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1982-01-29 - Orange Coast Pilot
UC Imne streak, downing • Will I Long Beach State <See Sports, Pa1e CU t * •••• * DRllGI CUil YOUR IDMITDWI DAILY PAPER FRIDAY. JANUARY 29. 1982 ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Schmitz has bomh scare Newport Beach office evacuated in phone threat hoax TARGET? S talt' Sl•n .John Sr h m 1 t z · offa rt• r N·t• 1 \"l'<i a homh thre a t :-.h11rtl~ lw fon · his n•primand in t hl• St•rwt1· Court hacks, relllap S AN FRA1'CISCO 1 AP I -The California Supre me Court ruled T hurs d ay th a t th e 1981 r eappo rtio nme nt s tatutes e n a c ted by t h <.' Lcg i ~la ture should be use d fo r t h e 1982 election primary ·'The court must act to protect the citizens of this slate lo vote in an orderly and con~titutional fas hion A good fatl.h e ffort has b ee n made t o m t.'e l t h e constitutional impe rative or one p e r so n . o n e vo t e w h ile m inimizing a ny dis ruption of the electoral o r polttar al processes and without intruding into the p r o p e r s p h e re s o r t h e c o -o rdin at e b ra n c h es o r gove rnment." s aid Chief Justice Ros e Bi rd 1 n the ma jorit y opinion. Three justices joined her in the major ity a nd three wrote dissenting opinio ns "E ver y mem bcr or this court ag rees and most parties concede that the old out-dated district pla n or 1973 is unconstitutional and may not be used for the congressional e lection. The only alternative open to the court is the r eopporlio nt•d d is tricts ad opted by the Legisla ture and approved by the governor ,·· the court sa id. During oral arguments, the court heard eight lawyers for De m ocr a ts .a nd Re pu blicans offer a variety of proposals - includjng de lay ing the June 8 primary lo Sept. 14 lo r esolve the dis pute over whe t her the rig ht or re ferendum or one -man. one· vote should pre vail Democrats urged the justices to order recent reapportionment bills setting up new s tate Senate , Assembly and con gr essional dis tricts b ased o n the 1980 cens us be use d for t he June primary. Calirorna a adds t w o n ew congressional seats this year lo th e 43 it h a s be cau s e o f <See REMAP. Page A2> ~ By STEVE MITCHELL Of Ille O.ity ~ ... SUff St ale Sen . J o hn s"chmitz ' Newport Beach offices received a telc pl'lon e d bo mb threat Thursday. just hours before the s ena t or w a s f o rmall y re primanded by his colleagues in Sacramento. The caller . believed to be a fem a le. told a Schmitz a ide . ··The bull dykes of America have place d a bo rn b in the se nator's office. It will go off in 10 minutes." Schmitz' Campus Drive suite was evacuated and police were ca lle d A ::e;irch turned up no bombs . M e a n w h i I e . at l he sl a t e Capitol. the Senate voled 28·10 to formally condemn Schmitz for his remarks in a Dec. 22 press r eleas e in which he attacked a bortion·righls ad vocate s in d erogatory terms. Six Republicans joined all the D e m o c rat s p rese nt i n s u p porting a resolution by Senate leader Da vid Roberti. 0 -Los Angele s. that calle d S c hmitz ' co mment s ··outrageous ." a nd said they pla yed "upon pre j udice and into lerance." The formal reprimand , which falls just short or censure, is the firs t applied to a state legislator in modem limes and has been c a lle d unpreced e nte d b y members of both parties. ·'T his Senate cannot tolerate t he inc ubation of prejudice wit hin its ranks . prejudice CMlty "'-' -,, ......... , .. THANKS, PAL Michael Doyle. a Costa Mesa animal control officer, tak es a licking from a grateful six·mont h-old pup rescued from a burning doghouse. Police said the animal's owner was t r ying to k ill the ani mal Suspect arrested in slaying ·of Turk LOS ANGELES I AP ) - Police ha ve booked for murder one suspe ct in the bold . daytime a ssassina tion or t he T urkis h consul general who was caught rn a burst of gunfire as he drove to work on a busy city street ··w e are looking for at least one other suspect .·· said Deputy Police Chier James Ha rdin. Armenian te rror ists claimed r esponsibility for the killing of Consul General Ke mal Arikan. the third killing of a Los Angeles Turkish cons ular official in nine yea rs . Police late Thursday booked Hanoi~ "Harry" Sassounian. 19. ... of Pasadena for inves tigation of the murder, said Los Angeles police Sgt. Dudle y Varney. T hree juvenil es h eld for quest ioning for several hours were released Thurs day n ight. Varney said. Police Chief Daryl Gates said th<.' bloody ambush killing of the 54-year-old diplomat came only a week after Arlkan had been w a rned that his life was in da nger but turned down an offer of police protection. ··w e have no ide a why he chose to do what he decided to <See TURKISH, Page Af) against people who a re blithely accused of de viant behavior . prejudice against people who are attacked for their ethnic background," saicl Roberti. ··when I first saw tha t press release. when you first saw it. you knew it was bigotry ... he added. But Schmitz. a-Corona del Mar R e publican who r a n f o r pr es i d e nt in 1972 o n the Ame rican Inde pe nde nt Party ticket, expressed no regrets and predicted the a ction· would aid his campaign for the U.S. Senate this year. If e told repo rter s the vote am o unt e d t o .. p o liti ca l m asturbation. It accomplishes nothing but it m a kes most of them feel good."· • "Tonjght when I go to sleep. guys and girls. I am going to sleep very soundly ... he said during noor debate. In · a press r ele ase issued on com miltee sta tionery late last year. Sch mitz . used the terms .. bu lldykes ." · .. mu rd e rous m a rauders," and "queer·· to d escribe a bo rt i o n ·rig hts advocates who attended a series of he arings he chaire d. At a Los Angeles he aring, Schmitz said in the release. the front rows of the auditorium were filled with a "sea of hard, Jewish and <arguably l female races ... H e a lso call e d fe m i n ist attorney Gloria Allred a ··slick butc h lawye ress. ·· Ms All red <See SCHMITZ, Page A2l SUING Feminist attorne~· Clnna .\ll1w l h a:-. ri((•d i.l SH} m al l1on l1ht'I :.ust against St al <' Sl'n .John S C'hmit7. Freedom 'precious gift' U.S. general calls rescue result of 'power of prayer' VJCENZA, Italy <AP! -U.S. Brig. Gen. James L Dozier today ca lled freedom "the most precious gift .. and said his rescue fro m Re d Brigades kidnappers was la rgely the result of the "power of prayer.·· T he JO-year-old general . clean shaven and c lad in a green dress uniform. also paid a glowing tcibute to Italian security forces who freed him Thursday from a Re d Brigades ··people's prison·· after 42 days' captivity .. As a military offi cer . I would very much like to have people like this under my co mmand when the going j(cls tough,"' Dozier sa id. Italian a uthorities made 17 m ore arrest s t o d a y and uncovered hideouts fill ed with a rms in re ne we d e ffo r ts lo s mash the Red Brigades, Italy's rf},P s t f e a r e d t e r r o r i s t o r ga nizat ion . Mos t o r those a rrested were from Verona. but a few were picked up in Mestre , ne ar Venice. Dozier made extempora neous r e ma r ks t o 250 r e po rters Turkish Diplomat Slaln SLAYING SITE Ma p indicates the intC'rsertion in Los Angeles wherC' Turkish C ons ul G e ne r a l K a mal Arikun wa-s s hot to dt'alh Thursda~·, g a t h e r e d al th e non-de monination al c ha pe l at the U.S. military base in this northern Italia n city. He did not take questions , expla ining he was s till bein g de brie fed by It a l i an a nd Am e r i c a n authorities Woman hurt in 4-vehicle accident A lruc k·t ractor that jum ped the center divide r of the Costa Me s a Freeway pro mpted a r our ·v c hi c l e a cc i d ent . hos pitalized one wom a n and stopped commuter traffic . Ca lifor ni a H ig hw a y Patrolma n diverted ca rs on to the Garden Grove F ree wa y from 4.30 to 7 p.m. Thursday a fte r a lhree·axle rag. driven by Ambrose Russell Ballantyne. 42. of Wilmington. faile d lo slop for stalled traffic south or Chapman Avenue in Orange In ves tigating orri ct'r Dennis Wel ch s aid whe n Balla ntyne braked. his truck s wer ved from the ~lowest southbound lane and bounced into the northbound lanes, striking head·on t he car of Margaret E . Schae fe r , 53. of Ana heim. Next in line was Al an Scott Rodgers, 19, of Corona , who laid down his motor cycle, avoiding a collision and escaping ser ious inj ury Such a quick m aneuver was not possible for the pick up truck dr iven by J ohn Henry Hays, 28. of R iverside a nd it hit the Schaefe r car from the r.ear. She was taken lo Chapma n Genera l Hos pital s uffering from broken le gs and facial lacerations. Welch indicated the roadway wa s s l i ghtl y d a mp Cro m arternoon rains . T he g ene r al s a id n ot h ing a bo ut the time he spe nt in capll\•11 y lie appe ared relaxed a nd ges tu re d re pe at edly to m ak<.' has points Befon • Dozier met with the pres!>., a :-pokcsm a n . Lt. Gen. C o I ,/ a c k B a r h a m , l o I d rt•porlt'rs that the gene ral had n ot b t:e n ··ph ys ic a ll y m1 s t r (•a t e d .. an d was ··s ufril'll•ntly fed" during the s ix "el•k ordeal. OO?u•r \\as flanke d by his \\l f l· .. Judith . a nd th e i r 24 Yl'ar old daughte r Che ryl. Mrs l><m er had te ars in her eye-. ancl nodded frequently a~ t he J!<.'ner a l spoke . She also n .'4:<.'1 \'l'd a belated Christmas present at the ne ws conference from Oozie r. a gold cha in willl thC' symbol of NATO's Southe rn C'ommc.t nd M r!>i l>oz1er kissed him on the left chcC'k and hugged him - rC'peat 1 n~ the gesture t hree t im <·s at the r e q u est o f photographt'rS Dozier. desr n bed by a ides as a dc•voul non·d cnominational Protestant and a regula r churcb j!OC'r. sa1 cl "the power of prayef wor ks ·· ·Tm hen • today to tell yo9 t hat 11 works and at had a large part rn my being he re with yo11 .tod<1y ... he said. · • 1 pray regularly myself but clunnJ;? lhC' last six weeks I wai on t hl' rccci vi ng end of m'an! pra~ ers. a nd where I was yo~ c·ould sure a s he ll fe e l il,'1 Dozie r !.aid ORANGf COAST WIATHI . Fa ir throug h Sa turday Low s t o n ig ht 5 3 al beaches, 46 inland. Highs Saturday along coast, 70 inland. Details P age A3. INSIDf TODAY Bergeson tax measure rejected by pan~l The freeway closure after the accident was due to the cleanup or spilled gasoline . No citations were issued pending furthe r inve stigation. For mer WQShington Poat reporter JciiiiC Cooke 1oys the /ear of failure COU$ed M!r to fabricate the story of on 8-yeor·old heroin oddfcl. Page 1\7 Bid to get NeWport lawmaker's measure on June ballot fails By ST EVE MARBLE Oftlleo.ltyP'l•Slotft A l ast-d i t c h e ffort b y A sse mbly w o man M a rian Bergeson to get her Income Uax indexing meas ure o n the June ballot faUed Thursday when she was unable l o locate two senators who had prom ised to support he r plan. T h e Senat e Financ e C o mmitte e r ejec ted Mrs. Bergeson 's pr o pos ed ~n1tit~1l •mendmenl lb.ii morning for the second time this week . The vote was 6-4 with eight needed for passage . The vote earlier thjs week was 7·4. Today was the final chance the Newport Beach Republican had to gel her version or the Indexing m eas ure on the ballot. It would have had io pHs the finance commlttee as well as the full Senate to be on the ballot. Aides to Mr. Bergeson said the Ne wport lawmaker was ancry but now) ~ntends to 1up1M* a different version of the Indexing meas ure that ,will be on the JW\e ballot. This version was authored by tax-cutting crusader Howard J arvis. I ndeldng is tbe process of adjusting tax bracket.a upward lo reflect inflation , so that a cost-or·llving raise doesn't push a taxpayer into a h ighe r bracket. ll 1enerally means more money for taxpayers a nd less money f~ t.be 1tate. Aides to Mrs. Bergeson said that e i!'ht members or the 15-person finance committee had promised lo support he r version or the indexlnc plan. Aides c lai m ed that the m easure was voted down Monday 7-4 wben one or the eight senators stepped out or the room . Clalmtn1 this was unfair, Mrs. Bergeson waa a ble to eel a second vote launched only to discover four of her supporters m lsa6na. \ You auto check can out today Looking for a new car? Check out the latest m odels in today's "Auto '82 Updele " in the Daily Pilot. The 18-page special section details the newest features . Including higher mileage and Improved perforn:tance. and lookll at the prospects ror lower Interest rates on auto rlnancin1. It will give you a fresh IOOk al t he new llne of '82 can. ' •, INDIX • l,\2 • • • • • • Orange Coast DAIL v PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 Rapist killed by clerk Ne wport robber, prison escapee identified by police A man who has been Identified aa convicted Newport Beach robber and rapist Tommy Knox , haa died rtom 1unshot wounds 'he auffered during an alleged bboldup atte mpt In Rancho ... c ucamonaa. .. ., Knox, a prison escapee. was 1 blasted four times in the chest last wffk by a liquor stpre clerk, lnvesUgators for the Sao ., Bernardino Sheriff's office said. " The 35-year-old Knox, officers ,said, was alle1edly holding up r.the liquor store when the clerk wheeled around and s tarted firing. Knox remained iJl a coma until hJs death. officials said. But investigators said it ' wasn't until Wednesday -the · day Knox died -that they · learned his identity. 1, Otrtccrs said Kno,,:. who c11caped from a P o mona Courtroom last July. assumed lhe identity of Mark Scott Bradley and had dyed his hair after the escape. In vesUgatora said they do not know who or where the real Bradley is and how Knox obtained documents bearing his name. Knox was convicted In 1979 or 23 counts or rape. robbery , kidnap and assault with a deadly weapon. Offi cia ls said h e was sentenced to 20 years in San Quentin State Prison but escaped last July. Unlll the episode in Rancho Cucamonga. a town near Ontario, police said Knox's whereabouts were a m ystery. Newport Beach Police said that Knox was responsible tor ti vc robbery r.ipuis in Newport includln1 one incident where he molested • 14-year-old 1lrl They said he usually would force victims lo submit to sex acts before domandina money. He also was convicted or robbery rap e c rimes In Fullerton. Brea, Upland and Colton. Officers in Newport believe that since his escape, Knox may have returned to the beach city to pull off another robbery. At the .time of his death this week , Sun Bern~Hdino authorities said Knox was wanted on nearly $750.000 w~rth of arrest warrants and being sought by seven different law enforcement agencies. Jnvestlgators also said that Knox was riding a stolen motorcycle the day he was shot in the liquor s tore. ~Reagan pays tribute to FDR ., ~:Newport Beach son a ids centennia l celebration n h WASHINGTON (A P > - ., President Reagan , once an 1: ardent New Dealer. paused during a tribute to Franklin D. f. Roosevelt to defend hi s " campaign to reverse the course f, of government establis hed by ,.. Roosevelt nearly a half-century ~ago. - Americans. said Reagan. "are practical people ... We sense f when things have gone too far, when the time has come to make fundamental c hanges ." ' (Related photo, A10> ~ Reagan 's evocation of r Roosevelt's political philosophy came at a WhJte House luncheon Thursday, attended by about two dozen members of the ~ Roosevelt family and former t officials of the New Deal era. , ce l eb ratin g th e lOOth I anniversary or the 32nd I president's birth. I From PageA1 REMAP. • • I population growth in the past decade. I Any delay in filling those I ;seats, Democrats said. would 1 •violate the U.S. Constitution . : because old election district I lines do not reflect current : population changes. : Tbe equal protection clause of ! the Constitution, they argued, takes precedent over the state constitutional guarantee of the referendum process. However. Republican attorneys countered that the real issue is whether the people have referendum power to overturn decisions by the Legislature. , They noted the court for 70 : . years has termed power of the referendum to be a "precious right." Further, they said. under 'California's constitution. laws , enacted and signed by the ~governor can't take effect when a referendum challenging them qualifies for the ballot. In thls case, three referendum petitions covering the three types of legisl ative districts have qualified, u'nless the tribunal rules otherwise. One Republican suggested the primary be postponed with a vote on the referendum as : scheduled in June and then go on from there. Others urged the · court order use of the old district boundaries it set in 1973 after a • similar chaJlenge. D e mocrat s argued referendum petitions are invalid because of errors. including f having people list the address where they are registered to . vote rather than residen ce ' address. : Prof's cookies we r e tainte d EDWARDSVILLE. 111. <AP) -Cookies given to the head of a univer s it y chemistry department were sprinkled with wh at appears to be cyanide, authorities say. Professor Michael Matta of Southern Illinois University said that he suspected cyanide aft.er looking at the cookies. He sald a person unschooled in advanced chemistry would probably not have been s uspicious. Keagan praised Roosevelt as "o n e of his tory 's truly monumental rigures .. an American giant. a leader who s haped. inspired and led our people through perilous times." The president recalled the "wave of affection and pride" that swept a crowd in Des Moines, Iowa in 1935 when Roosevelt pass~d through. "He really did convince us that the only thing we had to fear was fear itself." Reagan said. On Capitol Hill, the Roosevelt family gathered with friends and members of Congress to pay tribute to the president who led the nation out of a devastating economic depression and rallied its people to victory in World War II Th e h ig hli ght o r that ceremony. featuring songs and s p eeches o f praise, were scratchy. recorded excerpts from memorable Roosevelt s peeches. introduced by his son, former Rep. James Roosevelt of Newport Beach. Only once did the audience inte rrupt with applause, when Roosevelt was heard saytng, .. Better the occasional faults of a government that lives in a s pirit of charity than the co n s is t ent omissions of a government frozen tn the ice of its own indifference " In a voice s trik ingl y r eminiscent of his father's, James Roosevelt read part of a s peech that FDR wrote for a Dem oc r allc Party dinner scheduled for the day after he died April 12, 1945. in Warm Springs. Ga. "The o nl y limit to our realization of tomorrow will be our doubts of today." Windy, warmer weekend forecast A windy weekend witb warmer days and cool night.I \ was forecast for Ora nge Coast residents today by the National Weather Service. A weather service spokesman said gusty winds meuuring ts to 20 mph wou ld continue through t he weekend. Clear weather with no rain in sight is forecast. Temperatures will rise to the 'bigh 60s or low 70s during the weekend. Nightly temperatures will drop into the low 40s, the weather service said. F or residents planning a trip to the mountains this weekend. tbe weather service said a traveler's advisory would be in e ffect through Saturday. with winds gusting up to 40 mph. Li1ht intermittent showers were r eported Thursday a fter noon in several Orange Cout cities. In Huntington Beach. veteran weather watcher J . Sherman Den ny said his rain gauge recorded .08 inch of rain on Thursday. · He said this moisture brought his rainfall total for the year beginning July l , 1981, to 6.28 inchel. about two inches ahead of the rainfall total for this date last year. Vietnam memorial design revised WASHINGTON (AP1 Sponsors of a memorial to honor Am e ricans who fought in Vietnam will add a patriotic. heroic touch to the project's stark design, which s ome veterans denounce as a "black gash of shame and sorrow." The compromise agreement was reached in an emotional meeting Wednesday night in whi c h , accord ing to som e participants, nearly all the 50 or 60 people in the room were moved to tears when some veterans who had spent years as prisoners of war told why they objected to the original design. According to some who were there. Sen. Jeremiah Denton J r., R . A I a .. w as' a mo n g those insisting on a design change. Denton spent n; years as a prisoner of North Vietnam. "It was a fierce. emotional evening." said one participant. who ask ed that he not be identified. "It was a nasty five hours .'' The original design called for a monument or polished black granit~. It was to take the form or two walls, descending 10 feet into the ground, and meeting In a wide "V" with the names of 57,692 war dead and 2.500 still listed as missing chiseled into the walls. As a compromise, sources said. the sponsors agreed to add an American flag and a statue of an infantryman in the heroic "follow me" gesture similar to a well·known s latue at Fort Benning. Ga. , But. even with those changes. three or the chief objections of critics would remain · The memorial will be below ground, will be black. and will be in the shape of a "V " Some critics think the "V " stands for the peace sign that wa s fla s hed b y anti -war protesters during the war. The National Re vie w, a conser vative magazine. called the design an "outrage" and 27 Republican congressmen, in a letter to President Re agan, de nounced the design as "a political statement of shame and dis honor" and a s ked that another be selected . Among the critics a t the meeting was Texas computer millionaire H. Ross Perot, who has called the original design a "tombstone." a "trench" and "a slap in the face ... ORANG£ COAST Daily Pilat CIHl !flff adver1l1lng 71 41142-54171 All other dep•r1ment1 642-4321 The design, by Maya Ying Lin, an architecture student at Yale University, has won praise rrom some quarters. J . Carter Brown, director of the National Gallery of Art and chairman or the government's Fine Arts Commission, said the de s ign conveys ''a n extraordinary sense of di1nity" and needs no "corny specific references" t,o the war and no "bits of whipped c ream on pedestals.·· Thomas P. Hiiey ~-et-I ,_,.,,.0"°9t Robert N Weed ,._ Thomas A. Murl)h1ne t- MichMI P H1n19y ....... °"9Cllgt L. Kay Schultz ~-c. Kennettl N ~ Jf ~~ Bernard Schulmtn c-... Chartee H. Loot ........ ,., e=_t..Moor. .. ' Brown made those point.I lut October after Tom Carhart. a West Yolnt araduate who led an infantry platoon In Vietnam and waa twice wounded, asked the commission lo revoke Ha approval or lbe '~'"'· • ... ..,..,..... TOWERING INFERNO Flaming debris spill s down th(• :,idl· of th(' Trump Tower. a 35·Slo•'." buildin~ undl'r c·onstn1c·tion on :"JC'w York's Fifth r\\'C'llUl' F'irl'mCn saul the.· fin,'. dt!hb<.•rat el~ ~l'l . rlama~(.'(f much of the top floors From Page A1 SCHMITZ REPRIMANDED • • later filed a $10 million libel suit against Schmitz. Schmitz said Thursday he was being jltlacked solely for using the word "Jewish" in a context that was not laudatory. He added, referring to abortions. "The bigges t holoraust going on right now is nine million people being killed for the simple cnme that they have not been born yet ·· Roberti and re llow Democrats on the Senate Rules Committee las t month. after the attack. removed Sehmilz as chairman o f th e Co n s tituti o nal Amendments Comm ittee and from two other Senate posts Roberti's resolution. SR29 , supported the Rules Committee action and deplored Schmitz's comments. It stopped short of a formal censure, but had the same effect. ·'The aforementioned conduct of Senator J ohn G . Schmitz brings the Senate of the State or California into dis honor and disrepute and, if passed over would te nd to implicate members of the Senate as condoning that conduct, .. the resolution said Several other senators were as critical or the remarks a s Roberti. Sen Harr y -Keene . D·Mendocino, anothe r Rules Committee member. s aid Sc hmlti·s pres s release .. appears to be the first truly wicked act committed by a member of the Legislature." Sen. Ed Davis. R-Chatsworth, said the way to a void another holocaust was to denounce "the firs t Jew-baiter who makes state ments s uch as were made by Senator Schmitz.'' Senate Republican leader Willi am Campbell of Hacienda Heights said he supported the Rules Committee a ction. but contended that further action should be left to the voters Re agan to pus h nuke prog rams WA SHINGTON (AP > President Reagan will propose further tncreases for nuclear progr~ms in his 1983 energy budget but will pus h for deep c uts in sol ar and e ne r gy conservation . congressional sources say The propoSlltd budget figures. obtained Thursday from sources who as ked not to be identified. wou ld add more than $800 million to weapons productions and other nuclear program ~ over 1982 levels From Page.A1 TURKISH • • • do. but be <11d tcluse our of( ors," G.ites said. A friend of Arlkan's , Akir Keskin, said the consul ient:nal seemed to have a premonition of hl11 assassination, but stopped using bodyJ(uarda anyway becawse he felt th4'y could not save'hlm. "He told me, 'If someone wants to kill me. he will whether I am guarded or not. Why should I Jlt:l a young bodyguurd killed too'?" Keskin said. Thus, Arikan was alone when he pulled his white Ford out of the garage of the high-rise apartment he shared with his wife , Nurun fl was 9:56 a.m .. a chilly day with a light ruin beginning to full as Arikan turned the corner und headed up Co m s tock Avenue lo bu sy Wil s h ire Boulevard and his office at the Turkis h consulate two m iles away in Beverly Hills . He stopped at a red light, and within moments. he was dead Eyewitnesses and police said two dark·halred young men rushed up to the car and opened fire through the driver 's side door and wandow. There was a hail or bullets eight or 10 in all that smashed through metal and glass The gunmen rled to a waiting car, the witnesses said, and s ped away while Arikan , blood spewing from his wounds in the head and chest. slumped over the wheel a nd died. His car careened through the intersection. bounced off two other autos and crashed into a tree in front of a city Water and Power office. "The car was rolling, like by itself, like there was no dnver." said an eyewitness, construction engineer Rick Collette. who looked up from his work al a nearby building and saw two· young men. about 18 to 21 years old, running away. Police found a 9mm pistol and a 45 caliber pi stol with all their bullets discharged in ivy where witnesses saw the assassins pause before they jumped in a white Camaro and made their getaway Witnesses noted the license numbe r of the car. and police tra ced it to a ho me 1n a middle·class a rea or Pasadena, where the car was confiscated and the young men were taken into custody. said Pasadena P o li ce s p o kes man R ock y Mc Alister It was the latest in a series of incide nts agains t the local Turkish community by groups c laiming to be Armenian terro r ists Plane cra sh es SANTA CR UZ <AP J -A single-e ng ine charter plane carry ing bank drafts on a scheduled run from Monterey to Oakland cras h e d in the fog -s hrou d e d S anta Cruz Mountains north of Santa Cruz Thursday . authorities s aid Officials could not confirm whether pilot Ken Adams. the o nl y person aboard , had survived OBIE SPORTS LTD . .., ,,, COMP810FO MARKERM-30 W,LBRAKES • COMP610FO CLEARANCE REGULARLY $388 .00 INCLUDES MOUNTING Ir WAXING ·::!_h\t~na,. ·t.\H · •• ""',\\\\\\~~~~~... •\ . 2831 PACIFIC COAST HWY. ~·OPEN ALL CORONA DEL MAR. CA WEEKNIGHTS liiiiiiiiiii6~7.~.5-~9~7~QQiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiii--mTILL~9P_M.._.~- l CA.ner lo 1'i•il- -No1VJGy, SUJeden ....... CHAT WITH POP£ -Mrs. Barbara Sinatra, wife of Frank Sinatra, talks with Pope John Paul II during the weekly general audience at Vatican City . Priest at lef\ was not identified. .......... STAR OF FAME -William "Count" Basie, top jazz artist for nearly five decades . received his star this week in Hollywood's Walk of Fame. With him is his wife. Neil Reagan, the president's older brother. says he has changed his mind and decided it might not be a bad idea after all to make the former Reagan home in Dixon. Ill., into a shrine. "stupid," but that was before he visited other presidential memorials and decided "every president's house ought to be a memorial." Reagan told a business group in Phoenix that he initially thought the idea Reagan, 73, is honorary chairma n of a committee seeking $500,000 to preserve and restore the house where he and President Reacaa grew \Jp. Sunny skies Wlncts -I to 11 anoh In tlle •"•',._, llul loc•• non11 to ~llHtt winds -cenyont 15 to JO knotJ wltll J lo 5 -... , WH terly t-1 I to J ... t. ~11'1' Cl .. r .otler,_ •nd tonl9'1L -19f\t -S..Vrcs.y. H19M IOIMy a lo u. f1 to U s.e_., Lows 1 .... 19111 lnlMnt-2Cll. South-st wlr>Clt I 5·JO mpll In _,,,, 9Nftlnv 10 non'-fl -.,. Wlndt dKAalng lonlQM. N<N'tt.m oevn blp In 50s. In '°' In -"' .,. .. ,, .. Norlllem end C.nlr•I Cellfornle wll 1 11• motlly lel r lod •'I' •nd' ~lurd•'f. L.l"91rl119 tllower. over si.rre . U.S. summa~ Extended ''"''"f"'I rn::m Former President Jla•J Carter has accepted ao invitation to visit Norway for three daya ln the 1prln1 followed by a vl1lt to Stockholm, the Swedt1b capital, a Norweclan publl1ber announced. Carter will be the cbtef apeaker May 5 at a forelp policy aemlnar or1anl1ed by the publlsbln1 houae Hjemmet Fa1pre11eforla1, it.a manalint director Niia Sc~aMersaid. Carter will speak in Stockholm at a similar seminar sponsored by the daily newspaper Svenska Dagbladet, Scbjander said. A divorce suit filed by .larea Lewla, the eatran1ed wife or entertainer Jerry Lee Lewll, baa been dismissed in Shelby County Circuit Court in Memphis. Divorce proceedints wUl continue between the couple, however, in Chancery Court in Hernando, Mlsa., where Lewis bu fUed apinst his wife. They were married in 19':'1 and have a 10-year·old dau1hter. Alwin Nikolals, the cboreographer-composer- designer, will receive the 1982 Capezlo Dance Award. The 69-year-old Nikolais, who has headed his own dance company, The Alwin Nikolais Dance Theater, since 1953, will be given the $5,000 prize April 26 at the Juilliard School in New York City. The Capezio Award has been annually given since 1952 to honor lifetime achievements in dance. Past recipients have included Sol Hurok, Martita Grallam, Arttaur Mltclaell, Jerome llobblna, Robert .loffrey, Agnes de Miile and Alvia Alley. After hi s seco nd drunken·driving conviction in nine months, Superior Court Judge Rago F•taer of San Diego has been ordered . not to drink alcoholic beverages for three years. Fisher, 60, who remains on the job, also must stay out of bars and liquor stores and stay in San Diego County, unless his probation officer gives him a written note to leave. Fisher earlier a1reed to attend a year of driving cranes. A cokl front •-t lllrou9'1 Ille ~ 0 reCQ.8 t ... er GrNI LAU. r99io.. T""rW•Y. J' '''••411"9 1tron1 nortllwulerly Felr _......,IN ""locl. HltM In wlftft ...., lltM .,_ from Mk lllten ,_ .. , -61 eo 15 LOW\ 4A to U . to N-Yor11. .. .. , et -In ·-S2 llO 60. ···"' ~ ~ ..:.::.. 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Mailbox contributors muat include their name and telephone number for verification. No circulation calls. ple111e. · Tell us what's on your mind. • 40 41 21 14 47 M • 40 .. .Q 49 5' 4' 49 • Q • 4S S1 0 .. •1 .. la 0 11 46 40 ,. • .. " • 0 SI 11 ., J7 • • 11 41 • • u u .. , l.J Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 s Looks for mayoral support for New Federalism plan WASHINGTON (AP ) - President Rea1an, movln1 quickly to counter criticism of his New Federallsm pro1ram. met with three Republican mayors and won their backinJ for his contention that there would be neither winners nor losers amon1 the states. White House aides passed out charts purportln1 to show that the shift or programs and funds between the federal government a nd th e sla t es would be balanced in every case. They emphasized the flcures they used might chan1e, but that the balance they Illustrated would not. •·All states would be held harmless," said White Houae spokesman David Gerten. But al the winter meeting of the U.S. Conference of Mayors. Democratic House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill called the program to transfer welfare, fooa stamps and about 40 other social programs "a disguised attempt to balance the budJ(et on the backs of state and local aovem~ntl.'. Richard Schweiker. secretary of health and human servtce1 and the cabinet member mcJlt affected by the proposal, ursect the mayors to reserve their judgment until they have a c han ce to help the administration iron out their concerns. Rape convict who claims impotence Mayor Margaret Hance of Phoenix, president of the Re publican Mayors AssoclaUon, told reporters al the White House that "President Rea1an has taken a bold, creative, courageous step toward a Jone, overdue reo rde ring of the federal system." She was joined in the White House briefing room by Mayors Richard Carver of Peoria, Ul., and James Imhoff of Tulsa, Okla. • • given six years The three mayors said that critics or the pro1ram apparently did not understand it. A convicted rapist who claims- he has been impotent most or his Ufe was sentenced to si.x years in state prison Thursday for a crime some therapists believe he is incapable of committing. Joe Jerry Yrigoyen, 29, found guilty or raping a 20-year-old former neighbor in July 1980, was allowed to remain free without bail, however, pending appeal. Counselors who examined Y r i go ye n f o ll o w i n g h i s conviction last year said the defendant was incapable of beginning or completing the act. This was due to iJlnesses which Yrigoyen suffered as a chiJd. they said, including a bout with tubercular meningitis. However. Orange County Superior Court Judge James 0 . Perez, in a separate hearing earlier this month, turned down requests for a new trial for Yrigoyen on the basis or tbls new information . Yrigoyen , a r esident of Cypress. was tried twice on the charges. The first trial ended in a jury deadlock. The second proceeding res ulte d in his conviction. Yrigoyen. who bad no prior criminal convictions. insisted Reactor operator scores up Preliminary test results Indicate that 11 out of 13 candidates have passed a federal examination to become senior reactor operators at the ne wly expanded San Onofre . Nuclear Generating Station. Officials with both the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission a nd Southern California Edison Co. said Thursday that the test results wer e dramatically different from last November's, when 16 out or 18 people failed the examination. Final t est scores will be computed by NRC officials in Washington, D.C. Results will be announced next week , NRC spokesman James Hanchett said. Senior reactor operators serve as the supervisory personnel in the control rooms of nuclear power plants. Al San Onofre, the operators are needed to man the control rooms of newly built units 2 and 3, which are expected to be licensed for full-power operation If}' the federal go\lemment later this year. throughout all trial proceedings that he was innocent of the charges. "l believe ... he is probably impotent al this point," said Deputy District Attorney Tom Goethals, but the prosecutor added that he still believes that Yrigoyen was not impotent when the alleged attack took place. Yrlgoyen was con victed principally on the basis of eyewitness testimony by the alleged victim. Ri c h Will iam so n , the president 's adviser on intergovemmentaJ affairs, told the mayors the administration would move to bring Medicaid costs under control once it takes them over. He did not say what measures would be tried. Wi lliamsoni s aid the 1983 budget will propose cuts totaling $11 billion in so -called "entitlement" social programs outside Social Security. o..r ......... ..,'-..,. LIGHTING UP -Barbara Lundgren. aboard her Palomino Everything Nice, watches new lights being installed in the equestrian area of the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa . The fair installed 48 lights for the horsy set . $ first Time Skiers * New Ski School ••• .VE'.., c; •• s'°' is~ .,.s, ~· o~ . '9'111 •t1 • llM: $15 FOf' ~ S..1lon1 Mew: Call For Rnervatlon1 831·3144 u.lls 20 peoplit _(t,3.l ·3141 s Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 • Reagftn 's math questioned ., WAI.TU •. MEAas A rJJm -President ftea1an baa eome up with some new matb to explain the aoarin1 bud1et deftclta he once promlled to end in a hurry. But there are akeptla in his economics clus who prefer old·fashloned arithmetic. ,, Amont them, ironkally, are aome ol the Democrats Reagan accuaes of fashionlnl federal policies that ran the debt total up to the trillion dollar level. , But they are not alone. Republicans and conservative Democrats are worried, too, at the proepect of deficits expected to far exceed the record $66.4 billion of Gerald R. Ford's last year in the While House. They wanted federal excise taxes on tobacco, alcohol, 1as0Une and telephone service lncreued to trim the deficit. So did some of the president's own economic advisers. Reagan said no. 1111 llAlDll "So I will not aak you to try to balance the budget on the backs of the American taxpayers," be said. That sounds good, but.one way or another, the whole problem is on their backs anyhow. They pay the bills . The whole argument has some old adversaries speaking in harmony now. For example, Republican Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas and former Vice President Walter F. Mondale, who ran against each other for vice president in 1976, agree that something has to be done now to reduce the deficits. They don't agree on what. Like a good many Democrats, Mondale argues that Reagan's massive income tax cuts need to be tempered or delayed. The tax cut wlll reduce revenues by an estimated $37.7 billion during the year that ends next Sept. 30, and by $92. 7 billion the year after that. . Campaignin1 for the White House, Reagan had said be would balance the budget within the four years of bis firtt term. He backed oft that monthJ •So· Instead of balance, the pro6pect now Is that deficit• may sWJ be runnlnt at S80 billion or more in 1984. Rea1an also had said budget deflcits were the cause of inflation. More recently, his advisers have been sayinl that ·it isn't necessarily so, and ope of them suggested there ls no connection at all. Reagan's explanation now includes the claim that euing inflation helps cause deficita. ··As it now stands . our forecast.s, which we are required by law to make, will show major deficits, starting at less than $100 billion and declining, but still too high," he told Congress. · ·. . . The budget deficit this year will exceed our earlier expectations. ·'The recession did that. It lowered revenues and increased cost,1. To 10me extent, we are also victims of our own aucceaa." he said. Under Reagan's tax bill, thole revenues will be gone for aood. Elsewhere ln the State of the Union speech he noted that taxes are to be lndexed for inflation so the government won't profit on rising prices. While he didn't mention it, that too, will add to the deficit figures. Secretary of the Treasury Donald Regan says deficits will be declining by about $10 biUion a year, to levels in the range of $90 billion in fiscal 1983 and $80 billion In 1984. And, as the eresident observed, high interest rates add to deficits , since the government already owes about $1 trillion. Reagan said interest cost the government about $5 billion .more than was anticipated during 1981. Economic theories and new math aside, the arithmetic explains it. Spending went up more. .......... TOP SECRETARY -Ellsworth Filhe Jr .. 48, has been named secretary of the year,by the Chicago Lake ShoP.e chapter of Professional Secretaries International. It's the first time in 30 years the organization has named a man to the honor. Filhe says he types 75 words a minute. "Railing taxes won't balance the budget," Reagan told Congress Tuesday night. That is true, of course, if the government merely finds more ways to spend what it takes in. "It will encourage more government spending and less private "investment," Reagan said in his State of the Union message. "Raising taxes will slow economic growth, reduce production and destroy future jobs ... Dole, now chairl'\)an of the Senate Finance Cbmmittee, helped engineer the income tax bill, but had favored excise tax increases to partially offset the lost revenue. Rescued climbers thankful for lives In any event, Reagan has flatly and repeatedly ruled out any change in the three.year tax cut that is the centerpiece of his economic game plan. LITTLETON, N.H. <AP) - The woman who round two young climbers after they had wandered for 3'h days on frozen Mount Washington said one of them hugged the other and told him, "We're going to live! We1re going to see mom and dad again." J effrey Balzer, 20, and Hugh Herr, 17, were in satisfactory condition Wednesday despite frostbitten arms and feet after surviving wind chill conditions that made the temperature seem like 100 degrees below zero. The two expert ice climbers, still unaware Albert Dow, 27, or Tuftonboro, a rescuer. had died during the search for them, were in intensive car e and "taking nourishment and gaining strength," s aid Gen u1cKson , a spokeswoman at Littleton Hospital. She said the extent of frostbite injury would not be known for several days. "They weren't in pretty good shape," said Cam Bradshaw, 28, who found the pair Tuesday after stumbling across their tracks while hiking five miles Crom where searchers had concentrated. She said Herr's boots were off, his feet "swol· len, frostbitten and frozen." She said they apparently re moved their boots each night, then "slept in a fetal position, with their hands and feet in each others' armpit and crotch to keep their body heat together." She said that Batzer was coherent, but "Hugh, I wasn't able to establish contact with . He wasn't coherent. He seemed lo respond to Jeff more than to me." They were s itting up but "weren't thinking too straight." Ms . Bradshaw said. "They couldn't even feel their limbs. ··Jeff hugged Hugh and he said ·we're going to live. We're going to see mom and dad again.' " Ms. Bradshaw said. They had .been without food or equipment in wind and sub-zero temperatures that at times produced a wind-chill fa ctor of 100 degrees below zero. Each night after searching for a trail, they found an overhang for s he lte r and used s pruce branches (or insulation, B~tzer told his father. Caesarean report stirs controversy ........... BOSTON <AP> -A new stUdy concluding there is "little cause for alarm" over the increasing rate of Caesarean sections already has co~me under attack from critics of the operation who say it is dangerous and over· used. The study, published in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine, said the death rate among newborns bas fallen dramatically ln the past two decades. And it said the increasing frequency of Caesareans, especially In complicated births, has played a GOP eyes Dallas for convention WASHINGTON (AP> -Dallas would be a good place for the 1984 Republican national convention, President Reagan has suggested to top GOP orriclals. NEW PRESIDENT -Roberto Suazo Cordoba. Honduras' first popularly elected president in more than a decade. waves to crowd that attended his inauguration cere mony in Tegucigalpa, Honduras. The event was held Wednesday. "We will, of course, do everyt hing possible to accommodate the president's request to give preference to Dallas," GOP national chairman Richard Richards said Thursday. • The asu1/ route calls fol our pc/usi~ strNm-/ined s/1cl<s from Asher. Hanchome basics to accommodla. a slew of vibrant. yet clas&ic looks. Two Dick flap pocbts, stripped ribbon belt with 0-rins. White, ba,,.na, powder blue, tan, beiBe navy polyester and cotton. Sizes JO to 4-0; 52.50. In Men's Slacks, the Men's Store-where~ are all the thinp you are. S..b Fifth Avtnue. Sooth (out Plu .. JJJJ "Bmtol Strtiet. Cost• M~. " major part in making the first days of life safer. Dr. Ronald Williams of UC Santa Barbara reviewed the outcome of 347 ,668 births in California between 1960 and 1977. During that time. the death rate at birth fell 48 percent. •'The rapidly rising rate of Caesarean birth, growing at about 6 percent per year, has been a subject of increasing a ~ concern and controver sy," Williams noted. "The findings of our· study ... give little cause for alarm." "That's an-irres ponsible statement." responded Or. David Banta. a physician with the federal Office of Technology Assessment in Washington. "My feeling is the Caesarean sections are both saving lives .and killing babies," Banta said. .. When they. are done inappropriately. they lead in so me cases to infant and maternal death." At the Health Resear c h Group, a Was hington -based advocacy organi~ation , Dr. S idney Wolfe said , "The problem is that articles iike this could generate a resurgence of Caesarean sections being done indiscriminately." fiiiiiiiit Everything In our entire stock Is on sale-two days only- January 30 and 31 . Pick from our large selection of unlaue auto gifts and clothing. If you drive a Porsche, Ferrari, BMW, Mercedes, Corvette or Rolls Royce, you should be at this sale. We are not an auto parts or acceuorle• house, all we sell Is fine clothing and gifts with your favorite logo embroidered or engraved on them. satin jackets • suede ,aci(ets • short & long sleeve shirts • sweaters • crystal • apa paper weights • key chains • gold charms • ' sun glasses • pillows • model cars & hats In Brea Mall At 2004 Brea Mall Brea, C.lff. 92621 714-990-M52 Maater Ch.,oe • VISA • AmerlC8n EICJ)l'eas ALL SALES ARE FINAL. j \ l I . OIL CASE SUSPECT -Lail Johnson. center. , is escorted by deputies. after his arrest in a Kern County case involving an alleged stolen 1 oil operation. Johnson, 56, was booked on 24 ·~· ....... counts of cons piracy. grand theft and receiving stolen property. Twelve arrests were made this week involving the theft of $60.000 in oil products. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 s A•·1 Organs aid 3 recipientsd r Heart, lungs, eyes, kidneys of victim transplanted RIVERSIDE CAP) -The heart, hm11 , eyes and kidneys of a 15-year-old hit-and-run car crash victim have been transplanted lnto three recipients by phy1lclan1 operating In hospitals acroaa California. On Jan. 20, Rubidoux Hiah School sophomore Ellen MWTay died from injuries received in a Jan. 15 traffic accident. Her body was flown to Stanford University Medical Center in Palo Alto, near San Francisco, where ber heart and lunas were transplanted into-the chest of 26·year-old Nancy Lassen, of Phoenix, Ariz .• who is reported to be recovering. Miss Murray's eyes were transplanted by Inland Eye Bank physicians at Loma Unda University Medical Center in Loma Linda, about 60 miles east of Los Angeles, and her kidneys were used to replace a patient's defective o rgans at a Los Angeles hospital, officials said. 'f he recipients were not identified. "I feel so thankful that through her death someone else is living," said EJlen's mother, Rita, at the family home in the Riverside s uburb of Rubidoux, about 50. miles east of Los Angeles. · "Through her, and with my faith ln God, and the prayers of all, my friends and family, well , now I know I can 10 on," Mrs. Murray said Wednesday. And then she cried, explaining, "I just can't believe It, you know." Mrs. Murray's husband of 40 years died last October. Mrs . Murra y s aid her daughter was returning from a party about 11:30 p.m. on a Friday night when a pickup turned in front of the car in which she was riding. The driver doctors two days later about donatin1 her daughter'• vital organs. • ·'They bad asked me If I bad • ever tboulht about that," lbe said. "I never thouthl I would ~ be in a position of m•ldnt a :- decision like that . . . I said, 'Ob yes, by au means'." ,, "Down deep in my heart," lbe .. said, "I was so happy that . . . t someone can see throu1b her , eyes, and someone else can live. ··She would have said, ·~ 'Mommy, can you see them •t. flying me up there? Can you q "I feel so thankful that through 11 _h_e_r_de_a_th_so_m_e_on_e_el_s_e_is_li_vi_·n.....;:;.g_. '_' __ :~ of the car, 19-year·old Greg Stueve of Rubidoux, was killed instantly. and two other Ru~idoux teen .agers were injured. California Highway Patrol Officer Terry Taylor said Thursday that the CH P issued an all·points bulletin for Anthony Bracken , 36, of Riverside, the alleged driver or the truck. But no warrant has been issued or charges filed. However, Taylor said it was a hit-and-run case. believe s omebody baa my ·1 eyes'?" •f Her heart and lungs were ' transplanted during a four-hour operation by Stanford's cardiovascular surgery team .J headed by Dr. Bruce A. Reitz, 11 said hospital spoke.sman Mike h Goodklnd. Ms. Lassen, recipient of the heart and lungs, had suffered .. from pulmonary hypertension ~ for about five years. and was not , expected to live more than six , months without the operation, ~ Stanford officiaJs said. ' . Indian artifacts reportedly missing "His truck turned over, and he was helped from the wreckage by witnesses," Taylor said. "He remained al the scene for a while, but by the ti m e the officers arrived he was gone. Nobody saw him leave. He was just gone." Goodk.ind said Ms. Lassen, a ~ registered nurse, remained in critical condition and still faces q a "rather precarious recovery ,1 period... But he said her vital , signs were stable and she was recovering as expected. · SACRAMENTO CAP> -With Indian groups seeking reburial of human remains uncovered by archaeologists, the state now finds that many Indian artifacts in general disarray. William J . Pink, executive and expensive inventory to find The inju.-ed teen-agers were The Bee said the Native director of the commission, said out how many items were in identified as Jamie Ramoz, 17, Stanford bas been performing . the double transplants since last I March. Fi. ·ve of the six recipients ~~ have survived. A m e r i can H e r i tag e they found more than 200 human stale possession, and which who was in stable condition , are missing, the Sacramento Be_e.uid today. The Bee said an Indian group that baa been searching for artifacts taken from the graves of native Californians bas evidence that the loss is extensive and the collections are Commission, created by Gov. remains missing from another itemsaremissing. Wedn esday at Riverside Edmund Brown Jr., recently collection that was supposed to Communjty Hospital and Karen partici pated in inventories of be stored in the San Diego area. Riddle is senior archaeologist Brown, also 17 , in satisfactory two sets of grave goods it tried The Bee quoted the caretaker for the state nepartmen( of condition at Kaiser Hospital in to retrieve for reburial. o f a w es t Sa c r a m e n to Parks and Recreation. He said Fontana. The Indians found four of warehouse a s s aying the he assumes that the losses are After the accident, Ellen seven artifacts missing from one artifacts may have been stolen limited to a few of the hundreds Murray was put on life-support Goodklnd said the Stanford j surgeries are the first since the late 19605 and early 1970s, when • t hr ee operations were , performed. All tbree patients ~ died. :.t col l ection in the West by vandals. of artifact collections the state eq uipment al Riv ersid e Sacramento warehouse the state The caretaker, Fritz Riddell, has warehoused during the last Community Hospital. Her Hearvlung transplants were ~ resumed after a new drug, uses for such storage. said It would take an exhaustive 40 years. mother was approached by ;...=.:2.:.:.~~~~~~::.::::.....!.!....=.::::::::.:::....:::=.::;..::;!~Z,!!:==:=..:..!:....~.:.:......::.....;:....:;.:...:_~~~~~~~~~~~~~ cyclosporln A. was perfected. • oject sparks big SF changes SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -In an elegant Civic Center condominium project sparking big core-city changes, the last steel beam for block-square "Opera Plaza" was installed a few days ago and completion is only a few months away. By December. most of the condominiums are expected to be sold, on terms little short of incredible for a city where a studio apartment can 10 for $150,000 and rents of S550 a month are commonplace. Situated a short stroll from City Hall, the •opera and symphony halls, Opera Plaza will offer 30-year mortgages at 9,,_. percent interest. Although sales will not begin . for another month, the Van Ness Avenue "neighborhood" of 450 condominium apartments alr.eady is injecting new life into a high-crime area once populated by sleazy storefronts and tenements. The vesl·known ; restaurant was a hot dog joint. No more. Long known as "Auto Row" Van Ness Avenue's s howrooms will be replaced by apartments, hotels and office buildings. As Opera Plaza is completed, construction will get unaer way across the street on a new, $25 million state office building. Another three major office buildings are in the works, and many other buildinga are being refurbished to the north on Van Neas. All this in an area the San Francisco Redevelopment Agency could barely give away a few years ago. Today, it's solid gold. 1bere is a catch: To obtain the eyepopping terms, buyers must pledge to use the unit as . principal residence. Those buying to lease out, or use the unit as a pied-a-terre will have to pay 1oing market interest rates. Opera Plaza prices range from a few thousand over $100,000 for a studio to $300,000 for a split-level, three bedroom town house -plus $190 monthly maintenance fees. The median price is $190,000. Amenities include a swimming pool, racquetball courts and underground parkin1 for 800 can. The secret to the terms, in a general fiscal environment where 16 ~rcent interest is more the rule, wu Opera Plaza s unusual financing. It was put together under provisions of a stale law, a cooperative venture or the development agency. the city, banks and the developers, Pacific Union. The 9'AI percent mortgages were made possible through sale of more than $80 million in tax free bonds by a combine led by the Bank of America. In addition, the bank issued a $246 million letter of credit guaranteein1 the bond 1 iaaue. charity shwld give you a tax-Oeductibl~ receipt and pick ~ .,wr-refri2erator at no charge~ This offer is limited to two donations~ housddd in selected areas of Los Angeles, Orange. ~tl.118 and Santi Barbua oounties. O>operating charitable cqanizations are listed below. You must mendDn this offer to <X>llect the reward. ~mcqy and save money. And K't $25 from F.dilon for 'tQ.1f operable second relrigeratot But ...,,,,.....,... .. ~ M.m 15, 1982. ~ , :: ~ -• I .J ... I . ' ' ~· Orange Coaat DAILY PJLOT/Frlday, January 29, 1982 THE BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) f 1'MIL" CIRCt:I by Bil Keane "Jack Spratt was on the Pritikin diet." "(;ome on, Ajax. It Isn't all THAT acarey." by Brad Anderson ."You'd better hurry! Marmaduke wants to see the dog cartoons!" /·29 ACROSS fllld perts 1 Alien '49 Elm tongue 50 Purgetory 5 Of eQllinel 53 Aclc·ecl! 10~ mlulle 14 Be worthy of 5'4 -dN91 15 A pig In -se Egypt, e.g.: 2WOl'dt 61 Oemolllh 12 Grudglfy 13 -Berber• MS.bird a5 -of Cle\lel WHAT YOU NE.ED !'I> A LEMON TEA RUB AND A CtLA5~ ~ MOT MOR!>( LINIMENT UNITED FNlure Syndiclle Thurlday'e Pl.tZZll SOMd .. Pl1mp -;:&:oil~ .,.....,. 4, Gt9ll Lall• Olnlf 42 -off:Mld ., .... ·=r- 17Dlpl..., DOWN 1 Heed: Fr. 2 Accleiln 3 Englllfl compow ·-1¥9 5 Ludl ·~ 78'Mlp1dl ICltd ... tMllnooln 10,.... 11Cefell '2--,, ..... by Harold le Doux MEANWHILE l'l..I.. NEVER F'°""'VE SAM tF 1 FINO HE'& fJPENOIN(, TI1E AFTERNOON Y-llTH LINDA MAY / OP.15TMAT A LINIMENT ~U6 ANP A Gt.A!1S Of MOT LEMONTEA? by Ferd & Tom Johnson I THOLJ<:,HT You1t> LIKE TO NOW J'M HoME. \ff~ .......... 11 .. --•o... L.,. PUNt'TI 0 I i I I ,_, TIJMBLE•EED8 SHOE PE~~··· 'r'OIJ IW=TA ~~SELF ~rzw CHILOREN--- WRITE DOWN THE CAPITAL OF FRANCE L1LL A/AP o.J ).~0 OF 1WI I !!llLK1 OIAJEON Tl)IJA MOU5SE WITH 60UR c~ A>JO 'f/i!.;4 VE L Wl~AAJ E:A!iOUIC.ACIE OF WVIAJ(;} LAP:>f - WELS I LEAlNED ONt: TMIN6 ... Charles M. Schulz 'i'OO 00 TROLL FOft SHOWFISM ~ rr ~ - by Tom K. Ryan BN?-OO!fl ! BAfWOM ! 8AR001"1 ! ~:::::...-~:tr-T.,. ( ~_,.. ' r l ! by Kevin Fagan SO 1'~M I~ IA1'4~'f ~S OH ~"INO M'i ~c.K ! by Lynn Johnston -- -·~·.,..,._ OVERWHELMED Fireman Jim Hazetrpauses to C'atch his breath after fighting fourth fire of da ~· in Centralia. Mo .. when .• u high pressure surge of natural gas in law pressure lines res ulted irr 20 firt•s . The rt" \\'as only one reported injury in t he freak occurrence. Modernization of air traffic control eyed WAS HI NGTON (AP > The Reagan administration. in what would be one of the l argest government purchases outs ide the Defense Department, has unveiled a 20-year blueprint for mode rnizing the nation's air tramc control system. FAA Adminis trator J . Lynn Helms, who gave details of the progra m Thursday. s aid the total cost has not been determined , but that at the progra m 's peak -from 1985 through 1987 -the government would spend $1.5 billion a year. Other sources said the cost of the new. highly automated system-eould total more than $10 bi llion . Helms said the plan has been cleared by President Reagan and the administration 'will propose new aviation taxes to pay for it. He said pr opos als will be s ubmitted to Congress calling for a 12·ccnt tax per gallon on aviation gasoline. 14 cents on jet fuel, and an additional 3 percent tax on co mmercial airline tickets. ··our projections show we can cover the program with that ," Helms told reporters arter briefin g industry representatives (or about two hours on the 20·year plan that envisions ne w computers a nd inc reased automation. Th e adminis tra t ion so ug ht increases in avi ation taxes last year, bu( could not persuade Congress to go along . C urrently the tax on aviation ga soli ne. used by small aircraft. is 4 cents, and ticket tax is 5 pe rcent. There is no tax on jet fuel. used by commercial airlines. 'I did not want to fail' Cooke explains falsified story NEW YO RK (APJ -Former Washington Post reporter J anet Cooke says the fear of failure caused ' her to make up the story of an 8-year-old heroin addict that won her a Pulitzer Prize later returned by the Post. "In my case. the temptation didn't derive from ambition," Miss Cooke tells Phil Donahue in an interview to be broadcast Monday and Tuesday on. N uc ·s "Today" show. "I simply wanted lo write a story that I had been working on , so that I would not have to go back and say. · 1 cannot do it.' l did not want to fail." A transcript of the interview was released Thursday by NBC. Wh en the story appe a r ed in the Po s t o n S e ptembe r 28 , 1980, Miss Cooke recalls, she could not bear lo read it. "At the time I wrote the story .. . I felt terrible about it," s he c:oou says. "When the paper came out ... I didn't read it. I didn't want to see it. I didn't want to think any more about what 1 had done." Miss Cooke's inter view with Donahue, taped Tuesday in Chicago, was her fi rst public appearance since the disclosure in April 1981 that parts of "Jimmy's World" bad been made up. The fabrication and also Miss Cooke's falsifying of the resume she to resign. the Post and Miss Cooke was asked to resign. "When I heard that I had won the pr ize. which was 10 days before it was actually announced in public, I reme mber sitting there and thinking m y life is over what am 1 going to do?" Miss Cooke says. made-up story. "I knew that I could not cover it up and that it would come out, and that it would be every bit of a scandal that it was," she says. Asked by Donohue wh y she lied on her employment application to the Post , Miss Cooke says, "I felt that on the strength of my own accurate credentials I would never have been hi r e d. at the Was hington Post. "And I also re 1t within myself a need to be perfect ," s he continues. "I wanted to be absolutely ... as close to perfection, on paper. certainly." Miss Cooke maintains her story was based on information that a young addict like the one s he described in he r story a ctually e xis ted. After the Pulitzer was awarded, she told her editors that the child was a "composite," that quotes a ttributed to him we re fabricated and that. some events she claimed to have witnessed did not happen. I had submitted to the Post came to i.-.. light only afte r s h e had be en awarded the 1980 Pulitzer for feature She sa ys she spent two months looking for the youngster. a nd decided to manufacture the subject of her story ''over a period or a couple of days, when I really began to think, 'I'm never going to find him if, in fact, he's out there. What am I go ing to do?' ··And I felt that the last thing that I could really do was go in and say to an edilor, 'l can't do it.· " .. wrilin~. The awa rd was returned by the Post and Miss Cooke was asked ATTENTION -' MOBILE HOME IWNERS A Mobile Home Park /Conversion Ordinance wlll be discussed at the H•lllMJlon Beach City Councll meeting on Monday, February I st. Time: ~:30 p.m. Location: 2000 Main St., H.B. All · residents ere 1rged to attend. ~range Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday. January 29, 1982 Acclainied ads' results few PORTLAND, Ore . (AP> -A p air of prize-winning television commerclal1 for two Pacific Northwest beers have attracted a lot of attention but didn't help saggin1 sales of locally produced brew. In a Blltz-Weinhard ad, a pair of truck drivers try to "smugale" a beer from Callfomla lnto Ore gon only to be stopped by an Ore1on "Border Patrol" guard. Jn real Hie, lhe state has no inspection stations. but the series made a local star out of "guard" Dick Curtis. And from Washington, a somewhat eccentric gardene r is doused by unseen hands a fter suggesting that mysterious •• Arteslans" are res ponsible for brewing Olympia beer. These sort-sell scenarios have become the bas is for two enormously popular television campaigns but Olympia sales continue to decline and BHtz-Weinhard sales are still headed downwards despite the company's success with Its s uper-premium "Henry Weinhard" brand. Olympia Is one of the last Independents and Blitz ~as abeiorbed by Pabst of Milwaukee a few years ago after sales started to decline In the e arly 1970s . "T~e co~mercials haven't helped one iota," said Bhtz.Wemhard President Fred Wessinger who displays an award from the Cannes (France> Film Festival in Ms Portland office. But Ira.Zuckerman, a vice president at Ogilvy & Mather Inc. agenc y in San Francisco Is philosophical. ' ''When you're a small brewery and you don't have the millions or dollars to spend for air time like Miller and Anheuser·Busch (lbe nation's top sellers> you can have the best ad in the world and it just ain't going to work," he said. our 11th grczat sa1cz,) now in progress n<zWpJrt bzach 5lorQ, only NEW BOSS Vice Adm . Kinnaird R . M eK ee . 52 . nuclear s p eci ali s t and s uhm ariner . wi ll S U CC<.'C d Adm . ll ~·m :rn G Hickover. it 1~ our inte.ntion to haw a e>aJ.Q. at such a time. that wi, can offer a sub.stantia l amount of m<Lrchandise. from our e.xisting .stock at a .significant pric<i r<Z.duction . w<i shalL cont 1nU<Z. ou r p:>hcy of n ot "buying for .eal<L5·; so all of our salcz. il<z.rne> nzpnz.scz.nt t)iQ. bizst pur- chascz.s avai labl<z, to u.s throughout thz yzar '\Ml. think that yo u wtl l find an <ZXe<ZJLcz.nt choi.oz, of fin<L eak-mQ.rchandisz. to ch~ from a fabulou5 5CZl<Z.ction fi01n.our Qal's ~pt . ., m<Zns dnisf> and ep:rl.e~r 1 ancf lJoys OOpt . at ?:O;:, to 60% off our rcajular st.om hou.ra will apply @)~c@@)~@ 4q fae,hion i.5\end, n<i.wp:>rt bzoch., &t~-'XJ70 ' t I • t ~· Orange-Coat DAILY PILOT/Friday, January~. 1982 Coast Guard cutback invOlves ·real 'risks Gambling with people's Uves is no way to achieve budgetary savinp, but ln ordering cutbacks for the Cout Guard, that UI what the politicians in Washington are doina. For a relativlly picayune savine of $46 milUon, the Coast Guard ia being forced to cut its military manpower by 3,400. c lose 15 search and rescue stations, decommission 11 cutters and reduce budgets at 16 other stations. Locally. that would mean the end of the vital helicopter station in Los .Ange les and cutting •manpower assigned to ocean~going vessels in Newport Harbor and Marina del Rey. In Southern California, with its many pleasure craft. the effects of the c uts could be disastrous. The loss of the ~ Angeles helicopter station. whose three choppers saved 80 lives on 235 calls last year. would mean helicopters would have to fly in from San Diego on LA-Orange County rescue calls. That would mean a ~ to 90-mlnute night. a lethal delay in many sea emergencies. And what about the problem of an airliner down at sea off LAX? The cutbacks would also hamper an already hard-pressed effort to intercept drug s mugglers. Newport's Point Divide c utter would be on •'instant readiness" only 10 days a month, compared to 21 currently. The Point Divide would lose four to eight crew members. Under administration plans, the Coast Guard cutbacks will be completed at the end of March. There is still time for Congress to remedy this frightening situation. and it should do so without delay by restoring funds to the Coast Guard. Sen. Ernest Hollings. 