infectious hospital wastes at their facility in Orange. Orange County health offi cials ·said-·Momhy-the MedfCal center's special autoclave apparatu s h ad pa ssed operational tests and could once again be used to sterilize the plastic and paper products used in the treatment of patients. The autoclave. which uses a combination of heal a nd pressure to sterilize the wastes, had been out of operation for repairs for several days earlier In the month. The county revoked the me dical center 's permit lo sterilize the wastes at its location last week when health orricials claimed the infectious trash was being improperly stored there. The medical center normally sterilizes the wastes in the outdoor autoclave and then has the treated g_(!rbage taken away with other wastes. When the autoclave was out of ser vice, t he university had contracted with a special trash servi ce to take care of the untreated wastes. Some of the garbage illegally turned up in a county landfill s ite for normal trash, leading to a county crackdown on the dumping of infectious wastes. About 160 bags of untreated wastes traced to several area hospitals have been found in county landfills in the past-few weeks. No new findings have been reported since last week, however. NEW DUTIES -Alethea Caldwell has been appointed executive associate director of clinical services at t he UC I Medical Center. f Edison football probe asked Huntington school chief wants recruiting check By PATRICK KENNEDY Of ... o.l!y ~Sutt An administrative law judge I s h ould investigat e alleged recruiting by the Edison High School football program. Brian Lake , president of the Huntington Bea~h Union High" Sehool District, said today. Lake said if an administrative I a w j u d g e c o n d u c t.e d t h e investigation hearing there should be no future charges that the district "soft pedaled" the inq uiry o r co nducted a .. whitewash." Ray Plutko, commissioner of the California Inter-Scholastic Federation (Cl F >, recently ordered Sunset League officials to conduct an investigation lnto num e rous allegations that several trans fer s tudents playing football at top-ranked Edison were illegally recruited from other schools. But Lake said that because the Sunset League is comprised of only six district high schools. it would be "more credible" if an authority outside the district conducted the investigation. Lake sai d the rec - omme nd atio n for an administrative law judge review o f t h e allegations will be con s idered by the trustees tonight. The recommendation was made by Superintendent Frank "Jake" Abbott. Lake said he expects approval of the request. ·'There has been enough concern in the community over alleged recruiting at Edjson that it's time to conduct a thorough investigation and determine just what the situatio n is," Lake said. He said that over the months se veral me mbers of'th e community have asked trustees to look into possible recruiting violations at Edison. L a s.l N.o v e m b e r . a n anonymous letter outlining alleged recruiting violations at Edison dating back to 1978 was mailed to Cl F and district officials, Lake said. "I don't put much s tock in anonymous letters," he said. _Yesteryear's Jane Fonda cited • Gi,fted student.s ronference set Socialist Bixby heiress called an enigma in Costa Mesa history The 10th annual Conference for Gifted and Talented (students) ls scheduled Saturday at 8 a.m., at Huntington Beach High School, um Main St. educating and parentinf gifted.and talented students. By SODI CADENHEAD Police Department, taking on Of_o.t.,,.....,.... the cases of women and children Today, 52 years after her living in crime torn tenement death, Fanny Bixby Spencer houses. remains a legend -an enigma She lived in a room in her in Costa Mesa's history. father's ornately massive home, Scorned by many and known · peeling away the gold edeed to all who lived in the town or wall paper and throwing out the 2,000 a half century ago, her French furniture, said Mrs. Lee. refusal to salute the American The Laguna Beach resident Flag, her donations of money to and author of "Newport Bay: A orl.by oc.ganizauons and her -PtOtter!: stisCory :r explamed that penchant for feeding the poor she fii~\. became interested in made her famous. the Costa Mesa woman 10 years "She was not just a radical," ago. Ellen Lee told the Costa Mesa "She was the Jane Fonda ol Historical Society. her lime," said Mrs. Lee. "This "She was rather ootrageous." was a woman who lived 50 years The ninth and youngest child too soon."· of Jotham Bixby, who owned At the age of 38 Fanny Bixby nearly all or Lone Beach, the married a Long Beach dock heiress ls a reminder that the worker named Carl Spencer. very rich un be radically Having alienated many or the different from you and me. people or Long Beach, the couple She We>re her long black l\alr rpoved to Costa Mesa in 1919 and pulled bick ln a severe bun. Her the legend began. white factory blouses and long black skirts became her trademark. Stron111· affected by the poverty ahe bad seen in Europe and New York, the younc beire11 became a radical socialist and pacifist. She worked-for the--t.0111 ltftC!lr "She was a one person social service," said Mrs. Lee. "She was the PTA, the library, lbe women's club and the welfare department." Over the years the Spencen' simple wooden house at the corner of· ·l8th--anct··Wfrttt1wr CO'S TA Me SA LEGEND . Scorned at the time. Fanny Rixby Spencer cut a s wa th t hroug h the social fa bric of Costa Mesa 50 years ago. became a home for countless foster children. Decades before social pro1rams. became comm.on. the Costa Mesa heiress was donatlng silverware and money to the PT A for a hot lunch program. She gave money for the city's firs t library, a women's club and the land where Lion's Park is today. . Accepting land and money from the eccentric heiress was one thing, but allowing her to set fool in the Friday Afternoon Women's-t:tut> was-~nreUllng else, explained Mrs. Lee. - The wealthy woman insisted on 1iving feverish speeches on the Uls of war and the need for "I'm somelhln9 of .a pariah,'' she wrote a friend i:1 1125. "I'm an oukast . I would rather be friendly, but I don't knO'f what to do." Sponsored in part by the Orange County Department of Educalioni the annual conference wi J have guest speaken and exhibits on a •variety ol areas related to · A $15 registration fee entitles participants to the speakers' exhibits and lunch. Speakers Include teachers, school administrators and parents of gifted student.a. For further information, call Coreae Barr of the Capistrano Unified School District at 496-1215. •City Hall volumeen •ought. ff Wlllngton Beach officla.11 are seetln1 volunteers to ftll part·Ume clerical job1 in City ffaU. City spokesman 8111 .... Hid tbe new "Volunteers in Partnership" (VIPs) oraaatzaUon want.a people ol all a1• to donate time each week to type, rue, work oa special events and act as City Hall receptionist. Reed aakl vacant desks are available for volunteer workers. For further information, call 511-$511 or apply at tbe public lnformatlon office of "City HaU, JOOO Main St. • Senior aoftball, ~ •lated So adama nt was her opposition lo war that she refused to allow any of her foster children to salute the na1 .• In her will she stipulated that no military organliation ever be allowed to use Lion's Park. But the terms ol the will were HunUnltOft Beach Parkl on weekmdl at Greer' Pan never carried out. Fanny Bixby and R~tioG oftlciall hYe bff lie Fadden ~venue and Spencer died In 1930 at the a1e ol announced formation or a Gold• Welt 9tnlet. 51 slow-pleb IClftball l••sue for Today, not a street. a part or HllkW men et .... t 56 YMn Por f-.n.tler lnfor.aUoD, a plaque exists to say tba\ oldwbolivelDt.beelty. eoatacta..~at .... JJI . J:.anny.Bixb>' Spesacer one• UY.cl . L__,· _;-G;;•;;--:;.•;;;;~pra~ett:;;ees;;;=are===att.=r:'"P=·m= • ._=.....,_===:· =:ln1i in eu _____ _ >.---:----._ ,..s . . ----,,, ·~~~ "Ah! What a great day to be alive. and, as it turn'ed out./or excess profits." HERB MEN OUR MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO Storm jokes flood mail Some readers in these parts objected to storm jokes, but most or them come from storm country. A joke. however bad. in the face or adversity has bee n a trademark around here since the '06 firequake (sign on Markel: "Eat Drink and Be Merry -Tomorrow We May Have to Move to Oakland">. I like the sign in the window of Patrick's mud-spattered bookstore in Fairfax: "Boy, Do We Have Dirty Books' "But We Won't Soak You For Them." Paul Bacon liked this line in a San Francisco Chronicle news story : "In the reassuring daylight, many or the men. women, children and animals o f Sausalito's endangered neighborhood were philosophical and even cheerful... Wh ere but in Saus alito would you find a philosophical dog, perhaps a St. Bernard. puffing a pipe as it contemplated the wreckage? AS I HA VE SAJD for years, readers of this column are the finest people in the world. It takes more than a killer s torm to keep them from N amephreaking a s witness this damp note rec'd aner the waters went down: · · 1 phoned State Farm Insurance to report two feet of water in our Scotts Valley home and found our agent's name to be Don Soakup! Hystericall y yours, Elize Winby ... The spirit that won the West. ·· " WA KE OF T HE STORM: I'm not .suggesting the Golden Gate Bridge be closed permanently to auto traffic. but what a pleasant city this was without commuters. All those parking spaces! Not to mention tables available immediately in restaurants . We must face the facts. however: Commuters made this city what it is today -a mess . . . First night of The Big Storm, Dorothy Hayes of Santa Rosa announced breathlessly to her 12-year-old Danielle: "They've closed the Golden Gate Bridge!" Danielle: .. You mean the w,ater .is THAT high?" AH SO: In San Jose. Dr. Arthur W. Anderson, Jr .. found himself behind a station wagon inscribed ''Bay Area Map Supply" with license plates "ST MAPS" and a sign in the back window reading "Don't Follow Me I'm Lost Too." llMA IOMllCI 'AT WIT'S ENO Filing system out of order A clean desk is overrated. They're promoted by the same people who spread rumors that neatness signifies an orderly mind and ranks right up there with clean fingernails and godliness. My desk may be "unstructured, .. but I know where everything is. Trust me. My expired library card is right here under the desk blotter along with the sales slips from Christmas 1978. That stack of folders over there on the f l oor i s labeled MISCELLANEOUS. My reference books are right here under my feel for easy access. Personal correspondence is in the Easter basket on the chair and in case I need a throat lozenge here they are right in the drawer next to the holy card of Pope John. My "Good Morning. America" scripts are neatly arranged under the quilting frame. on that chair are notes for my next book . and that entire sofa holds column ideas . TIOS DESK ORA WER here holds a packet of s ummer poinsettia seeds. a wood en pig that holds a recipe in a c lo thespin, a ke t c hup packet from McDonald's. a column by Garry Wi lls on J ohn Lennon and a pi cture of a bab. sucking on a stuffed animal. I have not thr slightest noti on who it is. And in this drawer is a piece of used carbon paper and a pair of prescription g lasses with one lens missing. My husband vis ited my office last week and complained there was no place to sit. I le said I should get rid of some or this junk. I promised him I'd d ean out the center drawer in my desk. but I couldn't go through with it. I couldn't throw out the rock with my name on it that a retarded chlld from Illinois had made for me. I COULDN'T THROW awav a certificate Co~ free ice cream cone, or: the pi cture of Barr>ara Howar and me taken in a dime store. or the one earring. or the balloon from a carpet store opening. ~r my stamp that reads. "ERMA BOMBECK. LOVE GODDESS ... or a book of 15-cent stamps. or the sewing kit. or the badge that reads. "IF WEARER IS FO UND DEPRESSED . ADM I NISTER CHOCOLATE IMMEDIATELY ... I did throw away a business card of a man l'd never heard or from Columbus. Ohio. My husband poked his head in my office yesterday and said. "Listen. give me the phone number off the card of tbat attorney in Columbus. Ohio. I asked you to file ... You know something'.' That didn't even surprise me-. POT SH01S BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT DON'T WORRY! you•vE NEVER YET M ADE A WOUN D I N ME THAT HASN •T HEALED. GOREN ON BRIDGE BY CHARLES H. GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF 0 1982 Tribune Company Syn<11ca1a. Inc. Neither vulnerable. South deals. NORTH + AK62 <:?976 0 754 •AH WEST EAST +Jt754 +Q lO CV J 4 CV IK 1085 <> 12 O HJ •JIOl5 •QTU SOUTH +U ~~H--- 0 AK Q J IO •&t The biddlnc: s..11 WMt N~ Eut l 0 P .. I • P ... I CV P .. 4 <> P .. 4NT P .. 5 Q P ... 5NT P .. e o P ... ... , .. Opening lead: Jack of •. The upert a.a. t.aught himtell to Ulink differently from the averase player. Tbit hand from a team matc:h lllHtratea how tac:h type would taeklt a diamood tlam. South'• dedtioo to go on to alam wu dubiou. althouirh he ••• uodou1Mdl7 lnnu· enced by Ml putner'a ill· couiderect juntp raiae In diamonds. South's concentra· tion or strength in the dia· mood s uit means that, despite its high point count. his hand was riddled with losers. Instead or launching into Blackwood. he might have been content with bid· ding flve diamonds and leav· ing it up to his partner lo decide on slam. West led the jack or clubs at both tables. The average declarer won In hand, drew trumps, crossed to the king --of ~pades-and toolrttre hu rt finesse. When that won, he continued with ace and another heart. Had hearts split S.S. declarer would have been home. But the fates were unkind, and declarer still bad to lose another heart for down one. The expert declarer at the other table also won the club in hand. He reallied im- mediately that h'9 would have no chance for his contract If the heart fineNe faiJeJ, and that h~ would have to loae one heart an1wa7. But with careful Umins he mlsht be able to avoid a 8"0ftd heart lour if the ault apUt "2. At triel t WO be Jed a low heart. from hia handl Aa the earda lie, '\hie aim· pie play rendered the defense helpless. East woo the heart and returned a club, knocking out clummy's ace. Declarer drew t wo rounds or trumps and crossed to the king of spades. He took a successful heart finesse and cashed the ace of hearts. Had hearts split evenly, he would have drawn the last trump and claimed. But when West showed out and, fortunately. could not ruff, declarer was able to ruff his last hurt · aummy, cross lo his hand with a club ruff to draw the last trump and claim his slam. What if West ruffed the ace of hearts on the third round? Then declarer would have been down one no mat· ler how he played the handl ff•• .. Y" dlMM .... ltttit ....-. 1Md7 Cwlea Gwea.'-dM ...... Fer a _,,., .. w....._~ LH th." , .. 4 11 .H t • ~ .............. tide ..,....,..., P.O. l ea 16t, Nenr .... N.J. '"'8. M .. e ct.de ..,.W. te N.w• .... ,. ..... ,. ....... --........ Orange Coast DAILY PILOTffuesday, January 28, 1982 H /F WELCOME BACK AGAIN Forml'r ho-;tagt' Hobert Ode wa!:) grrt•tt•d Monda~ at Stt:wart Ai rport: N. \' . by !'>omt· of his fans hcfon· thL· R~rMt & U..uor Store A Dining T rad1t10n Since 1922 Serving Lunch & Dinner Reservations Suggested 645-7077 Two Days Only ! New, Ofiglnal wlldllfe oll painting• b ~NCY ... H ptHalve animal P91sonallt .. • ... '.'people with fur" SOUTH COAST PLAZA HOTEL (B•lboa Room) 666 Anton Blvd/Costa Mesa cE•ll Br•stot ott 1 405) S.turd•y •nd Sunday J•nu•ry 30 • 31 , 1982 11 a.m. -4 p.m. 011 Paintings based upon CLANCY S 1981 /82 PHOTOGRAPHIC SAFARI 10 INOIA and NEPAL • with empllasls on "Tigers rn 1heor natural hab11a1 " No Adnflasron Charge all orig1n111 un1Qu' pa1nt1ngs shown tor sale Exclus111e1y p1esen1ed by· M Clancy Inc /8ox 11 /Solvang, CA/93463 .............. dL•dication of a plaque honoring the return of th{' hos tages from Iran a year ago. PROTECT YOUR VALUABLES ..... -lur'nr• • ,.,, ... Insurance and Documentary Photography 754-6630 ~J Daily Pilll Classifieds ~~ f fr an >I in\· ,;;, c a <= '.\G ~ s orran1 111' 11\ i.:o\!.nal' '' f lo\ \1ro''o air . ;... <1.o"'s ,, 1 r l':. · l'\c<: ": 10 0 35,c l l J ~ !'> \o \'or \)i.\ •. l'\ coll' \'S & 4 3~ ~~a own\:\~ i\-H96 ~ ',.Sold thru Pilot in 2 days. Ran 1 week in L.A. Ti mes with no results. Ve ry impressed! ,,. ~~~I @ 642-5678 charge it ~-~Y phone From .South Laguna.& North County call 540-12-20 1oll-free. BE -AN ICE SKATING ~ at an /, ' ICE CAPADES CHALET • NEW CLASSES STARTING • REGISTER NOW for internationally famous Ice Capades Chalet Ice Skating School. Whether you've ice skated before or never ice skated in your life, one of these classes is for you. · • BEGI NNERS WELCOME! • 2701 Harbor Blvd . Harbor & Adams Costa Mesa 979-8880 ENROLL NOW!! PUBLIC ICE SKATING EVERY DAY. LOTS OF FUN FOR YOUR MONEY, ONLY A BUS RIDE AWAY'.! More cluck for1our Oflt• t11>1111flllnit!'11. lNa '11ctt fMJ •Ill II ,1111Ciptdftt IKllllM COUfOft eoo-"'4J hi so.t11tn1 Clllltnlll OrangeCout DAILY PILOTrruelday, January 28, 1982 • NYSE COM.POSITE TRANSACTIONS fveYU ... UJ•UUOa YlaAOUOll YU lilW YOe•.M1 .. a1Y. ~,..~ ... , .. , 01'801' &•O CllfCf••AYI HOCI' l•CMAMU AllO •tN•tlO IY , ... •.UO ANO llfUllfU ..... .... S.lft .... wo., ~· ,.,.. ~· ..... 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S 4 'At (TIMI u tlw Nt>nth o/ a lt>-pm H1'Wt on hote lo ION On 11our ISlll Income ta.ret.) { I If you uae ,1our car ror busineas, you may overlook an easy tax·cuttin1 proceduN, especlall.y If you boulhl your car in 11181. In the put, many ot you have liken the laay method permitted by the lntemal Revenue Service In flturins the deducJjble cott ot runnina a business car. You determine the number of mlles 1ou u.aed the car tor busines1 dwina the year. The allowable deduction is t.hen comput.ed at 20 ~nta per mile ror the tirst 15,000 miles of b1&1lness uae and 11 cents per mile thereafter. This e.llmlnatea t.be need to prove all the drivinJ expen.ii~s. Thia procedure has become less ~" attractive becaute the otticiaJ increases in the mil e age .. ,. allowance over the IJllllA PllJll !§::.,;;Z years have not kept l up with actual costs For instance, the IRS kept mileage allowances for '81 at the same level as for '80. When you compute your car expen.'les, make sure to compute them both ways -your actual costs vs. the deduction allowed under the I RS formula. It may pay to use your actual costs, though that may require more record·keeping. If you bought a car for business in 1981 , used or new. there are rules under the '81 act for computing your depreciation that tilt the scales even more In favor of deducting actual costs. Here's a rundown or these n ew rules . Regardless of when you placed the car in service in 1981, you can claim depreciation for 1981 equal to 2S percent of the cost or the car, Thus, if you bought a n $8.000 car in November '81 , you claim $2,000 in depreciation for 1981. For disposal or your old car in that same month. you can claim your costs for the old car under the pre·1981 rules, plus the costs of the new car (figuring depreciation or $2,000). And regardless or whether you use the optional or actual-cost method, you are entitled to. a 1981 Investment credit of 6 percent or the cost of the car you bought in 1981. In 1981, the IRS changed the rules on how many years you could claim a 20-cent·per·mile deduction on the first 15,000 business miles each year. For pre·l981 years. this could be taken ror the first five years or the car. After that. the car was viewed as fully depreciated, and only 11 cents per mile could be claimed on au business ·mileage. Because of the new post.1980 rules that permit cars lo depreciate over three years. the IRS says that ror car expenses after 1979, a 20·ceot·per-mile allowance up to 15,000 miles a year can only be claimed on up lo 60,000 miles. If you drove 15,000 miles or m ore a year , you would reach the 60,000·mile total in four years. ! The T reasury has indicated that the 60,000·mile limit would apply lo post·l979 expenses. regardless or how much of the five.year useful life limitation was used up before 1980. This would mean that you could I continue the 20-cent·per·mile deduction even though If you were given a rebate as an incentive to purchase a new ca.r in 1981. you don't have to report the rebate as income. Tomorrow: Sales tax deduclloas. STOCKS .IN THE SPORIGHT 89! J9in~ .. ~' f !~~£~ ·~ lot ~v. J .... 2S STOCllS °'"" ".... Uw c-Clll lO 1no 139.n M rs m .n 10 rs 1 tt• :tOTrn lJ'U)04'llfiOMO Jl-ln IS Ull IQJ ti 10. PS 102 '6 106 II• II I) -"' 'SI<. . " +114 t!o~'~ 32Sl1 l2171 m M J21.cr,a4~I: _I AMERICAN LEADERS -~ -"" -• 1'- --~ • l\lo . ~ •I"' . .,.. Pel, UP 21.• Up ft.I Up JO.O UP 16,t Up IU UP •• Up U Up 6.1 UP •.1 Up '·' UP 6.S Up ... Up 6.4 Uo 6 a Up H Up S.S up SJ Ptl. Off 30.0 Off tt.O Off 11.t 0" IU Off IU Off IU. Off 11.6 Off 11.1 Off u Off t ,I Off Lt °" ... Off LI Off , .. Off 1.1 Oft-f~ Tr•n tS.,100 Ulll1 tlJ .• U Siil S,.SJ,JDO WHAT STOCKS 018 N£W YORIC. IAPI J_,, 2S p, ... TO<My .. m Ad .. n<tc! .,, 0tCll119d IOSll Unc ... n..., ,,. .. ~ Tol•I l•WH 111.J 117' New hip 10 1 New IOW\ •S. .. W>\Al 4"'£X OIO NEW YO~tt l,llPJ J"" 2S Pr·•v. tocNy ~1 Ad•enod UP Otcllnt<I .,, Jll U11c"....S Ill ,.. T04•1 ls.._ IU ,. .. New MQM • J New IOW$ S6 METALS Ce""' 11'-·IO u~h • pound. U \ ""'"'•'*" Le• 10<"'11• - VtlC 0-43<-. -·dell-. T .. U 4121 ~ .. II WM• CotnpOolle lb Ai.M-7•17<elllt•pound,N Y ....,....,., ..oo.oo .... "•"· ftt•t--13»,00lroy 01 . ~.Y SILVER-., GOLD QUOTATIONS ~: mornl"lfl•lft9P13.SO, ""ti.ti. ......... : lllW-flal"I t.176,SO, uP M.ta Pffls: U10.ll, 111>U IO • ,, ........ , P 7•.tl, off '-o:> bric.II: u.e ll•lftll "' s oo. .... u.°"*' U JUO- M•••Y & M•t"'••• OlllY e•lly q""1t U16 SO, 1111 $A.SO. e....-..: only dilly -•• UP• .so. • "'SO, e,.......,,., only dllly q-· ,..,,~. 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PotrtGE W S I It • ~ 'JI • +.. • ... , ........... 1..... I .-.... McOI"• , ... S1 lllil• ....,"" 1Al1 Jt a-LOS ...... OELES (AP) --, _ ~ 6 1• \'ii ~"' .__ftll t I S1I + 'Ill lil!<OtH 1Mlt SJ .,Iii.... .....~I IAI 1 -11tli~·-l'V"I -1 ~ LiU9 • ': ... _. ~ ·~ 1:111!.~ ....,,,., ... ,,,,. =· 14 '*'ft'' •• » >1~· .-..e,.,. ....... twt+1 Ante.let·bued oil giant.a UnlOft OU t . ·: ;&::! ~ :~di r: ~ ;:~ :;t'J ~~ ~~.:.~ =:r :I·; 2 1F::::: =:.,' ...:11 ~ ':~: and AtJanllc Rlchrteld Co .. reported 11 ,. • ~ ' ~-. "'v°'' .irn ,. r-. ... U = ,:,: 'fl 1,~-~..:C"'A ,: ~ ff t ~ hl1her net eamin1s for 1911 1 a ,....,_ '"... •"• ·;,,., ,. ..... & i;:: ,!I~" =:d., tit 16 _: "'1111M1{"': ,,J:._:1:: record 1711.4 mllllon or $4.56 a share 1· ~ f ~:: :::= ;,! rS ·l! ~ "' ;a:,: :!:':1et°t f i !!"-! =:i ~u ~ .._..... for Union ud Sl .'7 bUUon or•·• a r , At'" ":ll + • "'111 94 '° n..+ "' MW'To ~... ,.,.";. tAlJ J &::.:· ~ share for Arco. ~j!·; .. , ~& . ij1 ;;":::::~~ii 91 ~= ~~:, 'LJ;f F: l,..:.riJ .; = i-:.~ Union'• year~ n1u ... WU up 12 ~ ~ j '=="' = :: ~~.: =;¥.. tt:~ J 'I ~ ... Efi · ' "*;: -111:: l:I · ' .. f~ ~ percent tram the 9847 mllUon orsa.n lr'.l• t. :; ii 35""~·~ •• lj · ! • IP' ft .il ' ': I'' Ii .. '' ~ ,: ..... ::.-'79'•-. a abare palled la t•, while Aleo'• , .. , • " ·' .._... • "' •. • i:l n -~ ,, . ·+ • ...... · -:cw :JJ .~:t: ~I:::··: ••• up only 1ll1bUy o~er the sus -1' .!_ •·" .. ;.~ ·-~ .... ~ ... 'ii.# *t:::: =ff~:·.;~.... ~ "'··.;t-n111 :1~ bUUonor•.t4a1bareofay•~•IO· New YOlll( CAPI -fttket '* MeMe¥ 91 .... tOlftl, ~ •111\ FrlMy'\ ll'l<t ll""""911f, I IYO'f ea.. "'1.H, et! U.•. -.,.. ..... I troy or • Uft.U, off t.),OD, ........ fO ....... l.J trey ...... , ••• .s. ... . ..,,,, . a.triM ICIO ~-• .n 1,..y ea,.~ 7J, ......... c-< •J '"' ,... ':tt .. ;e·· ~ I ~ :!~ N : ~·"' Unkm 0.ainnUJ Fred Hartle)' aalcl HJ .. ~.·~.&:=;: ,J f !! = ==::-:;;:· ' -. ~ -1r.11 :1· ' ll\:t :::: All t ;, r.~.~ net ........... for lb• fourth quarter ,. 1 .. • •• _ ~ .... t • :t•H " , .... 11Jil~ai..i~~.i·a...:•:•~re~•~~m1~1~11:on~or~ ... !;·:•~·.!....,..~~· ~~lt!i============~===~;::::::;=:=~~ f . ..... .. II ,. '4+ II •• . ~ .. ' -~------·----..... llllJ Pilat . TUESDAY, JAN. 26, 1982 'HI F TE LEV LSI ON C6 CLASSI Fl ED CS The Trojans have dipped into Edis'cln High's ranks for. an assistant coach. For the story, See 82. TAKING COMMAND Estancia H.igh's Jeff Gardner has been in charge of the Eagles· baske tball fortunes for two years. The All-Cl F guard does it all. dribbling, looking for the open man and scrambling defense Small wonder he needs a break <lower center>. At 5-1 O, Gardner • IS Estancia's big guy 49ers had soIDe plays left over He's dominated Eagle basketball games for the past two years without being fancy.about it Big guys get you fired. Little guys win you games. By ROGER CARLSON OttMU...,~Staft -1 I IW --Oominallff is Kevin Magee jammirrg- the ball down the hoop or Bill Russell swatting away an attempt by some 6·10 opponent. But don't try to sell the theory to Estancia Hi g h Coach Larry Sunderman. Sunderman might agree such feats are eye-openers, but for winners, well. he'll settle for the athlete who has been doing just that (win> for the past two years at Estancia -Jeff Gardner, who isn 'l a threat to be making any fancy dunks and doesn't figure lo swat loo many shots away. But when it comes lo dominating a basketball game, well, this 140-pounder who can stretch to 5-10, has been controlling things for the past two years with his balf-handling, shooting, dribbling, passing and defense. "Steve Van Hom dominated games for us recently with his inside strength and wing shooting," says Sunderman. "He was our big guy at 6·5. "But I'd say Gardner has probably dominated games for us as well as any I've ever had in my eight years in the Newport-Mesa district." An example: The Eagles won the Laguna Beach and Las Vegas Invitationals -and Gardner was MVP in both occasions. Gardner's role <or best value) comes late in the game when Estancia bas a lead it wishes to protect, and it's a time that is his ravorite as he takes on the opposition one·on-one . with yo· yo movements while dribbling, wastin'g away the time and eventually drawing fouls while his teammates are stacked somewhere, drawing the other four players' attention. ·'I like it when we spread the floor and I can do my thing," says Gardner, who turns 18 in nine days. •'That's when I get lo score, tt he adds, alluding to his eventual trips to the free throw Line after being fouled, keeping the Eagles their lead or extenCling It. The quick little guard bas bit 89 of 112 attempts from the line (79.5 percent) and he's a 54 percent shooter rrom the field, although he still isn't shooting enough. However, 9.8 assists per game ( 167 In 17 games) is the resuJl. There are limes when Gardner is simply too team oriented, goin1 for the assist. rather than the shot, and it's something Sunderman bas been trying to correct. The Eagles are 6· l in Sea View League play as they prepare for the second half or lea•ue competition in the tightly-knit championship and CIF 3-A playoffs race. With a 14·3 overall record, the Eagles are trying to put together back-to-back: sterling efforts after Gardner led the Eagles to the CIF 3-A semifinals a year ago. For it he was named to the All·CIF 3-A squad and Gardner is well aware that team efforts can pay a lot of individual dividends. "I figure if the team does well I'll get my recognition," says Gardner. As for goals, he says: "Just not to play poorly and lo be a factor. to have something to do with the outcome of the game." An example: Gardner's two steals in the opening moments Friday led lo a 12-2 first quarter lead at Newport Harbor and the Eagles never stopped. It hasn't been all gravy for Gardner, when you're a 5·5 freshman and ln the midst of one of the better groups to come along in several years. that's not surprising. ·'I was really frustrated as a sophomore," says Gardner. "I didn't know if I wanted to continue or not.·' Sunderman, however , along with Bill Wetzel. who was the freshman basketball coach at the time, saw the potential and were making plans. "We saw hJm as' an eighth grader when he played for TeWinkle Junior High against Rea," says Sunderman, "and he was really tiny ... but by the time he was a sophomore (now he's 5-7) you could tell he was the heir apparent to Tim Krohnfeldt." ·'There are three things that are so important,·' continues Sunderman. "That's natural ability, command of fundamentals and altitude, and I'm not so sure the last one isn't the most important for Jeff. ''From Day One it has been we , never me. And he's a kid who respects others and has their respect." If anything, Sunderman would like lo see his prize guard become a little' selfish in terms of taking shots, and Gardner says It's one of the things he's working on. As for his collegiate future , it's hard to tell. Maybe it's with a Division I or II school with baseball (he's a standout shortstop for the Eagles l, maybe it's with basketball, but not on that level, players of Gardner's size are usually ignored. "There has lo be a place for him <in basketball>," says Sunderman. "He 's a role player that runs the show, someone to orchestrate everything and he knows the game." Al this point Gardner is leaning toward a baseball future, maybe beginning al UC Irvine. San Francisco survives pandemonium Super Bowl champions welcomed by biggest crowd since World War II SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -For people skyscrapers Ht up like 49er gold and who like to consider themselves laid·back, business in the financial district came to a m ell~w and sophisticated, San hall in celebration or the team's 26-21 Franciscans staged a wild bomeconuni for victory over the Cincinnati Bengals the Super Bowl_ chamltl_QILSM Franclaco--Sunday-at~ttac:-Mictr:-tt-w~49en .,. _ _,_!I'S. . first National Football League A tumultuous crowd estimated by police r hamoionship. OVIRWHELMED -San Francisco 49ers Coach Bill Walsh and his Super Bowl champion team were 1reeted by a crowd of more I than 240,000 fans upon their return to the Bay Area Monday. at about 240,000 jammed the downtown Head Coach Bill Walsh, 49ers owner financial district and all the streets Eddie DeBartoJo Jr., their wives and leading across town to City Hall Monday Mayor Dianne Feinstein sat in a 1134 in the largest street demonstration the city Packard convertible ahead of seven bas seen since the end or World War II. motorized cable can filled with players ..as Police said there were some htjurtea and the parade inched throuah the crowd. al least one stabbing, but no major Leading the way wu a band playing rock incidents. 