0 -S .C .. introduced a bill Thursday to that effect. Surely, ther:e must be other areas of the federal budget where some or all of that S46 million can be c ut without r eckl essl y endangering many lives. Question u11resolved The U.S. Supreme Court should have resolved whether persons convicted of murder as juveniles can be put to death. It had a chance last week in a case involving Monty Lee Eddings , wh:o was 16 when he fatally shot a state highway patrolman outside of Tulsa in 1977. The court had been expected to answer whether juveniles who committed their crimes when under 18 could be executed. lnstead, the courlmore,l\alTOwly voted 5-4 to overturn Eddings' sentence. The majority held that full consideration had not been given to certain "mitigating" evidence that could have resulted in different punishment. Chief Justice Warren Burger. writing for the dissenters in the case, said, ''It can never be less than the most painful of our duties to pass on capital cases, and the more so in a case such as this one." However , he continued, ''there comes a time in every case when a court must bite the bullet." We concur. The court did not disturb the conviction of Eddings. The court did not rule against capital punishment. It did make necessary. however. a new sentencing procedure. Justice Lewis F . Powell Jr .. writing for the majority, said: " ... there can be no doubt that evidence of a turbulent family history . beatings by a harsh father, and of severe emotional disturbance is particularly relevant." Under the ruling , it is possible that Eddings could be sentenced to death again. "We are not unaware of the extent to which minors engage increasingly in violent crime," Powell wrote. "Nor do we suggest an absence of le1al responsibility where crime is committed by a minor." SWI, the court did not rule on whether persons can be sentenced to death for juvenile crime. We can only hope that the court will find another cue on which to rule. Social· Security threat Following the lead of many other public e mplo yee organizations. one group of Saddleback College employees is attempting to break with the financially troubled Social Security system. Members of the California School Employees Association, which represents non-teaching staff in the district, have initiated a drive to give its memben the choice of either remaining in the system, or dropping out. .. Organization officials maintain the college's private retirement plan is sufficient to cover their needs, and additional payroll deductions for Social Security are not worth the expense. Employees of the City of San Diego recently quit participating in Social Security in favor of a private system, financed by payroll deductions. It appears more and more public employees are choosing to drop out of Social Security, which is compounding the problems the system is facing by further eroding its revenue base. • Fortunately no mass exodus can result because private sector employees are not a llowed the option of withdrawing. In addition, once a public employee organization withdraws from Social Security, that organization cannot r e -enter. Individual membe r s going to work elsewhere can, however, resume their Social Security coverage. The fact that those who have the option of abandoning the Social Security system are choosing to do so is a sad commentary on the perceived viability of the system. If the trend continues, private employees may begin to clamor for the o ption of voluntary participation, which would probably be the final straw for the fragile system. Troubled or not, thousands of Americans depe nd on Social Security for their sole retirement income, small as it is. Allowing a wholesale abandonment of the system would be a national tragedy. Correcting the system's deficiencies is the answer. Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex- pressed on tnis page are those ot their author!. and artists. Reader comment.ls 1nv1t· ed. Address The Dallv Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 9262~. Phofle (7141 642·4321.. , L.M. Bo yd/Fat parroltl Maybe you didn't know that a commoa bea.ltb problem amona pet p1rrota Is obesity. That's rilbt. Fit parrots. The medical examiner cleterm1nes tbe time ol death bJ tbe temperature t of the body. You've read lbat. Qu•tloo ariaea lf the doctor ever can ORANGE COAST Baily Pilat plnpolnl the time exactly. Not by temper1ture, certainly. Clotbin1. body fat, these influence tbe matter. The experienced doctor can set pretty clOH, however. Am told you can set a mud 1taln out of cloth by rubblnl it. with a 11lced raw potato. lllSht try that. T1toru1 P. H•••v Pllt>llSher tlilmM.:-. Mii,a1 .. , Editor Barbara Krelblch Edltorl•I P-oe Editor Demos again seek 'reform' W ASHlNGTON -The leaders of the Democratic Party are making a sincere and rather valiant e ffort to get presidential politlcs back to where they can understand it. They would like to preserve that grand American Institution, the nominating convention, and, not incidentally, make it easier for either Edward Kennedy or Walter Mondale to win the party's nomination in 1984. But· good intentions and fond remembrance may not be enough. The party's efforts to reform its recent reforms will probably fail. The convention, Kennedy and Mondale may all be things past. THE PARTY IS in the process of rewriting its rules for the fourth time in the past 12 years. The latest "reform·· commission. whjch met cordially in Washington two weeks ago, was called th e Hunt Commission afte r its chairman, North Carolina Gov. James Hunt. The Hunt Commission is another attempt to undo the damage the party believes . tbat ll did itself with the democrati&ed rules adopted in 1970 by the McGovern Commluion (after Sen. Gee»rse McGovern). Tbil ti1M, ln the harmony of a deal between repreaentatlvea of Kennedy and Mondale, tbe • commiuioo members recommended the following rule ebanps for comideration by the full Demoer1tic National Committee in llarcb: -Shortening tbe public dele1ate-aeleetion "aeaaon" from 20 to 15 weeks by moving the Iowa caucuses lo Feb. 27 a nd the New Hampshire primary election to March 6; Getting professional politicians back into presidential politics by mandating that 15 pe r cent of al l delegates should be "uncommitted" elected olllcials selected by me~~ RICHARD RHVIS 1'i ). Congress and s la te de moc ratic committees; Ruling that state parties could rewrite their rules to produce a greater J1k e libood of "winner·take -all" primarie s i n s t e ad o f the proportional-representation elections of recent years; Eliminat ing the 1980 rule that bound de le&ates to vote fo r t he candidate to which each was originally pledged. The DNC will probably ratify all or most of those changes. The idea is to prevent futur e no m ination s o f little-known outsider candidates -m other words, to lock the barn door after George McGovern and Jimmy Carter have escaped. But things will begin to unravel again. The Democratic professionals are trying to restor e the old ways In the face of the new realities of televis ion politics. Television -the technology of i n sta ntan eous. perva sive communication -changes all the old rules because it transforms local events into national events. The re really is no s uch thing as a "local" selection process in Iowa or New Hampshire or anyplace else. Television brings each caucus and each prima ry into ever y American living room . In the new nominating process, thos e early events are the equivalent of t he firs t ballots in the old-time conventions. The winners of the first ballots under any nominating system are likely to win the final prize. The television cameras . the campaign money and ambitious professionals tend to foll ow the early winners that's called "momentum." IN 1984 AGAIN, no matter what the rules, the race will probably go to one of the first winners. It could go -as the nominations in both parties have in rec~nt y~ars -t~ a C1lndidete who has taken the time to campaign almost constantly for a year or more before those early "local" contests in Iowa and New Hampshi~. (I also suspect that California or another West Coast state wi ll move Its primary into the early weeks of the campaign to end the ··tasl and leas t" i nflue nce of Pacific primaries. J So, old races like Kennedy a nd Mondale may control this phase of the 1984 Democratic nomination game, but the eventual winner would seem more likely to be someone less shopworn, s uch as John Glenn or , perhaps, one of the group of younger Democrats who will inevitably be labeled "neoliberals," a Gary Hart or a Bill Bradley. One angry citizen tackles lawmakers (Today's column is written b'jl Mr. Waters' aHociate, Phil Jordon.) R a lph Morrell , who t o th e disc.Q_mfiture or. the state's legislators has already proved the adage "One man can make a difference," is at it again. Morrell doesn't look like a man who has made history. He's a retired U.S. Navy warrant officer hailing from Dixon. a town of 5,000 or so population in the Sacramento Valley. He has a s mall-town, self-effacing manner - until he gels angry. HE GOT ANGRY a few years back. and before his anger had cooled, Ralph Morrell had made, at least in a small way, history. Morrell came to the Capitol at that time to study legislators' voling records on some legislation Mrs. Morrell had an interest in. ln the course of his studies he discovered a pair of time·bonored Assembly practices, "ghost voting" and "vote switching." He w.S out.raged by both. "Ghost voting" occurred when an absent assembly ma n "vote d" by having a lower house colleague punch for him or her the voting buttons on each Assembly member's desk. Morrell felt, correctly enough, that this practice allowed m embers to be llll llTIRI "present" so far as the record was concerned, even though they might not even be in Sacramento, much less in the chamber and at their desks . "Vote switching" was possible under a house rule that allowed members to vote one way on the floor, then, so long as the outcome of the vote in question was not changed, be recorded as voting the other way. This, as Morrell realized, allowed Assembly mem'bers to have it both ways with constituents who had strong Coping with contra~ctions The ma.in reuoo that so much advice about our behavior and altitudes and reactions toward other people ii valueless Iles in the fact that such 1dvice is afraid or aeemin& inconsistent and contr1dlctory. But sl:nce the very nature of man is a paradox, the only valuable advice must , IYllfY ~Ill be that wh.lcb at rtnt 1lance aeem1 inconsistent and coalredlct«y. 1t 11 up to ut to dltentanale the threads ot truth and falllty; no ooe elte can dolt fOC' us. As 1 prime example, we are aomeUmes told to pay no 1ttenUoa to whit othen think, but to do wb1t we individually feeJ 11 belt and rtpt. Tb11 ia the "independent" m.a that 'nM>reau cb1mpioned. ON TH& OTHS& band, we are nJolned to pay attenUon to the views and oplnAom of otben, fw we want tbem to tblnlt weU of us. Evm tbe Amwte• eNhltlon..-, wlllt noue.t the idea of monarchy that reigned around the world al t.be time, appealed in their declaration of independence to ''the good opinion of mankind." So what shaU we do in this regard? How can we maintain a moi'al and spiritual balance between our personal convicUons and the received opinions of our day, when they come into conruct? It seems to me that the onJy true litmus test for such a decision Is uking oneself, and sincerely answerin&, one question: "ls what I propose to do an action that is abov~ the common morality, or ~lot.o it?" IF WE DEFY convention, and scorn the good opinion of others. in order to achieve our own 1aln at their expense, our pleas ure at thelr pain, our domlnan~ at their aubmi11lon, then we are not betn1 "independent" or "lndivlduali1Uc" -we ire beinl ITffdy and lnaen1ltive 1nd brutish, and eventually falle to ounelves. I( we defy convention when it ii hypotrlllcal and oppreaalve and dumbly confon!Uat, ln order to attain a pJ th1t wlll elevaw the 1oelety we Uve in (and the 1oclety ot men), then we are tnaly enll1tin1 our "lndependeiaee" ID the service ol humankind, al wbateYer cost coOVMtwa. I ~ feelings, pro or con. on a given piece of legislation. Morrell started speaking out against the practices to any group that would listen. writing letters to any newspaper that would publish them. Al first he was laughed at, not only by legislators but even by a lot of lbe reporters covering the Legislature. Surpri se! His efforts resulted in an irate public and , earli er this year, the Assembly leade rs caved in, changed voting procedures to severely restrict. if not e ntirely eliminate, the questjoned practices. Did Ralph Morrell rest on his laurels? Nol on your life. He's more recently dis cover ed t he exis tence of the Legislature's contingent fund -Morrell calls it a "slush fund" -which, unlike all other stale expenditures, is exempt frO«l slate Finance Department budget and accounting controls. NOTING THE fund had been used to purc hase , among other things, "a variety or luxuries such as first class air travel, $570 gold finger riqgs, cut flowers and beer . wine and potato c hips" for our lawmakers, Morrell re m o unte d his white horse. He announced a drive, with rumself as chairman, "in reform of the unaudited profligat e s pending of taxpayer hard-earned dollars by members of the California Legislature ... " .. We intend ," Morr ell stated, • "e It he r lo force reform th rough legislation. or through another initiative drive." , When Morrell took on Assembly voting procedures, he was an unknown. No more ; this latest effort, only a month or so under way, bas already attracted naUonaJ attenUoo. llorrell's photo appeared in an article on the s ubject in a recent Time Maguine. And, thls time, neither legi1laton nor newsmen are laughing. ARAtr teven mamas•, b It trve ~ Lla Taylor II tblnkln1 about a atarTtaa role ln "Ellht l• Enoqb"7 l'AN ···::::=-:----.......... ---.-·--............. Ir' ....... .. .............. ~ ... . Orange Coast bAIL Y PILOT/Friday, January 29. 1982 · rnmrnrn~m~mIB National Regi'8ter of Big Trees grows ~l.£~~ ~ONSON fn January or UMO. the American Forestry A11oclaUon introduced Its Big Tree pro1ram this way : "Wanted! The Location and Measurement of the Largest Specimens of the following American Tree Species." A list of 100 species followed. By UM5, when the first list wu published, 218 trees were proclaimed national champions. By 1951 the number rose to 291, by 1978 it totaled nearly 700 and in 1980 it exceeded 700. And the old "Social Register of Big Trees" has become "The National Register." Noting that about 1,000 $J>eCies of American trees are eligible, the association says, "We have sought out champions for those eligible species that are not yet represented in the register." There are big-tree coordinators in all but a few states. TRIMMING A GARDEN -The tuberous begonia is a beautiful addition to any garden. Their tubers are available now for selffiihg_ al your nearesL_&arden center. Elbert LitUe's "Checklist of U.S. Trees Native and Naturalized," published ln lt7t, ii the gulde now ln determining eUalblllly of champions and challengers. The American Forestry Association. founded In 1875, is a nol·for·proflt citizens' conservation organization. Membership in AFA is not necessary for nominating a · Bie Tree. Bie :frees have been discovered by foresters, botanists, a 4-H club, a • colleee dendroloey club, and a local Sierra Club. To nominate a tree, send measurements to The American Forestry Association, 1319 18th St .• N. W., Waabinaton DC 20036 with the exact location a nd name ol the landowner. Measurements required are the circumference in feet and inches at a point 41h feet from the grouqd, the height in feet, and averaee crown spread. Identify the tree by its scienti!ic as well as oommon name. If in Plant them in late March or early April and don't be stingy with them. They are fine ip a hanging basket, in pots or in the _ groun~. ~ - Put color border around garden Two or the brightest plants to use as a perennial border around the flower bed are the primrose and the delphinium. The fairy primrose (an annual) is available in nurseries now , ready to plant, and will give color in a matter of weeks. The English primrose Ca perennial) is the most adaptable and widely planted or all primroses. It grows in almost e\f"ery climate zone or California. You will find them in single flower~ of white, yellow, red, purple or blue amidst crinkled leaves. Or, there are the large, double-flowered ones in yellow, red and blue Garden club sets m eet in g Robert Dugger. creator of hybrid orchjds, will address the San Clemente Garden Club Wednesday at 1 :30 p.m. in the Ole Hansen Room of the Community Center. corner or Del Mar and Seville streets, San Clemente. The lecture will be illustrated with slides or Dugger's many flowers. For more information cafl Ruth Wilson at 492-1591 or 492-9509. shades. These flowers come in clusters on top of stiff stems which rise above rosettes of green leaves. Clumps of delphiniums are available now also. They will brin& a bonus of enjoyment for they bloom several times each seuon. The most popular delpbinium colon are purple, U1ht and dark blue, lavender and white, but the color range extends into red, pink and yellow. Give them full sun and a rich. we ll-draining soil with regular waterin& and fertililine. You will be rewarded with spikes dense with blooms that ran1e in size, depending on the variety. from one foot to six feet in height. Other quick color bearers that set the garden ablaze are pansies and violas with thefr purple, yellow and white blooms. Planting sweet alyssum in conjunction with the pansies and violas, or just by themselves in contrasting groups or borders or while or purple, is also very attractive. And later into spring there will be the petunia to plant for color right through summer into fall. Don 'l rely on these annua.ls and perennials to just brighten a border but use them in containers, hanging bas kets and raised beds. Planting bare root shrubs SUPER BULBS FOR SUPER llOOMS GLADIOLUS BULBS Since the first of the year , garden centers have been stocked with barer oot deciduous trees. shrubs and roses. Many beginning gardeners may ask what the advantages are in planting bareroot stock. Wh e n deciduous plants become dormant. the sap is at its lowest ebb, which means the roots wi ll not dry out as fast . So planting deciduous stock now insures q uick growth with the advent or t he warm spring days. When tk'ansplanting bareroot stock into your 1arden keep these two t hin1s in mlnd. The bare r oo t s should be mai n tained in a lfloiatenea, _protected condition during t he time between pickln1 then\ up at the nursery until you plant them. If you buy your bareroot stock in the newer, more con venient plantable pots this is easily accom plis hed by just keeping it watered. Otherwise, you can cover the roots in damp sacks or moistened soU. Secondly, a balance ID alae between the root atructure and the top (or branches) ~hould, be maintalnf!d. Since roota bave been pruned In dl111 n a . eorr .. pond.lo,_ ~rualat •toukl be aPP"tG to the top. 2.79 I ao% OFF I DOZ AE0.3.ltDOZ. DSDLB • ftOL.AI llAR • IHAPSODY IM ILUI • TIFFAMY • DISCO • ... _,_.. ..... ,..., ........ w ..... ,..'""'94.,.. .. ,.... .... QUICKEST WAY TO HARVEST ONIONS •.• PLANT ONION 'SET$' Have grffn onions In only e wHks. M1ture onion• In few months. WHITE • BROWN ANO RED ·sers· • I Florist Special I Sunny·Yetlow DAFFODILS Fiii every room wtth chffttul Deffodlle. Come In today. Fun & ea sy to grow. Since 1946 Hullisles N~reery • Florist . 2MO Harbor llvd., Coeta Mna NJ good thru Feb. 2. 1812 while ........ leet doubt, uk a local forester for help. If an el1aible species that is ln Little's CbeckUst lan't in the National Relister, It means that no specimen baa· been nominated. qr the 228 champions listed in UM5, aeven remained in 1980. The others have died, been destroyed, or, in most cases. been replaced by larger specimens. Arnone new champions in the 1980 supplement with circumference. heleht. spread, location and sponsor are: Alder red (Alnus rubra) 15 feet, 99 feet, 76 feet , Gardiner, Ore., Frances Kimmey ; birch yellow <Betula allegbaniensis> lS.?, 107, and 88 feet , Huron Mountain Club. Mich., Paul Thompson; elder Blueberry <Sambucus cerulea) 11 .5 feet. 40 feet, 36 feet, San Jose, Calif., Richard Marsh; Also, cottonwood (eastern Populus deltoides) 34.1, 78, and 128 feet, Tama County, Iowa, Mrs. Frank Behounek ; ha\vthorn <Biltmore Cratae1us lntrlcata). 4, 26, and 26 feet, Shenandoah National Park, Va., Richard Salzar: holly <American llex opaca), 8.2, 99, and 40 feet. Con1aree Swamp, S.C.; magnolia. (southern grandiflora). 20.3, 76, and 96 feel, Eladen County, N.C .. Daniel Grimsley; Also, maple canyon <Acer grandldentatum> 6.1 feet, 48 feet, and 41 feet, near Vanderpool, Texas, John Haislet : oak blackjack <Quercus marilandica> 13.4, 48, and 41 feet, Grant County, Okla .• Lyle Byfield. Any queries about gardening pro~ms mun be accompanied bJ1 a stamped, sel/-Gddreaud envelope. For Earl Aronson·s Auociated PTeH CuitU to Ho1.11e Plants," &end $1 to House Plant•. AP New1/eature1, 50 Rockefeller Pl4zia, New York, NY 10020. Tuberous begonia prima donna among plants in y~ur garden Plant a jungle of those magnificent tuberous begonias. This plant is showy enough all by itself that it needs no companion planting to enrich its looks. 1'be tuberous begonia is a prima donna in the finest sense of the word. It comes as a pleasant surprise lo any gardener that this gift or nature is quite easy lo 1row. All you have to do is provide suitable 1rowin1 conditions. And these are not difficult to accomplish. advises the California Association or Nurserymen. If you are not familiar wit h the tuberous-rooted begonia, go to your nearest member of the California Association or Nuraerymeo and look at the pictures on the bins where the tubers are kept. In reality, this plant will exceed the picture's promise. A slngle tuber grown in an eight inch clay pot will give you pleasure until fall, but if you have space, you can multiply this delight by eetting and plantine many tubers. The temptation is to take one tuber or each kind -the red, yellow. pink, salmon, while, etc.: the rufned. the single, the double. etc. There are so many varieties and each so attractive that it's like being a kid at a candy counter. For the best results, though, plan to use the same color in masses or groups. Group the tubers in pots, redwood containers, wine barrels, hanging baskets or in the ground or the same color. Put them in an area that bas filtered light. They like a soil rich in organic matt.er and they will want plenty of water but never water so that the foliage or flowers are moist come nightfall. Gllllllll CHICllllT •Time to start thinking about selling out annual bedding plant for spring color. Just be s ure to provide them with good drainage. •Keep after your lawn -mow, fertilize and water between rains -to promote healthy green grass. •Those ln warmer winter areas can prune fuchsias now and in the middle of February but those in colder areas should wait until after the danger or frost has past. •Thinking about relocating a plant or two in the garden. Now's the time to do it. Leave the root ball as intact as you can and be s ure to replant right away. -. - 1-LDYD'!i gardensho .....~--~~----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~---\_ ~~ . ••••••••••••••••COUPON•••••••••••••& BARE, ROii ROSES & FRUIT TREES. 1 SJ 00 off on any purchase of 3 Bareroot's I I • · or I 0°/o (whichever is greater). I I l(Coupon Expires Feb. 3. 1982) 1 I ~--------------·co PON·---------------' English Primrose Bud & Bloom Plant now for shade color in winter & spring Reg. $1 .25 4 " pot Fruit Trees Clare Root) Apples Peaches Plums Nectarines Apricots Standard Types & Dw1lrl Available Pruning Demonstration on Roses & Fruit Trees ~by v1suclcas1ettel ' ·-e¥eryl/2 ..... J Other Subjects Available Bare Root Roses Large selection-over SOEHo select from - 1912 Aw.-d W-..,.. Brandy French Lace Mon Cheri Shreveport Old Fa•oriht Chrysler Imperial Peace Summer Sunshine & many more Tree Roses Clare Root) 1982 Award Winners and Many More Kell0CJ91s All Gromulch BARE ROOTS JUST 2 cia. ft. size L\)VE ....14.Jt MOW s3" FrM oellyery Within SMiie RadlUI Winter Hou,.: Mon. thru Sat. 7:00 a.m.·5:00 p.m. Sun. 8:00 a.m.-5~00 p.m. .---.. LLLOY1J'lmnt9Efff :4NO.t.:ANO~ CO ... INC.\ .• "203'NwJPQrt BMJ. (Of Boy St.) C.O.to , o:9'J1m I (7f4) ~'74'f ,I • ... ................... ________ __ Ornngo 9oast DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29. 1982 i . errors DEAR READERS . If your holiday spending left. you under a stack of credit card bllls, the Federal Trade Commission advises you to r eview the billing s tatements carefully. Credit card billing errors do occur, but they are simple to r esolve if you know how to use the Fair Credit Billing Act. Under this law, you must send the creditor a written · nr.ice about the problem to avoid paying any d sputed charges Phonini: does not tri~ger the leaal safeguards provided under the Fair Credit Billing Act . To bl protected under the law, write to the bank or retailer who issued the card. Your notice must be received within 60 days a fter the bill conta ining the error was mailed. Include your na me and account number, the dale, type and dollar amount of the charge you are contesting, and why you think there was a mistake. Make sure you send the letter to the C-Orrect omce address . Check for a heading on the bill such as "send inquiries to." Do not put your letter in the same envelope us your payment. To make sure the creditor receives your letter. send it by certified mail, return receipt requested. If you follow the above requirements, the creditor is required to acknowledge your letter in writing within 30 days after it is received. unless the problem has been resolved within tha t time. A reasonable investigation must be conducted and, within 90 days, the creditor must explain why the bill is correct or correct the mistake. Documents showing the charge was correct also must be provided. if you asked for "proof' in your lette r and if the creditor states the bill is correct. Your account cannot be cl06ed just because you disputed a bill under the Fair Credit Billing Act. Where to buy book DEAR PAT DUNN : There was an article la tile Jan. 10 DaUy Pilot about Stan Pblllips' book, "I Never Pay Retail." I'm planala& to buy a new clothes dryer and would like to know where to send my order for this book. U.H., Costa Mesa The $7.65 book can be ordered from C.S. 6800, Costa Mesa 92627 Advie'!_f or l l'}H ' 1t'riter$ DEAR PAT D NN : Arter many years of being an avid reader of romantic fiction and adventure stories, I decided to try my band at wrttlDg Oction. I have completed several novea. which friends and relatives are urgtag me to have published. How do I go about preseatlng my work to a publisher and bow can I fet It ropyrighted? P .S .• Fountaln VaJley The names and addresses of publishers and literary agenLc; are listed in Bowker's "Literary Market Place.'' available in the -reference department or your Orange County library branch You a lso might want to refer to the library's copies of "Wnter's Market" and "Writer·s Handbook .. If you decide to submit your manuscripts to publish ers yourself. rem ember that publishing ethics di<;tate t hat you do not send them to more than one publtsher at a time. It also would be helpful to ask an experienced writer to give you an honest evaluation of your writing abilit y and offer objective criticism before you contact a publisher. An unpublished b11ok manusrript cannot be copyrighted (;r1r rr prnhl•·nt"' r hl!n uinte to Pat fJunn / '11/ 11 11/ rnr red tape. getting thl' m1.\11 t·n nnd nctwn 11ou need to 5oltt> 1n1·quitw\ m gor>emm ent and hu.\ml'H \lnil l/flu1 ques110ns to Pal f>unn At y,1u1 'iert'lce. Orange Coast :Daily Pilot. P () /lru 15/ill f 'rJMU \.fe.~a. CA 92626 As many letter:; as pou 1hlt· >nil fw un..'lwered. but phoned inqu1nes or lettt'r\ n11t mdw1mq the reodtr•s Juli name. addres1> arid l1u.'Cm1·" fu,ur<i· phone numbe'I' cannot be considuf'tl t lw. 111/urmi appears daily er• ceJ!! Sundays · · I_ UPHOLSTERY I 1111t 1,i11 -4 S... ·' -1'22 HAHOI ILVD . . ~STA MESA -541· I 1561 ~J Daily Piiat Classifieds -;--850 Spyd~r Needi\ 70 cn"1n 1• work minor . .. $1300 Looks l\ICl'. II p p .OOOQ. ''Sold first day to the first person that called.'' g~~I @ 642-5678 charge it by phone From South Laguna & North County call 540-1220 toll-free. ." ..... FDR HONORED -President and Mrs. Reagan visited a museum exhibit at the Smithsonian Institution. Washington, D.C .. Thursday commemorating-the lOOth a nniversary of Franklin De lano Roosevelt's birth. whi ch is Saturday. Pilot Logbook - Candid commentarie3 I •1 ,., .._ exclusively in the . II y I DI How to reduce violence Child abuse, racism cited as causes of aggression SACRAMENTO (AP) -A 1lale commlu&oo examlnln1 the cause of violence recommends promotlna natural childbirth, dlscourag l n1 co rp oral puni1bment and media violence, and eU.m1naUn1 racllm. A two.year, 114·pa1e report by the Commlulon on Crime Control and Violence Prevention was presented to Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. Brown commented that Imprisonme nt a s lbe sole response to crime "ls ultimately not coina to work.'' The Democratic 1ovemor told a news conference that violent crime is rising, and "I suspect It'll continue to rise even if we lock up another 5 or 10,000 people, which we are going t.o do." The news conference was called by Assemblyman John ·vasconcellos, whose 1979 bill created the commiulon. The 22-mer;nber panel included law enforcement officers, proset"ulors, elected officials. educators, therapists and other professionals. It did no original research, but studied hundreds of books and papers. Vasconcellos said it was the first such e ffort since lhe national Kemer report in 1989, which conde mned ra cial divisions as a major cause of• violence. The state study also presents a bleak plcture of racism, saying many members of ethnic minorities have been made-part of a "permanent underclass" that la ''denied parlicipation In mainstream American life," ca us l n a alienation a nd powerleuneas. The report contrasts shurply with the Legislature's othe r efforta. New laws have 1iven California some of the nation's longest prison sente nces. Numerous bills are pending to lengthen them still further, and the voters will decide in June whether to approve massive prison and jail cons truction bonds. Vasconcellos, D-San Jose. who as Assembly Wa ys and Means Committee chairman speaks con tinu ally of the s tate's shortage of money. said the com missio n's s tudy is not addressed t o aovernment solutions t.o violence. but r~r to personal solutions. He said the report "proposes an educational and gr owth process for the people or California." But Vasconcellos said he would vote to raise taxes, or shift money from less important programs, to com bat child abuse. a key target or the commission report. The stale spends billions on arresting. trying and impri soning criminals, and only a small fraction of that on child abuse prevention, he said. •'The majority of persons who are vio le nt criminals were abused as children," he added. The comm ission , which examined 46 books and articles on violence and the family, did not atate that child abuse causes crim e. But it uld numeroua s tudies s how "a s tron1 a ssociation be tween belnt .a bused and ne1lected as a child and s ubsequent criminal and. violent behavior.'' In one area, the commission took a n a lmost rad ical approach, given its findlng that 84 to 97 percent of American parents use some form of f# physical force on their children. .. • Insistin g that It la not advocating "permissiveness," , the commission s a id bitting c hildren should be banned in 11 school and discouraged al home, and that "at an appropriate time , in the future ," the state should , "consider a legislative mandate prohibiting corporal punishment in the family." Such a law wouldn't be enforced against parents but , would "encourage a change in the s ocial a nd c ultural a c cepta b ility of corporal punishment," the commission said. ·' The commission also came out · s trongly for "n at ural" c hildbirth. which minimizes drugs and technology and seeks to involve both parents. T hough there is no proven connection between the birth e xperience and later violent behavior, the commission said, it beli eves that "a positive birth experience -one that is gentle, lovin g and non-tra umatic inc reases the likelihood or healthy child development," Oar :r Frame Sale Fits ! Sale on thna Sanday, January 31 a.., 0.. Fw at the R1s1IM Pdce, Get a Seccwl Fw That C... the s. ••• a..-1.0-c.- At Aaoo ~ 1 C Frame Sale when you buy one frame at the regu'Jar price you can get a second frame that COltl the same or les for one cent. A frame for a penny ftts your budget! And our frames ftt your style! From 9lmple to topt"'Clc*<i. There's Gegimt gold leaf ftnilh frames; sleek ledlorl frames in silwr, gold or .,..... metal; ooutemporary plastic see-hough box &.m.; fancy or unadorned frames with glMs and ~19; textured or smooth wood IJames in a variety d handlome finishes; artlltic tr.... wtlh a lot d color or *"PY plain frames wth NUlll &rwhes. Ptus more! In a wkie range of as that wtl ftt moll anything from a faYCde 9llde .wp-.tlot to an lmpiesaiw •.:at>e. tcUllom framn!, fining and labor not included.) The Aaoti Blochets 1 C Frame Sale fits you for a penny! (Aa:wtn•lt nwy very from llor'e to store.) ..... 1UllTGlllUCM NlllPSI ....... MILM.._ ......... ca9JAWtNNt Jt1 .. •CIJiillltM :MM.llLllllL .. a 1G1D-• •• ar. •-. .... -M .._.Ma a.. 114 •• •• --·--................... ____ ..._ .... -·-... .......... __ ...... -- , , tl •• 1 • J .. c n • Daily Pilat FRIDAY. JAN. 29, 1982 CAVALCADE BUSINESS ENTERTAINMENT 02-3 85-6 87-8 Merrill Lynch" is using Orange County to test equity . access lines of credit. See P.age 85. D a .. FDR's OIIIl: l!endezv.ous with destiny By SAUL PETT ......... c:.n. S d11 I It hit people in different ways, a ll o( the m bad. The first thing that happened In P a ul Bethke's house , near Loveland, Colo., was that a dream began to die. He had yearned to be a school teacher but now. al 20, he had lo drop out of Colorado State Teachers College. His parents, who a ran a small farm, were stone broke. He had o n e pair of pants, corduroys, and he washed them every week. He drifted, desperate for a job. He would ride the boxcars, a hobo. just one step ahe ad of the railroad cops, this man who wanted to be a teacher. The first t.hing that happened in Harold Ions' house, on a day in 1932 in Ferndale, Mich., was that his father was laid off after nearly 30 years at Ford. Then, when they couldn't pay the bills. they lost their electricit y. Then, when they couldn't m eet the monthly mortgage payment of S35, the bank foreclosed and they lost their home. A man grew old fast in the auto factories in those days and nobody would hire his father_ The going rate for unskilled workers then was about 30 cents an hour. e· The re we re 15 m i llio n Am e r ican ~ one-quarte r of the work force, hunting jobs that · didn't exist. There were farmers with shotguns fighting off deputies with foreclosure papers. The r e were tho usands and· thous ands of businesses that failed and by noon. Marc h 4, 1933, every last ba nk in the country was closed and nothing seemed to be stirring, le astwise hope. "We are at the end of our string." said the outgoing president of the United States shortly before he yielded office to a ma n with crippled legs. Standing was a lmost a n act of will. and he stood there. legs locked straight by steel braces. in the cold drizzle of the bleakest moment of the Republic since the Civil War, and in a voice that rose with the sweep of eagles, Franklin Delano Roosevelt took cQm mand. "First of all, let me assert my firm belief that the only thing we have to fear is fear it self,·· he told his a nxious country m en clustered aro und their Atwater Kent radios. " ... This nation asks for action. and a ction now." And action it got, unprecedented action in the first 100 days and in the days and years to com e, in peace and war, and the nation was transformed. He made the economic we lfa re of Americans a government commitment. He set the American system on a new course that would not be serious ly challenged or changed for nearly half a century. He presided. "exuberantly over a nation in upheaval and regeneration," in the words of J a m es Mac Gregor Burns. historian. Until Rc>osevelt, presidents seemed remote. This one was the first one we came to know, the first in our living rooms. and he came in with a -style that was at once Olympian and homey. On the first of the 100 days, with Congress as anxious as the country to do something anything -Roosevelt sent up legislation to reopen the banks under federal regulation. In the next 99 days, Roosevelt steered 14 more major laws through Congress, delivered 10 speeches, met with the Cabinet and the press twice a week and made a ll decisions fore ign and domestic without dro pping a stitch in his patrician poise. Among other things, the new legislation put the credit of the United States government squarely be hind. ba nk depos its and the refinancing of home and farm mortga ges. It lapnched mighty complicated efforts, through the National Industrial Recovery Act and the Atricultural Adjustment Act, lo raise wages for factory workers and prices for farmers. It took the Unite d States off the gold standard. It set up a national relief system for the hungry. ll established the Tennessee Valley Authority, a profoundly new experiment in government, to revitalize a wide depressed a~ea. It set up the Civilian ConservaUon'Corps, ad ingeniously simple way of putUn1 half a mJlllon Jobless young people to useful work. And in FemdaJe. Mich., Harold Iona and his parents moved back to the same house they had lqal a few months before. They were able to r•·buy it with a home loan from the federal .iovemmenl. And out in the mountains ol Colorado-, Paul Bethke looked at his s hapeless future a nd 'ltlickly Jcl'ned the CCC. Moeuy, he earned S30 a DJontb to build trails a nd plant trcea. Before it *81 done, the CCC planted more trees than any tkl1Je enterpriae in history for reforestation and ..ll.Dd screma •taiMt soil eroeion. Hun1ry youn1 men came to the CCC, •riled h•rd outdoof'a .nd t lepl ht Army 1 b~rradtl •t pilht. "any were eaUn1 well for the first lime in years and gained as much as 20 pounds in the fi rst mont h . "It gave us back some hope," Paul Bethke said . lie saved his money and in 14 mon\hs he was a ble to go l>ack to tea chers college. As a leader and a man , Franklin Roosevelt was and re mains an enigma. He played the high politics or world states man and the low politics of p recinct captain . alternate ly the lofty educator and the devious manipulator. He both Inspired and dismayed idealists . He led and he was pushed. He struck out boldly and tem por ized ti midly. He had no overriding ideology and was impatient with labels . Ile seldom, even orr s tage, seemed fearful. Asked if he ever worried , he made one or his rare references to the polio that had left him c rippled since 1921: "If you had spent two years in bed trying lo wiggle your toe, after that anything would seem easy." Through a thousand competing pressures and details. he appeared imperturba bly on top or life. With equa l aplomb, he took epic calls from Winston Churchill and one from a son asking if the president kne w of a diaper service in Washington. He relished, a nd Am ericans relished with him . serving hot dogs to the king and q ueen or England in June. 1939, the last springtime or peace. As their tra in pulled out. as they headeo ho me for the war that was coming, he led the singing of "Auld Lang Syne" a nd the s houting of "Good luck to you ~" He s aid, "I want to be a preaching president. like my cousin," Theodore Roosevelt. and he was. 1n an educational way Radio seemed to have been mvented for him. His fireside ch ats were precisely that . warm. s imple. clarifying. r eassuri ng. ne ighborly without corn Until Roosevelt, presidents seemed remote. This one was ·the first one we came to know, the first one i.n our living rooms,. and __ he came in with.a style that was. at once Olympian and homey. "Let u~ c-almly consider what we must do," he said in thl' terrible s pring of 1940 when Adolf ll1tler's panzt•r divis ions and stukas swe pt through the Low Countries a nd France. And in the da rker daxs after Pearl Harbor . he Ct ~ked in ad vance that people listen to his next talk with world maps tn hand. Then. "This war 1s a new kind of war It 1s warfare 1n term!> of every continent. every is land . every sea. every air lane in the world Look al your map.·· No president since C wi th the possible exception of the one now offering a n opposite philosophy > has matched Roosevelt 's gift for the telling metaphor . Franklin Roosevelt did not solve the problem of unemployment. World Wa r 11 did. , l .~ I 1~L-1..... u -:_;,4_ ---11111111? ... .._ __________________________________________________ _..<.._ ____________ ~, HYDE PARK VIEW Thl'ir youngest !-.On said. "They wen• a te am ancl thl' Ronsl'vcll yt·ars. But in the first two ter ms , the economy revived markedly, hope revived. many more people worked. factory and fa rm income rose and Am erican society was altered in pattern and text ure In Ferndale, Mich . the WPA supplied work for the father of Harold Ions. when the auto industry couldn"t. In Dixon. Ill., the WPA also provided a JOb for the fathe r Of a young s portscaster named Ronald Reagan. In those days. Ronald Heagan voted for F ranklin Roosevelt. In Loveland. Colo .. with the he lp of money he earned planting t rees for the CCC. Pa ul Bethke__got his <'ertificate and began. le.aching in 1937. He went on to get his bachelor's, master's and doctorate degrees in education. In M1ch1gan . the new United Auto Workers fought for union recognition through a storm of s it-down strikes. A young organizer named Walter Reuthe r was beuten bloodily by Ford goons for trying to pass out le<.tflets. Arter the strikes. Harold Ions had a union. a seniority system and job security. Now m arried a nd a fathe r. he bought h1i. own first house in 1937 for $3.250 With the union contract. his hourly rate as a joumeyman machinist rose to $1.37 "IL seemed like so much money we didn't know wnat,to do with tt ... The fomihes in the house in Loveland. Colo .. and the house in Ferndale, Mich., almos t never misst<d a Hoosevelt fireside chat Plain people e verywhere felt close to this s o n of t he Hu d son Valley gentry , this pince-nezed gradua te of Groton and Harvard and the governor's m ansion in Albany. They fra med his picture on the wall and named their babies after him. lie was a lso uncommonly detested in a thousand board rooms. banks a nd country clubs across the land. where he was regarded u a traitor to h.is class There were endless jokes a nd rumors depicting htm as a Communist, liar, thief, alcoholic and syphilitic. People everywhere also loved and haled Eleanor Roose ve lt, the shy, introverted woman who had survi ved the pains of a troubled c hildhood and a troubled marriage to become. probably, the most active. most ubiquitous, m ost singular firs t lady in U.S. history. The hatred a nd the ridicule slowed neither t be lieve. wer e more fruitful and creative as a consequcnc·e of that partnership.·· o f the m . E leano r c ontinued to travel 'exhaustingly far and wide for her husband, a president a lways in the market for new ldeu a nd infor mation from the grass roots. In Cabinet meetings. he frequently introduced the latest intelli gence report from his wife with, "My missus says ..... Loved or haled, Franklin Roosevelt waa tbe ultimate politician . He played a political a udience with the high s tyle of Benny Goodman on the cla rioet , with a dazzling variety of me lody and improvisation. He flayed the "economic royalists" wbo say tha t "political freedom Is the busineaa of government but econom ic slavery is nobody's business.~ - lie stirred his ge ne ration toward "a r endezvous with destiny." He s ank the opposition with the devutatin1 rhythm of " Martin, Barton and Fish." He could play politics like a huatlin1 pool sha rk. 1940· Would he run for an unprecedented third term against all tr adition? Roosevelt said nothing. Each or the other candidates tbou&bl Roose velt had encouraged him to seek tbe nomination. Only at the last moment, whe'l it was too late for anybody else, did Roosevt..lt let it be kno wn he wouJd accept a draft. And in the convention hall, in a mir.:cle ol spontaneity orchestrated from the basemea.t ol C h ic a go 's s upe rintendent of sewer.a , loudspeakers in the balcony and on the noor e rupted with one cannon·like voice: "We Want Roosevelt! ... E verybody Wants Roosevelt! ... The World Wants Roosevelt!" Long before Pearl Harbor, in the growiq m enace of Hitler a nd Hirohito, Roosevelt wa lked a thin, high wire between isolationists a.nd inte rventionis ts. Alternately subtle and bold, bending the r ules, lracling old destroyen for bases. pushing lend-lease through Coneress. he s lowly committed the country to alJ aid for England and Russia . s hort of war. He led t he buildup of the "arsenal of de mocracy" and e lectrified Congress and tbe nation with a production goal of 50,000 planes a year. a goal wide ly dis missed as rhetoric. In Berlin, Aoolf Hitler said it would be years before America could challenge him, not before 1970 or 1980 at the earliest. But by 1"4, "degenerate" Ame rica was producing 100,000 planes a year. He led the nation in all-out war, with calm and strength and endless buoyancy, from tbe · "day of infamy" and rumors of a Japanese invasion of California , to the climactic sprint ol 1945, when Ame rican Gls stood 57 miles from Berlin. In postwar planning, Roosevelt tried a.Del failed to persuade Churchill that world peaee required the end of colonialism. He tried and failed to persuade the French to let go of a plaee called Vietnam. He had great confidence in his one-on~ powers of persuasion but he failed to charm Stalin into the idea of a free Poland. Re did 1et assurance that the Russians would e nter the war in the Pacific Unlike Woodrow Wilson, whom be served In _ the first world war . Franklin Roosevelt sold tbe country and the Senate on the idea of Ii world pea ce organizatio n. It had no teeth, but with time be thoupl tbe United Nations could be made into a real force. With time, he thought be could brinl StaliD around to pea ceful coexistence. He ran out ol lime April 12, 1945. There is still no oCficial monument to FrankJin Roosevelt in Washington, D.C., but out In Colorado and Michigan and across the land, monuments exist in the lives ol ordinary people. Paul Bethke fulfilled his dream ol belal a teacher. He taught government and poUtkaJ tcience for 22 years, doubled u football eo.eb, and ended up as superintendent ol acboola. He has voted mosUy DemocraUc tbroucb tbe ,ean. Ha.rokt Ions, the auto worker, b• YOted only Democratic for 48 years. He now bu t.bree children , 11 1randchlldren and three great-grandchildren. . In the family as a whole, tbere are etabt homes, 15 cars and 11 teJen.AoD Hta. IODa retired two years a10 when Ilia boartJ rate wu $U.20. He and his wife, Sally, Uve on tM nWl"a from Investment.a plus montbl,y · peulou ol $141.97 from the auto body shopt and •1 from the (ederal 1overnment. And in the twist of circwnstanct1, ...._OM seneraUon takes for 1ranted what aDOtbtl' • ,..,... didn't have, when one's man Pl'Olrwt beeom• HISTORIC MEETING AT SEA -Franklin starr. Ge n. George Marshall stands behlnd another man's concern over ta.ht.a• ud tM Roosevelt a nd Sir Winston Churchill chat Churchill. To t.hc extrcm lel\ is Capt. Etttott excesses of lhe welfare state, ilatow_ IODI'-, aboard HMS Prince of \Vall"S.Qn Aug 15 t!Ml-~Rooscvett , tbe...presidont.: · ---•~ •. 91..,._... •• wo1ta, tUtlid ,.......,... A prayer boQ,k is on Roose .;,. 's lap. CtlieJ of _ Reegan. • • .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 •ANN LANDERS •ART HOPPE •HY GARONER Mom's ·marriage a blessing for teen daughter DEAR ANN LANDERS: My mother is making plans to m a rry a very nice man. He is respected in the community and has a fine job. The problem is this : He is much more strict than Mom. When they get married, I just know he is going to set down a whole new set of rules for me to follow. I realize in some ways he is r ight about the life I should lead. but I a m almost 16 now and have always done things my own way. I don't think it would be fair if he j ust stepped in and took ove r . My mothe r has always been easygoing, and this is what I a m used to. I don't wa nt to have my life turned upside down. P lease tell me if you think he should have , the right t o do this . -CALI FO R N IA UPHEAVAL C.OSO de Bienvenidos Youth Shelter 1st ANNUAL ANTIQUE FAIR Los Alamitos High School 3591 Cerritos Ave .. Los Alamitos s ... .,.s..y .-. Jct. 10.eo Admis_sion~l2. -~---..-3 ...... - ------- .......... .......,St9M A Dining T radition Since 1922 Serving Lunch & Dinner Reserv a lions Suggested 645 -7077 ONTINENT AL IMPORTS SOUTH COAST VILLAGE FAL&. CLIAIAMCI SAU -2 ();30°/o O'FF iMPOITED HAND PA.INTID CHAMICS Ir rc>RCaAIMS PLUS MUCH ~ i ..... ,., SHOP IAIL Y FOi IEST OOHTIHBffAL . s• rcnOM. M'ORTS DEAR CALIFORNIA UP: What you are sayia1 ls this: "I bave bffn able to do as I please all my llf e becau1e Mom ls a pushover. Now 8be l• gettlni m1rrled to a maa wbo has some batkbone, and he' going to let up some 1uldellnes that wlll mean a lot lest freedom. I know he 11 right, but I hate being dlsdpllned. What 1hould I do?" My answer: Thank th .. good Lord that you Will no longer be allowt"d tu do H you please. Vour mother's marrlalC«-Is probably the best thing that has happttnrd to both of you In a very lonJ( tlmt>. Be grateful. DEAR AN.N LAN DERS · I huvt• ht•t•n cooking for utmost 50 years. Wht•n I w11s 11 little girl and helped my rnotht:tr in lhl· kitchen. she taught m e a lwa,vN lo hn•ak an Come in and see our large selection of Swimweai· South Coast Plaza ln the Mall by the Carousel 751-7500 .. Grand Openin:g SPECIAL egg m a separate bowl so a bad one wouldn't ruin the whole mixture . In the half century I have been cooking 1 ha ve never run into a rotte n egg. Is it possible that I don't recognize one'! Do you ) t hink the two·bowl bit is necessary·• NIGGLING NUISANCE IN NO RFOLK DEAR N.N.: The re ls no way you can fall to recognize a rotten egg unless your olfactory sense has been permanently df'Stroyed. By all means, continue with the two.bowl bit. According to Landers' Law, the first time you decide it Isn't necessary you will run Into a rotten egg and ruln the whole mixture. DEAR A NN LANDE RS : I am a minister's wife ·Writing about a problem that must be common nationwide. I am app a lled at the way people tonduct the mselves in church when they attend weddings. Once upon a time parents taught their childr en that church is God's h ou s-e where th ey s h o u Id beh ave respectfully when visiting. Today they carry on loud conversations across the ~ .. ~ ais les. let their c hildren r un loose durinl the service and stand up in the middle o1 the ceremony to take flash pictures that blind the minister. One photog rapher gouged u big hunk out of our beautiful ma hogany door with his equipment. Las~ nigh t several c hildren wef\e ch e wing chicken legs and dripping F rench fries on the front pews before t he wedding began. Please tell your readers that many years of s acrificial giving by church members m ade possible a beautiful place of wors hip. and when they vis it a church they should behave as respectful guests. SO MEWH ERE IN OKLAHOMA DEAR SOMEWHERE: Conside r the word passed, but don't expect miracles. The slobs in the world never think yoa mean them. Service suiting her I knew l was in trouble when I ca me home the other evening to find my wife . Glynda. reading a copy of the F rench fashion magazine. A La Mode. which she had liberated from the beaut~· parlor "Maybe we can get a mortgage on the c hildren ," I said hopefully. "Don 't be sill v ... s he said. "This won't cost us a penn~: I'm simply trying to det e r mine how I can bes t sern• my country. "You 're goi ng to join the French Foreign Legion'.'·· THAT GOT ME A LOOK. ··Wit h bud get c uts d r <.1 s tical l ~· <.·u rta i ling government aid to th~ need~·.:· he said with di~nity . "I am res pond ing to the Reagans' appeal to \'Olunteer my ser· vices ... "The Reagans· plural'' I thought Mr. Reagan was the only one who had iss ued a call for volunteeris m .. "Yes. but it's Mrs . Reagan who hus set an example for the nation to fo llow b~· doing all the volunteering." said Glynda. ··Look what s h e 's done now · She s volunteered to ht!lp 01.4t the• need~· fashion industr\' bv wea1·i n~ the latest creations of t h e t op cles ign N S a bsolul <.·I~· fr<.'l' of char ge .. AIT HOPPE THE INNOCENT BYSTANDER ' I didn't ask an\'onc for a nickel to repaint our bedroom ... · "Wait a minute ... l said . "S he t•xpl a ined t h at t he Wh ite Ho use is America's house. She didn't do t hat for he rself. .. ··And I suppose t hat S200.000 wort h of new china was for Am e rica's dining r oom a nd t h e n e w table-e+ot hs wer e for America's breakfas t nook '!" "That's right .. "Well. what an• all these new clothes for. then'!" "Maybe s he has America·s body." I suggested ") HAP PE~ to be a size e ight myself.'' said Glvnda. "So there's no reason I can't do jus t. as good a volunteer job fo r the fas hion industr\' as she can ... J know a loaded mine fi eld when I see one . So I asked Glrnda what she'd do with the creations when s he was through with them. J .. A target for all of u:, lo ~hoot for. · I agreed. "But I didn't realize the world of houte couture was on the s horts ... "OH, THAT'S THE 8 .EST par-t ... ~he--- said "Mrs . Reagan's going to donate hers FREE HAIRCUT Whe n you _buy Cellophanes Color Perm/Wave $20 $30 $40 Also see us about London's top c·u1Tc•nt New Wave hair styles FREE CONSULTATION Come relax in our opc•n-air tea~arden. We look forward ' to seeini! you at. ~ <>f ~ . Hair Studio 763 Bakt>r cbet. Bear & Bristol > C.M. 540·3855 Placing a Classified is twice as easy! Just S8cY 'biarge ~-~ - you c an use your VISA or MASTER CARD to place a DAILY PILOT Classified ov•r t he telephone. including 8-0ay week ads. <.;all (714.) 6 42-'5678 ~111111 -~-_-_-----· _ --Ta&-OPange co-.lrt"' !l-TargeS't mar1te"t1'i.t:~e • 1 "IT MUST BE ," sh<.• said "Mrs Reagan's press secrctar~. '.\1rs Tate. said Mrs. Reagan has acn·ptl•d a numb<•r of gowns a nd whatnot to wear on loan but solely lo benefit the fashion industry. Mrs Tale said Mrs ReaJ,!an and I quote · h a s d e r i ,. e d n o p e rs on a I be n e f 1 t · whatsoever .. "We ll. .. I conceded. "what with her foster gra ndma·s program and a ll the other things she has lo do. s he certainly wouldn't be helping out Bill Blass. Adolfo a nd Yves St. La urent if they didn't need it. But what's that got to do with you ·?" . "I don't feel she should have lo go it a lone." said Glynda. "Tell me. how do you t hink I'd look in this Bill Blass short si lk bubble dress?" "In public ?" "Or do you feel it would be a fa r bctter thing I did by saving poor Calvin Klein in these pink suede sweat pants?" "I think you should let Mrs. Rea gan go it a lone:· I said. BUT GLYNDA SHOOK HER head determinedly. "No , I've failed to do my sh a re for all too long." she said. "When Mrs. Reagan collect ed S800.000 in voluntary contributions to redecorate the fa mily living quarte rs in the White House. to museums after s he 's worn them a couple of times. But I've got a better idea · I'm going to give mine to the poor ... "Ho" ven tric kle·down ." I said ... Mr R<'agan would. be proud of you ... ··T hen you think the need y designers will let me help them out·•" s he said. ··No way ... I s aid. patting her on t he s houlder ··You're forgetting that the Reagans have one thing going for the m when it comes to collecting mor e than a million doll ar s worth of free decorating. free dinnerware and free clothes ... ··What's that'.' .. asked Glynda. "They're filthy rich:· I said. POJ SHOrs BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT ,.,., <'Ir I WISH SOME&ODV KNEW WMAT NOBODY KNOWS. ~ .Dad gives nickname Q: Where did the late composer. singer and actor Hoa1y Carmichael ge t the nickname "Hoagy"? A : From his fathe r 's full na m e. Hoagland Howard Carmichael. Q: Sometimes I wonder how Sir Laurence Olivier, one of the finest actors of our time, looks upon nudity In the theater, on TV, In movies and some magadnes, etc.'! -Arthur N., Miami. A: He doesn 't look at it intentionall y but has said he's not affected by it. nor conte mptuous of it. .. Everyone who chips awaLJt_~_statue alte~-looks ,,af iL_ Whethe r you like it o r not. there 's something to influ.-tce the audience!·· Tony Randall. a great admirer of Sir Laure nce. s hrugs whe n a s ked that qu es ti o n . N o ti c in g th a t th e IC>ng-long'·long-·running nude · s how "''Oh! Caltutta" W1rS ~tilt-on -Broadwsy. he- remarked. "I'd J(O to see lt If !Omeone took J .. Pf ISOllAllTY Q.&A. I } . . BY MARILYN AND HY GARDNER t m e there . but I'd never pay to see it!"' He nny Youngm a n . who saw lhe show five times (because he liked the music ~) was onl v concerned a bo ut the effect thf presence of nude acto rs and actresses ~af on the une mployment s ituation : <"Ta king Jobs away from wardrobe mistresses an• wha t ever t hey ca ll m a le wardro bf elpet'S.") -. 1 Q: Didn't Sean Connery get bis baalt tral•lnl for tbe James 8oDd fllcken ~ playln1 Taraan? . i\: No. Re WAS in a 1959 plcture tttl ~·Tan:an""s Greatewt Adven{ure· '" wfik Gordon Scott played Tarzan. . ... ol La~una Boach T YOUI HEALTH OR. PETER J STEINCROHN Cold weather hazar d told DEAR DR. STE l ~('ROH~: With special oxygen treatmt•nt m ~ ~on "as ~rescued from the dead . tie "as sitting in a parked car with his fiancN'. It wa!t zero weather and they had thl' windows dosed a nd the engine running. Arter a while !-.h e dt•n·loped a ~eadache and wanted to go into the hou!te. But he was stubborn and 'at thert'. Arter s he had been inside for almo't a hair hour. she looked out and m,· son'!-. car \\a ~ still the re. · When sht' we nt out to talk to him. he was slumped ove r at the "heel. fie was un conscious. She quickl~ informed he r par e nts who look him to the hospital immediately. They dia #':nOst>d carbon ·monoxide poisoning. As be didn't respond to 100 rwrcent oxygen treatment, the~ transfern·d him to our larger ho~pital. Still un con!'.ciou~ he was put into a hi~h pres~ure o~n~en chamber. Within a ft•" hour~ he bt'ca m e :conscious again. Now. a month lalf•r. h<• '-t'"m' to be a~ normal a s be-for«> tht· 1>oi'4m ~ot into his s ystem. The~ madt-a promi~e nt>\er to s it o ut in the cold \\ith "in do"' doM•d and the engine runnin~. Last winter a fric·n d of min•'. living tlillone. was found d t>ad hours aftn being exposed to ('O from a fault~ hf'atin,; system. -~ r-.. , .. DEAR MRS \' Tht point 'ou rn ;,ikl' 1s important espe<·wll~ cl1111ng till' c·old weather when CO JJ<H!o.Onlllj! n\,I\ ht •c·omt• a sil ent. mortal thre.it When ordmar\' ln:.it rn1•n1 "1th .,,~gen does not bnng u ho111 1m1n·11\1·ml·nt 11 mt' b ecom e s a n 1mport .1111 1·l l'n H·n t i n r ccoven Tht·r<' ha,1· h 1·1·11 "l'\<·r a l in St an(.'~ S II f (' 0 Ill p I l'I l' I l' l' 0 \' t• I \' 111 unconscious pa tient -.. p111"111 c d ''' < ·c > whe n treated "ith h ' p1·1 h;,i r 1<· 11 \.~ g t•n therapy for thret•-qua rtt•r' nt an hour of 100 percent oxygen at 3 :J tmos phl'n ':-. ;.1h:-.11l utt· • Som etimes the tre at nwnt rw c•d-.. lo hl· re peated within six hour ... Complete d1s plac·emen1 of I ht· < ·1 > from the hemaglobin rn thl· blood i... importa nt to prevent futu re pC'r ... nn.d1l ' or nll'mon : complications ' Dr. Stemcroh11 u f'lc1m11·, q11t>\t111n:. /mm readers He cannot ansu1er oil md11•1duu/111 hut will include those 11( y erwrnl 111terest 111 his • column Send your q111'.~t 10r111 111 111111 111 cr1ri• <11 I the Daily Pilot p () R 11J r11;11 r11.\tt1 \frsn. (',\ '92626 .. Sagittarius: Plan trip Saturday, J anuary 30 A RIES (Marc h 21 ·April 19 > '. Take initiative. gel r id of s uperfluous material and realize that d elay is not defeat. Cycle is s uc h that you em erge victorious despite te mporary setback . You'll gain greater independence. terms will be defined and dis ruptive e le ments will be eliminated. TAURUS I April 20-May 201 : You have a lly behind scene : someone in authority. who is financ iully responsible. will support your efforts. Clandestine meeting could be on agenda . What seemed out-of-reach will become available and you'll profit as res ult. GEMINI I May 21.June 20>: Aura ot romance dominates scenario. Focus on ho pe s . wis hes. a s pirations becom es ava ila ble a nd your product is made ' a ttrac t ive. Aries. L ibr a n a tives play important roles. Long-st a nding assignment t·a n now be completed . CANCER <June 21-July 22 ): Ybu make important contac t which aids bus iness. ('uree r. Accent on ambition . standing in t•ommunity and dealin gs with persons in res pons ible positions . Money comes from s urprise source. You 'll be stimulated by ex('itin g individual who expresses confidence in your abilities. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22>: Many a ns we rs ure arrived at throug h a form o f meditation. You regain sense of direction . philosophic al concepts are clarified and t r avel plans come into focus . Cancer . Capricorn. Aquarius natives play k ey roles \'IRGO cAug. 23-Sept. 22 J: Review budget. check for legal loophol~s. dive rs ify and be aware of finan cial obligations . C h e c k l iens. leases and p rop erty uppraisals . Long-distance call could lead to travel and a profitable project. Gemini. Sag ittarius natives play key roles. LIBR A I Sept. 23 -0 ct. 22 I : Pe rmit other.s t-0-r..e.veal their ~!ans while you play vour own cards close lo chest. Review and re vi s ion m ay be necess ary . L egal transaction involves property and money. Emphasize publif relations. patience and per sistence. SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 211 : What starts as routine task could be transformed into creative project. Accent on details . s ig nificant chan ges. employment and policies affecting lifestyle. Favor will be returned by one you aid ed in recent past. SAGITTARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 211 · Em phasis on cha n ge. variety. possible travel. dealings with youn g persons a nd a cquisition of luxury item which m akes home a more interesting place. Taurus . Libra. Scorpio persons figure prominently . You could have luck with number 6. CAPR ICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. l9 l Emphasis o n real estate . ho me base. a bility to see situations a nd people as they uc:tually arc. not me r e ly as you wish they mig ht exist. Surprise call could be received f ro m relative in tra ns i t. You ·11 be C'Ontarted hy a persistent Pisces. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18 >: Forces no longer will be scattered. You learn where to locate needed material. You 'll lake de finite s t a nd regarding money. career a nd love. Short journey involves Cancer or Capricorn native. Prom otion due. you could assume executive position. P I SCES <F e b . 19 -Marc h 20 1 Ro a dbloc k to fin a n c ia l progress is rem oved. Yo u'll be rid of unnecessary burden. More people will be concerned with your views . m a ny will seek your counsel. M~kc pers onal appearances . ~a thc r needed ma terial and de lineate current trend. GOREN ON BRIDGE BY CHAR LES H GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF North-Sout h vu I Ol'rJ hl1· South deals. NORTH • 105 3 1:1 86 0 10 7 •AK 9865 WEST EAST + QJ42 • A 96 V'J 9 ~K 10743 OQ90 O J 86 +742 • +QlO SOUTH + K87 <;?AQSi 0 AK 52 +u The bidding: So•th Wei t North East I NT Pa11 3 NT Pas11 P ... Pa11 Opening lead: Two or •. -tn the brtdgtt pt:tJi?l's-"-;__ Garden M Eden. ull hriTiiant plays succeed. But life is not ne&rly 10 kind. North oulh reacht'd t hri•t> no trump in quick lime . WtlTte North mrghf not nav1• the 1tr nl(th in hl1th c&rds ror hi' Jump to game. his long ~u1l rated to produce five or !>I\ tricks. so his bid was drJrly warranted . W eosl lrci hi s fou rth-best !!pade. East won the ace and ronlinued the suit. Declarer ducked Lhe second round or 'padcs and won the t hird round with the king. The fate or 1 he <·ontracl now seemed to hinge on a 3 2 club break. but when declarer led the • JBCk or clubs and rao it. he suddt'nly found lhal he had another option. Sitting East wns a young Ft. Lee, N.J. ex- pt•rt, Michael Kamil, and he 11moothly ployed the ten under the jack! Mo t declarers would now as umc t hat Weal had .. tarted wtl.lrfaut cf\Jbt ro-nsr q ucl.'n and continue by leading n club to the nine for the "ml\rkcd" finesse. Eau would win the queen and aJI tho e lovely clubs In dummy woula wit.hrr on the vine bccaufe declarer would have . no way to get to them. But declarer blithely continued • wilh a club to the king. and the contract rolled home with two overtricks since declarer could safely take the heart finesse at the end. There are two possible ex· planations ror the way declarer played the clubs. Eiti..t he did not rea.lize that he had a 1econd club finesse avajlable. or he was aatuLe e nough to realize that East might be false-carding with the Len or clubs. We will never know for sure. but we shall charitably assume that the latter was t he case. Hew .. JH dleeM LIM MM ....... a.IT a.rt.I a-..... --. ..... ~. • ee,1 .C "W ...... 0,...... Lea4a," H•4 U ,11 te '°Gen• ..... •·" can el dda ....,.,., P.O. lu 151, Nenr ... , N.J • .., ... 1191le ~ ,.,...._ t.e New .. ,.,.rti.ru. Orange Coa t DAILY PILOT/Friday, Janu.y 21. 1912 WA ITING FOR M ORE N EW S Joan Townsend. sis ter of res('ued l '.S Bn~ Gen J a m es L. Dozier. li sten:-. Thurs day an ht•r Alvin. Tex .. home for the latt-st telct'ast for ne ws of he r brother. Mrs . Townsend suid s he ........ first heard oi ~ kotbtt'~ ~~ from tbe n Red Rrigadlts: h~ m hdma. Italy. wtien ·: a reporte r fuom ai r;racfi0t staem taHed her and -~ read the communique uo her With Mrs. ' Townsend i.5 rretr son . &.nllll ~C.'t~~ ~(t\\~~ \~~'j£ The "90 Day W>nder'' offers an unbeatable combi· nation of benefits . High inte· resL Short 3 month tem1. Low $1000 minimum. Quar· terly compounding. Even on early withdrawals, you still earn 63 annual interest. There's no 3 months' for· feiture of interest or loss of principal. Available to California residents only. ~ate offered on accounts opened through Monday. ·r~uo ren•"•al~allht-,,..m.-rah· k.1tt m." lh.1nl(r<1I n·n ..... ,,1 COMMERCIAL CREDIT COMMERCIAL CREDIT PLAN, INC. ,\nah~im. b.'>11.., Bn•il..hu,....1 ..,, 'l.!~11 ;-; I 1,j 111. Co..ta ~. 1;11 1'.-...1 17th "' ~rttl'L7 till lliflfl llunllOl(lnn Bt•a('h, lhOj;, 1,.,1,t ... 11 \\, ,, "l '1:!1il7 1'17,,, I \1i1oo1Jion \'it•,o. :! a:~lf •• \h( 1,1 l'.'lf1.. ~ .~\ '•.!hi~. ;;n :.'h.d Santa Ana. I:! 11 ~-''' 171h °'lf1•1·1 '•:!701 .iii ''°''I --------------------------------------------, ~~;_ VALENTINE'S DAY IS FEB. 14 THE BIGGEST FlOWER DAY OF THE YEAR! SO ORDER YOUR VALEMTIMES DAY FLOWERS FROM OUR "AWARD WIMMIMG FLOWER SHOP." WE'VE ORDERED THOUSANDS OF YOUR FAVORITfS! DAJIFOOILS, TUUPS. IOSH. CAIMATtoMS, AHO MUCH MOIL CAU MOW 645-00tl .. .. * ~ • I I 00 • ~ CJ) ~ • ~ CJ) • ~ • I t •(.,. ik spm:' sivl not tis& m price: reuoo· a6ile matt d'uaified ~· ; . . , • . ! ! I I ' I . I • ' .. Orange Coast DAIL v PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 out of crisis Off-road vehicle• banned .• li08 AM:Ja.a <AP> -1'11 Nau.Ml nA _. • ...... .... ~llelew'cfn r,r•1r•····· ••• •••l.ea4 ·~~ .......... -l'Od falllilJ . ......._ ._.••"Ill a ..... Kl'ffa ...... jec't. die ·~..,.. •ls ·year experience ln •:.=.:•evlllon "bad been a aucceu. Now we •Mil to Ht out to create a broad •wareneu of televtalon and IU effect on people, particularly ,.._, chUdren. We feel It ii t.llle to move in new dlrectlona." be made ror pro.ram•, 1he ttJd. One will Hy, 'National PTA Recommended for Family Vlewln1,'' and the other wUI tay, "National PTA Recommended for Vlewin1 by Fa millet with Mature Teena." By THOMAS D. ELIAS Japanese farmers and thcdr clout ln the Diet Japan's parliament, have suddenly become a key factor ln Gov. Brown's hopes to win a U.S. Senate se11t. SAN fo'RANCISCO (AP) The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has upheld a ban on ve h icular use in two co rrid ors of the Imperial Sand Dunes. , .. , I llf • It's all oocau."e of those pesky Mediterranean fruit mes . ...................... •n. Leverid&e aald televiak>a ..,._rammlog submitted to it weuld be reviewed first by a tMe·member panel that would weed out proirams obvloualy 111ot suitable tor l'leCOmmendation. The PTA wlll ch1r1e producers a fee of S2:iO to review a proiram. She 11ld SJOO will be returned lo pro4ucera of pro1rama not accepted by the pre·screenlna panel. FALLOUT Pieces of a deteriorating ceiling in the Capitol have been falling on the desk of House Majority Leader Jim Wright. D-Texas, but it's not a Republican plot. A major part of Brown campaign strategy this year ls the belief that last year's medfly Infestation will fade from the minds of most votc.ris . Even though malathion s praying continues. the Iii~£ .hove not been making A summary judgment was granted against the California Association of 4WD (four·wheel drive) Clubs and the Callfomi1 O U -Road Vehicle Association by U.S. Dis trict Judge Leland Nielsen of San Diego In a n a ction which sought to force the Bureau of Land Manage ment to re.open two corridors in the Dunes. ne1at1-. Mpe.eU ..... eoiw wa•t to ••••••l'Se pr.1ra•m'n1 dtat a .....-•. We will aot aame Wbt Wt! coaai•er to t.e ~•4 pro1rammia1." •ur Aa11 Leveridp, nat.ioaal ~ 4lf tbe ab-million ...U.r .._. llf pare•t.a and luca.ien, saw Ttlunday. The full panel will have aeven members made up of a parent, a teacher, a st ud e nt a pecliatrician, a program content curriculum specialilt, a media educator and a psychologist. 'ney will be selected by the National PTA Executive Committee. Prosrama will be rated on the basis of their quality of µfe, violence content and artlaUc and technical quaUUa. Asked about President Reagan's comment to television executives that he would like to see television and the movies return to a simpler time, Mn. Leverldge aald, "We cannot turn the clock back. We're movlng forward. Television does reflect the values and mores of the countr y as it is today. During the early evening viewin1 hours proeramming should reflect wholesomeness, but we also reel the need lo deaJ with the world as it is today •· Wlflllll llCUI headlines as they did last summer and the governor and his backers count on public attention s hifting to other issues. Al a DeW1 eoalereace .Mn. Roof falls on Texas Democrat Leveftdle Mid tM PTA will _. up a aetjceal telewiADD NView paael to ..,..-eat....,.._ for family \'iewiq. Tlte PT A alto will ~ a pro1ram of teaclUQc Tl/~ aldlh to prepare dtiWl'en Jar ''the video-media ialeraatioa explosion el tt.e ~:· Mrs. Leveridge said. 1'he review panel will consider onJy completed programs and will not work with producers daring the development and 1u:ript stage, Mrs. Leveridge said. Enter the Japanese. Even though the medfly lnva~lon was limited to onJy 3.935 square miles - a fairly smaJI part of California -and even though they n~ver infested even one piece of commerclaJ fruit, fear of the fruit mes did infest ln February 1977 the BLM ordered temporary closing or the corridors to vehi cles and in December 1977 , per· , m anenlly c losed the areas. WASHINGTON <AP> ~~~t~ of the most lucratite markets for California -A year after the roof In Japan, those rears caused a quarant1·ne -f e ll in on ot her She said she felt tae PTA'& Two types of endorsement will c o n g r e s s i o n a I no": pa~iaJly. relaxe~ -on all non-rumigated D Cahrorrua frwt, not JUSl produce from infested .. ,._....._ She said the PT A had no plans to join in any other television monitoring plan or boycott that might be initiated by other groups. Reagan state rating drops emocrats, the ceiling areas. Many California growers believe the medrly started coming down on House Majority Leader scare was a bandy tool used by Japanese farmers Jim Wright, D·Texas. trying to win imP.Ort limits , something they have wanted for years. ··Pieces of it we r e . 1' Japan's agricultural lobby -which d1·s11·kes l anding on my des k falling into my coffee imports of California fruit because it causes both cup. It was hard to keep lo wer sales and lower prices for the generally my mind on what I was inferior home-grown product -had made its doing," Wright said. quarantine stick, the loss for California growers could have topped $100 million this year. Another Republican . T. his slate's farms normaJly sell abour •150 upris ing? No. just 11 • another casualty of the ma ion w~rtb of fruit in Japan. including more d than ~ million worth of lemons and oranges. eteriorating West California growers weren't about to lake that SAN FRANCISCO (AP) facade of the Capitol kind or loss lying down. Californians worried about building. Moisture bad . ~irst, they gathered pledges or more than $10 u n em p 1 o y men t a o d a seeped into the walls m~lhon for a national "don't-buy-Japanese" media a n d c e i I i n g o f l h e bl t th uld b recessionary economy are majority leader's office, 1 z ey wo ave started if the Japanese had decidedly less enthusiastic about causing plas t er and nbot relented. T.hen they spurred diplomatic efforts President Reagan 's job .Y the ~~P;'!blican Reagan administration, which performance than they were paint to chip, peel and finally eliminated most of the quarantine. nearly a year ago, according to fat~ .. 1 l . s n 0 t a n "We buy their products and we expect them to the Calilornia Poll. ins u rm 0 untab 1 e buy o urs, .. s aid :John Hay, executive vice The poll, a public opinion problem." said Wright, pres ident of the California Chamber of Commerce. tele phone survey of l ,OU who has. spent most or . "We :d lik~ to solve this kind of problem respondents by the Field the past m. onth exa·led to diplomatically if we can," said Michael Stewart. Institute 1ound this month ... _t spokesman for the Western Growers Assoc1·at1·on. • 1' · w.. the s maller. d1.s tr1'ct for every two people who favor "But we're ready to mo ve if we have to." Reagan's performance in office, office he has in the Th~ growe rs were also ready to hire a one does not -a sharp drop Longworth House Office campaign manager with firm links to the from the 7·lO·l performance B u i l di n g w h i I e president. The t~p c hoice was Lyn Norziger, until ratio re_po~ last April. re pairmen worke d on last ~<:ek t!t~haef Q91iticatomcei:Jn the ~eua.n Further, 51 percent of the Cll pitCfl ornce he admin1s r ation . Second choice was William Californians polled said Reagan r ales a 5 ma j 0 r i l Y Roberts, co-manager of both President Reagan's is doing a poor or very poor job leader. runs for gove rnor of California. handling unemployment. Air.. ..-J,,._ -• . But . the grower s des perat ely wanted other 17 percent .rated 1 hi Tab paid daplomatac errorts to succeed because they wanted favorably on the issue f s d . . their market -and their profits -back. pooster Mervin D. Field. ' / • • . And w~en diplomacy succeeded, the biggest ' in peTlllieS s igh of rehef came from Gov. Brown longtime political a ntagonis t of the growers. ' AJuka vu)nerab)e CASA G~DE. Ari:t. For the growers believe bis statements las t The Interior Board of Land Appeals upheld the closing and lbe dis trict court agreed. The Court or Appeals s <1id there was substantial evidence to s upport BLM's closing o r the corridors o n grounds the vehicular use was destrucUve to plant life in the areas. Fede ral regulations. it said. justify closings for this purpose. Drunk cycling bill signed SACRAMENTO IAP> P eople who ride bicycles while drunk would face fines or up to $250. under a measure signed into law by Gov. Edmund Bro~r . The bill, AB1576 by Asse mbl y man Pat Nolan . R ·Glendale, would also apply t o people who r ide bicycles under the influe nce of drugs Current law alread y prohibits riding a bicycle on a freeway. BIG PLANS -Pilot Jim Campbell of San Francis<.:o checks a map of the world in preparation for what he says will be an attempt to circle the globe by powered hang glider. He will be accompanied by his friend. Patricia Trusty, who he met during an earlier glider event ANCHORAGE, Alaska <AP) -Although Alaska could probably survive for a while if it seceded rrom the United Stat.es being an independef1l-country ~ the Soviet Union 's doorstep could ~~ve dangerous, a special comm1ss1on says. <AP> -It didn't make a year warning that the medflies were "out of dime of difference t o control" legitimized the fears and led to the Shirley Jean Kelly's Japanese quarantine and less severe measures in lawyer how her former othe r foreign markets like Taiwan and South h us band pa Id the Korea. divorce fees. If the growers· boycott bad gone forward, it Truck driver Frank would have hit its stride at about the s ame time as Kelly cleared the books Brown's primary campaign. Not only would that by paying the $3S4 tab in have revived the m ed!ly issue . but it also would pe nnies -35,450 of have been a loud reminde r of Brown's role in last them. Kelly. 47, said he year 's crisis . Nolan 's bill wo uld make bicyclists subject to certain secCions of tbe- California Vehicle Code r e lati ng t o drunke n driving. .,. thre w in an extra rOIJ of So th • · I Oren9e County Sullerl0< Court . e re s irony ap enty in the whole medrly 100 C•vlc c.111 ... or we\!, 'L J'it ' D N' ,4 50 pennies, just in case p1clur~:-.Democrat Brown is the leading political senta A .... C.11torn1an101 e y /:I. his Count WaS off. ben eft ~1ary Of s.uc. CeSSfUJ diplomacy by a :~:~:~'l'°{~H~l~G~~~ !!1i!i "We'll take them... Republican adminis tration. Yet growers -KOJIM• ., EWKUI~ of ,,,. E•Yle of BAltSICV Bl'NKER. JR . age 71 . a k d • said Shirley J ean 's Brown's m l d t . d 1·. I M M.MOSELEV HARRY BARS KY .resident or San Clemente. ey •scove OS eermme po it1ca enemies in DEFE NDANTS LE •SO N F 'd r h 11 ry I aw Yer . Ric bard C_a liforni.a -were also delighted w ith the POME11ov Assoc1 .ru, 1Hc . • resa ent o Ana eim, Ca C'a Passed away on C lemons , whe n the d I t I Th corpou11on. PETEii TI HTu111 Hand Passed away on January 27. Thur&day evening He is IP o ma IC resu l. ey won financially, but WELLA T1NTUll1N, JACK A LONG. 1982. He as survived br his llUrvived by has wire Maria pe nnies were pitched bis Brown emerges as the political winner. M•llGA llET wooo HA STI NGS wife Cella. son Samuel or c . Bunker. 2 sons George p_ NEW YORK (AP> -Left-banded DNA -a way. He gave Kelly a __ INCOME PllOPERTv ASSOCIATES. A h kind or mirror image of the genetic maten·a1 found rece a·pt. E"--· l MAllG•llET HOWE. aA1111 v v n a e 1 m . Ca . J Bunker lll or New Jersey ' ....... u ~co1.1!nr1utboaedmSantoMon1co J wstNSTOc,c . E;L MU FO.IC g r and c h 1 I d re n . 1 a11d John E Bunker or in all living things -has been discovered in WE SfHEIMEll a. coMPAHv. • great·granddaughlt'r , Tuscon . Arizona . nature, scientists report. Th k ' h v•n•••1 P••tnu,tHP F BlltLL brothers Ben of Phoenrx . daughters. Maria c . Battista The leader of the research says the discovery e s y s t e linri.t f :vLgf~~~~ A T:~:T ~ .E ~J.~~~ AMriizona •.nd Ned or Des of TutGock. Ca. and Gaylan could beJp solve one or the biggest mysteries in EfHrGulHIEIE.lllv..! LCOLllEPV. llESfO'llLL ~ o nes. owa. Greves1de B Frederic kson or San · h ed '"" ~ • genetics -ow genes are tum on and off as an LONDO M E o 1 c AL co L L e c T , o H seTv1 ces will be held nn Cl emente. Ca .. sis ter. a nimal or cell develops . N (AP> -Bored with the baby-sit cbildrenfreeofcharge. •ssoc••T•OH, •He.,• <«POr•'""' Friday, January 29. 1982 at Margaret &wman or Chula "It's reasonably well understood in bacteria, Bahamas? Fed up with Florida? Sick There's skiing on the planet n. ALLSTATE FI NAN CIAL ll:OOAM at Harbor Lawn V1st1. Ca lie is als of skiing in Europe? Then try a trip Europa. where galactic skis take you ~~:~~:!·T~C::.·,,~Rii 5c~;~z'E'!s5 M t'morial Park Services s u r v 1 v e d b y 1 4 but very mys terious in higher animals," says th 1 d Alexander Rieb or the Massachusetts lnsti'tut.e of to e moon. up as wel as down hills . You can BANK & T11usr COMPAN Y. un er the direction or gra nd ch ii d re n an d Technology. British travel agent Thom as Cook v1s1t Mars or Venus or Pluto, which LB•EllEBAJlluAoJYuo. vo. E•-B•oa11A!lBH•11HA. Harbor Lawn-Mount Ohve great-grandrhildren Mr ~ Mortu•'"" or Colit.I Mesa. Bunker was a veteran 0 Malfunctions or that gene reoulata'on system is orfering galactic tours. but only for the brochure calls a place onJy ror CAfRICOHE. s J DAVIS. MERlf ~J e th wbo h t .. _ d • th loners Th f rt f hot J CONST llU Cf lO H COMPAN Y. 540.5554 World War II , servi ng with could be responsible for the formation of cancer, ose · appen o u.: aroun tn . e · e com o s o your e LLOY D'S eAHK oF CAL1Fo11HiA .• BUNKE& d1stmction an the t:nited Rich saidinatelephoneinterview. 25thcentury. include 175 restaurants run by corpora11on , GU ARANTEE G EOROE PATRI CK Stale& Marine Corps as a The firm has issued a lavishly telepathic waiters, an indoor forest COLLE CTIO N CO MPANY .• "The cancer cell is one that's lost some d . . . . <«PO••llOft. M a. M llEPORT•HG Chie r Warrant Orricer, element or control," he said . The researchers do illustrated brochure offering an "out an sports facahlles ranging from AHO llEFEllllAL se11v1cE. 1Hc .• -----------. !~0~b1~r 1~f ~~ aM~~o~~~ not yet know whether left-banded DNA is involved off this world" holiday with a choice cybernetic fi shing to laser archery. ~~·. ::~:~~~,"~ :A1H,..Hc'~c;~ Lodge i.n Costa Mesa. Ca. in thatloss of control. 0 no less tban 22 Interstellar "We've had people trying to ... ...._eiton,coLowE LL. BANKER & ,..ct•or.-s -.a.•OUWAT ...o.TUAWT 1 tO Broedwey Coste Meu 642•9150 IAlTZlllGoHOfll SMITH I TV!MIU '#UlCUff C ... f'll 427 E 171h S1 Costa Mesa 6416-9371 ,_ClllOW.S IMllMS'..,....., 627 Mam SI Hunt1ngten Blllach 536-6SJl9 PACINC .. W 1•1CM1A&.P ... c;.,,.1e1y Monuery Ct\ape~rem.tory 3500 P11e1hc View Or111e Newpof'1 Beech ~2700 NcCGltMClr NOC'*ll•S i...Qune Baeoh 494-941 5 l.aguna Mlfl.t 7tl-ot33 S.. Juilf'I O.p1tt,.no • "'NDILA .............. Mottu.y. c.,,_19ry .Cr9m9to~ Private interment l.A!sneski Genes, made up of DNA. serve as blueprints, stopoven. register for space journeys for about ~os~:i:OHL~E ~ :11':. ~•cLH~:o Mortuary. 640 South El s pecifying the characteristics and controlling the Hotel Moonstone. for instance, 2 O Ye a r s.'. sa id Edmund IMAGAwA, o11•HGE couHTY TAX Camino Real. Sao Clemente. growth of aJI living things. offers air pressuriied lo the Swingleburst, group public relations ~~LL•~~;,:,<;. REMsp'L~~!E':.~ ent r us t ed with t hese l t ' fN equivalentofsealevel on Earth, plus manager for Thomas Coo k 01:veL.OP11<1EHT OEPAIHMENT, arrangements.492·1717 narecen issueo aturemagazine,theMIT magnifying panoramic windows and ·AHO ALL OTHE11 PERSONS KENNER researchers reported findlng the curious form or fl t· b 1 · H did l h . UNKNOWN cL••M•HG it.Nv 1110Hr DNA h oa mg acorues. e no say ow many, ii any, TIT LE , eST •TE, LtEN.oij KATHRYN v. KENNER. -w ich they call Z·DNA -s pread And, of course, mama robots will orders be bas taken. •NTERE s r 1H THE 1uac..•. restdent of Newport Beach. throughout genes from fruit flies. ...._ __________ ... IPllOPERTY DESCRIBED IN TH•" ca Passed away o n Rich, a biologist who led the research, says NU ma Ml •ta PllUC •TICE ~~A';',!r~,~!5H~E~~H~: ~: .. ~~io:· January 26. 1982. She was e xperiments are planned to try to figure out what ----------cLouo uPOH PLA1Ht1FF·s flTL.····; born J anuary 19, 1907 in role Z·DNA might play in the regulation of those SU ... lllCMCIOUllTOfl fllCT1TIOUUUSIMUS fllCTITIOUi8USllllESS THEllETO AHO DOES I THROUG" • Denver. Colorado Survived CAUflCMtMIA.COU1n" i.Ml!ITAT8MaMT NAM•STATEMaNT 10.1HCLus1ve i.. b h h b d Ch 1 genes. Ofl~AMI Tiie loltowlno P.,son h dolno The lollo•l"t IM"'"" ••• oolno SUMMONS "' Y er us an ar es. Certain chemicals can cause B-DNA to change •• t11e ......, e1 -,..._.t..., .. ...,.,,..". blnlnnu1· CAM 11uMa•11: ,.,,. da~chters Martiie Monroe to z DNA d . R' h id . """'-'• MOWAltO MAU•••. SWEET SATISFACTION, 111 Uni LANO SEA AtR MOTo11s. 160CI 110T•CE1 You ...... -~. Tl\tt~. and Carolyn Nichols. sons · • an v ice-versa, IC sa an an oo•••• KAY• MALI•••,.., Strut, 11•-1 ltec.11. cemor11•• 0onstnet.sut .. o•.N.....-tBted•. cwnmeyc1K..,....,1ns1youw1111Wt\;• Obarles E. Kenner Jr. and inte rview. The chemicals that encourage the ._.. .. .._. '*' ea111o ... 1e,... .,_....,. '-'• Ulllen.,.., ,..__.,!.• 3obn R. KeMer. Memon·a1 formation or Z-DNA are also those as•""'iated w1·th CAISWMealtA11t1'11 It•• M. HO••l•nd, 600 Tu\lln G•lldHn lnfullrlu. Inc .• wltftln ·~ "-.... ~-~ ~ O•MltTO'"°"CAUll A¥-. ~ .. «II. Cell!Ofllle Celllor11le <«p0rellot1. 1600 Dove Ml-~· '•: i;er~ices will be held on turning on genes, he said. ~c.....,..•••w m.a s ..... 1. Svll• os. N••PG•I a .. c11, av1so1 u ... 11e '* demfft•-· Saturday, January 30. 1 If bis hunch a·s correct that left band-"" DNA . c ....... H••••• M•l•H• end Tiii• ltuMnetl " <onclWct• "" ... C .. lt .... ftleftMO Et frlW>el ........ dKld~ c ... rr. U& • ~ IS Dffftfl It.,. Mat ... "-w m .. • ,,.., • ....._ Tiiis tlonlneu 11 conduct .. toy • tin •v•te11cl• • menos ciue Uf',1>•' •t Paclrtc View Mortuary involved in gene regulation, the substance could 1111 ... '" ltll• <-1 i.r .,. .,., "·"" --corpw•t.... ,....,,.. ....,.,.. • • c11es LH ... •l C he Pe I at l : O OP M turn out to be immensely important in basic 11_1,,. "1~ •• c-... ttwlr Tlltt .....,,._. -11 ... w1tt1 n. c..lldltn ,,,.,.'" 111e lnt0tmec..,_119W. • Interment at Paciric View geneti·c r·esearch. •mH ''°"' Cl\er1.-.,,. o.,_ ,_,, c...-of 0r ..... '-"" .,, F.-.._ · · 1. To THI DEFENDANT: A c1v11 • M I I P k N ...... I• CM•••• .... o.,. ... J_, •. lta. .......... • umplel11t .... """ Ill•• h Ille etnor a •r · ewport Rich and his associates first discovered Key. l"te1.. nil .....,_1 •• 111ee1 •'"' .,. P••1"1111...,,..""" B.e H h . Pac If i c V le w z 0 NA t I Ii 11 It_.., wW!'lll "'-I 811 ...._ "'*""" 0r.,.. c .. st o.i1y l'llel, c-1, cien of 0r....,. CW!lty .,, • 11 ... .., wish 10 ••l•M tllh •ortuerydirectors. · wo years ago n crysta zed genetic ,, .. ,.,, .. 1,, 1 .. _,,., •• ., ..... Jt11.n,n,F' ... _!.t2t nm UNl ~,.,10,,.,. •-11 • .,.......,,.,_..., ... "~ MEYER material prepared in the laboratory. o .. r h•••• 11111 uvr1 '" ... ., .. t1111 --.. 11 __,.., .,..,, t11e JOHN HENRY MEYER The discovery was a complete surprise. IDet..ni-.... a .. ,.. Civic c..... PIU ma ""'1 ..... er .... Coast 0.ll• Pli.t, ., .. llllS c_, • _,..., .......... "' : E h d ,.. 1"'9, WWt, ,_,.. Afte1 Cellfw!IMI,.. JM, Jl, 2', I"•), 11, 1"1 J....a reHOllM IO Ille UMPl81111. (II e f lJll .• a1e 76. resident of veryone a assumed that D"'A -·O-G,at•:•r<tec••·"'"..,....,. -Jut11u~"°""*""le•tt11w. Costa Mesa. Ca. Passed deoxvrtbonuclelc acid -could exist ln only one "-"-..... <-. 11 *'' ni.y '1CTtT1ouseu .. •1 • _ ... -· court• -1""' .....,.,,. or <-el\ <' ,,., wfly .... ,..it1911 fer <"*'It ti ...... ITA,..••T ~ ••~ or•I ,, .... ,,. le lie ••re• 111 1,,. aw.ay on January 26. 1982. basic form -as a Iona, two-stranded molecule ....,..,,.. ... ......., T" ,.....,.,.. --· .,.. 11e1,,. • ••o.•11. U111M1 .,... ..... v--Mltl Si.arvlved by his brothers that spiralled to the rloh_t. tt 11 """"'.,......,... • <"" • IMI-•: "'CT1nou1eu1111n1 -· ~w111 M.....,....,...8"1k•ll.,, .. 111e Carl c a d G w • . ~ .. ._ -.. ,_..._. IUNMT ..ua. ,..., 111amc c.... NAMS ITATllMNT ,ie1n11"· .,,, 1111t c-i ~ eftttr • .,. · n eorge · -• -tn t11e Delly PlleC. 1 ,......._, • Hlefl••y. k<llMI hecll, C•lllor111e Tll• 1011owlno H•Hn 11 eot11e ludtll'Mfll ....... 1,...,.. 1t1e ,....., -e&'er ol Qlsta Mesa, Ca. ~ .. ,~ •• c~i.. . .,...,.,,.. 111 1111, tt7«t ...,..,,.., •: .. ,,,.,,... '" IM ,__. •• ,,1• Wtlkll •bter Leona Talarsky of ----------.. 1 WTeU. tested _., ....... MU ...... ,.... MAOOll'i Put, INC ... THE AHOCIATIS. 21'0l Kroll (OUM!'"'4tln..,.11ltfl!Nlllel ...... Portland, Ore•on. niece 'ICTtTIOUSIUllN.. W' ~~--. wtw .. t11t..,, .. ce1i1w111a -..r•""· 1.us 111ecw1c '--·~a-11.cAttMt. I•""'"' -Y or..,_.,. or .u. J)l e ..._ITAftMSNT .. Ml........ CtHI Hltllway, hoet 8Htll, JetMt O. -.. lllertr "-rela.tr ...... ln ... c.,_...11t. en• Peraha ol PortJend, T" ,.,,_.,,. ---... ,.. FRESNO (AP) DAHO-'-Y.,••· tetlfenlle•«t . • ... ,.._c .. i.t.t. . 11.11yww1111 .. _111a..weet Ot1e1on. He wes born on ..,.._ .. , •bout ooe-.__ ....... of .,.,. '"*At.OM. lllllU•N•• r11i. ...,_, 11 c~'" "' • '"'' Mint• 11 c...-1 .. .,. *' .,, •'*""'t fill""' mMW, .,_ •M4H 1 1111rch 9, 1905 ln Felrvlew, si ·v'•"c~"ON 'S CL•ANINO n •vun.o 4W'I .,... .... ....,..,e_. ,.,._.._ IMl•f411181. • ................ " tNC -"''*" • ....,..._.ac......,.._.a....-SUJr.u cllr•.. " "'• ,,.. ~· .. ••••·· ~Vile we1ll t-.cl la .._. ..... ~c:....o.11v,_, .......,,,..1..c. ,_o . .._ .......,.,"-·_., .... ._..,,._, LI--...._,CA..,. ano, Tulii·-. :...i=ra _.,_a;-_19'_ .. _.,_._,. __ -_-_-__ -_,.,,_•~ --u1 • '°""' -""" ....... _.-, .... """' ... oATffe.t;a, .. •"•er ...... served ln World SHAitOH PHO••••. u .. 1, -... ...-.-. , -~ .. ,...,., c_..,,c:-..e10r ... C.-.ty..iJ-... '-••A.aitAHCH War 11tnthe11th Air Force. o.c-...._,.....,CA,..1. and Merced coaatlet ·-...._. -.......... •·1•. c..,._ ' er v I cea ll WI n b I• le r .-.!.....~~ " c...._.. "' • coatalned •-•· of tbe For,____. .... c--. ~ .. Or-. c:.aev • ,._.. .., ..... "' ....,,"'-• .. --..,,,..... ~-.... .,....,.. ... ~ .... Or ... CMlt Oelly..... 0.,0.., ' l"riday, Januery 29, 11112 •t TMt.......,. -,...,. ._ .._ that were hl1her than C::. ••• LCMU• • .,, .._,_.. 1 I 1125 G1alef Aw ~ ...... ~ D P'•mlly Mortuary Chepel on sHA1tON111HOS111x ballaed .,..Udde DBCP ACTION ~ ..... 9"1C81... Je11·•·1s.11.1t,tw ..... co•.CMn.aaNICMOlllOll ,. l 100PM. Interm e nt et ~c..,.e10r-.c-.e11J-the atate aafetJ AM&YMOT =:=. CAU.64Z·H71 ~a.n.---..._ \ fakb&veo Mamortal Parit ' ,_ atandard, offlclall ---••a&..-=,.,,...._.._.~-•nd let• rriettetl1 Ad· ::~"':9:-• ......... •lb Dr. Andrew c. SCt•ley ~~c...o.11,::=; ....,..,. ~ ......., vllorhelpyouplaceyour T..__ mm.,... • detioa. ., .... •. •s. II."· 1 rePGl't*l. __________ _, .-. n . "· ..:.'::":' .. <:' o.tflf :':i ad today. --~~ea. 0et1Y :::i ' • • 0 • • • 0 0 • 4 0 0 ... r' a a· -rnrn~~[I]~~~ ML bullish 90 county Local offices to offer new equ~ty access account By KEITH TUBER n.11,~ ............. ..., Orange County will be one ot four C a l lrorn ia l ocations selected as a test market site for Merrill Lynch & Co . 's new Equity Access Ac count, the company has announced . The account, to be available next month, is a new financial s ervice which will e n able qualifying homeown ers lo establish a personal revolving line of credit based on the equity held in their homes. "No. we're not really getting Into the banking business ." s aid Charles Atwood, president of Merr i ll L y nch Realt y Associate s. ·•Merrill Lynch docs not take deposits we' r e only on the lending side." The revolving line of credit is secured by th unencum bered equity in a ho m e, with the maximum c redit line set at 70 percent ofU\e appraised value or the house m inus w hatever remains to be paid on the first mortgage. Interest is computed dally based on t he c urrent prime rate plus 2 percent. While a base rate has been set al 14 percent, the In te rest will flu ctuate Wyle firm .cancels franchise in Irvine The Electronics Marketing Group of Wyle Laboratories has acknowledged t hat National Semiconductor Corp. was canceling Wyle franchises for Irvine, Santa Clara. El Segundo, San Diego and Seattle. The cancellation is expected to be effective Feb. 22. The an- noun ce m e nt was made in I rvine by La u r en I. Pond, pres ide nt of the Electronics Marketing Group. Santa Ana h ealth firm to sell stock Home Health Care of America Inc .. Santa Ana, has filed a registration s tatement with the S e curities & Exchange Commission for s ale of 1.25 million shares of its common stock. The offering price is expected to be between $14 and $16 a shart!. One·mmton Shares will be offe red for sale by the company and 274 ,000 s hares by s hareholders. H o m e Health Ca r e o r America, through a n etwork or region a l centers. provides s pecialized medical services and products at home to chronically ill patients who other wise would be hospitalized. Pond said that Wyle facilities at Phoenix, Denver and Salt Lake C ity will rem1lin franchised at this time but are expected to be canceled at a later date. "While we wer e aware that National Sem iconductor was concerned about our recent fran chis e agreem e nts with Texas Ins truments. we did not expect the cance llation,.. Pond s aid. Pond added, "If the National Se miconductor franchises are canceled this action is expected to have a negative s hort·term effect on the Wyle Electronics Marketing Group. "However we believe that in the longer term we will recover a ny lost sales through the newly acquired Texas I ns trume nts semiconductor product line and support from our other m ajor semicondu c tor s upplie r s incl uding AMO, Fairchild Se·m icondu-ctor .--rnte1· Corp .. RCA and Signetics. Wyle Laboratories is a n lrvine ·based diversified h igh -techno l ogy compan y operating .in the fields o f electronic compone nts a nd systems marketin1: research, en gmeermg servaces ano test: i ng : ind u st rial manu - facturing, and transport.ation. Di-ablo cost plan eyed SAN FRANCISCO <AP > - Pa cific Gas & Electric Co. has proposed a method ror covering the costs or the Dlablo Canyon n uclear power plant once it starts operation, insisting there would be no change in its electric rates . The utility filed the proposal Thursday with the state Public Utilities Commission , which will hold hearings on the application. C urrent PG&E rates don't include any Oiablo Canyon e<>M-s . and under commission procedures none can be included until the plant near San Luis Obispo begins producinc power for customers. · Th e plant. just three miles from a n undersea earthquake fault. had received permission from the Nuc lear Regulatory Commission in September to begin low-power testing when design flaws we re discove red in the plant's s eis mi c s afe t y des ign. The NRC s uspended the tes ting licens e in Novembe r because of con cern ove r the errors. a ccording to c hanges In the prime. .. J\s tar as we know. there ti; no other plan like it," J\twood said. "We 're no t a w.,n· or anyon e doin g t his. b u t we belie ve others will copy us ... An article in the Los Angeles Times Thursduy s pccululed the n e w Me rrill l.yn ch account might be struc tured similarly to that introduced last s pring by She a rson/ Ame rican Express. But unlike that plan, the Equity Access Account is not tie d to the balance or any other broke rage account. Access to the credit 1s made available through bank checks and a VISA curd provided under the a ccouol. s imilar t o the M err i l l Lvnc h C as h M anagernent Account. There is no minimum transaction . but the mini mum c r edi t lin e exte nded will be SI0.000 ··we think it 's <Equity Access Account> a vcrv l(ood product a nd that the market potential is very good." At wood ~a id . "That's why wc lim ite d the test areas to not include Los Angeles County, although we d id of course choose som e of the more populous areas ... In addition to Orange County, San Diego a nd Ventura counties and the city of Sante1 Harba ra will participate in thC' test . The company expects to expand the service to other s ta tes later this year Mernll Lynch csltmatcs that the total US unencumber ed household eq uity in 1980 was a1lpro ximately S.1 t rillion. The test a reas. 1hc compa ny said, contain about 1 75 m illion reside ntial units. or 50 percent of Califo rni a 's s in gle fa mily detached homes T he compan} estim a tes the median value of these ho mes at bet ween $106.000 a nd $135,000, d epending on the area Me rrill l,.y n c..tL Hu b.ba.td Jn c _ ~ ULe... s ubs idi a r y marke tin g the account, believes that 60 percent of those owning these homes pote ntially qu a liry for the account. Loss reported by Far West Far West Financial Corp of Newport Beach, paren t of F ar West S avings & Loan Anociation. reported a •net loss or 13.8 million. or Sl.94 a share. for tbe year ende d Dec . 31 compared with earnings of $3.3 million, or $1 .67, reported for 1980. . The company also r eported a fourth-quarte r loss o f $2 71 million. or $1.3S. compa red with earnings of $2 m illion, or SI 02. for the 1980 pe riod Gross revenue s for the year increased 29 .5 percent to $115.7 m 1l lton an 1981 from S89 3 million in 1980 including real estate profits of $.5.2 mHl ion und $4.35 m illion respectively Standard l:ogic reports losses ·~ -TRE- Standard Logic Inc. of Santa Ana reported for the fiscal year ended Oct . 31. Net sales amounted to $4.3 million vs . $4.6 million in the prior year. Ther e was a net loss of $1.88 million or 61 cents a share. vs. a net loss of S32,324 . or 2 cents, last year . In the fourth quarter, net sales were $792,362 vs. $1 roillion last year. Net loss was $785,619, or 25 cents. compared to net loss or $80,712, or 4 cents in the like period in fiscal 1980. The company blamed the loss for the year on continued developm ent and marketing costs associated with the company's Dar\,restaurant and.~otel point-of-sale system. • t'irf'lllott • 8IOOM N Lill ... C'fotwf • t'oJWro/ Cn1H14t • IAT!lt 1111t'lawd ,,.,.., • Oro, CNtllot 111 KllClwol • A411# IO llw llHC~ • l>r-9 _, ~'""' • l'>ololtlf '"- • t C.t CGH!ff ll!llA Alll_,lt • NOi-llolt C•l.ICNI•,. l(llolwJI G..,. 0-°""""' ' CORAL BAY '89Fr9so TERR.ACE MODIUNO:OPlN' COST A MESA t'CATUllNO ON& ANO It'll llONaOYIA SALaOPPICC OPCN DAILY UAM Jf'M ,._,__, --r:•t*I•• --..... • C1t1 TWO ICDlOOlll Pl.A_NS 831-8123 ~s~a;.a:;;o;=::!'l:."ICl*2::: ~:~o .... , •• .., H•••H'lt '' l·t' ,,~: ,..,...-.: .. ,.._ ~'""'" •' •ov-o .. • •C•M Stnt,. "'-.lf...,t 'f'ttul _.,~. COST A •&A641 • 1289 '"'--lllllSl()M .,,.,io495-0401 t.uc.-c._.. •• ..., fie~ Ol9tD .-,,., el A-~. I "HI t 'l.AtSEf)l7 '81. XR-7 O~ S.\I.~ WITH Tiii" .\D '8950 • I \.\ I I! 11 I 1111 n I ·~....,_ .. ... Orarige Coast OAJLY PILOT/Fr iday, January 29, 1982 _., ...... ,_.,,-......"._. PICTURESQUE -The nearly finished Pacific Mutual Plaza in Fashion Island breaks the Newport Beach s kyline on one of the week's clearer days along the Orange Coast. Japanese boycott postponed T he f'rt•e Marketing Council or I 1·vrne has acceded to a request by the state of Califor nia a nd ;.i~reed to postpone a "do not l>uy "-·campa1gn d i ret•tcd al J upanese products . FMC president Les Hubbard ~aid a letter from legisla tors and state official~ asked ror a delay to "c•lar ifv the r esults of the latest nc~otiation s" between Jap an llnd the United States over thl' J apanese m e dfly q uarantint• of California fruits and vegeta bles ·rh c letter wa s s ig ne d by Assembly Speaker Willie Brown, Asse m b l y A g ril·ultur e Commi ttee Cha irman J o hn T h urma n. Dir ector Ri cha r d MUTUAL FUND Rominger of the De partment of F'ood & Agriculture, and Floyd Mori. director of International Trade It urged the Free Marketing C"f)uncil to "r eevaluate your organization's position on the proposed boycott of Japanese producL'i ··we realize the lette rs and a greements concluded last week between Japan and USDA do not go fa r enough," the lette r s aid. However . "The re laxation of r est rict1ons for le mons, the d ecisio n pe rmitting in -trans it C'Old treatment. and agreement to return to US DA quarantine boundaries upon a declaration of e radica tion in Los Angeles and S tani s l au s c ounties is e nco ur aging. "In addition. we intend to send a California delegation to Japan to meet with government and industry officials to fu rther explain the propriety of our pos itio n and to encoura1e further accommodation on their part." Such a delegation wo1.uu include "key legislator s , state gove rnm ent o ffi c ials and indus try re presentatives." Hubbard s aid the Fre~ Marketing Council agreed to postpone "do not buy" activity to allow all parties a chance to work out a solution. OOWld ,....... tit£ Fft ASlt Co Ac~• OrtcolNI ;:,i T-9 s lnllllll "'"'"' s ~' N..Cfll .wt ·-"' PelllHar un-.. 11 M•Fwti lelCpt ldteWtd -..ii ·~•eM!fl"" '· Crntttt• EMCE11 lnfrm.., UAmEn _, Ali.En ONMw-NOlha Lottt c... ~ J -~Olf DA '"°' -I"' Olf IU >"" "°' Oft IU J \lo Olf II.I "' "' °" u '"" -\lo °" '·' '"" -"' °" '·' >~ -v. °" u • -"' °" 1.1 1)\f) -' °" 1.A 1014 ~ °" ... )\'> -"' °" u 7"" -"' °" u ~-\<i Olf u ~-'40lf u • -\lo Olf u 2 -.... °" u t• -IV> Ott U > ..,_Off u '1 \'i ()ti S.f' ,..., ,,_ °" u 1 .... \4'0lfU 1\11 \4' °" u ... "' °" ,.. •Ill "" °" u ' "'°"u )\lo ~ °" u s " NYSE COMPOSI'f.E . TRANSACTIONS quOlAt•o.t• ... ClUO• ua.oa•o• ,,. ..... \'OIC. MIOWUT, ''-CIPIC.. , ••• 1ono.. oanoll AlllO (Ut(lllllll&TI "OC• c•c.ie•••U•••'-• ... t10eY fMC lllAM> AllO lllattNCt - • ... Borrowing woes on 6-month CDs fTIU ii tM &a.t o/ o JO.port #fW• on "°"1 to aooc °" Jl(>ur lNI "*cc>rrw tans.) If you're amon1 the millions who 1n 1•1 took advantage or the offer by various bankl to help you raise the minimum $10,000 necessary to lnveat in their high-interest·r.te six-month certificates of deposit by lending you en®&b to make up the full $10,000, you have a tricky lax problem ln recordinl the tax consequences on your 1981 return. Under thes e arrangements, the • n· bank loa&ned you· money at rate s generally l percent' • ,... m~re than .the CD IJHllA PllJll ~..;,~ paid you. This meant Lllll T that you actually .. ,-------.-..---received only the interest on the amount of cash that you were able to pay. less l percent or the amount you borrowed from the bank to make up the required $10,000 minimum. While it appears that all you would bne to do is report the net amount you actually received as interest income. the Internal Revenue Service sees this difrerently. It says that you received the full interest paid on the entire $10,000, and you also had an Interest deduction equal to the total interest paid on the loan. Here is what this means to you. Suppose you were able to pay SS,000 toward a $10,000 six-month bank certificate with a lS percent interest rate and the bank loaned you the other SS.000 al 16 percent. You actually wound up with S37S interest on your ss.ooo ror the six-month CD{less $2S, or $350. But the bank notice will show your interest income on the CD as $750. And you must report the $750 on your Form HMO. You can take an interest deduction for the $400 difference between the $350 you actually were left with and the $750 you must report as interest income. but only ir you itemize yout deductions. Otherwise, you may end up paying income tax on $750 of reported interest when you only earned $350. NOTE: The 1981 special combined interest and dividend exclusion of $400 on joint returns and $200 on single returns may help reduce your tax. This ls a TRICKY tax problem, demanding careful handUnc. This is the last or my 10 tax columns, so below are highlights of the '81 tax law that apply to the return you are now filing. -Your 1981 tax rates are only 1.25 percent less than your 1980 tax rales. U you compute your lax from the Tax Tables. the table figure has already been reduced by l.25 percent. If you compute your tax from the rate schedules, you will find a four-line worksheet, right on the page with the schedules. tbat you should fiU out in order to get the benerit of the 1.25 percent rate reduction. -If you were SS or older when you sold your principal residence afte r July 20, 1981 (and met certain other tests), you can exclude up to $125,000 or your gain on the sale (lnstead or $100,000 before July 20, 1981). -If you had any long-term capital gain from sales made after June 9, 1981, and you had 1981 taxable income of more than $60,000 on a joint return or more than $41 ,SOO on a single return, the maximum capital gains tax on that gain won't exceed 20 percent (instead of 28 percent I. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT • .. EW Yblllt tAPI· s.le•, T~ 11tk • ...... °'91111' .... ""'"" -Ktlft -.,._ 54Kll EllC-.,e 11-. r.-:"" ,...._., ~. ::::.:.-.u. . "' .._...,, 1.001... ,. •• I•-I .... 100 JOI<. • "' A..-T6T 'I01... .0"41 • to "CA 'IOl,JOO 17"41 \lo .,__.. .... 171'1 • "' LTV Corp ISJ,200 I~ • '- Ee1tftAlrL --~ • '-Dulle ,._ ?a,100 JI'-• \lo ()rnerllld 7",1" JJ\lo •I WenwC-.. ,,-61"41 • ,.,., T,,,.., I ..,... :l&4 • 2"' ·:::= we.• Jtl4 • "" ·-=.--:::.. -m:: = :: AMERICAN LEADERS- MNaiK• DK-UIK.._.., T .... I._ ........... -lows wt<A l AWEJI OIO To9f ,. .. m ..,. f1 .. NEW VO"lt IAPI J., • METALS ,,.,,..._, HEW YOIU( CAl"I -~l"tff ~l<tt T_.,.y c.,. ... ,,_ c.•11h • ,,_,,., IM!teN. IAMJD<-• ........ • IMC G.0<_,.,• _.._ .... -... , .. v .. ,. -.is w.11 (..._._ ... Alt•I AF ,.n<-•--',N.Y. SILVER GOLD QUOTATIONS .,,__, a.-, ......................... ..... UMle:...._, ..... sm. ....... n.. f'llftl1 .....,.. .... .... , ..................... . z.tdl: Ullt ...... -.. ...... -.......... ... ..., ............ , .......... ......... .JS. •...-..i -llelty --..... . ..,.. . . .......,.,_ .... .,.,_, ............. SYMBOLS --- 4-'- I. l I I ' .. .. n t Orange Cout DAILY PILOT!Thursday1 January 28, 1982 ... ~ . :..~ / . : .. ~ .. :. ,• II f\;.._"t-~ ' '.,' '·. 20 MENTHOL CIGARETIES Salem t SMOOTH LOW TAR 100s • \ • H .. * •1 .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 Town is used to hard -times- - flCnnaut MIMe.IU • i -... •.......,." -- ....... t'tAT .... N't "'C'TITIOUI llUSINHI , ......... .._. -........ "'"' NAMa .,., ..... 1' ...i11..... fl\t lol .. Wlnl "'"""' eA 40111• S & f OOfdul llNO SYSHIM\. I OU•l,..He\ lltCTIT~· llUll .. I U •&Ma •'l'aH .. tlT Tne lo•low1n1 P"'°" " •••111 ""''""' .. OAVtl) STl(Lf & ASSOCIAlU, ,ICTITlout 11Ut1•al6 MAMtl ITATINMT ' , ..... , ... , ............ , ... , ... ..,.,.,_ ... . 1 ,. •IC'f1TIOUI •u...... •KT•nout Ml9f ..... ~ ITA~a....-WT -MAMllTATa .. WT Tht ffllOWllll H f'ton It delnl T"• ...... Int l«-t lrt j'"I ..... 1....... .... ... ..._ ... oveltUAS MANUl'ACTUllitlNG f'O\.IMTAIN VAl.LclY C ... I I ll lt._,e,lrv ..... CAtt/14 THI SYNl!llGLl!HN GAOUP , ROOSEVELT. N.J (AP)!_ In l~ •• p atc h or Or. kll•lll Ho CIMll .• 11111 .... dJO c-O<lv•. """• .. '"--· land was carved from lhe N e w J ersey cornfie lds '':,.";:· ~~:.C:.11\lwfl c ............. , •. ••M;i~:~";n1·:~!. wot u .. ttJ G.,,,., . ...,.llOrl ll .. ch, CA ft .. 1 Guy t"dworo r.onYt•. 1n GorMI Ave N9WPOt1 llM<I\, CA '1 .. t Wll.,1.I AMS AND DlllY IS. USI W•rner A.. $w F, JC~lft veuoy, CA ttl OI J•mot w 1'1-0M, 11» """'oo Ori .. M11nll .... Oft 8Mcll, CA ttMJ Wllllett\\ •IWI tlly•n, In< , • Col llornle C.e<PO'.i!O<\, 114' ioy...,,I Wey, Newp011 llffch, CA tt..O COMPANY, 111 llitlver•lf• A ... -. JOINT VfNTUltC, •> Cor~et• lull• "· N._i ... h. ColllorN• Plu•, S..ta. ~ .._, .. oc t A 9'W ., ... for a N e w Deal cooper1alivu m eant lo pro vide • lrvlM, CA'2114 Olllmtr °''"'· Whitt .. ,, (;olllornle w ay oul for J e ws s w e a lln a thtir lives away In the 1~1~·~.::~1""" 1' '-'" bv •11 -:..,, .. " " s1r1<-i.no. ,.. LI••• Thi l bu""OU I\ < Ofldu< lod 11' e" lfldlVIOll•I C•rl ""llllp LOVtttt n, MS Vie HAltCX,0 G MOllitlHtAD 61t 1.IOo Nwt, ,._llOI' INdl, (olltwnle lleytl .. Drlw, Ne--1 ...... CA t2"'1 '11..0 G11y E Goll"' aiarmt nl dlalrlcls o f P h ilad elphia and New Yor k. • te'**.-si-c11e11 "i.n , c.1e .... c•'"""'• ,,,,. F our ycan lute r . the federal cox-ernme nt c:.."r:,'y~'~:';"J.;;:.~:!.;:J~ c!::~~.c~~~':~~~1"'•g1>0ll•. T nl\ •l•tt,,....1 "''°' 111"9 wllh Iha '°""'Y Cto11t. OI 0•_,.t._IY el\Jeft t1,lfl2 rilh l>v>lneu I• ~0"411~ttd llY • Thlt Ml""H ll C.ONllKI .. ltY .,. 1AID A A"Allit AllAOt\ 11 1"41vlcNel. Whit-, trvlne, (A '111U Carl'· L~Wt Tltlt M lllO'U h Un4klCI ....... e offe red to sell the h1olated 1.9 square miles to the n. , .. , 11 ...... 11 o. LArto11. tt121 Hto1wu" 100 families llvma the re for $1. The r e a re residents "" ... o11n . l.•011n• N1e11•1. ce11to•n•• "'""' l'ubl._ Or• ..... C..>1 0•111 PllOI, .. .. .,ol l)Ot1ntr.i!lp l-W FI~ Wllllem\ •nll Ryon, In< SIUO<'l Wiiii""'' Thll ~1-4 we1 1114'f wttlt ..... nerol ~'1\lp C0<inty Clof'll ot Or-Coullty on HAllitOl.D O. MOltl HEAO JOllUUY JI, ltC. Tlllt tle'-1 Wet fllH Wllll fht Jen. 19, f 0 $ S, It, 1'. ,..., 0 1 fl • PuDlltllod °' ..... CMtl 0.11, PllOI, mn who still thi nk It w asn 't s uch a great d e al. J e11 n . "ett s. '" "· ,.., ... ., t~'' _.,.., 1, ,_,., by .11 •1t1C llllllll""( p, .. ,~, ,, .. .,. c-1, c..,...., 0r.,.. c:-ty °"'°" Publl"-«I Or.,,.. Coo\I Dolly l'lkll, •· 1'92. •· Tiii• •1•1..._I •ot fllOCI wllll IN! Cou111y c .. rk Of Ore-County on JWt ,,, I .. , Jen. n, 1t, Fob t, n. 1t12 .. ,.., ,, ... • """''"'" Or ..... CO.ti 01lly "'°'· "We turned the m d own al first because we ~~::.:"'vif,,od .. -1•11on °1"'' •n°"•----'"-•--""-'"'--...... -- just couldn't afford it," s a id Morris Ch asan, whose Piil.iC •TIC( F1r, .. w 511.t• l'un1c uu1Nos w(1.1. 111 ,.,., .. ,..-------------Je11. 1, u, n, 1t, "" 'r'., PuDll'htG Or•not c,..,, Oelly PllOI, PlllJC llTICE J•" ?t. f:eb !>, 11, "· 1981 ~1 .. 1 PllJC Illa 1 family W"S On e Of the ft'rst seve n'" mo ' t th Thi\ tlel..,._t we• llled wllh tht M8 L.O ll Y TM& COSTA M8SA .. , "" Ve tn 0 e County Cler• Of Otel\Ot C~nty °" l'LANNU•O COMMIHION AT TM• f e d e rally fund e d coop e rati ve durin g the N'-t1t11 Jenu•r11n. ,.., ctn NAU •• n ~••• 01t1v1, conA D e pressio n . "I still w o nde r if we let the "''""ouuusiNus "1117A MHA, CA1.•110ANtA, AT•·•"·"'•------------l'ICTITIOUI llUll ... IS .. AM& ITATIM&NT . NAM«ITAT&M8NT PuDll\l\eCI Or~CO.•I D•llY Pllol, OA AS SOON AS l'OS $1eL.I PUIUC MOTIC( government get o uttooeasy," T~• 1011owtng ,.,.°"'.,,doing Je11 H.,.os.1t.•t.1"1 • ...,, TN •••••Tl ll ON MONDA Y,------------- H e said reside nts wer e reluctant to kick in a ""'1n•u .. : "•HUHYf. ,.., "'cTm ousaus1N1.u Tl•t ltltowlllt jltr.011 I• doing 11u11,,.u .. · "'CTITIOUI IUllNIU l .. AM9 ITAT&M&NT Tht totlowlne "'""' ••• 4 ln9 VISU X·9'AV LABORATORY, •llJC •TICE penny e a ch because they feared they wo uldn't be 11101 lr~IM 8ovltverd, Suite t02, "' REGARDING r11E FOLLOWIHC. NAMI STAHMI NT bl '" fund th k f lh d fu>lln, Ctlltor"l'll• ttMQ APPl.ICATIOH5 fl\e •otto.;ll\11 llO•\Otlt .,. dol"Q PltESS WE.ST, t'1•t "'~-Ill\ ... "C". T1rttlft, CA '2tlO Denlel ~ Mellllll, , .. W•l""I bu•tnn,•• ' M A H A G I! M E ti T DEVELOPMENT COH$ULfA~T~ IH U Fl•rlde Street. 111111 U O. Hu11t111eton lleecll, (olllOtnl• tlMS a e "' e up eep 0 e wate r an sewage MOL~1·-I D••ll Envlronmtnlel lmpe<t llutln•n•\ l th bli h 1 d H•nlHler CorporatlOll, Oenerel ........ -p ants, e pu c SC 00 an othe r s ervices . Pertntr' 2100 _.h Mein St•••. Stilt• l'ICTITIOUI •UllN&H Rt !l«I •lld "-•el Pl•n AmendmH\I u H I ' E 0 s p E A I( E II s • 0, C'"t• Mft41. CA '2'27 Thi•_._,, L_,., by ... lfldlvlcNel But the fe ds ulle d 0 t I 1941 d lh Ano. ce11tw111ett101. NAMa STATU•UENT GP .. MA '°' c "-" u1111•1e1 • ..., Assoc•AT•OH. mo """'" s1. s.i11e Id d 'd d p . U n an e Thll 11•.Slllott I\ COll<l\l<ltd Dy • Tiit IOllOWlng Pff'°"' afe CIOlne Soft, l11<0'1IO"etod, tuth0rl1od eQelll 1U,Huflllnvlon .. ech,CA 'l104' o...i.t "' Mef IOll AM L. ICr ..... r. 20011 Swe+we L.ene, Hllft11nelon &oo<h, Cellf0tnle r es e nts ec1 e to incorporate . c hanging lhe "'"''°" s-tnertNP 111n1,.0,. .,: •or c . J s..,. ... ,om •ncl !Min•. »u Mo11t•• Ovftet'lllo, 111<., • ce1110""• name Of the settle m e nt fro m J e r sey ffomeste ads .._1., Car_ .. ..,_ GAEAl WESTER N ALARM CO , Felrvlew ~.,lei Co.•I Comm11n1ty te<por•llOft, tttO Mtolll SI., S..llt U1, Thll ~·--lilod with N Counh Clenl f/I 0rllftl9 Ceunty °"Jon IJ, lflJ. .,_ I l<r/1110 L--,Prftld9<\I lltSI l!lh•llell\ Wey, Tu>llll, Coll09" Olst•l<t, llJO A~•m• AvOllu.. Hu11tl11Q1°"a..ch,CA'l1 .. l o the Borough of Roos evelt and buy ing for $4,500 Thi• ~ wet ui.o •Ith .,,. c .. i1or111e ._.., 10 ..... nci .,,. ••na "" 0t\IO"t1loro• fh11 11u,1~, 1. co..ouc1e<1 Dy • the homes the y h a d rente d for $15 a m o nth. Co..llly Clerll ot or...., c-·· °" Greet W.Wtn Al.,m ComNftY. ,,.,,. ~loll del\\lly rHld•llllel end totpor•llon ... .... 1 PUllll-Or ..... C..tl Oelly PllOt Htleft l . llulltf, 14l' S.-y ~r .. t Orlv•, F\lllerton. C•IHorni. ~ , flll• llu•l,..u •~ <Oftducted 1'Y • _,.,_,,..,wp Not much h as Changed SI' nee the n. ;1_.-,,u. ,.., •~ .. e C•lif-• corporo11on 1m1 9"W'•' -c1e1 to urlMlll u nier -..10yn.,..1u, 1nc ""'JM fJluall'I W...Illilln. ~ ·~•ld9nll•I, lo<•l!fd et lht tart'4r o! S..JM\11 L.o<lley ,_ :"IC s till c ould he 'the 193Qs lor~1y-.-1---9'Hl-IHl.,.._.-e.int-o.ltl'f l'ltot; -&ru1 wu .. ,-...141,.., Ailll'I' A-...., P•M(r"a Ori.. Tiii\ ~;=·~':':\'i!:; wltl\ tlw _ W 19111-• """'"I(,..,.... ' fhlt ... ,_ ~flied wllh .,,. Jen u. n. 1t, .... '· ,,., 1,..., . w ays," Mayor Leon Ba rth said. "We 're pretty Jon "·"ett in.-,,,,.., ••w1 c~\:"~~;:." 1, conduc•..:t by • E;•'':'::':!'t°'~~.'::'"!!:' .. !~". .. , coun1ycio••ot0r-coun1y .... J.,, ------------ isolated o ut he r e ." <orPDr"•'""' " c.P-n.1e tor co.1.a ,.,.. .. c11v coun<11, 11 "" ~'"'"~:1:,ttNIH (1Nnly Cltf'l1 ol Or...,, C-ty Oii '.JM 10, lta. ~,_.., Pubth.-Or-toast O.alty f'ltlol, At l r •~o 000 th bo l'k _,,,•TICE °""""" J --·· Ant. P.O. Bo• 1100. 10 tm0110 ,,.. 0-"-••1 "'"-a n a v e rage COS 0 .-e , , e X I e 1"waA S.Cretary plen l•nCI use CIHIQl\Ollon• ot 11• 111, Publl\l>tel Or~ c ... si Oelly PllOI, NAMI STATI MllN't Je11 tt. 2', F114> s, n, "" ~,.., ho uses -only 75 h ave been a dded to the o riginal f'leti•tOU• eusi-1:•• T111, s•.i-• w• "'"' with "" »•..., A•1K-S1r .. 11tom 111Qll """"'Y Je11 Jt, FeD s n. "· 1te1 ._, ...,!i':.:,::~1ow1no Pt''°" '} e101110 •u •n11" 2()() -a re Still Consid e r ed inexpens ive, but they ' • '" •• Cou~t'f CIOra ol 0••"941 Covnty °" ruldtfttl•I to gf!nerfl comrne•<lfl 1-------------"' '1~ l NAMISTATllMllNT JonueryU, l"2. Envlronme,,tet determtftet10" •llJC -ncE UIS AS50Cl4'TES . .S-10 Me<ArlllUr i--------------are StiJ not e a sy lO Sell, recalling the tim e in }94() Tiie lollowlnQ PeHOll 11 CIOlllQ .... ,,., MQOtl Veele<leratlOfttorGP lt )... "' 1'11 Blvd., Sle 500, '<ewiior1 Be.o<I\, CA , whe n half of the m stood vacant because settle rs DU1lneu •• Publl•'*' °'-c ... u oatty P11o1. l. Rei-""""°" 11-11-01 •lld ton• .,..., "9CT1T1ou1 •u11Nus I S PORTSPAGE (THEJ. ISO Jel\,Jt,F91!.S,t1,t•,tt11 .-..,. U<Htlon permit ZE.f1U lot Crown l'ICTITIOU$eU$1NISS Wllllem l Tooley. H• Soutn NAMl:STATIMINT Willing Or a ble tO m ake the $500 down payme nt Newport Blvd , Com Me••, C•llt ------------Englfteerln9 eno ~u•v •yono NAMl$TATIMINT Roomon, lo> Af\94!1n, Celllornle f lle lollowlno Petton h d"'"V COUld not be found. m11. •llJC •TIC£ CorPOrelloft, •ulhOrlltd •Ot!"I\ tor Tl•• tollowlno per.ont ••• Cloln~ *20 Wllll-L r~ew llu~~~~:.:A I.TO , 1000 W1"1 ,L .• , O•vld AIM Booth, :io; v ... Clr<le, l"W Georot t<OOOt. P 0 Bua '1U, R•verly l>u'lne\> u -.. -r ,._, The garme nt fac t o r y built to p rovid e S.•IBt oc:ll.Cellt.tOl40. ------------Hllh to• permt\\lon 10 ruone PERSNICt<ETV. ,,,. Eldon •E. r111• , .. ,_, .... 111ee1 wllh '"' Hlghw•1.He-1lleoch.CA t2~ COOperaliVe e mploym e nt iS Still he re, about lO be Thll busiftfl> I\ conou<leCI Dy en NMltll P'OPUIY trom llJ to II• oooeti..r wllh C~le Mow, CAt1•11. C~l\ly Cieri! ot Or•not Countv"" Jell. Roll Engen Ill<., e Celltorl'llf ... ~ d lndl•Mlwt. ~ICTITIOU5 •US1Nll$$ VUIAnc!K 10 ••tow l•notm perlt.11\V •nCI N•no A l(err. ,,,. Eldtl\, COlll• 13, 1M1. corpor•ll""· 1000 Wn l Coell HIOflw•Y. avan oned by Its fifth indus try, a pressboard O.•ICI A e-11 NAMIESTATllMENT .. ou comp•c• p.-~•nQ. •ne1 M•w.cA.,,,21 ,,_ NewP0t1~h,CA tJtU ~ m a nufacturer . t\nd the gene r a l s tor e Is va cant Tiiis .......... w•' lllto •1111 tho Tht lollowl119 P••>0n1 .,. ooln9 vor l•nce. t•om "'lbeO. •nCI bulldlRlj ElllADtll\ lloll, •• , .. HOii, Coll• Publl\htcl Or-Coe\! Dally PllOI, c.::::.='.n•n ,, (OllCIU<led r . · thi · f c-tYCltflt.otOranQO CountyOf\Jon, bu>lneu•' sepa r•llo" r•qulrtrntnl\, In Me ... CAm71 J•n. U.22,2',F.O,S,ltel 1'1.f1 a gain, S tame or two years . •. ,..,, SP GROUP. 1Hoo R•e1 Hiii conjunction with .. P•ntoon ot en Tnl\ Du•ln .. , " <oneh.octed by • Rott E.._ 1"' But the town mains t ays a r e still here _ the ,.,..,, Avenue. 1rv1rw. c-0111orn1atm• ••l•ll"O ..,nlte11<trt;n,,,,1eomp ... 10 11..,11., pel'1Mr'11IP PllUC llllC( c , ouo Hellll 1 d h p blllNO Or< c st 0 11 Pll t Oenoe Consull•nl>, Inc , • provlele • lol•I ot 1S opert.....,111111\., N-y A Kerr VI<• P<nklellt peop e an l e post o!Cice, the m a in meeting place • J u ~ F~ • .,... 00 • Y 0 · cellfo•lll• <~•''°"· 11soo 11.0 ""' •«•ted ••*'•no m1 e .. r St•"'· 1" rhl• ~,.,_, w•• 111., wllh .,,. fhl' m t-nt """ 111ec1 •ltll 1i.. d th r en,'" '""''• l2, It, ltl2 50IMl •-I I Al E I •U,.Eltl-COUltT OF ,., ll'OltNIA C-•,,tw 0•"' ol ~-~-·-tv Oft'J a n . e ·Scene 0 many argumen ts. Squabbles Affnut,lrv .... ,Celtornettll4 •" tO"* nv •Ol'lm tnUI C01111IV C1tnotOre-Cou11t10f\JOll, • .,_ ....... -' ..,.._.,.. ......... , .., b ed I Tl\ls t>vSln•u I• conelutltd by • ClelermlNIJon -live CIKtoretlOf\ 27, ltrl COUNTY OF lllVlllSIOll 13 lte1 a o ut ucat on w ere s o fie r ce in the '40s, for _,,, --cor-•tion , z ...... Ei<teo11on ,..,,"'' u .. 2.0. "'"• -. .. o..1t. ~,-. example, that townsp eople set up four separate ...._ ••IK o... con>u11en .. 1nc •or Joe Muf"Pl\y •"'"°"''.., """'' tor P11D11"*' 0r.,. c ... .i oeuv PllOI. ...o. eoa 11.. P111>11-.:1 Or-eo.11 oe11y "''°'· e l e m e nta r y sch ools t o accom mod a t e a ll "ICTITIOUseuttNHs Pmklem Jemu" Tudy . vice ~~~t~/~':,'~"':.:':."~~:~~;j0~'. Jen ,..Feo.i.tt.••·1"' ... ,.., PLAINT1~-r-·~s:':~ VILLAGE !•n n,u ,"·""' '·'"' ~" Vie wpoints. NAMalTATIMaNT Thlt tt•l-1 wot llltCI wolh t"-111l1101s, for a t°""olk>Nol u"'permll to HOMEOWNERS ASSOCl.t.TION. • 1; P1aJC Illa And, again, the problem of public wor ks 11u~~ .. ~.~0!-111g ",_,,er• cioinca ~:;!:.V~.~~ °' 0••1199 couni, °" ~~~~11°:''.::::'.~ ~·::ciP •!:~ PllUC •TICE cet~o~n1;~~1~?''•~":"c 0 R fundRing has ellmergetdr" d $1 ·11· to 1 . h Cep~.~r~::. ~:~~~·e!~:p.~~.";~~~ PuDlhneo 0r_. Coest D••I~·= : .. :-:.:;,onmtftt•I ClttermlnellOI\ ·---,-~CT---.-'.-'c:'_T_!_:_~-~-N_:_r __ _. =~2:.!!:0:.~~0~0t.AAl~°o'"..: ooseve mus tn m1 ion com p y Wit C•lltonile J•n Ji. F.o s. 11, ••. ,.., .,, .. , ' z ...... E•OPhon "9•mll ZE fHIS JOHN DOE BltOWHE. JOHN DOE -1191 f'ICTITIOUS eUSINES$ HAM~ STATEMENT ' The tollowlng Pt•\011 Is ••n11 Ord e r s fro m t h e S t ate 0 e pa rt m e n t o f G•t90'Y p FurlOnQ, .on ro,on :'"" ~~'T":w~ ,,01 g«• T 11m~ 11u!.':,:,::~'0"1ng 0""" '' cioing ~::t,'c,e.;, •;:~~"..u:'': :;:"~~~ Envir onm e n tal P r o t ectio n to c lean u p its Terr«•,Y-L•ndt.C•11•orn1 • .,.... Piil.iC llT1C( °' '< · 'g' •"•1011m•" BALBOA BLUES, so1 E. Bey • P•rt,..,.,.111, -oou 1 _ 111, ""''"'" .. I d $ 00 Jernes D Scl\lnldl, .071 Toy°" Como•ny, ..,,...,,,eel •oent 10' O A•tllut !Ulbe», Cetllornlt IMS l11<lus1,.. Waste w ater treat m e nt p a n t a n 5 ,000 lO le"eu . Y-ll~, Ct lllornl•tt• S<l\ltnlltr, 2l40 Elelen Avenw tor e Audrey M N.i~ t"441h Str .. I, u pg rad e a deteriora ted water sys tem . Thi• Dustno• " cone1uc1ee1 DY "~~:~:T~~ <Oftdllional uw -m11 tor • '1 ""'1 >te•POrt Be«I\, c.111.,,. •• ., .. , c.!!=:n. M.t.IH STREET ASSOCIATES, OW llt\o<Arl-Blvd , Sit SOO, N--1 llo•<", CA t2tiO B t h h J. d r I r th lndl•lduell NEGATIVE DEC' <ATION <-, mlnllHT\ l)(OI«• IP u DI Wllh ""' bu\lntt\ •• <onCIU<leCI llY on NOTIGll Y• ........... -Tiit a r as a pp ae o r oan s rom e Gte90'yP Furtono ~ .... • ..... , .. from,.,, •tll>•<k el\CI Uftll\(OrCIOf ... Cl.\WJClo\tlonollwr lh"'1 gOVemment, Which he Says OWeS the town a t least Thll lie-I wM lllod wltn lht Tiie Coste M••• Plennlng drlvew•Y wldlh,el'Cl•rt•l~meplor tPett,..r"'IO t~ ............ ,......_ Wllll•m l Tooley, H• South RoumoA. Lo• A,...IH, C.lllornl• ...010 Covnty , .. , .. ot Or•~ COVlllY °" O.P<ltlmeftl ... , proposeel to .. _ lal • 1•·101 -""'-· IO< .. ~., 1U. •IWI Audnty M Nel""' ~-=-~':":.:-:. '.:..':: that muc h "a fte r they left us kin d of hanging out J.,,.,.,., 11, ,.., neoo•••• e1e<••••11"""' regordtno "" n40 .,.,.,.., """n"" '" an A? ro~ Tim " • ._,_, ... 111.., ,.11,. 1,,. ......,, he re in the COrnfieldS." "11•7 tnvlronmentel lmpf<l(ll ol lhe EnvtrOl\l'nt ftl•I Clt'lotm1net101\ County Clerk ot Oranqo C,ounty °" II wl•k ID • 1~ I I Thh llusl""' I• <onelu<I~ Dy • llmlled-1:~p Wllllom L Toott y lollowtno .,,_11•1 neettl•e <M<••••tlOf'I Jenu••• 10 1981 11ou ~· -.... flllv <• o en The to wn's only revenue comes fro m the Publl•NCI Or•"91 co.st Oell y Piiot, 1 oew!OpmMt A•vtew OA.f1~ '°' 6 z-E•oouon 1>erm11 ZE •?~ ,..,,,~ •""""Y"' '"'' ""'"•" vou "'°...., oo Jon. ?•. Fet> S, 11, i. 1"7 507.fJ I -so p Pll s lh I Ill average $2,000 a n nu al laxes On each Of the 275 • two •lory olitce bu ldt"ll corosllll"O tor Guy •nCI Jo Amllurge, 310 BO\toro PuDll\lw<I Orllt\QI Coe\I Delly Piiot. rom V o • y0ur wr ell This ,...,_, wes meci ••th lhe CounlY Cton at Or-County°" JOft U,1'11 f a milies, a nd Bar t h believes it 's t i m e the :~.~~·~:'.' ,'!·.i!o w.':",,';'0.,.:r;,~r;r:; :V.::j,:~~. ·~·~..;~ .. ~°: ~:~~= Jan n 1•.F•D s. 11• '"1 m.f1 ··~~;o·,"i:s7!~,m,:Y:~"=~ PuD•h1,.., °'-Coest 0•11~1,:=. community expande d . NIUC llllC( Avenue, 11\.aO ·-llOl\·(Ollfor1T11no lronl .. ii..ck •nCI lo El lrlbllNI ~ Ot<ldlr (Olllr• UCI. Jan u , n. ,., Fot>. ~. ,.., ,...., For luf1her lntorl\'ltllon, PleeW (.ell •CICI. 'e<ond story •llo•e •n Ul\llno PUil.iC MOTICE Sii\ •udlenCla • meno. que Ud ,,._ ___________ _ But the m ayor says people fear t ha t g ro wth N$-tlUI lhe Planning O.oorlmtnt ., 1110 9•••Clt In (Of'ljun<llon wlln en o lslln9 rHPOndt ...,,,0 Ot lO di.\. La• le Will mean the bor ough , Whic h flanks a popular .. ICTITIOUS eU$1NU S IS·f.5145. l11191e l~mlly llc>ml! loolt<I •t el>Ovt f'ICTITIOUS eUSINESS lnlormaclon q .. 11-NAMll STATEMENT Publl•NCI Or-c. ... 11 O•lly Pllol, tOdrtH. ,11 •n At tone EnvorOl\mt'nlel NAME STlllTEMENT SI U>leCI-• sollcllar el <°" .. to dt J------...,...-----back road lo the J ersey s hor e. wi ll lose the The totlowlng .,., .. ,,,er• doing J•n n . ,.., sos~ dtterm1,,.1,.., .. empl '"• 10110,.1no person 15 Cloinca un ·~.., ttt• eW1110, .,..,.,,. ..tCTtT'IOUSeUStNllS "cha racter " few outsiders h ave cared to explor e . 11uslnHu s. 1. A"'°"" Pe1111oro 11 .. , 01 zont .,.."'wu•• l\eur1o 1mmed••••m•"'•· d• "'' NAM• STATIMENl' T h at Ch a r acter began lO tak e Shape from the DE LOREAN 'llOTOR C"'RS OF P1mJC .TlC( Ei.ceollon P"'mol ZE..,-O'I, lentell-e JWO LIMITED, t)Ot S.nile9<1 n;•nera, "'•-•Hie 1ftt.•ll•ii'' htY ...,!,':,:~lowing PtrtOll IJ OolnQ AMERIC.t., 205' SE Mein Slrttl. mop ot Tr<t<I T 11501 •ncl T·1170P, tor Orl•t. N-POrllk9'h.CAn.4'0. egun•,,.-wrregl\ r-• tmPO ow n 's ver y b egin n ings, w he n t he r e was lrvlnt,C.lllorntot21U -------------c Robot Len u ltt ... Cl SOI\, JAN ET w OONl<EL.&.Y. Uot I TO THE OEFENOANT A Clvll MILMAAI( ENGR, 16.0 BelKock, wid espread outrage over w hat one New York Ot LO•••n Motor Comp•"•·. NOTICll01'$AL.E lncorpor•t<ld aull\O•llod ~I lor t S.nll-°''""· .. _port a...:11. CA complelnlM\~fllodD1 lht Pl•lnlll CIKt•-·"'"'" Mlthlg•n torPo,.11011. tlO Per• '<otkt It .,.,..,, ol.,.,. PUrwanf to J SflQerlltom •nCI ~.:UIS FetrvlH• "2..0 ... ,,.~,YOU tr you with to dt,.no llllt LYlo lrwln Mtrll_.., Mt Gtnt.,, n ewspaper called a "com munisl" community. Avef\ue, "-Vork, "°"' vori. 10P11 >e<llo"' J011 -lllnot '"' C••ll cooe Roeo . .ano eo.~1 communlly co111111S fhl• _,..., 1, conciuc tt<1 bv '" •••wit, .,.... ""'''· •''"''" • Cl~Y• "Pl c . ~ .. Mew. CA ft01 Whe n t he Farm Secur it y Administra tio n Th•• D<nl .... u" <ollduCled Dy e OI 111• St••• of C•lllornl• lhe Ollltlcl. 1)70 AO.ms A•tflllt, tor 11\dlVldu•I ..... "'''summon\,, ..... ., 011 yo.., ,_!i".',~·lluilol MU Is <-..Cled Dy ... ed th J H ds d <~•tlon unOtrt......,, H-T-lno. will iell permln ton to ,_ pr-ny t•om J-w Oonn .. ly Ille wllh this~_, • "''"'•" ,.,_,,. ~ - a nnounc at ersey omestea wo uJ be on e o. L_.,, MOlor c_, ., ~" ....,....,, '"' ... w. Ht~ s1 .. Mt. c1-eP, CL -1 & A 10 POA·UC Thlt ""'-' •n 111.., ,.11,. "" ~00~~· d=•~"!u~"!~'.~~,:: ~.. LY•• 1 Merli•""' Of 16() SUCh COOper ative experiments ar,Ound the C.11 Brown,Vl<ePrn ldfftt CoUa Mue •I 10.00 e m on (Plenfted Otve'-"1 Rtt•-lle< CounlyClerkolOr-Couf\tyonJM\. Tllh ti.I-w•s llleCI wllh I ... "''' •-• wet lli.G wllft -W..-tdev, ltot IOtll <Ny ol F-...ry. Uf!Mn c-.terl, ~lllONll uw perm11 • , .. , -II<••-ol tl\O plelftllH, -lhh Coul\ty Ctorlt. ol OrOllQt Coouf\ly °"Jon nation . a Ph i la d elphia new s pa pe r refe rred to .c°""'Y c1eri. ot O••noe cou"'' on '*· ,.,. 1otloWlllQ Ot1c••-...-11y. t no oe .. ._._, 1>1en '°' <oro•truci-.,,..,11 court ,..,.Y -• 1.....-1 .....,." u, , .. , Ben j amin Brown , t he m an who conceived of the J ..... ,.,,., ,.., 10 wit· Y-ot c.i tt. -· ot c. 01 1 1u co,,e1om•"•um ""'" •"" PuD""""' °'-eo.11 D•tty Piiot, yov '" i.. ,., ... oe.....-"' 1ho ~·~ P\;Dll-0r0R9t C..\I Oelty PtlOI, ti R · bo I S ,.,., ... II M • . M o t o , H o ... ,..,., ... '""""''I"""" per••ne •"" H n 1 IS, n lt ,.., 151_., completftl, wh1th co11ld """" '" Set emenl , as a " USSl8n· m iltle lalin." Publl~ ()rengt Cotti Oelly Piiot, WBAAG4l0la..1U4, Ll<ellst No. prt .. t• --· end ·-tour 101 qernhllmel\I of ••OOt. IOlng ol J•n U. 71. 1t. Foo i . .!_~ 111.., O ppositio n was so s tron g t h at feder al Jon,.,""'' 11, "· '-~, ICNBtll, si-"' C:.lilorni.; YH • .. Wbdi•i•loni IOt•led •I .... (OfMr ol tnOl\•f or.,._,,, or OIMr ••llef mar s h als w e re o n h and w hen the houses were built f:T =~~:tz~;~~0~1::~ ~'::~ .. ::;;:, •:i.~=:~0>;, Dr~~ f'llUC •TICl req._,...,.,,,~~·~11,von.cieni and when th e fir s t fam ilies a rrived. f'lklC •TICE """'.,., P.fJ tAI E _..., Oet>UIY Th h h 'ld d Sel<I Ule It tor th• p11rpo" ot (GI z E ~ ZE 10 l'ICTITIOUlllU$1Nll$$ OeteCIJ.,.1J.1'e1 • n6" •• en w e n o ur c I re n went OUlSI e lo h igh .. 11,tylng '""Of.,.. -r>ione(I tor for~-Solt~~=. ;:,·.::;;: . ..i :.:.,,., NAMIEITATEMIENT • ltlCMAltOl. ltMMllll NOTICE Of'TAUSTll'SIAL.E school. first in Allentown an d then H ightstown, we "'CT•Ttous euStNISS T-1no & Stor--..-.rt~ coso 10, Norm Pu•ll•m tsll ,.0,.11 Tl\t 1011ow111g P•"o" " dotng n ... 1"lll!wo'111, Sotta. •• Ts No 1o11_., .. h ad to leach them how to fight ." Ch a san s aid . Th• ,:.=~:T::..=N•~• doing 01~::.,~~~~~~.., :::;.v,:::,~"~,~~ .. ~·.~~""~'~ ou~in~·~~· 8 iNvesrMENTs. 11 ~-,=~·.,_ 0·~~·::'.·.:~:~i:~~'.::: ''They wo uld say 'Here com es the Jew bus' 11u•1,..uas· J-Ml•tt• topermti tr. ..,.,11, ... 01 • ..,,_ ,...., s.,,.,,..,, ,,.,,,..cAttllS Pvl>I•""" Or-c ... ,, oeuy Pll04. 01 lho Old Or-c:-.i" c~ and Oth e r t h '. n gS a n d s tart beat ng 0 t h MOMTCLAIA·CANOGA II, 1'41 Publlstwcl Or .... CoeS1 O.llv Pilot. In en tal\ll~ boilld""" IOUl<ld et 74• ChHltr A W.atker. Jr , 11 Suntl)O, JOll 11, "·Fob S, 11, ltl2 3".f1 II\ 1"-200 lllOO on WHI SOlllA AN t n e ........ Crest ............ M•Dr•, Cetltornle JOft. tt. "" iOl-cJ "'""'' A.;;;,.,,., s.:;;; 4'·1 '" .... MP lrvl .... CA t1115 Blvd . City of SOlltt AN, C•lilornl•,.: Childre n," Fay Libove, .a lSO a m ember Of one Of '°'31 ,.,.. l!nvlr-ntel Ott#rmlnetton Tl\ot llU\tlln\ "<onclu<ltd by en ~ P'laJC .TIC( FIRST IHTEltST ATE BAN K Or the first Seven fa milies, recalled. Oort Mur\U, n4t Lei.t C..sl Lent, -Ill --eaempl. 11\dlvldu.al CALIFORNIA, Trvu.. or W<<HOO• R 'd h La H•Dro, c.tllornlo t06ll ~ ••IK • Zono Euei>tton Pu mll lE .. ,.,, CllHI .. " W•lk ... Jr. Tr\ittff Uf\Off '"' °""Of Trust m-es1 ents say the slurs ave lar gely subside<:l , Thom .. L• S<••z•. su1 D••" •or oon 5u1,_1,nci • .authorllecs ecitn• n"' , ... ,_, ••• 111tc1 •ii" tr.e su,.t1110tt C<MlllT"o~ CAL1'4>1tNtA by E wttt .. Scott ...a Gnntt S<on b ut C has an said , "P eople s till s pit w he n they hear •venue, SOlllA ""-· J:•lllorn•• 11104 NOTICE OF DEATH OF tor Norm Pulllam, I ii, "'"'" Coul\ly ci.rul Or-County°" Jon , COUNTY 0, OAANOll llu\ben.d OIWI •"•· es Ten•"'' In th R It " OeMls J, An:ntr, ,_,,Caprice ORA J RACKER Al<A Felrvltw s1r .. 1, S•nle 4'n•, tor • ?O '"1 '"ti.. Mell•• 0111\t AOPllu tton ot '°'""'°" -rec,..-S.O-mDe• 1• e n a m e ooseve . Ori••. Y-Llnde.C•lltornleti,.... . • vul•M• '"""""'-'"II '""""•m•nh ,.,,.,,. LEONARD SOKOL WASSERMAN, '"°· .. IM"""-1 Number ,..,, '" Still, Roosevelt 's obscurity has a lso been a n Ao•:'~::'..~'.~;ito~~:. ~~~.r•m• 0 RA JEAN RACKER toperm111,_ _,,,°" ot • W<ond 1100r Pvt>ll•lltd Or.onoe Go.tst 0.11, P1io1, ROSE RU&Y WASSERMAN, l'luti..no Book 13TS/, Pa .... ., ot 0111e1•1 attraction -to folk s inger s Woody Guthrie an d Aloi•°"'•"· W2 ,,..,.,.111 street. AANDDMION~STPEE~ITEISOTNATT~ ~,~'',.::1~':: ... "':'~',~~ ~~.-:'::'.~' !4i Jan 11 "F.i> '· .,, ,.., .,.., _,w;~e:;~=;~~~~... :1~~o:d1•0°'!'.:o'.,,'°:"'~~:;•7" P ele Seeger, whose br oth er, Mike, moved in a fte r Sent• MOftk:o. Celltorflla to40j ,.,.. Env1r ..... ,,...n,.1 ci.ttrm•"•"on -u •""'" 01te>e1t TO SHOW CAUSll •••or ot u1111e<1 ee111orn1e aon~. • r P t • r d f d This ~lnen ,, <onOu<l•CI Dy • NO. A 111974. •••mo4 ...... ·~ ~OllOl.U.GIOf'N-E C•lltoml• Corpor•llon,.,., '"'°"Of o n e o e e s ree concerts, a n to a m e ..,..,.1~1p: To a 1 1 heir s. io z-e.ceo1tonP9rm11zetJ11 LEONAROSOl(OLWASSEllMANa. th• breech ot cu101" ob11ge11on• Depression -e r a a rtist Ben S ha hn. He cam e t.o town "'" "~~~ mec1 with,..,. beneficiar ies, creditors ,., F'"'" 11•11.,.., •uth0<1,.., •oon• ,.,cfinous eu$1NllU ROSE RUBY wAssEAMAN, l\\llOelld •e<uttd th•••llY. ,,.11,. 01 wl\I<~ to paint a mural tn the town g r a mmar school and cwnty c i.r" of Or•noe c~n•v on d ti t d't f tor Jn,,,. _,., us Merritt Plec"• ptAME STATllMENT -•lte.,,.,,. lllH • "1111"" 111 '"'• llrH<h ••,.........,A..,.. 11, '"'· st~lbe rest of bis Lile .. - -Januery 1•. t ~n COOR ngen e re I ors 0 '°'.·-''°""'use Pll•mll to ... _.. '"' tollowln9 per1on h do lno c~·· tor ~°'°" •• _. ..... tltl-• .. lllll,_ '"-u.c2, '" B- R oosevelt now boasts about 10 painters , a '--OMc•tt .,,.,,.. w~•o"" m~kfe-a~~! '::~c:"':::~.;~,~~ ~~:~~: 11o1~;;-:~~~ESA co•N a. JEWELR~ ~~~:~~~.;~~~~~0': ~~'!:.,::. ;::';, :,...~~.=:':0 pianist . a photographe r a nd a com poser. o•••aucoo"H Inte r ested in the w · 11 ;!~~':':ID~~.v;-~=•':o":;;~:":'. ~;: .. ~~~m,~ud Rose •u ~v~~"i--:::S-': i::..':i~,>=:;r:=:~- "" ;., str an9e .tha with-aH-the-m .. •u• ~ ano a11 ..--.---~ ano1or estate: oorkl"Q, --n -·· 10<ote<1 •t Roll "°'""'· 144 E. JOn\, Coste -'°· ROSE 11u av WAT£RS tho time "' ..... or...., ~~le,., <fte<" the a rtists. Roosevelt never turned into a toun"st Mtac-. ou.o ,.._ A petition has been filed •Dov• •ddou. '" •" A2 10"• CA.,.,, 11 Is ...._,,..-.. tN t •11 -d•••n 1>,, • Nnk •no....i 1 .. 1ne by J une Lee O'Connor in E11•1ronm•nl•t e1ete rm1,.•llon· Thlt 11u.iness ts '"-...:i..i DY .,. 1111•Alltd 1" 1"-,.,,."., •ttr•wld ,.,.,,.,.-•Int llU•lnu• tn "'d trap . But a lo t or peo ple think it's an ugly town, PuD11J...:O:.::C~st'::ty ....... th s . c f tatmPl lllCllVIO\>el •OP••• ••t•r• '"" <011rl '" <-fl'. si. .... C.NIOf'ftl•; MIO ..... dlhl• fi 'h .. 'd Sl f M . e upe n o r our t o 11z-e.uotlon PtrmllZE.fO-t11 Aot1-...1 Oepo~He.l et 100 Clvk c-.,..11 De_.......,. • .__,,.,o an a s m e Wll us , sa t e an a rtin, a J .... H , F• '· 12• ••. ,., -.a. Orange County rCQuesl ing tor M•tco•m c 1toss. eu111or11.i ....,, ,111, ''°'-' -~ 111.., wllh ,.,. °''" WM4. s-. ,,.,.., Calltorftl• • .,, 11t•• _......,.or -""*-tt ,.,. wood eng ra ve r and son o f Illustra tor R obert Stone that June Lee O'Connor be tor South eo.si Pia ... J3U F••,.-eou"'' Cl9A ot0r.._ c-1y..., Jon. Merell >.""-et 10·• 0«1o<• • "'·· .,,..;." c-..... '° -_ ~.o 11, M tin h r II ed S h h to R It ...... -• R.....,, far el\ Ultf\1-o! Cewwlllloro•I 11 lte7 elWI .,_,_....,.. _<..,W. ll Ollf MldTr...-........ wt4--.ott,.,,lln a r , w oo o w a n ooseve . ~••IK appointed as personal u~i>e<m••toellow•IHloryDUlioi,.., "'""' 1110 ll•v•, .,.., '°""""°"to• ..,..,.....,.,v-111 0r..,..c-;... Wha l is the future o r Roos evelt, w hich lies -~ r e p re s e n t a t j v e t 0 <Oftelltlonlll UW ....,mn to allow oft·•ll• Publllhed Or-C:O.UI OeUy Piiot, u ..... __ ....,.. .... De .. -.... Celltor..ie. 4"tr ...... ,. a lmost s quare ly between Philad elphia and New f'ICTITllOUS•USIN•ll a dmin iste r the estate of P•rllln9 -verlWtU '""" P<lflt.lnQ Jel\ u. n . ,., Fee S.1"2 1D-«2 th::!::'::":-"':~~-·., All -~ ...... Miii-In'"' 0 J R k ( d th requore..