'n roll on a natbed truck. Deputy Mayor Hadley Rort said be "Unbelievable, unbelievable," Walsh thought the crowd exceeded 500 ooo said several timu as he reached out to "We're deallna witb a total unknow~ble · shake thousands of bands: The players and the numbers 1rew into a ~ • were hugged and kissed in an unabashed size,•' Roff said. outpouring of emotions. Spectators sat or stood dan1eroualy on The stunning roar of the crowd cascaded the ledces of tall office buildin1s. Others alon1 the motorcade tor more than an shimmied up traffic U1ht1, treea, street , hour as the playera came into the view of si1ns and lamp posts. They blew red new segments of the crowd. plastic trumpets, tooted whlltles, honked Tona of ticker tape, ~mputer paper and bom1, waved peManta and toned •round confetti drifted down from lkyacrapen, small footballa. creatln1 at. leut one full dlpt'1 work for When the parade finally bepa iD tbe tbe ell)''• aan.lt.aUon crew. • brilliant late afternoon 1uasblae, the A blockade of bodies acroM the wide • • expanse of Market Street forced the parade to change its route and take a detour to lhe awards presentation at City HaU, where as man}' as 50,000 /ans w.er_e That ls where most or the trouble began. Thousands of spectators surged aaainst police barricades in front of City Hall while the players were presented keys to the dty. Police on horseback cbar1ed into the crowd and helmeted officers used their clubs to keep the spectators back. "I hope it 's another 35 years before we win another Super Bowl," aaid one distraught officer. At least one sta~bln1 was _reported ln front of City Hall and several 1pectaton were trampled in the crusb ol bodies, said Tom Shafe~" a diapatcher al Central Emer1ency nospltal. Moat of the lnjurtes, be said, were minor cuts or drlll problems. Altboulb at leut alx police and mon than 100 IJJ4!Claton were reported 1-jurecl, lt ippeared to be leu violent tbu tbt incldeota which ~curred Smday Dllbt ~ (See WE).coliE, Pap Q) .. PONTIAC . Mich. (AP) Super Bowl XVI was so good . many left here hoping for a rerun. What are the chances of the champion San Francisco 49ers and Cincinnati Bengals having a rematch next year? "They're a team that will be hack," 49ers Coach Bill Walsh said of the Bengals. "They're too good. I don't see the AFC with a team to beat them." And San Francisco? "WE 11UNK we can improve in the draft and make a run again," said the coach. "But it will be tough to repeat in the NFC. We . have a lot of good teams in aur conference." If the 49ers do make it back, they will have some ammunition that was never used by their potent offense Sunday. "A lot was left over on the play board," Walsh said Monday before leaving for home. "We couldn't take advantage of some of the things we had planned." Poor field position through much of the second half restricted the 49ers' attack. • "Backed up as we were, we had to be careful," said Walsh. ··We couldn 'l do some of the things we wanted to. They had field position and all we could do was stall them. make them use the clock." B UT '111E 4tEllS did plenty in the first half, constructina • 20-0 lead, the largest intermlaaion margin in Super Bowl hlsto~ and then neld on 1rimly to Fig~ off a Bengal comeback for a 26-21 victory. •·We demonstrated areal character," Walsh said. "It was typical of previous 1ames in which the offense and defense took turns briQcln1 us back. n • In the first half, it was the 4'@r offense spearheaded by quarterback Joe Montana, voted . the Most Valuable Player, who directed the team on two TD marches -oOfJ a tz-yard drive which wu the lon1est ln Super Bowl b1atory. In the Mccmd half, It WU tbe : 41er defense whicla 1ta1ed a brilliant toal-UDe stud, ...,.. the Bm1ata after Ctadma.U-Ud a nnt·and·soal from tM 1-prd Une. • "Tbll wai a 1r.at YidorJ over a ftae teem, ·~ '-· c .... _., .... a, : • --. AP ......... Orange Coaat OAll Y PtLOT!fuelday, Januaty 28. 1912 H /F 'DEATHS RSEWHERE SANTIAGO, Chile IAP> EdHrdo Frei, 71, • former pretldtnl or Chile. died Friday. Frei won the prealdency In 1984 by deteaunc Marld1t Salvador Allende In an e lection hailed In the United States 11 • victory tor Western democracy. _,.._ fllCt., .... IWatN• llMlll ttAT11MellT '"' .......... ,.,_ -...... ............ : P"OCNaM 0" O"ANOI COUNt~. INC .. llW LAe11t A-, e .... -...~,.... lttwller l111larfrlMt, 1111< .. a C•llf••• ~ 11'7 L...-A11a111ue, Ctttt Mete, Ctllltrllla ..... Tiiis _,_. It ~-.., t Cel'Wtlltrt, ......... 11....,.,IMt, IM. 1tkiw.w ....... y .......... flllt _...,. -fl ...... .. ~_,., CIHll ef Or ..... c:.tw14y t11 J ....... ... ,,,_ Pultll!lllM On .... GHii Oall'I' D ET R 0 1 T ( A p ) -l'lltC, JM, It,,., ....... J, Wllllam V. Luneburg, 89, a 1tt1 tna former pres i d e nt or ' Amerlc•n Motors Corp .. died Thursday. SAULT' STE MARIE, Mich. CAPl -Carl 8 . Roekmao, 86, founder of the ceremonial World War I Drum and Buale Corps, died Thursday. The group was created In 11160 and i ncluded veterans who served in World War I. CORONADO cAP1 -0 . Wllllam Goepner, 70, believed to have rlred the first shot for the United States against the Japanese In World War II. died Tuesday. BUNNELL, Fla. IAP> - A woodcutter born into s lavery on a Virginia plantation more than a century ago has died at age l l9, one day after he was placed in a convalescent home for the rirsl time. lk~ W•rd was bor n on Christmas Day 1n 1862. when Abraham Ltncoln was president. - PICTtTIOUI eutHte• •"'MITAfhlMl•T Tiie 1e11aw1ne ,.,_ 11 .. ,,.. 111111-.. : l!ITATll PLANNING INVESTMEHTS. •M "c.llltrllla Limited~·· 1*3 Datt St, fl1111ntal11 Valley, CA tt709. Carme11 Fr-rlCll Gllllt. ltMJ 0.lo St,, F~ V .. lty, CA ft70L Tiiis WllMM 11 (OftMIM lly a llmltM P«tMnfllp. c.r-FrMtf'l<ll OYllo Tllll ft.elo -WM lllM wttll lM Cllllrtly Cla'1t ol Or-C-y on Otc. 2. n11. "'"'" PwlllhlM• Ora1109 CHll Oally Piiot, ,1.,_ n, It, M. ,, .. 2, .ttOJ SaMI fllCTITIOUI •U1tMat1 NAMa ITAT•MaMT Tiit I0110Wl119 paraon• are .. 1,.. -1 ...... s: L I L ENTERPRISES .... T,..., .... Way, C•la -·CA ma.. Oavld C. Lano, • T,...._ Way, CMla Mela. CA nt1'. Cllerl• Jo lAflll, ... Trtrtlert Way, Cotta Meta, CA '26Jt. Tllll llutltMtH 11 cortekKl..t ay • etMrel partntnfllp. 0."'dC.U.,. Tiii• _, WM llled wit!\ Ille cour11Y c1-ot Oreft9W c-y °" 0.C. JI, 1'11. .. ,,.... Publl-Or-CoMI Dall~ Pile(. Jell. ), IJ, It, 2', 1"2 J6~1 "UMM "1CTITIOUS •UltMlll NAMI: ITATaMaMT ---~ NoT•c• o, o•ATH o~ ... ,ta•TINIT1ll'llAU MAIU• L. SCHWO•I• °" ,,..,,_., "· 1•" 0 1• •·111• AND OP ftBTITION TO ~N1~fl' AMU!J.¢.~ T 1 HI ADMINISTaR etTAT• t~5:?::· • ~ NO. A·111.1J. r= ~ ., ,~-:::::: T o a I I h e I r s , vtNCINT ,, tuteACt ... _,. beneficiaries, credltora. _,_.,..,..,,..,_Y•. "'1• and contingent creditors ol , ... ,__.. -. •tt. "' .... ,,..,, Marl• L. Schworer and ,... • .,._ ... .._.,..,°' .... persons who mar, be c-•.~ ..... ,._..... .. .. 1. ~ " Trwtt .... 01 ,.,..,, otherwise Interested n the -••.., c--. ..--,,.., ., .. will and/or estate: U11llM ..... el"'-"<•, al Ult.. a tit' "" ........._ fll...,. '"''•"4• •• "'r•t A-1<111 '"" "' pe .on nas ..,......, .., 111wra..a ~ ._ ...... ,.. by Thomas L. Schworer ln , .. ,,,,,....._ ... Gt..,.,._. the Superior Court of Me,~ ...... ,-. ...... Oran~ countl requesting ~C-...•IM-lltW II ""•" .... Dff4ll ,, ''"'' 1111-:,.: that homas , . Schworer ,,..,.,.." ..._. 1t1 .... c..ay • be appointed as personal ...._ ... ,... .. : (ltytf 1.wi.. re p resent a t I v e to "".., Trwct '*· .. .,_,.. .. • administer tM ast•t• "( --~-... ..,........... ... .,.,. ., ,, 111111011 .... .,, .. .,., Marie L. Schworer (under 1tec..-flfOrw111tc:-ity,c.....,.. t h e I n de p • n d • n t '"'..-. ..,..,_, • ... ., ... , Administration of Estates ........ ~..-.-.."' .,.. ....., .,... ._. ..._ • """'" Act). The petition Is set for HO lett, ltllt wlllltllt tllt rlllfll at hearing In Dept. No. 3 at turtac• -*'· .. ,_... ,""" OtM 700 Civic Center Orlvt Ir-c .... It CWtla, • LlttlttM • P..-,.., __.., oi;...., 11. ,.,. West, In the Cltv of Santa 111 .... Mal, ,... ... _. Oftlc1a1 An a , Ca II for n I a on R::-.,.....,_.,, .. liltfltfk&ert Februarv 10, 1982 at 9:90 •• .11 ... ,_. "" ..,. 11 .. 1119 a.m. cenhcte•: Ar .. 111 M. lcllHll. IF YOU OBJECT to the TrvtlH, Cl• c-1, Hema'--· 9rantl1\9 of the petition 111< .. , .. , Oen "'"'· lull• 200• vou should either appea ' Na_,.,, -..Cf\, CA ftMO. r 01rec11-to u. ....,,. ,,.,.,," at the hearll\9 and state ;::•;r::'111e-::i:-.,."'=-~w= vour objections or flle it un 1,.,,, ..,. tw• ,...,cat..., ., written objections with the 1111uotk•. court before the hearing. s.1• .. 1. w111 11t me .. wllllellt Your appearance mav be cove11artl or warrartlY. ••preu 0t 1mp1t•• ... 10 uue . ..,. .... ,.,. or In person or bv vour aMumllnllCn 1o ... ,,,., u.. ""'9141 attornev. 11a1a11ce ..,. °" 111e note o• notH I F Y 0 U A R E A sac:11red .., uld oe.. of Tr\111, It wit: , 11u,su.u . p1 u1 tllt tellawl"t C R E 0 I T 0 R Or a u11ma1 .. co111 ... ,.,,, .. , an• contingent c reditor of the .. .... ," .. .,,. u-of 111a 111111•1 deceased vou must file •111111ut10rt of "'" Notlc• '' sa1e: your claim with the court ll,IOUS. oa1aG:J_.,,,,1'12 or present It to the F1n1 A,._1ca11 TIU• personal representative ....... MC.'-" I ac.i11om1ec.._.u... appo nled bV the court o...~rod within four months from Au11W1ltd Oflker the date of first Issuance ~~~':,':1 of letters as provided in 1141,..2211 Sect.Ion 700 of the Probate P'*'"""F°'--: c-Ot1•t Pl1tt. Code of California. The Jaft.1',K. •2· "2 2'"-1 time for flllno claims wlll PIU Illa not expire prior to four months from . the date of fllCTITIOUS MMMHI M"'MITATblla .. T Tiie fttltwlllt ,..,._ art ...... i-1-.. : the hearl09 noticed above. BEING MODERNIZED -The battles hip New Jersey is undergoing renovation in dry dock in Long Beach .in preparation for 1983 duty with a Navy task force. The New Jersey will be fitted with cruise missile launche rs and other new weapons. at cost of $326 million. OCEANSIDE IAP I Theodore K . Krugl•k, 70, an author and former reporter who ran the• USC journalism school until r etir ing in 1974, died Tuesday. T llt lotlowlrto parlOfl• art Goln9 llllllMUM: CENTURY COURIER SEltVICE, SAN Dl EGO 1 A p J us21 P•HO 0t Valtncla. Laou11e Hiiia. C.tllofrtla ntSJ Writer·educalor Ramon oau L. Gon<oe, 1111 '"' s1rw1. Jose Seader, 81. who won Wt11m11111er.c.11tomta'2ta lhe Spanish National Prize Mo-.m.a Mellcll EU•••te, s.c.1 for literature in 1935 and was W~:~:,:r;1~i ... No C, Oltftda&e, nom mated ror the Nobel T1111 -'""' I• c0rtC1uctt<1 by • Pru~e ror Lltt>rature in the -·a• ....-nNo. COUNTRY WOOOS Al10CIAT~5. 1000 Ouall Streat, ~llo 260, N-per1 •tacll.CAnMO. D0rt N. Vltlrt, General P"1Mr, 1000 Ouall Slteat, 5'141o 260, ,......,, llffcll, CA "'60. Dtn11l1 A. Martin, Gtrttral P ... 1 ...... 1• Oow111 sc-1. s..i• *· Htw...,i llMdl. CA t'JMO. YOU MAY EXAMINE the flle kept by the court If vou are interested In the estate, vou mav flle • request with the court to receive special notice of the Inventory of estate assets and of the petitions, · accounts and reports described in Section 1200.S of the California Probate Code. Acid rain in Sequoia? Public jobs on decline 1970s died Frida" Gall L. Gon<ot ' ' Tllll llaltmtrtl wM llled wllll Illa SAN FRANCISCO 1AP 1 County Cltrti of 0r..,.. Courtly Ort Otc•"'-II, 1'91. Tlll1 ...,._ It ~-_,. a 11 ... 1 ... ..,.....1111 ... O..H. Vieira o-rar Part,,., TllK S.--WM llltd wltll IM C-ty Cltrll of Or ..... C-ty °" Jllft.I, 1'R Robert N . Broxon, Attornev •t Law, UOI P•rk Avenue, Balboa Island, CalifDmla 92662. 675-5460 Pollutants traced in Southern Sierra Countess Suunne de Tess an, 98. wh o wa s honored for rurthertng French Am e rican relations. died Friday flt71P• PlllMI-Or-Coa\I Dally Piiot, Jllft It, it. F• 2. t, 1"2 ~ N ......... MlllH.~ . ......, -----------1 AU.P......_ ....... SEQUOIA NATIONAL PARK CAP> -Acid rain has been detected in thunderstorms over Sequoia National Park in the southern Sierra Nevada, researchers say. more acidic," Bancroft s aid. Acid raln a lso was rep<>rted last s ummer at Mammoth Lakes farther north in the Sierra. The Sequoia park researchers found ozone levels higher than s tale standards on 30 of 65 days between July 23 to Oct. 10. They hope to measure the extent and severity or ozone damage to ponderosa and J effrey pines in Sequoia park and adjacent Kings Canyon National Park. BOSTON <AP > Public job s in Massachusetts. which had been g r owlpg rapidly. dropped by 43,700 since state voters enacted the tax-cutting Propo s ition 2~. according to the Division of Employment Security. WESTFIELD. N.J. IAP1 Sbubsl H su, 89, a diplomat who represented Ch ina in world councils before and after World War II, died Thursday. ''''' n•dc.tler.._ _Mee..,...,,..., .... ,.. l-----------1 .. _,.,.._..,CAftMI Publlshed Orange Coast P1-.a Daily Pilot, Jan. 19, 20, 26, fl1CTIT10UI •UllNHS N&Ma ITAHM .. fT Tiie IOl'-11111 parlOfll art eol"11 Pwlllllhtd Orartoe CNll Oally 1982 334-82 Plltl, Jon. 12, It, a., Fea. J, 1"121f.G I------------ineun EUROPEAN PAINT E AS, JS• ...... ----------fla& llllC( Storms last SUD}mer and early fall often were "quite dirty," said Larry Bancroft, park resource officer. CMla MeM SI., Colla MeM, C.. ftU1 fla& llllC( 1-----------Vlecllmlr Batllll, M6 Colla NS-1'271 si,. c ..... ,,_..,c..mi7 "1CT1nous•u11NHs NOTICE OF DEATH OP Jlrl Rac.a4l, "' ewt• ,,_.. SI., MAMa ITATaMSMT A monitoring station in the park, one or .six in California, s howed acid rain with pH factors as low as 3.7. AMES, Iowa (AP! - J•mes ff. Hlltoa, 82 , president of Iowa State University from 1953-1965, died Thursday after a long Illness. co;1•1 MeM. c.. fl'27 TIM 1o11-11111 "''°"' ••• ""'"\ JEAN C. CRAW FO It D II' llulirtHS 11 <0rtC1uctt<1 by a llul!Mu•· AND OF PETITION TO -···~Jiii DOMIH ION·SUNFLOWER .• ADMINISTER ESTATE WM. a.lllll Joint v.,,...,., 17'1132 SIL~ll Clr<lt, NO a 111757 Precipitation contains acid rain if the pH falls below S.6 on a O to 14 scale of hydrogen-ion concentrations with 7 considered c hemically neutral. The state Air Resources Control Board says most p<>llutants over the southern Sierra come from the adj a cent San Joaquin Valley, althougb some drift in from the San Francisco Bay Area, Bancroft said. Howeve r , the data s h o wed public employm ent, based on November figures, is s till up 37,000 in the d ecade. peaking at 364,200 in 1979. It was 283.400 in 1972. TllK --tiled wlttl 111t s.tltt C,lrvlM,c.llfWlllA"714 · .,.. • c ...... , Cltrll of Or ..... C-ly °" Ooml .... Eqwitlet Cer_....... . T 0 a I I h e I r s • Jatt11<1ry IS 1'12 Calllornla ctrp0ratlort, 4740 Vort beneficiaries, Creditors ' · l'tetm Karman A••-. Newport •Hell, and contingent creditors of Pwt>tl-Or-eo.11 Dally Plltl Calllorfll.tf'JMO Jllft.1',2t."-b.2,t.•"2 ttl.eJ Sunflower Pro,.rlln, Inc.,. Jean c. Crawford and •'The big winter storms seem to be relatively clean .... with a pH of S.5, but in the summer and early fall it drops a full point, that is 10 times 1-----------Calllornla ,..,_ .. lort, lm2 Slay-II persons WhO mav be I .OS ANG £LES 1Ap 1 Pia& Illa circ••. 5111• c. ,,...,,,., c.tlfonli. nm otherwise Interested In the R et a Sh aw. 6 9. " h 0 1-----------.;=:!, =:.:,: "'"dwct..i by • wi II and/or estate: portra}ed the housekeeper "'CT1T1ous•u11 .. us ~P-11n. IM. A petition has been filed on the TV series .. The NAM« STAHMSNT o....ral Pert.., bV Cvnthla Jean Crawford Tiit lollowlrto pertoft ., dolno By: J-R. Wflllt, in the Superior Court of So • l • ' • l Ghost and Mrs Muir" and ...,,,,..,,.,, ....._ ~ C •a l te s tna appeared in Wall Oisne~ ·s WILDWOOD COMPANY. No. 7 Tlll1 ... ...._. -llltd wltll tflt Orange Countv req~stlng ~ I 'Mary Ponpins." died J an Barun • court. Ntwporl lltacll, County Clerll of Ofa1198 c.-y °" that c y nth I a Jean .. Calltorrtla .>ec•......,3•. 1•1· Crawford be appointed as II Alllft IC ........ _, _, UOO Se., "11'11t k • l • s.11 La11e c11y. u1a11 a.101 ...,..,_ o-.,.. c...-o.11y ,., .... personal representative to _, LASKOW Ca Pass ed awa\· o n .ey·~ on insu in :\1 0SCOW l r\P i T1111t1u1lrtH1 l1 coM1Ktectby a.,Jart.s.11,1t,1t,1"2 llUJ administer the estate of ALBERT LASKOW . J anuary 22. 1982 ·Born ~ 1""1"1""!11_K_ Jean C. Crawford, Irvine, ·d r I · C Varlam Shalamov, 74. a ~-· -• -res t ent o rnne . a December 5. 1903 Survived T111, ·1~-1 wa• 111 .. ,.1111 1-~ "911K California , (under the P d J R u s s i a n w r 1 t e r w h o • --·-· • ·-asse a\\ay on . anuary 24. hy her husband Charles R The lawyer for socialite Claus von Bulow, who Co;inlf C••·-01 <><eft9W '"""'Y "" I n d. e P e n d e n t 98 1.1 • , d chronicled life in Soviet • -I 2. -.e 1s survive by his Evans. I sister. 2 brothers. J is on trial in Newport, R.I. for a llegedly trying to labor C'a mp!I in a hook Jllftum ''· '-,,,.,.1 "~~'::!~~:,.•::.:' Administration of Estates wire Lil lian. daughter sons Col ll uga Mill e r . kill his wife with ins ulin injections, says he is entitled .. Kol,,m:i Notes." Pub11u.ect0r-coestD.t1yP11ot, • Tll• 10110,.1,,0 perto11 11 o.1no Act). Thepetltionlssetfor Har riet ll ec k er o r Commander Hobert N. and Jan lt,76,Feb.7.•.1"2 ,, ... , butlrttUH: hearing in Dept. No. 3 at Huntington Beach. Ca .. son J ohn A Miller or Versailles. trying to prove that crucial evidence was seized died Sunday PEASONAL ••LL PAVING 700 Civic Center Drive Samuel N. of M1am1 Beach, France. also 9 grandchildren illegally. PIU Illa SERVICE. "'7 Awl•"'°'' Terr.. We st , Sant a An a , Florida, 5 grandchildren. 1 and 2 great.grandchildren. DefenselawyerHeraldFahringer s aldincourt · BALTIMO RE •AP > c~'.:.=.~:,·11,1A•1e,.,..,.. California 92701 on sister Esther Friedman or Memorial services will be Monday that the evidence, a black bag allegedly Cornelius \\'. Krus~. 68· 3 "1CTmous•uMMHI Ttrr.,C•taMnal,CAttw. Februarv 10, 1982 at 9:30 ---'-l6-N.d&-; 1 broH\er··9aV1d .. ·~kl·at-St:-·John-the l}ivine---• ·-= ur'"· -----~,elll:f<LRm~.s>nc.aLJob.ns _ NAMaSTAT&MaMT ""--..-tt C'Oflduc1".,. ... a.m . l.askewitz of Florida. Mr Churc h on Thurs da y. Plll:IS lwpkins University for 36 Tll• lo11owlrt11 oer1on •• dolno 1n111v1~~8.Smlt11 IF YOU OBJECT to tM Laskow was a Mason for January,28, 1982 at 4:00PM y~ars and a proressor bu•";-,•~a~~VNA ASSOCIATES· n ••-••llltdwtt11• grant109 of the petition, · h B W rr· · · emeritus Of env1ronmenlal ENTERTAINERS (I I J A 'f , __ approx_imately 40 years. a wit urt e1st o 1c1ating. hea lth sciences al the MILllURH, "°'war..;. Aw .. s..ii. c-IY C1ar1t of°'-..-.tv., vou should either appear member of the Long Beach In lieu or nowcrs the ramily univers itv's School or s1.Huntlft9l0rtllucll,C..."'4t Jaft.e,nc. ,,, .. at the heari09 and state Elks J888 ror 15 yea rs requests donations be made containing an insulin·tipped hypodermic and It . d r bl" H .1 Ja,,_ Mllbum ""1111.,.., P-.. PY•ll•-o ... ,... c .. ,, D•llY your objections or file Services will be held on lo the Ame ri ca n Heart drugs,sbouldnotbeallowedinthetrial,whichis d ygdiesnedan u ic ealh. Dr ,H""'1nvt""e.ac:11.ca"'4t Pl1ot,J ... 12,tt,Jt,F.a.2, writtenobjectlonswlththe Tuesday, January 26. 1982 Association. •e un ay. "'1' ._,,,.., 1' conducted "' en ,.., la.G court before the hearln9. expected to resume this week. 1.,.,1.1e1ua1. a t 2 : oo p M at Harbor WARNER F h 1 , t · h · · J...-M11111;msm1111 -• -Your appearance may be Lawn Chapel. Servil•e s MICHAEL A. WARNER. a a r nger s reques came m a earmg m Ide T111s " .. _, ... mtd w1111"" ~ ... ,.. in person or by vour under the direction or resident of Costa Mesa. Ca which von.Bulow's s tepson, Prince Alexander G. nlily count., Cler11 ot Ora,... c°""'' °" attornev. Harbor Lawn.Mount Olive Passed away on January 25. von Auersperg, took the stand. J..,uary 0 • 1112 ,,..,.., "~C::::::::' I F YO U A R E A Morluary or Cost a Mesa 1982 al the age or 63. He 1:. * • o{i•u•or.•Q. P..a11-0r..,.. c.a.i Deity Piiot Tll• to11owlrto ..-r .. 11 1t ••lno C R E 0 I T 0 R o r a 540·5554. survived by his "ife Jean or The aircraft carrier USS Constellation, part of • ' 0 J•11 ••. •. F.i.. 2· •. '"' m.-, llW...uas: contingent creditor of the C t M C 3 th VS I • h Inell 0 EL OORAOO WINI( & SPlltlTS, EVANS , os a esa , a., sons e .. nava presence m l e aa ffaD, _.,. _ uJu 1:1 Toro Road, e1 Tore. deceased, you mu$t flle VIOLET H. EVANS. age S te~ h e n Warn e r of dropped anchor al the Kenyan port of Mombasa on wi'thheld ,._ "9lllK ca111orrt1anuD. your clalm with the court 78, resident of Costa Mesa. Huntington Beach. Ca . Monday for a goodwill visit, the U.S. Embassy Antonio J. Roi••· usu or present it to the Michael R. Warner of Costa "'CT1Ttou1auMMau HHtller11too11. El Toro, ca111or111a personal representatl"• -----------said . FRESNO <AP > "AM•ITATaMS"T .,.,. .. Mesa. Ca. and Richard A. Th . b h rt . S ..... _ . Tiie tollowlno ,.,..,, •• dolno T11i1 Wl!Mu 11 c-..c-..., ... appointed by the court ~---- PllltClllOTHBS m.L llOADWAT MOITUAIY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa &42-9150 IALTI IBGBOH SMITH & TVTHtLL WHTCLIFf CHAf'll 427 E 17th St Costa Mesa 6't6-937t PllltCl..OntHS SMITHS' MOITUAIY 6i7 Main St Huntington Beach 536-6539 PACIAC YllW .-.OllALPAll Cemetery MOrtuary Cl)ai>el·Crel'nltC>fY ji;oO PK•hc v-nnve --~·tt;;c~. ~2700 MICCMJMICll M011'UAlllS l..lguna Bemch 494-9415 Ui.auna Hills r~ S.,, Juan C.plslr~ 4'!>-1776 0 Warner of Calarornia . 2 e earner, w ose ome po ts a• _,_,o, ts Names and addresses of ...,,1 ... un: lftdlv..._.. within four months from bro thers St an I e y and scheduled to visit Mombasa until Saturday. federal grand jurors s.;11~:?.~~!t'i::.,"l!::.'ci~.:;,·· Tiii• ~· =.•11 .... wit11 .,. the date of first Issuance Silvester W1etrzychowski * * sitting in Fresno will not A11a .. D. 01111no114m, 1on ,_,., c1erti of 0r.,,.. c-ty ... of letters as provided In b o t h or M 11 w au k e e . A eunman who tried to hold up a crowded be released Ln the future ve1"'11,,. 0r .• H"""nvt°" a.ec11. ca. o.(. a1. 1•1. Section 700 of the Probate Wiscoruiin. 4 sisters. Sister Baltlmore/ub was trapped by about 150 angry ., .. , ,.,.'"*=1••rwwtentc... Code of California. The M ar~· Alvona or W1'scons1·n. t be t bef th a hi as a security precaution, Tiii• e-lntaa I• COfldlKI .. lly efl PwtOHke ... ,,. J pa rons an a en ore ey turne mover to fed 1 · d d 'ded lftdlvldl69• ..... Am Q1191niiattm ,., time for fifing claims wlll Frances Allmon and Ali ce police, authorities say. a era JU ge ect · A1i .. D.0111"'°'*" •ec,_.-_ ....... ,. · not expire prior to lour p el k 0 w s k I b 0 l h 0 r u .s. Dis trict Court Tlllt _...._, .... ,...., wllll ... 1'1"91 t Greenfield. Wisconsin, and The incident began when the two men armed Judge Edward Dean county c•-of°'-cou .. ty °" ...,..1_0r_Coatt0.tiyPllo(, mon hs from the date of Irene Michalski or Cudahy, with handguns walked into the Garrett Lounge, Price issued a special J-.,u:•m. ,,111011 J.n.$.1J.1t,a..•m ,.,.., th~~e~rl~~tl~~::C:~•e w i s c 0 n s i n . a n d 4 fired two shots Into the celling and announced a 0 rd e r banning the p1111u,"" orano• c0 .. 1 Dally PIU llllCE the flle kept bV the court. grandchildren. Memorial holdup. re lease, but added that PllotJart.1t,1t,F..,,2·'·"., _.., lfvouarelnterestedlnthe Mass or Christian Burial will * * he did not believe he had Pate Illa "=":::=::-estate, vou may flt• a b e c e I e b r a t e d o n An avalanche killed a member of the search th I 1 th it l ri.e .......,_. ...,_ -...,. request with the court to Wednesday,January 'l'T.1982 team buntin.c for two missing climbers on frigid .e hegldathau or Y 0 ,,,,,,_1n--~-·••• WllMN•: receive ... __.lal notice of at s :JOPM at St Joachim's M w--a..•-with o e names . .... -·-.. SMALL CLAIMS PRoc:asttNo --~ Catholic Church Interment f ou•l _,._ in New Hampshire, a member picture 8 0 f the ..,....ITAThleNT coMPANY. 2791 circi• or1111, the lnventorv of estate o the Appalachian Mountain Club said. 23 b · Tll• 10110•1"11 "'' ... h ••1"• ~ 9Md\, CA tMa. assets and of the petltlon1, at Riverside National Another member of the" search team was -brre~ er JUry w~re -1:::t_tc:-~NIC Of' "°'-LYWOOO, ,,...,, CleR T .. , Jrt tm Cln:lt accounts and reports Cemetery. Pierce Brothers hu•a'ed abo t '·t d but aa d to di pu as or more t an tlQlllflliMOll,trvll'f,C..m•• Otlwe,~9tedl. A...a. described In Section 1200 8rlt 8r01rdway-~ortuury LU wa-. eep, man e I 20 y~ars until Price K•t1 s.er, UOUlet MMn. 1rv1M, Kettl'-' ,_,., TMt, ma ctn:• of the Callfornla Probate directon. himself out and radio .for help, said club prohibited the practice ce.flrn °'~~'=!~~'*!., .. Cod WIF.sE spokesman David Warren. last year. 1,,;~1:..,..~• 1' c~..,.., 1111111<•,,....•'" -''""' ati.er e. LEE HENRY WIESE. The two were part of a team of about 30 The state's four other KfPs-tr .,.,,....,c.~· Wittman & Wlttma•, reaident of Dana Point. Ca. searchers who had been ftthtina tbe mountain's federal courts do not T111• ....._. -.,_. "'"' • T1111 ~-:..''; .... .,.. • ly: •llftdaH It. Wlttmett Passed away on January 24, sub· zero temperatures and ferocious wtnds Sunday l ,_,, ti C-•Y ,..,. °' °' .... c_., c-IY c.-" Or'"" '-"' • Attorney at Law, 11nf itl2. Survived by hla ond re ease uuorma on on J_,yu.1-. J9'1.t,t•, I I II d dau1ht.er Eleanor Dunnlna. and M ay lookinC for Jeffrey Batier, 17, and jurors without a court ........... o... a.1 Qll:~: ,. ... , ,., ne ., ., l•ltt J, GrneaMle services will be Hugh Herr, 20, both ofLHca1ter, Pa. -order. ,,.,.,,.,,.,,,.u,t,1• J1 ... ~·J:::;,:t~r" 0•11' Tf1~~';ti:°"''• ti ... hel4 on Wtdnesday, January • • P r I C e c i l e d 1• U641 Pubtlshed Ora~ Coast at,· 1nz ,t u~OOAM at The American Dar A11ociatlon:' wary of recommendations from o 11 Pll .... J 1 20 .... f rth ~·--hall l all -...1-t hool CJu1ifled Ada ar .. th.. -•.. a Y '"• •n. • • -· Pacific View Memorial u f'r .. V\11 .. c en1e1. • O•ml a aw sc the Judicial Conference "' "' r..-.1912 907-62 Park. with Rev. Bruce that restricta 1tudenta and faculty members to of the United ~t11ta to -wer lo a aucceurul flCTlnouuu .. •a• c....--------• K.arrle officiating. Pacific fundamentaltst Chrilttans to keep ill academic s upport bl s poll c y :=:r'!:;~ ::i11ei,.!1;: ..._ ITATe••T -.JC lllll View Mortuary directors. accreditation. chanae, -Le! T"' ......,, .. ,..._, '" "'"' ----------....... AB .11 k'-bod ..... .-.1 e ~ Ml-•: fllCTtft_eutl_ NEW BU ..... EN Co1tleot .lite DAILY '9LOT llr ""'""""°" .......... ~ r•qulr•••nte' for ••l1t9 a Plotltloum .................. MMU1 ~-- •uc A'I po.uCY·ma wl y • .,._, 171·138 ..__ _________ _. UNITaD a11T111t,...t1H, ,., a. ..._.,A.,._.. Monday In Odea,. to reject an attempt to undo tMts..,c..-...CA...,, TIM......._ ---....._ the provisional accreditation tranted Oral &ollerte M l de U o.i1e :!'!r:· aa 1· .,.. •·· _._.i Un1veralty Law School. eaa eB CQBeB C • fte c.:;..,-:-....=· .. •· _. ... ..:.!~-=:'.~':..,......_. • * , ~ .... CA... flrMrtc ....__, 1ti11 ....... SACRAMENTO CAP) -ODIJ m cuea ol ,,,...,._._,....._A .................. ....,CA-. It~'• mine aafet.y atency abut down 17 1 __ ,_ ,._11,. __ a_ 1 .~~!..... !!!!!'--·~ . c111,. ,........_, ,,. a.11t .... Coal _..__ durin~ l I'-~'-........ me••• were re.,... .............. ,vnlHI u~1•ar, a --.... _,....,. Drt• ...._...._CA..., llMIK1t a apee a -r"-,.-om..-rd 1 ..... n.--~-...a -• a .... ~a-. n.e ....... 11 __...., • by tbe deaths of a mlnera la U.. atate laat week, reeo °"• aays --•late ._.,...._._, He .. tb '"'' ........ 1e ur• n• "' • ...,,. ,, Hid offlclala. S.rv.J...~ b-... ...___ 1,.. ,_ 1 w -~ _,. __...C':":i T1lll =---=--.-• At 1eut one safety violation wu found at each • ~ mu .,_.. ,.,.,1 c ...... ._, anu -,..... ...... -.._ .... c-e. °"' ., -o.., .. of the mlnel that waa lbut down, lta~rtment cu• la 1171, UM preYloul l"lc!ord low. c.-.. C11rt1"' Or-. ea-tJ • .......... I ll,__ -~ Ill l ,_ Ill lleul• c .... were down ·--uma•-u. • o.c. "· ""· .._ o .-UN nera a ... peetor U.r • _. ... --.. ........ or..--~ ........ _.o.....,..., Hid Monday. ~.rcent nationally, the de;utm•& NPQl'ted. *·.,ta,,.,-..,. -_.,. . .,.. ., "',..., • -... , , ' I I; llllll lllCH/11111 ClllT lltlyPlllt TUESDAY. J~N. 26, 1982 CAVALCADE COMICS STOCKS 82-3 84 87 Erma Bombeck's desk may be "unstructured," but she knows where everything is. See. P.age 83. D a ' Social Security withdrawal ~yed Saddle'back College employee group members polled on system pullout A Saddl eback Community College District employee group is polling lts members to see if they want to pull out of the Social Security system. Members of Saddle bac k's California School Employees Association, which represents non-teaching s taff. initiated the drive to give employees a choice of part.icipating in the system. Julie Pahan. c hairwoman of t h e Committee for Social Security. which is coordinating the survey, said employees are paying into two retirement sys t e m s through payroll deductions -Public Employees Retirement and Social Security. "All full·time employees have a retirement plan through the college," she said. "If we have one system, why do we need two?" Miss Paban sa id paychecks are being depleted considerably from having to pay into two systems. She said her group would like Social Security payments to be an option for those who wish to continue in the system . She said the impetus behind the drive to drop mandatory Social Security payments is the s h r inking ·buying power o r college employees, caused by inflation. "We want and need to have more take -home pay," Miss Pahan said. "In my own case, and though I've had pay raises. I'm at the same level as 1 was three years ago." UCI wastes OK'd for sterilization UC Irvine Medical Center orricials have received approval t o resume s terilization o f infectious hospital wastes at t heir facility in Orange. Orange County health offi cials sa id Monday the m edical center's s pecial aut oclave apparatu s b a d pa ssed operational tests and could once again be used to sterilize the plastic and paper products used in the treatment of patients. The autoclave, which uses a combin ation o r h e at a nd pressure to sterilize the wastes, had been out of operation for repairs for several days earlier in the month. The coun ty r evoked the m e dical center's permit to steri lize t he was tes at its location last week when health -Off cials claimed the infectious trash was being improperly stored there. The medical center normally st erilizes the wastes in the outdoor autoclave a nd then has the treated garbage taken away with other wastes. When the autoclave wa~ut of service, the uni versity had contracted with a special trash ser vice to take car e of the untreated wastes. Some of the garbage ille~ally turned up in a county land/ill site for normal trash, leading to a county crac kdown on the dumping or infectious wastes. About 160 bags of untreated wastes traced to several area hospitals have been found in county land/ills in the past few weeks. No new findings have been reported since last week. however. She sa id col leg e adm inistrators had s aid her organization must demonstrate that there is widespread support for the move by its membership. "We've been told we have to get the signatures or al least 75 percent of CSEA members before this can go before the di str i c t bo a rd f o r consideration," she said. Miss Pahan said the college administration had also s aid it m ay lake as long as two years before employees are allowed to di scont inue participation in Social Security Faculty at both Saddleoack campuses Irvine and Mission Vit'jO are covered by a private retir~ment plan and do NEW DUTIES Alethea Caldwell has been appointed executive associate director of c linical services at the UCI Medical Center. not pay into Social Security, acco rding t o a college spokesman. Miss P a han s aid many employees in the Saddleback district believe they can get a better deal through a private retire ment system. She said people she has talked to are afraid that deductions for the financially troubled system . Social Security, would continue to go up while benefits would go down. Under federal la w , once a public e mployee withdraws fro m Soci a l Securit y. they ca nn ot re .e nter. P ri vate employees are not allowed the option or withdra~ing. Highway • pro1ects proposed Orange County and 15 or its 2ti cities have proposed highway projects totaling $120 million as candidates for state funding in the 1982·83 fiscal year . Amon g t h e 44 projects proposed to the Orange County T ran s portation Commission Monday for inclusion in its 1982 State Tran s p o rt a t io n Improvem e nt Prog r a m are sever al along the Orange Coast. They include: -Widening of the San Diego Freeway from eight to 10 lanes between the Garden Grove and Corona del Mar freeways. Widening of the McFadde n A venue overpass at the San Diego Freeway in Huntington Beach. -. . . . . .. ... : . •• ·'I#' ~· o.ii,, ~ -~ s.. ... -...... LAGUNA FATALITY Walter 0 . William s. 22. of Vista . was fat a lly injured wtren the car m which ht> was riding flipped over a bridge at the south end of L aguna Beach at 11 p. m Monday. The driver . Timothy P Thomas. 17. of Camp Pendleton . is hospital ized in fair condition. Police said a compl aint of manslaughter will b~ filed against him T he car was northbound on Coast Hifo{hway and failed to negotiate a curve near Victoria OnvL'. and plummct1;:d over a guardrail. United Way ----budge t bids- rise by 49% ~ Bus driver faces court on sex rap -Redesigning of the Newport Boulevard bridge over Pacific Coast Highway to create a third northbound lane. -R econ s t r u cti n g t h e interchange of Myford Road at the Santa Ana Freeway in Irvine. -Widening interchanges of Culver Drive and MacArthur Drive both with the San Diego 1-~reeway in Irvine. Laguna sclwols eye child abwe policy Laguna Beach ·u nified School Dis trict employees m ay be required to report all suspected ca s e s of child abuse or be charged with a misdemeanor. Sexual abuse or exploitation -Cruel or inhumane corpoTaJ punishment or physical injury. An Orange County Transit Distr ict bus driver has been ordered to appear at a Fe b. 4 preliminary hearing on charges he engaged in illegal sex with a 14-year -old Bue na Park girl Th e proposa ls will be presented to a transportation commission s ubcomm ittee in e a r I y F e b r u a r Y· Negligent failure·to protect a c hild fr o m se vere malnutrition. Karen Klammer. volunteer chairwoman of the United Way's Allocation. Planning Committee, said tod ay that 1982 budget requests to the United Way of Orange County North-South are 49 percent higher than last yea r's total allocation. ·aboard his b1:1s while-rt-w1ts stopped near the Huntington Bea<·h City Pier Burn victim said serious A policy that 's unde r consideration provides that any sc.hool employee who fails to report an in stance of child abuse or a suspected incident, -I s gu G of a misdemeanor. - School Supe rintendent Bob Sanchis said the policy is being considered under recent state legisla tion -w ttich -pT-O"tects employees from being the target or a laws uit for r e porting incidents or child abuse. Ms . Klammer said inflation a nd federal budget cuts are the major reasons for the increase in r e quests for f i n a n cial assistance. "Although United Way raised more than $12 million last fall," she said, "the simple truth is we • re going to have to make some tough fiscal decisions this year . There just isn't enough money to go around.