-1\, -•~"' 10 lllt t-,._ city ol N_.,..., ka<ll C-IT o• Yo rk? ~ATSMaMT ra . ac er un er e m•ster plan Envoro,,ment•I In Oolly Piiot, • 11•••P•Per ot 0 ,.,... S..•• cililorfti. -ll>t<I "Whateve r ha ppens, we are going lo face ~1':.:~:•:ow1no "~Mii '' ••'"' Aldn Id .et Ptie n fdEet nt t .,.~.0~'"1u'~·-1orE''!.·t'·--'"''"°•' Pia.IC ma :•.~1'.!:f::;.-:-4.:".::! °'.'!!~-· -~-~ .. · ·~··~ h d l . " B rlh 'd B th . ALAOOIH'S. AMI', ... ,, ..... Hiii m nis ra on 0 s a es r ........ "' .. ~ --· c~ut ...... -· ~IO -~-~ .. ~.. ·~ ,_...... ~. -som e ver y a r tmes, a s at . " ut at s •••lluo, <:,t01, c;;;;;. -:. c;.•tornt• Actl. The petitio n Is set for •PPll<e•'°"'-~ 1)0.no ., u n .;.~.;;;:;., • .,,_ _, -rroct No."'· 111 ..._City .. N _ _. nothing new to us. And, by the way, we still nm h 1 . Dept N 3 t '' 111• 011 1ce ot '"• P1 e11111ng ~•CTITtou111u11N~H D•••dJ-v20 •"2 llN<fl,o•..,maop r.c-•n -:. II I OOS ear ng tn • 0 . a Oepef1_..., Room 100. 11 F•lr Orl ve, .. AMI STATIMllN1' ... _IO H .:............, 21, 11•10 1S le H l"<lllll .. ol guarantee r esl'den ts a free spol 1'n our cemetery " ~11 "• ... KOh•n. t 700 C 1"•lc. Cente r Ort've . I The toltowt • I d I " n-....... ~. • 8~:i~~~~~·~~ Wes t, i~ the Cit y of Santa cc;~~=~~n~ ... " 0.11, P1io1, t>u•IMuM: "• P "°" ' 0 "0 =ri:~ ;. ~~-~: ::C.~'. •lldMdl.tel Ana California on Feb 24 J•11"0"' "· ,., '",., VAN GE Nus GL.ASS IHO, t55tl P11tl41si.ci °'"..,.. coHt O•lly P•tot. _,,.,.., .. ~: Desert plans studied SAN DIEGO CAP) -Scientists from Egypt and Is rael will for the first time co mbine their research talents to tum the ir deserts into lush farmlands, San Die go S tale Univers ity o fficials said. The program, a imed a t inc r easing food production in those countries, is being developed by those countries' agriculture ministries , the SDSU FoundatJon and the San Die go-based Fred J. Hansen Institute for World P e a ce. Robert OnteU, director of the Hansen Ins titute , said ~ $5 miWon proje ct , financed by the U .S. Agency for International Developme nt, will get under way March lS with a meetin1 in Cairo. Soldiers donate pay TEL AVIV, larael CAP) -Soldlen in Israel's regular .rmr. are don•lln1 • d•J's pay each month t.o hep defra~ lhe COits o malntaillinl Israeli defenses. Althou1b the donation ts voluntary, an army employee who r~fuses must fill o"' a form for the payrouter'a otflce, " 1 Nwlelltl•tltoi-• 30 · • Produtl L•ne, No. •. Hu111l11eton Jt111 22 ,. .._ 5 12 I.et l 1..., •••l"nllll ti 1110 N•'111o•tttrly 1,.1, ,.....,_••Iii.cl ..,1111 ~ 1982 a t 9: a .m . _.,. ~E 8M<l\,Celltornle•1Mt · • • · · • cw11« .. ...., Loe•· lflefte• Wftterty Cou111Y Clerk ot orenoe county °" IF YOU OBJECT to the .....,_ ""'"' Abdul R Mtmoll, "" Noll•• _.,. MMll'f U .00 , .. , ...... "" Ntf111efty llna J IS 11112 . of I I Clr<lt, HunllnotOf\ B•«h. Cell!or'lll1 '"--·~ "'9t'fff; ---~-e~on enuery ' Pll17'4 t1 r a nt1ng the pet t 0~, l'~TITIOUS.USIHISS •UAI tllt So11tllt1IT tine t i H id lot, PublllMd OrMOt c ... st Oelly Piiot, you should either a p pear NAMI STAtlMINT Thi• ......... ., h COftdUClll<I ...., ... Horth•••ltrt1 IS ... , .. , ,,..,,. .... Jon 1',Feb.S, It."· 1"1 ..,._.,, at the hearing a nd Sta te Tht tollowlnq P•rton 11 doing IN!lvldUll. NMt• SO..IM•_tterly ~ Of .... tot. •. b • I · lluslneu •s· Alldlll ll,Memon lfOTICIOf'IAL.a tlttft<e E-rl'r IUO tett e1eftt tM f'ICTITIOUI euttNUS NAMt! ITATIMINT Tll• lollowlno P•''°" '' Ootno Du\lllOHH: MELE·l(OI f'AllitMS, t'2,. Wtll McD11r-1, trA trv\l>O, ce111or11I• '111U. L ..... L AllMn, Jr. 1t01 SOfltlep Or lve, ,.._., llaecll, Celltot11I• ~-This -i...s.t Is C.eNll<M W Oii lndlvldllof• L....,,, L. A,_,,, Jr. fhll .......,_ ... fllN •"" ... C-nty Ctent tf Dr41119t c.uritv ., ~mwra."''· ,,,,.... 1"1191U... Cir-. OMtl OtllY "lkll, JOf!. "· ,, ... "11. "· '"' -.,, your o iect o n s or file TERRAI N WEH 11. 11201 t<roll This ... ,_, wu 111ec1 with"" o"AIAL~llOP<TY So11111er1y 11110 of .. 1 .. 101, 1~ th• w ritten ob jections w ith t he Lent, Hunllf\lll011 l!ee<I), CA.,,.,. Cou111Y Cieri. ot Or•noe County °" AT ,.lllVATI HLI so..t..._, cor,,,.. tlle..of; "'-• c ourt .befo re the hearing. J•mo 0. Hornell, I0'4 Parlt. Avenuo, Januery'10, 1'112 Ne. A·t•U. Norlllo.,aeny •tone Ille ~ .. 11, You r ap""a ranee ma Y be B•IDo• "'"'°·CA., .. , f'llUM 111 ,,.. ~'°' Court o1 ,,,. s1oi. 01 1111• ot wld Lot • to '"° pef111 of "" This buSIMU '' condu<l•d bv 1 PuDtlUw<I Orengo Co.tit 0•111' Piiot, C•lllornte tor lht C-IY et Ofllftl9 lft 11e911\11lft9. in person Or by YOUr llmoleCIS>M1ner,lllO J•" ll.2',Feti i.U,1"1 lllS-97 lheMan.<ot lheEsteloofANTHOHV Eacept tflel porlloll ot Loi t attorney. J-0.Hornen -JOH N GALLINlll •Ile fONY -r•-••lol~:•......,lflO•llNI I F y 0 u A R E A Tftl• JI .. _, w., flied """ '"' BALLINEllO.<IOQ-. NertlMltl <-• .. Lot 5; "'°""' C~nt'fClertlOIOrengo CountyonJon. PlllJC ma Notice Is herelll' 9lven lllel llM Westerty t.tOlteteltfle .. N-11y C R E D I T 0 R o r a •· 1en ~ • ..,.. ""'" tett '"' Pr...,••• ..... llM ., IAI s; tMMo ~., ~1.Ji contingent c red itor of the "'""1 ""'"ous eusiNHs " -""""* ..w 11e1 lllddw. W4tft<t '"t "'ett.4 """"" ~'' 11 ... ., deceased, you m u st f ile P111111s111c1 0r0110t c .. s1oe11yPl1ot, "AMl!ITATSMU•T 1oc-~o:_.-.._.i:rc..-t, Lt t 1s .. : ..!.'!!_nc• Eest•rly 1,10 '"' Jen. I , IS, n. it.'"' ltCM? on or ...... IN """ .. ., ef r--y -e 1..,., .. -..nT UflO of Ml4 you r c lalm w ith the cou rt '"' 1011-1,.. ""°"' .,.. "'"' 1t12 •• t he.01110 •• """t " L•f s " IN E-1T ,_ ..,....: Or presen t ft 10 the r.JC ma MlllOU.. ,Oflflerm~Ur, e "•t festftll•I lfleftce ~, 11.JI .... tltftt IM Per sonal represe .. ta l lve FOXX AND ASSOCI ATES, ISOS2 Cor11o••ll•11. n• Htwport Celller ..... ,_,, MM, " -...... , .. •• ------------~-. Sprl111<1•1t, S..11• C. H11nt1,..te" Orlve, S..lte Jll, N-perl ••e<lt, .....,,,...... a ppointed by the c ourt ,1CT1TtOU1•uttNHS llM<ll.CA'2Mt c 111ror111e ...... c-tv .. Of-.., Tll• '" .. ' •ffrn• .... eth•• within four months from llAM«ITAT9N .. ., .,,._ ... i>.1tK•-· • OM11w11te stew flf ~. '""" ,...,., tMie ,_'""' ....._.. •• 11 ....,, " .. th d t of fl st • The tollowlng Pf'M" h dOlllt "°'~°'""· ISMt '-'~· Suite C, ""' '""""' f/I NICI ... ,.. ef .. reel ••-rt\' 9ft<r1"4 _,,. It e a e r issua nce """-" H\lfltlftllon 11etch, CA .,... 11_ of ...,, ... "" .... ,...,., 1111e ~ ..... '1J v1e 1.111o s... of lette rs a s provided in GLA Ot. * E ""' 5,. CM••.... Tllh 1Mtt1t10u 1s ,_,.., .,, • ""' "'..,... lt\lt "'° .w.to ,. ,... """" htldl,CA....,. Section 700 of the Probate CAt2'2'. <orP«tt'-f!Ke•w41"-ec.I'""'_.....,., "'° .... ..., .. T.,..... ._ .. ...,, Code of C•llfornla. The GIOCl'f• s. a.-. u 1tue v.,,., ,. ... .,,."-'.,.." ••• tr t4MNIM OCMr "'°"tr 111 e11v 11e111111y 1w -""'-'-er ' I f fill I I Ill _ _,9Mcll,CA....0. J-L.Fou MfMltflto.,..M..Wet<MIM,ot\fle tlwltr ... ..__..__ t me or "9 c a m s w Tiii• !Ml...,, 1, r:OftfW'"..,.., ~~ t1,,..ot....,,1n..,. ... 11 tti.c0t1t1n .,.........,.,1,-........ """'. =,,..-----------not expire prior to four 1.-hllduet. T1111 ,..,._ -, ..... _.....,. ,. .. ....,.,, ......,. ..... 0r..,.. Said ... ,.,. .. ,..._.,,_.... PICTITIOUSllUSl"UI th from the d t f o~s.a......... c-1v0tr1it10\'-ewi.tl'onJ111. Ctwftly, t t••• •• C•llr.,111•, of""'"' .. ...,......_.......,_. NAMa nAT8M9NT mon S , • e O Tltl• ~ wet lllocl wit~ '"' J4, "" •ert1c11terty •K rtlltd et felttwt: ........... OWtllM ff'WCJ T,,. '°''°"''"' _,.,.,, .,. fol"' the hearing noticed above. Ceutttr C1e~o10r .... c--..OftJ.,, ,.,.., .....,": ,.,.., dWIM -• ....-., .,. --.. It: YOU MAY EXAMINE 21, 1tn. 1'114111tNd Or.,.. Cotnt Delly ~let. Let "°'~'oct No ID1I. "'"-""' tn11t"., •tlfNtM • •-. -.t McOOHAl.0.SHOlll ANTIOUH, the flle kept by the court. F111• JOft, u. n. "· "" ), ,.., UMI • '" .. ~ Ill .................. .,. ~!..!.11!.,~. ~·1~11<1•· Sell J 11•11 If you are Interested in the J ,..,..,...., 0r....,. C•• 0111, 1tu... --1M" • Ma..i-~ r«.,.. '11• .,,.,. .. prlne..,., ._,_. °' -• -......,.., -... ...-. .. -,,. en.29,1'.o.S,it.1•.1• ..... -•....., of Orefl90 Gowmy, Cttller11I• •M .-s.•.• r..... ••IK •err• a.rnn •co•"•'•· ,. .. , e s ate, you may flle a ~ ""'~ , to"""..,~._ .. "'" ~. 1111 ..... 1 ...... _,... ,,111(1,.1 ~-c ........ ._ v .. Jo, CA .... ,. request with the court to -· -~-o-. cei~· .... NI-•,...,. w. •• i-trer '"..,.... PICTl1'IOUS •vtl•H• PU.UC ua.a oete e...,• IMft, 21m ,.._ 1 1 1 ti f ~ 1111111111K ,.CT•TIOUt ..,....... r'"""" ... ,..,1111 iewM _, 1e1111•1 ~ , ... ,,.. u ...-c"" -..weTAft ... tn ••••••• ...._.... ...,....,,.,.. ve1tweie,"" J•11 c.tttr-. CA rec e ve s pec a no ce o .. ,,....nAT••"" , •t11tu,,....tuwse11ctllflnftM1t11tt -· "" f9llew1111 _., .... It "'ft' ,., .... ,,,. i.e....• ,.. u Ml•• t1t1s. the Inve ntory of e s tate 'ICTITIOUllUM••ta ''" fol1twlt1e "'"" 1, "'"' ••••· ., •••• cHll .,.. ,.,.,.,u Dettf,.·.11~,NT'!i~&T• ..,,._.: · .. n. Lt iwr-. c:.HIWltla, w111 • Tfll• ~""• •• <~-.., e 1s1ets and of the Pttltlons, ...... ..,.,,. ... '" __,,,,.. .... , °"'"""" •v 11t1• uorH ., "•' ....... 900Y•IG"f.UNL.IMITIO,nt ......... ~ .................. ,..,,.,,, .. .,,., a ccounts •nd reports Tll• fell••lll• _..,.. •• ....... UMlf&OIO!.A .. WO.-ICl•l,ttt1 jljl., ..... ., ''"'' OtH tll tllt e-«OP""-IPO't•IA, l ut Utfl llrtet, CHI• Mue, -.ect11tlt, C*le llllne, Cellftrllle, ..,,.,L..,..Mco.ei. 5 ..._Ml H._ 0..-........,, IMcfl. CA ., ... ,.., ........ T9tl 9K UflC M Tfl&ll,.I ~--. ..._ 11 _..., •"""'"" a. .,.,.. ..,,.... _ """' .,.. .,. described In S.Ctlon 1200. CH•••'I '""""°'· ,.,.. Per• ,,..._ ' ..,.......................... ~•LY u111no • ....., "·~.Jr.,,,. hit f'!I· c....ey ~., ~ ..... ,_, 111 of the C1llfornl1 Prate v-.CelleMMe.CA..,. te "11 1. , 1 "Mo""... •• • ..,_ • • "'"'lttllt... CM.tflOllMIA~ IJtll t~. C-to -.0, Ctllftnlle tef .. ,. l'ltOAOl l'S INC., lt.O, ... OK •,,191. C.......... CNryl ... ,. "lcllett, ,_, ,.., .. MOLMelito, "91 ........... !>five, wlll'9,_....at .. ..._..tMce 9y l ..... Alledle ...,, ttl1,.......,9Ncll,ca...a. p.,.. .,.,..." ., -Yllla.C:-. ...... CA""1 ......,,llliedl,CA..... ......, ..... ...., .. ..,..~ ..... -..... - TMa ....... s c...-wr:'" • 111 ~ ar-..c.. Dell'¥......_ ,....._. OrW119f c..e 011tf "°"· Ur W I , "t m • r , Tiii• ......... 1t ,......__ "' • .,111 • ...._. 19 ...._ _ _,, ... .....,.,....,.......... 1.-. .. at "' ......,. -.. .. i... ...,......., ,.,..,,,.,._ ... .1 .. tt,,..a,u...... ,.. MacDonald & Mt•d!t, .............. ......,..._ o.....• .. ••.1-.y ..... ,.,..._ c...... •r ........ ..._ .. Ppr""-J• .. Attoraoy1 at Low, IH Qlef'f!AlteMtclltlt ""''-._..,.. '-"tt.11111 11111 .., .. ,..._..,._ ............. ,.=,-::-; :-:~: J acli Anderson Jlaily P-Qlld_ .... ,.n CO•t•r Drive, c:.=. ~=:.."!'J: C::v ~ ·: ::..:.~=: ..... ..::i:.~==--=.::: •'=-"~. = ~"·""· ___ 1 luate 1SSS, Newport "· t•. '"' • •• ~J·"""'''" '""' OMt• ... GA .. ,_ ..... -----~-~-IJ... .. -..Ctk~AW. --. ----• . .. ........... ,._ ,_ U I SS t • ~Or ... C.... o.lty ....... "Tri ,,_....,.Of .... CM11 Deity ""'-,,_.i.... Or....,. Ctt't Deity ~ "'*t-Or-. <MIU)el_, ~. ........... Or .... C.... DI!'" ....... ......... Or-. C... OOOllLll'Jlllli -IP• ... ,. 11, "· tW .. _ , . _ <: a4 J tll 1f, ........ tW .. ,.tlift. ft,,_ S, 12, It t• • ,Ion t, li,.{L tt. t• ,.... Jell, Jt, •, P• S,,.. --l.,_, ti, .. ,~ I, M 1 ""'1' FfHOAY,JAN. 19, 1981 Rams doing their best FOR THE RECORD C6 to confuse everyone. C3. 0Mr ,_ ""9t 'r Petrtc•O'.,_ THE LEADER -Ed Dougherty. a touring professional since 1975. Is the first round leader in the Cros by Southern tournament at ln·ine Coast Countn· Club with a 66. See stor~·. PaJZe C6. · Seasoned veteran at 20 Bailey started motocross riding. at the. age of 10 By HOWARD L. HANDY Of ............ At an age whe.n most youngsters are taking up LitUe Lea1ue baseball, Pop Warner football or some other type of team sporta, former Dana Point resident David Bailey waa quitting achool and taking up motocroa& riding in a serious vein. Bailey, at ace 10. quit school to travel with his father, a well·known motocross riding school instructor. Now, at age 20, Haiiey la a seasoned veteran of the sport and will be competin1 for Team Honda in Saturday night's Supercross kickoff event al Anaheim Stadium. BAO.EY BAS NEVER ridden on the man·made Anabchn course or at the Los Angeles Coliseum where the circuit moves in June this year. But that doesn't stop him from believing he has as good a chance at victory as anyone else in the field. "I like the closed circuit and indoor racing because everybody is t.Qg_ether t .. Bailey says. "In outdoor racing, there are different categories dependin& on the size of your bike. Everyone rides a 250cc bike on the closed circuit. "Riders sometimes complain about the man~made tracks but I like them and I think it's great. There are a lot of tricky things you have to contend with. "It takes a lot of thouaht to get around the track and you have to concentrate a lot. Concentration is what it takes to win on these tracks. "Doing 20 laps on the little tracks is tough. There are so many things that can DAVID BAILEY go wrong and you can make mistakes. There is no room for error." says Bailey. "The better your start. the better chance you have to win. Everybody runs so close to the same lap time that a better rider starting in the middle of the pack bas difficulty in getting to the front to win," he adds. BAILEY DOESN'T SOUND like a rider who bas forgotten the classroom. After six months with his rather on the road, be renewed his education through a correspondence course. When the family settled down in Axton, Va. and be was at the seventh grade level, he went to a private school to finish b1a hilb school education. "I call Axton my Home now," Bailey says. "It is a very small town lo the south·central part of the state. My dad does the schools from there instead of traveling now. We have a track on our property." Bailey has Utlle fear when he is riding even though it appears the competitors are doing death·defyin1 acts al virtually every tum or hill from high in the stands at places like Anaheim Stadium. "IN A STADIUM RACE, the tracks are all different but one or the thin1s they all like to do is put two jumps that are six to ei&ht feel high about 20 to 30 feet apart. The idea is to get around the track as quickly as possible and some riders wiJI jump from one and clear the other. When you are in the air, it's pretty scary. And it's history if you don't make it." He has never had a serious injury but broke a smalJ bone in the top of bis hand about nine weeks ago while practicing at home. "I lost control of the bike and fell but it's healed now." Bailey doesn't ride a motorcycle on the streets and says: "I try to avoid the streets. Whenever anyone offers me a ride on the street, I try to irnore it. I don't think car drivers pay enough attention to bike riders on the streets to n1~k.-il sMfe. 1 enjoy riding on trails and courses ~... I prefer to ride in a car on the streets ... TIDS IS HIS first year a.' • learn r-iJ~r for Honda. "I've been semi-sponsored in the past and last year I rode a Kawasaki. This past year, Roger deCoster <a former world and Team Honda rider> was talking with my dad and expressed an interest in me. "I rode a Honda to test it and found I liked it and then I signed with them. They pay me a salary. furnish the mechanic and pay alHravel expenses.'' Bailey is high in his praise of a new mechanic he has (See SEASONED, Pase CZ) Ford balks ·at trade Lakers walk away with this game Slowdoum efforts "by Phoenix make it interesting for. awhile, but. are thUXlrted in the end By CURT SE EDEN Of Ulle D...., ...... SUit hair of the NBA season on a successful of tea, they were impressed with the The Lakers jumped out to a 25·18 INGLEWOOD -That wild and crazy St.eve Martin was on hand al the-Forum Thursday night to catch the Lakers' contest with the Phoenix Suns. note. Suns' strategy. first-quarter advantage. Phoenix got its "I've never seen a team handle the "Tb.ey {the SunsJ have vecy_ good first lead of the night at 6~48 of the 21-second clock as wen as the-suns offensive players and they work hard on second period when Jabbar was called did tonilbl," admitted Laker Coach Pat exeootion," Riley noted. "Maybe It was for goaltending as.the Suns took a 32·31 BALTIMORE CAP> -Third baseman Doug DeCinces is glad to be going home to the Angels. but outfielder Dan Ford may not go to Baltimore unless he receives compensation for the trade. But there were no arrows through the head and no King Tut garb. In a fact, the only thing unusual about the actor-comedian was a new beard. Riley, who had to talk and run in order a factor that they had a game last mght advantage. to catch a plane to the Meadowlands and didn't want to get into ... a race horse It was slowdown aner that. with the where he'll coach the West in the NBA situation. · All·star iame Sunday. "But that's the first ti~ I've seen a Suns' Dennis Johnson and Walter Davis , patiently wearing the 24-second clock "I'm d. eli"ghted we could play that delay game handled that well in a f · 1 F t I t down to a few ticks before pulling the DeClnces, who grew up in Northridge, was acquired by the Angels from the Orioles Thursday along with left-handed relier pitcher Jeff Schneider in exchange for Ford. It probably grew just by watching the Suns' deliberate style of offense. To say Pho enix slowed the tempo is an unaerstatement. And the strategy almost worked.· well. For a fast break team. we played pro ess1ona game. ortuna e y, we go trigger. a Very good half.court game tona·ght," some steals and they started rushing W th h h · hots · th r rth rt .. a·1 · • e oug t we could neutralize their RJ.ley added. t etr s m e ou qua er, 1 ey d b 1 . added. spee y s o wing it down a bit," "I thought I was back in college "I'm a little surprised they didn't try e xplained Phoenix Coac h J o hn "I've played in Baltimore for a long time," said DeCinces. "If I ever wanted to play anywhere else, it would be in Anaheim. I. feel very fortunate. I'm happy to But three straight baskets -by Michael Cooper, Jim Brewer and Bob McAdoo -to start off the fourth quarter were all the Lakers needed to pull out a 97-87 victory to end the first playing USC." no ted Kareem to run," said guard Norm Nixon, a Macleod. "'They came out much Abdul-Jabbar, referring to the Suns· doubtful starter before the game, who tougher defensively in the second half slowdown game. wound up hitting 11 of 16 for 22 points. and did a good job of getting the ball to Don·t get the Lakers wrong. Although '"ll didn't frustrate us though. It was Kareem. I tho ught he had good the style of play isn't exac:.:U::.:y~th::..:e::.ir:_.::c.::.up!!:.-__ f_ru_s_t_ra_t_in~g:..t_o_t_h_ei_r....=gu::......:.y_s_. ·_· _______ <_Se_e_LAK_._E_RS_ . .;,.,• P_aa;.;..e_CZ_> _____ _ be coming home. and I think I'm joinIDg one of Ole best lineups in the game. But Ford told the Baltimore Sun be would not report to the Orioles' training camp unless he received compensation or an extension of his contract, which How can you knock numbers like 16-1? expires next year. "I'm hoping we can come to an agreement because the Oriole organization is a good one UCI not complaining after victory • • and I'd like to play in Baltimore. By JOHN SEVANO Of .. ~ ...... ,_ ··But something .has to LONG BEACH -How can happen. If it doesn't, this might you say anything negative about be one of those things where no a team that's 16·1 overall. not to deal is made," Ford told the mention 5-0 and tied for first Sun. place in its conference? Ford's contract listed six Very simply, you can't. teams to which he could be Gr anted, the UC Irvine ·traded. The list didn't include bas ketball team hasn't been the Orioles, but the outfielder's playing UC Irvine basketball of agent, Bill Moore, approved a bu · II new list that included Baltimore late. t who's gomg to rap a those wins . . . which is the al the request or the Angels. bottom line, isn •t it? ·'Dan is concerned about The Anteaters had another one compensation because he had a o r tho s e question ab I e · • no-trade clause and he helped ~ ''. California make a trade,.. performances Thursday night Moore said. against Long Beach State, but when the buuer sounded UCI ~-' DeCinces, 31 , hit .263 with 13 was on the ri&ht 11de or the score r •• ftome runs and 55 runs batted in ''", for the Orioles tut year. He has ·~~We 7::~r look good, but we .,., averaged 18 homen and 66 RBI win ," kidded Coach Bill .. ' for tbe put five seasons. Mulligan as he entered UCl's '"" DeCinces is expected to move locker room after the game. ~~ into the Angelab· starting lineup, A ct u a 11 Y , l he s c 0 re 1 s L·.. replacln1 Bute Hobson at third base. Hoblon, acquired prior to somewhat misleading in that the the 1181 season , was Anteaters were in control unproductive on offense and had throughout except for a rew problems on defense last year. brier mental lapses. · • • DeClnces ·la a proven A Loni Beach Arena crowd or l" performer and a welcome 5,396 saw the 49ers (5-11 overall, 1-4 in the PCM> score the first addition to our club," said bucket and t.ben Ue UCI on five Aa1els' Vice President Mlke separate QCculona early in the. Port. "His presence lives Gene <Ansell Manager Gene Mauch) rlrat hall before the Anteaters more maneuverability. We now be1an buildinlf their lead. bave two infielders at each The9Ulteaten led 22·18, 32·22 pmitlon... and 42·30 belore HWinl ror a ·3' IDAl'lin at &be ln••nnte•km n-nenr.r:-21;-"Wi's the top UCJ then extended that marpn It was at that juncture, however, and with Kevin Magee on the bench . that Ben Mc Donald decided to take charge by scoring four or his 14 points to put UCI back in command again. 65-58. "Yeah, I was looking to lake my shot," admitted McDonald. "With Magee out there weren't too many people on the court who could score ... except (Randy> Whieldon." Whieldon, in ract, broke out or his four-game shooting slump by hitting 6 of 10 shots from the floor en route to 16 points. ''That was the first real bad slump I had ever gone through," said the sharpshooter, who was hilling 81 percent for the season, but only 46 in conference. "I knew tt wouldn't last, though . All I had to be was patient." The 49ers needed to be patient, too. especially witJI their leading scorer -Dino GrelOl'Y -on the bench in street clothes due to a severely sprained ri&ht ankle. Guard Crail Hod1es (24 pointa) and Michael Zeno (13) tried to pick up the slack ... but the een Just didn't have enoup 1un1 in the end. reliever for the Orioles' to 14 polnta early In the HC:Gnd aocbnter farm club of the half before a mental lapse-lD l•ternatlonal Lea1u• last wblcb the Anteaten went MUOD, •....-rtnl In 41 aame1 1corele11 for Just under sis wtda • •t reeord, 1211ves and a' minutes -reduced their lead to Ironically, it wun't from the noor where the Anteaters lead thel natlon In sbootin1 percenta1e (80.4), tbat UCI held tbe edp a1ala1l &.oa1 Beacr State. Instead, ll wu at lhe free throw Une where UCI wu 34 of S'1 , while the 4'ers were a paltry lof 11. • "Irvine shot 34 or 37 free tbrowa '-that'• not only •ood - . ANTIATD IN FLIGHT -UC Irvine's Kevin Magee iooms in for two points while beipg watched by Long Beach State's Ray Mosby and Cc»la-~• ckl~~'il·tet"M ............. ...._ at the Long Beach Arena. Anttaters remained in a tie for flrst with Fresno by upending the 49ers. 78-68 behind Matcee's 31 . ~ft • -------. . ---t'.""l I.IS earned run nera•e. 11·58. -.. ------llQ..r..Cll- .. ,, , \ . . . , ------·--------- Cl f:' .... _ Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1812 Broadcaster Olsen -now a-Hall of -Farner From AP dl.!Jpatche1 CANTON, Ohio -Merlin Olsen, former Rams ' defensive tackle and now a television celebrity. has been elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame In his first year or eligibilit y, it was announced Thursd~. Two·way performer George Musso and defensive e nd Doug Alkins, both from the Chicago Bears, and linebacker Sam Hurt of the New York Giants and Washington Redskins will joln Olsen ln lhe-1982 ensbrin.ement class~ 'Ibeir selections by a 29·man panel increased to 114 the number of immortals in the game's s hrine at Canton. Olsen became eligible this year after serving the mandatory fi ve.year waiting period after his retirement. The quartet will be inducted into the Hall of Fame Saturday, Aug. 7, in ceremonies before the first 1982 exhibition. It will match the Baltimore Colts against the Minnesota Vikings. Ols en serves as a pro football color analyst as well as the s tar of the "Father Murphy" se ries, both on NBC· TV, following a brilliant ca reer in the National Football League. The 6·5, 270·pound Utah Stale All·American. native of Lo an Uta'k..Pl~d as the Ra\ns' left defensive tac e -or 15 years:-Rep layed in the Pro Bowl in all but one of his years from 1962 through 1976. Quote of the day RI chard Brodeur, a goalie fo r the Vancouver Canucks, on Edmonton Oilers scoring star Wayne Gretzky : "What he does best is make vou look bad." Canadiens snap Boston's streak Doug Risebrougb and Rejean ~ Houle nette d two goals apiece ' Thursday night to lead the Montreal Ca nadiens to a 6·3 victory over Boston in the National Ho c key League. T h e Br uins' eight-game unbeaten streak at home ended afte r six wins and two ties ... In the only othe r NHL gam e Thursaay, Brian-Sutter, J orgen Pette rsson and Tony Currie each scored two goals and Blake Dunlop chipped in with a goal and two assists. as St. Louis cruised to an easy 8·3 victory over Minnesota. St. Louis' victory inte rrupted a seven·game un beaten string for Minnesota, the leader in the NQrris Division standings . . . Rookie center Ron Francis of Ha rtford will miss at leas.t two ga m es and perh aps s everal mo re a ft er suffering an eye injury when hit by a puck shot by t eammate Blaine Stoughton Wednesday night. Knlcks' Holzman wins No. 600 New York rallied from a 13·Polnt m deficit to defeat Washln11ton, 102·98 Thursday night ·and give Coach Red Hohman his 600th National Basketball A ss ociatio n victo r y with the Knicks ... Elsewhere, a IS·foot, off·balance }ump shot by Bernard Kln1 with 16 seconds left lifted Golden State to a 111·110 win over Chicago ... Sidney Moncrief and Srott May c ombined for 49 points as Milw a ukee overpowered Utah, 119·101 ... All·star 1uard George Gervin scored 37 points and Mlke Brats came off the bench to toss in a season·hlgb 19 as Sa n Antonio routed K a n sas City, 126·115 -.. Houston's Moau Maloae scored 31° points and grabbed 20 rebounds and Calvin Murphy becam e the 21St all-Ume scorer as the Rockets cruised to a 109·101 triumph over P hiladelphia ... Calvla Natt poured in 11 of his game·high 25 points in the fourth quarter helping Portland to a come·from·behind 96·9S win over San Diego . . . Larry Blrd scored 33 points, including 22 in the second haJf. aa Boston coasted to a 116·104 victory over Cleveland. OBs top NFL salary ladder NEW YORK -Quarterbacks [il ea rned an average salary of $160,037, f » tops in the National Football League in 1981 , according to a survey released by the league Thursday. The aver age salary for all NFL players last season was $90,102. a n increase of 14.5 percent over the $78,657 average for 1980. the league sur vey s aid. Those figures do not include pres eason or postseason pay and performance bonuses. T hose payme nts would push the average past $100,000. The league said it had paid $140.7 million in salaries a nd $16.2 million in preseason and postseason pay and performance bonuses. Behind quarterbacks as the top earners were running backs, who averaged $94,948. Then came defe nsive linem e n at $92,996 .. followed by r eceivers <~873 1. offensi ve lineme n ($85.5431. linebackers ($85,205). d e f e n sive ba c k s ($79 ,581 ) and punte rs -placekickers ($65.7791. Palmer plans course in China O RLANDO, Fla. Arno ld l!I Palmer reportedly will build the first golf course on mainland China later this year. Palmer's company will hire about 4.000 Chinese to help build the course in Canton. the Orlando Sentinal Star reported Wednesday. The golf pro said he 's hoping the course will be finished by October. Details of the course are still being worked out, the newspaper said. Palmer said he met with Chinese officia ls at Bay Hill Club near Orlando this week and agreed on a contract. Palmer visited Canton for a tour of the proposed site. part or a SSO million resort complex ~From Page C1 LAKE RS. • • Yancey rebounds from illness GREENSBORO, N.C. -In laat 'l!I week's Phoenix Open , golfe r Bert Yancey failed to make tl\t cul. Thia week he failed to qualify tor the Andy Wllllami tournament In San Diego. Yet, Jull by playlnc. Yancey has made an impressive comeback f r o m mental Illness that c ut short his once·brilUant career. "Listen. I make a comeback every morning whe n J wake up and make my coffee," Yancey said durin1 a recent telephone interview from the Sea Pines Inn and Golt Club ill Hiiton Head , S.C .• where he is a teachlne pro. During the 1960s and early '70a, Yancey played the pro tour full-time, with a classic s wing and mild temperament. A former West Point cadet . he was a serious, lnt~lligent pro. to whom othe r golfers looked for advice and leadership. Stacy starts fast in Florida Hollis Stacy, usua lly a fast s tarter early in the LPGA season. fired a 5·under·par 67 Thursday to • take a two-stroke lead a fter one round of the Champions hip of Deer Creek in Deerfield Beach, Fla. Stacy. 27 . birdied four of the first seven holes and finished the round with a pair or birdies on the last three ho les to take her two-s t roke ad van~age over six different golfers ... _John McEnroe was a mong the four tennis players named to the United States Davis Cup squad that will meet India March 5.7 at La Costa Hotel. The others na med by Coach Arthur As he we r e P eter Flemln1, Brian Gottfried and Eliot Teltscber . . . Free agent relief pitcher E d Farmer, forme rly of the Chicago White Sox. has agreed to terms with Philadelphia. Television. radio Following are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratings are: / 1 ' / excellent: ' ' ' worth watching; ' fair ; • forget it. 8 p.m .. Chennel 5 ./ ./ ./ COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Oregon State at UCLA. Announcers: Joe Butt itta . Oregon State's No. 8 ranked Beavers are undefeated in Pac-10 action with a 7--0 record. The Beavers are led by Lester Conner and Charlie Silton and will be facing an Improved UCLA team. The Bruins started the vear in a slow manner but have come on strong in recent games behind the play of Kenny Fields who scored AS points in a pair of vic tories last week in the bay area. RADIO Basketball -Oregon at USC, 8 p.m., K DAY (1580); Oregon State a t UCLA, 8 p .r)'l., KMPC (710). Ski Report Snow conditions in Southern Callfornla mountains. 9:A3 a.m ., 12:0 , 3:0 , 7:A3 p.m., KNX (1070). Basketball scores W 1t•111U<ky ... AV\Un f'9ay .. UC l"'lne 11, L°"' IH<h SI .. Offensive rhythm tonight " UC S•n Ole90 IOS, Southe rn E re ...... -s. tt,llMI .. YOVllQ,-SI n . E 1(-ucky IS NE Lou!\'-11, G• So<llhern •I MOrerw .. St 7', Akron •J J a bbar finis hed the evening ce111orn1e Col9"1" FriosnoSt u,s.n J-51 o w ith a game-high 3J points, c.1 si.tt Fu11e11on o, uc s.n1. while Nixon added 22 and both 8e<b9r• o Mike Cooper and Jamaal Wi lkes 't::o~S:'!o~:'v'-u"':.SJ add:?d 13 apiece . S.n1e Cler• 7•. SI /Nry'\ .. He•.,.1111, Uleh '1 It was Cooper's s la m dunk PolntLometo,ArusePklll< .. whic h helped the Lakers pull wn1rnon1 1os. LAl•1>tl1110 He,.,.11 P..:it1< H, Cel llllheren H away. The crowd·pleasing slam 11ec111n Rave the Lakers a 64 -59 lead and Pecmc 100, u1.111s1. It · kl ( II d b Nev..,.Reno7S,Monl•N'7 was quac y o owe y a solo wor1Mr"n ,.,,_a ... ""°"'•"• s1 effort by Brewer •1 T he reser ve power forward Mlnnnoiui~:!. .. 1.,11 u scored his only two points of the 1owa s1. Ml<llltan SU• night when he stole the ensuing Ml<lll9'9fl•1• °""' si .o '°'' llllnoltu, Pvrclwt .. pass at mid-court and took about 111d1 .... ai. Wlt<OllJin s. f. e d 'bbl d dd d th Wlclllle SI IS, Or.iie oH av n es an a e ano er eraoieyn,1111,,..1,51 ~ SE LOUii ..... 10, Nl<holls SI '° S MIU•S~ 101. P•n A_,l<an 1' S el~ n , Wh <.re.,_ B•y '1 .... Bost"" co1199911. Nort!Wasle•n II Conne<ll<ut n . llM,,,..tt_ SI Rlloch lfl•nO Jt. Goor90 Wa\hlnqtOtl S. SI B°""ventu,.. 73. llM•wd•vwtts ,, Ouci.,._'2. ~1 Fr.n<I•. Pa 11 ll•IP•••ko •1. Utica St Women H'911k-SM'I-"-E\l•n<l•U.~k U COf'ON del -SJ, COllll lllWW ., Irvin. M. Unl~llY S. S......l. .... EdlM)n JI, -Ill• •t l oU Fovnt•ln V•llo U , Hunllnolon 8H<hS6 Ocean Vie•''· w.stmlnshlr 1' • . ·-· .. - Fresno St. easily • • • WIDS But Titans take squeaker • From AP dllpatcbe1 F RF.SNO -Rod HIHln• scored 14 point.I t.o push the 19th·ranked Fresno State Bulldogs to 63·45 victory over San J ose Stau Thursday nlaht Pacific Coast Athletic Association play. The wln wa2' Fresno's lllb conJecutlve victo!l this season, IU 16th In PCAA play and the m1 straight at home. ., Leading scor e r for San Jose was ChrlJ McNealy, who scored 12 point.I with a game·hiq 11 rebounds. "" Hie,W. a forward, scored 10 points In the firG half, leadln1 Fresno to a 22·11 edge over San J ost at halftime. Bernard Thompson. who led the team wi eight rebounds, was second in scoring (or tb• Bulldogs with 12. I .. C•I State Fullerton 42, UC S•nt• Berb•r• 41 ' SANTA BARBARA -Guard Leon W~ connected on four foul shots in the final 23 secon Thursday night, sparking Cal St ale Fullerton to 42-41 victory over host UC Santa Barbara. i Wood's free throws with 23 seconds to go gav Fullerton a 40·37 advantage. UCSB's Richllr Anderson made a layup 10 seconds later. makini 40·39. • Wood was fouled again with seven secondi remaining and was perfect again. giving th.• Titans a 42·39 advantage. UC:SB forward WayJti Davis 16-foot jump shot with three seconds to g4 completed the scoring. • '!!'\ Wood led the Titans, who are 2·3 m PCAA plat and 9·11 overall. with 14 points and seven assis~ Forward Tony Neal added 11 points and a game·high 12 rebounds for Fullerton. : . .. Peclflc 100, Ut•h Stet• 78 STOCKTON -Senior forward Mall Waldroi scored a game·hlgh 28 points a nd Steve Howari added 22 as the ll.1liversity of Pacific crushed Utab State 100·78 in a 'P'GAA game. The victory gives Pacific a 6·11 record overaU and a 2·3 PCA.\ tally. Utah State slipped to 3·14 and 1-4. Pacific led all the way. with a 46-41 halftime lead . Center Leo Cunningham led Utah State with 15 points. USF 7~. U. of S•n Diego 53 SAN DIEGO -Center Wallace Bryant and guard Quintin Dailey combined for 43 point.A leading ninlh·ranked San Francisco to a convincing 72·53 West Coast Athletic Conference victory over the Univers ity of San Diego. Bryant scored 23 Points and Dailey added 20 for the Dons. who raised their WCAC record to 4·1 and their overall mark to 18·2. ·Forward Gerald Jones pctced San Diego with 12 p0ints and a game·high nine rebounds San Diego State 80, BYU 66 SAN DIEGO -Guard Keith Smith scored 19 points to lead San Die go State to it s 11th conseculi ve homecourt victory. an 80-66 triumph over Hngham Young University in a Western Athletic Conference name. Smith, a 6·0 poi nt guard , als o harl a team·leading nine rebounds and was credited with 10 assists as the Aztecs taised their WAC record to 5·1 and their ove rall mark to 13·5 Guard Zack Jones added 16 p0ints and res erve forward John Garwood contributed L2 points for the Aztecs. who have won their last three games. Iowa 57, Michigan State 56 EAST LANSlNG, Mich. -Kenny Arnold and Steve Carfino scored 12 points each to lead the No 6 Iowa Hawkeyes to a 57·56 Big Ten victory over Michigan State . The triumph. before a sellout crowd or 10.004 in J e nis on Fie ld hous e , improved th ~ league -leading Hawkeyes' record to 6·1 in ronference play and 14·2 for the season. Minnesota 61 , Northwestern 53 EVANSTON, Ill. Trent Tucker scored 18 points and Minnesota took control in the second half as the lOth ·ranked Gophers defeated Northwestern . 61·53. s tuff. McAdoo then converted a onton "· ProvldeftU 11 uo11 -..= -th~ay-an'iJ ttte"'f!ft~~----"':--,-.=".""':M::":al=er:--::o.l:a.Sl. .... lllr:lWIP~Alll..,.ic:=U=J=-=c=---~~ll~':'!"~~L:L~~U-.1~-~..l.lJWJ:~~~Jll.JJlLJ:_--- held a 68-59 advantage at 10 :25. r111w ... w reuss1 ., ~c-L- advantage at 10:25. s.. M1u1onv1e1o n.s.n ci..._1e•1 The flurry woke up both the .a.1c,orn se 1°'· N Tea» 51 ., L.aov"" leecl\ SJ. u_.. Hiiis 0 Lakers and their fans. !!!l~"...-------------11111111111111 .... 11111(1111--- us .. :o lh;~uYt':J ~f;!pe=~~ :rx;; ' II REP ~ t SUPEACAOSS TRACK -Anaheim Stadiu·m has been transformed into a motocross course with plent,· of jumps. berm~. s and pits and other obstacles brought in for t he occasion. The Supercross event takes place ins ide t he stadium Saturda~· n ight. s lowdown s trategy.·· said t:_'}'-I RT .,~'7· · Cooper afterward. "But Coach • ·,(,. ~ ~· -~~~~~~~~hhe~f~:e;~-~ • ~ up by eight, the game changed - drastic ally.·· · 'l thought it showed they (Phoenix> had respect for us. From PageC1 SEASONED VETERAN. • • Their strategy was a good one - in the first half," added Nixon, who said his left elbow was still hurUog aft.er bis collision with Milwaukee's Harvey Catchings Tuesday night. picked up fo r the coming year. "We've only been together a s h o rt lime but he's really talented. His name is Paul Turner and he can c hange anything on the bike the way I want it. He also notices things when I'm riding and tells me about the m to hel p m e improve." BIS BIGGEST TRalLL! "Probably just belng out there In a stadium race before 40,000 or more fans." be says. "When you're riding, you can hear them and it's a great feeling.•· Bailey. along with some 80 othe r pro riders, will be on hand Saturday night at Anaheim Stadium to s tart the 1982 Supercross season on the ~·plus mile track that has transformed the basebalt-rootball parlor Into a rugged expanse of be rms, turns 8Jfd jumps. Here's how the track will run: The long s tart line sendl the. But desp1te the pain . Nixon will join t ea mmates Magic Johnson and Jabbar along with his coach for Sunday 's NBA All·star game. The Lakers finished the first half of the season with a 31·12 record and maintain a l 'h game lead over Seattle in the Pacific Division. T h e 87 points scored by Phoenix was the lowest point total ever by a Sun s team a gainst the Lakers . The previous l ow . was 88. riders down a 70 -mpb * straightaway into a giant berm uau HtHLi _-... 111ev ......... , that rounds home plate a nd .....,_1&1o111eM1tw..U.TwMll•llllM."•• boomerangs the riders toward a ,,,. L••t<•' .,,., ion •• .._ ••nc• s..111e Goldmine Holiday HUI Kratka Ridge Mountain High Mt. Baldy Mt. Waterman Ski Sunrise Snow Forest Snow Summit S now Valley SOUTHERN CALIEO,RNIA Snow de pth/lacbes Condltloas 36·48 pp 12·18 pp 32 pp 12·18 pp 12·36 pp 32 pp 6·24 pp 24·48 pp 18·36. pp 58·60 hp CENTRAL CALIFORNIA June Mountain 64 pp Mammoth Mountain 122 pow/pp Dodge Ridge 90 pow /pp NORTHERN CALIFORNIA Lifts/chairs 3C 2C FO SL FO 3L 2C 3L FO FO 4C 17C FO Boreal 162·200 pow/pp 4C Donner Ski Ranch 102-178 p., 2C Sugar Bowl 177·264 pow/pp SC Northstar 51-124 pp FO Alpine Meadows 84-200 pow /pp IOC Ski Incline 36·SO pow/pp 6C Mt. Rose 9·12A PoW 6C Conditions : hp -hardpack; pp -packed powder; pow - powder. Lifts/chairs: L -lifts: C -chairs; FO -full operation. Plunkett 8&Y8 ·story misleading series of 6·foot high ramped =-=~*;::.'"~:!:°..:':!'.:!~~";,: Jum~.~d~eyclimba~~ ~~~~-·~~~~A~-------~------------------------1 d t b t d ,., .. "" ........... ,flt , ... to.I'll -• m oun o e osse over a Cil"'"· W1111e "°' ,.,.,.. ... ,, '"'"'" ,,. .. , ,,., .. OAKLA ND <AP ) _ Jim 30.root gorge . There's llttle •• 111 ..._,..,. ._.-.,, .,.. '"" "'....,., Pl _... recovery time to prepare tor the ::;:::, ;~": "~':'.~ :..-:-.. ~.,.: u ..... ett may need sur1ery on IS·toot ma.salve wall of dirt that ,.,. .. ...,...,....,_,.,.,.., .... ...,.,.. ...... hla ri8ht thumb, but the Oakland leads to a rbf.thm·brea'\.lnJ 111,..,..._.,.,..,S1M1._•,11•c1111111 Bald • q t b k h • "''""'• .......... 1..6119" "". ,_..,,... en uar er ac says e se r ies of of ·center a n _,..,.._.,....,. .......... ,..,_ never told anyone tb'lt the 'kttty~eredw~ee'•· Wllf ... 11 ..... •w c .... ~.-... ___ ..,.;humltn&J~e t1'Ju1reer. A1 the i14eA ...,. tfoie end of :J:. ':. ':...:."':.;;...~· w :' .. -: ''That story la blown out of ~e circuit, they Med to blut :r,::: • .... · · · ................. ~ proportion," he said Wednesday. through a maaa!ve sand pit and .,. ..::. =:-":. *:.!4:'.;.:.--:-.. ::; "Tbla '8 a Un1erln1 Injury but I one more catapult Jump before ..., .. .., ~·· or. CM11 CM1N11Y ""'*"' never mentioned to anyone that they make a tl1ht turn to the ~tit.":!":"·!.~~:..::-=-,~ it w., t.breatenln1 my cal'ftr. I stral1htaw1y to belin all over .... " ...... ,...,,.,.......M<••CMtA--. .. ___ i(n.:1~';.,:~ pja at l L.>c..--.i-~t9ttta.·a.. '911&.ur• m•'e _,_.._.. __ .~,:.\ c:r:!.:' ... ...:= ~= -tor • •. °"' ._.,,,.,... ... "' '*· OUTSTANOINC VALUES! 9*W 1912 YW RAllrT "l" SIOAH Super -economy with th is one• Fully equpped Including a •speed transmission. tinted glass. radial tires and trore! (Stl<. 3077) (01813 ). SAUPltlCE 55999 '" 'IW AHAAON'1" Fully eqUij)pid w1fh leetherette seats. tinted gle•. deluxe package & more l (Stk. 3028 ). (107289). List~ -SI 1.5'0 o-....-s1ns NIW 1912 'IW .JITTA Loededl Equipped with 6 •P"d trenemi•lon. air cond.. stereo & prep. (Stk. 30!56~ (474712). LW Prtce Stoll Dhu t SIMO SALIPllCI S7GOC ONE-ON-ONE l'CT s R<.1nd~· Whiddon 1 12 1 c1 ri vt.•s for la~·u1> during Thursday 's P CAA C'l<.1 !-.h \\'Ith ho~t Long lk;.1eh St Dl•fl•nd in~ for the 49e rs 1s Ke\'in T~ L' ThL'' pl;m a_l.!am~ S<1turda.\· ni~ht at thl· Anaheim Conn •ntion CenH·1 lul lm' tnl! In irw.., iH 1)8 t numph From Page C1 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 ca Ra~ still shak.e 'e01 up It may be the off-se ason , but everything's still a mess The Ra m s are simply relentless. E ve n durin e t h e ir s upp ose d "off-season," t he Rams are doing their best to grab a s hare of the headlines. Of course, as has been the Rams ' practice of late, everyon e and everything is In a state or chaos and confusion. ' Hopefull y, I 'll be able to sort out some or this mess for you ... but we're going to have to take things one step at a time. FIRST , LET'S d e a I with Don Klosterman. Some time next week the organization s hould announce that the gene ral manager has received a ··promotion .. to executive assistant to the pres ident (Georgia Fron ti ere). Klostermun. according to a reliable source, will become Georgia ·s right band man. What his duties will ~. however, are still questionable. K lostermun contends he will have more p<>wer unde r the new reshuffled a lignment. Others insist, though, that the move is nothing more than a gentle w ay to s trip Klosterman of his authority. Naturally, with Klosterman getting a boos t . that l e av es the GM s eat unoccupied . The candidates? Well , there are two. A ssistant gene r a l manager J ack Faulkner could get bumped up a notch -but don't bet on it. A more likely candidate would seem to be Ray Malavasi, who would assume the dual role of both coach and general manage r. FOR A LONG TIME now Malavasi h as yearne d for the s ame double responsibility that San Francisco·s Bill Wals h. Green Bay's Bart Starr and Buffalo's Chuck Knox possess. -"Ma lavasi believes ancf rightfully so that with suc h a power no one has to share the blame. or the credit. for a team's season. Thus. only one person is accountable for whether a team is good . . . or terrible. If Klosterman and Malavasi we re ho nest. they·d admit there was a lot or finger pojnting going on ' this past season. ~pile their statements to the contrary. ne ither side saw eye-to-eye very much with the other . Anyway, Klosterman is expected to move his m ain offi ce back to West Los Angeles. He will retain his space at Rams Park, too, but the word is he won't be around very much. JOHN SEVANO s ho.uld be an announcement where the new resp<>nsibility will fall." Geez. don't the Rams ever give anyone a break? • • • Next, I guess l sho uld bring you up to date on the Great Assistant Coach Search. If you haven't heard by now, the Ra m s announced Fritz Shurmur as the i r ne w defe ns ive coordinator . Shurmur, 49, has held the same post with the. New England Patriots since 1978. I reported in this column a week ago that the Rams would probably switch from a 4-3 defensive alignment (four linemen. three line backers> to a 3-4 <just the. opposite l. Ma lavasi, as of Thursday afternoon. continues to claim suc h a switch will not take place. Isn 't it ironic, though, that Shurmur jus t happens to be a 3-4 coac h? And that the Patriots played a 3·4 last year? Oh yes. as for Ron Erhardt. He shouJd be a nnounced as the team's new offensive coordinator today. At least he's scheduled to be . . although with the Rams nothing is certain • • • Just a quick thought: Why is Malavasi replacing _toac.he~ with othe rs coaches fro m "a 2-14 pr ogram (that was New England's cecord.last..seasonJ . -L---- 1 guess Malavasi will have to answer that one himself. • • • Fin ally, what's going on with Vi nce Ferragamo? We ll. as far as the Rams a r e concerned , they have assumed th~ position that Ferragamo will have to get out of his agreement with Montreal first, and then the Rams will approach him. ( Obvious ly. t he Ra m s don 't wan anyth ing t o do with Ferragamo's $450,000 contract with the Alouettes which, when you think a bout 1t. makes sense. '·I can see their point,·· said Ferragamo, who just returned from a two-week vacation in Ha waii with his wife Jodi <they're expecting their first c hild in Marchi. ''Actually, right now it's a wail and see ga me. My mind is programed to the tact l 've signed a guaranteed contract. I don't really know-whether Montreal wants me or not. .. FERRAGAMO SAID he has talked to Montreal owner Nelson Skalbania twice during the off-seaso n, but nothmg has been mentioned one way or the other. "If I end up reporting to camp, then l assume I'm going to be playing up there," added Ferragamo "llopefully, I 'II know something before I leave. though." Ferragamo is scheduled to leave for Canada in late May if nothing is worked out M alavasi has insis ted. however, if he does nothing else this off-season, he will have Ferragamo back with the Rams by the tim e Rams s ummer training opens in July . . " Here's a personal note to Georgia Frontiere: Arcn·~ you e mbarrassed by the fact he-medhrknows as macrras--TIXl.....,...,... ___ -t if not more ... concerning what's going on within your organization? Barons pin E~ison in wrestling The Fountain Valley High wrestling team virtually wrapped up the Sunset League championship Thursday with a come-from-behind 30·24 victory over Edison. The Barons needed triumphs from their four heaviest weight classes to turn the trick, after Edison had gone in front with successes in fi ve straight matchuP5 in the intermediate weights. Undefeated in Sunset League duals . Som e of the top m atchups of the evening Included Bill Alton·s decision over Mike Mino at 114 and J e ff Uyekawa of Fountain Valley returning to action after spending a lmost a month on the sidelines with pneumoni a In his m atch, Uyekawa scored the firs t eight points against Steve Currey. before Currey was ahle to retaliate and earn a tie. UCITOPSWNGBEACH • • • Of course, everyone is very hush-hush a bout what's going on, although Ma la vasi Lipped his hat a bit when he said · "We 're in the process of adjusting responsibilities. In the next week there Fountain Valley wall wr ap up the campaign against winless Ocean View Tuesday. Erin Riley was a winner over Paul Whitley in their hotly contested dua l at 157 . that's s pecat cula r ," praised 49er ·coach Tex Winte r, whose team had beaten the Anteaters in Its last 14 meetings, spanning 15 years . ''I'm pleased that we got back in the game . but we had poor judgment and played In a frenzy when we did get back into it We made the easy plays tough. I thought we could have won it..' Of course a lot o f conference opponents have felt that way after playing the Anteaters t his year "Whatever it takes to win. that's what we're going to do," said Magee. who finished with a game-high 31 points (he hit 17 of 18 charity tosses and grabbed 15 r ebounds> "I fi gured they'd be pumped up and ready to play. And I thought they did pretty , good without Dino I Gregory 1. we 1ust played bette r · · t-"-~ttt-~~rse-the-49ers get a quic opportunity to avenge the loss as they'll play UCI again S~turday night at the An aheim Convention Center I !Fountain Valley 'kickers stay atop Sunset The Fountain VaUey ffigh m en's soccer t eam remained above the ; pack in the Sunset League, while Ocean View easily disposed of winless Huntington Beach. Thursday j night. The Barons, 3-0-2, stayed on top ! arter posting a 3-l victory over 'Edison. Jim Jensen scored twice for 'the winners with Todd Andrews I . ~-so_c_c_E_R ___ ij, • adding a tally. Sandy Stracheo netted · the Char1ers' lone goal. Ocean View enjoyed a lopsided 8-1 i victory over the Oilers, giving the Seahawks six points in the Sunset ' standings. John Froustakis kicked in three goals, with teammates Ron Durbin and Robbie Sherry adding two I apiece. ~ In Sun&e l League wo men 's , activity, Edison is ato,p the heap al 1 4-0 after blanking Marina, 3-0. Three different Char1ers -Chanel Chavez. Wendy Winkler and Kelli Hartling - ! 1bared in the scoring. I Huntington Beach kept close with a • 3-1 record after nipping Fountain VaUey, 1-0. l Robin Stultz had the lone 1oal or &M contest ln the last 30 seconds from 10 yardl away, Gett.ins credit for tbe ahutout was 1oalkeeper Cathy I Rice. la tbe South Coast lAape, Dana HUii poMed a a.o wJlttewuh ewer l ~Valley. Laura Heizman I "---,.~ Wflift IWiff fUr ~ Dolphlna. 4-0-1 in ~a1ue and 10·3·2 o.eraU. -\ PCAA standings c .. iw-c. 0-.11 W L W L UC,,.,,_. S o 1' 1 Fr••no St•I• S 0 1' I ~n Jow Sl•le l 1 • 1 C•I SI•'-FullenO'I 1 l • It P'KollC 1 l l II UC Sant• 8¥0.r• ' 11 LC)n9 8H<ll Sl.41• S It Ul•ll Sl•I• ) ,. T-••Y'•S<0<"' UC lrv.nell,Long8H<llSl.41e6t Pac1tl< 100 Ulell Sl.4te 18 F re\no SI•~ lo) s-Jow St•••·~ C•I Sl•IP Fulltnon '2, UC S.nl• 8•r1Mre '' S..l\lr .. y'• Gamn Lono Bea<n Stai. at UC Irvine P•c1 t1c a1 Ut•ll Stat• Fr.-no Stale at San J°"' St••~ UC S•nta Barbar• at (al Stal• Fullenor> "I was telling (Rainer 1 Wulf that I'm sure they're s aying they can beat us w ith Dino." s aid Mc Donald ·-rm happy. but I'll be even happier af we get one more . Beating them once doesn't mean too much ·· ~~~s prognosis". .. , don't know yet ... said the 6-9 center 'Tm going to try to play but it wall depend on how I feel ·· "Dino should be able to play some Saturday," a dded Winter , "'but I don't kno w how much. We will play with what we have availa ble.·· Cc-rta inly Gregory's prese nce would boost the 49ers. but the UCJ players_c<:ntend they"ll be ready. · · 1 don t lfirnk Dino makes that much of a difrerence." said UCI guard Kevin 1-~uller of the senior with a n 18.7 average. "They have good talent whether he's in the lineup or not. .. "We played good at limes and bad at times. but we should have blown them out," added Wh ieldon. Blowouts or not, UCI is winning and that's what's important. Tennis classes set in Newport Beach The City of Newport Beach is offering it.s second four-week session of tennis lessens, beginning Monday, Feb. 8 at Mariners Park. Classes geared towards both beginning and advanced players will meet every Monday and Wednesday for four weeks. There will be different sessions for adults, youths (ages 9-l2) and pee wees (a1es 6-8). Registration wi 11 be accepted through the mail or in peraon at the Parks, Beaches and Recreation Department , P .O. Box 1768, 3300 Newport ·Blvd .. Newport Beach, 92663. Fees are $23 for adult and youth classes and $10.SO for pee wee classes. Youth baseball cl888 No.'s GBJ, 754, 759, 160, 111, 112, 118 ...................... . A CNllNlf.,........,, ... ., ... deck trlft , 1t111., "".,, for 1 smfffter ride. '12: ~·[2)1 Electric ,.;. FUEL PUMP Valvoline Automatic V T • • 0·1 ~ ,,ransm1ss1on 1 -..._ ..... DEXION II or ,,,,. FA 9 5c A"llMM hi JZ or. CASES, '""' .. ,, . . . . . . . . . . . . . -. #33006, 33008, 33009, #JJJ39 '288 . .. Fram Air Filter #CAJ89PLS~ Import I U.S. Allto Parts Specialists A class for youth baseball coacties will be conducted at Oran1e Coast COSTA MESA• Solith Coast Auto ta.ply NEWPORT BEACH• a-....ed •·•o n....S Colle1e. beginn.ln1 Tuesday. '1111' Ul•l NH r-• l The class is open to anyone. All 688 W. n.a.-Al Bristol • *2 W. Coast II...__ • phase!! ol lhe game wlU be covered. IMIUR L..U P,..J The iQtructor for the courte is OCC C~ ')~,, uatataAt ~~ M"1t..M~Cann _ --S:=~:-::=:::::-~-:=:"'..::.~=.-=.-;..-:...--:::-::--~:::-=-::1·::::~;:=-""":'~:::;;=~-::::i;:;::::::.MN~.J---~;_.;-;;;..;-•-----.• TM class will meet each Uetday . fr o m 7 :30 -9 :30 . For more• . ! , H I ( f '' l\J H () l J ( I ( I I '. .T I [ l I 'H I(' f ·-. l\ N [ ) M I\ y v /\ I u I\ 1 p td ~ T I ( 11) 1'\ I I N l I H F I 1\ I l t ' l ' lnform8llon, ~hone 556-5767. '· ~~~-~__,, , J -Or1nge Coaat DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 Tll llllHll l•1!L-I · ~:------1 Oranges' tennis T is Tb• CaUfom\a Oran1ehs of ~~a~nar:im acheduled 141ven mate es ConvenUon Center lhla ·~Tmfer. rour to T m Tennll expandicv rom ell:: t.euna wtth new entrte• ln Chicago. Houlton Dall•• 1tnd Phoenlx. Call rfl-'1910 for tlcket lnformatk>P. o ........ 1• Ho•• SclilMale . July 111 -Chlcaao: Ju~y ~'c~ ~:::~ Jul)' 21 Dallas : July 2 Phoenlx·. July 24 -Oakland; July 28 -· July 29 -San Ole110. Lakers' basketball ••••--• lle•e Sea.e.ae Feb. 3 -New York · F b Antonio · Feb 14 H • e · 12 -S..n Feb. 16. -SeatUe· ;~~to~9 12:45 p.m .. State; Feb. 23 _ '0en_v· . -Golden PhiladelJ>hla , Feb 28 C~c. Feb. • -March 9 ..:_ Ka~ -eveland, 2 p.m. Chicago· March 1 54•5 Oty; March 12 _ M h · Dallas. 1 p . arc 30 San Diego. m · i/'/{~ 2 ~ fhoenix; April 4 -PorUlllld Se~ttle ·~·' P.ril 9 -:-Denver; April 11 _: -Gold~~:~. Apnl 14 -Utah; April 16 All games played at the Foru games at 7:30 p.m. unless noted m. All Tfcket lalor111auoa · S7 ~ck~r are pri~ed at S12.so. SB.so and 674-rooo. more information, call (213) Running d Tenth .nnuil Worl 8 \JN DA\' be ln• at Chapman Muters flbrathon Ra~e be&lni al '1. 30 Colleae ln Orange. am. •io ter run al ume site belllns A tO.lh me 26-mll• marathon cour&e at '1:45 a.m. ~he rasteil. natesl course$ 11 rated one O• ln the U.S. eel l.lnlll '1 a.m. day of Entries accceptll ~~2.0380 ror more t)le utc.e. • lnform•\!on. h Tlllers rive and ,EB ' -Tromp for l e ·11 ...... Aid al · Races w1 ... '"" 10-kllometer r'(;'5· 8 Helicopter Station. U.S. Marine orpnat courae offerin& a Tustln. Fast alnd base Courae winds view of Mar ne Im hangers. throullh World War ll bl cteckln al 6:30 Race time ls 8 a.m. als ribbon! and a.m. Awards lncl~~~f:clude tickets to plaques . ~r P d Rams games. Lakers. Klngs ' an rr Farm Disneyland, ~ol~ ~!it~ T·shirt> or $4 Entry fee is . forms available al without. Registration rtln &ood stores ~ runninll shops and ~ce :enefils Tustm Ora nae County· . 1 . 8...-.. program Hlah g1r s ~·f -or more Information. Call '1:.>-7...,. Fifth annual Leatheme<:k MAY 8 M . e Corps Air S1at1on "' Marathon at an~ 385 ard marachon El Toro. The 26·m~~rse ·rs level, scenic begins at :J a.m. The Alhietic congress loop approved by d aid stations set up Refreshments an along course. . before April 9 are $8 Entries su~mit~dwithoul. Entries after with T-shirt an $ 9 w ll h T . s h I r l . Ap r il 9 are SS c:~lh~.3115 for more lnfo~malton. ~acquetball tournameni s E L F I of the . F I n a s Racquetball Classic Maauine/Spauldln& rofess\onals set for for amateun an~taneros Racquel and Feb. 12'14 al Loi \n Valley· SporU Club:._!_.°'°'f:d In d\v\slons for men Finals scncuU . m/open: seniors and women: pro ~ver for men and <35-years o\d itndmen); B/\ntermediale 30.and-0lder for wo and C/novlce de two Datsun 21os Grand prizes lnclu d'an Pacific Airline and lWO pair of Carla p~\1eS totals nearly passes Va\ue of a . 25 000 oo of eounll'Y 5 $ c'ompetiwrs to inc\ud: 'who have won lop racquetball plahye~ h<>\d in New York. · th r mate l'~ " d San pri'ics in o c . Detroit an Atlonlll. Clucago. Francisco. Kin gs' rema;~tng •chedule J an. 30 St Louis 2 Nc:w York Islanders i P m. · Jan 31 F'cb 2 -lfartford l: Vancouver, 7 p.m. ~· b P.m .. F'eb e - Pm.: Feb. 11 Q~e~c ~.30 Montreal, 1 13 at Pittabur h . · P m.: Feb. Pn llodclphla 14 . s Pm : Feb. 14 at Wushinaton 7.30 P·m.; Feb l7 -Calgary 7 pm' · F' bp.m : Feb. 20 _ • ···C24 Oet • J>.m.; Feb. 27 Chic1.1~0 7 l'Oit, 7.30 March 1 81 Q • • J>.m. ut Toronto 6 ucbe(', 6 Pm.; Marett 3 Boston, JO a m'. 'J!•mh: March 6 -at II 1.1.m.; M~rch 9 re 7 -at Hartford, J>.m .; March JO Ed at Colorado, 6:30 March 13 New York";~~ton, 7:30 p.m.: March 15 .,1 Ed at1de171, 7 p.m .. March 17 Cal ar ~onton , 6:~ P rn.: Pittsburgh ~ /m7 30MP.m . March 20 M lnnesota 6 I> . · • M arch 22 -at Winnipeg, 6' m :Mu~ arch 24 -at P m . Marc~ 28· ~~r 27 Colorado, 1 .Ma rch 30 at Calgar/ ~';ton. 7 pm . :JI at Edmonton 6·30' p.m .. March April 3 Vanco~ver ~ m . at Vancouver 7 P m • P.m . April 4 All tlm~ J>ST. Tennis tournament T he Congoleum ·Clu ssi(' tl'nn1 s tournament at La Quanta llolc•I Club neur !'aim Springs from Feb IS. tickets are priced at S'1. $8, SIO and Sl2 with discounts available for students. senior citizens and members of armed services. Series tickets uvailablc for SSO. For more information. call 345·2858 Will Oilers' bubble finallly bt1rst? Huntington takes on Fount<Un Valley tonight ; Marina tries to upset No. 2 Edison ~ ,. TWO BIG KEYS Corona del Mar High 's Kurt Petersen (left> and Huntington Beach's Billy Thompson lead their respective teams tonight in pr.ep basketball action. By &OGE& CAaLSON ---- °' .. M1¥ ~..... . . . picture and fading fast in terms of Cl F 4-A playoff Huntington Beach was picked to fmtsh fifth consideration. _apd_ th~~_arina Hiett Yikm~. w.er.e J.a..bbed..Jor_ .. fourth in the Sunset League, but as the second half of league play unfolds tonight, that's not quite the case. The Oilers of Huntington Beach Coach Roy Miller share first place in the lea.eue standings with Orange County's No. I-ranked team, Edison, while the Vikings of Coach Steve Popovich are just one game out of first in what has become a total mess for anyone who has to consider rankings. Ocean View, for instance, ranked No. 2 in Orange County, and No. 4 Fountain Valley, share fourth place in the league race -each on the THE BUZZ SAW continues toni1ht: It's Edison (4·1) at Marina (3·2>; Ocean View (2·3) at Huntington Beach ( 4· 1); and Westminster (0-5) at Ocean View (2·3). They're billed to begin a~ 7:30. ''I'm down to 216 pounds, says Marina Coach Steve Popovich. "It's the lowest I've weighed in 10 year.:;," s a ys the 6·6 former University <,f Wyoming player. "It's this season, everything is so intehse. When we were at Ocean View last week it was so loud, I was yelling at my players, trying to get their attention, and I didn't realize it but I had gone aU the way down the sidelines, in front of the Ocean View bench." Sea Kings • win it at the line . In other 7:30 games tonight, au s tarting at 7 :30, the Sea View League race includes Corona del Mar (8-0) at Costa Mesa (4-4); Saddleback C0-8 ) at Estancia (7·1); Newport Harbor <6·2) at El Toro (2~); and Irvine 0 ·7) at University (4.,.). Oden scores 27, blocks 12 in Irvine's triumph Laguna Beach (1·5) tries to stop a five-game South Coast League losing streak against visiting Laguna Hills (2_.) and in a non-league .game, Woodbridge High opens its home season against Vincent Memorial of Calexico after 17 straight road games, starting at 7. . Corona del Mar High used some clutch free l hrow shooting to stay atop the Sea View Leaeue women's basketball standings Thursday ni1bt • while Irvine squeaked out a win over cross-town rival University and Estancia routed Saddlebaclt. Edison gained another overtime win in Sunset League a ction while Ocean View downed ·Westminst e r and Fountain Valley e dged lluntington Beach. · Here's how it went: Corona del Mar 53, Costa Mesa 42 ·WOMEN Fou ........ V ... y 12, Hunt. Be•ch 5e Tbe Barons got balam:ed scoring from Therese AT MARINA IT'LL BE University of Puchalslt.i Cl6~. Deanne Davis (16). Sam Arledge California-bound Richard Chang and his Edison {15) and Lisa Ginsburg (13) to improve their teammates , taking their fast break and Sunset mark to 5·1. man-to-man defense against the Vikings, who have Huntington Beach, 4·2. trailed. 46-31, going been getting the job done with balance -four into the fourth quarter but rallied to close the gap. players average from 10·14 points a game. Fountain Valley connecte~ on 10 '?f 11 free throws Huntington Beach, which hasn't lost since oddly in the final period to hold off the Oiler s. opening league play at Fountain Valley in the first · "The game was evenly played and , called," said Mustang Coach Paul Kahn. Mesa actually outshot the Sea Kings from the ''We just waited too long to play catch-up," round, tries to reverse an 81·72 decision to the floor by three fi eld goals but CdM was the recipient of 31 more free throws. Oiler Coach Joanne Kellogg said. "We were down Barons, who rely heavily on the outside shooting of by 18 at one point in the fourth quarter." 6·3 guard Jeff Hughes. Kerri Carr led Huntington Beach with 13 Billy Thompson, a 6-1 junior, has been "It was fairly close for three quarters," Sea King Coach Karen Gearhardt said. "We came 1.:-__ .lhJWliD~tll· ~.soJme_;bi£_fr~ throws and stcone board work near the end." points while Tammy Buckets and Cathy Townsend averagine 14.7 points per game In his last four contributed 12 apiece. starts, but was held to only three points against Fountain Valley the first time around. O~A V"6ew 45, W••tmlnater-2.9----------:fi·trrtane, -re-e-senior ,-is avera,rtn . The Seahawks captured their second league Sunset League start for the Oilers and one of the "1 don't see us out-fouling them by that much," added Kahn, "but I guess that's caJled the breaks of the game.·· victory of the season. breaking away from a key matchups tonight will be Lane and 6-4 Ken one-point advantage after one quarter to lead by 12 Harter of Fountain Valley. The Mustangs, 5_., were led by Shelly Neal's 12 points. CdM's Lisa Greenberg led all scorers with 15 points while Heather Estey added 13. at halftime. Tammy Webb led all scorers with 17. while Pam White ( 12 ) a nd Karen Chase ( 10> also recorded double-digit performances. Westminster is 0·6 in the Sunset League this lrvlne 58, University 54 year. Kim Oden had a season-high Z1 points, pulled-Mater Del 58;-Bi•hop-Ama'-'3 _ down 18 rebounds and blocked .12 sh?ts ~ lead the Senior forward Kathy Dorman and junior Vaqoei:os to the come-from-behind wrn. . guard AJonda Varis co combined for 34 points as Uruvei:slty got out to a 32·22 ~allt1me lead the Monarchs upped their Angelus League record before Irvine, paced by Oden and Lisa St~ssman, to 4.2. re~unded to turn the game around in the final two Dorman had 19 points, while Varisco dished periods. off seven assists to go with her 15 markers. "We. were down by 14 <early in the third Laguna Be•ch 53, L•guna Hiiis 47 Ru!Jtlers, Cougars tangle LOS ANGELES -Golden West College can move. into a tie. for third place.in the Southern Cal Conference baske tball standings tonight if the Rustlers can knock off host LA Southwest (7:30). GWC, 3-4, will be out for a little revenge against the Cougars. It was LA Southwest which started the Rustlers off on a three-game conference losing !'ltreak at the beginning of league play. The Cougars (4·3) handed the host Rustlers a 91·88 setback on Jan. s. '.period) before we woke up and started playing Maryele Leeds poured in 29 points to lead the ball," Vaquero Coach Glenn Patchell said. "They Artists to their second South Coast League win· ---------------------1 :Came to play. They pressed the whole game and against four defeats. ieally took it to us." The loss kept Laguna Hifls winless in South Slessman had picked up her fourth personal Coast play. ·foul in the first quarter and played the e ntire second half without fouling out. She finished with 14 points and 11 assists. Dominic Trammell had eight points for Irvine while Elaina Oden. KJm's younger sister, had four points and 14 rebounds. Monica Contrera led University scorers with 14 points before fouling out while Brenda Zimmerman added 12. The win improves Irvine's Sea View record to 5-4. E•t•nde 13, S•ddleb8ck 16 The Easies upped their Sea View League record to g.3 behind the double-digiL scoring of sophomore Amy Hathcock. Debbie Hushes and Sherri Carpenter. Hathcock scored 17, Hughes 16 and Carpenter 12, while Hughes and Carpenter added 14 and 8 rebounds, respectJvely. Edlaon 51, Marin• 41 The Char1ers went into overthne for the second consecutive 1ame and a1ain came out on top, as Shelly Trepl and Mary Krupka each hit tree lhrowa ln the extra period to provide the marlin ol victory. Krupka led Edison scoren wilh 16 points while Tina Denffeyer had 11 polntl and 14 rebounds tor tbe c...,......, 5-l. Jlanaa'a Maraaret Lonaa was UM 1ame'a n~wa 11potnw•ft1Pllft'tl6QI' to lreep the vnttnp from dropptns to 2-4 ln Suuet elay. -- Mlask>n Viejo 59, San Clemente 41 Cindy Rohrig had a game-high 20 points and Darcy Sm.Ith added 14 in leading the Diablos to their sixth straight South Coast win. Rhonda Radin led San Clemente scorers with 16 points. This week's Special 1• CADILLAC SEVILLE Two tone paint, leather covered seating area, Cadlllac wire wheel covers & full power. (873YMV I •14,995 Cadillac Voltlf ProtttlfonSnt1tc• Agrttmmt Auoilablt i11cw.-...-'•"""''* Al,......,..,.,.'- ~'. · · .