·' Contributions to United Way . help support a total or 86 local agencies providing human care services in 32 communities throughout Orange County. 1>M1,,.1 ... s...i,,_ REQUESTS UP Karen Klammer says 1982 budget requests to the United Wa~ are almost 50 percent higher than last year The driver, Robert Mitchell Porter, 34, of Anaheim , pleaded innocent to the felony charge during an arraignment Monday 1n W e s t O r a nge .County Municipal Court in Westminster , according to De puty District Attorney Arnie Westra. Porter has been released from jail on his own recognizance, Westra sa id . H e has been s uspended from his bus driving job pendin~ dispositioh of the charges The in c ident a llegedly occurred Jan. 12 A 28-year-old Irvine woman, bad l y bur ne d when h er condominium caught fire early Monday, was listed in serious condition this morning in UC Irvine Medical Center. Patricia Marsh all suffered second and third·degree burns over 60 pe rcent of her body before being pulled from her burning home by a passerby, Steve De Salvo. 23, a UC Irvine student, authorities said. Yesteryear's Jane Fonda cited Socialist Bixby heiress called an enigma in Costa Mesa history By .JODI CADENHEAD Ot"" 0 .. ,, ...... , .... Today, 52 years after her death, Fanny Bixby Spencer rem a ins a legend an enigma in Costa Mesa's history. Scorned by many a nd known to all who lived in the town of 2,000 a. half century ago. her refusal to salute the American Flag, her donations of money to worthy organizations and her penchant for feeding the poor made her famous. "She was not just a radical," Ellen Lee told the Costa Mesa Historical Society. "She was rather outrageous." The ninth and youn1esl child of Jotham Bixby, who owned nearly all of Long Beach, the hel res:i is a reminder that the very rich ~an be radtcally di(ferent from you and me. She wore her lo.ng t>lac~ )\air pulled back in a se~ere bun. Her white factory blouses and long black sktrts b ecame her trademark. Strongly affected by the poverty she had seen ln Europe and New York. the youn1 belreu be came a radical 1oclall1t •nd paclfllt. She worked for the Loni Beach Pollce Department, takl"' on t.he cues ol women and c:blld,.n ·. li ving in crime torn tenement houses. She lived in a room in her father's ornately massive home, peeling away the gold edgeo wall paper and throwing out the French furniture, said Mrs . Lee. The Laguna Beach resident and author of "Newport Bay: A Pioneer History," explained that she fi rst became inter ested in the Costa Mesa woman 10 years ago. "She was the Jane Fonda or her time," said Mrs. Lee. "This was a woman who lived SO years too soon." At the age of 38 l''anny Bixby married a Long Beach dock worker named Carl Spencer. Having alienated m any of the people of Long Beach, the couple qloved to Costa Mesa in 1919 and the legend began. "She was a one person social servi~e," said Mrs . Lee. "She was the PTA, the Ubrary, the women's club and the welfare department.·' Over the yean 'the Spencen' simple wooden house at lbe corner or 18th and Whittier became a home for countless foster children. COSTA MESA LEGEND Scorned at the time. Fanny Bixby Spencer cut a sw ath through the social fabric of Costa M~sa 50 years ago. D ecades befor e socia l programs became common, the Cos ta Mesa h'e I r ess was donating silverware and money to the PT A for a hot luncli pro1ram. She 1ave money for the cit y's first library, a women 's club a nd lbe land where Lion's Park is today. Accepting land a nd money from the eccentric heiress was one thing, but allowing her to set foot in the Friday Afternoon Women 's c..;1ub was something else, e xplained Mrs. Lee. Tbe wealthy woman insisted on giving feverish speeches on the ills of war and the need for "I 'm something of a pariah," she wrote a friend l:t 1925. "I'm an outcast. I would rather be friendly, but I don't know what to do." So adamant was her opp osition to war that she refused to allow any or her foster children lo salute lbe nae. lo her wtll she stipulated t.hat no military organl&aUon ever be allowed to use Ll9n's Park. But the terms of the will were never carried out. FaMy Bixby Spencer died In 19.10 at the age of Sl . I Her hus band continued her b ea utification program or planting paJm trees up and down Newport BouJevard. But the trees were ripped out before his death In ltsO. The house they llved In la gone; in Its place are a few oil wells. Today, not a street, a pan or a plaq_ue exiat1 to say tba\ Fanny Bixby Spencer once lived ln Cott.a M•a. The policy also stipulates that no employee reporting a case may be civilly or legally liable for any report required by the policy. The police describes child abuse as: He s aid the board would continue its consideration of the matter at its next meeting in February. • Sailing instruction offered The Capistrano Bay Yacht Club's sailin g instruc tion program will begin during the April school vacation, April 5 through April 8, at Dana Point Harbor. Interested people age 7 to 70 may pa rticipate and membership in the yacht club is not required . All participants must be able to swim. Classes will meet from 9 a.m . to 4 p.m. Basic boating and sailing will be taught with inte rm e dia te and advanced instruction also available. Boats used will be Sabots, Lido 14s and Lasers. For information call 493-7102, 493-9161 or (213) 943-1707. · The fees for the instructiol\ session are : $ 2 o .. r o r y a c h t c , •1 b members, $30 for non-members and $10 for boat rental. • College course Europe-bound Tbe hi s t o r y , art , architecture a nd music of Europe will be studied this summer in a three-week trip offered b y Saddle back College's Social S c ience Department. Interested persons m ay ' registe r for the course, Socil~l Science 100 A· 0 Travel Stud y , t hrough Friday , o r at s ummer sem est e r registr ation in May . Part icipants leave June 19 and return July 1 l. The class is limited to 40 persons. Cost or the trip is $2,375. For more information, call. 831·4733. An informational brochure about the itinerary ls a vailable. • Injections seminar topic Hospital-acquired infec· Uona will be the topic o( a _emlnar Jor nurses at S o u t b Co a s t M e d. l c a I Center Thursday. Titled _"Making the Rt1ht Choices." the seminlar will f eat ure Dr . Jame s Green wood, director of microbioloCY for the Oran1e • Co unty H ea lth Oepartmment. Emphaala will be on the prope r proce dure f qr coll ecti n g a p e c i mens: pro~r wound care and the l egal implications of. tnfectlon control. For reservatlona, nursea ahould call the boa p ltal nursing omce at -.1111. 111111 TUESDAY. JAN. 26, 1982 CAVALCADE COMICS STOCKS 82-3 84 87 Erma Bombeck's desk may ·•be "unstructured/' but she knows where everything is. See. Page 83. I ·C~~ttee of 4,000 postpones Irvine Co. suit By STEVE MARBLE Ot•Dell'I ........... The Committee of 4,000 -the group claiming to represent disgruntled homeowners whOI lease land from the Irvine Company -has indefinitely, postponed a planned lawsuit against the development firm. The announce m e nt car;ne Monday. the same day the committee had vowed to file Its class action suit on behalf of residents in 'Newport Beach and ,Irvine. The Irvine City Council will meet tonight to consider the contro versial qu estion or residential leaseholds. 0.11, ...... ,...... .., ... ,,. .. 0'0...11 SWIFT KICK -Topping off an e xhibition b y h i s Huntington Beach Karate Club .. director Gary Pitts put. tii s best toot forward and down through 180 pounds of con crete. By brea king 20 in c h es of brick he set a world record. This was his first attempt at such a feat. but he expects to repeat it on th e "Y o u Asked For It" t e l ev i sio n s h ow . Th e club is under au s pi ces o f t h e Hunt - ington Beach YM CA. Dem- o n s trations we r e at t he .Hun tington Center Ma ll. w h ere Pitts autographe d pieces of the broken bricks for s p ec - tators. Members of a committee claiming to re present 4,000 people leasing la nd from the lrvlne Company. are e xpected to make an appearance at the 7:30 p. m . City Council meeting In City Hall, 17200 Jamboree Road. The committee Is objecting to Irvine Company intentions to adjust lease fees upward. Adam Max, a consultant hired by the committee, said the delay ~ame after the lnine Company showed signs or "resolving" the land lease dispute. Homeowners and the Irvine Co mpany have been locked for w ee k s in a dis pute o ver skyrocketing lease fees that up to 4,000 residents in the two cities must annually pay the firm. The two sides have yet to meet face to fa ce but have traded offe r s and threats through newspaper ads and stories. J e rry Collins, an Irvine Company spokesman, said his firm is pleased the threatened suit has been delayed. ·'It's a prudent step that works in e-veryone's best interest," Collins said. The de lay in the laws uit follows an offer last week from the Irvine Company to reduce by up to 50 percent the annual lease fee that homeowners must pay. False alarms policy readied Thoughtless action won't bring response from police By RICHARD Gl\r:EN Of tAe Dally ... .,. Staff The ~rvine Police Department won't respond to robbery and burglary alarm s which are chronical l y set o ff b y mechanical or human error be~inning Feb. I. Businesses and residences are allowed three false alarms in a month or 10 in a year, the policy s tates . If these limits are exceeded. police will tell the alarm s ubscriber to quickly remed y the fal se alarm problems or else police will ignore future alarms. Michael Weiss, Irvine police s up e rvisor o r pre ve ntive services. said that the policy is intended to stem the rising tide or false alarms in Irvine . ·'Our department responds to 400 false alarms each month." he said "and a minimum or two police units respond . to each of these alarms. "Ninety-eight percent of all alarms we respond to are false." he said. "Response time is usually 11 minutes and during th at time , o ur r es ponse capability to other areas of the city is limited ." Weiss a dde d that whe n om cers continually respond to false a larms. t hey have a tendency to develop a lax attit_ude whk h could place them in danger if the burglary or robbery alarm turns out to be real. He said that al the start or last year . police responded to about 320 false alarms per month and that by the end of the year there were about 400 false alarms per month. About 65 percent of the time. false alarm s are caused by human error. Weiss said. ''The e mpl oyees aren't properly trained or the janitorial staff comes in after hours and sets off the alarm," he said . •'The other 35 percent is due to me'cha n ical pr o bl e m s. sometimes triggered by wind, rain. fog and power outag~s." ColUns said a laws uit could "hurt this effort." T he firm a lso offered a financin g package to help a frected residents purchase their leased land. Under thla offer. the Irvine Company would provide financing at 12 percent for a seven -year period. The loans would be amortized over a 30-year period. The company's offer to reduce payments would be made only to those with re-adjusted leases. Residents would have their yearly payments reduced up to 50 p ercent the first year and then s lightly less each year following. • Irvine man stable after auto crash An 18-year-old Irvine man, who was injured when his 1956 Volks wagen flipped over in Irvine, was listed in stable and good condition this morning in Western Medical Center . Santa Ana. Keith Ala n Miller of 4176 Br1s bane was driving north on Ridgeline Dri ve one-quarter mile south of University Drive whe n he lost contro l of his vehicle. police said. The car rolled over. ejecting Mi Iler a nd passenger Leslie Diane Balter , 19, 19472 Sierra Canon , Irvine. Neither person was wearing a seat belt. Yesteryear's Jane Fonda cited Socialist Bixby heiress called an enigma in Costa Mesa history By JODI CADENHEAD Of ... Da6ly ,,_ s- Tod ay, 52 years after her death, Fanny Bixby Spencer remains a legend -an enigma in Costa Mesa's history. Scorned by many and known to all who lived in the town or 2,000 a. ha lf century ago, her refusal to salute the American Flag, her donations or money to worthy organiiations and ber penchant for feeding the poor made her famous. . "She was not just a radical," Ellen Lee told the Costa Mesa Historical Society. "She wu r.ther outraceous." The ninth and youn1est child of Jotham Bixby, who owned nearly all of Long Beach, the heiress is a reminder that the very rich ~an be radically different from yo~ and me. She wore her lone &lack l\alr· ·pulled back in a severe bun. Her white factory blouses and lone black skirts be ca me her trademark. . Stron&lY a ffected by the poverty she had seen in Europe aad New York, the youn1 beireu became a radical 1ociall1t and pacifist. She worked for the Loni Beach Pollce Department, taklnl on tab• cues ol women and chlldren living in crime torn tenement houses. She lived in a room In her father 's ornately massive home, peeling away the gold edged wall paper and throwing out the French fUmiture, said Mrs. Lee. The Laguna Beach resident and author or "NeWp<>rt Bay: A Pioheer HJstory," explained that she first became interested in the Costa Mesa woman 10 yean ago. "She was the Ja.ne Fonda of her time.'' said Mrs. Lee. "This was a woman who lived 50 years too soon." At the age of 38 t•anny Bixby marrled a Long Beach dock • worker named Carl Spencer. Havlng alienated many ol the people of Loni Beach, the couple rtioved to Colla Mesa in 1911 and the legend be1an. "Sbe was a one person social service," aaJd Mrs. Lff. "She was .tbe PTA, the library, the women's club and the. welfare department." Over I.be years tbe Spencen' simple wooden house at the corner or 18th and Whittier became a home for counUeu fMter cbllclren. De c ades before aoclal pro1rama became common, tbe Costa lleaa h'eire11 was c:.e. ............... ...., ...... COSTA MESA LEGEND -Scorned at the time, Fanny Bixby Spencer cul a swath through the social fabric of Costa Me-sa 50 years. ago. donaUnc silverware and money to the PT A for a hot lunch proeram. She aave money f~ t he city'& first library, a women'• club and the land where Lion'• Park Is today. Accepttna land and money from the eccentric heiress was one thing, but allowing her to set foot in the. Friday Afternoon Women's Club was something else, explained Mrs . Lee. The wealthy woman insisted on giving feverish speeches on the ills of war and the need for social reform. "I'm something of a pariah." she wrote .a friend lo 192S. "I'm an outcasL I would rat.her be friendly, but I don't know what to do." So ada man t wa s h e r opposition t o war that she ref used lo allow any of her foster children to salute tbe n ... In her will she stipulated that no military organl&atlon ever be allowed to use Lion's Park. But the terms or the will were never carried out. Fanny Bixby Spencer died in 1930 at the a1e of 51. Her husband continued her be auliricalioo program or planlln& palm trees up and down Newport Boulevard. But the Lreea were ripped out before his death in 1950. The house they lived in la 1one; in ita place are a few oil wells. Today, not a street, a Dark or a plaque exists to aiy fbat Fanny Dbby Spencer once lived in Cotta Mesa. Committee leaders have been 'cool to this