-'.Dl llD TllAT iilu-~ wrrll ....... -Miii.' 7 t2600 Harbor Blvd. ..,....,... C~M81C1 (714) 540-1860 IN CALIFORNIA'S PALM SPRINGS AREA! A Great New Golf Course Resort Home Community Invites You! The Southern California desert's newest, most exciting resort home community is now underway on the Jack Ivey Ranch just S minutes from Eisenhower Hospital and Bob Hope Drivel Choice golf course • • l<fcations now available ... ... i.----a selection of over 20 different manufactured homes. ~""!!!9 Pools, tennis, recreation... ~ desert vistas and sunshine. .,,,. L!J . ~ rr <<MWWGLa Off Interstate 10 at kubic load WrlleToday 1 ;;.-,;;;----------oco;. . I J1ck Ivey Ranch Country Club frff aolf pass I P.O. 8od6S2,PalmSprings,Ca92263 Included. Write I ,..._~111t""'1fb<ochl>'~tftd,_,..,.10n for col0t : 1111or .... 1.o11 brochure. map 1 Name ________ _ and retervatlon I lnfonnatlon. Address ---------:--:-:-' _. __ AOMlielltt t Ctty::~.:....;_-===== ~I State Zip CORONA DEL MA&' invasion of Costa Mesa is the top attraction in the Sea View League. Cdll was a bucket better than Costa Mes~ in the fint --ro und (thanks to M"ike 'Hess with four seconcb-left)- and it's becoming a do-or-die situation for Costa Mesa if the Mustangs are to realize their first CIF playoff berth in 16 years. Corona del Mar's tough man-to·man defense is a big item, led by Chris Lynch, Hess and Kurt Petersen, but the Sea Kings figure to be forced to the perimeter again by Mesa's zone defense. Costa Mesa's offensive threat is Ken Bardsley, a 6·4 UC Irvine-bound senior with a 19.1 scoring ·average in league. CdM is working on a 13-game winning streak. 26th ANNUAL 300 ACCESSORY DISPLAYS '-) \ . \ . ti ) 1 • ~~ • ) / I ) ( ) ll \ ) H I v I\ I I I V\(1rl(j·, rrn)~i \·><pt 1r1::-,1\1' 'Hi!·· '·: 400,000 SQ. FEET OF EVERYTHING THAT FLOATS FROM DINGHIES TO OCEAN-GOING YACHTS \".., ' j ~. 1 2 \)(II I 4 • ' \I~ ~-~ ~ • ' ' ~ . . . • , I i' I ' •-• . . . . ' ~ ..FJshlng World" with saltwater 11111 freshwater fishing seminars .... water Siding I Lum-to-Sall Schooll ' -I -i E fl Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 • • • H caught 1n an avala n che • • • start swimnnng By IOllN 8£VANO °' ................ Plenty of the white, fluffy stuff fell •II over the place the put week, especially In the Sierras. All that powdtr makes It treat ror skiers. but It also · make11 cond1tlon1 treacherous around the slopes. Jn particular. I'm talklna about the top or the mountalns where avalanches are a possibility. Naturally, resort.a WOT'k hard to p~vent such an occurrence. but It one should happen do you know what to do? Believe It or not, if you are caught in the rush or oncoming snow you s hould use swimming strokes to keep above the now. If you feel yourself going under. use' your hands to pack the snow away from your face. Snow bas a tendency to set up quickly and what you want to do is form an air pocket in front of you. Then s tay calm and breathe slowly. If you p~nic and try to dig out wildly, you mostly likely will run out of air and exhaus t yourself simultaneously Weekend television Saturday's TV. radio TELEVISION Noon (4) -COLLEGE BASKETBALL De Paul al Syracuse. 2 p'.m . (4 ) -GOLF -Tllird·round play in the Andy Williams San Diego Open. 2:30 p.m. (7) -SUGAR RAY LEONARD'S GOLDEN GLOVES -This 26-week series presents .regional teams or young amateur boxers in a series of elimination bouts. 3 p.m. (4) -COLLEGE BASKETBALL - California al Arizona. 3:30 p.m . (2) -.CBS SPORTS SATURDAY - WBA lightweight champ Art Frias (23·1) defends his crown against Ernesto Espana (33·3) in a scheduled 15-round bout taped at Atlantic City. N.J . (7) -PRO BOWLING -The finals of the Quaker State Open, taped at Grand Prairie, Tex. 4 : 30 .m . (28 ) -SOCCER AD 5 p.m. <2> -NFL'S BEST EVER. (7 ) WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS -Vikki deVries or New.pon.-Beach -is. . .among the competitors in tfte- U.S. ladies' figure skating championships. taped at Indianapolis. Also: The Duke Kahana moku s urfing classic. taped off the coast of Oahu. Hawaii. 6 p.m . (50) -SP ORTS AMERI CA - Highlights of the Big Eight women 's volleyball championships from Kansas State. 11:30 p.m. (5) -COLLEGE BASKETBALL - Oregon at UCLA. RADIO Basketball -Long Beach State vs. UC Irvine al Anaheim Stadium, 7:30 p.m .. KWVE (108 FM ); UC Santa Barbara at Cal State (Fullerton), 7:30 p.m ., KWRM ( 1370); Oregon State at USC, 8 p.m., KDAY 0580>; Oregon at UCLA, 8 p.m .. KMPC (710). Hockey -St. Louis at Kings, 1 :50 p.m , KPRZ ( 1150). Sunday's TV, radio TELEVISION 10 a .m. (2) -NBA ALL-STAil GAME - Kareem Abdul.Jabbar of the Lakers is in the starting lineup for the West All-stars in the annual game from East Ruthe rford, N.J . (4 ) - SPORTSWORLD -Olympic champions Dorothy Hamill and Robin Cousins are among those laking part in the second world pro figure skating championship, taped at Landover, Md. 11 a.m. (4) -COLLEGE BASKETBALL - Wake Fores t at Arkansas. 12:30 p.m. (2> -COLLEGE BASKETBALL - South Alabama vs. West Virginia at Morgar.town. W. Va. 1 p.m. (4> GOLF -Final·round play in the Andy Williams San Diego Open from Torrey Pines Golf Club. (7) -AFC-NFC P RO BOWL -Six rookies and 25 first-time participants pack the squads for the 12th annual game, telecast from Hawaii. 4 p.m . (7l -SUPEll~IAllS.:=l.911Superat.ar __.~a~m='p,,...1·on Boo seagren heads the list or veteran competitors in the second men's preliminary, taped at Key Biscayne. Fla. - RADIO Hockey -New York Rangers at Kings 6:50 p.m .• KPRZ ( 11 50). Christine faces big challenge By ALMON LOCXABEY ...... , ................ SA~ DIEGO -Thirty .eig ht crack kltemat1onal Offshore Rule sailing yachts will head south Sunday al noon in the fourth biennial · San Diego to Manzanillo yacht race. The number of entries is the same as started the race two years ago and many of them are repeaters. The battle for line honors is only slightly changed with Fred Preiss' 84-foot custom sloop Christine, Pacific Mariners Yacht Club first to finish in 1980, taking on the 67·fool u'itra-light displacement sloop Merlin, under charter lo Mike Satterlee, San Diego Y•cht Club. * •• • • • .... ,."''"· ~ffft vc M .. 11 .. 167·11 (IUlom tlOfPI Ml< .. HI s.tt.r•, SOYC. Mlclrlltf\I Su11 IC .. oa t•·•OI Ol<k 4rftuon, SOVC . Mt. -lu CC&C-401 l(•ltll Mor .... , l.Af'V llM<" Havr vc. HIOll l Tral" ISC·SOI Ml<11H I 4twallam, "--' H•r11or VC, Oct••I• CSC·SOI Sl•wert l(•tt, 11...W.•YC. ... lk .. I!...-l"arr4'1 Wllllanl. Craw. lleflture YC; """'••era csw ... m -.. ow, Ac-.uk• vc. ..... ,.._.. ... ,., J ... 9« .... Sll••r Gau YCJ llteftet••• CNel.-.171....., "'"911, SOYC. Sa•ta 1Hollaftd·40) llet•ll• "•r11N. ~· Ye; Secret ..._ CSC·IO) .,_. ...,_, 0.. .... YC: SI•~ l~I Jee~. l •llle C«l_I_,_ YC; '-'""" Cle"1.-11Jfl~-4I) ~ (tll ..... M.O MIUry, SOYC; Sllll'lll'ler wl,.. 11 ..... "., .. ,, ...... ,,,,. .. .,, f'Mklll,CIYC. Tlll'IWr Welt• ,,..,, •• , urry '""'"'· ....... ,.. vc: '°"' ...... IHellaN_,11 J.-ift Ar•ll'lt, IYC; ,, ....... ,........,., lltk"*"' l(Mtfl, IOYC. Warrler CCMIK .... I Al '-I. tcYC. n It#' r..-..., _ _.,.r o11-.., J_,Cel ......... YC Of rourse. the best way to avoid any of this 11 to observe all marked boundaries at akl areas and always be on the lookout for slide conditions In the back country. • • • A COUPLE OF NEW possibilities have been added for those people who want to learn to ski, SKIING and those others who have fell in. a rut lately and want to advance. First, Squaw Valley has opened up "Ski Any Mountain," an area entirely dedicated to the needs of beginning skiers. , The theory behind the mountain Is to have new me mbers train for "three.to-fi ve da,ys" on the beginners slope a nd then advance to the more HYDRAULIC FLOOll JACK PRO· TECH H MINl wl -1 /2 TON 21 PllCI SOCKn sn PRO-TECH 69 EA ~·Drive. Drop·forged olloy, heat treated & nickel/chrome plated. 4 97 SET StOfldord -1805413 - Metric · #805414 IMPORT CAR REPAIR MANUAL ~gg~:· ~ •7029 1088 SPARK PLUGS .. Sl•NOatO 77 c Eoch •U•St09 88 c UMIT Eoch 16 'LUGS f0t ,,,_, Oo•w"' !Ivy 1981 I O)'OIO• ll>tu 1980, Hondo• •h•w 1979. eo.,, ....... u 1981 Ch_,. l..,.""" 1990 For most Oouuns with single ignition and Hondo (Civic & Accord) 1965·78 For most Toyotos with tingle points 1967·78 For mos1 VW's 239 1964·78 (Exc. Robb1t,Scirocco,Oosher) Kn VW's (Robbit,Scirocco,Oosher 1975-80 2~: IPAB PLUG wm SITS For most Ootsun's 1968-80 (Exe. 1980 200SX), Chevy luvs 1972·80 Toyota (Corono,.Ml<ll,Celico, Hi-Lux 1900cc)68·79 For most Hondos Ford Courier 1974-78 V11n 1954-77(All) S..11 .. 1954-71 Von 4 19 SET difflcult terrairus. The mountaJn l1 open to new alders or all aaes. On the other side of the mountain, Northstar, near Lake Tahoe, Is offerln1 four intense. on·lhe·slope clinics to lake sklert who want to take their skills to a higher plane. The first clinic was conducted this week. The next ohe will be offered March 22·26. A "High Performance Skl Clinic" is scheduled Feb. 22·26 • THE LOCAL BALBOA SKI CLUB will show a cum of helicopter skiing in Canada, Tuesday night (8 o'clock> in the Empire Room al the Newporter Inn. Non·members wtll be c harged $1 for admission • • • FOR THOSE SKIERS needin& a vacation idea, TWA is offering a new tour package entitled "Getaway Ski the Rockies and the Alps." Combined with newly·announced TWA super Wl'RI MILPlllG YOU DO n lllGHrl PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1982 Prestone 3!! UMIT 12 GALLONS SUPER FLUSH •emov" rodtotor tlHI ond ooly r.-idve. Sofe ond _, to UM. 22 oa. NEW-MASTER WATER PUMPS • ski farH which offer• dlacount.a u. p to a percent la the U.S. and 55 percent to Milan (Italy>, tM packages, according to the alrllne, represent tbe lowest rates on the market. The 11 resorts TWA offers packa1e1 to In tbe U.S. include Aspen, Snowmass. Vail, Steamboat Breckenridge, Keystone, Copper Mountain , Wlllte; Park, Taos, Snowbird and Park City. The aeven-day paekaaes (10me 1ncludinf-.. free car and ski rentals) start at $231 per pel'IOn (lift tickets included). As for TWA's foreign packages, they start at $270 per person (double occupancy) for seven nights lodging. Ski cities over seaa Inc lude Cervlnia, Courmeyeur, Bo rmio, St. Moritz , Cortina D'Ampezzo and Zermatl Any one or those trips ought to make for a pretty good vacation. • WIRIWH:=RS 13" wh .. l-415300 14" WhHl-•5301 12•• -IS" Wt!Hl-#Sl02 EA Convert your wheel cover to o lo<lci"9 unit wiril LOCKING ADAPTOR Kii Fits most 13". 14• & 15" Import & Domestic Gori, except 14" & 15· front wheel drive models. ~~ 20!cH I .-~u.Q~• II I • I Vlks 197 4·80 Rabbit, Scirocco(Exc.Olesel) 7 29 SfT NOT REBUILT 'recislon mode lifetime lubrica tion Replace worn water pump• before damage For Most 12 Volt Ca rs (Eacept Import I cor1, Chrysler Ptoduct' with reduction i -A ••S -i gear and storters with buih-in .X _io_le_no_id_1 _or_wi_._th_s_ole_n0t_'_d_mo_u_nt_ed_. ____ _._C_H I I I I I PCVYALVll Ke.ps the air cleon. For most 129 Ootsuns. For most Torotos 1965·76 EA Dllftl9UTOll CAP A llOTOll For most Ootauns & Hondos (Civic & Accord) 1960· '80 (Exc.160·280Z, 41 l Sedon Station Wagon, l520P/U 1300cc) FOf most Toyotos 1967·'79 (Exe. 2M & 4M .... Eng., Corono 20R Ensi. & Hi·lux) ~EA liM moot Volbwoo"'' 1964-'80 Anaheim · 3 19 IA 1280 N. Euclid • 772-9840 *Anaheim 2340 W . Lincoln Ave.• 999-1621 Buena Park 5256 Beach Blvd. • 994-1320' Costa Mesa occun. For most Chevrolet (becept V-6119.5.5 7 9 6 Cyl & l-6 Models Ford Mercury 1961 ·'66 8 Cyt 1221 ·260 and 289 with Alum111um Housing) Oodge·PIImouth tE.acei:it 4001 & 4'40 Engine 1972·'80 8 Cyl Oooge·Plymouih l 60·'80 6 Cyl 17!! fOf m;;i ChevrolelfEacept Corve"el 1955·'76 8 Cyl. 1283-307·327·350 EngoneJ For MqSI ~ords Before 4/ 121751963·'75 6 Cyl 20!8 (144.170 200 240 Oodge ·Plymou1h 1959 '71 8 Cyl • E•CH Ford·Mercury 196S·'71 8 Cyl. (3S2·390·426·428l F0t Motf 12 Volt Chrysler product1 with reduction geor, and 1torten with built-in '°'9noids, or with JC>lenoid I A 19XCSH I mounted. (Except Import Cars) Tt HEAYYDUIY BltAKE SHOES KASCO-S.t of 4 bonded shoes for most KS 1 -27-82(004) 'Fullerton • KJ RlABlm 2978 Yorba Undo• 996-4780 •La Mirada 15081 Imperial• (213) 947-5641 •Mission Vi•io Auto Supply Wl .. 1 lllLPlllG YOU DO ft' •IGHI' 24510 Alicia Pkwy.• 951 -9175 Orange 1100 N. Tuliin • 771-3000 •11venide 1739 Superior Ave. • 642-3314 Fontana 9880·0 Sierra Ave • 350-1441 'fountafn Valley 9880 Womer Ave. • 964-6427 •Fullerton DAILY 9-9 SAT. 9-6 SUN. 9-5 10'403 Magnolia Ave. • 359-3041 •Santa Ana • CIC ~ 1'41 E. Imperial • 731-6971 -- 2604 s. Bristol St .• 754-1432 •Santa Ana 1302 E. 17th St. • ta 6061 a . Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Frh1AV January 29, 1982 r.-------~----_.;. ____ ....,. .... ....,•••cCN1••••1tC• PedfllDk..._ • L ll'tL .. UNrt )I II 111 ....... It I) .... l\o't ........ u 11 ·* • ~--n .. .161 1 ,..,._ u II .161 1 s...o .... IJ a •• " .........,. ___ S...A11!Dfllo ti 1• ... , 0.-r u tO .w ""' .......... fl n .. 1Yt IC-City 14 ,. ... ... "' Delles ,. ,. ., .. u u .... 1J 2' ., .. IJ ~••coet••••tte• A-...C.,..._._ ...... )J 11 ,, .. • .. .... • JY, n tO ,JI• fYt 20 u .'5S ltlo't HHIJeney1 " ,. .442 IJ C-Dhr ..... A1111w-.-2t I• .67• Atta11i. 1' 22 ,.., • I...._ It 2• Ml IO Cllk ... •• 1j Alt II 0."91t 11 » ·-11Yt c---• ,. Ito ..... ~··"-L.8lleft t7. "-"'• ., 9"'91111', Cleveland ICN Nflr Yft IOI, W~tl ......... "'· PfWi..ipN• 101 S-A_. I». IC-.S City I IS CO...... 1&11111 Ill, Chic-110 Mllw..,._ 1~, VIAii 101 ~-.S...0-..t:J , ........ o-... e;--~ L.Mlen 17, Sun1 17 ......... -R~ 11, kott 2, ....... IS. 0.... U, 0. ,,..,.,_ 1•. AU<y t, Hence • •• ..., 4, ~o. Tolels: "1).101. LOI _.Lii -R_.s 0, WllU. 11, A~ ..... JI, E. -12, NI-22, .,..., 2, C-r 13, McA-•· Tolels: •MS-17 -'7. k _..,o-rtws "'-la II 11 1• 2'-11 LMA......, U It 11 lS-'7 ...... ..,._.._ Tolel~-Phoeoola 11, L ....... les 20. hcMIUI -L.-~ c.c.11 Riiey, A -14,tD. COLLEGE UC lrvtne 71, Lona Beach St. II UC taYl .. I -Wuff •. McOoneld 1•, ~ )I, Fuller I, Wllleklofl It, JOf\11.n 0, T..,,._ s. Toe.ls: n ~ 11. ~HACH STATI -Leck 2, leno IJ, Tye t , ....._.. 14, J......_ s. Tay""' >. McDealtl 1, SllM 0, McCrM o, -,, t, P..,_S,T-:JO•ll ... ... ...._:UClrvN,- T-._,.., UC lr¥1M i.. .._ 8Mc11 SU• 21; ,._ out: ""etM (UC lrvlMI, -..., (Lofl9 llNcll Sl.ttel, PeyM l"-BM< .. St*I. HMIH ICHOOL STANDINGS ... VlewL•avue c----E.e-la ..._. ___ c....-.. Uft!Wnlty u..-• L • 0 1 1 • t EIT-t ....... ' Sa•uu c• o • , ......... _11:•1 ........,, H..-•• El Tero c..-... ,,,., .. c ... Mew ,,,,.... et Uflllwrslty t •JJI 2 •etEllWl.t SunMtLI~ W L H ............ IM<JI 4 I €.._. • I ..,.. ) l F--. ......... ..., J J ~........ 2, .....,......., 0 s ,......,,._0:•1 ..... MwN o-911 W L IJ 2 IS J 11 • • • IO t , 11 1 " t 14 o-911 W L tO • 17 2 11 ' n ' II I 2 I• ............. ....,, .. H_......, ..... ........... Oceall ........ louet!Coe .. Leeoue u..-0-.-• L W L • ....... Vltje • 1 II IO CllJl ... -V .. tey 4 2 12 7 0.0.H'* • 1 12 6 -~ J J IS t L....-Htlb 2 • 1• s ~e.ct\ I S I 11 T_.19-0:a 1 ~""" .. '--... " ... ~et Mluloft Viejo ........... c..tltr-Velloy Oc••n View 45, Weecmln1ter 21 WllTMl..STaa -"-s 2. GuUwle IO, ,.,_., .. t, K-1 I, F_.,m O, T•1t1 II 7·14"· OCa ..... YllW -C ... M 10, w.-17, Gaeff-'· ...... 12, se-J • , ..... " M•'5. tc.. .. o-- Wtttllll....., H S • .._" Dee.,. View IS 16 • ~ Tete! loulS; -mlMter 14, Oc.M1t View U~ p.., ....... , 1(-l IWtttmlftllw), Lagune BeKh 53, Leg. Hiiie 47 u.•uu HILU-SNeMll t, MelMfet 16, Autllll I, C ...... I. R-.n 2. l(ew ... I . Tolalt: II IM••7. u.•uu NACK-McK-1. w1111ams 1, Kur-IO, Ulda 1', Wooch t, ,,...,._ l ,SmltllO, Tatalt: 2211·1SU. k_.., 0-.-.. L ....... Hiits S I• It 12'-47 L..-8Mcll 10 11 > D-U Tol•I fouls: Legune Hiii• ''· L ....... .. ec .. t•; Fouled oul: 511ee11.,. CL ....... HlllSI, l(ff,..,. CLeo1111• Hllltl, Austin (L .... ,.. HIH1I, CN lll CU.-Hllltl, Smltll ILeou11e &Mdll. Crosby Southern Cet ln9et...e~ C-1 .. Int .... ~ Ed Oou91WrtY U.~ 1111 &rltlDll ,,.,._.., O.vkl T...,. ,...,..._.. CNp leek »-31_.. Jim w11ne ,,__ Mllcll Mooney JS.n-.t .,., llwrton »-»-ti Jey CudCI 34·- Rn .... , U.,._.. .. .., ... s..-1 >S.,.._.. TIMGr-»47-111 ..... .,~ ,....._'° Ste-J-3S.JS-N _, F"211u9" ,..._1'0 ... Fonl U.>7-1'0 Lerry Mia >S...-11 Merk Mc~ lS.16-71 Mike II-.,,_71 Mike ia-r U-,._71 Jeff ,...,,_ M-37-11 flute" lelrd J1~1 Dove S-Js.»-71 Renell' Hanno Jit-.a-71 J.wt Elam JS.#-11 O.vld....,. ,..,._n T.,,.C...... ~ .... ..,.., »-a-n T.,,.J_ ~ ler1 YMiCOY ..-..n JellftTr.. ........,, ArtSclll..... .......... o........ ., ...... C""'I•........ .._,, EdS.-....,_.. TOllYC_. ....... -----...._,. Jtllft--........ ... L....... .........,. .......... .......... .._...... .......... MICllMI.... ......_,. ....... o-wr .......,,. Jim---......_,. Celvlfl~ .....__ Maril~ .,......,. SconS...... ....._,. T.,,.Sc......,,_' 11~ Mk Met.,,_ 11.._,. Milek._..., -.....n Rk •e.w ~ MIU.,_ ....,. PeulW'-»11-1' Mike _......, Jf.a-15 Mickey Slloldtr ......_1S T...,. s1or.., 11·»-n Okk G..u .,._,. II-HlsMy .. ,._,. 1Ceno1.-111 .,._,. Rocky~ J1.,.._7, Ron COlnmonl J1·1t-16 Am• Oollu u.--n ,....,,..,. *31-n J im McLeen 41»1-n Tom Grom ~n CNr lie G'*"°'1 n .,._,, Jtck M<CMtc.... ~ Ool'9 --*'31-11 AftgeNa ~ ....... Hall 41-#-71 -0-.-tlW Pr-...._.,. • L • L Tommy A""°"' Ill • .._.,. :-:1-i'r.~-;•;--~J~tc~I "r=:"-~~·'-------.:!·r-" 2 1 7 7 Stevew..._ ......_. ~ ~ I: 1: Al J....,_ JMJ-.C2 ........ -11:•1 ..... .--... ,,,_-..... ,.,., -......r'•--17:•1 ....., Dal ,,,_ Sorvlte et V-...Cla H"" NtGH SCHOOL WOMEN lmne 51, Unl .. rdy 54 u••••MITY -c.m ..... I•, u-• 7, ll-12, HlllH t, H.-1 t, v-.. t, .... I t at; ttwflt-T-'t:tt•17 J4. •••t1ta-~ I•, T,....me11 •. K -09fl f7. E. 0... •. M911t1 t, _.. 2. Fl.,... I. T-b Ui.IS51. k9w .. o-rtws ~ 10 22 10 11-)4 1,.,,IM 1• I IS f1--• Tetal loollt. Unlnrslty It, 1rvl110 17; F-IM wt: Centre••· CdM 53,'lom MeN U ceiT& MaSA -L1111 •. l.emer t, NHI It, Garcia .. ~I 2, McAleer 0, Prlc:o o. lllllll•1,... 7.Gr.,,,,..,,O. T""9b: 20H4. COllOle& HL M&a -Eswy U , lrltcee J. Remnoy t . k•IMl•ll 10. Osc"n•r I, ~IS, 0..1. Tole": 171 .. l' U. tc.. .. o-rtws C ... Mele II I) 10 ~ c--•MM u n 11 1>-sa Tt4al "°*' &e111e Mou t•. C•-... Mer •; F~ out: Lu• CCOlle MeNI. ••r<I• (Coll• MeHI, McAIHr (Cost• -.1. . I.._. 13, Seddlebeck tt ft'l'MCIA -~ It. VetcMf 2. C .. ••Y I, MecMlllle11 I, 5<"•'" •· .....__ n, HUlllB "-T ..... : au.a. ....... eM:lt -TON-t, ,,__ t, ~&. -hlll O, --•, ,,_ t , ..... , .... "' "'-.......... , ._ ... ,_L...-n ti -J er C-. Jffry Heltterl11 Cll9 c ... -cc1. n -.... ...,_, J-. Umlne 11,..IM Coesl CCI. .a -CNp 8t<k. Hellf"y Hlt<lleocll I lrvlfle Coett CCI , .. -Devld l'Mre, Rollerl c .... rc1 CLA OVl11t•I; JoflMy Elem, o ... eo.,., II .. CMl'l'Ofl CCI ; Tim Gr-. MlcllMI Drucker 1111 Clll""' CCJ; .Jeff T'llorMefl, ~lc'-"I McO.nlel C&lo C....,.. CCI; 1111 l r1"°"· O.vld In.. CMhlloft VleloCCI. U -Jim WNte, l.AONrcl 511-C919 Ce1111011 CCI; Mike e-er, 1111 C_., Clr¥1M Coett CCI; €d 0W9fltrty, Eric Welton 191o Cell""' CCI; Woody Flt ......... Jeck HHll lllllllall W.ll1CCI. Sen Dtctgo Open J-yMlller Funyl- Mer'll LY't GH Mor .... &rvce,.._.. Me«ltH-y Celwlft,,_ Mlkeo..elcl , .... w-Cr•llS ...... , JeffMttc...i Lou Gr.....,, OollJ-v Cw1l1Mr.,.. l'tlll"--k NIOF ... Daft He~ eHICeltat V..-<e~ L.....,M~ J a<llNkk- OeM Ollll6tY JlflllClelV n~ lJ4D-..4$ ~ ~. D-Je-47 ~ ~ n~ ,~ J~ »-11-41 ,....,.._.,. ~ JS.l&-41 ...... ,..,,.... ..... ~ J~ ,......... ~ ........ J4.JS.--tt llnC.._.. Oewe •••-Al-. • ...... J ...... Onoeen ,., .. ,..-w 0.A.W..,lfll OoMLM.., .HMIC°"' o...•-Oe!llT .... I ,_w.._ 0.Mrl...,. 1111....., ,_,IAf ....... Oer.,H•~ll Jim OOftt Hal Su ..... c-s-R•y ........ IOl'O Mlft-A.._. ..... Lerrr Ne'-~A..,.. -..lrwtll Mlllere.-, Jellllk ....... ,...,~ Jlm T ........ JnHht Mlk•Svlllv111 kenHtc" L"'Nletwft Ed S..... .... ,_,...,.., ........ ... 'lllltM• 0Mf90 ...... L-•Te11l.-a ... E • .._. Re11S1;-Mllle M~CllllOllOfl AllMIMllter Miko Hellalld lruce Li.mM HIR ..... o. ..... k....,_ RMCWI MMkO'--• Mlk••·-Woedy •lacllllllnl ..... yGardNr .... l'C..,.,_, TCll'lllClte Oen Polll Tim Sim'*"" FM C ..... 0.¥1d Gr ....... Pflll R°'len Ar1 Well Jollll~ ClllClll R_..,.r AIGel ....... ,.,,. Pur1- Tffry-., Pet MCGowet1 8er,..,H..well Lefl11leCle-1 loo&yman 0.ftftll Trlaler J .. 0, ... 1 .... ,. OoOolet• Rod Nucr.oo11 Steve Spray Mlke SmlUI Merli Plell 9000y Hlct.ols Oouo&IK• OevklEdw- OOft Levlfl e·Kevl11Sl- J.C.Snffd JO/lft Llllff &lllyC- TomJ-lns 0-.. Atcllff Jec•R- 9111y 9eUler Ctert110R- fff•Y OleH Jlm8er1»ff Oete 0QU91etl Gibby Giibert R.H. Sl!lfl VlclorR09111-Rete &ott\ Jerry P ... G ... ., McCord Sco1tsi,,_, MllleNk- 0-G-.. Roe.nT...,._ Jim Colben Geor .. SMnrtoge Gery Trlvi-.o K.,.G,_ RllM--.. Alel!T .... ICaltllF .... !MtwL...._ .._,...._.. ... A ... c ........ ..,.,.,,,__ .......... ~,........ T_,,.._ ..... u.MI T_,Y..._ f'rollllC-, .... ~ ...... ........ ,_ ..... ,.., .... ...., ... '"'*"-1..eny •--0-. ........ ... J_, Ofee"-' ... ,,,... _.......__ JlmP'orrW ~ ........ Malll•Milty ...., ...... lteffy l'u!U Neftcy~Mettoft Cllldy Hiii Ll'M Aela!M Jerilyn 8rltr Myre Vet1Hoose Oot Germeln LeAn11 C•sedaY s.,-.,c~ Mery o_, Ke1"y W""-"' llOOlll W-0.le ~ ........ Joyc•K~I Dellllle "-IC-Y PoMlowelt Ly1111 Slr-y Sylvl• llertolacclnl S.Mr•P- &erNre M11reftle KeltlyHlte J-·-k 1NM1o e,..,.m AlkeRll.- J-Jo'l'QI Gell HlrAI Aleaenclre Rel-OI ktsyltl"(I I(•'"' Martin Petllr-y SM!leyHe<nllll C-"JoCelll_, Mer .. Sl-leld MertMH..-PetMlllerGletNn PelMeyen Selld•• ... .,.. .. •5-Ledd DonNWNte ..... ~ VlcklTellof' 9erNreMoaMSt Merty Ok-er.n Holly Hertl•Y Lori Hu 11t1o1c1 Yuk• Mor'9uc"' DetlMeAultlft CetMrlN°'-11 °"""' C-' letllSl- JoAnM C- VIOISlft(lleton YeaoOk......., JO Allll~lo SWl'OO'"'- JoA1111W"'*" vMe111,_,... 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JS.JS-10 ,..,._,. ,. __ ,. »-»-JI )6.H-71 ll·:M-71 J~I »-D-71 Jl.D-71 JS.»-71 J6..U-71 J7·J4-71 ' JS-16-71 •u-11 U ·>7-12 »3'-n .Jl.is-11 J14S-71 Jt.»-11 lS·J7....,J2 ,..,._n ,..,._n ~n ,..,._n ,...._n u-a--n -.,,s--n >Ws-71 -.u-n ,,_,._,, ,, _ _,, »-ll-n >W4-n ,,.,.__,, ,...,.__,, "41-n Jt.n-n •»-n »JS-11 •21-11 U·»-JJ >1·»-13 31·»-n ~ u..,._n J7->1-7• ... ,.....,. ,..,._,. J1.J1-1• ,......,. 11.Jf-74 ,..._,4 ...._,. ,,_,,_,. .,.._,. ,,..,,_,. ..... ,. ,..Js.-74 ,._.. 2t II 11 1$-4.) • •• q • • • • t-16 ,.... ...... : E•-1e• . ._._k '· Play Better Golf with JACK . NICKLAUS EVEN RT G0l-F'5 TOP L.SVEL...5 MRNV TOU~NAMSNTS ~~VE ~E~N 1.,.0ST t:»Y ~AV6A5 WHO FRlLEO TO ALLOW F~ AN INCREASED ROP.ENRL\N FL.OW. &0 ~EEP IN MINO T..,.AT, THE MORE CHAROkO UP '(()\) ARE , THE FRRTH5~ .,. "'OU'LL HIT ~ THE e:,AL.\.... ......... od~artl TllU•lb&\''I •llULTS , ........................ . •1•1T aACI. O.mlle lrot. flCllel R_,, (L ....... 1111 II.• t.• ).00 r ... uno ' .. " .. 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CAftd9r.nl •.OO 2.llO U O Sneeky ,.._ 18•kerl J IO J.00 Mr. Gun R-.r COe-rl J.lO AllM> reced: Sle¥0fllc Duke, Etoquenl Roy s. Andy's "-" 0.llff. Ounte•r. AllCIVt Ubet. Time 2:01 3/S . U IJIACTA CHI peld '34.$0 SIJITH RAC1.o ... in1 ..... ce El Mee H 10-yl IJ.00 7 00 UO Lord LO(lall (Longol 7 «> •.JO Wellere ITOold Ill •.olO AIJO ••~•d: Geme llobble, Soul"••n Rllylllm, l(llr, Derby Loro, Moll H-y Pot»l•r. Rec-• H , S....IU H . Time: 2:004fS. SSE XACTA 12 .. 1 peld l 14'.00 SIVllNTN RACll. OM ml .. pece OfftlW-IT-1 10..0 4IO J«I Ertenl• ICrewtorcll • .0 S 20 Armbt•J-IP-... 1 JJO Al• recect· C~lllul, Frotly Sll-t, LC'• Byrd, Cep OulleiM, 0-dele Led. Ardltn• Perry. Time: 2:01 JfS, U UtACTA CHI peld '25'.SO II.MTN •ACll. OIW mite !Ml<• lloflnle LAM H C llell.,.I 12 JO S 60 l.60 Summarsr.-ITttMtrl 1.60 >AO Gelle.-C~I >.60 AlllO re<ecl• ....... Key, H._. H-8reellw!M, Soloflklk•led Ledy. Llttle Al~ """'· r-.•s ~. ttetty ttorM • Time 2 00 NINTH •ACI. One mite !Ml<• Miu O•Y Girl (Cr09f*\I 14 40 UO S • .O Bye &ye Trecl CA.-.l 11.00 S IO SlloM of Hanel IGouclf,teul • «> AllO receo: Super Sue H., BetOMM CIWlt., K•Y-J-. Lome"-"''· 81ue S<>mme<. Fte~yCNtly,G'91F-l Tlma: 2'00 •tS. U EJIACTA 14-21 POICI '11110 TaHTM llACa. One mtle-• Olmenl• H-CC>ttomerl1..10 •JO J.lt GrlSIOln I LJthlf\l(IJ lUO Ue Jutt •~cc""'*'' •.oo Alto rec.a Royel Enerd H, Jemtt G••tte11, 91~ So;r9rlse, Able 8-, OfftlcM H, Jeu Ftt11vel, El Cebello A. Time: t :OO•t S. U aJIACTA (S,..)) peld '71.to Attelldante: •,1'01. Sena.Anh TllUIKOA Y'S •HULTS C ..... ......, ... i 'I M _...l ···"~··""~ si.·s~c•-..> s.ta uo uo ~TIN C~wel 4.tll 2.tO lellUKle CSlblllel JM Al• rec•: lulllifl PNI, Neturelty 0... ._.,.. IWllwe. *'-'• Prl11<es1. Me,,... ......... Time: 1:11. HCC*OaACl.tfw......_ l"9M LedJ , ........ ~, .... l.00 t..io v• 1Mc-.,.I J AO 2 JO l',_F,_CO.-..yeJ J20 AIN recea· R-·s 1.eu. Time For tteek-lls, Ilea Re isin, sw .. 1 Accent, Sc••l•t O'-. Foy H-y. 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" ,., 1111 ,~·s S<- MonlrHI •, &o.lon 3 SI. Louk •• Mlnnesol• l T ........ '•G-HY R-n el COIOreao lluffeto el EOMOflton WrHtllng ,-..,v~•.E.._24 100 -Gll'f IEI de< Slre<ll, .. 1 n -., )7 x ii u .. .. .i • .. 60 " • I) " .. w ,. J) 107 -S. Mino ( FV I p Mc LellQlllln, • 00 II• -Al-CEI dee M Mino, 11·• 121 -UY't..-e IFVI I. C.,,,.,, M 111-Alllef1 CEI de< '"°"'-· .... ll' -Por1noy IE) aec Rk llaras, 7 I 140 -Holtort IEI dee. Cempbell, , .. , U1 -OO!Otteln CE) dee Men<llln, 1.s ISi -Alley CEl de< Wllllley, S.l 161 -"9111rrt IFVI Cl<!Co Htlrl<k, 11·1 111 -R-1 (FVI p Zemnwell, l » ?ln -Okkff'°"CFVI P Pel'1lff,3 M Hwl. Abllll,. I FVI p C"'lellO, I 11 Men's toccer ,........ValleyJ,E.._1 Fou"t•lrt V•ll•Y 'cortno J•n••" t, ,, ..... , Edlao1t oc0f'mq 51,.KMn Oc _, ..... """" ....... 8-11 I OcHn View KO<l"O Frous 1 .. 1~ >. Sllerry J, Ourbln J. Smith ~unllflOlon lie.Kii .corlno Swick Women'• soccer HIOMSC~ E._l.t>.~k4 Estancle tcor\119 G•lda J. T110mt>t0n 1 H_... ........ llM<ll 1, F-..0'°' V .. lel'I Hunllnoton a-en \Corino Slullt Edl-J,-....et Edl•on 1coro110 Cll•ver, Winkler Hertnno 0-Hlltt J, C ... v .... , e Oen• Hiii\ ocorl119 Heitman, H ... n Britton shadowing Doughe rty lb HOW.\aD L. HANDY °' ................... Ed Dougherty, a veteren amon1 the youn1 pros competlnc in the Crosby Southern 1011 t9urnament at Irvine Coul Country Club, took the flrat·round lead by one stroke Thursday with a round ol 33·3~ on a rainy af\ernooti. Dougherty, a pro s ince t• and touring professional alnee 1975, started on the 10th hole and was 3·under par after five boles of play . But the leader was over shadowed by youn1 Bill Britton from Staten Island, N.Y. who fired a 30 on the back rune which included six birdies and finished the day with a 37·~. "I played great the first nine Che also started on the back side)." Britton said. "It was a nearly flawless round. I had six birdies and had a gOQd chance al the other three. ·'I was putting good and hit the baJI very well off lbe tee. But after 10 holes, I was just SO·IO. I think lhe rain slowed me down a little. It was lousy about that time." Dougherty was happy with his round that included six birdies and one bogey. ·'The course played wet and we were rained on pretty good for a couple of holes. But I was putting pretty we ll and that helped." The leader is from Linwood, Pa. and was a club pro for six years before joining the tour. He has never been a winn er. There are s ix players lied al 68 after the first round including the defending champion Mitch Mooney who had three birdies and one bogey during his round. Chi p Beck is fro m North Carolina and would like to see a second tournament every week. ··I· m not going to fly home every time I don't make the field and it's nice to find this type of com petition and the type of people who put this tournament on . ( made about two 30·fool putts today." Beck had six birdies but abo had three bogeys. Jay Cudd of Atlanta, lives only a half mile from Augusta wher e th e Master s championship is held each year. His goal is to play in the Masters and he recalls the times in bis youth when he used to sneak across the fence and play the lllh. 12th and 13th holes , then make a hasty retreat . "l made two bad iron shots on 15 and 16 (actually 6 and 7) or I might have been lied for the · lead." he admitted. He was 5-under at the time of the two bogeys. The two-day event concludes today including the partners' better ball competition in which Cudd and Jerry Helperln of Big Canyon Country Club and last yea r 's winner with Rex Caldwell, leading by one stroke. Mille r: H e takes advantage- = __ _..__5ML.OJEGo CAP> -Johnny .~ Miller knew what he had to do. "You know you better take advanta ge of this North course," Miller sajd, "because the South is very tough. maybe three. four Titurlldey'1 tranaec:tion1 ctasauu A--..iLMtw &ALTl~E ORIOLES Tr-0ouo DeCl11c••. llllrCI betem•n, •nd J ell Sc-..... pit<..,, to Ille Anvtl• '°' Den Fonl, IMfletdff. CHICAGO WHITE SOX -SIQMd 1( ... 111 Hickey, pltc,..r. •11d Ric• S•ll"•lmer, cetc,..r. TORONTO &LUE JAYS -Slon•d Demese Garct•, M<Ond basemen, lo • •••·Y••• ce111rect. ••rr• &01111eh. O\ltflelOer, encl Jim ClencY. Jff'Y Gervin ·enc1 Mer11 ..,_., pllC:N r\, to_ • .,.., U11trtct'- ......_. L ..... HOUSTON AST ROS -SlgMd Terry PUil!, OU"leld9t, toe four • .,.., t:Olllre<I, -l("o Gercle, ll'lfle-. lo•_ . .,.., conlre<t. MONTREAL EXPOS -H-Tomft>'t Tllofft..-,..... ... , OI S.11 JOM of t ... Ce llf•u•I• L••fwa; Mllbry len•dlcl m•11•1•r ot Je mn1ow11 111 Ille New Yerll·"-~encl.,., 11-. m._- ot c....,., ...... p~ .......... NEW VORK METS -AMOUll<ed INI Elllt V ...... IM. outfleldff, ..... --lo lffma Oft•-.,.., colllrtcl. ,.OOTeALL ................ L.NtiW RAMS -H ..... Fri!% Sllurmur .. .....,,.. llN <oacfl. ce>u.1•• HO,.STAA --.... ..,_lei ..... .... llellCet<ll ' UTAH STATE -El!telldM , ... contrecl Of •~ Sft.,..r, Mecl f-11 coecll, '""""" J.,..,.,..,, HIS. shots tougher." So Miller toured the 6,667·yard North cour se in a s olid . n o -bogey , 7 -unde r -par 65 Thursday and tieOFuzzy 1.oeller for the first round lead in the Andy Williams·San Diego Open golf tournament. Zoeller also played the North, the shorter and easier or the two layout used for the first two rounds. Mark Lye, however , had a 88 at the tougher . 7 ,002-yard South course . "As far as I 'm concerned, Mark is the leader," Miller said. As an illustration or t he relative difficulty or the two courses, the North yielded l2 scores of 68 or better, the South only three. The players switch courses for today's second round. with the last 36 holes to be played on the South. Gil Morgan was one shot ott the pace after a 66 at the North . .'J'om Watson, seekJng to re1ain bis pos ition as golf's leadin1 performer. topped the 1roup •l 67. Also al that figure were Mike Donald, Calvin Peete, Morris ffatalsky and Bruce Fleisher. Fleisher played the touch South course, the others the North. Jack Nicklaus opened hla Zlat season on the tour with a 81, Including • double bo1ey-t, on the'South. Tom Kite, the 1911 leadin1 money-winner, matched par 72 and POA champ Larry Neltaon shot 70, both on the South. At the North, Britlah Open ldnt BUJ Ro1era and defendtn1 c:bampion Bruce UetJ.ke each bad a '11 and U .S . Open cha m p David . Graham had WILSOH FOID -Ford MEISTEl._rc>RSCHI/ AUDI -=-..Porsche, Audi HUHTIM&TOH •EACH HOMDA -Honda IEACH OLDS/MAZDA -Oldsmobile, Mazda CUVIER MOTOllS IMW -BMW ~--'-·--~------.-..~------·----------_._...---~ Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 Featuring the newest models. lntro•ced the past three months. SANT A AHA CHIYSLB/PL YMOUTH -Chrysler, Plymouth, Delorean NEWPOmt IMPOITS -Jaguar, Ferrari, AstOfl<Martin, Tri1111ph. Rover PHU..S IUICl/PONTIAC/MAZDA -Buick, Pontiac, Mazda JOHNSON & SOH UMCOLM/M~CUIY -Liicoln, Mercury o.a. HAAN CHIY~/PL YMOUTH -Clwysler, Plymouth J SA'D' •ACSY AUIY IMPOITS -Subaru, BMW JIM ~II«> YOUlSW A& .. /ISUZU -Vol~11tn. Isuzu • IAIB MOTOllS -Bliek, Isuzu, Jag~r THEODOll IOllMS FOID -Ford MllACU MADA -Mazda SOUTH COAST DODGE -~ge . HOW AID CHIVIOLIT -Chevrolet IOI LOt•P• PONTIAC -Pontl3C SAMl"A AMA DODal -~ge ------~DATSUN =-OatM rl I IM Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday. January 29, 1982 It II , 0 ,, r ,, I (i n ll • r. :• I I I I I I I I I I I I I $ave on New Chevys =·--···•·: : 1982 : • • : CIT -PRICE : ! Chevroletsl ! ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• *Brand New '82 Ct.vy • K-lack Chevette Coupe! ·• • • 1.6 titer engine. B.U. • lites. radial tires. H.O. $5698 • .._, battery, buckets. etc. • •,No.~7. Mewo.IJ ···············1~•..t.•••····· •*Brand Ne~··•z ~hevy • Fleetside S-1 0 Plcku ! • Tinted glass, radio. 1.9 p • • liter engine. radlal tires. $6298 • • B.U. lites. etc. • No. 4429t46935. Mew CW, ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •*Brand New '82 Ct.vy e ~Door Cavalier Sedan!e • Pwr. steering, radio, 1.8 • liter engine .. tinted glass. $'"' • etc. • · No. ~4817072. ·Mew CW, 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• e *Brand New '8·2 Chevy e • S-1 o Fleetside Pidcupr • • V6 engine. pwr. steering, ~~.ed glass. lvger tank, $'"'. • No. 246917055. Mew CW, • ........................... e *Brand New 11'2 Chevy e e Cavalier Hatchback Coupe!e • Air cond .. pwr. steering. • stereo. spt. mi rrors, s7999 • tinted glass, etc. • No. 7629tl6933. Mew CW, · .......................... ~ •*Brand New '82 Chevy e •·~~.:{~·~.Pickup! : steering & brakes. ve. SJftl • H.O. rears, etc. • .. No. 0903l6890. New CW, ,a ........................... •*Brand New '82 Chevy • • 4-Door Cavalier Wacpn! • • Air cond .. pwr. steering. ' • • tinted glass, tilt whl .. etc. sa 191 • • No. S438J6855. Mew CW, I ~ .........................• •* Brand New '82 Chevy • • Cavalier Four-Door Sedan! • • Air cond .. pwr. steering. • • ~:~.whl .. 1 8 liter engine. sane • • No. &49217006. Mew CW, A •........................ .., 9* Brand New ·at Chevy • e Celebc HY. Fow--Door Sedan!• • Tinted glass. edlals. 2.5 • • ~~~~ engine. vinyl bench. s1399. • No. 6267(7143, New CW, A ............................. •*Brand New '82 Chevy • e Citation 4-Door Hatchback!9 • Air cond .. pwr. steenng • •• ea.b~~· radial whites, 58698. • No. 002616957. Mew o.1J • ............................. *Brand New '82 Chev 2· an ru • Air cond.. big mirrors. • • pwr. steer. & _brakes. big sa91• tank. H.O. spnngs, etc. • No. 8:1>917016. Mew CW, • ··························~ • *Brand New '82 Chevy • lnmala Four-Door Sedan! • A~Ofo~i7 cond.. radial • • whites, tinted qlas.s, V6. saa98 • appearance option. etc. • No. _8847(7118. New CW, •• ............................. e *Brand New '82 Chevy • • Monte Carlo Sport Coupe! e Pwr. steering & brakes. • air cond .. A~M. radial $9398 • • whit-. etc. • -No. 5005.l6946 ..... °" ~························~ • *•and New 182 Chevy ·• •Cca11& o Snort Coupe! • Air cond., AMtfM~ • t~t • whl., tinted glass. V6, s9499. • whit-. COWlfS, etc. • I No. _4481/708:4. • ~CW, •• ~· . ··~········· ... ·~ 1982 BMW 528e has improved gasoline ,mileage A llhou1h the 1982 changes, tbe 528e's dra1 BMW me may not 'ook ratio has been reduced 1ubstantlally different. by 15 percent. ll h. a It h aa a n e w b ody city MPG rate of 22 and des tin. a better MPG when there 11 no rallna and a llahter, acceleration, fuel is smaller eniine. reduced In order to keep T h e en 1 1 n e l s a · the engine id Una low. slx·cyllnder, 2. 7.titer, ,lo"! rev, bllh torque unit. The BMW also baa an on board computer, a ne w Intake mllnifold, modified combustion c hamber, a higher compressfon ratio and smaller vaJves. As a res ult of its The 528e has a new instrument P•nel , electronic heal control and cruise control. All of th e 1982 s ix -cylinde r BMW models will feature digital motor e l ectronic s . The microprocessor controls r,owered by a 3.2·Ut•r fuel lnjectlon, Idle n-Une six enaine with a speed, fuel Intake, h l1he r compreulon emissions and taniUon ratio. It has an ana101 Um ina. fuel -economy readout The 7331 is driven by a with the .options of 3.2-liter In-line. six with c r u i s e c o n l r o 1 , a n I n c r e a a e d automatic transmlsalon compression raUo. and lim i ted slip C r u l s e con tr o l ii dlfferenUal. st.andfll"d on the 733i. n· a l s o b a s a t r I P The 320i Is probably c~mputer, e lectronic tbe least changed BMW chmale control and the· for 1982. It has a 1.8-liter options ~f a utomatic four-cylinder e n1ine tr~nsm1s~ion ~nd with a fiv e -spee d lilruted slip differential. gearbox. It has an EPA T h e 633 is also cityraUng of25MPG. The BMW SJk 'features . a liz.cyliflder 2. 7-Liter. Low-rev, high torque engine that reportedly improves fuel economy bl/ 21 percent. Interior room has been increaaed and the . air drag ~ been clecrea.aed 15 percent. Pontiac 6000 has modern desiQn and advanced engineering Pontiac Mot o r Available in first level Division has designed and LE series as a and enli.neered the 1982 spacious four-door sedan Pontiac 6000 lo be a or cont em po r a r y l~an, contemporary two-door coupe, the f t v e · P. a s s e n g e r , Pontiac 6000 is powered front-wheel-drive car. by a fuel-injected 2.5 Although the 6000 was I it e r four. c y Ii n de r based on the General engine with three-speed Motors X-car platform a utomatic transmission and powertrain, it is a as standard equipment. ~om.pletely different car Approved EPA fuel 1ns1de, outside and economy ratings for this underneath with ride powertrain combination and h a.n d Ii n g with opt i onal air chara~t~rastic~ that cond itioning are 25 make 1_t . mtemationally miles per gallon in city compet1t1ve. driving and 40 on the Ford to produce propane cars t'ord Motor Company will begin production in February o f pr opa n e -fu e l ed passenger cars for the United States market. The propane option will be avail able with the Ford Granada and Merc ury Cougn and initially will be offered onJy to fleet customers. However , beginning with 1983-model production next fall the option will be available to aJl retail customers. ''This option can provide a n attractive alternative, particularly to fl eet operators who always are looking for ways to reduce opetatlng costs," Philip E . Benton, vice pre s ident of Sales operations, said. "Propane is particularly well suited to high mileage accumulation and high-idle time, intra-city a pplic ations . The biggest advantage or propane is its price, which historkally has been well below lhat or gasoline and diesel fuel." Since propane contains less energy per gallon than does gasoline, this means that overa ll fu e l co n s umption may i ncreas e , de pending upon application. With s lightly higher fuel consumption, the overall s a v i n g s c a n -b e substantial, due lo lower ru~ costs, Benton said. Propane currently costs approximately 50 cents per gallon less than unleaded gasoline . The propane cars have a 25-gallon fuel tank which is mounted on the underside of the vehicle. The vehicles have a range of about 500 miles, a 30 percent inc r ease over gasol i n e -p owe red Granadas and Cougars . Propane-powered cars also have the potential for longer spark plug life; improved oil and oil filt er life ; reduced cylinder, ring and valve wear ; r equire less carburetor maintenance and should experience less exhaust system deterioration ; according to Stuart Frey, vice pr esi deut or car engineering'. Ciera: 600 lbs lighter and 25 miles per gallon Oldsmobile Division's suspension. A new V-6 Cutlass Ciera offers an diesel enatne is optional. E .P .A. fuel economy The new lineup in the rating of 25 MPG clty Cutlass Ciera, LS and and 40 MPG highway B rough a m s er ie 1 driving. includes both sedans T h o s e e c o n o m y and coupes. fi1ures are obtained Among tbe hilhlighta with the standard 2 . 5 . 1 i le r en 11 0 e . are a weight reduction Equipped wl th the of_ more than 800 pounds dlvialon's 4_3.Jlter V-e and dual rectanaular he1dlamp1 and diesel e n1lne, the bumper·mounted park CuUUI Ciera la rated b7 and tum lampe. the !!.P.A. at 28 MPG c i t y a n d ' 2 M P O The Ciera aJlo bu an b.ithway. AM radio with two froet The new Ciera models speakers and ftxed mut feature tran1ver1e fender -mounted en1lne, body frame antenna. A. new featun inte1ral and .ontMCMra .. thelkle MacPbenm at.rat lront window cWoaer . . highway. The Pontiac 6000 fue l economy leader with aluminum wheels and no air conditioning is rated at 26 and 42 for city and h ig hway driving , respectively. Optional engine choiees are a 2.8-llter gasoline V-6 and quiet, thrifty 4.3-liter diesel V·6 . The Pontiac 6000 has a contemporary exterior de sign with clean , balanced inte«rated lines. The 1982 Pontiac 6000 LE (above and left) features slim, rectantular-theme instruments that are deeply recessed into a full car width panel to minimize reflections. The dramatic wedge shape of the Pontiac 6000 with a low nose, hi1h rear deck and a lean profile is the result o f many hours aerodynamic tuning the surface, contour and de t a'i l to mini m I z e fu e l -wa s ting wind resist ance. The end result or all this effort is a drag coerrtclenl of ).374 , making the Pontiac 6000 one of the m os t aerodynamic sedans available in America today. Small. flus h back windwhield and backlighl m o ldings improve aerodynamics and reduce wind noise in the pa ssenge r co mpartment. An understated black front air dam is highly effective in improving aerodynamics whi le moving ample air through the radiator. S ubtle charcoal accents are utilized extensively, both front and rear, in place or traditional bright work. Designed-in quality also was emphasized on the Pontiac 6000. Gaps and sea m s w e re eliminated in the front fenders, hood and rear quarters by using a "wrap-around s heet m e t al " approach instead of the normal end caps front and rear . All bright moldings are bac ked with bl ack OUR COMPLETE INVENTORY OF CARS & TRUCKS ARE READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! CHECI OUR LOW PRICES plastic o r rubber b ezeli ng and have finished ends for better fit, appearance and corrosion protection. All upper and belt reveal moldings are insulated from the body with black plastic inserts to avoid corros ion and unfinished metal ends. A restrained , functional interior with a fresh statement or automotive luxury that ls international in flavor complements Pontiac 6000's experior design. S 1 i · m , re ctan gular -theme instruments, including standard warning lights or optional gauges, are deeply recessed into a full car width panel to minimize reflections. An inverted V -spoked steering wheel gives maximum visibility of all instruments and controls , which are designed and laid out to be easily seen, reached and operated. A standard Delco 2000 series AM radio (may be deleted for credit) is on first level models and includes a digital clock in the LE series. The standard radio and other optional stereo ve r sions all hav e upgraded sound quality in 1982. Vinyl or optional Pompey cloth seats with ce nt e r a•rmrest appropriately appoint the first level Pontiac 6000 models and Durand cloth contoured seats handsomely tailor the higher-level LE series. ,Reclini ng , highly co ntour e d , open-headrest Viscout bu c ket sea t s are optional in first level trim and a 45/45 seat with an optional recliner is available on LE models . B ecause o r the aerodynamic, high rear deck and efficient use of space in s id e the full -carpeted trunk , luggage capacity for both coupes and sedans is more than 16 cubic feet. Specific engineering objectives for the Pontiac 6000 included s ub co mpa c t fuel eco n omy with i nte rnalio nal -c I ass l eve ls o r ride and interior quietness and outstanding quality. For a n interme diate car, Pontiac engineers believe they h a ve c reated a completely new feel and driving character in the Pontiac 6000 with a "mechanical identity," using refined and upgraded components. Pontiac engineers b el i eve t hat th e standa rd 2 .5·liter electronic fuel injected engine has achieved a world r eco rd for gasoline fuel economy. 626's GLC's RX7's BEFORE YOU BUY! YOU WOl'T BE SORRY! The contemporary celebrity ii another new 1hape from Chnrolet (abow). It combinei the style of the Malibu. the ~l economy of thB the CitotM>n .and the coach quality of th,e Cavalier .. The view of this four-door, five-paaaengrr udan ilbutrotes the low-MSe, high-tnmk wedge shape and sharply-defiMd trailing edges that translate into reduced aerodynamic drag. Both two.door and four-door model& feature 16-cubic-foot trunks. The celebrity is nearly one foot longer than the Citation. ·. Japan-based Mazda has record year with compact GLC leading returns Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday. January 29. 1982 .. Chevy introduces new sedan The tm Celebrity ...... a new abape in Chevrolet family aedana - combines 1m1U·c1r fuel economy wlth blt ·car ride, comfort and 1tyle. Speclllly deaj1oed to appeal to America's expandin1 mid-sized ramily markets, the Celebrity la about the same size inside u the Mall bu, altbou1b it Is about 500 pounds U1hter and a foot shorter. A Cuel -injected four-cylinder en1lne and an automatic transmission are standard equipment. The combination delivers an EPA-estimated 25 miles per 1allon in the city; 40 mpg highway. Two V6 en1ines -one gasoline, the other diesel -also are available. Other s tandard equipment items include power 1teerln1. power braket, AM radio, aide window defo11ers, full wheel covers, radial llres a nd body side moldlnp. Three Interior trim levels are available in both two-and four-door models. Both Celebrity models feature live-passenger seating and a cavernous 16 cubic-foot trunk. The car's pronounced wedge shape is the res ult or extensive wind-tunnel tuning which produced a .38 aerodynamic drag coefficient -the lowest e ver recorded on a mass-production GM sedan. Robert D . Lund, Chevrolet's general manager and a vice president of General M ot or s, said , "We ex p eel Celebrity to appeal to many motorlata who bou1ht smaller cars in order to obtain satlsfact.ory fuel eco nomy o nly to discover they sacrificed com fort, s pace and presU1e.'' •'In addition," he said, ''It should alao attract current fuJI and mld-alie car owners who have been out of the market for a new automobile because they were unable to aet Celebrity -level fue l economy and space in a single package.·' The new Celebrity is being brought t.o market almost three years after Citation , the first generation or front-wheel drive cars fro m Chevrolet, a nd b oasts m a n y e ngineering refinements. The two cars share a 104.9-inch wheelbue. But at 1•.a Inches, Celebrity la almost a foot lon1er from bumper to bumper. Enhanced by a atyU•h aerodynamJcs-conacioua d ealan which yields wind tunnel measurements clOM to those of s treamlined s ports cars, CeJebrity haa a highway fuel economy rating of up to 42 miles per gallon when equipped with the o ptio nal 4 .3-liter VI diesel and a 16.6·1allon fuel tank. City EPA rating is 30 mpg. With its 2.5-liter engine and a standard 15 . 7-gallon fuel lank, Celebrity travel ranae can exceed 600 miles on the highway. A 2.8-liter V6 gasoline engine is optional with EPA ratings of 22 city and 34 highway. Toyo Kogyo Co., Ltd., the Hiroshima-based manufacturer of Mazda cars and trucks, has announced revenues and .profits for its 1981 fiscal year, ended Oct. 31. per c en l from 1980 any model produced in has been manufacturing because of export the 50 years Toyo Kogyo vehicles. restraints. OveraJI ~~_..;;.~~--"~__;;,;__~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Operating revenues totaled $4,963 million, a 12.8 percent increase over reve.nues of $4,399.7 million in fiscal 1980. Ordina ry income - income before income taxes a nd extraordinary items -was $174 .3 million, up 5.2 percent from $165. 7 millJon last year. Net after-tax income was $85 million, an increase of 26.5 percent over 1980's $67.2 million. Factory unit sales for the year were 1,245,696 ca r s a nd trucks , including 77,200 knock down sets . Tot a l production wa s 1,254,502, including 76,620 knock down sets. A total of 376, 130 units, or 30.2 percent, of the 1981 unit sales were in the Japanese domestic market , while 869,566 units, or 69.8 percent, were export sa les. Exports to the United States and No rth · America declined by 5 export sales, however, were up 13.9 percent world wide. The GLC hatchback was designated the 1980-81 Japanese "Car of the Year" in a year when 137 new models were introduced by Japanese manufacturers. It also received numerou s other awards, including Car and Driver Magazine's Reader's Choice Poll in the United States a s the most s ig n i f ican t new imported car, and in Australia , Wheels Magazine named it "Car of the Year." Factory sales of the G LC ser ies , which con sist s mostly of front -wheel -driv e three-door and five-door hatchback and four-door notchback sedan models, showed a strong increase of 58.6 percent over the previous year. Production of the new front-wheel-drive series r each ed t he 500,000 mark within 18 months of its May 1980 start of production, a record for Jaguar uses wood, leather ·inside XJ-S Jaguar's fastest and mo s t s ophis ticated model, the Vl2-powered XJ -S sports car , has a co'lnpletely new interior for 1982. The XJ-S is the first Jaguar sports car to use wood trim since the 1955-57 XK140. Richly grained wood dash panels will replace the flat black paint used in earlier XJ-S models, due to customer demand. The use of leather is much more extensive. Besides leather seats, the doors , a rmrest s , Fe&t"-querter panels-end su n visors will be trimmed in leather. Power -operated .exterior mirrors have been added a nd the steering wheel is now leather bound. There is also a new four-speaker ste reo cassette player. Door-ed ge warning l• i g h t s i n t e r · mitl ent -mod e windshield wiper ope ration, a n interior courtesy light with a 15-secon d delay , a healed rear window that a utomatically s-huts Itself off a fter 15 minutes and pile ca rpeting in the trunk have also been added. From the outside the 1982 XJ-S will have additional chrome strips to the upper edge of both the front and rear bumpers and n e w five-spoke alloy wheels with six and one-half inch rims. The Jaguar Vl2 is the only V12 produced in quanti t y . At 262 horsepower , it is the m os t powerful production e ngine available in the United States. Standard equipment include s G M4 00 automatic transmission, c li mate control air ~,g p.o.w.er. steering, power windows a nd ce ntra l door locking. The suspension is fully ind e pend e nt and power-assisted disc brakes are used all around. The front discs are ventilated. The 1982 Jaguar XJ-S has a manufacturer's suggested Ust price or $32, 100 at ports of entry. The XJ-S is one of two Jaguar models sold in the United States. The :Other is the Series Ill XJ6 four-door sedan. The company expects that total Jaguar sales in the U.S. in 1982 will s urpass the previous Jaguar record of 7,384 set in 1976. VS engine powers Maseroti Quattroporte The M ase rali Quattroporte is big, fast, expensive ~nd has a body made of steel. The Interior bas all-leather upholstery · and light wood veneers. The dashboard i s co mpletely instrumented with a s peed o m e ter , tachometer. odometer, oil pressure, oil temperature and coolant temperature gau1es, voltmeter and fu e l economy and fuel level lndkat.on. The en1lne, with a pair of overhead camsbal'tl for each bank of lb• v.a bu a capacity of 4930et. It alto u.tet four l ·b-arrel drbure9in. • It takes 9.3 seconds for the Quattroporte to cli mb to 60 mph , although the estimated mileage rating is 9 MPG for normal drivin.r. Standard equipment includes air conditionin1 , All m stereo cassette, cruise control and electric window lifts. • The Ma se rati Company, owned partly by Alejandro DeTomaso and partly by the Italian 1overnment baa plans tor a . new and smaller model than the QualtropOrte. ll wm be a sport.a sedan priced in tbe $.10,000 ra.n1e. Plana , for 3,500 units to be introdueecl lft the U.S. ere Ht for the mtddte of im. FORD MOTOR COMPANY AND THEODORE ROBINS FORD ANNOUNCE ALL USED CARS LISTED .... HERE -AT OR BELOW WHOLESALE BLUEBOOK PRICES -STOP ~ SHOP • AND SAVE NOW!!! % TOTAL DISCM•T On Any New 1982 Escort "L", "GL" and "GLX" ..... ~~I j 1 I I I I .. Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29, 198) 1982 COmaro Z28 · to pace the 66th Indianapolis 500-mile race I • A breatbtaklnt blue Camaro Z28 u pace car produce ln excess of 250 Goodyear Ea1le GTs. It and aUver 1112 Camaro ls llttln1 beca use h o r se p o-w er . The wlll have production Z2I from Obevrolet will, Chevrolet is "the power fu el·lnject e d stock l h7·lnch aluminum p a c e t h e 8 8 t h ln motorsporl# ... and version available ln all wheels and four-wheel Indianapolis SOO·mlle has been /or almost 30 1982 Camaro Z281 la d ls c bra It es . The Race this Me morial ye a rs .'' H e wa s rated at 165 horsepower. transmission will be a Day. The car made Ila r eferrlna to the use of The pace car was bullt three-speed automatic. debut ln early J anuary Ch e v y e n1ln es a nd at the GM Asembly ' This year 's pace car at the Greater Los special heavy-duty parts Division Plant at Van wUI benefit from the Alltel• Auto Show. in both land and water Nuys ln November and aerodynamics that are The new Z28 Is the performance activities. a h i p p p e d t o t h e characteristic of all 1982 third Camaro in lS years While Chevrolet has Chevrolet Engineerln1 Camaros. The ca r 's to be named the official had little direct Center in Warre n , wind-tunnel tuned shape Indy pace car. It will lnvolvme nt in motor Mich., for preparaUon. simultaneously reduces serve u n agship of a sports activities durin1 It will be delivered to air drq and enhances 180-veblcl e fleet of r ecent year s , Lund Indy 500 officials April downforce. Recent tests Chevrolet cars and noted that every GM 15. in the GM wind l..unnel trucks eape c i a lly nameplate on the Grand The vehicle will carry m easure d Camaro'a' prepared for activities National Stock Car unique sliver and blue dragcoefficlentas .339. aurroundlq tbe historic circuit last year ran a paint and special pace Lund said Chevrolet 500-mUeevent. Chevrolelengine. car graphics .. It wili expects to offer about Robert D . L und , The 1982 pace car's have a dark blue cloth 6,000 •·commemorative C hevrolet gen eral engine is a modified and silver vinyl inlerldr. edition.; pace cars for manager and a vice 5.0-liler , fuel-injected The car 's roof will have sale. Noting that the president of General version of Chevrolets' regular optional glass 1978 Corvette pace car Motors, said th e cele brated small-block panels, and its tires will became an "instant sele ction of the ne w V8 . It is expected to be P 2 1 5 I 6 5 R . 1 5 c lassic," he said "I .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-think the same thing 1982 CAMARO Z28-TOTAL VEHICLE PERFORMANCE could happen lo this car ." Chevrolet's new Z28 Camara (abow) will pace the 66th Indianapolis 5()()-Mile Race on Memorial Day, May 30. The ,,,eciall11-prepareq silver.and blue Z28 will be pm.oered by a 5.0-liter Jule-injected VB mgins similar to the stock Cross-Fire VB . available in production Z2Bs. A limited number o/ lndy-5()() commemorative edition Z.281 will be available through Chevrolet dealers. Al HllDYNAMIC £ FFICIF N C Y MllOOYNAllllC 0.TAIL.INQ --Oller New Alf a coupe has gas economy, styling and safety ..., •• •c.ca· ~CMIAllOll'OllTCOUNeN- Titl CAMAM> DI TAllA Titl CC*C9M FOlt --l ff!CllNCY MYPAL .,_ """1Cll, H W-0 M AUlllMl'f UCIU.llfT DI-A •IWlll '» 1 --DCa1CN1 ~ lllOT o-1.'f -0¥1 TMI DI DlllAO CO.,,IClllfT cww•.,,. -VIMICU ~.au TO ·-C4). euT MAO ~VI THI '"'Ott' --COCl'ftCll•n Mun. ··~TINO 1• INCMAMO 00-0llCI AT -10 --D YIMla.I COttTllOL T .. .-OVl•NTI IMCU.101 • A"*'°Ul·TO-Z:.-rlllONT 'ASCIA -ICM 111141.IDI lllAOtATOlll Alll ••TAO IN ntl l OWIJtMALr • A DIU rlll()tff""" DAM WMICH Pi!OJCCTt,TO TH( ..... r110 11T Of', .. , VIHICU • LOWllll I OOY tlDt ltOLDINGI WHICH HlllVI fO tltOOTM Alll fLOW OOWll fHI VIHICU llDU > • ITllllAMU•D POlllf ltllllllOlllt WHICH CllllATI .... IMAL Alll I LOW CHITUtleANCI • A lllAlll 4'1119"0ILllll -CH flllDt TO llHP fHf Allll HOW AT"TACHIO TO THI 900'f. llllDUClllO f\Hll9Ul.l..CI nt1 lllllutTA•T DOWIWOlllCI t..ClllAlll DUI T"J fHlll CMA•OH Allll fHf AOCHllON o• •>Le i ro 111a '"THI fllOllT AT" •"4. AND IU LH ·" f HI llllAlll, CO-AllllD TO THI C-AlllO tPOlllT co"" Af " - TMI 11111 TOTAi. IS A IJI THAT HAI en• DtltO•D TO lllUN WITH THI WltoO THI MOIT 4111100 .. 1.AMICAU Y llftCllllT CHCVlllOUT f \11111 0 "11UD TO "* -Tl>'MNO PU9LIC • fl.tLM 0 1 -Clfl(; F-T rACIA I DH~ "'OMT Allll DAii I tT'lllu..JNIO -Olt • eoov.-~ • "'""' Allll - Alfa R on)eo 1has introduced the 1982 model o f it s high-performance sport coupe -the GTV 6/2.5. ·'The new model GTV 6 is th e perfect evolutiona r y s tep in high -performance,•' Joseph R. Dent1 chief executive officer , said. "it combines the best as p ec t s o f the award-wi nning 1981 GTV with several improvements in key areas." Fuel economy of tbe new model has been substantially improved through changes in the gear ratios. "The V6 2.5-liter fuel-Injected engine turns 20 percent s lower in fifth gear, achieving tbe same road speed. So there is a signiricant fuel saving. Top speed of 12S mph is now achieved in fourth SADDLEBACK VALLEY· IMPORTS ORANGE COUNTY'S • NEWEST DEACERl Now . . • the deale·r that has given you 7V2 years as one of Southern California's leading IBMW dealers is adding WE STILL OFFER WHAT NO LEASE COMPANY OR IANK CAN: • Expertly staffed, most modern service & parts departments for the ~more important service after the sale. • One of the Southland's most experienced sales & leasing staff • EHmin.tk>n of the middleman by leasing dealer direct IO you can save ·Alfa Romeo's 1982 model GTV 6 sports coupe (above) features improved fuel economy. Leather bucket seats, power windows, air conditioning. and many other appointments. are included as standard equipment. The 125-mph car, powered by a V-6 engine, accelerates /Tom 0 to 60 mph in under nine seconds. "At Jo nson &. Son, We are offering more · than quality. We are offering the elosest thing to eost-free driving." Dick Johnson .Johnson & Son Lincoln -;\krcury ''At tlohnso n & Son Lincoln Me rcury we urc of(e ring three rcmarkabk pro- gnuns f(>r otu-great little car tJ1c l\lcrcur\' LYTLx." ' -. AJ5'1Jt-h '-"'"-"· 'l111..,;;•••l1111 rn,.. .-.,·qu11l 101h,· 1~·i. ,·111 uf 111,· l.~11.,·.., 1.,1-.1.: 14111.'kl'I' pr1,-.·. II 1.'U11 1111.·1111..,m111)( ... ol 11p lo )440i'i 011 111,• l.y11.' l..S. \\ltl(•'ll .. \1111 111\' "'"Inf.(.., 11111\· Ii. 1ukn• ..... u d1n·k or u~·tl u ... pun of1h1.• "''"" p11~111,·111 1'ntr-•t1..a1M.:-· t'IU-:t:t F11r1h, ll1...,t 1""''u''· or :!4.1100 111lk,.., l.1111."l11 .\kl'\.'IH) "Ill pu~ li1r ull .... ·h1.·1l11lnl mol11t1.·11u1k'1.', hk'h1tlh1fo{ 111111.·-111r.-.. l11d111lll1fo{ 1111durnf.(•'"'·111111 lltt l.'I-,.! l11d111ll111l fllll1h. l1ll:l111ll11fo{ luhor. ,\1111111 110 ,.,.,.., to \1111. To l'\.'1tu1.'\: Lhc 1.~~ of m\11~1-,.hlp ..,, tit ti1rth.-r: 'IW9,..... ol'........__.lp _•c....C-:. <>!Ir \\11rk1111in..,hlp •'fl\'l'~~ l111.'11Kk i. ,1n11ully l'W•)'thhl/o( • for u full '"" ~··111.,. 01 24,000 111lkto. whld1cwr l,1111c~ ll nu. ·ni..· '"''~· thlntl'4 not l,l\\:~d h~ thth ll1111tc1I wurn1111y un: tin.· .... lluk!M. ulMI"" u1Ml lk'\:klc11IK. ·~wl)·thhi,( "'~ ,,.. l,1\l'~ll. l~\'\.'1)1hlnt(! .I In total these are the best offers on any small cars sold in America. And it is as close as you'll come to cost-free driving. LYNX•LN7•CAPRl•CONTl.NBNTAL• MARK VI • LINCOLN•COUGAR•XR7•ZBPHYR .:. L ·-I N C 0 L N M 1616 Barbor BoulcTard, Coeta Meea • E R C U (714) M0-868() R y , .. t i I I I : I i I l t ~ 1 t TM Iauzu P'UP 4z4, like.all P'UP pickufJ3 u .a1)Qilof>le in.a deltae model. Thu deluxe I veraiora includes special uterior paint treatment, unique interior trim. and. a choice of , bmch or bucket sNts. P'UPs.are.available in either ga& or diesel versions. I Isuzu sets sales records in U.S. with P'up trucks, I-Mark cars Isuzu sold mor e vehicles during Its firs t year on the American market than any import I tn history. Both the ·, l ·Mark passenger car and the P'UP pickup set first year sales records for anY. new import marque. · Tbe l·Mark h as an 1817cc diesel engine and , is among the top 10 in i ~PA fuel ratings for !~cars sold il> the United States. A 2238cc diesel engine powers P'UPs. Boib the l·Ma rk and P 'UP are also available with a l .8·1iter gasoline engine as w e ll a s manual and automatic transmissions. Th e co up es and sedans are joined by the LS four-door sedan. All models have a revised interior, complete with an all new dashboard and instrument panel. The l ·Mark series fo ur·doorSedan. begins with the two-door Th e J s u z u P ' U P Diesel Coupe, which is pickup ror 1982 reatures EPA·rated at 41 MPG in several re rine m ents . the city and 51 MPG on Isuzu is the only man- t he highway· with Its ra cture r to mak e s ta ndard 1817cc diesel its diesel engine avail· engine and four-speed able in 4x4 models. m a nual transmission. A five-speed m anual It also features a transmission is standard d e I u x e seri es th at in all 4.x2 models in 1982, in c I udes four-door. whether powered by the Sedans a nd two-door '1817cc gasoline engine coupes; and a sporty LS or the 2238cc diesel series. which includes a power plant. New for 1982 ~the Isuzu I-Marie LS four-door Sedan, feotvring itnna like.alloy 1Dheels, electric remote control mirrors, black-out eztrrior trim, .and .a lpecial LS paint treatment. Like .all I-Marie LS models, tlaia CGT ii.a~ in either gm or diesel ·,versions 1Ditha five-speed manual or~ thtte-spnd.automalic transmission. 1Suburu Brat has stylish new body I Just a glance tells you the Brat is something I special. The subtle. but conte m porar y styling , ou t s tandi n g road manners, and so much more. see mi ngl y m o re bri lliant b ea m Co r nighl·piercing visibility. Rectangular headlights 4 Orange Coast OAIJ,. Y PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 NEWPORT DATSUN 1982DATSUN 210 2 Door Sedan, 1.2 Liter, 4 Speed. Fully Factory Equipped. Ser #096836 $4798 Stanza 2 Door Hatchback, 5 Speed, Metallic Paint. Ser#009853 $6488 ASKS '82280ZX z x ''Grand Luxury!" 5 Speed Coupe, Factory A/C, Tinted Glass, Power Windows and Door Locks, Power Assist Oise Brakes, Alloy Wheels, Raised Letter Radla Tires, Digital Stereo with Cassette and Auto- matic Antenna, Power Ract< & Pinion Steering, Low Back Velour 5 Way Adjustable Seats, Dual Electric Mirrors, Quartz Digital Clock, 4 Wheel Indepen- dent Suspension, Cruise Con- trol with Resume Feature. NEVER BEFORE OFFERED AT THIS LOW PRICE! #432708 $12,998 '82 L'IL HUSTLER PICK-UP Rugged Features Including the 2 liter NAPS-Z engine. Ser#105933 $5988 '81 Maxima 4 Door Sedan, Executive Car. Fully Equipped. Automatic, AM/FM Stereo. Ser#105442 sleek side panels, the I contemporary st yling, th e H alogen 1 beadUghts ... all say the ' Brat 'a first r estyling !si n ce its 1978 also lend thrirty DL ,81 280zx models an even crisper profil e, their $9888 ••. =-i l • I.I ~ .'{ ll I t: ii ti •I .: '" I! " ~I ·r. ) 11 I{ .~ ~ I introduction has been more than worth the wait. combination or T ·top and sunroof which can be opened for a taste of the outdoors or removed entirely. Viewed from the front in its open position, the Halo Twin roor lends the s porty n e w Brat a unique gull-wing look. When the pa n els a r e r e m oved e ntirely, 'they can be s t o r e d sa r e l y i n s pecially design e d protective areas behjnd the interior seats . The new GL features two stylish rectangular Ha logen headlights and a Halogen OH -Road Running Light in the center of the new black grille. Halogen lights o rrer s upe r ior high beam candlepower in addition to a whiter , contemporary look Tu b blending well into the r 0 ' overall styling theme. :...--------+.:-_::~:l~llll:;rll~-f~•--------ttT-1 For '82, the Brat's ne_w ___ -fu11y Eqoippe . r But the uniqu e, i open-bed Brat offe rs 'more than just good • looks. It offers the high est EPA gas f mileage at 36 highway , and 27 city o f a n y 1 four ·wheel drive vehicle (sold i n Am e ri c a . , Combined with its fresh, I aerodynamic stylin g and luxurious n ew , creature comforts, It's I an unb eatab l e 1 combination. Looking at the Brat's 1 stylish new body and ' many features in detaiJ, ' one first notices the GL'a exciting n ew standard equipment like the Halo Twin roof, a c lever , two -piece Inside the GL, the driver and passengers a r e s urro unde d b y increased interior room. New plush st a ndard creature comforts such as a multi-position till steer ing wheel and a driver 's seat adjustable lumbar s upport orfer co mf or:l an d conveni e n ce . Even without looking further, one knows exactly why the new Brat Is so unlike anything else on the market.. .it's a versatile but tough rour ·wheel drive fun vehicle with body includes a recessed Ser #605664 kickstep Imprinted with a "4 WD" logo. New Chevy S 10 truck experiences rapid sales Chevrolet's new S-10 pickup is a popu la r truck th.is year. With.in the first two months that it h a s been on the market, 12,000 models have been sold. The S·lO pickup is sm a ller tt><\n ~·.,ndard Chevrolet pickups, but larger than the Chevy Luv. The most popular version or the S-10 has a 2.8-liter V6 e ngine co upled with a three-speed automatic transmission. Federal fuel economy estimates for this combination are 33 MPG on the highway and 22 MPG in the city. The S·lO's standard equipment includes a 1.9-liter. 82·horsepower, four-cylinder e ngine with a f o ur·s p eed manual transmission. $14,798 '82KING CABl)IESEL 5 Speed Pick-Up. A Winner! Ser #016560 '$7798 $5584 200SX Hardtop, 5 Speed, Fully Factory Equipped. Ser #61 8646 '$7388 THE MOS'f COMPLETE PARTS DEPARTMENT IN SOUTHERN CAUFORNIAI I. ' ... Orange Cout DAILY PILOT!Frlday, January 29, 1982 Town and Counf,!'Y co~bines luxury,. roominess · and efficiency The eluate, "woody" appearance o r rhe Chrysler Town and Country statJon wa1on may be familiar. but the . simllarily between the new 1982 Town and Country waaon and ita predeceason enda there. The 1982 Town and Country ls Amerlca'a first fronl-wbeel drive, mid-size station waaoo. President of Sal" and Marketln&. Front wheel drive, electronics, rack and plnJon at.eerinl, Jso-strut auapenslon, and many other en1lneerln1 features make it a atate of the art wa1on. which s ucceeds the heavier, longer rear wheel drive wa1on of '81. The 1982 model baa the autbentlc-lookin1. finely detailed woodgrain exterior which made this car a distinctive status car1 lhroug1\ its Illustrious past. end detl&n harmonloUI Computer tecbnoloay · ln the 1H2 Le Baron helped Ch r y s I er family. For low-apeed en&lneera provide a d a m a 1 a b I l I t y : smooth, quiet ride for protection, tbe lower the Town and Country ed1e of the grille can without aacrillclnt the mo ve r our inc hes outatandlnc handlln1 rearward and ia c haracteristics aprlnc·loaded to return associated with front to ill original position ln wheel drive. It it the event of front end same system uaed In impact.a up to 5 mpb. Le Baron aedau. Brlcbt window and Some 30 separate The new Town and Country ls a unique combination of formal laxury , roominess efficiency of operation, and distinctive good looks. It wears t he prest11e of both tbe Chrysler and The Town and Country nameplates. "The Town and Country ls a class leader with it'.s..a ~binatlon or features, fuel economy. size, styling, ride, and values," said John 8 . Naughton, Chrysler's Executive Vice The high -lustre , simulated leak panels and white ash framinc around the body signals the rich, quiet ride and elegant appointments traditionally associated with the Town and Country. The Town.and Country wood ff'ame.appeorance (above) ia.aoailable for 1912 in the new Chrysler LeBaron. It is the only front whftl drive, mid·lize stataora 100QOft in the United States. It &eats up to si.x, offer• premium . appointments . and four.cylinder fuel economy. door frame moldln&a, 1 chanaea to suspension stand-up aprlnc loaded system a nd chasals Chrysler Pentaalar hood component.a were made ornament, chrome dual to improve the ride and re m o t e rear view reduce nolse, vibration, mirrors, "Town and and harshness. Country " bodyside Notable among these nameplate and bright are special "ride" tires, rear, and color keyed a n d I m p r o v e d front nerf strips "!so-strut " front complete exterior. s uspension system. A bright luggage rack premium rear shock with skid strips ls absorbers, numerous optional. Insert.a in the acoustical barriers and rack's side rails match seals and lWled dynamic the white ashy bodyside absorbers, to reduce framing. Also optional doby and steeri ng are wire wheel covers or column vibration. aluminum road wheels. The only tire specified Deluxe wheel covers are for the wagon is a standard. s teel -b elted radial The 1982 Town and Country is available in on ly one model , a premium four-door with liflgale, and with two bench seats for seating up to a total or six people. With rear seal folded down, storage space is increased from 35 cubic feet to 69.2 cubic feet. The car is equipped with a 2 .6 -liter four-cylinder overhead cam MCA-Jet engine, three-speed automatic transmission, and power steering and power front disc brakes. Designers hav e blended weU the woody l oo k with a rich-appearing, bright rectangular grille fl anked by dual rectangular Halogen headlamps -a front New.Honda Accords have improved lines and handling f American Honda 's sedan offers cruise There's a choice of 11 Pl85/70 Rl4 wide white exterior colors: silver, sidewall with special red , gray, light blue, low rolling resistance dark blue, mahogany, tread tWled to the Town light tan, dark tan, and Country to reduce cream, while and black. road noise. • The new Accord Hatchback (above) features significantly improved mileage, more interior room, an aerodynamic redesign, longer wheelbcue, greater width and upgraded luxury appoint.ments. The official EPA rating for the Hatchback is an estimated 30 MPG in the city. and 41 on the highway. IT'S THAT TIME!!! WE'VE GOT TO SELL SOME DEMOS! 1981 GRAND PRIX BROUGHAM Stk. 8106 INCl..UOES: • Power Seats • PowerWindows • Power Locks • Reclining passenger seat • TiltWheel • Wire Wheel Covers • Much More! Mow Only 1981. PONTIAC GRAND LEMANS SEDAN Stk. 6143 INCLUDES: • Power Windows • Power Locks • Power Seats • Tilt Wheel • Wire Wheel Covers • And a Whole Lot More! NowQnty 59,89$ JUST TWO SAMPLES OF A llG STOCK THAT HAS TO BE MOVED! --· '- n e w 198 2 A cc or d s control at no extra cost. feature crisp redesign, The instrument panel improved mileage, more features a tachometer, interior room, a longer electron ic warning wheelbase , greater system , maintenance width and upgraded reminder, oil level and luxury appointments. pressure indicator, All three models have low-fuel warning light improved handling and push-botton heating characteristics and fuel and ventilation controls. econo m y that h ave A h ea dl ig hts -on made the Accord a reminder is another proven leader in its additional feature. c I a s s s i n c e i t s The inviting interior of introduction in 1976. the new Accords offers The three new Honda new luxury fabrics, new mode ls being offered form -fitting seats both Include the Accord front and rear, rich Hatchback , the deep·pile one-piece luxur ious Accord LX carpeting and courtesy Hatchback and the lights in doors on the roomy, five-passenger four-door sedan and Accord four-door sedan. A c c o r d L X . A i r All three feature the conditioning is standard improved Accord 175lcc on the LX. engin e with subtle All three models come r e r i n e m e n t s , a with standard five-speed smoother , quieter ride, manual transmission. A along with a larger fuel three-speed automatic tank (15.8 gallons ) to transmission is optional, provide a 1 on g er which the EPA lists at cruising range. an estimated 30 mph, 41 T h e '82-four-door highway. Ford Mustang races into '82 with V-8 engine M ustaog's big news with a Locking Torgue f o r 1 9 8 2 i s l b e Converter designed to reappearance or the provide significant 5.0-liter V-8 engine after fuel-economy gains over an absence of two years. conventional automatic And, because of a transmissions in all s pecial camsh.alt, a three forward gears . larger two -ba rrel .Tbe standard 2.3-liter carburetor , a larger four-cylinder engine wiU ex haust system and a be offered with an low -res triction air automatic or munual cleaner, the 1982 5.0-liter four -and-fi ve-speed M u s t a n g w i I I b e transmissions. . substantially raster than Fo~ a lso will offer the 1979version. spec1al packages or Whi le the 5.0·liter popular options at High-Output engine will reduced costs on th.e be available only with a 198~ Mustang. Re~a1l four -speed manual savmgs on. the various overdrive transmission packages will fluctuate. the 4.2 liter V-8 and The Mustange lineup 3.3-liter six cylinder will be reali~ned .to engines will be teamed t h ~ e e. s e r 1 e s 1 n with a new Select Shirt Cahfonua GL, GLX automatic transmission and GT. SANTA ANA DODGE 835-3691 VAN CONVERSION HE~DQUARTERS 1982 VAN DOUBLE REBA TE DOUBLE REBA TE SALi I ALL .. 2 y AM COMYBSIONS • ... -..CAil Amil 2600 cc 4 cyl., S~pd.. low mount chrome mirrors, bodyslde mouldings, rear step bumper, \ wheel trim rtngs. P.S.-Compare our price to ' other 4x4'sl Ser. No. 500280 Stk. No. C9005 With 2.2 liter eng'ne, automatic transmission, tinted glass, vinyl body side mouldings. maximum cooling, power steering. $6977 c..,,.,.,... ~M91Wp JOO JOO $8477 ~ $6377 ~ CREDIT HORINE 835-3691 ,,,. .... IROMATCOWI :....::::-.. -....... ., . __ ......... ~ ........... ., ...... ,,.._, Uf 77 ''"°' ..... WITGM ............ .._ .. _.... ==r' ......... .._. 11177 ,,,. .... .-.wMON ...................... ...,..._, ......... _ ..... .. .,.,__ h477 lf7'CAlll ............ -.--·--=°"' ....... -..... ••n 1m111e1 WTCCMIN . "' -.......... -;-; = ......... -. W .91l snn 1ma. MGMllCAaO i.e... ................... . ~·'·-----·-11777 . ·---=-...,~-~·-·~--= ·'=.:::.nr ....... NallA .. m OfMllWVCAll.8 Firebird changes its design The Flreblrd le1end Approved EPA fuel continues with the economy raUn11 for the introduction of the S/B VI (with automaUc) a I I • n • w u l t r a • are 20 city, 32 hi1hway; aerodynamic and effl· and Trana Am, with a cent P'lreblrdl for 1m. four-speed, has ratings Available ln three of 11 and 25 miles per distinct models -the I a II on In city and sport Flreblrd coupe, h I g h way d r I v Ing , th e per f orm a o c e . reapecUvely. oriented Trana Am and The exterior silhouette the new 1ophl1tlcated · ol the Firebird has soft luxury S/E, each has Its S ·curves over the own speclflc Identity. fenders, a subtle bone First level Firebirds line throu&h the middle are clean and simple ln and an ultra-low nose appearance. S/E models with smooth contours a r e d on e i n a electrically-operated tone -on-tone color hidden quartz halogen concept and are a bit headlamps. A 62 degree m o r e s u b t I e a n d windshield angle further sophisticated than the enhances aerodynamic Trans Am, which has efficiency. black accents to give it a A large, contoured high-tech structural frameless all-glass Jook. hatch is considered the Fireblrd c0ttpe has a most sophisticated piece standard 2 . S . Ji t er of g lass ever applied to electronic fuel·injected a volume production engine with four-speed car. This rear design manual transmission, o f f e r s a b i g giving it an EPA fuel improvement in cargo economy rating (without s pace and versatility air conditioning> of 24 with over 30 r eet or miles per gallon in city luggage capacity when driving and 35 on the the rear seal is folded highway. down. . S/E models feature a' A new fun c tional 2.8-liter V6 two-barrel wing-type rear s poiler, with a four -speed standard in black on manual trans mission Trans Am and optional while the '82 Trans Am in body-color SI E, help is powered by a 5.0·liter to reduce aerody,namic four-barrel VS engine drag. Wind tunnel w i th a· r o u r . s peed testing on the S/E has manual or three-speed produced an excellent automatic transmission. drag coefficient of .335. It la eaUmated the Trana Am and flrat level Ftreblrd w1U have dra1 coelflclenta ol .323 and .333, respecUvely. Full -width ·black l a i 1 1 a m p s. a r e maintained on Trana Am and extended to the new S/ E model. Flush, functional aerodynamic covers on the t urbo aluminum wheels are worth several counts in aerodynamics. These covers are standard ln black oo Trans Am and body-color on S/E. Although the 1982 Fireblrd exterior is s maller in overall length, height and width than its predecessor. interior room ls enhanced or maintained. First level trim on Firebird and Trans Am m ode l s feature full-r eclining bucket seals in either cloth or vinyl. A Pontiac specific integral-open headrest, reclining bucket seat, which also provides added lateral restraint, is s tandard on S /E models and optional on Trans Am and Firebird. This seat is available as an option in leather on all models. Front seal travel is increased from fi ve to seven·and·a·half inches; and, for the first time on Flublrd, a six-way power driver aeat ls available on all models. Flreblrd'a llrat level Instrument panel features round , rally -sty led speedometer and fuel gau1es with four horizontal rectan1ular openings for warning lights. S/E and Trans Am models feat u re standard gauges including tachometer and tripometer, housed in four round openings for optimum visibility. A new formula steering wheel with an exclusive Pontiac-designed energy absorbing hub is specific f or Pontiac and standard on all Firebirdl models. A leather map, pocket,, mounted on the instrument panel, is standard on S/E and included as part or the custom trim interior option on Firebird and Trans Am. A longitudinal r~r·drive applicauon or the 2.S·liler e lectronic rue l·injected engine is standard on first level Firebirds and available as a credit delete option on the S/E. Optional in the base Firebird and standard in the S/E is a 2.8-liter V6 engine with manual transmiss ion and a Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 ., The Pontiac Firebird hal been completely redesigned for 1982. The sporty car i& available in three m odel&: the Tram Am, SI E and Firebird coupe. 3.23 : 1 axle ratio. The s tandard Trans Am engine, a S.0-liter V8 four-barrel, is optional on both Firebird C with automatic trans mission only) and S/ E models. A 5.0·liler dual throttle body injected VB engine with rresh·air hood induction is available on the Trans Am with automatic transmission. The new m odified Ma c Ph erson front s us pens ion design is solid·mounled to the body structure through a bolt·on cross member. Road i solati o n is achieved through fine tuning of ,b<>dy members. \ Ford Ranger: a big truck with a little Qppetite for gas Ford Motor Company 'value for money' -a raised the curtain today key purchase motivator . on the first of its 1983 We have Twin-I-Beam products -a new-size, front suspension from domes tically -built, Ford's large trucks, a compact pickup truck smaller on-the·outside. named Ranger. b u t b i g g e r o n . Harold A, •. Pollng, th e -i n si de cab, e x. e c u t i v e v i c e v i r t u a 11 y l h e s a m e pres ident, Ford North pay load a s ·a hair -ton American Auto Molive pickup plus outstanding Operations, hailed the fu el economy -all Ranger "as the opening p a c k a g e d i n a bid in the company's multipurpose truck strategy for a grand des igned for run and s I a m o ( p r o d u c t efficiency.'' excitement in 1983. ·• Ranger is similar in Schedl;Jled for appearance to Ford's production m January. full-size F-Series but its 1 9 8 2 , an d Pu b I i c-exterior dimensi~ns are introduction in March , closer to those or the' Mr . Poling also im-ported ~om pact . announced that Ford Inside, Ranger provides. dealers have ~n t9ld three-across seating they may began selling w i t h m o r e h e a d , t h e R a o g e r shoulder leg and hip immediately. r o o m 't h a n t h e "Range~ will give lhE: best-selling imports. ruel·COOSCIOUS buyer ah The standard 108·inch attractive aJtemative lo wheelbase models have th e imports," Mr . six -foot boxe s, Poling declared. "It seven-foot boxes are combines small-truck featured on optional fuel economy with many 114. inch wheel base of the features of found models. Both trucks on the industry 's hav e a 1 ,200 · or best·selling pickup 1,600-pound payload truck-the full-size Ford capacity. The 2.0·liler engine is t eamed with a four -s peed manual transmission. A manual or a ut o matic transmission will be available with 2.3-liter engine. Ranger's features also include: · Unique capability to car r y 4x8 -foot construction materials hroi%ontally i n the pickup box with the tailgate down. · A quick -re m oval tailgate. · Ca mp e r and lighl ·dut~ lowing packages. -Double -wall pickup-box and cab·roof construction. . Weld-on front body structure for precise door and hood·margins that improve the quietness of the vehicle. · Computer·selected front and rear springs based on total option weight or each truck for optimal ride and handling. The 1982 FiTebird SI E features a tone-on-tone color concept and u powered by a 2.8-liter V6 twin-barrel engine with. a four-speed manual transmi&sion. F -Series, a nd quality Powertrains include standards unsurpassed the standard 2.0·Liter or in our history. an optional 2.3-liter "Ranger exemplifies four-cylinder engine. In addition, Ranger is designed with service in mind. Service .features include a virtually lube·fr ee chassis , self-adjustin& brakes and c lut c h . t-:--1t---------------------------------t-t-" llUIR1! co111-n1 'IM- I i "DRIVING WELL IS THE BEST REVENGE:' Only BMW's ... Because we know no better. 208 WEST FIRST STREET. SANTAANA. CALIFORNIA 92701 714/835-3171 • SPICIAL SALE ON 1982 CHIYROLITSI BRAND NEW 1982 CAMAlO Loaded inc. automatic trans.. tinted glass, air cond.. sports mirrors. tilt whl., spec. instrumentation, AM-FM stereo & rallye wheels. (Stk. 295). (101959). 59072 ·-·--· --. BRAND NEW 1982 S-10 PICKUP I Fully factory equipped including an economical 4 cylinder engine, 4 speed transmission, power steering. AM radio, gauges & tinted glass. (Stk. 475). (114482). 56449 .. -.. ·sEE US THIS WEEKEND.· .. WHERE I QCJ R REPUT ATI ON IS YOUR GUARAN'fEE! All.,..,._..,._. 10 "'* S• OI ... Geed T"'u t • 1 .. 2 0 \ -Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 Buick Century has beeri rebuilt 1 from the ground up for 198.2 Completely rede1l1ned for contemporary ele1ance, the lm Buick · Century reaturea transvers e frontwbeel drive, new 3.0·llt.er VI and 4.3-Uter VI diesel en1ine options, and a bi1b level of standard equipment. The aerodynamic wed1e shape and tailored loot of the new Century promises to set the trend for future Buick product deai1ns. Complimentin1 the new ·•aero'' s hape, the •outside rearvlew mirrors and bumpers are integrated into the body desi1n. which features a crisp, notcbback roofline, wraparound taillamps, and stepped headlamps. The Century comes ln four models: Customs Coupe and Sedan and Limited Coupe and Sedan. The 1982 Century four-door sedan is about 550 pounds lighter and 6.9 i.nches shorter than its predecessor, yet bu more headroom, only sligbUy reduced leg and shoulder room and the aame aise trunk -18.2 cubic reet. The EPA Interior raUn1 la H ctablc feet for tbla five-paaaen1er model, compared to 102 cubic feet for the 1981 rear -wheel drive Century aedan, which waa dealined to carry alx Pl.llelllen. The new Century's aerodynami~ refinements give the car the lowest coefficient or dra1 in tbe Buick lineup, just sligbUy lower than lbe "slippery" 1981 ~egal. The front end tapers not only from the windshield to the bumper, but also from the hood centerline to the fenders . Flusb mounted glass in the windshield and backlight improves the aerodynam ics and reduces the potential for wind noise. Even the standard smooth-sided wheel covers are designed with airflow in mind. The Cent ury 's en1lneerln1 layout la almllar to the biChly aucce11ful Buick Skylark, with the enatne mounted Lranavenely in the eneine rompartment on a abort frame or cradle, llolated from the unltlaed body by four rubber bu1hin11. Standard en1ioe in tbe Century ia a 2.5-llter four -cylinder powerplant, featurln1 electronic fuel injection. The throttle body system uses a sln1le fuel injector in the normal carburetor position, rather than separate injectors at each cylinder. The single injector replaces the metering system of the carburetor, includin1 jets, rods, venturis, and a separate idle system. A control module , separate from the Computer Command Control system, reads manifold vacuum, engine temperature and eng in~ speed, and delivers the proper amount ol fuel into the intake manifold plenum. Bealdea provldln1 a precise fuel mixture, eleetroftlc fuel inJecUon can 1ive 1ood cold drlveabillty, and helps reduce the posaibiUty of en1lne run -on, commonly called ''dieaelln1." An optiooai enflne for tbe Century ia a new 3.0-lller, 90 degree VS patterned after the popular 3.8-llter V6 which is s tandard equipment on several Buick models. The new 3.0-hter was designed specifically ror use Lo the front-wheel drive Century. It develops 110 horsepower (at 4,800 rpm), lbe same as its larger cousin . Torque i,s 145 at 2,600 versus 190 at 1,600 for the 3.8-liter. The reduced dls'Placem e nt i s achieved by shortening the stroke to 2.66 inches, compared to 3.4 inches for the 3.8-Uter. Cylinder bore remains the same at 3.80 inches. The 3.0-liter features a hifher compression ratio 8.45: 1. The 1982 Buick Century is offered in two models, the Limited Coupe, pictured abOve, and the Ciutom Coupe. The Li~ited is the more luzuriu& of the two. •• •• •• •• •• •• •• • •••••••••••••• • USE YOUR 'REI •• • • •• TO BUY • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••••••••••• • •••••••••••• ••• • •• •• •• •• BELOW FACTORY l•YOICEI CHAMPS ...... " ... l&OW MCTOllY IMYOICI ARROW PICKUPS . --.11 ... l&OW MCTOllY IMYOICI SIJ!POROS ....... •••-.ow MCTOIY IMYOICI ., - The Buick Century Custom Coupe has been completely redesigned for 1982 for contemporary elegance. · compared to 8: 1 for the 3 .8-liter. This was accomplished with new s pec ific flat-topped pistons. A new aluminum intake manifold saved 20 p o und s ove r a conventional cast iron design, and contributes to good cold driveability beca use a luminum warms up more quickly. A dual jet carburetor is u se d , o rie nt e d 90 degrees and level with the cylinder heads for the transve r se front drive applllcation. The c arburetion syst e m incl udes e l ectro ni c c hoke and electronic idle speed control. The new engine also f eatures a s m a ll e r , lighter air pump, a new water pump design, a thinner gauge steel air cleaner , a laminated glass-filled nylon oil pa n , and magnesium accessory brackets. Also available on the 1982 Centruy is a new 4.3-liter V6 di ese l engine, which also is offered on the 1982 Buick Regal. Thls new engine differs from the Regal version. in that it has an al uminum i ntake m a n i f o ld . an d is mounted transversely. The transmission used with all Century engines i s a thr e e -s peed automa ti c with converter .clutch. Final drive ratio is 2.39: 1 with the four-cylinder and the V6 diesel, and 2.53 : l with the 3.0 liter V6. Surprise hits add model to lineup The Ford Escort and Mercury Lynx were the s urprise ruts or 1981. The E scort/L y nx plants have been humming at full tilt trying to keep up with the demand for America's most popular small car. Car buyers snatched up 400,000 Escort/Lynx models during 1981, out s e ll ing e v e ry imported car model. And Ford ha s rewor ked the car to make it even better in 1982. A new, five-door mod el has been added t-0 t he front-wheel drive Escort/Lynx along with some other mechanical changes. A key element in this year 's transformation is a full s uspension r ec alibratio n . Last yea r 's s t a ndard underpinnings were an attempt at making the E sc ort rid e LT 0 -s mooth . but it didn't work. The new s us pension includes front springs that are 20 pe r c ent stiffer than last year's. a s lig htly fatte r front anti -s way bar, and reworked shocks. La s t yea r 's Escort/Lynx suffered from a lack of powe r. That has been corrected with the 1982 models . Jn order to increase last year's zero-to-sixty figure of 14.6 seconds to this year's figure of 13.2 seconds, the 1.6-liter engine has been given an additional fi ve horsepower. The 70 horsepower is fed through a close-ratio version of las t year 's wide -ratio four-speed manual tr&Mmission . Top speed is also up rive miles per hour to 92. T h ese c h anges , however, have affected fue l economy. Ford's preliminary estimate is that the close-r atio gears wiU come in at 26 mpg. Last year's model got 28 mpg. Other r evis i ons i n c lude a r e work e d c lutch a nd pressure plate , which cure the 198 1 m o d e l 's hair -trigger ·problems. Mark VI offers new design · treatment The 1982 Mark VI , available in two· and four-door models, offers n ew s tandard and optional design features. revised Signature Series equipme nt and new versions of the Blass, Pucci and Givenc hy Designer Series models. Mark VI features two n ew optional roof treatments -the rear half roof for two-door models and the full roof for four-doors. The interior luxury of M a rk VJ h as be e n enha nced with new. plush seat upholstery for both Base and Signature Series models. As with the Lincoln. Mark VI mod els i n cl ud e electronic fuel injection, e l ec tronic e ngin e controls and automatic overdrive transmission. 701~5 71CMYY Y8QA "-'w., .... _ """ 4-cyl~ .... . redlolM~. Llc. llOUI' $1198 19 llDCURY ZUHD LU•Ull'WfOOd ................ ,_ wlttlkyl ........ end I'S. Uc. 117YIA $3498 • 1882 ll'WD 2DR StANDARD l'WD HATCHBACK 77CHDY CAMAAO 79TOYOTA' COROLLA ~ "'°"''"' .... 0 -............... eu10 ••• tedlo. '"'' -wttll +cyl~ heet .. end PS. 4-ttML, redlo end .. .. 5114t5 ........ Sef.117164 $3798 $3295 '82 MUSIAll IL SEDAN Automatic. power steering. power brakes. GL Package, and much more! (Ser. #17174). '11 HONDA CIVIC 4 speed. 8 track tape. gas saver. (822RST) (33716) '80 MAZDA 626 Automatic trans . air condition. (1CAW1 52) (33768) '76 MG Racing Green in color. On l~ 38,982 miles! (&47 Fl) '79 TOYOTA ClllSIDA Lo.ded, with all the ex· tras (Ser. #0211'0) OnlY 20.GIO miles. (331291 '79 MADZA HATCHIACK Auto trans. elr cond, p/atrv. ate. Plut. Plush. ( 27'1WY) ( J36.4t). '80 COLT WAGOH Automatic trans . air cond .. a rare one. (M0#302904) (33791 ) '79 DATSUN 210 HATCHIACI< 5 speed. AM/FM stereo. red w/racing stripes. Only 35.624 miles. (900YOL) ~79 DATSU• 2IOZ S IPd. air cond. am/fm c• ... tte. (13"0) (3376'). 1210 Auto trans .. orange in color Lots of miles left in this one• (843JMCJ '75 AUDI FOX · Auto trans . 2· de hardtop. Exceptional car! (943SXF) UST SE El '81 TOYOTA CB.ICA Black on black, 5 sp. trans.. air cond.. pwr. str .. AM /FM cass .. cruise. ti lt wheel. {1BWW204) BLACK IS BEAUTIFUL ftlckUP PWr atme.1 brb, •Ir, txtr1 '"* OU'1216) F LL QUIPPED Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 D9 l NEW ESCORTL D .; I CALL OUR CREDIT COUISELO THEY WILL ASSIST YOU T• ..-Iffy we ....,.,.. .... YMr ,..,,..,... NO.._, cl'lllltt IMlclrerevM ....... ~ ....... 842-6611 '76 VW VAN IUllLETOP You can sit down or stand up in this one! (624NYI) lllCIS wni wna rllli OPlm IE'ft IOT 'Ell • MICMS • 41ts .• lllllCl'S • Lml • Sl9fO • TW HCUI( 'I OL ITAllPlll 20.GIO miles, at.reo, air, full POWer, air, lmmacu· late (lOIYPZl (33121) NEW 182 EXP.ORT The Sports Coupe 182 FLARESIDE PICKUP 'Lots of Equipment '69 CHm CAMAllO Auto trana, fldoN 1/c, PC»Wer t19erlne, YlnYI roof. (2DX05fl (33151). '71 CHm MONTICAILO Auto, P/ttrne, V.f, auto, atect wlndwt, stweo, cvttm wt.I, tllt, etc. J7.M6 ml. (UfWltF). (J3nl). '71 CHEVROLET NOVA •cir, excellent famlly air, euto trna, air cond. P/ttrne. (IANOS:Ml (Jnl7). '71 FORD , .... DIAMOND JUBILEE. VI, 11, fct 1/c, full PWr, 111. p/dK brkt, ,,,,, P/ ... tt, Arn-Fm rdo ttr, htr, t. 91t, tltt wtil. <nDUZVI (13146). '80 COBRA MUSTANG TU RBO. 4 cyl, 4 Siited, •tick thltt, siower stMr· lne. POWer disc brakes. vellow. (18 10041) (33141) '71 CUTUSS IUPllMI BROUGHAM. Ewrv c~ WIY•ble extra, 17..511 ort•. miles, feet frfth. (..OXZP) (33771). '76 POllTIAC PIHlllD Full llO'#ef, air cond. lherp, (lBYHfNl. '71 LTD WMON 10 PIMenMr, full POW9r, elr, crul .. , tllt air, etc. 31AOO miles. (242XZRl (33166). '11 CHRYSLER couou Auto trana, factorv air conc:lltlonlne, PC»Wer ,...,. Int, PC»Wer dlK lwlkat. Sliver (4a5MYl (33123). '79 Ll•COLN CONTININTAL MARK V. Thia cer loaded with equlpmentl Ctr would Mii new, 21.000 ml. (°"<:YN) (l)C). '78 FORD COUNnY SQUIRi w-.on. v... auto trns, a /c, P/1, p/b, radio, htr, lute rck, P/c:lr lockt. (327VQY) (33009). '79 CHEVY MALllU WAGON 6 cvl. euto, P/strv a. twka, elr, 35,436 ml. (370XNW) (3312S). '79 CHEVY BLAZER 'II UNGER F250 '81 DATSUN ICillgCc6P .... Club c.b. auto.. pwr. str.. air cond., 12,000 original miles. (2974e) Auto.. elr cond.. AMn:M. low miles. (1Y46531) . . u 0 0 Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Friday, J1nu1rf 29, 1982 I ., I. • • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 ~ OFHUNnNGTONBEACH New ' '82 ·MaZda Dleael Pickup • 82200 ALL NEW Fii 1•2 ------------...-----•-----------------IEW '12 llZll 1-2111 Long bed Pickup Standard features include: I 4-spd. Transmission ./ 6 ft. Long Bed ./ Tinted Glass ./ Heater + Defroster ./ Much More (Ser #2707) (Slk 14882) IRllll IEW '12 828 $ ••• , 11111 ~,..,.~ lllll•DIA r. a.LIVERY NOWAm Loaded! Not Stripped! Mfg. List Price •10,666.10 8ALll •lllO• O&Y · ··984,9 , lndudee AIR COND., divided front ...... pwr. wlndowe, tit --· tlnt9d --. drulle oontrol. AM/FM Nrec>, digit.Ill olocil, IPOf1a Mlrron & morel (Ser.0011) (8tk.1UI) . NEW '82 TORONADO BROUGHAM COUPE . Features: . """Air Cond. SIU Pllll RLY Features: """AM/FMMPX Stereo VI DIESELI ........,o&......._IALEPllCl ... Y w ... , ::: ~~~M stereo · •1 I 75 """ Radial Tires · """ Bucket Seats """Much More """•Speakers •57 I 0 """ Full Styte Covers """ Luxury Features """Much More Includes all power options, Incl. tempomatlc AIR CONO., pwr. seats, AM/FM ater. cassette, wire wheels, , automatic w /fuel saver OVERDRIVE! ( I0.17<M) ( Stk.7356) 115,47111 LOADED-llOT STRl,,Ell LIST PRICE $17 ,44611 (8«.6S2t) (hl.4703) NEW '82· MAZDA RX-7 tNtures: -"" 5 Speed "" AM I FM Stereo "" "" Buckets "" Alloy Wheels "" Wide Steel RadlaJs ""All the Goodies 1s1u.lfll~~wss V6 engine. pwr. windows. splil pwr seat, cruise conlrol. 1111 wheel. ~r5f~5 1978 DATSUN 510 SEDAN 4 cyl. engine. 4 speed trans.. air cond ... AMIFM radio. (831ZSL) 1a1 PllTlll Tllllll ,.. ...... ,. .......... ....... ........ ,....= ...... ..... Tf795 11771m•Y ...... ,.. ...... ,.,.,,.. --... ~ • 1171 llEYllLET llM'DIDUlml "' ............... .-......... ., . NH", I wtleelt. cv•t-l11terler. ... 5995 · , s3395 12495: .... "L to.,. .... the C~R ~t-D·l-T to,.,.. .-...... ~ltlona <a.._ ... • moneyt) ... ,,,,,.. ... ..., ,,, .... ,,, IN' olloloe ONLY 03 PEA MO. . +TAX -1••lllATE IEtlVERYt·· 1171 lllZll 111111•1 . 1171111111 ·21111 .1 .. Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 ~ The Ma.rda 626 Sport Sedan, pictured above, comes with five-speed manual traumiuiora .and gets EPA estimated mileage of 21 miles in the city, 37 on the laigluooy,. and 31 combined. Standard equipment on both the sedan and coupe (coupe pictured above) inclwks steel-belted radial tires, tinted glass, AM/FM stereo radio, quartz digital clock and rear window deferosteT. ' 1982 Mazda 626 offers European styling, luxury and economy The J.m Mazda 626 is for the inlemaUonaJ-size car buyer who wants to aacrlftce oothinl but the belief that European stylin1, lux uriou s appointments and virtuous fuel economy can't all be had on the same car. "Fuel economy is a prerequisite ol seUing a car in today's market. But setting 1ood fuel economy doesn't have to mean 1etlinl a car that skimps on attractive styling and the extra luxury touches that make driving more pleasurable. The 1982 128's are convincing proof," said Yoshiki Yamaaald, president of Toyo Kogyo Co., Ltd., the Hiroshima-based manufacturer of Mazda cars and trucks. The 626 is offered in two-door sport and luxury co upe and four-door s port and luxury sedan body styles. The 626, with the five-speed manual transmission that comes standard with the car, sets EPA estimated mileage ol 27 miles per saUon in the city, 37 on the highway, and 31 combined. Standard equipment on the 1982 626 sport coupe a nd sedan includes steel -belted radial lire,a, remote trunk and fuel filler door releases, tinted glass, velour seat upholstery, driver's seat w!th recline angle, quartz digital c l ock, full cut-pile carpeting, trip odometer, headlight reminder chime, rear window defroster, side window demisters, and num ero u s ot h er features. To that list, theJuxury coupe and sedan add a tilt steering wheel, power windows, cruise control, power steering and more. Jn addition, an electric sunroof is standard on 626 luxury models in some parts of the country. Fo r conve n ience, Mazda mounts the 626 lighting controls and levers on the steering c olumn , making operating the controls that much simpler. The clean and crisp European exterior lines of the 626 ~mplement the refined interior and off e r excellent aerodynamic efficiency as well. A black poly- urethane skin covers the front and rear bumpers, providing the skin returns to its both visual and original shape after practical appeal since 'minor impacts. The Chrysler trie~ the convertible market C hry s l e r Co r - poration's 1982 model lineup includes a new soft-top Chrysler LeBaron; a derivative of the front-wheel drive LeBaron two-door sedan introduced in October. Chrysler offers the n ew mid -size co nvertible in two ver sions : a II mited edition , one-pri c e LeBaron Medallion with Mark Cr oss designer leather interior, and a medium.priced model with vinyl seats and trim. The convertibles all a r e equipped with four-cylinder engines, console-shift automatic transmissions. power tops and front bucket seals and rear bench. The LeBaron Medallion leaves the customer the choices of color, ty~ of two sound systeqls and wire wheels or road wheels. The M.edallion is powered by a 2.6-liter Mitsubishi-built engine, featuring the MCA-J et clean air system. Its list of standard equipment includes power brakes, steering, windows, door locks and trunk release; automatic s p ee d control; air conditioning and tinted g l ass ; electronic digital clock ; tilt steering column with leather-wrapped wheel; convenience lights and warning lamps; deluxe wiper s ; dual horns, inside hood release and a locking glove box. A heavy duty suspension is optional at no cost on the Medallion. T he medium-priced LeBaron convertible is equipped with a s tandard C hrys ler 2.2·liter e ngin e , o r o ptional 2 .6 liter. swept back egg-crate taillamps are also elegantlook. piston engine with a patterned grille, side trimmed in black and A four -c y Ii n de r, 1970 cc displacement protective moldine and contribute to the 62.6's overhead camshaft delivers smooth power. "' Classic Ford Motor Company-built cars, such as this restored 1941 Lincoln Continental cabriolet or a 1932 Ford roadster similar to the above restored version, are included among t~ grand prizes in Ford Parts and Service Division's $10 million Old Car -New Car Sweepstakes. In addition to the classic cars, the Lincoln-Mercury winner will receive a 1982 Contintental Givenchy Designer Series Sedan and Ford customers will win a 1982 Ford LTD Crown Victoria. More than 2,700 Ford and Lincoln-Mercury dealers throught the country are participating in the sweepstakes, which is part of the division's Response '81 direct-mail merchandising program to owners of 1977-1981 Ford and Lincoln-Mercury products. '11 COORIR PICIUP '11 HOIDA PRllUDE '11 TOYOTA Sl5 I.FT/II '79 FIAT X-19 '79 HONDA ACCDID'U' 56225 53265 56996 5 ................. ------(1111111) 5 -.... ..... lllllGflOClf. ,,. dllrl ·-... ...., $3465 5..,ct .. etdfm atlreo. Won't'- lonGl "27AUB~ 55154 , ...... -...... Looll•llllo...~ 5 apd., a ir, p.a.'. amlfm, caeene. A harcl to find c:er. 1 -2 -------- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 I Buy or lease for less at Jim Marino v.w.-1suzu. r .. : -------...,.-=-----------------------------------------~~=-=mm-----------------t ~: . 3 ~~'IJ '82 RABBIT L . FultV equipped With stereo. prep., 4 speed and more! SALE PRICE s5999 ~~~ -~E.~ '81 Vw VANAGON L CJljZN_JE ;AW Fu11v equipped wtth leatherette W s.eats~ tinted gt.ass~ deluxe-= ---package & more! List Price '11,590 our D•s~ount. 1,395 SALE PRICE s9995 '81 VW SCIROCCO S Loaded with alloy wheels, rear window washer & wiper. s speed, stereo cassette. sports seats & more! list Price s9410 our Discount 101s SALE PRICE s9395 '81 VW JETTA Loaded with s speed. air .. stereo. prep. list Price $9035 our Discount 1040 SALE PRICE s7995 s -A ··· '81 DIESEL COUPE Loaded with steet t>elteo radials. pcwer front brakes. aluminum wheels & more! our Discount 569 SALE PRICE ss495 '81 P/U 4X4 Fully equipped with decor pkg . ultra mirrors. oower tron~tSc brakes. anc:J more• -~ Sticker Price \8358 our Discount· 1163 S ~~~~&1'81 l·MARK DELUX. DIESEL 4 DR. ......!!!!! Fultv equipped with s speed trans.. stereo. steel belted radials, and more! 11}411 •OJBS7 Sticker Price our Discount 7839 ... SALE PRICE ss995 '82 P/U Loaded with utt"3 mtrrors. tie down hooks. and much more! St1cker Pl1Ce our Discount SALE PRICE s5595 . . . . . .. • ·I' • l ··~ ,..,,, ··:A . . ... . . : . . • • Orange Cout DAILY PILO,T/Frlday, January 29, 1982 T.o b«r-priced modeb of the popular front-wheel drive Chrevrold Cavalier. and Citation have been add«f to the C"Mvy line for 1982. Above, i.t the MW four-door Cavalier Cadet. Chevrolet introduces new low-priced front wheel Cavalier Cadet model Chevrolet bas added lower priced models to its Cavalier and Citation passenger cars, reducing the manufactur'ers ' suggested retail price of base vehicles in those lines by several hundred dollars. "These new models will gi.ve Chevrolet d ealers very fuel -ef f icie nt higb ·qua l ity front -wheel -drive offerings which are very competitively-priced,'• said Robert D. Lund, C hevrolet gene ra l manager and a GM vice-president . "Chevrolet dealers a re currently taking orders for all three models. •'The addition of the new Cavalier Cadet indicates our desire to satisfy customers who may not choose all the eq u apme nt which is s tandard o n other Cavalier models but still allows them a wide c h oice of optional equipment items," said Lund . "T h ey also indicate our desire to continue lo provide American motorists with low-cost high-value transportation.•' Cavalier Cadet sedan and wagon madels will feature black headlight Ford offers full line of trucks Ford Motor Co. will offer a full line of trucks for 19$2. plus a new domestic compact pickup truck al midyear. The compact , called Rang e r , will complement the F·series piclcup trucks. The F -se ri es. cons isting of F -100, F-150, F-250 and F·350 trucks, was completely redesigned for the 1980 model year. Numerous fun c tional and a p p e a r a o c e refine ments, howeve r , have been incorporated into the 1982 models. In the F-100 models, the 4.9-liter in-line six will be standard. A new selects hift automatic transmission with locking torque converter designed to in crease fuel economy will be optional with the 3.8-liter V-6 and 4.2-liter V -8 e n gines . Th e F·series engine lineup also will include the 5.0-, 5.8· and 6.6·liter V-8 engines. A specially equipped s h o rt -wh ee lb ase Styleside F-100 FS will offer a rating or 22 miles per gallon. The F-100 FS will feature the 4.0-liter six, a four·speed manual transmission, a 2.47 axle ratio. a front spoiler and other refinements. Major functional improvements to F-100 and F -150 models will include the addition of adjustable camber to the Twin-l·beam front axles. Trim leve l s on F -se ri es will be redesignated, and now will feature standard, XL. XLT Lariat a nd XL S m o dels . All F·s eries pickups will fea ture a new grille highlighted by the familiar blue Ford oval DE LOREAN MOTOR COMPANY bezel a n d gri lle treatments as well as body-colored burrpers. The two models will be available in a choice of four body colors and ca rry "C adet" nameplates. Functional equipment ite ms such as AM a radio with digital cl ock , r ear window defogger, remote trunk or tailgate release and other features will be available as optional equipment. in the center. New options for 1982 include elec tric remote -co n trol , swing-away outside mirrors and deluxe s tyle d -steel and cast·aluminum shells. Ford also wi ll continue to import the Courier compact pickup. The 1982 model will have a new steering wheel and column featuring stalk controls. An AM radio is now standard and Courier will continue to offer two engine choices and an automatic and two manual transmissions. 3 YEARS · CAREFREE DRIVING ONLY DEALER OFFERING 3 YEAR WARRANTY 5 1000 REBA TE ''CAR OF THE FUTURE'' ASK FOR JOE DONOVAN 547-7504 Nissan first import auto firm , to offer refinancing . or dealers Niaaan U .S .A . announced the formation of a new 1ub1ldlary to handle wholesale and retail auto reflnancin1 for Dauun dealen and their cuatomen. The company, Nissan Motor Acceptance Corporation, will be headquar:ted in Los An1ele1 . Initial operations will begin next month in Soulbem California. Over the long term, the company envlalona nationwide expansion. NMAC ls believed to be the fiat wholly owned financing subsidiary formed by an import auto firm. A few other importers have started financing operations aa joint ventures with American companies. Niasan U.S.A., which distributes Datsun and Nissan vehicles in this country, will own 80 p ercent of NMAC's stock and the remainder will be held by the parent Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. of Japan. Ro~rt R. Baker, 47, ha s be e n named president of NMAC. Re la a 23-year veteran of the financing industry and moat. recently was western regional m anager for • Ford Motor Credit Company. Besides being roomy and economical, the 1982 Nissan-Stanza now features a new travel rack for outdoor, get..away trips. The roof carrier, available as an accessory, can either carry bicycles or skis. Restyled front end, new interiors highlight 1982 Toyota truck line Toyota's 1982 truck A total of 13 models line has the right truck are offered for 1982. In for nearly any occasion. addition to Toyota's four They feat u re a and five-speed manual restyled front end trans m i ss ion s', the hig hlighted by single Half-ton Deluxe and the rectangular headlamps, SR5 Long Bed feature redesigned bumper and an optional four-speed parking lights and automatic overdrive revised grilles. Inside. tran s mi ss ion that t h e r e · s a n e w r educes engine wear instrument panel design w h i I e d e I i v e r i n g in all models and new e x c e p t i o n a I f u e I seats in selected models. economy. The five·speed overdrive transmission is standard on the ~-too truck , replacing last yea r 's four -s p ee d manual gearbox. A II gasoline-powered m ode ls feature the four-cylinder 2.4-liter engine. All feature the s tandard one-t o uch tailgate release. Standard and deluxe two·wheel-drive models get a new wheel trim on th e o uts id e and a redes igned two-spoke steering wheel inside. S R5 models have new low· back bucket seats and a new cloth seat option . The re 's a lso cruise control available on SR5s equipped with th e f ive .s p ee d transmission. All SR5s get a tinted upper windshield band that reduces glare. YEAR-END DEMONSTRATOR CLEARANCE HUGE-sAVINGS NOW ON JHE SENSATIONAL 1980 ROVER. Factory incentives allow us to pass on substan- tial savings to you. Rover combines the quick handling of a sports car with the comfort of a family sedan and the utility of a wagon . ORANGE COUNTY'S ONLY AUTHORIZED FERRARI DEALER 3100 W. Coast Hwy. ·Newport BeaQh ~ 1213' 581-1532"'• 842-9405 . --Aato~n Eerrari • ~RoYer •J.aquar. __ Sporty Datsun 200 SX redesigned for 1982 The 1982 Datsun aoC>·SX Is more than just a pretty new face -it's 1ot some new mwide to back lt up. Ur e than e color·lnte1rated soft bum pen front and rear, a revised 1r1lle, hood and "8 " pillar louvers and taillllhls comprise a m a jor face-lift for Datsun's p e r sonal luxury car this year .. The "n e w l o ok " 200.sx h as a lower , wider appearance, but retains the overall crisp, wedae-shape d design u se d wh e n first introduced ln 1979. A 2 .2 -llter, rue l·lnjected NAPS-Z e n1lne now pwoer• the 200-SX llne. offerln1 the same benefits of drlveablllty and lower e mis s io n s as the previous 2-llter en1ine, along with a substantial Increase in torque. Th e 2 00 -SX i s available ln two-door hardtop and hatchback models in either Deluxe o r SL packa1es. The standard transmission ls a five-speed overdrive, with a three-s peed automatic offered as an option. A new feature for the automatic this year is a lock-up torque co nv e rte r whi c h Improves performance. Abo available on the 1982 200-SX is a vocal w ar nin g f eat ur e borrowed and expanded fr o m la s t yea r 's Maxima. Toyota launches new Supra aS performance sports cOr Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 Toyota ls laking aim al the performa nce sporty car market with the introduction of the 1982 Celica Supra. It will have the most advanced Toyota powerpiant available in the United States since the 2.4-liter ~win cam engine. differential a nd wide that can be driven on the The Datsun 200 SX has been mOdeTately redesigned for thi& year. A new feature includei the taillampa. • T h e fuel -injected 6-cylinder, 2.8 -liter twin cam engine is a direct descendant or the first Toyota twin cam engine that was used in the 2000GT sports car. It als o has four-whe el independent suspension, variable assist r ack and p inion st eering a nd four-wheel disc brakes. Two versions of the Ce li c a S upra are available in the United St ates . T h e b as e Liftback model features a lim ite d -s lip 225/60 HR tires mounted car's remaining fuel. and bumpers. on alloy wheels. .----------- The Celic a Supra L·Type also a liftback, bas a standard plush v e l o ur Inte rio r or optional leather seals. It bas a digital electronic dis play option that i nc l udes a digital s peedometer, graphic electronic tachometer and fu e l and t e mpe rature l e v e l indicators. Accompanying the di g it a l g a u ges i s Toyota's state-of-the art trip computer option. It pre dicts the time of arrival and number of mi l e s to a p re d e t e rm i n e d destination, regist e rs MP G fi gures whi le driving and the distance Chevy announces fall truck line Chevrolet returns to the 1982 marketplace with Blazers. Suburbans a nd fo ur-wheel-drive p ic kups t h a t get 20-m iles-per-gallon. These a re offici al EPA city estimates for the ne w 6.2 liter VS diesel e n g in e and fo ur-speed overdrive a utomatic transmission vehicles. The diesel engine t ea m e d w i th a f o u r -s peed m a nual tr a n s mission i n a half-ton pickup, delivers an EPA estimated 23 miles per gallon city, 31 hieh.way .. To offer that kind of mileage in a workho r s e truck is particularly gratifying, s aid Robe rt Lund, Chevrolet 's g e neral manager and GM vice president. The n ew 6.2-li te'r diesel and five gasoline engines are available with either manual or automa tic four-s peed overdrive trans missions i n alm ost all o f C h ev r ol e t 's 198 2 li g h t -duty pi ckup s , Bla zers and Suburbans. Properly rigged, trucks equipped with the 6.2 liter diesel can tow up to 13,500 pounds. Basic features of the m a nua l in clude an a lum i n um c ase , syn chronizers in all forward gears for easier s hift i n g a nd a floor-m ounted s hift lever . The ratios in the first t hree gears are comparable to a regular t hr ee-s peed m a nual · transmission. The fourth gea r is an overdrive gear. Th e o p tio n a l a utomatic four-speed a lso emphasizes fu el eco n o m y an d i s a vailable on selected h a lf · a n d thr ee-qu arte r -t o n models. It features a three-eleme nt t-orque converter , mechanical l o cking conv e r t e r clutch, column-mounted shift lever and fourth 1e ar overdrive (7:1) ratio. ' C hevro l e t a l so introduces LT-Metric Radial tires on sm aller 16-inch diameteT wheels .as standard or optional equipment on thre e -quarte r and one -ton trucks in 1982. The LT-Metr ic tires replace tubeless li1ht-tru c k tire s previously used with 11.5-lncb wheels and can inereue fuel economy f« t1loM models. Tbumbnail sketches of Qe.rolet's 1112 trucb lllehlde: . Tbe Serin 11 LUV ................... ,...,. 'are not available in Californi a , but the standard LUY gasoliJle.. is. Its engine remains t h e 1.S l iter. fou r cylinder. T h e L UY two-wheel-drive diesel model uses a fi ve-speed manual ove rdrive with ful l sy n c hro m e s h t r ans m ission . The four-wheel drive LUY diesel has a four-speed m a nual . full sy n c hr o m es h tr a n s m issio n , a t wo -speed transfer case and driving axles front and rear. El Camino has new front-end styling, new luxury seating and fi ve n ew exter ior color s . Low-drag front d isc brakes are standard, as a r e luidic windshield washers. An automatic -trans mission is standard e quip ment. Eng in es include a V6 and two VSs . Jtiekup sheet metal is unchanged . There are six new exterior colors, and new standard vinyl seats. The 1982 gasoline e ngine lineup remains uncha nged e xcept for elimination of the 5-liter two-barrel VS. The Chassis Cab has new exterior colors and fr es h i nt e r ior appearance. There are new heavy-duty one-ton four-wheel-drive models with an 11,000-pound g r oss vehicle weight rat i n g . A three-quarter-ton model with Bonus or Crew cab has been canceled as has the four-wheel-drive model with regular cab. Bl aze r f ea tur es include the new 6.2-liter di e s e l e n gi n e i n f o ur -wh ee l d rive models, the four-speed a uto matic overdrive transmission, automatic speed and cruise control for both manual and automatic transmissions and six new exterior co l ors . Standard high-back bucket seals ha ve n e w two-tone leather-grained vinyl material and new woven stripe custom cloth. Suburban models have new exterior colors and new standard vinyl seats in addition to the optional diesel en1ine and four .spe e d a utomatic overdr ive transmission. The diesel ls available in all half· and t hree-quarter-ton Suburbans, in both two· and four-wheel-drive models. VI 1aaollne •n 1l n es •re also available ln 305, 350 and 454 cublc ·l n cb dlaj>laeementa. Sportvan and Chevy Van h••e •••en aew1 enerior eolon. 5 SPEED, RADIAL TIRES (10#5528 71 ) (STK. #2301 2 $499 down + 1ax hC dOC fee s 159 mo 48 mos Del S815 7 56 APR 18 80 on approved cre<111 I ... • I Orange Co11t D~L Y PILOTJFrlday~ January 29, 1-982 ~~~f-~. ;. / / r~ f ( :~ : .. - The new Peugeot 505 Turbodieael u America'& first four-cylinder turbocharged dieael and the only car in the United State& to ally /our-cylinder diesel economy and durability wi~h turbocharged performance. Peugeot offers economy, power Peugeot may still be one or the best-kept secrets in Americ a . Worldwide, however . Peugeot S.A. grosses $17 billion annually and is Europe's second largest automaker. In the U.S., Peugeot Motors of Ameri c a imports the 505 series of sedans with a choice of diesel, turbodiesel and gasoline engines, the 504 diesel wagon and new this year, th e 604 turbodiesel. The 604 gets an E.P.A. m ileage rating of 27 MPG in the city and 34 MPG on the highway. It has air conditioning, a tap e d ec k , a nd a one-step locking system. A turn or the key not only locks aJI four doors, but run s up t h e windows, closes the sunroof and locks the fuel tank. Peugeot's best-s~ller is the SOS, a r e fined sedan. The 50S was recently discovered by American cabbies. In New York City alone, more than 900 cabbies h ave s witched t o Peugeot. Chevy begins assembly training program Wh en C h ev rol e t d e d icated it s n e w Engine and Assem bl y plants in Moraine, Ohio, on Oct. 14 . Ohio Gov. Jam es A . Rh o d es' presence was more than a formality. The state of Ohio assisted Chevrolet in developing a unique training program fo r all recalled employees. T h e r eca ll ed employees. ~bout 6,000 , were left jobless when Frigidaire s toppe d production in mid-l979. With both Che vrole t plants riow working one full s hift. 3000 are back on the payroll Before ever setting foot on the plant fl oor. t h ey report to their ·re s pective pl a .nt 's Training Center . Here th ey co mplete a comprehensive training 1>rogram. ··we think this special training is the way to get from the appliance bus iness to the s m all truck and diesel engine business." said George B. Albrecht, personnel director for the plant complex ... Because of th e co mpl e t e changeover , people are doing very different jobs than when they left and we wanted to prepare them for the jobs ahead of them." I n d eveloping t his prog ra m,. t he plants e nt e r e d into a coo perative arr angement with the Sta le o f O hio 's D epa rtm e nt of Vocational Education and Depa rtme nt o f E co n o mi c a nd Co mmunity Developme nt. U n d e r t h i s arr angement the State provides the services of a full -time. on -s ite consultant and loans the P.lant s c la ss room furnitur e and aud io-visual equipment. Stat e assistance a lso helped defray the costs of preparing the training m a n u al s a nd v ideo tapes. The training at both pl an t s consists Of a combination of textbook and vi d eo tap e instruction. "hands-on" d e mons tratio n s an d training in c o mm unicati o n a nd in ter-personal s kills . Each plant developed its own cur riculum , and each has a different emphasis. Employees at the a ssembly plant. for example. complete their training in one 40-hour wee k ; 20 hou rs o f team-building s kills training and 20 hours of "ho w to assemble a truck." "Since we use the t ea m -building philosophy throughout the plant, we decided to use our training time to e mphasize the s kills nee ded to make this m a nage m e nt st yle a success." said Richard E . Aco s ta , plant manager. SAVE 5100s OF DOLLARS 011 ALL -MODELS _,... ...... --· ...... SALES 4 REASONS TO BUY A ·DATSUN! \ S1 t the New '82 's SERVICE -.~-----~ -· ------ Saab Turbo passes taxi test Thirteen tlmea around the 1lobe ... or about 325,000 mil•. Swedish capita!, or cloee to 400 miles per day. miles lln't accompUaMd wt&bout s ome thln11 aom•Um•• 1olq • wron1. But, he add•. re1ualr service la the answer. . That's the number of miles that has been travelled by the Saab Turbo taxicab that re1utarly carries paueo1er1 In and out ol Stockholm 's Inte rnational Airport Arlanda. Thia impressive mllea1e has been recorded in Juat over two years by tad owner James Bergkviat and hLI wife, Pie, who live close to the Stockholm airport and whoee dally drivlq often includes five or six round trips between the airport and the Ber1kvlat, who took bl• private 1971 model Saab 8800 Turbo Into service when bl• previous non-Saab taxicab cau1ht fire in May or 1979, 1ay1 that many International travelers are quite surprised by his cab. "We chant• the oil ever1 week and the oll filter every two weeks," he uy1 about tbt .. Turbo, which In lla first year of service had rolled up over • 155,000 miles on the odometer. ·'This s urely is a capitalis t country when they use a Turbo Saab u a taxi," la a common comment from paa1en1en, he reports. On the outside the blue Saab Turbo looks as neat H muela newer can, and under the hood,• thanks to its re1 ular maintenance, lt 11 much cleaner than most cars with much leu recorded mileage. Of course, he admits a record mllea1e of well over 300,000 Swedish ta.xi owners James. and Pie Bergkvin pose with their veter-an Saab Turbo taxicab outlide the Arlanda International Airport at Stockholm. In just over two yeara, the Saab Turbo, not emctly your 1UUOl taxicab, hcu-rolled over 325,000 miles. Saab president announces no .increase in prices There will be n o increase in the prices or the Swedish-made Saab cars for 1982, according to Robert J. Sinclair. president of Saab-Scania of American. Inc ., importer and distributor or Saabs. the past yea r , Mr . this opportunity lo both increase advertising Sinclair advised dealers hold down prices to U.S. during the 1982 model that Saab would take buyers and substantially year. At a series of dealer meetings throughout the nation during the past week , Mr. Sinclair announced that prices will essentially remain the same for 1982 models as they were for 1981. Pointing out that the U.S . d o llar had st rengthened considerably against the Swedtsb Crown during Cadillace dealers report sales increase over last year D espite economic woes felt by much of the country, CadHlac sales continued lo c limb throughout 1981 . Cadillac dealers have reported an 8.S percent daily saJes rate increase for the 1981 calend ar year as comp ared to 1 980 . Dome s tic deliveries o r new RESALES: Cadillacs for t he 1981 calendar year tot aled 230,665 units . At least 213,002 new cars were sold in 1980. "Sales for December totaled 20,600 cars, up 18.6 percent from the 17,374 cars sold in the s ame month last year," Edward C. Ke nnard. Cadillac Motor Car Divi sio n ge n e ral manag er , sa id . •• Domestic deliveries for the final 10 days of the month were 7,344, a 13.3 percent increase over the S,758 units sold during the December 2 1-31 period in 1980. There were nine selling days in the period this year. OUR RECENT SURGE IN NIW CAR SALES HAS LEFT US OVER- STOCKED. JUST LOOK AT THESE V ALUESI: All payments for 21.56 a.p.r. 5599 down delivers 1979 Olds Cutlass Stereo tape, air .. tilt wheel & more! • 264XKA. 55497or48 @167 mo.* deferred orlce 18634 88 1980 Ford Mustang Tilt wheel. sunroof. custom wheels, auto stereo tape & more• • 8592TS 55997 or 48 @ 181 mo.* deferred price 19294 20 1979 Merc ury Zephyr sunroof. v1nv1 tOP. stereo rape & more• • 34831 54495 or 48 @ 131 mo.* deferred price 16917 72 ........... ...,,,.,,,. ...,..,. ....... ...,~ '699 down delivers ,.. ....... ~ ..... --~ .. ~, ....... ~~ ....... ~A 1976 FOrd Pinto 4 sp. stripes, stereo tape & morel • 338Jrr0 11997 or 24 @l 79 mo.* deferred price 12596 12 1975 Chevy Malibu Auto , air .. oower steering, radio & morel •11515 12297 or 24 ti> 92 mo.• deferred prtce $3028 44 1977 Datsun 1210 This economleal little car Is really sharp! You must see It! •354TRR 15597 ors& • 113 mo.* deferred Price M772.40 1•11 lulck ••011 ~~ ....... ~ ... ----~~ ........ ~ ....... s799 down delivers 1978 Dodge Challenger Auto . air. stereo tape, custom wheels & more• •222 WRK 54997 or 36 @ 158 mo.* deferred price 17449 70 1977 Dodge "Surfer" van Loaded conversion with auto carpets paneling, custom Wheels, power steering & more• • IV19040 54997 or 36 @ 177 mo.* deferred prlCe 17182 86 ......... ~ .......... ~ .......... ~ ........ SPECIALS ml!P'~ ........ :,,;; ....... ~ ........ ~ ...... 1981 Dodge van conversion Loaded with tee box. custom.paint. bay windows. 2 high back chairs. custom wheels & tires, air., cruise, oower steering, tllt wheel. auto. & morel •1441055, 511,597 1978 Dodge van Auto . power steertno & more• •1N55229 s4997 1980 Plymouth Arrow A great llttle fuel saverl •167 ZED s4797 -Auto<) 11r., crutse, 1)0We( windows; power •~--• • • loaded! •493U4 1._980 Qlds C&.ftl•H . V·61 cruise, power windows, stereo & morel •93881 12975 or 56 • 96 mo.~. deferred price $4158.60 S6997 • .Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 1982 ""' IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! 4 cyL. ,.... inj1cted ...... ••• plic.,...... FrOllt wt.el .... •LUGE ' IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! LOSE OUT 0 1981 T•I ••• _ 5995 Down Plus Ta.Uc•1e&D1: .. ...., ... -A•D s 1-1 A83 -•LY '7~ MOMIH SAU P11C1 MttU O ........ le & Dec. .... Sttl.H .._ ,._ SJOO.tO ..._Slll.ll..,.._...__.SH.MDlc•11ta,,_fw• ..... 9f Sl4U.tt 0... ,.,_.., ali w .,..., ... Sllt.IJ ,_ _. fw 41 ...... Sl7Jl.t0 ....._. ct.rp, A.P.a. 11.41.,.. Dehn94111 ,.,...t price S7 Ill.IO• ... •-' U949. ' I 'IWY. -----. EXAMPLE: SER. #217171 MILEAGE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! • • • E1 All Cera ..,.., ved Credit. Suggested retail price~~v~er ln1t1lled 1cceMOrie1. All Cert Ptue ... Llcenee I Doc. FM . OPEN DAILY -9 A.M. TO t 0 P.M. \ All Cers ubteet to Prtor Ille. Prto.Oood Thru Moncl!IJ. Februery 1, 1•. .. ' WE LEASE ALL , MAKES AND MODELS U ooz O UL a Orange Coaat OAIL Y PILOT/Friday, Janu1ry 29, 1982 in Orange County since -1977 . BUICK All New Front Wheel Drive Buicks answer to the exotic imports! nRANDNEw19s2 XJ6 Series III JAGUAR EXCELLENT SELEUflON OF MANY UOLORS FOR IWDIATE DELIVERY!!! BRAND NEW 1982 ISUZU ORANGE COUNTY'S FI~T ISUZU DEALER • I I FRONT WHEEL DRIVE THE NEW LOOK FOR 1982! --- NOW WITH A TWO YEAR 36,000 MILE WARRANTY COUPES SEDANS PICKUPS DIESEL & GAS ENGINES AVAILABLE ,. • CLASSIFIED INDEX , .... , •• bl 542·5'71 .m•sau e-11 -==--•• "" ~ ...... .... ~ ...... -== , .. •• Jl'hN •• ..... v .... , . .. ................ ... --==-.... ... .._li._i 1111 _v..,. ltll =::. ... •• .. . -._,_c·--'"' s...-•• ......... -........... _ -··-•• --·-... uman -.... .. -•• ...,._,,.,Sale ·-::::.:=.., '* ·-o.-.r wu en ... lllf g-t'~!Tr ,.. •• .,,..._\.'_Sak ·--.. -..-•• _,_, -_.,,_n, , .. !Altf«W. mt ....,H•Tr•rrr•.t JM --.u.-.1.--o.~c.,.,., -CM c-~ .. -CMtllll•• -._, ..... c; ..... 1111 --hc10oatt ---"-,. EQUAL HOUSING OPPOf\lUNITY, .. , on h lf't Meek•: All real estate ad· vertiaed in th is DNIPIPU is subject to Uie Federal Fair Hous· inl Act ol 1961 which 1111kea it iUecal to ad· vertise "any preference, limitation, or dis· crhnination based on race. color, relia,lon . sex, or national oncln, or an intention to make any such preference. limitation, or d is · crimination." Thia newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is In viola· Uonolthe law. DTAlS -~ ... ~A ... ........ -~ -..... ct.di .. .. -rw .. uo1 u. ~:[::• = ............... T __ ,.,.. -IWI -..~ •• r=-;:,~r : DAILY PILOT•-• ~;:;.!Jal = ......, for ... flnt =~ 1.e1 : a.centct l•Hrtlo• ... lllU HOMIS Remodeled, decorated 3 bdrm, 3 bath, mstr bdrm, ocean view $425,000 . West Bay bayfront. Slips for 2 boats, remodeled 3 bdrm, 3 bath $1,200,000. Ocean & jetty views. Marine room, 4 bdrm, 3 bath, ~00 sq.ft. $1,38.5,000. UDO ISi.i H9MH Prime Lido Nord bllyfront. 5 bdrm, 5 bath. Lg._L.R. 2 boa,_t'slips $1,500.000. Remodeled 3 bdrm, a bath + large rec. rm. beam ceilings, $420,000. I.MA ISi.i IAYFIONTS Main channel view from 4 bdrm, 5 bath borne with pool $1,495,000. Lagoon view Crom 6 bdrm, 5 bath, playroom, dark rm . den. $1,350,000! CAINATIOM COYI Spectacular bayfront view 4 bdrm, 4 bath, 2 boat slips $1,900,000. BILL GRUNDY . RFALTOR : , l ' . •• • • • ,.,· • • • FRI DAY, JANUARY 29, 1912 ONMYOURO#M MlWPORT IEACH IOAT SUP! For aale by owner. NewPort Be•ch boat docll. Room foe several boats. Louted in Bayshore. Includes 80 It by 7S ft tidelands luse, Newport City pier permit. SO ft U·ahaped dock with waler, lights & electricity, .1ancw1y, 6 permaMnt 1ccess easement. J3CIO,OOO. (1141 142-2'711 1fter 8 p.m. , TllPUX TENNIS? 'TYMS.. The only LOT in Cyprus Beautiful triplex near Cove Sao Cle mente. South Coast P1ua. Acrou fromboth Tennis Owner wiU carry fioanc· Courts 6 Clubhouse. Jsl io1 1t lZ ~. Pri ce time olftted!. Firm al m ,ooo. Excellent, tx· $18$,000. Penniman & .cellent loution. Ca ll Com . &Sl·lOOO 546-~U -=::.:.:c;=<-:.==:..;;.;:.=-~- THE :REAL ESTATERS 9¥•"• LOAN ....... , ... ,000 SPYGLASS IYOWHEI hU Price.a75,000 lifontllJy Payment $2999 SOUl'HPORT MODEL ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ : 6br/41,<!ba. •tOOsq n a c o e co a 25 s a · Bankers and bookkeepers are in demand. Check today's listings, classification 7100. \ l I ~ : I ", ~ " . TAYLOI \ CO. !;J ·, '. j I 1! , l I lf1 M CANYON CUSTOM · UCrTIM& •ou COUISI v•w Elel(ance & dignity in this Majestic Colonial Mansion located on the 8th green of golf course. Top quality craftsmanship thruout with finest woods. abundance of imported marble, crown moldings, 61h baths, air cond .. 3 wet bars + more. Luxurious mstr suite plus 4 other bedrms with private baths. banquet size DR. ram rm and billiard rm. Call for appt to see or a color brochure. $2,150:000 including the land. Financing available. V,tlSUY M. TAYLOI CO., REALTORS 2111 S.~H•Roect MIBIW~'POl'T-"' Cami. M.I. 644-4t I 0 AUCTION!· HARBOR VIEW HILLS IYOMB ISLAND'S MOST CHARMING SGL RES 3 bdrm + loft. French doors 6 windows. Finest appointments thruout. 21' Amethyst. I 673-SSIS •VAMSUllABLES • 110~ 'k 73K lit S7S3 pit1 3Br 11,;ba UOK dn poss I ll V.% 76K lit S856pitl 3Br 1 "iba l lOK 6K dn Prin only, Bkr 1167 ·3163 •..UYllDE• Wini POOL AND SPA .... , ........ 1007 Spacious 3 Bdrm, 2 ba. •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• Beaut.ifuJ 1rea. SlS,000 ~. ~e!.0'Xi~t2~~'d: dn. Askin& $240,000 new crpt. Owne.r will ~ pymt. PP. Agt. consider long escrow. --------""------Will finance. $41S.OOO . ..WCOMDO SO DM Owner/Act: 675-5134. Agent. 631·S737 c:-...... 1022 •Wl::9•1eecll 1040 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ] Prilllf 0-lelff N 0 QUA LI f. Y I N G . 3 Bdr + 3 BrdT. Assume You'U love to own lhis 12!111,000. in loans. Asking sreat Sol Vista w /~I s.w.ooo. Best location. Asking 2 Br + 2 Br. so or S136.000. Make olr. Bkr bayside $3119,000. ,_84847 __ 09 ____ _ 4 Br + 2 Br, jumbo ART1Sl' ABODE, 1 mi to loans. ao. ol bwy $449,000 beach 3 Br 2 81 Sl lOK Call for more details, ~house. Sun 1·5. 20612 Darrell, Pash: agl ~etLn.,HB•2183 Re/Max 759-1221 CDMDUPLEX =-·-· : -'f. C.M.1·2 LOT ==. •• There's an existing 2 4 BEDROOMS • 2'12 BATHS S.STOOCEAM &4per duplex 3 Bdrm 2 Ba, fireplace & beam ceilings. Ju.st steps to ocean and only 12 yrs old. Great investment potential if s ummer rented. Owner will carry some financing. $299,000 I 2S Bodega Bay $ RXEl.UPP£1S $ Call OWller 759-<n37 l2mlh·C..... I FM&Y IOOM -2FllB'UCIS 700 MARGUERITE New construction . Medit. architecture. Jbd rm & 2bd rm , $491,000, l'inancing avail. Owner /Bldr: (714) 67~9431 . CiilllO~T- 4 Br Deane Home w aJ.k to Surf Sl60.000 •75-1771 --• !: !ii, --------i Bdrm 2 Ba home . The lot ~ .. ae ~ II.&.-~......_ C.....t-size is SOXU7' with plen· ,.,-o-~c!'f~~or' E'-···iG.25%Th CouOP.-.oRT fl:EAN VIEW c;.,_ ._ '"' -.._..,..... -ty ol room for a new un· Ollift _., .. •••••••••••••••• •• • • • • • it Ass n lst T D set · up c111 Ri c k ......... ~units. ree 2 MAL.TORS 1251 t::•-Jt•W•y "•C•MT :=,';".:., !: ._,. I 002 A8tina "s:ce S105.000 . . =......... = ...................... . 6 R ... , 714/760-7292 Bdrms. usumable loan. uuLc....Mw,. ~ ""' • """' "' ...,,..me. Only S17S,OOO. Call c.w.,.., SUN., JUI 31st 2:00 p M .... •--1· 121/zOfo FIN. llSllS$. llMST· AVAILAILE IDT, flWIC( I That's ript• Own this ::::: =: :: newty deror'1ted bome ==, : ill one ol Costa lles1'1 _, .. i--fblelt areas. 4 Bdrm 2 _, .. _ -............ .. ~'!!!.'~.--. _ ...... ••w 1reat terms. ~(ITS Jl\all price, S129.SOO. C11l POSllAlS & • fer details, • 7171 llST&FIM , .. Siii -THE :REAL ESTATE RS : 1'1rsliiiCil•ht : 3 Bdrm, pool 6 spa, new urpets, very b est -(mancin& available. In· vestAJn llM>uld leap at this one. Fu ll price -IJJL'iK. 7$1-3191 -, .. --5 WTSIDE : IEAUTY! -Channing 3 Bdrm 2 b1th : home in prime loc-alion. -Greil financing terms : availbale avai11ble on -this one. and no q11alify. = in& . .Priu Slil ,SOO. : lkryL~~-us for com· = ~paai.D.~7171 §fifitl -Bhtfs. Lease option. 2 br, wide &rftllbelt. Sl39.SOO. Btr, 644-0134. : 9ftOIATE" : COSTA-MESA : A fant.astk 4 Bdrm. 2 : s tory home w Ith -m1&nificent I vine. family area. Fireplace, .... country kitchen. 12% ::: ftnancing available. C1ll ::: for more detail s . ;11111 =-------· : ATIIMTIOM • ,. "'9LD11SI : Wbeft can you rind a level R-2 lol South ol lhe "" bi&lnray in Coroa a del := Mar for SZ30,000! G'rut "" opportunity to build a :~ line.le family home, • :m duplex, or even two con· m1 dot. Generous terms ::~ IVailable. rm -ml fTll -fl• fl• flU fltl fl• flfl fl• flllt cwsi2' CREALTY 671-3411 s===== ! -"" --- COLD Well BANl(C!RO DC"1MIUY : .. COSTA MISA ::; BtadullJ priced 3 BR .. , hame oa actasl•e_Colta = .... .,.. Spa. wood mi dect pb11 ftrep11tt. Ix· = t'llmt ccMIUoa. Owotr = wll -.ill wkJ1 flHllt · = ...... . = ...... .. ar-:1111 ----.... PllVACY PLUS.. 645-9161 811·H1t M. . • • • with tbis 4 Bdrm, fenced C4 ~ti O For AppoilCtw.t to in. pooi home on ll quiet ~ .t .._ cul-de-Sic in Eastaide TIADE _, · Costa Mesa. A beautiful U..