idea. Affected homeowners in both cities own their homes but lease the land under them from the Irvine Company. The leases call for residents to pay 6 percent or the appraised value of their leased land each year to the firm. But as the leases come up for r eadjustment, the fees are focreased to reflect the spiraling value of land. The result is that annual lease payments are taking mammoth leaps, ln some cases going up more than 2,000 percent. Many residents claim they can't afford ' the hJ&her fees and at least one Ne wport man has eone Into; default on tUI property. , While the Irvine Company hu offered residents a ran1e of a lternatives to manaee lease fees or to purchase land, the firm has refused to negotiate or even recognize the committee as a bargaining agent. , Committee cons ultant Max asked the Newport City Council Monday to form a comm~tiee. with the Irvine City Council t<X help settle the dispute. Max s uggested the council committee investigate bolt\ res idential and commercial leases. ~,~-- • lroine bus driver horwred 1 rvine res1dent Thomas t hlcoine has been named coach operator of the month by the O r a nge County Transit District. Th e OCTD b oard of direct_.ors co mmended Chicoine for his outstanding a tte ndance , safe t y and overall work a nd driving record since he joined the district two years ago. Chicoine works out of the OCTD Irvine Operations and Maintenance Division. •Blneprinl ~explained CoasWne College will offer a bas ic blueprint r:eadinc co urse on We dnesday evenings, beginning Feb. 3, at Robinwood Learning Center, 5172 McFadden Ave., Huntington Beach. H . R . ltotllmaa , an architecture gradu~te fro~ UC Berkeley , will teach drawing techniques and the reading of blueprint symbols. The course is part of the college's bulldin& and construction program . Registration information can be obtain e d by calling Coastline, 963-0824. •Ari auction set for UC Irvine Works by such artists as C raig Kaafmaa, Toay DeLap, Jolaa Paal Joae1 and Alesh Sm llti will be auctioned Feb. 6 at UC Irvine. Money raised by the auction will pay for a tour ol New Yort seminars for UCI master of fin e arts Dr. Mwla &na.. directer of tbe Griffith Park Oblervatory in Loa Ansel•, wUI live a lecture enUUed. "Ecbdel ol Ancient Sides" at T:IO p.m. Jan. 31 ln Crawford Hall at UC Irvine. The lecture on the biawry of astronomy la part of a aeries that includes a 1peecb by Jean-lllcbe.I Cou.teau on '-'Ceanoloo on Feb. • and a candidates. The auction is sponsortld by the UC I s tudio arts department and lbe UCI Alumni Office. Admiasion is $10. A preview of the worb to be sold in the aucUon will betin at 6:30 p.m. Feb. 6.in UCl's .Fine Arts Village. For more information call m..an. speech by eartbqu~ke 1 pecialill Dr. &et.er& blleldd OD Mareh 21. Tbe aeries la co-1pomored by UCI and tbe Junior Lea1ue ol Newport Harbor. Ticket• for tbe tbree·leeture serles are ta and Ucteta for individual lecturea are $10. For more • llllormaUoD call m.aTI. •Sy.rp.any tela free concert The Irvine Symphony Orchestra wW pre.eat a ,...., concert at 2 p.m. Jan. 11 lD th• Turtle Rock Commwalty Center, 11 S-,bill, -~~I~. Tbe orebeatr• will p1a1 Hlectlon• from Haadel'1 oratorio. ••t....a ba lll1Pt. •• featurln1 tbe Callfornla Cbamber Cbor ... eond~ bJ,...... ....... ' • .. - TUESDAY, JAN. 26, 1912 CAVALCADE 82-3 IUlll 1:1111 COMICS 84 STOCKS 87 Erma Bombeck's desk may be "unstructured," but she knows where everything is. See. P.age 83. Committee of 4,000 postpones . Irvine ·co. suit By STEVE MARBLE OftlleOelty ........... The Committee of 4,000 -the group claiming lo represent disgruntled homeowners 1 whOI lease land from the lr\tlne Company -h as indefinitely, postponed a planned lawsuit against the development firm. The announcement came Monday, the same day the committee bad vowed t-0 file its class action suit on behalf of residents in Newport Beach and 1Irvine. The Irvine City Council will meet tonight to consider the controve r sial question of residential leaseholds. Dau,,.....,..... ., ~·••td1 0'0-11 SWIFT KICK Topping off a n exhibition b y h i s Huntington Beach Karate Club. director Gary'·Pitts put'. nis bes t loot forward and down through 180 pounds of concrete. By brea king .. 20 inche s of brick he set a world record. This was his firs t attempt at s uch a feat. but he expects to repeat it on th e '"You Asked For It" t e l ev i s ion s how . Th e club is under aus pices of the Hunt - ington Beach YMCA. Dem- onstrations Members of a committee claiming to r epresent 4,000 people leaslne land from the Irvine Company, are expected to make an appearance at the 7:30 p.m . City Council meeting in City Hall, 17200 Jamboree Road. The committee is objecting to Irvine Company intentions to adjust lease fees upward. Adam Max, a consultant hired by the committee, said the delay came after t.he Irvine Company showed -signs or "resolving" the land lease dispute. Homeowners and the Irvine Company have been locked for weeks in a dispute over skyrocketing lease fees that up to 4,000 residents in the two cities must annually pay the firm. The two sides have yet to meet face to face but have traded offers and threats through newspaper ads and stories . Jerry Collins. an Irvine Company spokes man, said his firm is pleased the threatened suit has been delayed. "It's a prudent step that works in everyone 's best interest," Collins said. The delay in the lawsuit follows an offer last week from the Irvine Company lo reduce by up to 50 percent the annual lease fee that homeowners must pay. Collins said a laws uit could "hurt this effort." The firm also offered a financing packttge lo help affected residents purchase their leased land. Under thls offer. the Irvine Company would provide financing at 12 percent for a seven -year period. The loans would be amortized over a 30-year period. The company's Qffer to reduce payments would be made only to those with re-adjusted leases. Residents would have their yearly payments reduced up to SO percent the first year and then slightly less each year following. . Committee leaders have been cool to Uus Idea. Affected homeowners in both cities own their homes but lease the land under them from the Irvine Company. The leases call for residents to pay 6 percent of the appraised value of their leased land each year to the firm. But as the leases come up for r eadjus tment , the fees are .increa~ed to reflect the spiraling value oTland. The result is that annual lease payments are taking mammoth leaps, in some cases going up more than 2,000 percent. Many res idents claim they can't afford the higher fees a nd at least one Newport man has gone Into default on his property. While t.he Irvine Company has offered residents a ranee of alternatives lo manage lease fees or to purchase land, the firm has refused to negoUale « even recogniie the committee as a bargaining agent. Committee consultant Max asked the Newport City CouncJL Monday to form a comm!ttee with the lrvine City Council to help settle the dispute. Max suggested the council committee investigate both res idential and commercial l eases. ---were aC l fl e • .Huntington Center Mall . where Pitts autographe d pieces of the broken bricks for s p ec - tators. False alarms policy readied Thoughtless action won't bring response from police By RICHARD GAr:EN Of Ille Dallr 1'1191 Staff The ~rvine Police Department won 't r espond to robbery and burglary a larms which are c hronicall y se t o ff by mechanical or .human error be~inning Feb. 1. Businesses and residences are allowed three false alarms in a month or 10 in a year, tbe policy stales. If these limits are exceeded, police will tell the alarm subscriber to quickly r e med y the false alarm p r oblems or else police will ignore future alarms. Michael Weiss, Irvine police s upervisor o( preventive ~ervices. said that the policy is intended to stem the rising tide of false alarms in Irvine . "Our department responds to 400 false alarms each month " he said "and a minimum of t~o police units respond to each of these alarms. · '·Ninety-eight percent of all alarms we respond to are false," he said . "Response lime is usually 11 minutes and during that time, our response capability to other areas of the city is limited." Weiss added that when officers continually respond to· false alarms . they have a t endency to develop a lax ~ttil_ude which could place them in Clanger if the burglary or robbery alarm t urns out to be real. He said that at the start of last year. police responded to about 320 false alarms per month and that by the end of the year there were about 400 false alarms per month. About 65 percent of the time. false alarms are caused by human error, Weiss said. ·'The empl oyees aren't properly trained or the janitorial staff comes in after hours and sets off the alarm." he said. ·'The ot.her 35 percent is due to mechanical problems , sometimes triggered by wind, rain, fog and power outages." Arts spat heating up Disrmte spills over during Newport council meeting A growing spat between the Newport Beach Arts Commiss ion and its own fund-raising group spilled over during a City Council meeting Monday over charges of an "illegal meeting." Newport council members · asked. t.he.,J;i~y attorney's office to investigate th\? charges. \The dispute -which has a length y a nd s ometimes complicated llistory to it -pits leaders of the commission against members of the Friends of the Arts Commission. The Friends is a two-year-old group of art supporters who are supposed to raise money for projects develope d by the com mission. Part of the fight centers on some money -reported to be $2,500 -that the Friends collected but never passed along to the commission. The dispute heated up this ·week. " Beryl Melinkoff, president of the Friend s, c laims the commission is attempting to put her group out of business and has scheduled an "illegal" meeting to do so. tries to "unravel the facts " Mrs. Rose explains that she is seeking to put the Friends out of bus iness because the arts commission has lost control over how money by the group is raised and spent M.rs . Melinkoff, th ough. claims t.he commission leader simply doesn't like the Friends. Council members declined Monday to step into the fray, 3aying only that the entire affair is showing signs of becoming 'embarrassing" to the city. -By STEVE MARBLE Yesteryear's ]line Fonda cited Madeline Rose, leader of the commission, acknowledges that she would like to "dissolve" the Friends. She says the Friends have become more of a hindran~e than a help to the commission. Burn victim said serious Socialist Bixby heiress called an enigma in Costa Mesa history By JODI CADENHEAD Of tM Daltr ...... Staff Today, 52 years after her death, Fanny Bixby Spencer remains a legend -an enigma in Costa Mesa's history~ Scorned by many and known to all who lived in the town of 2,000 a. hall century ago, her refusal to salute the American Flag, her donations of money to worthy organizations and her penchant for feeding the poor made her famous. . "She was not just a radical," Ellen Lee told the CosLa Mesa Historical Society. "She was rather ouuaeeoua." The ninth and youngest cbUd of Jotham Bixby, wbo oWMd nearly au of Long Beach, tbe heiress ls a reminder tbat tbe very rich ~an be ·radically· different from you and me. She wore her lon1 &lack "alr· 'pulled back ln a aevere bua. her while factory blouaea and &one black skirts became her trademark. ·~ Stronaly affected by tbe . poverty abe bad seen iD Europe aad New York, the youn1 beire11 became a radical aoclallat and paclll1t. She worked for the Lona Beach Pollce Department, takllal on U.e c ... ol women and cblldrea living in crime tom tenement houses. She lived in a room in her father's ornately massive home, peeling away the gold edged wall paper and throwing out the French furniture, said Mrs. Lee. The Laguna Beach resident and author of "Newport Bay: A Pioneer History," explained that s he first became interested in the Costa Mesa woman 10 years ago. "She was the Jane Fonda of her time," said Mrs. Lee. "This was a woman who lived 50 years too soon." At tbe aae or 38 t•anny Bixby married a Long Beach dock , worker" named Carl Spencer. Havlnt alienated many ol the people ol Loni Beach, tbe couple . rooved to Colla lleu in 1111 and the le1end be1an. "She waa a one penon social ae"lce," said Mn. Lee. "Sbe waa tbe PTA. the library, the women'• club and the. welfare department.•· Over the years the Spencen' almple wooden house at the corner of lltb and Whittler became a bame for couaUea foeter ~dren. Decades before social pro1nma became common, tbe Co1ta Ilea a h'el reu ••• COSTA MIESA LEGEND -Scorned at the time, Fanny Bixby Spencer cut a swath through the social fabric or Costa Mesa so years_ ago. donating silverware and money to the PT A for a hot lunch pro1ram. She 1ave money fOf' the city's flrat library,• a women'• club and the land wher.e Lion'• Park ii today. AccepUn1 land and money from the eccentric heiress was one thing, but allowing her to set foot in the Friday Afternoon Women·s t;lub was something else, explained Mrs . Lee. The wealthy woman insisted on giving feverish speeches on the ma of war and the need for social reform. "I'm something of a paria.h, ·• she wrole a friend l:i 1925. ''I'm an outcast. I would rat.her be friendly, but I don't know what to do." 1 So adamant was her opposition to war tbat she refused to allow any of her foster children to ulute Ute Oq. In her wtll lhe sUpulJted that no mllltary orcanbaUon ever be· allowed to use Lion'• Park. But the terms of the will were never carried out. Fanny Bixby Spencer died in 19.10 at the a1e of St. Her husband continued her beautification pro1ram of plantlne palm trees up and down Newport Boulevard. But the trees were ripped out before his death In 1950. The house they lived ln ls 1one; ln lta place are a few oil weUs. Today, not a street. a ~ or a plaque ex11t1 to say th&\ , Fanny Blxby Spencer once Uvtd in Costa Mesa. But, s he cautions, the meeting she has scheduled for Wednesday is not illegal. Mrs . Rose says t)ut in addition to being the ldader of lbe commission, she's also a member of the Friends. With the backine of eight others from the U -me mber Friends group, Mrs. Rose has called a meeting of the Friends. Mrs. Rose says the pufPOH of the meeting ls to put the.Friends out of business and then decide what to do wit.h the disputed money. Sbe says she called the meetJnc *•use leaders of the Frteadl refUled to do so. Mn. llelln.koff claims that u prelident ol the Frienda, all of Ulla comes aa a surprise to her. Further, she claims that Mn. Roae la no longer a member of the Frlenda and, therefore, cannot call the meetlng. Sb• 1ay1 Mra . Rose 's mem bersbtp expired earlier this moa.th. .Mrs. Role HYI that'• not IO. She says ber membership l1 paid up lbroulh the end of the month. ~ And ao the spat continues. City Attorney Mike lllller, meanwhile. ha• adviaed lln. ROH to call off her Wednelday meetlnC o1 tbe Friends whlle be A 28-year-old Irvine wo.,,an. badly burn e d whe n her condominium caught fire early Monday, was listed in serious condition this. morning in UC Irvine Medical Cente r. Patricia Marshall suffered second and third·degree bums over 60 percent of her body before being pulled fron\ her burning home by a passerby, Steve De Salvo, 23, a UC Irvine' student, authoritie~ said. School site sale sought The Newport-Mesa Unified School Uoard will meet tonight at 7: 30 to again consider seeking a buyer for 10 acres of surplus property in Costa Mesa. The site nen So11tb Coast Plaza drew no buyers when it was put on the market for ss.a mllllon Jut month. Trustees will con1lder lowertnc their aaldn1 price, said dlatrlct olnclala. The board wlll meet at· the Harper Community Center, U1 I:. 