~~ •OURS: • .. cupu• ,,..W.. back yard with covered ,_ ......... r--clellh. C .. patio and a cozy ocBUY . n JBdrm. &.eo"-for .... 644·4'10 1042 fireplace in the living '"'!!!!!!!!!!m!!!!!l•!!!!!!ml!!!!!!!!!!! 2• 2 ba home overlooking wtBI B.517 --------• room. Tllere's more! As· r= Victoria Beach. WESLEY. N TAROR co Can you rmd S Bdrms. 3 IO/oDOWM.ow.. Fla. ....................... .... laC•fort ble loans d -Openhol.lseSat/Sunt·4 • • bat.hs,bigfamilyroom. 3 BR2batwnhseinHun· when you see this 3 Bdm awna an an MOYI DOWN 21635 Solana Way large yard with patio in tiJl&ton Harbour. OwRer +den house. You 'll ::.=~c:!~11~.~ont~ THICOASTmd F.dnaLundberg~Assoc. Rf!.Al ·JORS 644-4910 aprimesection or costa will sell ror $185,ooo, want to &et cozy in front day. DOWN IN NICI 494-28M ~ Mesa ror $165.000? This SlS.000 dwn. AITD for ol t.be bis fll'e$)lace Only A 3 Br. 2ba bome w itb N E W p 0 I T ~~iiiiiiiiiiiijiijii~!!!~~E~~~ spacious 2 story beauty ~ at 15~. No bank 30'.(. down and take ad· LLl''PJl'Pf ...._ f th t SHOIES ............. ,......J......-! has a huge living room er.edit approvals ,. I ft I 1 ~~=d':e touhl: --• with massive used brick R 1 c b a r d L e e • =et.:.';::::.·~~ • -•• -po o I tab I e a or Owofr needs help ! Va· ~el fz~er Stylish. clapboard, sh'!t· 1 fireplace ! Assumable -"2=13-'-454-464~~1 ___ _ $131..51t. m..a111 --·--ramily /play rm or callt and ready to deal. 3 lot. "-lier will h•lp tered 4000 sq rt in loan available at 13•; lrrilll 1044 T Bdrm Z.aty wilb blt·ln '"' ~ Ba yshores. S bdrm . Call to see 540-llSl ~lllllll!!!~llll!lmll!!ll!!lll~-i ~ :,. Va~ ~..; kitcbeo, hqe sundeck finance! IZlS,000! large livlngrm, dlnln· ' . • .............. •••••••• IA•TNITMI and walk to beach. Now ..... ..,,...,. snn paneled Ubary and DfSPBAtl ! WllCILl•A*.T yn BILIEVE ... only$l71.* ..... bik familyrm. Hu ge Woodbridge3Br2ba. I J .... J ........ ~.. --?!?Call u.-.1£ALTY •67S.7060• kitchen, pantry and yr new. Low down . IS· ll•l•s' rooa • .,8{t= W ... &Ce.lltn .,_. ramlly eating area. swne loans. Need fast • I ,._,M-&... 7Jt.ltU 67M611 Security ~ sound sale. , .. , -· ''immmmmmmmiiiiiimliiimmiiiiil l YllWTOWMHOMES systems, ha rdwood FlmOMHOUSI SUCC~REALTY ~~=~'~lr•!l!~~=ll Master suites. View or floors. teak and oak 3Br.1Ba.large y1rd 549-7991 ....... 11qe FamUy L Orean 6 Night lights cabinets. wine storage, @,000 .... 6414163, Agt. University P1rk, 3 BR. rooa, larse z ur QWet Area. Parts. open marble baths and U · 2-.., BA Condo. ree, walk ,...., _.. wlt.b I U spaces. $137.000. Xlntl tensive paneling are on· MESA Yaol Lo schools/shops. newly IBQ. owe Zed TD. 111111 l'llD ca. Fln.HalorPatAgts ly a sampling or the 3bdrm.2bath,(rplc.dbl decor .. beaut. greenbelt -... ---• 751·9905,673·7300 qualltyfeatures farage, A·I cond . a r ea . SlS 9 ,000 . .64J.12H TI'Y-611-1266 n....-!t63101.'2968000FH 134,5(!. Owner will IS· "5.000/dn owe. Av1il BLDRS. CLOSE·OUT Faalastic larp lri-level cUltom designed condos nr best beach areas. A PETE BARRE TI REALTY From S78,SOO with l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!m ____ !!!!!!! special low int. flnanc· . inf. HURRY . call Classified ~ds. your one· 997.21149 Bltr. stop shopping center _ ~\#~ GARDEN PARK VIUJGE HAVI YOU HUD? 41 custom built town homes within a plush garden-like community complete with swimming pool -jacuzzi and unique recreation area. Available now -2 & 3 bedroom Cape Cod style village on the corner or Fairview Rd and Avocado, Costa Mesa. Furnished models ope n daily lO :~a.m. to dusk . Bonus: ~ r.r fixed rate loans avadable at 1313 Broker Cooperation HUIRACU S E I C E P S 0 E T C E T 0 ll P I E a· T & l A C I E ll I A Y L Y E 8 A R T E Y II ll Q P M 0 C A 0 A 8 A l 11 U II W Y M Y 0 U I ll T ll T I Z L E 0 A 0 Y llllZCSEUJCWllEELSAPfO l A A 0 L ll 8 S J ll E A II L U ll I K E TS N K·I PE II G N & Z & J 0 £A 11 0 E T 0 V M L M T P L P ll 0 ll 8 II C A 0 S I E U A Y A L A 0 A 0 A K U II It L 0 ll C H H C C A H 0 W A 0 C C II A S P L S S W I A T A Z L A ll Z S 8 1 II P 0 I T Z A L E I A A C ll A E J ll W F 0 0 " I C F S II II H A A I E II D I II U U Z l KULAIMYWSILOONDLNLA L l A W A A l U I C J T T S U L A M W ...... , ,., --........ z 2 2 ~ ... ,_*- I .... -: .... I II .:t• ~ OVER 57 YEA RS OF SERVICE We have a brand nfw vu II ..,........ sist111f10ancing. 2·12. byownerSS1·8074 phone at R~/MAX and . HAllOlllKE loJMc~,lttr. GROSSMONT &BALD IAY MODaM 11re are lookmg forward . . 54772' Lo asglsting our hearing An exq ws1te or~erlng ""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I in University Park Viii. Exquisite Decorated View Home. impaired friends with Ele1ant & ~pac1ous 3 -= . 11. This is P.frlert ror the Superb Modern Styling. If Your thei.r rul estate needs. bdrm + ram1ly home., 1 4BR Pool Home in Mesa smaU ramlly 2 bdrms. 2 Tastes Are Inclined Toward Call AMe MacCasland. iey. home wtpanoram1c Verde Lrg Comer Lot. ba. cent. A/C. covered CI CI a&t between 9.5 v 1s t a o f ha r bor , Breezeway. 2 Car Gar + patio. Association pool, Toda y's Sharp, ear. ean · 1TY&3l 1266 coastline. ocean & night Much More! Drive By, tennis close by. Walk to Features. This Attractive Home · lights. Prestige. com· 2828Tabago Place. Then schools. shopping and Overlooking The Ocean Should Be fort, luxury &r security. Call ror Appl to See. church. Sl39.SOO. · I M Reduced. now $69S.OOO. 9157-0lk59. Open House Sat In spected Immediate y. any I c<>wnerfinancing l. Agt. &r Sun. 11AM ·4PM S-peci-al Attributes lnclud ing -----......... ===-· MO-WO. Priced toSelJ at s11s.ooo E>ecellent Financing. Undoubtedly 642·S67~ I WtAssur,nable Loans. One Of The Best Priced Houses In ---· 1 Q!apentjon-W.h\it;s. · - Emerald Bay. $695.000. ONE YEAR YOUNG: 4 bedroom 2"':' bath home near South Coast Plaza. ·--..... , ... ,. 1•11• uc.,. ........ ....... ~ EXCITING VIEWS Step through elegant doors into a lovely garden courtyard and on int.o this magnificent home of grace and luxury located in prestigious Newport Beach. The beautiful living room, formal dining room and gourmet kitchen of this four bedroom. 4 bath residence all overlook a spectacular bay and ocean view. This home offers living areas to please all in the family plus ample room for entertainm ent at its finest. Lovely pool for swimming enjoyment. $975 ,000 includes the land. Thia flawless Eastside Costa Mesa home offers 3 bedrooms, 2 baths and is in excellent condition. Pedect for active family living or entertaining. An outstanding value at $158.950 Owner will rmance. Call John ~-mpbeJl for further information ~Q, ~[~R11\LTf 175-2311 ' . Ideal for the f rowing AfFORDA8l.£ 1 IDI'( family. Forma dmlng ~a room. family room . 't513C~PV5Dl:IRVM °"" 10% ~ ........... 2~tory crackling fireplace. 2 a.&. + .. co.do ....a.. I -oW. Pro r es s Io n a I I y a.. ...... -_., r--• landscaped ya rd .• v_.-' Ml W. SI 2'.500. • l204.a and owner will 3 bdrm, 2 b1. S27 1K BAI.BOA ISLD. OPPORTUNITY I ~finance. Call for de· down. Noqual. on 10~ • t --Loan.Slll2PITI ·••r~ 760-0680 Dtwtk price " ..... -............ 2 a.a. ........... & -.11'-d .. ...-_..._ Ut5,000. 117 W.W ............ WATERFRONT RmEAT! ,.. ... • • uauclc Vitw C04p. -u• , ....... ...., .......... to • ...... diec:M..,.. ........ 0.. .... 0..... .. csry Ant T.D . .t 12%. Id 9d to S2H,OOO. -WATERFRONT HOMES, INC. REAL ESTATE • SW. R~l'l!.t. l'IClllffl\I ~"' 2436 W Co.tfl 11"'11 JI~ M.r"" Avt ~t Bt11th &!bot Island Hl-l4M 67MtM I """' ...,."° """' r !N ltfK pMS rrrrrr1 1111111 • \ Amiss rrm T/Rock El Sc on cul.d·sac. Avail only to buyers with El St 11e cbdn. 3Z5K 9155.opO SHA.IP WTSIDI ALMOST IUDY 6 f1LD Lar1e custom lo ex· OM.Y 15-Y.DOWM elusive area. Quality throughout. 4 Bdrms. 3 Owner will finance to be w/wildemess views qualified buyer Well ... located, good looking 6 .-75.ooo. unita + 4 car garage + L..J-1497~17 .. , 11 I.I ample parking. Below 11 ---=.:.....::..:...:...:..-__ timesirou. Ctl...,'44-7211 l W-' .. MOITHth .. ~hf Beaut. lr1 bnnd new 2bdrm, 2""ba. (rplc. 2 car 11r. great area. .,. total down. Pay. meats UU. A1t : 751·321'7. Asam II loenl, 48r l"-ba, P'1m rm w/fplc, encl Dido. £/Side. Theresa •m1 E. Side. 3bdrm. Zba +.lWm apt, ....... . $10,000 d Wft . Ca II Olriatiaa: $57-2'113. HmTO 20760.-A•t. Cbelow l11f It> Opea hHH Sat/Su l2·4. Olml ... tMI I lldrm. J frplt, tor .. 1 dl•l•1. ............... ,. c...,n/OeN Cout -·· .... to e udC rom this neat 6 tidy 2 bdrm own.your·OWD unll. Oreb side o f the bittlway 6 otrered 1t an dfordable p r ice . SHO.•. Ol.D LAMMA A cllllt« of S separate. l bdrm thatm cotta1ea. F.acb with flrepl~e ' open beam ceilln11. The 18'1! nat lot haa nke ca. ...... ii '"" a IMrt waa to tile bearh ..... MYSTICllLLS AbsolOt'fl1 fabulous while water attan v ~s rrom this a bdrm. 21' bltb llome. W1lllln1 di"· tan« to "i•" nllool. ton • beattt. O•nu wlll hip rinure.. -- ;•~:oa;..._·_·..;;.;. __________ o_,. __ no-.;.._c_o_ .. _,_o_AJ __ L __ vP_1L_o_r_1_,_ri_d•.~-··_J-_•n-~-•-"'--~-·-1_882 ___ w_-__ ·_· ____ ··_· ___ ·_· ____ · __ ·~·----··_·_· __ · __ ·_· __ · ______ · __ ~·-· __________ · __ · __ · ___ 0 _________ 2 ___________ 1 l'ICTITtOUI auM••U UNI ITA'RMmMT Tll• tollowlfttl 1>•n011 It dol11t buslllftlM: OIU[O l'ILIX co •• s• Stur9"11 Or., C"le MMe. CA mi., CPl't-Or" 1' .. 111, "' Sho1•9"ft Or •• c;.10 •OTICI Ofl Tl•UITll'I IALI Mete, CA.,._, T S-No 4J07 Tiiis Mlntt• It COndllCIM tly Oii MOHAMMED S. OAUOO, AS 1 .... lvl.....,, "" .... ""'1ti..,.. Or°"" Coosl Delly l"li.t Jet1, 1. u, n. "· 1t12 1tMJ TRUSTOR Gttt ,..II• Oft l'M. S, tm, et t:lS A.Ni,. fl TLE Tiiis 1~ •M lllM Wltfl IN '9JC Illa TRUST Oll!O HRVICE COMPANY, C-ty C-al Or .... to;olftty Ofl J.,., 11------------- H "''' ._..., ... Trust" ~ t "41 •. tm . l'UeLIC #OTICI -wM lo Oetd Of Trull roe.,_ 1'1-· A11 .. .iic.tleft Mt ....,. f114d r, The Aptlt 0 , 1"1, es 11111. "° tttM. 111 Pu .. 1-Or-.... Cotst Deity Piiot. ltVN C-y. itO N..,..n c ...... lloo• 140U, ,. .. •0, OI Olllclel Jen I, U, 12. 2', 1"2 tu.I) Orlvo, P.O. 9oa I,.._, .. Kii, CA Recorch '" lllt offkt OI Ille C-IY tuu. tor o Z•"• Cllt11et frem Rocorclff Of°'-County, Sltlt .. -1#> --1111Ut .. 19-1 '° IMdlvm-H .... Dofl~y Celltwnlo WILL SELL AT PUILIC .._ -·~ Rnldttllltl ....... , ... Nortllwooel AUCTION TO HIGHEST l lDOER l"leftfttd Community lttt.,lotloflt l'OR CASH 1..-y-et llmt of 60lt In l'ICTl'nOVS IWll•llS It Cll I z 2) T I lowt"I _.,al tM Ullltod SteMtl AT UMa ITATSMHT .,,;,k• .. ,_ •,:•,: ...:; ... ~ ·:o~-~.~ THI! P:ROHT ENT..,.HCE TO THE Tiit followl119 PorlOI\ It dolllO dtVtlttlft'Onl of • doflslty Of , .. ., 0 L D 0 R A H G I! C 0 U N T Y ~l...U n : Ill Ul!IU COURT HOUSE, LOCATED OH GOLDEN AIUIOW GAS ENERGY : .... "'.. con:'ot -.:~TO:.'~:: NU .. l'ICTITICIUI eUM•UI • NAMll ITATll .... •T Tiie 1011owl119 --• are dolt1t ..,,IMn••· Cl) Al'Ol.LO IHTl'Rl"RIHS 121 fHE GI.AU Ml!NOl!RS, U H Otlt, SOllte Allll, Celltorflle t>104 J a cquelyn Ann Bn11, 2 .. 1 S. Sycam.,., 0, S..ta Ano, c.llfOtnl• tt~1 • Da lt Pllltllp B•en. 2'01 S. Sycam.,., 0, Setlta AM, Call-• 91101 Tlllt ~lntn It <ondllcted •Y t 90Mral --""-· J .... YftAM9- ThlS ~ •• lllH wltfl 111t cov11ty c .. ,.. or °'""' Cov11ly on Jenuory J0, 1"2 .... ,.,. P"INI"'°" Or-C.Olt Delly 1"11 .. , SANTA AHA I LVD . IETWEl!N co ... , Red Hiii A-. S..llt IOS. ,...,,,. v• A-on .... 7 .,., ,,. SYCA~I! ST ANO IROAOWAY, lyjlCllnt .. Co&lelMW,CAtit1'. lllt Vlllett ot Nortti•ood. An SANTA AHA t ll rlt hl. llllt Oftd J AMES H. l(ITCHEHS, Ult S. eftvlroll ..... fllel lmpect rtPOrl lot 1-------------lftltrtll QW'tvt,_. IO -now ,_ICI by II Third A-. Arc:odlt, CA ti*. Jon 22, 2t, F-. S, 12, 1'17 ,.._., Under H id Ottd 01 Truti I" lht T Horth-Ptrctlt 11 ond Ill •tt 1111 blltl,..u It c-tod b_y ffl ~ -dlllrllMitod tor l>Ulllk ..,....,.Y _,_ '" said C_,ty -lflddlvfClllOI. review from Nowmbtr 10. , .. , to 1-------------Sltl~~·~"';',:j No ....... , lllOWll Tl'tlt ~:;;:.::,. ~":sr.::~ •ltll ..... ~:::n~n!':·d!';''~::-c~1;~1f~~ CITY Oii' ~~~~:•L•.n. • on• map re<Of'docl In Booll 411, PotH COIH'llY Cler'lt o1 Or .... CovntyonJ.,, eftvlron,,,.,,..I '-' rtllOrl prior to NOTICl INYITINO llOS • 0 I h rou Q h • J In c I u' 1 •• 0 ' '· ,..,, e<tloft .. r...e Cl\e-11-ZC-t. A •••OAUTEMaNT ,. mlsc:111_.,..., mo111, records ot tllt ,.,.., k Ing • .,.. fll'ltOJaCT NOS .. 4111, ... A 4ln COIH'lly rtcorwrol H id county P11bll"*I Orenvt Coast Dally Piiot. Pvl>I -Wiii ...... kl on lfllt NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lllal Th• ,,, •• , •ddrtU •no Ollltr Jen .•• u. n. "· ,.., 1»12 -'c tc•, tlon T~~ CllFy of 1"'1"' C,!!! Int City C-110I '"' Clly ol FOIH'llt ln common cleslvnetlon, II eny, ol ,,,. ounc 1 on --..y, .W.-y •. 1-Celli 1 11 I led rea l pro-rt" atscrl.,.d e bo•t 11 -• --01 7:30 p.m , '" lllt cu, Council Vt llt y, 1 om111~ ~·. rtco(•,•0•00H• ,... ' ,._ llllllllK 1 c 111mbtrt, lrvlnt lftltrlm Cl•lc pr_ a""' ·~ ·-' : •.m purPOrlod lo 1111· S6 Carver S1rHt on Tutwi.,,, FtONery t, ttl2, lor the lrvl,.., CA 91714 Center' lnoG JlmbOrff Bouleverd, romoval ot Russian Tllltllt, Poison Ivy . Tiit """"''CIMO TruttH CllKlt lms l'ICTITIOUS BU5tNISS 1trvlt10, Celltornlt .\ end nulMlll<t-•"" rubblstl II\ IM '"Y lloblllly for any l11<orrtctnen ol NAMI STATIMENT P:or OOrtkuters coll 7S..J1S3 or cell City 01 F-l•ln Valle, In O(cordel\Ce Ille SlrNI -rtU tr>d ot,,.r common Tiit lollowlnt person Is Going 1•1 Ille Offlct of t,_ Clly ol trvlt1t wltf\lllew-ttk lllOM deslen•llon. 11 tfll', sllown llertln. buslt1tH et: IC 0 "" m u n 1 t Y D • v • 1 0 P m • " 1 Prol>O'llS SIWlll ,.. PrtHftled uncle<. Sold M~ will be m-. but wll,_t I t I A. M. R. A 0 VERT IS I NG OtParlmtftl, I rvlnt lntt•lm Civic Mt ltd cover end sl\tll be marked or covenant or warranty, .. preu or MARICETING RESEARCH; 01 Center "-•· 2'0t M<G-. lrvlt1t. dell•ertd10tsto1>elnt11e11-soltlle lmplltd, r"9rdlnQ tltlt, l>OiMUlon, or A M II MA IL ING (>I A. M II. C•lltornlt, CllY Cltrk ....... olllce In Ille City t11<umllrances, lo POV the rtmelnl119 P •R j H T i N G ; I 4 I A . M . R CITY OF IRVIHI! Hell, 10200 Sleltr A....iut, et or before principal tum of tne l\Olelsl -urtcl I" U 8 L I SH IN G , I SI A M. R . 8 y: Hetty C. R-lend the f\OUr sltlf!d, el wtllch llme t ll bids by Mid OMd ot Trust, with lnttrtsl INVESTMENT, t"9?2 Et Callello, El CltyC .. rll rtct lvtd •ltl M publlCly 0~11ed, lf'tertOf'I, es provided In MIG nolOhl, Toro, CA ftUD. Publl"'9cl 0r"'99 Coast Deity Piiot, eurnlned -o.c1artc1 bY ,,,. c 11, tdvances, II ony, unotr IM term' ot Allt n Carrold Higgins, 24'22 El Jon.,.rv 2t, tt12 ~ Cler' tlcldt" anCI the public ore Y id DHCI Of Trust, IH•. charQH end Ctbtllit, El Toro, CA '1•30. I lnvllod to be present •t ,,,. dtclaretlon el!PtllMI of. lflt Tr\lllH encl ol the Rlclltrel Brl•n Amtnot, lUt t ..X mJ1C( OIHldpr_.IS trusts c•Hltd bY Miid OHd ol Trull. L..cf...S., MIHIOll Vltlo. CA '2•t1. I All blcK to rocelwel, tatrnlt1td - Tiie total t mOUftl ot lllt UftPtlCI Merk Lewis GorCIOn, 2'Sll Lucinda, dtcltred wUI be reltrreo 11, ti. Clly "'' ... " ol Ille ot1flg.llon securt<I bY Mission Viejo, CA., .. ,. .onca OP Clerk to ... City EnglMtr .,,., IN City Ille pr_.iy to be told•"" •••...,..IN• Tiiis buslnen Is conducted 11, • 1 ~ltlfll'AUTIC* 01' Allor"" I« clleolng end •-rt to tN ullmtltd costt, t•P•ntu e no ~ner•l pertNnhlp NE8ATIVEOICLARATIONS City CouMll at 111 M •ll reguterty l dYtl\Ces ., '"' ...... of the lnltl•I Allen c. HIQoin• • Tiit '"'"-Renell Weter Olstrl<t .. SChtdUled mHlll\Q on Februt"' 1•. pebllce llon OI lllt Notice ot Sole Is Thu ~ .wnJlled_ wllfl u. MtNllM Ntellllw 0.U..atltM tor ttl1 S76,t06.IM.. Couftty C-o1 Or-COIH'llV Oft Jon Ille projects described below A Tiit Conlr.clo< lo wl'tOm eworo Of TM -flclery undtr w td OHd of • ltl) "Or•"" Ne91i!lw Ooctere41on Is on "" Contract It mtdt v.au. upOfl Trust htrtlolore t atcuted a nd ' ..,_ Ille o t tllo District olllct 0110 Is ntcutlon ol Ille Contract -•I his dl!llvertcl to Ille Ul\Offsl9MC1 a written Publl$llecl Or-Coett Delly Piiot, evtlttblt tor i>ubllc l11s1>t<1lon A own u-. turnlstl to the Cit' Ille Oeclerttlof\ OI Oeftl.lll -OtmM'td J en 1, U,n , 2', 1"2 11'"'2 Httetlve Oec ltrt tlOft wlll bt lollo•ll\Q -wtllch ll\all be luu..i for Sele, end • wr itten Nollet ol · conslclt""' fo< -oval or dlw-oval by•" tdmllteel wrety company wltll t Otlautt enCI elect Ion to Sell The -1#> -tly lht ... ,d ot Olrtcl«t ol Ille pollcynotdllr's rt11"9 OI A or .,.II., •ncl UftdtnljjtltCI COUled selCI Nollet ol ~ ... ~ Olttrlct ., IU 11Wellt19 to ....... d llne~ltl •allftll of AAAA or bell•~ flt Ofl•ulf -'Eltcllon to Sell 10 IHI F~ I, 1"2 ti •:OO'p.m., II\ Ille '11ow11 fly ,,. most cur,...., ..i1t1on OI recorded '""" COIH'llY "'"'" IM , .. , SUNltlOtt COU•T 01' THE Dlslrkt Offk•. Im% .. _ A......... BHt's lnwrlWICe Guldlt: pr~rty 11 toulod. STATE 01' CALll'ORNIA lrvlflO, Cellfomle. l•I A bond In '"' C>rlftclpel tum ol Otlt. Jtnuery S, ,.., l'Olt TH• COUNTY OP: OltANGI Tiit Protechcll'Wst ol IN IOltowlne: nol ''"_,,.total controcl price LO TITLE TRUST OEED In the Melttr of IN I I. lrvlnt ~., Drive -Vele11tle Insure IM leltrllul performance ol ,,,. SERVICE COMPANY AP911cellonby, Ave--Domestic Water Mein. Conlrect Ht.aid Trull" JOHN GORDAN SCHELL I Loce tloft: The proje ct •Ill bt tbl A bonel lft Ille prlnclptl IUm ol IU50VtnlurtBIYd.,Slt.450A 10, Chanvtol Htmt. con1tr11Ctod •IOnCI -edge -within not ltU 11\en Ille lot•• contract prlu to Encino, CA "U. CASE NO.: Alltl74 tr vine Conter Orlvt er.cl Vtltftcla 11cure P•vment of all unttllslltd Tel· 21).,.....,.. o •DSR TO SHOW CAUSE IAvtftut. Con1tructlo" wlll .,.gin claims ot lebortrt •ncl m•t•rltlmtn ev Errot s. Stlllmen ,Ott CHANGE 01' NAME •POro•lrnettly J,100 '"' ... , .. ,.... undtr the contract Publlthtd 0r"'9t Coell Dtllr Piiot, w HERE AS JOHN GO RO AN l11terwctlon ot lrvlt1t Center Drive, All 1ure1, bonds Shell be jointly J•n. u, n , '2', 1"2 n•U SCHELL, ,..ut-. •person....,., 11 lcon1111.,. to 11101 lnltrttcllon, '"°" uecuted fly Ille Contractor •lld the Yttrt of 191, lies llled • pelltlon wltll -oed within Vo'-I• Avenue •lld lnsuror •"" 11\ell lie Wbfect lo ll>t -.,. •""£ lllt Clerk Of lfllt Court I« an or-ttrmln-ti • point ..., '"' HSI of prior •-•• ol Ille City Attorney •• ~ '"' cllenglftO Pollllofter•s nt me lrom llltl l11tor_,lort to form -sutllcloncy. '" lltu of IN JOHN GOtlC>Ot4 SCHELL to JACKIE Tiie P•OltCI consists ol th• tutti¥ boncK rtqulreo lltreln, • ull\ TTM4 LEE SUTHERLAND. conttructlon ol J,100 '"' of 12·11\Cl\ bond In.,. -""°'lo Ille tol•I TM lol-lng copy Of "Noli<•.",,,. IT tSSDOROEREOtllel•ll perwns ACP t nclOIPwettrm eln,•""*'"' cont••CI price""'' lllt occ..ited - orlglfttl OI ~ch wn llltcl tor ,.cord lnttrttlod In ll'te eboft..tntlueci ,,,.tter of l ·lftch ACP "'"" ma in T lie .. ecutlon b' Ille Controctor ol an on Dec~ )I, 1 .. 1 '" '"' Offk t of _., .....,.. 11'111 C""'1 el IO:JO • m., ~ ol IN prolt<t 11 to provldt •orttmOl\t In tN lonn -manner ltlt COIH'llyltteordtrotstldCoullty,11 on J .J.U , In lhe courtroom o t .....,tle--llrtpt'Oloctlontor Prttcrl-bVINCltr ''"' t o you Ina smuch e s on Otperl,....ftl J, •t Or•ntt County several c~lel focltltltt In '"' Prior to comme11elnt work, the tHmlN llon 01 IN 1lt1t to stld 1ru1t 5-rlor '-1, 1'00 Civic Center Ori .. 1••H _,,.,,.Or-C-tv r"*'>U. contractor -tll l ubcontroctO<S lllall ProPt•IY shows YOU lltv• ht v• ... Well, Sonu -· Cetllorni• '2101, -Tiit ....... kltfltS ... lllWO -lb obtain t bu:llntu llct ... from Ult CllY lnltrtll 111 lhe Truttee's Sett show c-.11..,.,,wflylllel>'flllorllor 1c1.1tl~. ot Founttln Velleylnoccor<Mnawlltl Pro<Hdfn91 c,,._ol,_..sllollldnotbtgr-ed. Coftlect Ptrtoft Tllomts R l'ountelftVtlleyMunlclj>ol C-.Tll .. NOTICE OF OEl'AUl.T cepy Of 11\k order lo IMw c-.. Mllle•tlon rneuures to •void In I CCOf'd .. o wiltl ,,,. provl~lont Of IT IS FUllnlER OROER£0 -• ,HOlllm .. ; 111•1 m-tm $.Chapter S.lM. ANO •LICTION TO pUbllllled In "" Or-Coolt Delly POltnllt l sl9fllllce11t tfltcll No Sections 17>0 to 1n1. lnclutl•t. ot Ille SILLUNDI• P iiot ,. l\tWlPt Ptr ol g ....... Sltnlfktftl l-1\tfttklpettd L•borO....oflf\eSlel•o•C•lllornla, DEED 0, T•UST circulation prlnCtd lft o.....-eo..nty, 2 Sef'CI Coll yon A""""° R99!onel tht City Councll OI IN City of FOUllllln "-No. zaNOeY C•lllornle Oflte a wtt~ lor four IW a 1 tr Tr a fl\ m I Is Ion Mt 111 Valley !It\ bV rHOlutlon o_.ed '"' "t~T'!',;.~S::icE" wcceul,,. -s prior to 111e o•t• wt -ltkellons. P•• .. mnt "°"''Y rate of •oWH lor IF YOU R PROPERTY IS IN torllo•rlntolltltpetlllon Loct llort• Tiit prolt<I wlll """'In .. "~·"•" ..... .,.. .... ..-... ~ OATEO:~. Je, 1ta 1Wo IOCilt!Ms' mtc nenlc needed to uecute tllt FORECLO~URE BECAUSE YOU 11-ICIH.P....,_r 1l Stndc-.,onA-lnt,_Clly ol contreclwtllcllwlllbt awer-to!N A R E 8 E K I H ~ I N Y 0 U R Judftol Ille lrvlflO """10f' Ille c-ty ot Or ..... tucceutul bl~r. es e1ti.rmlntd 11y PAYMENTS, IT MAY BE SOLO Superior COU<'t ltrom Trallwco Roell -IY to lrvlnt lllt Ste It Olrector ol lftdustrltl WITHOUT ANY COURT ACTION, ..... fll'HILLlfll'MYElt 'Conter Ori .... •-o•lmettlY 1.000 lltltllons, you may ....,. Ille 1"91 •'9llt to brtl\Q J AGOBY & MaYEltS LAW Ol'l'ICE '11-r feet. The cont rector shell provide wch your account In QOOd tltndl119 by Mii N. ,._...., ahof. I 21 Stnd c .. .,..., A"""ut In tllt City of comPtnMlllon lftSU•tne• n f'toulreo ... Ylnt •II .. YoUr C>Mt Gut llOV ..... "'' ·--.cattm lrvlnt """'°' Ille Counly Of or ..... by Ill• Ubor Codi! ol "'• Sl•I• o• PIUS permlltod COits •nd openset t21U _,_ from,,.,,,.. Cellltf Drive MUl,,.rly lo Ctlllorftlt . and tll•ll eucule • within lllrtt monlllt from Ille dale ttllt Publl"*I Ortnte Cout Deily PllOl, ,Sullftyl'tlll, 111 lllt VIII-of Turtle con1rec1or·s cerllflc•te regoroing Hid ftOllce of dR!eult WH recordtel. Jtn. 22, 2'. Feb. 5, 12, 1"2 -.C •oek, epproxlrnetel' 10,000 linter'-· compel\Utlon rtQulrem eno The Tiiis •"""""It t627.00 ., ol January -• • -Tllo pro1«1 will consist of,_ Ptrtl. contractor •11•11 lurtl'ter rtQulr• all 1, 1"2, tnd wlll l11<rHlt 11nlll your -• -• I I EnltrttnMnl 01 Ille proPOStd subconlr•ctors to slmllarl' · provloe account becomes curren1. You may ~ ,..,llK ~Stftd Ctnyo" Avtnv• ll•glontl such c-ttllon lnturence for •II of not llt vt lo "'' ,,_ entire unpalCI IOom.sllc Weter Tronttnltllon Molt1 Ill• tubeontractoo ' employee>. The POrllon Of Y04K occounl, tv•n though • T.S.No.-ISCARDWTMI from h " lo U " coftlrtcton end wbconlrectort llltll ooyrnont Wet do,,,.ndt<I. but 'ou mutt NOTICE 01' T•USTll'S SALi i dlt mtter '" Ille Trtbuco Rood lo lurftlth IN City t "'tlllctte ol waiver P•1.:: = ...::,~,,':' f~:n~;.. dolt .. M I D c I T y I N v Es T "'E N T • lrvlnt c-Drlw ,_11, -ol sllbr-tlon under , ... terms Of Ille rocorCltllofl ol this docu..,..nt (wlllcn COMPANY, t Celltor111e COf'POf'•llon, 21 Ootormlnet1or1 t i ll\lt time to worhr't comoensttlon lmurtnelt. clelt of recorcllttlon _,..lier-I. H duly -'"'tel Trust .. \lfldef tlle dtsle11 -<-ruct tllt SCAROWTM 5-tcllketloM -oflklol ·llf-Mll Un•--s ~ ~1 ....... 11111_ l«~to-lollowf11Q dncrl--oltrustWILL ,,,_ lrvlN c-ter Drive to• pol11t forms to bt llMd lor bkldlnt c .. i. ...::,: _·;;,.u. =:'..-~i;o .• ;; hew SELL AT PUILIC AUCTION TO THE 1_. •• _v IMO ''-'"1 tchlfll oblalll•d only •I '"' olllct of .... City ....,...,... ._.,....,... HIGHEST 91DOER FOii CASH lot Ille. Sen Dlt90 F,_ey wllll l6'' E11oln"'· Public -111 Otportmont, only lltt lqtl •IOlll to ''°" Illa 1 ot · ldlel'!Mltr pipe, or.cl from 11>11 polftt to Clly Htll. COit ol stld ~lllcollons Is foreclosure by peyl"g lllt tnllro Cpeyab t ti llnM sett 1" lawful 'S..-ylltff wl9'1 U'' cll_. lllclt. U.00 11\Cludll\Q tu amount dtfftllfldod by your creditor. nlOMy ol tne Untied ~les) •II rltlll. T"' .,...kllrlH ot tllls proltct wlll, No bid wltl bt consldtr..i unlHs It It To fir.cl Diii IN lmOutll you m"" llll• •r>d lnleftsl con .. yeO '° -now be IN .. tttlng -1111u,. ~lk m tdt on lllt olllclet bleftk form l>OY. or lo.,,_ tor Pt¥met1t to llep held by 11 under seto °"" ol Trust In water customers lot Ille Olttrlct lurnftllecl.,, -Cltv -It m-In lllt l0<ectowre, or If V04K pr-rty Is ""pr-rty ,_.alnalt•r dn<rlbed, lttceuse " wlll -.ice "" ,.u.e.mty ecco•dtllc• wftll "" provlslonl ol tllls '" toroc•-· '°' ony .-.. -. TRUSTOR: R08ERT DULTZ -oltllt~ ..... ,.,,....,,. Nollet •lld ..._... """'"mel\U contoct SKIP RUEGER and DEANNA HELENE. OULTZ Contect Punon: S.... Melloy, 17141 atld CondllloM Ml 1«111 ~ So<tlon RUEGER, )II Frankllft Orio , tEHEFICIARY R08ERT SHAW, m.1m. 1 ol "" "Gelltr•I Provll lOl\S Plt ctntlo, Cttflorn le UUO, BARIARA SHAW, STEPHEN E . Mltl91tlon measuru to ovtld ConlreCI." Eech Bid.,_, must .,. 7U,.,....140 l(NOWLES-tETH w. KNOWLES POltllllOI ''""llconl tlltch H-llctnsed lft eccon:lence wltll •llOll<ebt• II you l'Mlvt t ny QUt1tlon1, YOU R. c ordtd Apr 11 17• 'u o • s • ffYOftd lllolt do<vmtllltd 1 ...... Stott Laws. should contact • ltwyer or the lnllrument Ho. nt'3 In boot< IUl7 "It....,_. Oomfttk Wttor l"k llltl" Tiit City r-~ trlt rl"'I to rtltcl '°"'"'.._ 191f'CV -lch mo ht•e Peet 1407 ol Offlcltl Records ol tl'tt '"'~•I Ellt". anyortlllli<b. lnwredyourtoen, olllct ol Ille Recorder 01 Ortfttt j Heme of tetncy .. ne1er1tklftO EwlynH.McClt-. R•mtmber. YOU MAY LOSE ·cou .. ty, sold -of trvsl dtlcrlbn prejKb: '"'"-11-.llW•rOlstrlct. CltyCltf'kOf tlle LEGAL RIGHTS IF YOU 00 NOT 1111 tollowlnt -'Y• toe.-1" tf'te • Dtttd· J-yM, 1"2 Cltyot Fountain Valley TAl(E PROMPT ACTION. CountyolOr ...... Sttt•OI Celllwnlt , ~yJ,W-.. r, Celltomle In addition to lht amount 1tettc1 Lot 1I °' Trecl Ho. J)Sl , 1" Ille Cit' I S«rttery OATEDJtnUlry 1"2 ...... lf'tould any prior IHH, lltnt, Of' .. Nt....,... llffcll, Coutlly 0' 0r .. ee. Pllbll-°''""' Coost Deity PllOll, Publl"*I Oranoe coast Deity PllOI, enc11m1>re11cn bo dtllnque"t or Stele 01 Cetltomle1 • ~0, on • m,ep 1 J.,, H, 1m ....., J.•"· 1•. 1• U2"2 bee-dtll._1. -tne -c ... tlMrtol ,__ n-1 , poees to bt cur ed a 1 • condl 11on of recordlolMlclOr ..... C-ty. .,. rolftstalod. ltld dell-lot m"'t '· lft<luslvt, Mlsct llefttou1 M•P•. ~ relnstat......,.. axNlllT 1 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN; Tllat To~tllltt' wllll n1on·•;c~~v: ,-----------.-0-. A tt9n ANNA M. ROH ESCROWS, INC. 11 :::r~o~•1 ~..:1.:Zve ol selct ' NOTICEO,IAUlOl'ltlAl.fll'ttOP•RTY duly •PPOlnltd Trusttt ul'tdtr lht Tract l'5l '°' 1,_ p,,,,,.,.ff end ts I AT fll'RIVAT'I IA&.a IOll-lnt dH<rlbecl cttod of tru1t: et ......... ~ TRUSTOR: ROBERT JOSEPH desc:rllltdlnAl11cltXlll,S.cllon 4 ot ,_..C... l EHOBY and tA"IARA RUTH lllt Oecterttlon ol Covt 11111u, l•otld ...... c..tJ9f°"911t lEHOtY,lluMltnciandwllt. 1 Cot1dltlo111 eftd Rtstrlcllofts ...... 9ffftlltfll' ... ,....._~ •ENEP:ICIARY: SKIP RUEGER ht•tlnelttr described In SU9 JECT •NOTICE IS HERE8'1' OIVl!H 11>11 IN ,.ldllllltll9d..tlt .. II ti_,.,,_.-, tu er.cl DEANNA RUEGER, llulbe"" ..... TO, Section 2, es provided In dttCI •tlle llftt Ol'td """"' blcldt<. t..Ole<t to ... <Oflflf"nlMlefl by tM -..ltltd wife ,.~~:;::,,.~~~:~,. •nd other =r: ~::-.;:• !.': r,r'~~'':ie.:.~=: = =::::. ':. !~:: Rtcordtcl November 23. ltt I u commoft O.slvnellort. 11 eny, ot ltlt k.,lrtd by_ .. ..,,, of 1-. w ..,,.,....., ......, lls9'I or'" ... t1011 to. 1"91 al Instr. No. U.. In booll ,.,.., -UOI rut proPtrly descrlMd tbo•• '' a. doc......_ .. tlle llme fJf .....,., '" -to ell 1"91 -"' rott ~Y Of Offk lol lttcorcb In -Ollk • ot Ille pur-tHtollt: tltu.te lt11MC-yot0r-. StetefJfCAll"-'l'lll,-rtbeclmloli...,tow": RKorclff fl/I °'""" County, said -.. ,. R bury RNCI c dtl M SEC~ T 1 .. ' E,."' w Ha.I P:T "' I ~· -M 1 .. ~ el trut ducrl.,., the lollowlnt Cetltoml°:. ' °'-"· Orlvt,~hecfl,CA"6SI. pr-rly: TM lltolltflclory -.. 1c1 Offd of Seid Mlt wtll occw on P:ollNery 17, 1• el t :• A.M. In 0.-t-tl J .. IM Lot UI ol l•kt 2161 .. ---.... Tr .. 11 ll•••l•l•rt ••tc .. t•d lftd ..... '"""'"<-" rKOf-In 8-.. ll09tl 2' to U dOtlvtrtd to "" Tr"tt" a wrltttt1 TERMS Of' SALE: -II. C...,,..lft, Jr., OI 1111<...., 9f tM I._.. .. Hllwll IMl.,1lw el rfllec•ll-Mllpt, 111 Otcleretl.,. of Otl•""· A wrltltf't I". ""°""· -..n to Mff Ille ,.., .......,, at M ~ Orlw, ~ '"' llffla flf tM COUtlly rec•rde• el N .. lct Of DMMlll -EIOc1left It Sell 9oKl'l,~etlol"°": MldcOUl'ltV.SolddMdollrvttMC»rft WI.I ............. .._i .. IM ,,,..,c_Prke.......... .. . ................• , ..... ctrteln Olll'9Mlonl l11<kldlllf --, tltMflclery, .. ec!Md end rocordod I" t . o.-itlM:ec:r.wwltllln ~=-=~-:: lt'ttorftl ...... ""c......., -· ........ ~y 11 .... .,, ... ~ wtl't -., .,,... -.............. loc .... . ..CWOd -ore -'lw ..... ._ Sold .... Wiii tit f'llMt, Wt •l"*'t ---. • •• caveNllll., _,.,,.v, ,._..,.. or lllo ••• lltllild; TM • brHCll el, o"4I lrnplltd, " It lltlt, ,......ion, or ... ..,, "'-111t •leMIMI IOr wll~ .. ..... e1111 MKll eood 6f fruit 11 M<llrh• Ms __ .,_"· '9Y '"'" ""' "' ' ,..,,fl(._.. -........... -wad .,, tc<Vn'W ltl tlllll '°""'°"' l'tot Ml Mell H id DMd ol fr .. 11 wltl't lf'lttrOll .... .,: . Tllo IMl.lfl-ol lnt.f"t Wflk ll 1M•tot1, OI IW..,I_ 1" Ml4 Mlt. OdHl'ICW wttll ltlttf• --It ~ M ......,..., ta,'"'· Olld ... , _ldfd tn Mid °'9d tf Trwt, If et11, tllMI_ ..... IMIOll"'fftb 6f ltltert.. _., .. ..,_ tf IOICI OeM tf Trvst. Ot II ft-lltf'ICl e 1 Oft t •r l ar ---~.If till'. OtfllMll*lt rool ' tMt, Cl\et9H Mid elf~~ ti tlle ......... ,,..,, If,.. -IC ... '"""~ _., Tllot •Y tot .. 11 tllortot, tl'te Mid Ooed9fTt'llll. llftdtfll911M, ~OMlll llOMllCl~r~ Seid Mlt ... W Mid°" l'..,_y t , tlNW -"_.,ti"-11oe .. ec.._ t9't •• n:• A.M. 1t1 "" '"°""" Mii dtl,_. .. _.. tMy °'"""" j l'OMI tf .. ~ IKMlll et OM City T, ........ -"'"' Ooclare41t11 et ....... .,.., ............ Oronft, OlfHlt ... ~ .., ... .... .... ClflllnN. _,..ttod wttft Mid •ty .......... Al lllt tlft9 rl .. lt'tltlel jllllltcotleft '""'°'· llldl ..... """ .... '" ., -llMlclt, "" ..... °""""' ..... d.C..,lftOlltl owl41tf!Cllll o•ll .. 110110 o•lltOtlOll IO Cllrtd •Y Ille o•ove _ ................ ._ ....... " ......... .,,... ... .,.._... ............ 111 MM •WW CMtl, om..-., olld ecl••f'ICH II ....,..., llNUI • ..., ._ ... ...,_.. tt......,,, I .............. -....... ... Dettt; ..,.u. ,. .. ~ ...... ~.......... .."",...........,.. Htllfy tlle o•llaetl•lll IOC•rtd ~.MT,_... --.. _: ..... DlillMr °'· 0..........,)1.,... -.. ":.J ............ CAWlt .... !'Wllf' , ... ~t• ......... ..... c.::::..-c ~-:..:..~ 0.IT "-l!ft. t, '' & •• '91_ ~ rMI. ti, a. ... ttlf MNt •. •OlotlC• """ -.., .... , ....,, ...,.,.... ........ .. •• Sotlot .. , .. "' "'" T.-Oood ....... t~ ......... l tor tlrtt '.,..,.'""' "" IMH'ott .... ,_.. -ell ... .... _...w1Wft1 .,..,., ...._.....,,., 15.- ..,....._ .. .,..., .... ........ _... ............ 7.,..,. 1.-dell ti a.er• , .... ••.,-.ooT~C•!fl,. ... .......................... c.. t.fttlltf .. ~oec,..Mllt""'~I 1. Finl Trwt .,_. ......... o .__...., ...... .,,,. ISi """'"aw,., ............... llll ""'"9tllltM~; '· • .,,., ......... ~ f"'Y'flfty ,.., ......,., c_.... ......... -- ( ..... TM~ i. ... .,..,..,AI II''.._•._ ....... All Mdl w....,. ,,-.. w 11'1 wt'ftlftt ... Wiii w _...... .. M ...... AfflltllO, ~ .._ft, CA •Jt, w left w1t11 AMII It. ~ • .Ir. ,_...J. ~ • tllt ...,,mcnll •• tMce. • tMY w .._ .-.. dlftc#_ ............ C-1otafly .. tlftlr ........ !"*4C_ ...... ................. -11*-Y ''· .. '-~ ••>., .. ---....... _,...,., .. ...., ................. '"'""" ........ CWIL t.-0 ..... tl¥ .. c.M. .... • ...... Tllo .... ·---....... ~........ JfW .... cadOi ....... .... OATIO'-Y'91,.._ AU.• It. '""""""'·· 'R . ...... •ITT'V .,....~lllf . ....., ... .__,, .......... _c...e...., ..... ,_............... ___ .. 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • "-ttlllwW. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• :~ ..... ~~~ ~=~ ... !!!~ ............................................. , ... ,.,..... 106' ....... , ............... e....... a.lhS. .... AIM Eutblurr ... 1245,ooo . fHTIUff Per A Uttee 4bctrnl, Z~DI, 1t1 yrd. UU ....................... H.8 .4·PLEX Near beach. By owner. Principals only. Caab lower"a price. Com.JI. ••le P .000. 1142-5713 Grt1 ' I atre + bid& alte aent· lllr1.000 UtumabJt 13~ Prime ci&l-d ... c. 3 Br. lY 11op1n1 parcel' •bort lit. IG-51'1 ; MMlOO. ram rm. dtn, pool. C•n dlatance from ttftJW ' HARBOR VIEW HOMES convert den to 4U1 br . bucb. Ownr has In· Modifted Carmel s BR , 3 = houle Sat H . 906 eluded pJw ror cuatom 8A j1CUSzl, prln onty. EC~nukovlch Rlty villa. tm,ooo. Spec· Mk 644·~5 12J0.0332 tacularvlewa! LA.UMAU~CH 10 unlu on Glenney re Ocean view, 2 blks to ucean. 1.ooed for com· m'I: 3 comm'I, 7 apta. "50,000 w/30% dn. Xlnl uaum. financing ow~ Call Marta1 4t7 .5132 MIS&ON REALTY Priulecllctd BAYf'RONT 494·0031 121 000 LEMEHOLD Up-r &ck Ba v Im Exqt.iaite 4 BR ~ BA, SAU IY OWMll ""' ' ' . ntar Und1 tale, lnclude1 I 8 mac. 3 bdrm. 2 ba. 2'00 mmaculate 3 r 2ba aq ft. Cat home Quiet private dock. eo· on the ocean view ho me . c u 1. d a . 51 c. N 0 w min b~ $.W,000. down, Futuret: Laree deck. $164,500, Yours for It auume 1750,000 at oak paneled den. As· SI0,000 OP. SHOO mo ~IG-IZ:Jl &umable loan and seller Owner .... Property 2001 ••••••••••••••••••••••• INCOME PIOPllTY SPECIALIST flnancin1. $319,000 Call 675-3772 S. a. eve1orwknd5497-2'766 C .. ht -1071 :"":~-::-.;.;..:::~:.:...;:.:.:..~~:-:1i.. ................ 1111 ........................ . ............ 1055 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Private 4 bedroom, 2 b1Lh borne that shows like 1 model. Over 1000 square feet ol deckinc with spa overlookinc serluded rreek and woods. Formal dining r oo m , 2 c u sto m fireplaces. plush carpet· u1g, wood plank flooring tn kitchen and nook area, and atrium off the family room make this home a true delight. $314,000 with assumable first loan of Sl59,453 at 121"1'~ Submit terms to owner 761-4519 Owner/agent ...... Yltfo 1067 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOUCLOSUH 15.000down ' 2bdrm. 2ba pen1houu right on the water . 2 Ty r s old .S2600/mo Contact Cathy Mathe ws at 830-9237 . 178·1980, Ive mess Landmark Assoc. ... id,......... 106' ••••••••••••••••••••••• MUST SEE! Prof. decor, ocean vu, 4 Br w/pool/spa + city lites Assume 11 78-t I True value 1429,900. Won't last! Pat rick ..... -RIDUCED $1401 MEWLYUSTED Whitewater view of Lit· Ue Corona beach. shows bke a model, steps from sand, S Bdrm, 3400 SQ R. OWC. Call Tim Rhone. . .. R&IMt\X 41D.·11A. UPCtaded. A/C, Country <:ourt home 1.n VIiiage S.J. 1121,000 AA llACH ILTH. 7 I 4/4tk Z I 00 s.t.AM 1010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ()ily ~ down Share t he appr eciatio n. tlllO/rm. payments 3br pool home Agt , Elsa· POSS.NO DOWN. l3l42t'7. SELLorTRADE 3bdrm, 2b11, $98 ,000, Penthouse Ba chelor $15,000 down Call 20 <~ down. a p .., r ox 1..:Chris='"'t:::.in::.:.a:::..::..:5:;.:5;.:.7..:·27;.;..::;;83'-'.-- 168.000 lst 111"•'; . owe OWMEI WILL SILL 2nd. 12'X: 3 yrs Gym. with only SSOOO down. P/Spa, clubhse St!cun rharming 3 bdrm . 1 ba t Y . S 1 3 5 · 0 0 0 Sl5.900 to the loan or 0wner/Agent631·8l69 OWC. SlOS,000. Call CLUM & AllY! agent Margot or Patty. 3 bdrm with separate 707·553-821111707-642·8443 Select rrom multiple uo- its Terms available Lo slit your needs. N-FfSSER cnmww roc. 714 641 0763 292S College Ave Cu)l;i Mrsa. Ci\4 A.Pft.E V AWY TaSMtter Near new 4·plex 2 bdrm, 2 bath each unit wilh fireplare, enclosed patio, garage. 9WI\ lsl Pos rash now Now Sl59,SOO. Bill Grundy, Rllr, 675-6161. family room and bath 1 I ' lhr I 0911•------- S399, 500 with great ••••••••••••••••••••••• C.M. TaSINtter f111anring!631--0680 ------• 4·plex Xlntrinance HARBOR a•i ~•Gooch! ,_J(S(!!!!!!!!!!!~67~5~-001~3~/t~·~~~~l23~ 3 bdrm home. 2 car '"" RIDGE garace. sep r umpus "---.r...1111 room. nice yard wilots ~ Mltst ,....., of frwt trees & rose Estate home approx bu.shes Much mur h 3500sq rt Owner has ..tmre' Ashng..'.s.93.soo purl't!ased ne home Good terms Must Sell! Customi1ed LOOK PROPERTIES 1 n e \ ~ r Y w a Y Wall846-l.336 GllA T DUPLEX!! $340.000 1809 W Balboa Blvd Open Dally. 2·4 Ted Hubert Realtor. 15fl.(1111 --- By owner fixer tnplex Sl.S,OOOsm lsl al 71.,r, Panoramic ocean view - - - - - -• 29'1 down will handle ---------1---------0WC rema111der at l3': Need lg cuh 645·3340 •lllAI EYEH • STAITElt !! long term 760-8430 by 0..-IN Estate owner • •••••••••••••••••••••• UIMI WATEIFIONT 1100 3 UN ITS on sandy ••••••••••••••••••••••• Five store shoppine cenler Garden Grove Seller financed Asking fl99.000 t8 8x 's gross ) *EXCITING* Submit the terms you beach. Sl.300.000 withlm--------i l600,<0l assumable 1st U.Wrlter,A9"f 75 .5710 need Agt 838 ·7733. 974-8306. Contact us for lsttft S. additional low dn pro· With or without furn, perties. 1'/2 IUS to ICH 24x64 Greenbner Hm in Iii!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! JUSTHDUCEO Laguna Hill s nicest 5 Two gorgeous units and star pk. only 2 yrs old. Ocean Grt .. .tPerti Ylew • W bedroom un· Beautiful 24x60 Keywest its 3 bdrm unit is great Hm · 2Br .. 2Ba This 1s for owner occupancy., the best in town. Owner f111anring ava1la· Mewporl leecll ble. ONLY l280.000 Call , 8uut1ful Belair M H 979-53'10today w/fml kit, l2xl9 h\ rm A · 12110 Mstr Bdrm Encl LLSTA TE ~~~ Nr Hoag Hosp REALTORS wo'i:::gME 7.1 XGIOSS! 8 UNITS in high demand rental area Assume ex isling f1n anr1ng of Sl50,000 at 10'. cind owner will carry Full price S240 .000 Call 979-s:f70 ALLSTATE REALTORS TAUOYEI SALIS 4-PLEX HARBOR s·"~ loan at $786 per 2706 Ha.rbor.Sle206 A In Orange S29S.OOO Isl RIDGE mo or S25.000 down. 540.Stl7 TD S163.000 at 12 1'. OWC balance S BR 3 Ba. fuced OWC 2nd pnnr Cu sto m Fr e n c h ' 10\•ely 2 sty. $245,000 Newport Buch De Anu only Owner Bkr Normandy. ap{>r,ox. 7200 S46-5880 or 631·7215 evs. bayfront Park Mtnl ..::644:.:..;..·7~mrl:.::.:.. _____ _ sq rt. Amenit ies too Vince. cond. i 8 double wide Lah for Sale 2 200 numerous to list. Builder 1 LIASE/OPT or SALE f'\replare. brick patio ••••••••••••••••••••••• has bui lt t his for l 4br 3baexec WestchH $60,000. 8111 Grundy Buelders,Jn\•eslors himself, but present. hoffle All ne~ In & out 67s.6161 Corona del Mar 20K sq ft economy .f~rces s~le. Quiel resld street Va. Mobile Home. ·5s, R3 twnhse condo site Und~. 2 m1lho~ Senous cant'-immed ocr Mayflower. 8X30, in fair P vt beach access 111<111nes only· 760·8430 Own/agt 752·2550 cond Call 645-7150 Must Senous pnnr only By byowner Newport Heights 2BR. be hauledoul owner 55!1.9265 Comer Lot Low Down IUUT. 'II HUNT CLUB LOT WATBFIOMT HOME flllV A Tl HACH Sensational 4 Br home sma ck on the water!! Featuring French doors . frplc. professionally de· rorattd It private SAN· DY BEA C H. Only 1265,000 It seller will CUT)' ~ loan at 13r, ! ! 758-1501or752.7373 ~ Walker & lee Reel f state • \Y '~ ~s.t/S-11-1 New 3 sty l>eachbouse ltll Court Street Walklnorcall. 675-22111or848·3133 SUll.500. Owoer1Agt MODU• .... HOM1t t Arre guarded gale 77 '390 _.. ~ romm S2SO,OOO low i . ., Heated pool ~.jar dwn 493 .33 95 h m FORECLOSURE TERMS! Greath vmg tn 633-0l6l olf. iii Mewport Hh C.M. 500· &46'tllll. -=c==or::..;n~e"'r:..:L:.;.:o""t-. -N-ew-po_r_l 2 Br 1 ba R2 T LC ....._P1oper+y 1400 Heights Will Jt Venture needed. Low dn Take·••••••••••••••••••••••• wtresp builder Owner only. Ask for Carey M<t.lvated Sellers Real 771 4390 over payments. Prinr I PU-SCHOOL Ag! '31·2242 &late in~luded Excel t': 1 t• DHft't, C M location lftOfi z 400 I -••••••••••••••••••••••• SCHOOL Pn City Ut• Great C.M. location for efficiency condo with ptt-K hool Room tor ex· kitchenette S6S.000 Slt5,000IM I ~ArtukovichRlly SIO,OOOdn 13•, tnl on bal ASSUMAIU LOAMS I 720-0332 or will take partner for this 4 bdrm 311 bath ..!642=-067:::.:.1~----- be a utir u l Portorino C arcW o.tofC-'J rmdel in Harbor View P. +•ir 1600 " ,., 2550 Separate mother in·law .........................., Q rt rs. a I mos l n ew i.. ............... -i ··.···.···s··oa···T··o·T·•A•el•• • carpeting, close to pool MEWPOn llACH S319So..soo,.. ......... ...._ Klgb visibility. C·3. MMI PAYMENT · ~ "·-·r. (kean view. 120 n. fron· uuwn 146-5605 U 1·6 lt4 t.ce. Use ex.isling build· 7Xgl'OIS I 15 houses. all in& ol 4000aq. n. or build run as apt. complex 10,000 SQ. ft. Owner will Pa!itive rash flow. Call •••tdlllhc. ltll hw carry. $715.000. 631·7300, fordetails. Realtor. [g\\bodhr1d4jt .t"MtlfiH.,Geo9aplic" . Elegant in design & crartmansh1p, on Promontory Bay. Beautiful custom home: 4 bdrms. 4'h baths. Interior designed & decorated by Darlene Ferrari Lohr. Slip for your yacht. For private showing, contact agent Patricia Perfette or Margot MacKerrow, 17171 ISl-Hll w 17071 642-144J HAllOI llOel Bea uti fu I "Kensington" with panoramic: view ' BR + ram rm. Great financing. Enjoy the private & security of Newport's most desinble acld.ms. t695.ooo Jerry Thompson ~l-8700 (SU) C11tl1•l•lwnow•· RealllJ ........... 1700 551·3000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • LeiaureWorld Condo. For 4'2tlarnRo h•>-1"1n~ Sale By Owner. 2BR, ._..., ,.,_ 28A. Uprraded carpet.a. .._... ' 2700 Greal View. 185,000. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 714·545-7101, ltl OD· P"rl. 1-5. 114·1'1N.131 3-SPM. = r;2roio NORnl LONG BEACH 2 bdrm, 2 ba bome with Vlrtinla b d Country Club &tiles 1m/1tablf a.n utra New S br. 3 ba Condo Uvin1 quarters on 2 3 Wlll}~u ator acres In Exclusive E .. u Equestrian Community From ll1S,OOO s u r r o u n d e d b )' 1714) 1147.'IOM Cleveland N 1tlon1 I --Forest. 30 min rrom SJ S.C. Plual 38R 28A, II· Clp. Panoramic View! Hm 11. ~. SIOK lat ~Dl~lJI •1• ctn. owe 2nd, ....... ..:tol=-:. PJ_,,,,uc•=M4~·l~MI=--•• •II 1100 Mort families ar·e ceulng ...................... . the c1mpin1 "bug" this llll a tax abtlter? Sell year. Jr YOU have a myl/l2yurnewtripln camper th1l'I not get· or tx.dlUllt eqllitl ror lina uaed, aell It now coadoor? Owner. After 7 with I CIWlfled Ad. lJ.t78H134 ... ..... .,...... ~t41TY ...................... . at•• lmocka oftfJI when you Plivatt Part1 IAMl•I • nAk·~ftl Dally r. Hom lO 8111 • "lot Clua10ed Ada to I.-Optiaa. Batlla1 r'Ndl Ule OrMlt Coalt , ..... Ntt.~--~<=----marllet. ,.... .. ,M71 idle lt"'S •Illa I Dally Pilot Claulfled • ' ... Or111g1 Coat OMCY PILOT/fridey, Jenuaty 21. 1982 .... "-"U.fa 't1• ............ Ith• "-"U.fud•1d Cwt '11 'f .......... , .. 'If 1w.h........ -, ............ At ...... , ...... 'Af Im~ ...... 11 ..................... •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• ••• ••• • •• • • ............ tt•••••••• • ••••••••••••• U&k A .~ 1 • J 421 .. ••••••••••••• • ••• •• •• ... •• •• • • • • ............ •••••• • ••• • ••• ,........ ••••••••• • • ............ • ...... • .............. . ..._,. I ti• c:.e...... UH Ir* U44 tit ~lt.tt UH ....................... Ml 11rf.._. J76t c.t.W... llZ4 c.leMIM JIJ4 ·=..,_ S.Q1m• 117' ......... •••••••••••••• ... •••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lc.l\AlA Arte •••• f ••••••••••••••••• , ••••••••••••••••••••••• '"'''''''''''''''''''' ~ Jl4J •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• c.;...,.._ Jiii -.11r 'ardecitrfwtr Wnillrt ... Mtw Newport HU., fre•h • 3Br.2Ba. afc,l>OOl,aec rlrt la e ool vt 2 Br. 1 le. Couple with_ .................... NICI I BEDROOM =w·;. .. •••:d• pd. ebl\, no peu, 2bdrm.ct.n:\lcbbup· clea; 3 .. fR, 'file, lee 1-..oopet.1."P.P.u . ~v~~~2w'e:11f;i pau! ~aln!uhe'rpon 1mall l11fanl only . OuardedJate. ttnnl• aprtmtntwltbvlewol .,__t r a;,Ya • !'aide. 541 .9441 or anded. Slnrle 1tory. -x;,rsittJ'' O. I 8·l220: ..... Mmthly,17).7173. I /. all lo •·Ira i Br lllO/mo. + utlll. 1450 CGWU, 1 mmlo.1 pool, lbe •foUoU courn. hlll1, cnarpor , no 011. Pully i huttered · Buut Zbdrm condo lltdtftaptt Froms.seo' NewportBlvd. tile root. cobble atone publ c teonla co11rl1 111o.:.AJtl'flollll Cullom2brwf k Ph"tplace. Atrium. Nur Bluffs ma cnlflcent pri · 8 C Pl 1 • -•uws 157.au. · · One bedroom. refrla. IU'elt, oa c.hannel adj• b•hlnd properly. 2 "'$ ...... )140 ~ Kida ·:so pool • n d t . n II ls . harbor/ ocean YU, 3br, re' ii . tau ()(. ·---Coe ta ..... USO ctlll to marina. Unique tftCIOled urporl•. all ~••••••••••••••• OC arA'•• :.llAu14 U7$/mo . No pets newlY rtdtc. Kida/pets. wa er a 1 1• 1 1 80r0umi, Latp Bac.belor. Nicely 2Bt.Adulu,nopeu,new· MMINlaftul:aoPM. · ZBR•tnio. Wltina,laundrylaclUty • oo Rent, to Sbow' ...... ,.,.,._ W..0880 lllld°.8'75-1117. 'fia, poo · I mo. furni s hed . Many lydec.1tove/rtfri1,encl 1•scm lll4Wlltmodem1panl1b llltfwlale!Nlettstry, Stl,)plAOlln&l famlly Newport Beach Ex· { i4)!7s.IOltjS7s.0540. amenlt1ee.p .64H°'5 J!!lio.M50.t79•"10 PIHEBLUFrAPTS. •-1t• Jl4e llyle Wldln&. 2 adulu '181. l\tll ram Rm, 3br1 paUo only1425 u.t.Towac..tw ec.uuve Home with pool UJIPtl' 2 Bdrm Iii\ Bath M•a Verde, 2 br, new 2 Br. 2 Ba. No pets . ...,...... only. No chlldrenorpet1 ftplc, DID Rm, Water' OC·R!NTALS 750-3314 New 2 bdrm + den, 3 ba, • l\lt!ll ltouse. Grealfor So. Cout Plaza area, I& OCIAtiROMTI C'rpt, drp1, paint. Quiet Patio, view, ( rp le, •••••••••••••••••;.;.-j' pleaa. MSO per tnonlh. Q.,._.,f?ll0.147·5'30 OC-RENTALS Plantation shulLer!I, •t· childttn: walk to Club deck paUo, pool, rec., 3 bdrm, 2 ba rno lo mo area. Cul·de·HC. k 75. Jltll:Ui, encl 1ar .. IH 1~ret~a.'lt~.2 :1:i Avallable February . ...,. l·Sbrl.l200tol2000 tach~ 11r. Avail Im· Houn, school ereen· Secwityaate.$52$. 'tllsummer.f150 •1Dl.M·1"5 Mo\'e,p.$0.6.11<8107 JJt/la t "' lll Cal l owner 17 1+1 ,. ,,,..,_. Jilt 7SIU314 Of'.\An7-daya mediat1tly.Kay&«.ll060, bflta td•a1r•n\11ycom· 6?S.S.teo 646·4144 m.20to p••UU£SAAPTS 8Darlu2atory,2bdrm, ~an,, •tu*'7222+ u · ..::&42-=0=llll::;·'-------••u•• .. ••......... ~ -PM 673-~ ... "' • NUDELUXE BR ~-i~ba""""" rt vt mo ..... ~ Vlllaae Mobile 3 bdrm, 2 ba, familY-rm, . . . munlty. Harbor View 1 U61 Me11 Dr. • ...-. carpo • P 11AAU9 ... 1 """".. 11 ..... _ ... ·Homal>art"1rnlahed 2 w.averde. Nicefaml· 4 Bd fam!IY rm, duune Home1.Call759·1058 ·Tennis, 1p11 view, full 2 Br. unfurn. $425. p1Uo, l500/mo. Open OCIAM"'v"' 4Mwwwrw -• Br 2ba pool .ctltl no ly home w/fplc Bllln rm Col~al home. Pool 1830Port Abbey Pl ace sea.uity, bh·ln bkcue, Adultt only Call btwn Sat., 2310 Santa ADI Mmt ele1ant apartment trU.fwll•l4 JtOO ""-c.k-Lo ahopt 11 at.oYe OW/GD. lmmtc • teruus In association. RENTS1800/mo orleaae SA,"2$/mol57·2914 M.541-MllO.' Ave.Pb : (213)375-1107. building In Lafuna ...................... . ,..a..anta. $'750 mo yr· No· Ynl sin1les. $775 1166/mo. Call Charley, Olldoone1otJ1ble. 2 HUGE Bedroom a Beautiful 1 Br. Apt. Quiet Beach. Fmest location In WIHletrN A.Ml ly IDcl util. 673-3685 or •t11rdener. 557-6853, IUl!lS.W.e.QO Newport·Seavlew 3 BR WISlCLlff Ground Floor, Pully bid&. near •bopa ,l town Brealhtakl~ Fiim II unfurn (bdrm' l·SZ..M, 1-m1ao1 *-Z'J30, 1.11·31.SS exec home, with frpl, Ex~ly neat coo· Carpeted. Bui ll·lns. bulel. 21.3/498·6786 or viewa. All bll·lna. heal apt All ulil pd All UDO ISLE cbrmg •Br E.lide cute l Br cottage wet-bar Located ln pre-do. Ground level. SUPER Locat.loll! Over 213/5'1.clll54. :re~1it:rubLea~!r!n~~: amenltles.MS·Ollll. 21,\Ba, II aunny patio yud area $415 + sec' ltlpous stturlty 11ted Spacious two bedrooms. 50 Adulta. No Peta. 1315 Eflide. 1 br, $360/mo. 2 eo • up 330 Cliff Dr . .._ 4000 .....,adecl. SUOOfmo. Bili Scl or married cpl: community Pool, spa & 'J"wo baths. Private Mo. Apply Apt "E". ~br $410/m~. A~ults. 494-11183. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gnandyf1W16l ISHOtO Beautiful Condo. '3B R. temls courts. fl500/mo. patio. lA>vely CJ"Ollnd.s' •WUaonMM477 et. Walkm& d&Jt. to . La&una Beach Motor Jno. --..--.-.._,. ......... '"""'" ___ 1E. 2BA . To Sublf'l By Call640-2:549 pool Adult complex. 1'1..:.1.. .. __ 'ed I .. 648-5542 ~udio S290~ '-" blO<"k to 985 No. Pacific Coast Decorators Bil Canyon Side2bdrm. lba, r.,,k, Matth lst. Woodbridge •-v -"Vl1• ar1e'" · ~ch. oear shopping. Hwy Laeuna Beach Townbome. 2BR, 2BA, fncd )'I'd. car. 1615. all Call Afler3:30 Private community or F.asy walk to shops and Spedous studios, one Br. with patio, pool , ~TSlDE u l 1 Is Pa Id Ii o t e I .• Formal Dinlne. 11100 ""in.cl. No pets/kids. &5'1-4367 SEAVIEW. 2·4 Br. banks $670 month. andtwobe<llooinal)lt1· 1ara~ kids OK, no 3BR. 2BA. Aval1 'eb calirornia 497 .3077 . Dail).'. Weekly, Kitchen Mo. A&t846-0295 m Knox St. Drive by homes, fully eQuif ped Yearly lease. Broker, men ls. FURNISHED pell. ~/mo. 641-0743. 1Sth. $.'585. lnclds Gas• 49(.2'J97. available Low winter OCt-•11.B"DnNT 2 B l first.752-6499. Or2BrangetrleeBPatido Home. kmi1 t c h e n fw l h 631-7300. llld UNFUANISHEO. •E·lidedulWle2BR up· Water.NoPets.833-9389 Steno: lo bch. !bdrm. rates.494·~ .lL """"u nv r, . . or r. + en, spa. crowaves, 2 .,,1c 's & ~ .... ,....,. I ·1 ,.. Balboa Inn ...,, • • up ba. $800/mo . Rll a E.sadeCM3Br2Ba.S800 tennis, pool ss10 1mo wetbar.S1400&S1700a Oakwood also offers . .,.. .. ,,,,y,newi1aec .. •._.../~• 1\.-lba SS50 incl uttl · '"" Writer, Ad. 752.mo pr rm. Call Rbt Milliken 581·3165. th u"" Tow t Hit , .... Utlll''~ ......... ,,!f0u1100 11· 120 E 20th. Child welcome, 2 B,R. 49t-1'124 eves weekly Kilchennette. __...---.. ...... "'"'-""---=--=--1.,., mon .644......... •L.• ll•d 35z5 ..., ._ .. _, _. --ocean rront 675.S740 ' ... ~ - & • 1~ cpts, d.,,s1 pvt patio. Almost beachrront apt ............. 14 3llw/loatSHp ....................... ~Y Beaut 2bdrm condo, SU>ve poo, lndry. No S900/mo Ocean View, Room and bath Fem . ......... •••••••••••o• 2 Story, 4 BR. 3 BA 3br,tba.S1900. DELUXE end unit , like prime S.C. Plaza toe. cal.a/dogs. $495 water & de(ll immac spacious 2 S300 1 mo Man y ~ 3202 w/FR · S850/mo. Isl & BruceJohnson675·0941 new 2 BR. 2 Ba frpl, ·•1Mllllonln Waterfalls, streams, gasti ' ' 't ••< .,.39 e -last + Sl.50 deposit M &C· pool a ale many xtras "-cfMtlon 1 br, 2 ba 499·3982 a!Tl!ru 1es . ....., . .,. ev ~. ....................... nab-Irvine Realty NEWPORT CREST48r. 1'ustln~S.A.line.S62S.N~' AndMuchMore' spa, poo . $800 /mo . 145 .18lhNearOrange. 2br,lba,oceanvuw1gar, 93'1.8079dys IEMTALS E.sideCMcondo,3Bd2~ MackHanson551-8700. 21,; Ba. Some ocean petsTIS.1.580751·0796 1714)673-9019j675·0540. 645·2708or960·3989 walktolown/b('h.$650.Bayfronl.rm&ba,pool, VearlY·Weekly-Wlnter. Ba, gar, Ire patio, spa, view S925 /mo Agenl -· • · For a month or a hie· 1 and 2 bdrm trailers . .,_.,.... 3126 499-sal2. J&cuzzl, sandy beach, 2,3,4 'Bdrma, Newpo rt $'125/roo. Joyce Wallze, RANCHOSAN JOAQUIN 6.'11·2262 ~"u.fww 3600 11me Models open daily 1165 lo $260 + $150 ••••n••••••••••••••••• --/mo840·8087 Beach6Balboa. a 6.11·1.266 VILLAS, 2br, 2•-,ba. PLUSHexec3brw/gar ....................... 9amto6Qm Adullsonly. stcurily, no children. no DUPLPC:.Large3bdrm, t .. ..,.+leecll 3169 Jo\lm. refng, microwave. JACOIS IEALTY CHOICE L SIDE den. pool & jac . adult rrplc, pool, now $695 Beautiful New Custom no pels pets. 642-919.1133 E. 16th, 28xl8 living rm. Some •••••••••n•••••••••••• kit priv • phone, swim PIOIMEltn 2Br, t~Ba, frplc, bltn romm. S82S lmo. March OC.RENTALS 750-3314 Deluxe Duplex. 3B~. "-k............ c.c.ta Mesa ocean view. Recently de· p11U MNPOIJ ming pool, steps to Bch, r-SR ran.ge/iven, dshwshr. lst.833-~. ~~j ~1~!;.~~!':.1 ~ Gar~~ments ~1~0~·e:!' ~14r:;i ;9i~~.J.1i~'t gar. ':.~•"'rM"ENTS "'·m'.'"°NBA548p;~lnc.lds 6~/1\3 P•dtio. ool. S600 mo. 2·st0f)', 4BR 3BA. fam LOVELY LARGE Mo. tst, Last & ~ Dep. house or apt. In Costa 1 or 2 Br. near ocean. N'• r11 ...,..,., Hamia 1t~1;_n.o pets. 381 rm,lg.kitchen,$850 mo HOME In Nft w/lge Localed al 193 E Newl)Of1 Beech/No. Mesa by 2tl/82. 1 am aarage,clean.Z46&2 "A" Util. M Prol. Con1emat. Le I Br, l~ba. f.,,k. 2 ..... No . 559·8523 bdrms. forma dining " Virginia. Call Saber 880 Irvine steadily em ployed ' Cordova Dr 661 -1537 , COUMTIY CLUI Non-Smkr 642·8363. fri~.;~o\:l:S:1. l~l~E!~Jo.si;1~ ~~~ ..... !?~.! =fr:1ir~~maculate t~~~~· ~:!~8~;C:ryer. (7~~~~~104 :~tbl~a~edTrm'i~:ci Lar<213>~·.~7 <collect>. h ~llMT ~Ns~ 8PM Days . .... ..._.. 3206 tr!lsh comptr, grnhse OCU#IOMT Waterfront Homes Inc I yard, s outh Laguna, Newl)Of1 Beech/So. D'X)ve-ln funds Please ge "'""10 Apt. wit ..... n.-v Jo\lm BR, Ba & Liv Rm lla"'ram. beach, 2 Br 2 car elec gar. $750/mo unty, ,, mi 0 _.. (Dover a11611'11 2 Br ..... .,... I "ha'ld OK No 66l·U92 lnclds Ulil CM Mesa -•••••••••••••••••••• win .. pvgl encl yard. 21 :!4Hr Sec ff '31·1400 s.550 incl util. Call, t70016thSI call645-8203after 6.00 oceanview.$260/mo. IEACH Patio. Pvt Ent. $450 ,. 759-1234 pvt bch. fishing pier. I (71•1 ... 25,... -• An adul i Ba. 123 E. Bayfronl, ZBr adlls only no dogs NNport Ctesl lownhse. .. .,.. · .., peis 2563 Elden Ave ............. 314( . l commun ty on Verde Ref, 556-6033 Balboa Island. $1200 3 brtwnhse. 2112 ba. frpk flsOmo. (714J 499.J8t6 newly redec. Jbr 2"2ba h ._...a.. rr....-t .. L. • ..a 67~8074 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lhe Back Bay Spec-Laguna Niguel Shores F wiJlter. 11400 annual Nice! 1125/mo -Walk lo beach tennis I ... -. ..___ u•••uaac. W"'LI lacular Spa1 7 swim· k d Berti, dap 2l3/478-3S77 : 96J.3018/548·Sl28 Clean 2BR House N~ Bch pool: spa Mmi 0rean vu: i:A:;i:.:i::.t .... •j•7•0•6• USTSIDE 2 rnr.~e Apl. ming pools, 8 Lighted ten· ~as~lee:s gl~te b~~~h . .-u. • Small 2 bd Sm Yrd. Gar. Kids & Avail Feb I. S900/mo. 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •-r4-• 3776 Cowlll)' Woods. Large I Yard s1'nole •-double ni.s courts. bike trails, tennis pool 1·acuzz1 ~ MIN& SUMMY rm, garage Pets OK! S750. 494-2576 yr lse. Ch1ldrtn ok !'::::':'................ Br. loft, no children or car garag:. n::.r Hunt. put ling gr een s ma It' k it c'h en el te: I Br.281. cottage. Very ~ble for elderly cpl Best rental in Laguna ~ 2 Br l'l'l' ba , walk lo pets. Country setting Harbour. Children OK. Bachelors. I and 2 ash d $250 private. $950/y rly . No ·548·4181 Beach!Charming,new IA.YVIEW I 1465/mo 180 21 st St bedrooms apartments, w er/ ryer Isl 675-1018. Walk to OCC, 3 BR. 2 BA. ly remod J br. 2 ba "Ot· IMMA.CULATI I bdrm 2 bath ~ondo 111· beach. 22S La Pa oma, 0""" .,.;, • ...,., Eves •-840-61117. and townhouses from &security dep 493·3490. ' BW FFS, 3 br. 2 ba "On· ., ' Apt B. $450. 637·7918 uZ...': ... ~ . ...._ • .;. .. B . I f 8 .... , ...... 3207 ·, fenced yard, pool. fp. lage Wallt to beach & • full security bayfronl --"..,,........,...,... Le. I rtn·P ex. ronl un· l$40tol1000per month Bal Isl, Room Ii ath. pvt _.................... 5/mo675-6736 ~ping. s12001mo Call do, frplc, 2 pvt patios. b ua Id in g . Nice 1 y ....., llUallh 1530 mo. ZBr. 11, Ba it,1 n~wbfaTsls/S~rapes, On Jamboree At entrance. 1200 I mo Winter 3 Br. 2.,,. Ba.J2BRCarpet& Drapes. 1 BillWedmore,551-8700 ~ ol 2 pools. adults. runushed.$1200permo, 4i.fMlll ... d twnhse, adults only, mn1 in s. ater/ SanJoaquinHlllsRoad ~673-4=~755~-----~/mo. 306 Montero. car gar. No Pets S450 MONARCH BAY Ter· /mo644-1559 . lmmediateoccupancy CA""'rt, balcony tpalioi Beach. $375. Water & (710644·1900 Newport Hgts-Room for ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. .,_. &ias pd 891 7490 art 6·30 h M F ..,.0 l.SINor213/33S·4686. Mo. lat & Lasl. $100 Dep rare. Beaut home + Exclusive area, Harbor lndcy rm, no dogs. wil p · · · fl«> FEE! Apt. & Condo renl, pvt bat . I ..., ""-dllM• 3222 64&-5637 furnis hings 4 Bdrm View Hill s South , ...... .._.. 3106 consider cat. Call for M rentals.VillaRentals ..!llll~.548-~~9882=-----,...... •••••••••• ••• • e e e e •• •. • 67C •0 12 B a O. -...__,...J.....l 3226 $3500/mo charmint*: 3bdrm, l'r.lba. Vrly. Sml stud1·0 apr. ap~ l•TOWMHOME ...,., r .... er. 1 Anuna Beach New Cot· ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• --W t rf . t li I ,.. .ii. t hi I I d •· L MGMT.,,., '"'" ~ Lease. Nrty new 3 br, 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• a e r6on31 1400omes n, w....,. o as on s an .. Partly fum. l mature ....... 1.,.,,, Fenced yards/FRPLC Oceanfront for Winter lage. Own Room. Ba. ,ba, 2 frpk~ balcony, 3bdrm, pool , s pa , · ·---_ bch Grdnr inc l . edlt..DOG·amokerl325in· EA.STSIDE 2Ba.f}iclsdGar.NEW Rentals. Furnished & Phone. TV , Laundry microwave, oar, 2 car skylights. spec ocean 3 P!Wi Den. Lu>tury Home $1250/mo. 751-2787. J · D. cl""· 213/281·0065 '575 mo. 1 2Br, 1,.., Ba 1669 Mo 848·3775 I.Ilium. Broker. 675·4912 Priv. Gar Sorry No I ar . G a rd e n e r vu, Sl.200/mo 754 ~20. surrounded by Spanish Property M&ml. twnhse, yd Iba lcony, Large 3 bdrm, 2 bath, Kitchen 5. 497·1838 · $1250/mo. 83&-8631 courtyard Very nr bch. EastbluH townhouse 3 Br A Dtvislon or -••••••n•u••••••••• small pet OK. all bltns, (rplc, patio. garage. QM THI IA.YI Nr Hoag Pvt En t & BA Ml.al all. 6pm. Quatnl 2Br, 2Ba . studio. Pvl area. Pool. tennis 21,; Ba, 2 patios, over· llurbor Investment Co $350. Utll Pd. lB R . lndcy rm. This one won't Xlnt. t62S. 675-9132. One of I kind luxury Xlnl. N~Smok or k1tch lee 3 br, 2 ba. 2 blks to liv rm. frplc, lg kitchen. courts. · 493·0467 looks backbay. Prof. de-~ ~. 417 E Bay Ave. laet. 2 bdrm, 1 "1 ba, $375 apts. 2 bdrm, 1 bath apt 128S + 50. 646-1035 bNdl. Patio. OW, car ref rig, wshridryr, dbl OV\RM 3Br 2BA, yard. ()" Av:I i@ Y6 lse Bob Balboa547-1W, 542.-0190 TSL MGMT 642·1603 +S3'15 deposit Gas pd. located directly across Room w pvt bath. kit & wfopener. $850 yrly. car gar. pauo. 1495 mo walk lo bch & pool ·• Yl 7· 1' Ii t 111 Trtr l llrSCl SMS Balboa Pier. QWet 1 Br l Ba. new Nr Beach Bl Ii Mc Fad· I fromtbe Reuben E L~e lndl)' pn\• Pref fem m.1157,875-6282 ore 9 4. 549·1343. SIK)O/lse.Owner 499·3638 Newport Crest 2Br.2"2 )ltd Sava1e. Wilde" Co. caf1)tls6drapes. good den. Adlts no pelS Just remodeled Wllh Closelobus &shopping OCNVIEW·Pvt bch, new 631-6166. •--wi-.a 3252 ba, loft, frplc, pool, spa. S3ZS mo.,..~!..1 'no m.-E.side loc. Mature 1113-41194 ~ CIJ'l>ttin&. drapes. CM 548·2114 ~ 2 2B ~·.....-. sauna Ocean view. pdl,Nr . ......-....... oAve. adults only .._,, 147 E. Del 1 ·d kitchen cab111et4 & ap· ~....-. car gar. r, &Toro 3212 ....................... LeaseP75/mo 675-5911 541-81 ! Br, yrty, near beach. -uu poo s1 e xtra pUanca. This upstairs NiceHomeNrSCP!ata 2Ba.pC1150mo.760·8382 ....................... Exec.4br,3ba,ramrm.3 · .... , , , 3707 1550 /mo .-Yraok l&hSl.H large 2br. 2 ba. bltns. 'llnclud f' 1 545-1717 Ila 3bdrm. 2~'tba. ram New 2 br. 2 ba condo. car gar. view. nr ocean Versailles Penthouse ' .. 1 Mslhall llty 675-4600 2 BR. 1"2 BA Studio Pool. dswhr, p, miles beach. :?rrored e~ar,;.re~l~;!i rm, den, din rm, fl'l'lc, ref rig. pool view. '600. tes. 974.3420_ C: o o do 2 b d rm • .. -••••••••••••• .... • Oceua1de small bach Hot ' cold water. gas Adults, no pets. S450mo doors' a spacious derk Room. $215 mo. s Houses patio, 2blks from ocean 498-1258,1142·71.M --MhMIYieio 3267 ~~1~~~~ ~::m~~~:y~ B~. z~ .:l1~2GB~: SD7 ye;{y, util pd. 20i I h,..!1.!l ... n' eda i dkib y SJ6.8J62 overlooking the bay rromsa~5~ Reot /lease. 11400 lk11119• leec• 3240 ....................... cloletoshopa and water. I '750., 1 Bll •· Adlta. E. Balboa Blvd. 67~9562 W':'i'k't Cov par I ng Frplc .. 3 Br 2h ba. 2 car. Sl.800 month. Utililles in "'---~1414. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR 1~. ba, fam rm. S150 + uUI 754.4114 exl ·UW pd. Tiil llay 21. 303 orm.tl25 o s~op P n g 2 bl ks from beach eluded. For appt call Hottk, Mottfs 4100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Br. Family Rm & Den. p~r ~~~ 581-6043 Old teacher/wife will 2 bdrm 2 bath new 21IOColle&eAve WAL K TO BEACH: S.5PM. SIALAIKMOTB. c.t.Meto 3224 5Blksloocean Elegant2 study, rplc. view. $725 SOOCarenCnam I E. aw.1-171·2111 OCWROMT 1465-1476. Olive Tree, f750/mo.968-9110 . (714)720-2473 Mon-Fri ...................... . DUPLEX Fo I $850Mo Plush crpts 2'2 l!\S W"""" ' • 541·7367 I Bachelor. slove & Wkll)'rentals now.avail Ba Cedar & glass, sun· H le 326' HCAHYOM bouaeait ~ur Bay, Pllial. carpet .. Yearly NEWPORT .HEIGHTS refrige. Gas & waler IJDOVlEW Gorg. 2 BR , SIOS & up Color TV. IEMT deck. dbl c a r prv ~~ .... ~ ........ Luxuri ous three Oceanl'ronl ont home. ~116$.CaU Linda or lie 1 bdrm, Iba. 37012 pald.plO/mo.536-7979 tp adls Phones an room 2274 • Features 2 Bd 1 Ea. garage. fully ma int Big Canyon 2 Br 2 Ba . bedrooms. Two baths 64S--35S7 Art, 875-?080. LaPerle Ln 1395. no dogs Fum.isbed & Unfum 1·2·3 ' loOO/mo 675·6359 Ne wport BI vd CM gar11eldr1 yard.New yard.Adulls,nopets.ln S875•mo.Patnck,agl Formal dining room. C...dllM .. 3722C:.-dllM .. 3122 76G-O'IS9 1 Bdrm ., Apts . Gym , LargelBR.Ulilpd.Spot· 646-7445 cUllft ' paint lhruout. qw re at 527 18th St 759-1221 Rirhly decorated 111 mut· ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ••••••••••••••••••••• I Jaru~u . Sauna, pool. less. Quiet. 1450 2421 E -=::.!;:.=------Im med. poses s ion 960-63.11 ed tones 3000 sq fl Bachelor unit. ulil pd. No STEP TO OCEAN. Mosl IA.Y TIMIHS · tennis . vo I le y b a 11 . l6lhSt. 645-4718 MIB> A PLACE? $525 /mo. Call Tom 48R Condo 1,28A ss25 LUXURYIATFROMT J acuzzi off master c<dtingl2.50mo charming In old Corona. basketball, game room Reas.Weekly Rates mo tst, Last & Dcp No 3 Br 2 Ba with boat shp. bedroom J car garage 641-1391 2 Br. 2 Ba. frplc, ocean SPACIOUS 1 Br lllnl Sch 846.()619 Steps to beach. 1·3 Br. Kltchenelles Phones I Pets 768.7633 Avai l now Man y 12050 month Yearly view from deck · : · 1·2Br,bothfl'l'lcS.S775& "Z"Channel Movies r "'-cl"'IVe 2-B 2,~ B" pl, amenities S3SOO Mo lease. Cal I 631 -7300 , Cotto W..0 3724 SIK>O/mo. Call Anthony Calhedl rat ceilings, walk 28r. 2Ba. Uv. rm. din rm, S650 per mo I m Sandpiper. 1967 Newport C.A "" • " Broker675·4912 Realtor ....................... days 642·5757, eves & 111 c oset, dishwasher , +gar, 1 mi lo bch. 1475 maculate 673·2507 agt Bl. Costa Mesa 645·9137 tJla. tennis, ser gate Seaview lrg 4 Br. ocean . CASA DE ORO wknds631-6630. rtreplace. garage, ~I& mo. 85(). IJ96 2 Br 2 Ba. Condo. pool. 11-....0 , -ose beach S8SO Art !i vu. St600 mo Patrick. ALLUTlUTIESPAID 3 • ...__2 ............ •~,';!'~~as~ 1JtY 1 Br wtfrp lc .. pool. encl frptc, 2 private palios. Rtstt4-s 4175 v.... 962-1398 agt 759-1221 W1s•cu.---_... 64 ... ,1.13 y gar, nr shopp111g. $395, growid level. S650 + de· ••••••••••••••••••••••• H.LUCIYRW 4 Br 21.ot Ba Bonus rm. -'J rr Compue before you Old COM. View, 2 sun -.. 8474166_ posit.730--1783,551-498.s. ltowtt's ~H• Rent ln Costa Mesa's Famrm,3.IOO sq rt nr 2BR Cond o Ad ult Two bedroom . two bath C d declls.bearns.fpc.$975. IUnf 2B A d 1 NEWEST gated 20 G-rLake $t09<. ovas Complex ,2BA Nr Hoag. condo. Ground floor rent . ustom esign Avail Feb 5. Richard 2 er llo I um r pt.A uts Spacious IBR in SrCiUens 5·6221 ... , ""' ,-..,.,..M L •-o reatures· Pool, BBQ, ,,,,.,_,.d .pa ,1arage,poo ooly,nopets. F.astbhif Pool. Quiet. Towuhome VILLAGE 840-6203 No~Doo 1st. ast .. ep Qliet.adull complex.No cov'rd garage. s ur· """'~1'01· 2eves 719 W. Walsoo. 648-1251. 960-2675 I Pleasant area! Slngle S-rR ... lh 4200 COMMUNITY. 2 & 3 Br. 3 br. 1 1~ ba. re~enlly m· gs. 761Vi633 pets Walk to shopping rounded with filush .....,. $435/mo. 2br t b . G I Adult N P t KN\/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2,._ n. '"""1800 s rt of • ' Harbo V H 2 1670 mo. Yearly lease. 2 Br 2 Ba d I • l,'J a, garage. ood · 0 e 5• ..,...., mo IM: tlydro-lubs in master gar Kids welcome Isl swimming pool. jacuzzi, ilngratfiumts best. Nforopem~~M adults. sr~=o !Br, lBa. frplc, bltn 2 ml. to beach. 1460. 2 br a...-&. IP-_ _.. ~-i~. Ga~·ages. sulaled, fenced yd. 2 car Br Oen'.er~pltm~asrge 631-7300.Bkr. landscapin1. Adu t liv· coo 0• enr gar. CHOICE L SIDE loc. I blk to stores & bus 1644-4767 EAN VIEW 't d' . r 5 mo + dep S700 Avail 2 . B ,...., rqe/oven, BBQ, pool w/carport. $440. __. ~ I ml to beach. Wkly or ~i......!~~,ng otoamces' Feb. 1. 96.H329 I orcaar l~1aornag.e,1. nP~\l'adtse llG CM4YOM LSI 365 W. Wilson, 642·1971 Owming separate cot· lo small welt kept com· Mgr: 7111 Ellis, Apt D 2BR, 2BA. Yrly Rental rmnthly 3 br, 2•, ba wuuuuwlllll firep • ' 2BR McLain Co ndo lace. Newly dttorated, ...i-........ mo adlts no Owner·673·311S Avail Now . SS OO condo l2l31592·4184 micro·wlYe ovens, 2Br.withgarage.stove& gardener. pool service C llG F\tm apt .. util paid, near beach. 2 BR. 1 BA .-... _, 'it • · 5.5-18112 Aft.erSPM private patios ' yards dishwasher Child & Av a i 1 F eb ls t Sll25permo a erry weekly, $750 pell, •1 Kami on. Lge Ba chel~r w /sep NEW 0c' v· 2 BR Y..,._ ..... 4150 Gardener provided small pel OK ~50 mo $12.50/mo. n o-0347 673-7161 or760-ll97 642.1334 673-3017 Eastaide 1 br apt. lge bdrm. l ba, uUI pd, close 2•,c, BA ean rt':! Ph ••••••••••••••••••••••• Elegant living only lS 536-7979 Beautexec home!5br.4 lbdrm,fum orunfum, yud400lqft S360 to bch $3 60 /mo . ,gar. mo OCEANFRONT2 &4Br minutes rrom Fashion FANTA.STICRENTAL' ba,WeslclJffarea,tg yd, $395. F\lrn. bachelor. 3 bdrm, ~en. 2 ba, gar, (213;..3085·TomiSleve 1148 ·2262 , ask for i 64&5800,64S-26&2eves Avail Winter. Weekly bland, 7 minutes lo S.C Soac exec 4 Br 3 Ba 1 IA.YFIOMT lseorlseopt 646·53SS ~. $200 sec. dep. + front urut. New paint 1 br _1 1 •. Rosemary G or Brand new deluxe lbr Monlhly.673-7873. Plua or 0 .C.Airport block to beach S900 2 Stary. 4 + bdrms. 2 Bhlfs. 4. br, mo to mo l!t, move-in 548-0130 and caa!t. Adi ls, no ' _, l:'' ~l. ast .. 96M&33. condo, cpltdrpl, fp, encl Pal S ri M • ~~1'!!.~~:of:,r~ 75&-9293. ~!~~~~~e~i~~~~d I~. short term. red. 0-Poiilt 37!6 ~~~ chlU Mons~::c~ cle~l~t.'574 Oean, xtr•l~2 br, l'"l !~o~a:~e 1:;01o~e'j:~· te:y&~~~~a3(~Rn2 BEACH bungalow! lrg $lip. $3000per mo. Avail rent,nopets.494-6163 ....................... MMill24 ba lwnhse. 1'1 mi ocean. 1850 • 673 6 2 Ba , furn w1atr1um Frwy. Starting at S900 a l+br, appl, ONLY $450 Feb l Spac. 4 BR, 2v, BA. Fam ~per older 1 Br. Villas, lBr • 1 ad u It only . Adults only. no pets. I mo. . 11 . Golf. tennis Daily. month. 631-5439, 2473 OC·RENTALS 750.3314 room, pool, fl'l'I . 955.0809 small a. coiy, 1 person. Dal-1 t. $600/mo. ~ 1525.980-2392 840-2!153. weekly & monthly rates Orance Ave ., Costa S!SOO/mo no pets. 1375 & 1395. 1~ .640-7442. -.PAitMiiifs ·~-UDO WATERFRONT. avail. 714 558 ·8001 2M::. enclsd ~rage ~~b~.I~~~· ~~~ed .1s~: Eastbluffs, 15 MO . 493-GI0.1. 3 br, 2~ ba, fl'l'lc, l bl Bea~ul 11rden ~pta. Jt:t:. 3142 ~1~e!.~;~~~o Rita 9-SPM,ask for Mark. . . IMt,sec. 960·1662 LEA.SEW/OPTION TO lluf'sd•leeclt )740 ....._ -1mo inclda ulil. Patiolfdecb. Spa, heal •0 •••••••••••••••••••• 2Br 2n. -p ... Lid c No .. Tahoe Condo, 4 Br 5 Adults, oo pets. /mo. UY BR B ...,. ""'" -_1;1 ........... 2 BR, .. , .... BA CONDO • ua, at•. O on· mm to Northstar 1400 .,.,..W Wi'·-631 ••-4Br Twnhse, 11,Ba , B . 