11th St. ln Coeia Men. TUtSUAY J ANUAR Y .'b 1•rn2 OHANGf COUNT Y C ALI! OHNIA 25 C EN TS Briggs 'outraged' by high court Former state senator flays weakening of capital punishment law By DAVID KVTZMANN OltlleDelfrNlttuff Former State Sen. John Briggs, who promoted a 1978 initiative that expanded CaUlornia's death penalty laws, bitterly assailed the state Supreme Court today for invalidating a key provision of the capital punishment law. "I am outraged that the Supreme Court once again has acted against the best interests of the people of the state of California. "I am hopeful that the U.S. Supreme Court will overturn this monstrous decision or that· the Legislature will take swift action in amending the law," the former Jlepublican lawmaker said this morning from Sacramento. A spokesman for District Attorney Cecil Hicks aald administrators in that. office were waiting this morning to· receive a copy ol Monday's state high court opinion to understand its full and immediate effects. Justices, in a 6-1 decision, struck down a part of the law - known overall as the Briggs Initiative -which requires that juries be told that convicted killers, in the penalty phases of their cases, could .1ave their sentences commuted to life without the possibility of parole if they were not sentenced to death. The state Suprem e Court made its ruling on the basis of the vran1e County Superior Court death sentence banded down in the case ol Marcelino Ramos. The 22-year-old·defendint was convicted for tte 1979 'execution-style slayinl' of the night manager of a Taco Bell restaurant in Santa Ana. · The jury in his case was told, over the objections of the defense lawyer, that Ramos could hav e his sentence commuted by the governor to permit parole If he was. not sentenced to die in lbe California gas chamber at San Quentin. How~ver, the-' state high court said that particular instn·ction to j urors was unfair to the defendant because the governor Is empowered to commute death sentences as well. ··Basically, any sentence can be modified by the governor," said Chrts Strople,· assistant public defender In Orange County. Strople said the Supreme Co urt ruling was not unexpected. because the panel last summer soli cited the comments of lawyers around the state on bow they fell about the Briags l~w. named for former State Sen. John Briggs, R-Fullerton, who authored the successful ballot initiative in 1978. Strople said it had been the consensus or defense lawyers that th e controversia l <See BRl.GGS, Page AZ> Reagan won't seek higher ta:xes WASHINGTON (AP) - Pres ident Reagan will tell Congress and the American people tonight that he wlll not seek highe r taxes, but will propose an unprecedented $50 billion-a-year tr~nsfer of more than 40 federal programs to state and local government control, well·placed sources said today. Other sources said that while the president has rejected excise tax increases as he tries to cut the federal budget deficit, he plans to propose closing "tax loopholes" that would raise a total of $18 billion over the next two fiscal years. In addition, those sources said Reagan will propose trimming AP-NBC Poll---------------------------. Would· you prefer that President_ Reagan propose tax Increases or federal spending cuts to reduce federal bud9et deficit? Tax II Increases 17 °lo Spending Cuts Not I Sure 11 % 72° Do you think President Reagan should propose tax Increases ift order to reduce the federal budget deficit? H Reagan seeks further budget cuts do you think the cuts should be in defense spending or in non-defense spending? Yes -24% No Defense -32°1. l 0 % Non-defense -56% Not Sure I 6 ~. Not Sure • 12 •10 Nuke eiµergency over 'New York plant cooling off.after radioactive leak ONTARIO, N .Y . CAP> - Officials at the Ginna nuclear plant today c-a nceled an emerglmcy declared 26 hours earlier wheh a tube rupture caused ·an internal leak and released puffs ol radioactive steam into the atmosphere. "The e me rgency is over," said Richard Peck, a spokesman for Rochester Gas & Electric Co., the unit's owner, canceling the nuclear alert, the third most serious of four emer gency classifications. The alert classification had been designated Monday night, 10 hours a ft er a "site emergency," the second highest level, was declared following the rupture. "There is still a lot of work, but the ..i>lant superintendent determined we are not in an emergency any more," Peck said. , He said the unit was into "the recovery phase," with workers having returned to the plant. The unit still needed to be brought to cold shut.down -a low-pressure, non-boiling state for the reactor's water system. Otrici.als said today midmorning that the process was continuing s moothly and the temperature was expected to .be brought below boiling, at about 200 degrees,, ''within a day." John Oberlies, an RG&E vice president, said that a residual heat removal system was started about 4 a.m. PST and that temperatures and pressures within the reactor continued to fall. A "site emergen cy" was declared Monday at the plant 16 miles northeast of Roc hester shortly after one or more of the 3,260 tubes in a steam generator ruptured at 6:28 a .m. PST and pressure in the reactor dropped: Status was downgraded to "alert" 10 hours later. Oberlies said temperature this morning in the primary cooling system was at 329 degrees, down from an overnight reading of 340 degrees. "We are convinced the plant is s afe ," sa id RG&E Vice President John Oberlies. •'Things at the plant a r e progressine very well. We know it is stable." A "site e mergency" was declared Monday shortly after one or more of the 3,280 tubes in the generator ruptured at ti:~ a.m . PST and pressure in the reactor dropped. Status was downgraded to "alert" 10 houl'5 later. A ''site emergency · • is the ONOFRE WARNING SYSTEM TESTED -A3 LEAK SHUTS DOWN VERMONT PLANT -A4 second most serious of four JlU C l ea r emergency crassifications. "A1ert" ls one step lower. · · "Everything worked; that's the real storr,' · said llU&E· education specialist Funk !'f. Orienter. "Al~ the systems operated the way they were supposed to. Nobody was hurt or killed." Officials at the Nuclear R egulatory Commission in Washington descr ibed the incident as minor. although it was the first "site emergency" s ince the nation 's worst <See NUCLEAR, Pate "2) ......... NO TDT -Dr. Norman Loomis of Ontario. N.Y., reads about his neiahbor, the Glnna nuclear plant (background>. which was shut J,OWD amr radioactive steam WH emitted into the atmosphere. c $63 billion in benefit programs, excluding Social Security. over the next five years. In the first phase or the transfer of federal programs, Reagan will ask Congress to create a Federalism Trust Fund of about $28 billion a year to help the state and loca l governments pay for th ei r new responsibilities. The president will propose that the federal government assume the full cost of the CHANNELS 2, 4, 7, 28 Medicaid program or health care for the poor, which costs about $19.1 billion a year. In teturn, states woYld...pay lbe- tull cost of welfare and food stamp programs costing $16.5 billion yearly. From 1984 through 1987, the federal government would turn ove r about 40 additional programs costing about $30.2 billi0n amually. Included would be transportation, education and law enforcement programs. The Federalism Trust Fund would be created to compensate state and local governments. It would amount to about $28 billion a year a nd Include revenue from current federal excise taxes and the windfall profits tax on decontrolled oil prices. Afte r 1987, the f e deral government would phase out the trust fund by 25 percent a vear. By 1991 , when the transre r program would end, the federal government would no longer be collecting excise taxes. except for 2 cents a gallon for gasoline. The 2·cenl levy would be used to m a intai n the re deral (See REAGAN, Page A2> Deltf "9e "--.,., c:wte. llarr TOPPED Dr. Sammv Lee ··crowns" former s tate senator Dennis Carpenter with a tam·~s hanter during a roast in Newport Be a ch. Tough roast Ex-solon Carpenter lambasted By STEVE MITCHELL Of .. IH'ly " ... ,.... ~" "This is the most pitiful roast I've ever taken part in ... quipped 4th District Court of Appeals Justice Robert Gardner. And the justice was right. .. Nearly 250 me mbe rs of the 552 Club, Hoag Hospital's support group, gathered at the Marriott Hotel Mo nday night to roast forme r state Sen. Dennis Carpenter during a $100 a plate fund-raiser. .. The three-hour lambasting of the s ilver·haired. pipe-s moking forme r s enato r was laden w~h bad jokes some ethnic in natu re and riddle~. with ribald remembrances of the former FBI agent. And all the while. Carpenter sat smiling at the dais . puffing on his pipe a nd scribbling down notes for his eventua l rebuttal. ··He was proud of his military career." said Judge Gardner of Carpenter's 1946-1948 s tint in the service. "Of course those were not the most terrifying years in the hist ory of the Unit ed States ... Referring to his years as a federal agent. Gardner said. "He was in the FBI. Big deal. Every guy with a low draft number went into the FBI." . And as to Carpenter's several marriages. the j udge quipped. ··Dennis Carpente r has had more families than Charlie Ma nson." Othe rs were not so kind Tom Riley said he was pleased to ~ at a function <See EX-SOWN, Page AZ> OCTD to. levy transport tax? ~ . Pr~poia.~ for needed funds. awroved; Now up to voter F-Or"the _fitst lif!le. the Ora_nge transportation requirements into would go a l~ng way in defmine Co unty T ta n'S Port at 1 on the next century. the county's financial needs. Commission has apfroved in Approved unanimously A Ir e ad y . co unt 1 concept a proposa to seek M o nd ay b y the fiv e trans portation planner • legislation which could empower transportation commissioners, estimate close to $20.4 billion ts I t to 1 e v y a county wide the proposal is one that often has needed to pay for the county's transportation tax, if approved been publicly discussed by the transportation needs through by voters. panel. It was adopted, with little 1995. But state and federal The action is aimed at discussion, as one component of doHars for trllhsportation wid providing the money· needed to t h e co m m i s s i o n • s 1 9 8 2 fall far short of the projected pay for l he co u n l Y's legislative program. cost and locally generated Boyce waives jury trial Also. the panel approved a m o n ey will be n eeded lo related proposal aimed at complete lbe progra m, she said. m o difying the Ca lifornia Mrs. Coss-Fitzwater said the Constitution to permit the county's transportation· needJ imposition or certain local taxes most probably will requi\ 1 with the approval of a majority, range of taxes to raise he rather than two·thirds of the needed money. 00 escape rap voters. She also pointed out that the . Although the panel approved Los Angeles transportation By Tiie Associated Press Convicted spy Christopher Boyce made a brief court appearance today in Los Angeles, and hi s attorney waived his· right to a jury trial on charges of prison escape. Boyce, who bu been mute at previous court appearances, remained silent today while his attorney told U.S. District Judge Lawrence Lydick that be preferred to proceed without a Jury. However, confusion arose when attorney William Dou1herty of Tust.tn uid he wished to "stipulate to the facts" of Boyce's escape -a procedure whlcb mJlbt make • trial unnece11ary. However. Dou1herty retterated Boyce is pleadins innocent to the cbarp. Boyce detailed his escape in i~tervlews with New York • Tlmn reporter Robert LlndHy, whoae book on Boyce, "The Falcon and the Snowman," ls beint made into a movie. Lydtck did not lmmedia\elY rul•on Dou0erty'1 request, Ud attomeya kM* a nNaa to confer OD thetr f\lrtber ttratep. the con cept of levying a commission already has the transportation tax, no specific authority to levy such taxes. taxing proposal has been settled upon , explained .Nancy C o s s · F i t z w a t e r , t h e 1111~1 llUIJ lllDll com mission 's governme nt • 11 affairs coordinator. She called the commission's action a "broad brush stroke" approach, and said a more detailed tax proposal Is forthcoming . Mrs . Coss-Fitswater Slid a financial study to be completed in Au.nast Radioactive spill~ ··- reported in lab BERKELEY (AP) -fwo University of California studenll were ex~ to low lavell ~ r a 'd ioactivity when they 1ceidentally brok e the protective coverin1 on • radioactive aub1tance ln a laboratory, uniftnttJ offtdals say. Altboulb tra~ ot UW lron·SI m atertal fell to tlM lab floor, nobodr •• eoM.a•= and monltol'tlll deYleee tM teak wa VW7 IDIW. Chance of showers 20 percent Wednesday. Lows tonieht 52 inland, SS alone coast. Hiehs Wednesday 58 at' beaches, 65 inl~d. 111111 TlllY a • orarr Coast D~\. Y PILOT/Tu.day, January a. 1882 •• Heavy Fains pose threat in Northwest PA. JI ' fHAEAT -Map loo•tee ~ntnrlo, N.Y .• wher, 1team o be ruptured in 'nuclear ower pla11l. ,. 'From Page A 1 NUCLEAR•·'· ~ommerciaJ nuclear ,cctdent at T hree Mile I s land near tllarrisburg, Pa., in March 19'19. fi ·'It might be expensive for the &perator to clean up, but in fer ms of public health (lonsequences, it was not very ~erious," said Harold R. Denton, ftie agency's director of nuclear reactor regulation. ?. The 470 ·m ega watt liressurized-water reactor, \.hich opened in 1969, is on Late i~ntario. About 45,000 people live \\Ii thin 10 miles of the plant. ~O b e rli es em phasized :\1 o n d a y • s r e 1 e a s e s o f iudioactivity were minor, but oted that five workers bad been · x posed lo trace levels of tadlatiort. All went home after howering or wipins oft with a • loth. ., Radiation was released In a ~eries o f rive-second puffs l taling three minutes wilbbl a ne·hour period followtn1 the u be r upture , officials Hid. G&E continued to check for adiation outside the pa.mt. but berlies said late Monday: "We re convinced there are no health problems." The maximum radiation detected was 3 millirema at tbe pl ant boundary. the utility saidJ Exposure to a chest X-ray is' a bout 20 millirems, and a dose o f 600 ,000 millirems ls • considered lethal. oFrom Page A 1 BRIGGS • • • 9 sns truction to jurors on ~om mutation of sentences was . r constitutionally defe~live." h The assistant public defender o;aid lawyers atsN'believed the !jury instruction ~'.\nnecesaartly u ndercut" the chance of a t.tonvicted killer being given ~ ,JHe sentence without possibility tfif parole. C In the penalty phase of a c~apital case, a jury can decide ,ei ther to send the defendant to . ~an Quentin's death row or give )) i m the life sentence without ·parole. l 11 The only justice who dissented ~ the Supreme Court's decision o nd ay was Mathew 0 . obriner, who said as many .. :jO death sentences in all could f pc reversed under the ruling. It This was assuming that the instruction was given to juries ln a ll capitaJ cases since the Briw l aw was passed by voters in 978, Tobriner said. Strople, however, said tome udges. mindful that proviaicJm f the Briggs law would Dot urvive a constitutional test. efrained from telling juron bout commutation of life entences without parole; or counties? SACRA MENTO (AP.> -~ alirornJa's county supel'\'SMft ant the stale to runalltft hem a portion of some state tax a proposal that could exetn_. em from future budget cuts. Representatives of the County upervisors Association of alifornla s aid at a news onference Monday that they re working on legis lation for a 'stable funding source" for ounty governments. replactng ear-by-year appropriations by be Legislature. · CSAC also 1<>t a reply from the late to a suit by counties oft!' costs of enforcing 23 new 11ws. he state response denied that t he laws , including new jail terms for drunken drivla1," would require any new or expanded county services. ., .............. ...... Tbe Plclftc Northwest waa battered by winds up to eo mph ud rala tbat t11reawMd to, brine more ft111"• act muda1idel, u Mldweateraen suffered throu•h more anow and 1ub1ero i.m.,.fil •· A cnoqatonn Monday dumped UINe la6el ot aaow on Chicaao, •M • dultSna of snow on much 6f tbe 111lcl·Atl1ntlc coast compounded travelers' •robleM •n Icy bl1bwaya. <Related Jlhoto Pa1e 82) Snow fell on the upper Ohio Va lie)', the eastern a bore of Lake Ml~an and the aoulhem 1horet (jf Lake Erie and Ontario. Temperatures dipped well below iero from North Dakota lhroufh the upper Mi11l11lppl Valley. "It's kind of 1n endless battle,·• said Vicki Jacobs, a sherifrs dhpatcber In Potter Cowity in eastern South Dakota, where blowing snow wu closlna blabways just behind the plows. Six residents of Garibaldi -in Aortbern Ore1on wet~ evacuated Monday night In case there was more floodln1. About 100 residents were evacuated during the weekend because of flooding after heavy rains, said state police tropper Stephen Gm stations probed/or bad nozzles A crackdown on service station owners with defective recovery noules has resulted in the lockup or 28 pumps in Orange Q)unty. The noules were ordered shut last week bJ South Coaat Air Quality M1na1ement District workers daring an inspection of 8 ,000 service stations in Southern California. By Monday morning more than 100 pumps bad been ordered shut in Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino counties. No exact figures were available, said Air Quality spokesman J e ff Schenkel. Wednelday was the first day that inspectors could issue criminal citations lo service station owners who fall lo comply with request.a to repair defect.Ive noulea, Schenkel said. Service station ownen wbo attempt to aae malfunctioninc pumps ordered r 'r repair could face finn up lO 1,000, said Schenkel. Since 1179 the recovery nozzles have been required ln all California service stations. Air Quality officials claim that the nonles have successfully removed 65 tons of hydrocarbons from the air daily and help recover 77 ,000 gallons on 1aaoliae daily. Schenkel said that the 'inspector.I assigned to Orange. San Bernardino, Los Angeles and Riverside counties hope to visit a total of 80 stations a day. By Thunday, the last day figures were available, about 300 callers bad phoned a newly eslablisbed ·phone line lo co mpldn about defective nozzles in their area. The toll free number is (800) 242-4020. Band blember slain outside •. Santa Ana bar A .U.}'ellr-old member of a marladl, band was shot and killed MoncJay night in the parktq lot of a Santa Ana bar. Santa Aaa police reported the victim, whose name was beinl withheld pendlna notification of kin, WU accoeted as he parked his car at the Mazatlan Bar, 3417 W. Stb St., where he was to perform. Before he could leave the car, a man approached the driver's · side and, wielding a shoteun. 'demanded money, accordJnc to wttneum. Tbef uld the victim reached into bis pocket for bis wallet, but waa shot bl the face before he could Mad Oftt any cash. ho other penons in the car were not injured. A police spokesman said they are seeldq a man in bis 20a. O .. AfltOfCOAST · 11111y Piiat a .. .-.. ........ 114MNt1I . ......... , ---~ • • White. "We're just waltlna to see IC the rain we're 1ettln1 now 11 1olna to brinl the water back up," Whlte 1aJd. "We're keept.nc a close eye on ll." Slate police said travel wu 1tlll limited or blocked on $20 million collected for c~nter The Orange County Music Center received $20.6 million in co ntri butions last year. including more than $2 million in cash. it was announced Monday. The contributions of cash and pledges pushed the music center over the halfway mark toward its $40 million construction 1oat and will enable the performina arts center to collect two major cash gilts. Calling 1981 "a banner year for rund·ra.islng," music center chairman Henry Se1erstrom, said that the cash cootrlbutiona far exceeded the James Irvine Foundation's malchin1 fund chall~ge. Last July tbe foundation contributed $3 million to the Costa Mesa perfo1·min1 arts center, with tbe first Sl mlllloD contingent on tbe ability to raise another $1 milllon In cub by Dec. 31. Also, the Segenlrom family's S6 million pledge was conttncent in part on the ability lo raise $1.8 million during the year. "The cash commitments rrom individuals, corpora lions and foundations were most gratifying,·· said Segerslrom. Segerstrom said that one of the priorities in 1982 will be meeting the second part of the Irvine Foundation's challenge, which calls for receiving another $1 million this year if $.1 million in donations is raised . When completed in 1985 the main 3,000 seal theater will be only the third in the nation capa ble of providing theater, symphony. opera and ballet. according to officials. A second 1,000-seat theater is also planned. In addition to raising fund s for the construction or both theaters . officials have also been working to raise $19 million in ·endowment funds. FromPageA1 aectlona of U.S. 101 1lon1 the COHl and on U.S. 30 tUl ol Astoria because of mudslides or because sections of the hl•hway bad been wuhed out. ln Eastern Ore&on, state pollct ln La Grande said winds 1uslln1 u hi«h u 80 mph were From PageA1 recorded Monday nl1hl on 1 state HJ1hway Department wind gauae in Ladd Canyon east ol La Grande. ' Moat rave r &eveu were droppin1 In western Waahlnaton ·stale after weekend ralne added to the runoff from meltJn1 anow EX-SOLON ROASTED ..• honor~g "my good and longtime friend Paul Carpenter. ref ernng to the current Democratic state Senator from Cypress. He said the forme r Army man ··won the good conduct medal at the Balboa Pavilion and the sharpshooting medal at the Fun Zone. "I'm glad he wasn't a Marine:· said Riley. himself a retired Leatherneck general. Newport Beach Mayor J ackie Heather said that. frankly. she couldn't believe Hoag Hospita l was honoring Carpenter. ··vou set back health in Irvine 20 years:· she said of his past efforts to establis h a competing hospital in that city. Carpenter's law partner. Stuart Spencer. continued the barb session by bringing up the cattle rancher's childhood : "Denny was not a pretty child ... Spencer began. ··Wh en he was 4. his mother took him on a train. One of the passengers told her. ·Madam. th<tt 's the ugliest child I ever saw.' .. Dennis' mother complained to a conductor about the insult. Spencer said. and the understanding conductor apologized and o Uered he r rree passage for the remainder or the train trip. .. And here's a banana fo r your monkey:· the conductor purportedly said. Bad jokes. -One roaster said Carpenter once prepared a re port for the governor. which began. ··we have not located the light at the end of the tunnel. but we do believe we have located the tunnel. .. -Basketball buddy David Baker , a Newport Beach attorney and unsuccessful Irvine council candidate: ··When we played basketball I didn't know if Billy Barty ha" gained 20 pounds or if it was the Pillsbury doughboy on the court. .. -Dr. Sammy Lee. a Korean ear doctor and former Olympic diving champion. presented Carpenter with a ta m-o-shanter and a ha lf dozen bawdy one-liners. Hut the smiling recipient of the insults had an opportunity to respond to his attackers. A sampling : On J ackie Heather : .. She has set the ERA back at least 20 years. ··she's also running for re-election. I say. le t yo ur conscience be your guide. On Judge Gardner: ··1t·s an easy cop-out to sit on the bench when you're a crummy lawyer. But he"s 70 years old. I hope I'm in better shape than you appear io be.·· On Sammy Lee: ··He's the smallest ear doctor in the United States. He can personally go inside the ear with his tools and all. .. Of Paul Salata. emcee of the evening's roast : ··He is the least articulate and least educated man in Newport Beach:· In the Cascades, but some m ountain highways were blocked by anowalidea. There waa a flood w1rnin1 'O• ·t'he Elwha River west of Port Anaeles 'on the Olymplc Penlnaula because of rain in the mountalna. Santa Ana wins round on films SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Santa Ana city councilmen didn't violate copyright laws when they copied a film shown in an adult movie theater in efforts to close the business down, a federal appeals cou.rt says. The 9th Circu it Court of AppeaJs ruled Monday that the councilmen had made "fair use" of the material under the law. But it disagreed with the jury's finding lha( a film's obscenity can be used as a defense against a copyright infringement claim. ln efforts to obtain evidence to bac k a n anti -pornography ordinance, a city council agent visited the Mitchell Brothers' Theater in Santa Ana and took photographs every few seconds of rive films while a recorder taped their entire soundtracks. The Mitchell brothers, James and Artie -along with severaJ of their corporations -filed suit against Councilmen Gordon Bricken, James Ward, David Brandt and David Ortiz. and their special attorney. James Clancy. Clancy helped draft a public nuisance abatement ordinance in early 1976 aimed at ridding the city of its adult movie theaters. The ordinance, which declared cinematic depictions or some sexual acts to be a nuisan~. was adopted. On Oct. 26 , · 1976, the city de clared Mitche ll Brothers ' theater to be a nuisance for exhibiting adult films and all licenses and pe rmits we re revoked. DC-10 pilot knew crash inevitable BOSTON CAP> -The pilot of a World Airways DC-10 jetliner REAGAN that slid off a slick runway into • • • B d t 't • • ' Bos ton Harbor has told ...... u ue nmmin.u inves tigators that as he landed interstate . hway program. e . ~ he cried out lo the control tower . Assumin the Medicaid "We're goingofftheend." program and reating the t f The World Airways jet's transition trust f would COit mus 0 r recovery approach lo Logan International the federal govern nt about Airport had been normal, "but $47.1 billion a year. Th cost to he (pilot Peter Langley > state and local governme for WASHINGTON CAP > -interest rates of the past two realized the runway was slick the welfare. food stamp and 40 FederaJ Reserve chairman Paul years on the Federal Reserve's when t he airc raft was n't o th er pr ograms to be Volcker saidtoday thenation's pollcyofkeepingatight-reinon braking ," s aid Robert transferred late r would total economic recove ry could be the nation's supply of money, Buckhorn, spokes man for the $46.7 billion, a lthough at least threatened ir the "Re agan which makes it difficult and NationaJ Transportation Safety part of this would be paid by the administration and Congress fail expensive to borrow money to Board. federal government for the first to complement the board's buy goods to finance production. There were no fatalities and eight years. tight-credit policies by trimming Volcker has said repeatedly no serious injuries among the ' Sever al sources, who were the federal ~udget derlcit. that the policies are necessary 196 passenge rs and 12 crew briefed by White House orricials "An inadequate balance in to keep inflation from rising members. although three people Monday, said the president will policies can add to financial ever higher. remained hospitalized today. propose that guarantees be s tress .·· with severe He said today that ''price "He found he wasn't slowing written into law requiring that consequences ror homebuilders, when be used reverse thrust and ll b · d h expectations have calmed and b k " h money for s pecific proorams sma usmesses an ol ers ra mg. As e approached the a b di h b h there is some evidence that the Pass directly Crom the new fund a Y urt Y i.gh interest end of the runway, he turned to t V l k ·d underlying trend of costs is b I r to whatever government will ra es, o c er sa1 . slowing... ·t e e t lo avoid hitting the administer a specific program Vo 1 ck e r comm ented in runway lights . . . The aircraft _ eliminating the need for slate t e s ti m o n y be f o re th e But he also said, "We know continued to move at a high rate and local governme nts to congressional Joint Economic there is a deep-seated public or speed," Buckhorn said. initially raise vast sums of tax Committee. in s tinc t associating large He said the speed was about so revenue. Many have blamed deficits with inflation." knots, or ss mph. Oneso~~sa~th~m~tof ~-----];~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---~ the elements of the president's transfer program would be proposed as legislation during the coming year. Another source said state, eily and county leaders were told by administration officials Monday that they would be consulted throughout the proposed transition period. To raise revenue that would be gradually los t unde r the phase-out of the Federalism Trust Fund, states could rind themselves reimposing the excise taxes that Reagan has said he wants to abolish. A wide variety of excise taxes, including those on alcoholic bev&rages, tobacco, saaollne, telephone service, tires, jewelry and other luxury items. could be involved. This mornin1, Rea1an met with Republican coqreaaional leaden al lbe While House to be1Jn roundlnc up the help be • will need to lain Capitol Hill approval for the proposals he wlll o. Jlne In bis State of tbe Union addreu toni&bt. Tbe speech, to a Jotnt ... ion of Conareu, will be nationally broaclcuLat J,p.m, PST. - Sea1te M•Jorlty Le1der Howard H. laker Jr., R·Teaa., said after tbis mornln1·1 mfftine that u a result of die president'• plan "t:be poor ol tbla eountry wlli be better oft than under tbe exllttn1 bodte-podfl" ot procrama. He would DOt explain bow tbl1 wouJd occur. -l ·When 'fou"re re•dy to stop tooklng. Rolex. Ewryone wants a Roltx Oysttr. A. LactyDatt, 14 karat yellow ~old and stalnltss steel, St,475. 8. Mans ~tual Datt, 14 karat yellow gold and stainless steel, s1 ,750. C. lady's Pe~tual Date, stalnltss s~. $845. SLAVICK"§ ""'JIMllr'ISka 1117 WJ\ert ~ besr swrpri~ begin. ,__ ..... (714>6"-IJIO•~llld\ Allloar.. Loi~· llnDlllt• IM-.. l .. .. ,. Orange Cout DAILY PtLOTfTuad9Y. January 28, 1882 N ----------------· Dow Jones Final OFF 1.24 CLOSING 141 .58 ... ,., ~'" .._,~ Computing auto expenses fTllU u the uvnth of o JO.port '~' on how to aoue on 11~r L9'1 Income tazea.) H you use your car for business, you may overlook an easy tax-cutting procedure, especially IC you bought your cur in 1981. In the past, many of you have taken the lazy method permitled by the Internal Revenue Service in figuring the deductible cost ot running a business car . You determine the number of miles you used the car for business during the year . The allowable deduction is then computed at 20 cents per mile for the first 15,000 miles or business use and 11 cents per mile thereafter. This eliminates the need lo prove all the drivmJ expens~s. This procedure h as b ecome less attractive because the official increases in th e mileage a llowance over the years have not kept up with actual costs. For instance. the IRS ~llll PllTll ~ kept mi leage allowances for '81 al the same level as for '80. When you compute your car expenses, make sure • to compute them both ways -your actual costs vs . the deduction allowed under the IRS formula. It may pay to use your actual costs. though that may require more record·keeping. If you bought a car for business in 1981, used or new, there are rules under the '81 a ct for computing your depreciation that tilt the scales even more in favor of deducting actual c~ts. He r e's a rundown of these new rules. Regardless or when you placed the car in service in 1981. you can claim depreciation for 1981 equal to 25 percent of the cost of the car. Thus, if you bought an $8,000 car io November '81, you claim $2,000 in depreciation for 1981. For disposal or your old car in that same month, you can claim your costs for the old car under the pre-1981 ruJes. plus the costs of the new car (figuring depreciation of $2,000). And regardless of whether you use the optional or actual-cost method . you are entitled to a 1981 investment credit of 6 percent of the cost of the car you bought in 1981. In 1981, the IRS changed the rules on how many years you could claim a 20-cent-per·mile deduction on the first 15,000 bus iness miles each year. For pre· 1981 years. this could be taken for the firs t five yf!ars of the car. After that, the car was viewed as fu lly depreciated, and onJy ll cents per mile could be claimed on all business mileage. Because of the new post-198> rules that permit cars to depreciate over three years, the IRS says that for car expenses after 1979, a 20-cent·per·mile allowance up to 15,000 miles a year can only be claimed on up to 60,000 miles. If you drove 15,000 mtles or more a year, you would reach the 60,000·mile totaJ in four years. The Treasury has tndtcated that the 60,()()()-mile limit wouJd apply to post-1979 expenses, regardless of how much of the fi \!e,year useful life Limitation was used up before 198>. This would mean that you col.lid continue the 20-cent-per-mile deduction. Tomorrow: Sales tu deductions. 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