4 • 2 Vt Al ....... •••••••••••••••• daya 759·1301 eves _..."" ....... nopeta. •T• d p b ' '"' . '"""· ·-~. vi j I . • "BR .. BA .... ~ MCA/mo o. an.oram1c ay wit Tom 857-1668 4 BR, 2 BA, adultsfno carport, encl patio, S690 ew. acuzz · appraasa H:l.'s FINEST 6"-2578/640-6175 ' ·' · ....., _,., ocean view. Lease OP· ,petstemp.rental3~mo. mo . lsl + dep. Call 4/~Br.2Ba.Famlly rm .. p~lce S290 ,000. your SpanishEslateUving! ColhW... 312 311W.Willon 431·55&3 731.5022 lion poss. St800 mo ...... toS... 4300 On Monrovia Sl. near Kathy848-6800 -~.g ':l·g~ bl~~~~T pnce $250,000. 11600/mo Beautiful park·llke sur· ...................... ,...._ ... _. Jl40 ~•leocll 1140 675-1642. • .................... .. lltlLl.\50.957·0899 ............ s1 000 1mo Agent 64CM>Ull roundings. Terraced JBrTownhouse •••••••u•0 •0 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••QWet2Br.1Ba.1arage. Prormaleto shrw/fem ~ 3242 Beaut Nwnl Creslrondo pool ""-"en gas biv. gorgeous. spacious Lr1 4BR Exec Style tWt.o. 541·5032. -... ' · ~ma ""' Newly decor. IU pd.. pool, adults, no pets Nwpt Shores home Hom ... In Pr•ferred •• • ••••••• 4 br, fam. rm, din. rm, sparkling fountains. encl gar., pool, ds-hr. 1801 15th. St Apl G "' .. •• ~·••••••• •• Spacious house with pool, jac. tennis SllOO Spacious r ooms _ Ad ..... ., • .,u.ff3 .. tII'ennebunkport? -r 6427340 540-96019·5Randy Resideotial Area. CM. Ma 1 n C h an n e 1 ' swimming pool. 3 Br 2 yrly.646-0686 Separate dining area. ,....,,.,..,. . ...,, · ~ ......, mo. · · Maturt r esponsible .-Brand Newl Carpets. waterfrontTownhouse2 Ba.Familyrm.rrplc + Walk·in closets, 2Br.1BaApt I Didn thewinthe Studio apt, refri1. and Fem1le. non smoker. Drapes· • P 1 Int. Br. 2 Ba. wet bar. f1!c 2 additional ut ill t y LIASl/OPT or SA.L~ homelike kitchen ' Newly decor. Gas pd. ....__ r~..i Prix in,.,.,,, partln1 00 Peninsula. Newport Oceanfront. Tbrou1hout Every• many up·gra es bdrms . Ni c ely 4br.Jbaexec.Weslcllff cabinets.Walkto Runt· endgar.,pool,dshwr. rt1U11UW\ltUl1U '"1 ~87S-G112all5 123S/mo54l·l&61 GRoom •. ·~c ... v3 arcadr. SUOO/mo. 714'6s75·7171. I and 5 ca ped • au l 0 hof;nt. All new in • °"v l. logtoo Center. Adults. '42·5073. (\('"'\~ ZBR. lBA At Beach Ulll Uala t ... I .. , -" HUMBOLDT I LAND sprinklers. SlZSO/mo. in· QWet. resld. street. a· Bdrm f 1485 ~ 2 B 81 S39 11\...1 :._,r• -..:..; Pd..,_ ,...,,~ o IMJare spac ous • Gardni111 Service, ONWaterw/40'dock 4 clds f•rdener •pool c1nt-lmmed. occ. 1 -um. 3Br lYJBar,~ i.au!· tryourenotsurewt\O (Ofwhat)Kennybunkport ·646-5743 ~rt Shores home. Oruce Tree. Wat er· bdnn. S2200 mo yrly. s er v c e. 6 4 o. 13 2 7, <>wn1y17sz,2550. Adults, no pets. dry lac oooi 549 ·9556 · was. oon't feel ~-you·~ not aione 5fr: 1 2 b ll 1 1 Feb lst DOO mo Pet• Subject to Ap· W1terfronl Homes. Inc. ~la otfice7-s.9·6597 UlillUea Free! ., · · · or rap • m Rlndy 540-9601 t·•da ":•I. lmmed Oc c. 631·1400 . '. s • .-11fEVICfORIAN: New· Kennybunkport 1soneof14diSt1nct1Yely n>m beach. No pets, Mtt'rmmltnffdedtoahr ~Mo. 157.-?4 WATER oriented condo. HARBOR VIEW HOM ES C•hh-JJ71 LA QUINTA HERMOSA ly deror. 2 Br w /gar., d11'ferent apartment floorplans at SeawtnO ViUq acMta onlr. '42·2357 3br apt very clole to 4 br, I bl coodo, many w 2Br 2ba, ffp. bltins. 3 Br. 2 Ba. dm. r.,,k. 2 ....................... 18211 Part.side Ln. 1 blk ~ ~ • A~a&:•·~~j rn Huntington BNch SNwlnO Vlnq IS a reutt Vnalllea bachelor. 1475, bead\. @!Omo. 675-scNI .a•DJtlt•. $800. Dye 2 car 11r . tennis, pool, car aar, gardener, Hiiitop Et lale, Jiuce W. cl BeKb, 3 blks S. of ~""1.'5puu •• ..; •120 of t<JU!ly ,..rsoNhtedprofes.sional "'•Mint\, lat, lMt, aoo stt. Gale u /CHRl.mAN R ...... T ... • 11.100. Avail 2/1/82. rooms,bones,pets,klda .__..,.. • _.,, ,... ,,.. '"" SUJrd pool spa wet Pt •• .., mm; eYI MH• ~IC, aec cate. 1825/mo ~. 644-54511 <*. Non·1moken. 11100 FA!inJer ., "G" Victoria 1419 The kind of attention you CleseM. rm. Gienft MJ.5.31S en1 2BR IBA .. E.C.M. lhrp J br . 2 ba . H/17M1154 EMcbhtfs •Br. famlJy n>.lll·Z131tves. 147·1411 2Br.Adult,beamedceil· AperfectblendofnaturuncllMllQ-cu.-..' ' PUmo.&3l,.~Dan poolf1pad bbq, aar, Ir* 3244 nn,lge yard.642·516lor -...... JJll i.,...... 1741 lnO,aervebar refn1e. ~led lnaforestwithbabblingbrookunclQuiet Lrs28r2Baupperunlt. Lady zo.30 to •hare 3 .t.~mte1.rj~\'sr ~'0~ __ ................ M0-8107 -·-·••••••-••••••,, .. , .................. ·lat.a at.wood. No pet.a, pon<2S.cooltd1>ynatucatOCH11t>raues.AOdto dlc:t. "1>tc •. &real loca· l:"'dplxatthebeach. • Ut/lut. uoo dep. WOODlllDGE 2bdnn. 2ba w/stontfrplc, Dtlue Rustic Beach Lulury sttldio. spa, TV, 2Z5I llaple St. MZOfmo. thattenniscourt.s. SW1mmtng p()Ols. a)ICU111 and U.. No children/pets ,J.11.•J"'~•blei '"'Ir •• 3 Id-~-;-around nr pool ' gar. '690/mo. Houle 38R 2BA. ,with maid 1ervlce, phones. St8-ml,@W. Shopp! Ind '715. Yrly lease. Call 64}.G°K + ' Ill untt, beaut: dteor. lrg Adultt, no pets. tst, last IUDken tub, 3 storiea, PIS wk. •mt lbr. Iba upper 4·plt1. a convenient location neir ng Uoyd, Jacobs RHlty · tn 1 •••fT ... l•t pldoarea.11175/mo.No lrS150dtp. Ref's req. spiralllalrcaae,hottub tit •rtlMdt J76t adult.I, no pet•. $525 emptoyment andyou'vtgot~placeanyonewould m..-it Mature adult to ahr I ...... I~ ba, ..... ett. era I 1/Su II D f75.2520 dga. 3 patios, 2 ,.,. ... , all ... ;i .................. lOtOCYaltDda. Mi-l!E pfOUCly un home.(Even Ktnnyllunkportl) 3 Ir I Ba, frplc, 11ra1e. r~· :c:e~;~f.,,Jc ' • (Jll)941M WeetcUff 3Br. f/r+aml carpeted • drapu. RHl•COMIOIT One and two bedroon'I. one Ind two blth Pldo, :'°kid• or peta. _ac. · · ' Clott to l .C. Plue, olc. New cpt1/palot. • Slwp Call (IU> !tte!ll IAJ Lattt 1 BR down•taln ad~lt 'l)lrtmen~ from ~.00 -~ = ~ury CODdo. C .... ~'::. "11 6 -MM111.1Sl·ll17 ~~ I .,.,... w ~ patio fp dfw NrlMID111'1&1'rtlr4lba 1'191e. atral&bt • hra 1_,~,I ... IWOta: 3 bdrm 2 Wi 1 1 hr J2tl' l Bdrm , moath to poal. .p., cu pcirt, no Uprf/pctllc,I• M, prof, SSOO/phu ; ~.:.,cu.a. . ~ frplt, SJ80 mo. zn _, .................. I moath, atllltlea 8:1d. ='· ...., onb *5. l!!P9MIT~ 7U•H41 dya '40·IU4 ---·-P!:'·Jb•, ~"'-MHUt MNlfl1••1t1• I =-~ Call aa, lllrtaHl:IM7 Vt1"9' .. 0 .. , 117' We:t:!et •omu .-~-~---m-• • mlllft. Be•t frffftbelt Slicit familr ._.,_I • I D 11 .. Vtr*. IP" 1111 • ,................ 9'11111 ... Jf ... ,_ .. ,.. tall CIMalflod ........ ,...,. ... ltlfM .. I friH"J l ...... 1 .... ...., .. !Ile.,. .. ,. .. =•· ~111 N .. 1 loe. 6 Decor! HI, bdrm, l~ fta. Ll•aaJ ... New deett. Adlb, tSSSSHunllftVID"WllgtLn ~llldl.CA ltl\tile,Pfllt,l ... _..10..,.llltlC. . 19frALI ~ram Im. 11100. room, formal dl• .. J n.t'• an euy way for P.•111· ...,, <714) ...... , • •9' to \tull, a Otlll YMrl .m Jlr,l• .. ~--roaa.O.~tpQ,A JWtoMlllbatblcl~le •lko.dl1rLC. F1'91T1"'9Stn°"IQ.ffJllllfhlndlonlllOlto .. llr.J• = .. -Ctil*-f '*-a -II -'4: --,. • Jonctr •· Jmt Piiia, LA. Peel, 1pe. ~lddln. "*' .. en._, ....... -....-... ............. tn1 llL r~ ~""9 Hr•• ...... s;;r -· lil·lll·dll ••• =t'c~:_~, . ' ~--·'-UllrlOMn1.-. iU~·11t:w:.·· :tk&'= I =-"'-'- .. --1t1Mu.--.... &121 Ck:raii#1• .. ' '• H1a .. 1111t ' I Mi.i · ft II 1 .... ~-~··••••;:-•• ~~;;i.;·1; l.ii!""' __ ........ -;;..:;~;;:10:· ii:..:":i:·:.i;; .. ;;· c=:Pft:"' -:;;.;"~;;.;;.;~ .. ••snueiiii*• •· ·• •r"· (J'ormlca • Top~/rlmoved, ••· Phlall>-Roon111·Recnod ,.poulble lady, atnt' am op. c. l. HEATING-fl!PAIR All 11191 -llaltlll••· ~~::n--:~:.i Ml·-or can bJ Attoneya ~ ct.u upe lawm r• 8tucco:Drxwa~PH700 __,. • xlot rtt1. Pref. 8DDded. 1111. Reta. Color Bin.ACE ffl.llM QrM.ldm.a•• • , 1.., a.ome. AH•tr Ad 1120 at ·ftw;glM. anzoo oov"'4,DJ;itil , ... _.....,. N.B.ana.H'MW ~._i.IU:GIUDict " irhM• ••• i. . , lloa. Ulna 19W,M)rl, c.e..w........... WHYNOTONEOr _ .................... Homlcltaniot: depend•· Im Smal)-llf 9rlce• ... , •• J. ..... '!f: ..... -m•••••• •••••••••• ~M.;;mllOllUL---~e...t.... -....... -.9;.9.ttel. 1111BllT!8'mmona HARDWOOD FLOORS blit, booelt. Cleaned lo are ,1mal ! CcUl; NB. PIOf•TY 11 I Al.LED m ~; ................ c rowa mouldla1. a...,,•,f4HIM ~autlMJycleaned ~ut11fa c tlon . F.lp4.ft9fll·ff7 MANA•••M ~ J:=u ........... 'aCrptCltaoen m .. tUu, "'II ua1t11 ••Ptllllat. ~eprt, A2·Mll _ O.LMqunPaintln. 1 OrlaatCo. ma 141,. _ ---Dted to bow ...... bob. CE'' th. Hardwooa Comm. ca. .. !olP. ...... • .._ ,. CUit. wen. Uc 062478 ~Call ior Info > C..CeramlcnJt caU mootiantt ~ to wood P'°".Hf·M ;.;;;;;1 ....................................... lm.rreen&. 731·Qfl andratel · ProlutMn. rr .. ..a . .=:Jiiiie~=j 'lc!rtlMr, •rn• _l·A Own ln • DUMP JOBS EXPIR. PREPARER CUSTOM INT/EXT . ~flHW ...,...,_..1 °sWaa 611.eam clean. 1-111 ~~ ...J.U:apT:~· HmallM~ln&Job• Enrolled to J)ractlce EXPERTS!RVJCE · · TNts.ntc. .,..------Calot bridltwn, ........................... ~7'artdr PaUOI' CtlUIJl~"flPl befcn the IRS. ~uaUty LOWRATES •• ··-...................... . S --............. ~. io-m. b1t1cb. UV£.IN Mk,pn. compa· Gmd. Prof. Service •t HAUUNG•DUllP fltrut.£91!.if9·~18 J'il!:88QOK 5#·117~ •oo•••• .. A• ........... •Elpert'l'reePruUal* \'Giiffa -~ttlll' Hill. liv/cUI. rw SIJ; niona , lltter1, MC. &an to Pleaae. JOBS.aakforRudy, FEDERATED NEUiONSPAINTLNG !:J'i:..Hont.~1':.lG~ Colrimerd. aJ~-llnlft '111 "'' -,. ~VJ room ruo: c®Cb &ll'deaer1. Brouabt to •awbll·••Wtl Hl:lm · lncomeTaxServlce lnt/r..t Reaid/Comm ~..-. · ca tn · kYkM ~ •.e '/I . 'd a. Nu -~ •· Guar.1eum. tol!f1lomefor~t.erview. Gudenln ~coi L YOUI .a.cT Al-4111forapvt. ~etliua. Refs, l\AcHiplinc.HHlff ..-J ... A~YE.._,,..1'R ....... E .... E_,C..,A~R~E-6G 71.•1122 11.alft. 1llp·4 .-41eDeft. Oil .C111t~u.. ~· <Z&JmNRI dean •' b ii CLIANW "" M ~tlt.87·2637 ~ cabineu buill or Complete Hrvi_. aaf l!Ll•••lim•lilml =·=•· tecfor ~ .r;&·Jl!o1;1ork ~ ror...'Llt•=· au na TOl>AYf Yardtaaraae ::~!!!I............... PAINTER NEEDS t:~lfiSed, reatore~J -~~ 10 1,. 6 • -~·-·-----;91.;;;;. ... ,........... MicbMIH5.f!H dn-lietc. lton.trlk'l. BRICKWORK : Small WORK-30yruxp.lnt atal.n jobs. Q ~c.IAl.@tM i!!fa!i!I ...... NoS&eam/NoShampoo DRYWALl,./ACOUSTIC Garclealu" ed m. __ ·1MC24bn> jobl, Newport, Coata /at AcouaUcceillnf• mpp.ft2·M TreeTrhninl cltu up1 i~Qliiia••n;••;r:• --·••••••••••••• 8talD.$1ieeialia.t.Put l4Jntxp.f\allyUc'd• llowtq,ecln;ai:,~111 Haulina/clean-up, dirt, Meu.1 Irvine . Reh. DtviaPalgliogH7-La§ •-•I s11..-. ~yaervlcefreutt'. • Com~ k -up -.C:.ISOM da·fr•utt.•ua igHnd, W·H iweeplrfa~· Fre'e abrubttree trim, etc. f7Hl15. p....,•,tbeGame, .......... n;;;w;;;-. .... 646·7SSC Tony'• Tree .••11.HtR ~lialdintiDCelN7 C:...Jc..cne. DRYWALLTAPJNO ettlmatea. "5·4372 or Jl.lllt.t.ruh. ... 4914 cu.tomBrickMuoney Pedenin's tbeNaine! COMt•CIAL , .. Scn1ce .............. .__ ___ _ ._.. =-·nmodell.o~ ....... , ............... Alltm.urea•acoutlc HW71l HAUUNG-Btudent baa Compl. yard conftruc· .Uc.Z!ljH ff2.0862 =STllAL ,......_ .~.......... . . ~·L.. pat o THOllPSON'S . Fnuft. Keyln67HOH CUSTOMGARDENlNG tnack. Lowest rate. lion. pool decks & fflepalntin&·~ll. grad DIUM~ 0;;;;;;1 .......... •.•••• pra(. Mt'Vlce oa u:.-'uiiiiest. S:.'ti70 ,OONCRETECONSTR . ....._.. a.id'l/Comm'I · CaU75&-1978. encloeures. Local refs. 7 yn up, quality work. Turn ~oat or unused Credentlale~ former -~ applet. Steve'• RO~BRONE-iC ji..:.!P"Tlt HJ.Ml2 ....................... Clll=\!l!I. m.3511. X 43 SHR J 64H&12 l.ewrat•· Dtna646-1889 space into a workable teacher Admtniatrator. Ae.a.n.a:15u G •uiw"' " --ELECl'IUCIAN -priced nlEGRASSHOPP•R TREES/ UBTRIM Hart llaaonry. Brick, L.J.B.PAJNTING area·rooms divided. J7yrusJ)er.Kdatbrala ~ UclN'LCONTRACTOa ........ ~••• .. ••••••••• rilbt, free estimate on r-..a.. .. 1a . hat GarqefrYdClean-ups Block, Concrete. Ref. QUAUTY. REAS . ~wall, droo ceiJin&s • aade. Corona dfl, Mar. · _ . ....., !IQ;HH Hamen1CeramicTlle lai'leorsmaUJobs. ~I wnmai Us' "°'ee pt. 557~1 Uc.38!12N.646-1Sf7 Llm6tH383aft.6 trim.c~oeolry-to com· '44-1147 ' ............... P1NE HOllE 1'1oan . Showen . Tu.bl Li" .......... 1 673· 'Atta ........ p ~tape(la t na-uu· G d' u s I pl........ . II To . Jefr" ... o ..... v""'•~ ·G-E--..... -.-N-C-.. -, ALLSTATE PAVING lllPROVEllENTS Callf9Ytimef72.P -~· !!!!!!!!!!-__ ~ Dggiipic~l ~ on· ra ma ... uon.ry our pecla ty! '-•lllt , _.. a m or • "" eth~ ... · ~-StriJ>in&. AdditioftlA.Remod Jin RESID/COMM'L LandacalJina·Yd Clnups Tt1111119r1. Asphalt, con· Cle~ quick, depend•· •• 1 .................... at66H913ord3·3886. Elpert pvt tut;ortna. all ' ~. eomm./KeaMI. . . ---'"' e · I Q1 ... 1 Senlcft 31 yn Hf,. Do my own Treetrlm·Eipert maint cttte • tree removal. b&e. "e Clo any size job. HANGING flO/ROLL ..... levels, nex. ume. Call Uc: mI3llZ HS-. 1111 cal ,. -................... won. Uc d. Al §ff.8126 Jim 851·01?0 . ~.!!~ fr plantln~. *63UOOt• Stripping-disc on paper ....................... 57255 aft. Spm Drivewaya Parkin4Lot PEP. GJRLS clui;ain& UC'DELECTRJCIAN H ~ "8eiWt;tfi·Comm I EXPERTBRJCKAND Visa/MC 645·93~ REPAlRSFORLESS WlildDwClt•lll R~,,~•tina. ~ =~•·Olracea· Qua1. wort. Reu. rates .. ~.':!1 .... ,......... --1,._ 638 Masonly. Small jobs ' UC. PAPER HANGER Sbin&tes, flal. 30 !rs ................. , •• , ... S6aAlj>balt -•••r.~ ' f'\:eull. 83H072Tom ~ntry -lluonry-Jmfrs· JZ&lc facin15. lbaded & guar. No job exp.~eegt. 770.27~ "LettheSunahineln" YcG1·4199 Ue.UMZ 77H5H Ca•at ... & .. nl TOPQUAUTY ROoftnJ ·Plumbing W ..... R .............. ~.55l· .7&0.701 tooamallortoolarge. •AJIS'ONLYI Call~ineWindow W-11\'t w.HALICOMITI.. ...................... , Electricalworltat DrywaJf.Stucco·Tfle anta EALLYCLEAN LANDSCP /MASONRY "'eeest .. TonY898·2728 AilTYpe!.646-6463 Cleamn,c.Ud. 548·8153 .. _ ........... ,.... Clilfom Tomes liam-All= ~rt ded Reas. ratea. 531·5055 Bemodel. J .B. 64!>·9990 JW,\E,;;,~1~~~m Concrete. Lie, ins. WALLPAPER BALBOA ROOFING co •RESIDENTIAL• TlllOM YOUI CAil Int. remod. el 'rrencb esper. "°'ee etl ar a~vice Electric ~rSpecialty ! HOME IMPROVEMENT ROBIN'S CLEANING 20yrs. Free est. S36<09l4 All kinds. free est. The only roofing co. with ~~y =~g 2 sty lGiNil -Of wax. 40 mo. doOn, lkYll.lbls 'patio AJJenCout (Mite) a"!, quu:lt, ~e~nda-REP~R·PLUllBJNG Service-a thoroughly ....,._ $11/roll. Lie. 330986 construction rebates. --'-~ .. ...... ....._~llllZLL.1.1a::J1:111E11'--l pen . .Mf:3852 4"1·S323/49f.4863 ble."edoan~zeJob. Heall!l&· carpentr~, cleanhouse. S4Q.08S? ~;;~;;:................ Norm64S=0880 673§143.§73·8229 ClearV1ewWandow1 PRpF.POUSJDNG c.Mttf..._ ADD'NS/REMODELING •631· • elec, tile. "°'ee est. o Exeertiseflous It . •ABC MOVING·Exp .. ~--•al lllberRoofing-alltypes. Xlntservke,treeest. ~ •\J,our home or ........ ;~;;;;1....... Plana Lk'd Geor1e Aooreo...-.. iob~amall.645-2811 Suppliesfu~ue:e'd111g ~~J:C:~t:S~~~~· .. ..................... New-recover·decll:s. Ken 673·9018 t!n-.ck675·0344 . CUSTOM CABINETS Pilmer•Sons.557-8932. • ......... ;~~l ........ Ben s Home Improve. TnlltYorthY. 9S7·8003 ..... -,--MO-vl·ti:iii*-•BRY~NT S• LicJ.411802.548·9734 Make your shopping Mn....._ Kit bars,aar llDita . · · BESTllASONRY menl ---• "., WallcovenngRemoval easier byusingtheDaily ~S........... Reli'.~t/SD·l&is Abdd1t101ns, remodels, TILEfrWNOLEUM Service. All!obl, big or Top Quality. Special Alltypes. 642-1343 ~rtl~ PilolClasslfiedAds. 9abnit ourCllbomu 1 ome m/croveme,nt, Gru87H3!M small.964·~1 IMMACULATE care in handling.~ yrs ....,./I_. "QualityRoofing~r yr,..;,anytjme. , C:.,.1111• d~. oon, patios, ~•Linoleum For Repairs, painting , ~lcn exp. Competitive rates .......... ;r.-;!......... t'lneffomes."645·010t ' 60-M82.646-S759 ' •• .. •••••••••• .. •••••• raveway s · r .e · Home Van fr Motor c~~ Christian re Home Otra· .... s · NOovertime.7»1353 P~ERPATCHING •JobnHenry's Roofinf,• Tlll-...-1111~ · , FINEFINISHWORK plumbin1. etc. Lie. u-• .... •-=D · • · "" Sl'ARVING COLLEGE Ll 'd •-1 s • --Mature Babysitter Remodelin!'Doorsbung 371711.PbDOAS !!W!"·!!'!I.....,.. ave. li e~• , Restuccos. Int/ext. 30 .c; • ns,. 15 .or , on.U,ClrlfWIC..C., needed, ll·F 4·9PM, Randy~IJ!IOCdM · frwltDoon JACKOFALLTRADES HOUSEWORK DONE SlVDENTSMOVING m .Neat.PaulS4S·2977 estimate & anspectaon. 1 • N.8. are• aft S isli-6466 CHAR RENOVATING h~~ ~r=t ....................... Call day or night, BY J A P A N E S E : CO. Lie. #Tl2H36. Neat patches fr textures call aft. S. 631·5038. DAILY PILOT Babyaitting Mon-Fri. eomp1 int/est• cust Room addifc t •FRENCHDOORS• •Jack675·30lh Professional. Call Yoshi. w1~ed·rJ·M27 hnt. ltl·l43t S.Al•flllt CLASSIFIED NeWbom to ~rs. 6 to cabiiiets.25Y!l.64$·3749. improvem°!15rit enr:~ 10 panes .installed , 6' I REASONABLE 839=5CDS A H U RQW ! ED'S PLASTERING .................. ~·~ .. • LI!:?· &G· . cysTOM ADDITIONS surance work, decks, :.=~~ ~1(;'-, PJtf~r;Jsf'f~lRE~T. ~Caucasian Hskpr. ~~l~~g6'~i~~ All T¥oes Int. or Ext. B~~.~~1f~11>cK~ · ADS .• -ol lYr Old. Wall Kitchen remod .. pat.ioa 1 starter · SS.00 per Fast ar Careful. Lowesl 64.S-82S8 free est. Freeest Ins &4J.7S8l 1 Babysit full or Part· Stylites. Refs. Bill 770-8067Lic313174 '*lbllutltfllllalllli' REJ~~~EDED. hr. AHluent Homes Rates Law Allows. MIC PLASTER&STUCCO ct~~· ... M.,· dl.-s T~~-Cmtll~olt,W~~'..· DP. Lmn. 63l·CM89 646-0082 Ba c It b o e Service : ..................... ... ·4ll7 ~ Visa. Lic/lns. 673-08S3 Repair. No job too sml. _..... - -,_ """ "'ft - Infant Care: f~l ~a ••••• ditching, grading. Low ·~··L~ !Small Jobs, Handr Man, SCRUB·A·DUB PtiiiiiilNJ MS-4203/645·4199 ............ '$ ...... .. ~ monms. My 'nredolPlainWalls?ln· rates. Construction: An.Ycbair hand-stnpped ~1rp ent~y , P umb, XlntProlo:toosecleaninJi ....................... -ting ~JtJ'or~~~~ ( 842•5878] -'---;--.§31-1880 crease the Value & ad!l'm, ~terati~. {e· or re1lued, $19.75. A ,S46-~-easonable w~ Jean631· 16 F\nepaintingby Richard .... , .................. Freeestimates S48-04SO Balmit~ .. MY Home. Beautr. ol Your Home pairs, !DBIDl. Design & To,ucfl Or Class In· -~ LORRAlN~'SHOME Sinor. Lie, ms. 13 yrs of Drains cleared from SlO . Cl{.MCJ11.·Fri.AllA1es. Witb lbe Richness of consulting, 730-1611; evs terim, 711 W. 17th St. Have something to sell? SERVICE. REFS. llltPPy.localcustomers. PlwnbingRepairs Have something to sell? §31'311119 Solid W!jl!!d. 496-6161 •7385 fA2. C.M, 642-7712 Classifiechds do it well. Own trans. 962·0510 evs Thanhou. 631-4410 Free!!$l. IHcM 642-9033 Oassified ads do 1t well. --~ Lo.t & Fomd noo ''"• • nso "'... 5350 "' •• 5350 -....•...........................................................•........................... --. - -ft -• 0 ... _. Orange COllt DAil. Y PILOT/Frldty. J•nUllY 21, 1112 n .......... !!~ ." .. ?!~ ..... ?!~ ~!~!! ..... ?! ... ~?~ ..... ?!~ ~~~ ..... ?!~ !~?~ ..... ?! ... '9e'.~~i'Aii'I!'.~ .... ,.._.,,., N"4t.•----i NOUS. • . PAITl\.IPAJlTtlT ..... IT/ llC'YlllCIPT IOUllmM Arl!tl'~111a¢ac1 0 rtCillleaka • IMdld for lii11 pro PUl!Me.U. firm ...U · PMT·Tliel laulldili.6...., for CAlllO•IA .. ._~_.. -•• · C TIOM fet1looal la Newport tap put.•, produt· ... Z. llol·r.1. Wort wtille =eoc~P'°'l·~ IA....S I LOAM •Mil .. 1Hr. cw,..., a..1 'h UMN It u II . Mu t b • u.a ~l. llu& be "•• •H at uhol. ve • •~ Pan.,.._-t.n. Potl· _._... M=Jf7.I Pwtt •"You! Call PIOCIUOI '"Poulble w/own fall,acewa'-6•tllor· -..-. type file. requllrNtl1tr,oe1 co,m· t loa for our New Lull• ., h h 11 l,rlailp. S/bn • day, $ 111lae4. N•••auper ~ ~w;, cnaa u oa or1u1,a· Nftpoc1 leada Otflu Cr ll •n Celt ...... 111·• """* reqtint 10.. ea .... All~ PM. buk1round lltlrful. helplW, Call &11.ai7or ~ lkilJaOoodtor vlnal1ecl Require C111llerin1 ' ... at(We, rtfn1 .•• doumeet1tlOJ1 u · opee, Rth req. Xlnt. permanen 09. U1&1•. typ1 I • T In Ix erluu .... ,.., ...... ,.. ...n.ttomeftcrow6 C!lltl4fMO.Mda11. portunlly for rlabt 11_._.1 0 _,_C'· .. "'·· m111180tl C£a101EKatllleen: pr/ue'coaract Ju~Seanl7cuftfroet-free s=f::-'.:tl l"U ~ bld:1rounc1 dnlra· MOUllWIYIS peraon. Near O.C ';: ~-~·· \./Ua~ ~ I. cO · Sa 1 MartlD 521. EOE Nlrt1. e mo old. IMO ) ----T..._. 1Dtttvlewtr1 Al~. Call Mr. T. ror 17\bSt,c'ii'Mitl~~ ap: l;,:~~.c~Mnp T!ACH!R·Pre Scbool, Ol1iU~lOl.Y1 • ,._._.. •rtter look1D1 c:wne.1ocated in ele11nt •anl.d. il'IY ••&e + 1n . t'\111 time. permanent, • C for l*tOll lattrttted In Newporl Pln anchl bonul. Ev" only Call PASTUPllSOM Retail SICllTAIY liberal benefit•. Aleo Refri&erator, Hotpolnt. lh ~ ..... ~.·fuclorm"ultauryal Ctn\er~Xet. nlary, 11 1113189 5da,ysawetklnclud lni ANftt.t~a. Immediate openlna. AIDES. Ca ll Marilyn Wht.$115. .. ~-OU&llandift benem1 • lN.WRANCE Satunia . Art or draft· ...,. parttlme, for church In 147-5314. ~ ~pandUfbt profit 1 n1. For In· Pwi• .. U... 111&bac~triNndbelpru1. S..Ptni•ll Coita Mes a . 9·I Teachflr ror Christian Ner h eavy du t L ~·· Ideal or tervlewpboee: "nds ,.._ P\all company bentflta. needed for contem· weekdaya. Ability to Pre-School, p/tlme, WhirlP»I waaber ' callele•Mlf·Hl[>loyed JICkieEk VP ~-.:-:!• nrr :my· PENNYSAV ER poraryretallstore.lllu•t worll lndepend•ntly. Mon ·Frl 9 .ip m cSaxer~.558-0233 caner woman. Phone • ~ ...... _, -ach Aaency · 1 be dynamic• bave 1oocl 84IM85Z (t.1. Mon.f'ri). ..... 7m . w:1112 · ' -,,--ldmund In La1una ~AM Salary OHn. Pension l P acenlla Ave., women's wear back· , \ ...... ....,, . Convection Ovta Broiler ltldlat*-out. STATllAMll andVOUPbeneflts C.M. around. Experience • • ,....., • 1100.Callatter&pm ACCUMULATION, of• Movinilalt:lllowt ..... 5GONewportCt11terDr. Phont95Ml.22Susan need only a 'IY· Sala I SICllTAIY/DIC. 646-ZB yn. Htnredoo 1 iota, Picnic Tablet, Plana.. ,,... 141 NB•~IOOEOEM /F LandJcape, exp. main· ,......,.,~ +cornm.Pffasecall ~ Penonnel/Adve(llsln1 .., ~11,.t;n h 3f'x1S"llttonmicrowave ~fcftn':>i.s~ !~fJ: ~~o l,d1M heLlfura , r;.;;~···············4·-------· lenlDCt! penonnel WIJll· NeecMd, pac\ time . Work come In lo: Apropo #29 Dept. ~ openln1 per ... ,. • oven. like new, 1200. SMtaan 9-4 277 E 16th C1 a.:1 ., ... , uu. ueci!tA~~~M. BEAUTIClAN·career ed.Pieuceall,493·0835 lS to2:5hour1perweek, ru .. lon l•l•nd, N.e. =~~1:!1~:· c ...... ,,.,,. •. Me-7303 Plare!iC.M.&42·oi37 T:n.Mleu,O::. I05 &3l·3M8 oriented ba.lratyllst • forappt. evenln11 and poulbly M4-.!.O.E. GoodtYl>iol.shortha i PIHt •! te IS Refrl1erator, Wu her Garac•SaltHuae manlcwilt for • blably Life G1&ardl, Water Safe-Saturday. Ellperience in Siddle Maker 18.00/Hr ex ~. lloo-•mok:r: J•••1t ShldeMa • Dryer1 Freeier • Dis· Saturday' Sunday Jan. WAllHOUSI SAU I 1;:•' located •alon ln Faahlon ty Instructors wanted ad buUdln1 or P•&e Must have a years ex· ca'lruo-0123 between ........ , ... c ... hwu ner. _JlSO E1eh. 30-31 t -4PM. Dreuer. SAT•SUNt:JM Pr ~JI Island vie. Sandy: ror the City of Hunt· makeupdeslrable. AbiU-perience. Will make ' 9-2. llllltY. TNda ~ M&-M ldnc 11 bed, ehiira ' For home"" office 6 ............. ••••••••• 64CMIOZ3. lngton Beaeh. Call ty to wort rast and ac-repair Enfll•h • other .. T' .......... s,r.. REFRIGERATOR; very buDiltedsolother items r.=•ure. r.veryttaina 't:':c'... 7001 Fami~~~~Pt~~a~ioo =::~:rt~~;~~·:;~. =~~~~f:~~~~e~:~:~ ~fneJa~tu~a~:.1t~~ SICllTAIY ~oo~C?. ~r: ~ar. autodefroat. Y':::!~i:!::·!'i,. ~~::;.::== •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• •u '1ecretabnail service opp'ly for adv1ncment. The Dal.bi Pilot is an saddles, bridlu end Mon111e Company In '213' 4 5 4 Freue~. uprl&bt, S150. cellmeous Sat 10-4. 1011 U631Coley River Circle: ll I fOHWK n que us ness OP· Also needed . P /ti me I other strapgoocls. Take Newport Beach h u Elettric dlyer $7S. Both Albor, CM. F. V. (off Newbo-bet. HotWDCli'. t'.M: ·chrls· IJ0!1wUtY.MS-3&13. nllht elm. C.M area. =~~~ye:P&~~n!~~ ad to the nearest Stale ~ C:,g5::i~~\~~ TEACHER -Infant &deand.~·3585 5 family yard sal e Warner • Slile r ). tiall Preschool. 646.M23 Cashier for ladles •P· 96.1.sus; 549-1'22. minori l iu a re en . ~~ment Service of· skills, eye for aecuraer. Development Pro1ram, M11lc Chef Gas oven Fri/Sat t to 5. Jan 29/!G. 64J.1340 Doi! or Judr. I Ul"\DNING pare! shop, liberal disc.. COW"qed to apply. ce in Oran&e Countrc. 6 attention to detai . p /li~e .. ~ember of rqe SZOOlbst 6 17 c/f ts.2SSanta Ana Ave, CM. mues· Sterlin& ailver. mv" advancement O(>pt 'y. • .. uctl ..... E &lbmlt appUcafions at DOT 7S3.l8l·020 Ad pad Non-smoker, salary trllllldisctplinary team. K.enmore ref rig frzr , .... , carpe"'·r ' I AFTERNOON Bendils. So. Coast - " front counter. for by Emploxer. Special ed. • Spanish $225/bll Both lint cond c-& Cht It! ,_ , , H .... I EVENING Plua. 545·0724. B OPllATOIS ~Co•t Sales·earn extra UU SUOO.CaU: Katie, important. Call: Jackie 565025 · Gar~le 2f!lh. 29lh, ~cb toola misc. I WEEKENDS Phillips. Whomeo r k c I o s e t o •L...& part time or fu ll time. S.9350 546-5760. Refrigerator. bottom m . . chairs, class KB=~~ lslaader /save on gas. open· ,.._, Call 867·8164 Security Guard Needed T~ dilplay cases NCR Cash ~--·------ , i CAStlH ings ex.s~t on day shift 330 • 1t1y St. for Newport Dunes freeuCar. nms11:::11357933 Resister, Mirrored Small items to quality an· Trainio1classes for : /t me good pay . for exp'd or trainee in· c .... w...; CA SAUS 12:30AM to S:30 AM. _,.. clolet doors etc! Priced tiQues. Sl-$500. Sat onJy ~c&npany.51oca· ject1on molding ' lmmediateopeninirfora 1131 Back Bay Drive Immediate openings to 19cu fl G·E relrig, It tosell ·makeo/fer!315 &-~.4481sabellaTerraee Dr ........... c:.tPW1•ato.11t Mttlc .. L.A1tt CAU5st9'6ll liona.Over 20. We leach. machineoperators. Xlnt full ·time reader·ad NB.644..QSlO worlt pleasant eve. hrs. s:p· • good cond, $1SO. 12th St, ·Hu ntington COM (top or Seawaril Metro Car Wash, 2950 benefits Includes, major NX-llCll'T. N!pl'fSentative for inside 1 $-9 Mon·fl'ri. mo selling, ~ a 960-68113 Rd.> HarborBlvd.,C.M. medical, dental, plus Work temporary jobs sales eosition. Must be S.C'y~O,.r.,._a hourly wage, call art. IOl5 ---C-..... --.-.-- Child Car e & Light prolitsharing. closeto home. assertive person with ..,.r lPM,966.0151 ....................... Must clearoulmany an· SAllC1....111.-Housekee~ina Needed. CIMCO VICKI HESTON ExcilinJ career opp'ty Ta.HOME S ... LES tiques, framed prints. _. "'-om 2 p 4 d ""'•Bn·ggsAve CM &ASSOCIATES ror bright ener getic "' LargeandsmallH,a·eees. Designer cJ~~_es1 all r1 • • ays """' ·• 540-0400 penoo interested In in· Ftr position open for as· PUBLIC FURNITURE No r•H-able 0 er re· sizes. Neighoomooo col· Calif. Paramedical ., weekly. Occasional ternalional t r avel, sertlve penion with past *lllf'JfON• ...... "" lection. Some antiques Tech. CoUe1e 3745 Lona Ovenlighl. Own Trans. MAIL PllSOHMEL languages ' youn g peo· te lephone sales e~ """ fused. 1539 s:ionrovia and misc Sat only! 1·4 Beach Blvd. Lon Beac l3·75Hr.S3.l·S338 PIOCESSOI ASSISTANT pie. Rapidly expanding perience Apply in hJrYFriM7:lOPM Avel3,N.B. U·Jpm. -5ts FemJea!, Corona del .W. Wmhd. 7 075 Coemetolog11ts Publishing Firm near Personnel / Advertising European based student person at 1660 Placentia Nice !Xirm swtes, Uvin! _M_ar ______ _ •••••••••••••••••••••;• t TICtMCIAH~ J.W .. AiJi>ort h~ an im· Dept. has opening per exchange pr ogr am , AveC.M rm tbls, dining rm tbls GARAGE SALE Young mar ried ma n or exercise.'!' weight m~d1ate opening for expansion Npt Bdt/ located In Laguna THERAPIST Infant ch r s. I am P s. 1400 E. Balboa Bl.Yd. SWAPMIET would like odd jobs eves '°65 heallt! clin1c-,Grow. bright sell-starter as a Financial services firm • Beach, as seeking a Development. Program, refrlt[rator. PLUS BalboaPenin!ula Every Sund ay, 8am· It wkends Can do 1 inc ro. -:ith oppty for mail processor1han· Good typing, shorthand, person st r on g in P ttime Member of LOTS ORE. SAT·SUN JAN.30-31 Jpm la.rt. g F b 7 variety 0; handyman substantial advance. drman. The right in· exper req. Non·smoker secretarial skills but transdiscipUnary team U VE $A VE SAVE Mayt1g electric dryer, Or.ii~! eo:t c!u~ge: iobl. 97MS2S eves; ask men~. S3.75·S4.50/hr. divadual should be able 64().01.23between9·2 anxious to rapidly as-NO'!' & feecUng bkgrnd \fe'honor BofA. MC. ahn>st new. Beautyrest Fairview & Arlington, torBill sta.rting.64S-7717 towortweUwithpeople Pre-school Tearher for l sume managerial necessary Spanish Cashier's Checks & mallress,kingsize.Blue Costa Mesa. Admission ..... W·_...__. 7 OO Counter Kitchen PIT., & have a willingn~ss to H B school Ex per responsibilities while de· helprul Call Jarkie Cash. NO PERSONAL and green couch Draft· free to buyers, Seller .....,.. --I Ruby 's Sandwich learn. Some expenence pref Over 18 Call i al.ing with visltinJ stu· 546-5760 CHECKS PLEASE ! ing board and misc Reservations/Info. "••••••••••••••••••••• Saloon All3 6(5·1100 in mail processing or ~8788 dents from Scandinavia Food available. Items 1teim. 67J.90SS S56-SlllO ACCOUNTING CLERK · ' handyman work 1s de· & Germany. Starting . TIHRIMM~ subjectlopresale. '••••••••• needed for lg multi·, CREDIT si rable . but not PROJECT MANAGER 1 salary Sl6 ,000 + Mm Syearsexpen enee MASTllSAUCTION GAl.AGESALE! I" brf:DCb travel agency in 1 Good pbOOe manners to necessary. Good benefit r;:.096/Vear benel"llS Send resume or an all phases or tree work ansi,, Newport Blvd CM Oming rm set w /buHet, th t ch 1 n J co u c bu. lmne. 1 Yr. accounting assis. t credit manager package & pleasant Must ve 4 yrs boiler l«ter-to: A.SSE., 228 & modem equipment 833-9625 646.8686 misc tables. lamps , pie-~~ht~. S!._e';,, =~::: or bookkttpmg expdrer with collections. Ac -working conditions.Con maker training & S yrs No. Coast Hwy, Laguna Exc~llenl company of-lures , houseware , Sat .;u. 1251 SurfllDe a must. Travel agency curate typing, general tartMrs.Eves,.s49·4834. exp reluire proJect Beach.CA 92651 ferin g top pay & .__._ IOZO ~::.t~tr.!itJCf8.T3~~ CdM knowledge a plus. 40 Hr olflce duues E.xcellent MAKE MONEY while at m&mL s iUs covenng SERVICE STATIO~ AT benefits Ir vine area. -,-.. Be ud D CM --------wk . ?tint company , company benerits. Ex· home. setting up •P· plant maint . engineer TENDANT P/T even· Please caJI bet. Sam & ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm a r. MOV ING OUT SALE benefits. S900 mo. ~o I penence p referred. pointments for comm 'I ~~~ag~~~~~lt~~i:anf!: ings ., wk~ds. neat ap· Jpm, 768-4751. WAMT'ED M,%'W-~J iJE :~~,s~uCb:av;_rx:h!'fJ ~11'~fa~I To.mm1e Good Startin~ salary. clfllelcleaning $.5toS20 ty, & oil sands or oil pearance & handwrit-tlU.sTOfftCH COSTA MESA rTW>torcycles, old trutk, . ortnterview · I Publishing hrll'! near hr. work on rom m shale extraction exp 1ng. Apply at: 2590 &per......... o:~?IM'bi~~~~K fl&rnilur~. cookwani Appliance & TV ser vice I John Wayne Airport. Female prer. 964-9345 Responsible fo r oil . rt Bl. C. M. To act u aide & business frame 6 Forks, will pay Glfage sale Sat. Stereo, ttc. Come early. 405 E counter, parts sales, Call Mn. Eves, 549-4834. t h I f t' d dishes, clothes, misc. Mode N l H t t:oocl hours, benerlts. Oeliv"""'/Sales MAMA.GR . Pe r o c em 'ca . SBYICE llEP mgr or re are ex-uptoSlOO. 536.91132 na, wp I •· vis -·• F d I chemical & synfuels pro-for•""""'' ti led d eclA!ve 6 family Book· 1380Shannon Ln, C.M. 646-4S28 -Brown Co. 411 E. Call Between 11·2PM. oo service, rela1 jects in 11 West ern -inuS . a car eo keeping, typing, ban k· --~-----17lhSt,CM 646-1684 545-1157 take-out. Contact States. SUbmit resume S-8 hrs. weekly. hourly ing ., investments. MEN'SSCHWINN ..................... '-U DENTALASSTJRDA Manager or Operations. before 215182. Take ad wage+ mileage. Creal f /Ume. Call Mr. Jones. &LADrES'3SPD ""'"''"""'""'• . 9337 Laurel Canyon "'D S G for h o u se wi ves. l50ea.Cash.720·0363 Needed for a very nice, exper, ~rogressave .Pre· Blvd .• Pacoima, CA to: ,., D. 1001 . rand mot.hen. Bef. Sam & aft 714-644·9716, Nwet Bch. a1Jadultl2unit complex venta~1 ve practice. 91331213.98.1-1996 Ave .• S .A . DOT 5::.lpm. Girls Nishiki 12 Spd. In H.B. 2 br, 11.'J ba apt NB/lrvtnearea. 752·1320 . . 189.117-030. S41.4771 Mw I ••M Touring HandleBars.1-----------------ava.ilable for manager Dent I Collectl Se , Medical/Bae~ offaee PROPERTY MGMT ... •••••••••••••••••••• Uke New $175 645-4 199, Frwto Y• with. a lar1e rent reduc· Expera. req. PJ~l"me, ~r;. J" eVxepn'di-P1unn~tKuGre' Busy NeWPort Center Servip ·ci!~UonAllendant ...... IOOS 64S-4203 I04S Fwlllllwt IOH "-.,._11•" ::. ' d I d art-Tune, Evenings. ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• Racers Wanted! Morning ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• YUU. ,_. ..... Dentnex. al. N. 8 area. 642·6880· 644--0381 ~vea~s:J :ta~!re to 3PM to tPM · Mon.Sat. Antiq. ue oak Hoosier . xlnt training 20·30 m 1 Jes. I Free Fe: cat. spayed has Wat e r bed , c o m p ........... -.. •--LOf b di p t Slart., 14.20 hr, Must be conil, t250. 1890 elock, days76().(D27eves all shots needs TLC call w/frame, heater, db, ATTINT10M: Roving Assistant. front --· c an e : r oper Y exp. Pref over 30yrs of $150 &t&-8127 -89J..630'l lik sm 646 • oHlce 6 chairside, with some front ofc ~·· manaiement ror abop-Ace.Emie.675-2276 -· 5 months o\d. 10 speed enew . ·135S !~b11·~013usye~~sold•,ntdo pleasant N.B. office, perie?ce. H.B. family pine centers, office Se-·1ce Stat1·on Atten·· bi.ke.woman's,SlSO. Black Lab, 2 yrs, good Movini! Love Seat l200 . ...... " .,.. pr~_., .. e .... ~ man11ement • "'On • • u 4 '"'ERSARYSALE ,, •• .,,.,,. family.t.u.. Loves k1i!s King Bed ~1ae01d1·01. Wirt one or two even· llOll·smkr. exper. & x.•u' . U"W.JUU. sttuct.ion runclin1s. Caa: danu are Needed for tvmn '""'........., USd·2339 SlSO Oak Hall aTree. in1s a week ielt1ng Ray lie req Salary MIDICALIECB'T ctidate must bave prior F\all/ .. Put-Time. Afiply JAN UA R y 3 0 . Boy 's Jr Var sil/. Fw• 1050 S350 10' Bench, ""-. ne-sp'/.er su s"' r1· p "U! ""Sl f ff _. ........,, -s Sch.,.;ftft Bt"ke, lllnt con . ----~ .. ' · · '""'"" Bua'f ront o ice. U · C:rty mana1ement • .""""'!'..1.;<-" an uan JOAM·9PM -u•u -'" Oak Obi Bed Set -lions. ransportation ~ nwa Rd CdM l6S 080. Call after Spm ••••••••••••••••••••••• · -· d d 1 DENI'AL perd only, Newport iroundlnlbt 1bop· I · DootPrites Mooday thru Friday. Y Amoire,P95.645.a5.S ::per~fs~~~a~~o:id~d~ Ortho. front office. Ftr, Center.64-f.W?O. ping center field. Also j' FREESondrinlls l1ltl96Z-8n4 **I BU * * Kingsize wate rbed call 3 to 5:30PM , ask for gd. typist, hvy. phones, MB>ICAL ASST CUISlnleUoa related ac· EXECUTIVE And ColCtt Good used fUmiturc ' w/headboard, shelvea, Andrea, 642·4321 , ext past Ort.ho. exp helpful, P/tlme, exp'd front ofc. eountinfi bacuround I GlfTwilh ~rchase 20• DllT lllE AppUances--OR I will very nice co nd. SlOO 343 id. bens. 642·S89'7 NB ~ ins .. IL bkkfg • v~be pful. u~ WESTMI YSTER SI0/080 S36·98.12 sellorSELLror You f11m.SJ6..6632. A...-L.1.___.0f t · F h1·on Is d c . e ol some .......... SECRETJRY ABBE I · MASTBSAUCTION DAVENPORT •· .,._.. ~ c. YPIJI&. as an · ~ • be accurate Al'n'IQUE MALL • Need alert person for N.B. 644"0381. typist. Candidate must . ll7Sl Westmuuter Ave ATALA l<IJ ladies' 10 spd ~U. llJ.tU5 LOVESEAT. SlSO . .. Dehlltr Wlllled, no exp., nee., but does he.Ip. Wax & polish cars, good driving rec., 18 yrs old min., lma&e Auto Salon, C.M. 64.S-1171 position with established Medk-a1 Secretary be wUJint 6 able to han· Garden Grove Col umbus . d o u b 1 e 31 solas. New S98. Lov· Uke new 640-e l41 pleasant group pr~ctice. Derm Office. Peg Brd dJe heavy work load. LOCATID IN FAStlOH ISLAND M4·8Ul3 ! butted tubing,~. eseau SSS Sleepers. ~table & 6 barcain Min. 1 /Yr ex Per . Exp Begin Feb 22 S850 Send resume • salary I 673-S051n7G-0256 S199. FACTORY 957·5708 chairs, modem love seat Newp o rt Ce nter . tostart.7S9·0006 req uirement s to 8ig8CPAfinnlocatedin Clllin·set 4 caneseat Bike: Powerlite BM X. KJNGINNERSPRING 848-4019 eves ~1122· Models & Escorts Fem Classified Ad • 1000, F hi I I d · k ' tadder back·S200. Oak XL NT Con d . f u 11 y EXTRA FIRM mattress l..ow\ge chair w/casters, Oonut shop,p/lime.AM. ()i.Jy.Top SS. Daily Pilot, P O. Box 3S On San IS see mg slatbk·SIO .. Walnul cane equipped $200 OBO set. never used, worth blue . Down back no ex per. necessary· Ap· 642-4852 Aft 12. IS60, Costa Mesa, 92626 a prof essiona} secretary. seat Qn Anne·S60, 2 Lyre S5U292 ~1 sac 1248 del Never cushion. $12S. 979.9933 LOT ply In person: Dil)pily P/T restaurant help T · 1 S bk·SSO. c ane seat M&.&n..Mattrialsl025 useo queen si . worth SofaS150,2chairs MAN Donuts. 1SS4 Newport Modefsd 1U1 .... tt.ct. wanted, appl y in person. Y P l n g W P m • bench·S40 .. copper fire •••~••••••••••••••• Pl9, cash only, $218 del s:;o, new upholstery forleadlngimportedcar Blvd,C.M Nees ta attractive TheTummySturter 270 s horthand 100 wpm , extgr·SllO .• 42" Franklin Usuallyhome,7S4·73SO 968-8523 At!l'O dealershi p. Must be Driver wanted, p/time . ~nfwomen for agency So Bristol CM 7S1·~7 frpl, never used·S250.. MOW 25• /FT ma lure and ex . f()C' bluepri nt company assignments. 548·7762 ca p ab I e 0 f w 0 r king din lbl-$25., twn bed Redwood 2x6 &ecking, MUST SELL s Piece Oak Dining set ~~ced. d"Elxcellcenlll in C.M. SS7-la78. ... .. SES ... IDES 1· n depe ndent I y. we 11 set· . 751·0178 ... ~· long; also redwood Mah d b d S1300 new, sacrifice l600 icon 1tons. a ~ "' UAl.ESTATE fencing. Lowest price ogany ouble e eash.S3J.4399 eve. Wolfgang at Saddleback Escrow/Home loan ex-Need allshifu. Can earn SALIS • organized and versatile. Armoir china Cab·chairs, , guar. Jim or Ken with ma~tress. Moon COMPLETE BDRM•-. B M W I S U B A R U perienee. Part time to til.00 per 8 hrs Must We are ~roud that we end tbls, chandelier, twn .... , "~" ....... sh·.....i mirror on head -&n·21MO. start.l§/br85CH201 have exrer & rers . Competitive starting beds, m g S1 comforter ann.me ...... ""'°". ~ . Sofa & loveseal SJOO. Ba~ysitter-M ature re-e...i.I Offkt Le~c ou i e Nu r ~ e 5 ~:;~k5~ec~r~uc{nes~~u~ salary and ex ce lien t ensemble. 7&0·B03l Ni!!,.b~~~b:~Pfi~{~~:S~ ll00080 631·7797 aft 6 ' =~t~ =~°4~: s1;,r' ferences preferred for -<rcCiTRATETYPlSTI Registry 351 Hospital Newport Beach "f ine benefi•.... Art Antiq ues for sale, pdS1100,sell1595. Bunks S200. AL L 19mo/old • 2mo /old. 5 Take phone orders, fil. t1acbS~l~ Newport Home" market and as ..., Oat, pines4a ~gany. 95.5-2272/963-7333 Sola/Settee L-shape 13 ft. NEVER USE D ! ! dayu week. Costa Mesa Ina. no bookkeeping. ' such need two additional CALI. FOi ~ · Bei1e/woven like new mGOl area•l365 S:30·5. S4 hr start Nunin& sal~rsons who want Bu~ful Duncan Phyre C=-& IOlO S3:25~67J..62161 -------- wnma Person need ed to babyait6/yrold cirl l/hr everyday, Mon·fri. Will have to meet child after scbool at l:SSpm •keep until approx. 2:45pm. MUST BE UEPEN· DABLE. MUST live within walking dblance to Stonecreet Elemen· tary Scbool, Wood -brid1e, Irvine. Please call 552·0461 alter 5:30pm. Warner·Harbor Area. NUISESAIDE to lnhaprofessi~al 17141640-9200 ~~tng !~t.m Tab!~1 d4 .......... !'!•••••••••••Dual kine u bed, SlSO: on~l.!l!STg OR.et nd male or remale Need Exper'd all shirts Conv atmosp ere . enJOY "'-['· "" ique gwiae Vlvitar Thyristor zs5 ~ 6 lge chat of dwrs, ... ~...-, ""Gi.w 1•. rm 5 !!J immtd~~7 Hosp. Nwpl. Bcb. Bring workin g and have EXT. 247 Des.. 714/536·1508 or nash l'IO. Vivitar 75.205 nightstand,DOO for3pc .,.. et. r s prov bdrm '----I -.a. your smile ' join us! iealous desire to earn a 213/a6186. Cash. 720-0363 set. Wlftn. table & capt's -~• Free mjr. med., dental subitanllal Jiving while EOUALOPPORTUNfTYEMPlOVER Ha ve something you Canon mount SlOO.I chrs.rolltopdesk.couch Part lime gent;ral office &lifeins.Call: 642·8044. providing excellent want to seu• Classified Ss>ukmS100.673.o822 8' eout;h 6 loveseat, nub· & loveseat. oak cofftt duties, and hbran an. services to their clients adsdo1twell 642·S67S. Oly mpus OM-1 with bybeige.SSOOpr Coffee table PP 957·1568 or m1ture individual •P· If you are that person Cbrome Body. 1.4·50 MM tbl, 1259. 720--0363 5'56-272S prox 2S hrs per wk. <rtice and want to work full Lens +Olympus 75 to lSO UNUSED QUEEN BED. -Dining-. -. -t-a-bl_e_•_4_c_h_a_irs-. NewJ>ort Office675 . ..iuo 1~~~~~LY time, please call Bill 7.oom Lens & Case. $350. Box Springs• Mattress bedroom set c;_,., Offkt Cote for a confidential IM0-2TI6 Cost, 1675, Sell S200. 540-4239 Ty p i n g , f i I i n g , J:r!::!~t interview. 640-5777 · NlllOMIS 111 a.mo. M fe, fruit wood. m~ple telephone, mail Fu ll shorthand ( {, <C> ) , 35 mm lild 80 lens. Xlnl Rattan md ·din. set w 4 fulialt 60 X 20 X 36 $145. lime Mon-Fri. Salary ~ Offkt t Cote Realty . ! cmd. $400.1148-lSlO cane chn, 12GO. Rattan Dining set Fruit wood and benefits. Local """''ER A FEE PENTAX llOAUTO. etac~ $757;....,,~~· tbl red maple finish, 2 arm working conditions. Call Work Cloeeto Home 64().5777 Complete system, $325. Queeii AM coffee table, w/10 in leaves, $235. Corporate office, Good ··~.. & Investment am I •. .....,er. --chalrs,4sidechf'S'37llSS 962-az:M VICTOR • -· 67J.S05l/7~0256 desk and lo boy. $250 646--0Url e.ntina HA IR DRE SSE R and Temporary Service DolJI I040 each. 962·3.WI ... Fr-ee.u--r -S-100-: _4_a_n_t_ICl_u_e manicurist with cllen· 556-E20 EOE M/F K£iiii<>ND·~;·•Aic9C-Bdrm set, S pc , white, chain $75 eai Wlcier JB.W tele. gd NB Joe. Health llet9HoM1t ,...._ · · coocl cond Sl75 Da couch S300: 011 dreuer FULLTJME plan avail . The Hair Paru Ii access. counter Parttime'Privateyachl ~~~~irep~{F·?t~' 79-1213,ev&4s.0276. Jl00.645-5360 Position available in our Handlen. 642.8484 penon, sblpplng & re· club Corona del Mar. { ( cc T~ } ) 213/187·134S an 6 pm. Contem~rary Parson 7Vt' Sofa sm. Love seat Downey ortice Ex · ·-------• ceiving exp. necessary Wed-SUn 6 PM to 9 PM. --~ bl 0 .. P .. 5. 2 mat .. hed Cba1·ra Harrison Boat Center. Outgoing and people AKC Golden Ret. pups, a we a. •r· •• ' l::~ce required. Con· Garden Grove, Dave or oriented. Call bet 10 6 6 champ lines. shots ' ~op /Eit, IZOO. @each. 545-3'04. J""'uLove fa1 Id Act1'on TomSS4.a:iOll Wed~Gayl644·9530 wormed 1195 5457614 Dinln1 111me table, 4 VV<I .. ,. _ , ' • • chairs 115. Dresser wltl 21.J.m.3081 • UC.r!TJPIST ~ . Sm Wbt Poodle Mix. SlO. llA1TRm• mimr@.IS7·516l CAUFlllU Call a PAITTIMI Establish ed export ewspaper imesli!'!.-BOXSPRING Safa r . ......,. eonditioll .• s.9pm. Expandin& youth rnartietill& firm needs -,.,., Pd-a...11..,. r-. •- =Pilot eouaaelio& firm has Rteeptfl'Yplsttoanswer 2/yr En&. Bulldoc. -·-...,.,. .......ntry print, browa fflEIAl openinp for 3-5 sbarp te)ephocie Ii 1reet vis· IPlYed. Loving ramUy ~O:~~ PllJow lOnalJOO&M-7113 =I .... _ an ISOR OIUdna matUtt people ltora. Various typln1 Ca rr·1ers pet. Mature family. ........ -· --,..,. to motivate ambitiOUI cMis, a~uracy a must. for l'outes ~ r-···"' _...........,, _, -ewood Blvd. ••13 _ ..... c 11 "5 Pl ~in · ""'""'P• I' 1old /1ret11 .................... ,,, IU>W 11' ...... • 6'" pm eaaant aurrou I•· A.IC Chow Hi years, cru1bed velvet. x Int Pamit. dbl retlow !Mad, ~=~ 642-5678 :=;,.m .343.Astfor ~=f! !d:~: in Huntington Beach, rtmate. Loves people. l'OlldP .... znt ,.,, ta• •tc~' -S~ mmnt. Noo·amoker on· Needa J: home. $300 rr.th'eertlri1SDS Din R2Cf· Sac. • 2 ly. IMS Equipment, 2ll05 f f • \I lie & N rf Be h cauaa 17 table•· 2 nlctit 1tind1 • 4 tlll • e.,. lill _ ..... : ............... ~· . •, .. ' . ~ Mn1tlsil5-: : "•PJI'. itw;;..., dilplay aalelpenon-to ~ : .._.. "'1...., fw Ora1111 Cout Dally • ~ Piiat. lalarJ, ...... ud Httlltat ~ ; .....,.., ~ ..-...u. for penoe· ~ ~ •t" tuttr .. bftlou. lend com~· ~ ._ .. llsil,.....,PO .. lllD, I ~ : ·-CA. .. "' .... talla, ....... Aa ~ :' ..... °"' 0 ., .. ,1a,.. ? ~ ~ ;.:-aw1• f»Ui IMILY"-01' . 7 ~· ••il&f~-} t.'h .................................. ~I J •• WANTACTION? Barranca lld., Irv. oun Qin yQ y ewpo Q( •Poodlel "R" P;nle' IU H . Oreuer 175. _a_m_•~.---- Clusifed Ads 642-5678 E.0.E. -.01. T·C•Pl.1. _Toi, S2 0 to Clair '51 + acnall tablH New IDH I 141 ltld , M.. nu Boarded 6 15 6 llt. lint Cond. br~ ~1 '••• •••• •••••••! Gn!olnecl.$M.M "1·Mi -·~·~ • • hll Y• 1041 llO¥taa. Mu1t Sell O....S tarrtq1, .1tar Eltltnl UDUHd 10fa .. .I..~ d ff• G•ll • bed. 15" cir TV 1115. llll'!.J!.•· • ... f'· • Sof1/lovt1ut, 01'11 ....... .. • e • Good E• iJ-ICJI CALL .-. aac. •· Pttan Hav• • ••••AL~ • colfff/t1d t1blt1 •I AQUAllA&INll. ft'Ak .• i>roximalely 350 customers .• 1' c..... r Trips CIRCULATION wall ..... Oak lftllttr 101-:aJt.GAINITt! W kd hO 2 30-5 30p • • ~ DEPARTMENT .._ *· on1. • y.., ..., .. .., •• s.r. ~. ~~.ni. Mliiiniu':i • • G m.. ·111y lilt ::..r:i.:~T!~~ L .. '=:-•mCUlt of collectina. For de· rtaf p . •· No Jn•. ...,. _...,..., e. tail• call Bruce 'Carty or e · ' n111 at11 u... ... • • '•~•teG112J . • 842~21 1 - ( 0"4"4fl. r H~'r'li! >It' 1,41, I /11 'r ' • ·. •Jan. 29 -Feb. 4• Anthony Hopkins stars as Quasim6do in TV version of 'The Hunchback of Notre Dame.' See 'On the Cover ,' Page 2. Karen Valentine is 'Muggable n11a.ry' · Inside TV, PageB ABC is doing Friday night shuffle Televiews, Page 2 CBS Television has 'Capitol' idea 'Capitol,' Page 13 I I I I I I I I I t Tel~views . . . . . . . . . . . . . • Page J : On the Cover. . . . . . . . . . . Page 2 Highlights . .. . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . Pag( .l ~ Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . Page 1, .:: Inside TV . . . .. . . . . . . . ...•..... Page ll ~ Lerters... . . . . • .. . . . . .. . .. • . . . .~age~ _g Word Came . . . . .. . . . Page 81 ~ TV Puzzl~ . . .. . . . . . . . . .. . . . Page 81 ,Daily Grids . . . . . . . . Page IOI .2 Prime-Time Details Page JO ii ·Tube Towers . . . . . . ..... J>age 11 •Cable Subscription .................... Page ~s· pay~ime prama ......... ~· ............. Page 27' Movie Guide .......... ~ ....... : .........• Page 28· . ., Program information ii proviUd bp tM networks and ltationl and ii subject to change· .fPithout notice. Channel Llstlill! •. _J . 11. 9 KNXT tCBS) ~ 612fW. Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles, a. 8 KNBC (NBC) 3000 W. Alameda Ave., Burbank, Ca. •• •• KTLA (Ind.) 5800 W. Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles, Ca. e KABC (ABC ) 4151 Prospect Ave., Los Angel~, ~a. CS> KFMB (CBS> , 7677 Engineer Rd., San Diego, Ca . e KHJ·TV (Ind.) 5515 Melrose Ave.: Los Angeles, Ca. (10) KCST CABC> 8330 En1ineer Rd., San Diego, Ca. e KTrV (Ind.) 5746 W. Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles, Ca . • KCOP-TV Clnd.) 91S N. La Brea Ave .. Los Angeles, Ca. 2t KCET I PBS 1 4401 Sunset Blvd .. Los Angeles. CCI . 8 KOCE <PBS> 15744 Golden West St., HuqUngton Beach (D) On-TV 1139 Grand Central Ave., Glendale, Ca. CZ) Z-TV 2939 Nebraska Ave .. Santa Monica, Ca. (8) HBO T1me-Ufe Bldg.,'.Rocke(eUe.reen1er,N.Y~. N.Y. CC> Cine max > Time-Ure Bldg .. RockerellerCenter, N.Y .. N.Y. '~~~~. al) (WTBS) Atlanta, Ga. CE) (~PNl Cl) c Sbowtime > ·black <S l Spotlight •(Cable News Network> lllilJ Pillt MAINOFFICE 330 West S.y St., Cost. MeM, c.. - Mall address: Box 1560, Cost. Mes., Ca., 92626 Telephone: 642-421 2 2 --- Telntews ------------------------- 800 9:00 9:30 10=00 . ~ Mork& :J Taxi ,,G. indy-.... Strike ·~ Benson u... Force ABC's prime time shuffle 11,..-1€11AEL DOUGAN °' .. Deity """ ..... It happens every year at about this time: Network execs succumb to mid-season paranoia and launch round one of their favorite eame - prime time roulette, which is a little like Russian roulette only more dangerous. At least to the programs arrected. Viewers, like cats. a re creatures of habit. We like to find our little morsels in the same place at the same time and we become upset if our cozy corners are disturbed. Shifting a show around, then, is rather like kissing someone on each cheek before reaching ror your garrot.e. "Mork and Mindy" was so badly wounded by ABC's scheduling machinations several seasons ago that it has never rully recovered. "Hill Street Blues" barely survived placement in rive - count 'em -fi ve different time slots during its OlitheCowr tirst')Tear. Lesserprugrams IMlve not rared so well under the circumstances. Anyway, here's what ABC has in mind for rive of its faltering shows: The lights went orf permanentlv in the "Da rkroom," that s hameless rip-oH of Rod Serling's superior "Night Gallery," last Friday. It will be replaced by .. Best or the West" at 9 p.m. and ··Making a Living" at 9:30, beginning tonight. Also moving to the Friday night line-up will be "Open All Night" at 8:30. That will replace "Bosom Buddies." which goes to Thursday njghts at 8: 30, "Best of the West's·· old time slot. Clear? Evidently, A BC is attempting t o bolster its fadjng Friday prime time slate that has s urfered mighuty against "The Dukes or Haxzard" and "Dallas" on CBS. But how sincere is the effort? None or these shows are blockbusters. See ABC. Page 17 Hugo's 'Hunchback' on CBS By JEFF PARKER Ot tti. Daffy ..... Sl.lff The ultimate gothic horror tale -complete with a deformed bell-ringer, torture chamber and beautiful gypsy woman -wilJ be aired Thursday on CBS. "The Hunchbact or Notre Dame," Victor Hugo's classic tale of s hame and cruelty in 15th century Paris. will star Anthony Hopkins in the title role, Lesley.Anne Down as the woman he rails in love with and Derek Jacobi as the sinister Dom Claude Frollo. This is the fourth filmed version or the s tory. Lon Chaney Sr., Charles Laughton and Anthony Quinn precede Hopkins as actors who have t aken on the difficult role. With the help of m•ke·u~ and a growing awareness of what it might have been like lo be born into such a disrigured body, Hopkins hopes to capture the essence of a c haracter who w as "gentle, loyal and com passionate.·· ''He was a beautirul person imprisoned in a terrible shell," Hopkins said. "He was treated abominably. He was jeered at and nogged and persecuted in just about every way. Perhaps people today are not as obvious in the way they torment their fellow man ... "The Hunchback or Notre Dame" tells the story or Quasi modo, the hunchback who tolls the bell in the great Notre Dame Cathedral or Paris. He is routinely whipped, beaten and humiliated ror his ugliness. When a beautiful gypsy dancer , Esmerelda, shows blm pity he falls in love with her but becomes easy bait ror the vengeful machinaUons or the Arclideacon Frouo: consciousness, arousing compassion and an acute awareness or the cruelty man can inflict upon man ," Hopkins said. "Since we are all a composite of both good and evil , we tend to see som e thing of ourselves In these characters . Usually when we point a finger at someone. we are pointing at something that in ourselves is lacking." But the unde r s tanding of Quasimodo's character wasn't the only thing that will help Hopkins bring the pathetic hunchback to lire. Four hours ol make·up application before each day or shooting helped make Hopkins the physical, not only the emotional replica or the hunchback. The buncb <sewn into bis cape), a snaggle·tooth, a hideous wart collection over one eye, a misshapen chin and a deformed lip were all added to Hopkins each day of ruming. ·'The re was a feeling of isolation and lone liness with the make-up on," he said. "I couldn't have lunch with the rest of the crew because the producer didn't want photographs or Quasimodo to Uppear until the show was about to air. l also realized that my make-up had a way or putting people orr when they were eating ... An equally errective make-up job was done to recreate the Notre Dame Cathedral itself -where most or the action takes place. The American television crew couldn't shoot with the usual crowds around the real cathedral or cover the surrounding steps wit h mud (no cement in the 15th century). so set designers "went lo work at Pinewood Studios o r London. Using copious photo a of Nolre Dame, they constructed a Frid ay specials JN#AJAll't •• ,. Mat••• I:» CIJ.,._,...I .. THE IClTaet WITH .W.. A Ngfl ldM)OI bueb8ll ater enjoye cookll'Q .. much .. atflle4lcL 5:41 (8).->~ PMVmW. fWRV A ,_ hoet ln1r~ 1he movie•. 1pec1111 and t~-------.Dfla .... comintt-• Home 8o11 Office In Febfu. 8:30 ~·HUN'TIWI GOU> Dllllg9t and b Cll-1 embroil a 13-yMr-old boy .. he delpet9tely ~ lor his mlaall'Q 1111)9<. (Part 5) 7:00 HUNTEft'I GOU> Dang., and excitement embroil • 13-yeat-old boy as he dnpetately MM:hes lor hie mlSllng tattier. (P8t1 6 9:00 CHARUE CHAPLIN: TliE UTTU TMMP Ha.t Joel Grwv chronlclea the -ty years of Chaplin's car-w.th a compilation of aome ol his lamous silent•. Including "Tiie Tramp," '"The Rink " and "Shangtu11ed " AFTERNOON 12:00 (I) IOMB)NE'l IN THE IO'TCM!N WITH JAMI! A high achoo! baMball star en}oyl coolilng .. mucn as a1Nallca. E'\IBING l.'00 (8) HUNTP'S GOU> ~ and e•d1-I emb«lil a t~-old boy .. he de1Pefll1ely -a- fOt his ~ father. (Pan 5) Cl KEHNY LOGCMNI Slf>OeJ I aongwrlt« ~y Loggina petfOtml many of his gfNt•t hlla -indud- ll'Q .. wtlel_ I cal You Friend" and "Keec> The Fire'. In ""' concert taped at the Santa Barbeca County Bowl. e::ao ® HUNTa'8 GOU> ~ and .. c1,_,1 embroil a 13-yMr-old boy .. he delPefately -0- lor his mlMlng father. (P*t 8) 7:00. LOU M WLI If COMCIR"I a... and l'llllOw aoul -. -lndUclng ''Ledy Low" Md"'T'-M The 80ft8I I Sing" are per- formed by Lou Rawle. l:OO. CttANNIL 2'1 80UJIN Alll'WWl'rf't IHOW KNXT calebrat• 50 yMra of ent«tainmenl end --vice IO viewers ol ~n Celifornl&. e O R>R Atlc:tlorman David Brinkley ._,,, historic .,,, 1001- --.-ofii;-~ era and lntervlewl with lormer Rooeewlt Maodatee and c:wrent polltk:al leedera on lhe 100ltl lfnnlverUty 01 Iha birth ol Franklin Delano Roosevett. 10:00 STANDING AOOM ONLY "An Evening Al The Moulin Rouge" George Hamilton 00111 an e~tlng evening lrom lhe Moulin Rouge In Patil featuring lavlsl'I coe- 1-. provocative danc- ers and lopr>Olch interna- tional vanety llCll. 4:00 D 8lOfOE: EAT THE BEAT 0.boreh Harry and the members ol Blondie per- lorm lhe songs lrorn 1helr album "Eat To Ttoe Beat" on this video pr-tatlon Sa turday specials JAHUAlfY ao, tta MOANNG 1:30. I AM A FOOL Acclaimed m ime and clown Boe> Ber1cy demort· alrat• the key 8'ementt ueed In 1111 .,, form. 11='0. IN PINON: JAMEi MICHINEA Hoel I In..,._ Aidl Brellenfekl &alks to euthor _,_ 'Mlc:llener about toia Ylewl on America'• ·poll· tics. tu•. eporta and lhe ~system. 1l!CIO. A JUNICM ONll9ML Oik:BIT Thie epedel ... lur• llx .. 1raordlnary 1olol1ta, egea 10-15, from 1M Unit· ., s ..... Mid ,,..., who """ perform "'* -original ~~ ... 11".aO (I) DOTT1I WllT "Speci91 ~· Dottie W• and K.nny Rogers perlofm -of her~ hits, Including "Sorry," ··~ In l.aevlng'' and 1'~TftloW." -- 1:00 • ICBlllDY CINTER TOMQHT "GtMt Jazz Vlbell Uonel Hanlpton And F~" Peeri Balley. Dew Bfu.. llectl. loot Sima, a.tty Carter and other juz reata pay a muaical trtb- u • 10 L -'Hainitonit a White ~ reception and a conoert •• ~ Cen- ter. -1:» Cl) THE WIDICY WOM..D ~JONATHAN WINT'EM <>u.t: Joe ~h. 2:00. MITn.H ..... BETTY CMTlfl Jazz linget Bell)' Carter I• proflled through lnterlliews and Pl'for"*--(R) 4:00. MWX'WtG YOUR WOM..D Martin Agronlky •~es the lmpec:t of the t.i.com- munlcatloo41 reYOlu1ion. . • WNftONI The behlnd-lhe·acenas action d11tlng lhe Fesllval ol IWw American Plays In loulsvllle. Kentucky It lllghllghted. l!\llNIHO 1.-00. AONA BAMETT 8fl'ECW.. "Movie Siers" CS) DOTTIE waT "Special ~ .. Dottle Weal and Kenny RogeR ~m eome of her "'P8f' hlta, Including "Sorry," "leuon In LMYing" and "Al'rlerb-T rllogy •• 7:00 Cl) THE W/lO(.V WOM.D ~JONATHAN WWT£M ~=Joe Namath . 7:30 (I) 1.AFF-A-THON A COCJJ9dlan llOlll and four comic contestants wllo compel• agalnet one anolher •• teatUted In thlt unc.neored comedy game lf\OW. ltOO. THE IUNT CNll9 Hosle: Stan Mooneyham. Carol ~-. 6-la: . Mike Douglae. Old< Van Patten. Meur_. Mc:Go- wim. HO 8 (I) GOlDEN Gl08E AWNIOa The ltth erwlUlll 4ldlllon of .,_ ..... !lonOfinQ I ,OOO's of Movies For Sale or Rent See~ Vldeo _Experts at ••• Yh11e :C. ..... ft1 ... ls I ... Mlllol· IL • ..., COST~MISA • 646-at21 • ·- FDA, THE PEOPLE'S PRESIDENT "FDR,'' commemorating the l OOth anniv~rsary of the birth or Fraoklin Delano Roosevelt. will a il' Friday at 8 p.m. on ABC 1Ch. 7>. The program explore s how FDR changed the scope of the American presidency and the role of federal government in U.S. fo reign and domestic policy. The program traces the career of President Roosevelt <shown here. top row from left l from the time he was 18 months old with his father James. at a e S with his mother, Sara Delano, <Jower left> at age 15. anafma y wfth his two sons. F ranklin Jr. and J ohn in 1922. ....._ In ... lleldt of "'°"°" p6cturw and ...... "°"· .. lie tlleceel "°"' ltle 8everl) I •0t1 HcMI In Johnny Mann ho9ts a doc- a.-ty ... c..e. ~ llbolll ... mil- • CML.DfmfQNTHm NM See HighUghts. Page 4 5 3! ~ ~ ~ t ~ ~ ! fA . ... ! ' ~ . ~From Pqge3 i .,,. of otllld ,..,.,... In .., tM..icl. -• M.LeoD'a f CNl.DI•• ..... of .. W!lfld'• Clll6-;f drWllllleln•c1911C81eW- -MCI beeWMn .. end 8' dMlh. l'IQP9 end .... ..;J10:9•MWCA•-. ~ 9UfWH0'8 Lal•••? Hoele: C.ol ~. ~ 8t8n Moo!..-.~ a: Efrem ZlmMllet Jr., o..i .--. WWlelll .... 10:IO(ll)THIYIMTMATWM: •1 Petrldl O'NMI i-te Ihle k>c* .. tM moet_-- eble ---ol IN prewloue ..... 11:0e e LOW flWI ONm Hoete: St1111 ~. Art Unkletter. Oueete: DIMlllln C.rroll, ........ Sue Andereon. Oev• ~. LMnele Heme. 11:IO Cl) mAME >Ml John ey,,., .,_ you .,....,..,...,.tMtl. WO-INtl .... end -- tNrl enytNng you've - -In ... encote ~ tetlon from IN Showllme ...,,. l.Mwery. 11:GO e OUR •FOMO._.,..,.nna.11111 'Nlll.Y Hoete: De1e EVIN. St1111 ~-au.ta: Mlk• Oouglee. w..,,, ShetNt. Cera~ • • ONDlm: IAT THI llAT Debcnh H.-ry end ... ,_,..,. of 9lc)fldle per- form IN 90f"9 from ttlelr elblMI "Eal To Tlle e.t•• In tllle video sw-tt.uotl. 1:11 (II) THI LAST AWlllll» IHOW Devlcl ..,.. .. Sunday _specials . JNIAJNf'f 11. - MOfNNCI MO@ H9C>INIAK .......... .....wwv A ,_ '-I lntroducee the movlH. 1peclet1 •nd IQO!r1I ewenta coming to Home BcMI ()Mee In Febt'u- ._ ;·~ WUT "9peclet De!Mry'' Dottle w.t end l(.wiy Aoger'9 Q9tbm -of .. MIC* lllU. Including .. Sotry ... 00L-In LMvinO" end •• Amettoa· Trtlogy. •• 7:1D(J) ....... •THI Klla.N WITH JMm A high 9ChOOI ~ .. ., enjoye cooking • mud'I M athlellca. APIC IOON HO. ADYINTUAE8 .. ART WITl4 .U. HNWI Act .... end art io-"'* HwrW guldae ..,.._.. on • tour of tM National Gallery of M In W..nlngton. O.C. •• <B> H9() INIAlC ,......~ .. It.WW A ,_ hoeC lntroducee the movl... _.peclat1 and epcwt1 _._ coming to Home Bo• Offica In l'eb<u· er;. A REAL GOLDEN GLOBIE -Laura Dern. named Miss Golden Globe by the Foreign Press Association, will assist in the presentation of awards at the 39lh Annual Golden Globe Awards. to be broadcast from the Beverly-Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, Saturday at 9 p.m. on CBS (Ch. 2L ._ tM plghl of ...... from -tom Central AIM{lce wflo Nive fled to CaMomiL 7:00. <=--.. THE~ C.AffCA Sten Mooneyham and Cwol ~ hOel Ihle ~'MV on IN ..-a ................. "' Alrtc:a wt1o have "-' alfaoteci by war end drougflt end .. ,..... of Mldl.-U. 7:1D. B. DOMDO: THI 4IOLD_..,THI ......, Thle......,...,,._the """' blfllnd the laglllld of IN fOld kingdom. MO. THlflOlM TON The pteclM lllrmOnlal of IN Four TOl)8 ••~ In eodJ "WUI Claeelicl .. "Bemedette" and "Sllllld- tng In The Slladowe Of Love." t:OO. 8AUAGHIJt MAD AS HEU. Tha n-en1 comedlen pokM fun •• toplce rtng· Ing from Ctvletm .. to MX In TV c:cmmerclel&. 1t:OO ® llX •A THME- LETTER WON> Man -on -the-1 1reet r .. ponM• end ••perl opinion• are u..O In thll documenter; to - -of the most-Mlted ~Iona on the aubjac1 of -uellty. 10:IO. 8ETTY 900P f'DTIYAL Some of the bait films of Ille "'-!IUble Betty Boop are IMIUted lnoludlng "Lil· lie King,'" "Cruy lnveo- tlonl" and "Liiiie Pal." Monday speci~ls F9'UARY 1, 1112 MOfNNCI t:OO Cl) IOMEONl'I .. THE KITCHEN WITH~ A high acllool beMbell 1tw anjoyl cooltlng .. muclh .. atNatlcs. t:a0. I AM~ POOl. Acclaimed mime and clOwn Bob 8ettly demon- .., .... the k~ ...,_,,. 1-.dlnhllMtanft . ® ....... 4IOLD Den91r and •a•• 111•11• embfoll a 13-year-dd ~ .. he daee>erMely ~ tor Ille m1e81f1g latt.. (Part 7:00 ® THNll TAU TM.a Ludwig Von Drake hoet ltwM ....... c:lMelca. UO(J)P...:Tl.YW Clorle LeedvNn .. .... lured • lroedwey ~ lllbule to Frllllk L.oaM«. the songwriter .tloM com- poeltlonl -• raeponlibla tor the -of 8'dl tavorftM .. "Guys And OOfll" end ''HOw To &IC- caad In ...,_ Without RMlly Trying ... 4:00 CB) TWllE WAS: THE 19308 Oldt Cevett • .par.. Ille d•c•d• ol th• Greet o....ion. wtlleh allO geve bWlh to radio, la\lllh HollywOod mulicals and the jitterbug. 5:00 CB) HUNTBrl GOl.D Denger and ••citernent embroil • 13-year-otd boy •lie ~a1ely -cMI lot 1111 mlMing father. (Plitt 7) • THE FOUfl TOt»S The~ h•moniel of the Four Tope•• IMIUted In ...ell IOUI c:lallk:9 u "Bernadette" and "Stand· Ing In The Shadows Of Love."' 5:30 CB) TI4ME TAU TAlU Ludwig' Von Oralla lloet lllfM animeted cluslca. 8:30 Cl) 0 a a l!Cl LY FRANK 0«11 LMChman II .... lured .. 8'oadw9y pays trlbul• to Frank ~. the aongwrller "'9IOM com- See Highlights. Page 9 • Distinctive Fashion What has been a better investment than BUILDING? Every Sunday NOTHING! 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Other features include: • 6 IYIMT /7-DA Y -rao-•--IAMMAILI ,....,., ........ d NCC dk g! • 2·5'UD 12/6 HOUll YHS __... .-ltY -4 ec--rf • AC JDC OPHA TK>H wltlt tt. optfoMI Ml CAD batht 'I pock. •LOCI SYSTEM ................... ....... ,... .. ,, AIM Feeta es: DOUIU/nlPU SPUD, YAllAILE SPHD/FRHZE FIAMI, INST~ PIO&IAM LOCATE SYSTEM .. ct STOP BY FOR AN AMAZING DEMONSTRATKN .. . --- SPECIAL OF THE WEEK!!! YAMAHA ~350 . • • COUPO• 8P•CIA181· TDK T-120 SUPER AVILYN VHS ... V...Tape UCIU.IMT COLOll AMO SHAIP Dlf AIL FOil ALL YHSllCO..S le:: '1~ ..... , ... c-. .... MAXELL OOXL II C90 · THI IMDUSTIY STAMDAID IM A ll•lltiSto MIMU11 CASSITTI 1sr s3~ Wtl2 .... c..- llSCWASllEI I .JI • D4 PLUID ... ,,._UST SJ59 '2.IO l l I .. I ___ .._....._ .. _____ _ -. -. ---4 6--------mlll,~~~~~~~~!!!~~~--!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! i .- AMC-JEEP ORANGE COAST· · ·. AMC-JEEP~ULT 2524 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -549-8023 -----SADDLBACK IMW 28402 Marguerite. Parkway Mission Viejo 831-2040 -495-4949 ROY CARVER IMW 1540 Jamboree Road Newport Beach -640:6444 IOI Mel.ARENS 1MW At Beach Blvd. & Whittier ':La Habra -522-5333 CREVIER MOTORS 208 W. 1st St. Santa Ana -835-3171 . . 1 CADILLAC - NAIEiS CADILLAC 2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -540-91·00 Al 1 a. CADILLAC-OLDS GMC-DeLOREAN 28332 Camino Capistrano Laguna Niguel -831-0800 CHEVROLET . -. COMMll.L._~HIEYROLET , 2800 ti.arbor Blvd. : Costa Mesa ~~1200 ----=------~ - CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ATLAS CHRYSLER.PLYMOUTH 2929 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -546-1934 DATSUN NEWPORT DATSUN 888 Dove Street Newport Beach -833-1300 LINCOLN-MERCURY JOHNSON & SON UNCOLM-MERCURY 2-626 Har-bof-BlvG.- Costa Mesa -540-5630 '•SANTAANA UNCOLM-MaCURY 1301 N. Tustin Avenue Santa Ana -547-05 I I FRANK PROTO LINCOLN-MERCURY 16800 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach 848-7739 MAZDA MIRACLE MAZDA 1425 Baker Street Costa Mesa -545-3334 ANAHEIM MAZDA 601 S. Anaheim Blvd. {'naheim -956-1820 PEUGEOT llACH IMPODS 848 Dove Street .. . Newport Beach -752-0900. PONTIAC . IOI LON&PRE PONTIAC 13600 Beach Blvd. Westminster 892-6651 -636-2500 PORSCHE-AUDI CHICK IVERSON. IMC. 445 E. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach-:-673-0900 MEISTER PORSCHE-~UDI 13631 Harbor Blvd. Garden Grove -636-2333 SAAB IEACH IMPORTS · 848 Dove Street Newport Beach -752-0900 . . . TOYOTA EARLE IKE TOYOTA 1966 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -646-9303 MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Beach Blvd. 1 Hunti~ton Beach 847-8555 i VOLKSWAGEN JIM MARl~O VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Beach Blvd., ·Huntington Beach 142-2000 VOLVO EARLE IKE VOLVO 1966 Harbor Blvd. Q>sta Mesa -646-9303 1 1 ·. ' ----·----·-~ 7 Sports glghllghy ~ ........... illi ... lliiiliiiiiill.tiiiiiiliiiill51iiiiliillimll!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!m!!ll!l!l .... !!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!m!l!!!!i!!!!I!!!!!! .. !!!!!!!!!!!!!! ............ $ Friday Chemplonshlp bout 1:00D8wtCKES-AHOY ~ Alt Frlu Ind WIUJAMS IAH DIEGO sports EmMto &pana. °"" 8 PAOf'E88IOHAl Flllel round eoverege ol JANUAAY 2t, 1912 80WLEA8 TOUR this TPA event (live from AFTEAN00N 4:30. IOCCER MADE IN the Torrey PIMS Goll Club oaw.tANY In La Jolt•. Cell!.). Englend vs. ~· 8 (!J THE PAO BOWL 2:30. CA088-COUNTRY 5:00 8 Nfl.'8 llEST EVER TM NFL '1 1nnuet llll·ll•r 81(1 SCHOOl. 8 WIOCWOALD OF o•me leeturlng the t>ut "Wuing And Trail s.n..·· 8"0RT8 ~1 of the AIMfiCMI A look " tuen •t wn•t 1982 united St11 .. Lediee' Ind Nallonlll Football con. types ol S1c11 .,. •vell•ble. Figure Sketing ChemplOO· lerencet. what to weer and how to ship, with a report on the 3:00 D SPOATS Al'lELD 8PC>IY the WU neede<I for Pain CNtnpoonll\lp (from at 8UGAA RAY verying \ condihons tndiaoepolls, Ind.): Duke l.EONAA0'8 OOLOEH (R) Kehenamoku Surfing Clas· GLOVES EVEHINo sic (from Oahu, H•w•ll). 4:00 D OJ THE al 80CCEA MADE IN SUPEAsTARS 7:00 INSIDE TH£NFl QEAMAHY ' 5:00 8 U.8.A. VS. THE 1:00 9 COUEOE Engllnd ,,._ Rum•nl• WOAU> IH Ol. YMPIC IWIKET8AU 5:30 (!J WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS Of"egon State vs. UCLA SPORTS (Premiere) The United g COUEOE eve.eo St•tes n•tlonal bo•lng 8A8f<ET8ALL team tell• on the netlonel Air Force va. Las Vegu 8:00 al SPORTS AMERICA teem from the U.S.S R .• 11:30. COLLEGE '"Big a women·• Volleyball currently renked number 2 M8KETMl,L ChempionshJi>e" In the WOfld (lrom Moe· °'egon vs. USC CID 80XlNO cow» 12:00 e ~ _ wee N•p« ,....~ KICKOFF tltle match t>etwHn Saturday· sports JANUARY 30, 1912 MOANNi 10:00 a! COl.LEGE 8A8l<ETaAU M1ssoun at K-. State AFTEAHOON 12:00 D Qt cou.EOE IWIKET8AU Mcnnesota at lndtana 12:30 8 WEEKEND HEAOO "John Mat.-..lc" 2:00 D Qt WICKES -AHOY WtU.1AM8 SAit DIEGO OPEN Third round coverege ol this TPA event (M lrom the Torrey Pines Gblf Club In L• Jolla. C.Hf ). 2:$0 8 SUGAR RAY LEONARD'S OOl.DEN GLOVES ®J PROR:88IONAL BOWLERS TOUR S 125,000 Quaker Stale Open (lrorn the Forum Bowllng Lanes In Grand Prelrie, Te• J 3:00 D oou..EaE BASKET8All Celifornia at Arizona 3:30 8 Cl) SPORTS SATUAOAY 1S-<ound WBA Light-ght Wilfred Benitez and Rober· kl Outen; HABF heavy. Weight bout bet-Lynn Bait and Michael Dokes. 7:00@ Ol YMPIAD "The Mkathon" l:OO ~ COUEOE 8A8kETBALL Oregon State VI use 11:30 Iii COLLEGE 8A8kETBALL Of"egon State va. UCLA Sunday sports JAHUAAY 31, 1812 MOfMHO 10:00 8 Cl) NBA 8ASKET8All Live coverege ol the 32nd annual All·Stu game, featurlf\O tile t09 11ars or the East pleying against the 111rs 01 the w .. t (from the Blenden Byrn• Arena. East Rutherford, N J l a a 8PORTSWORLD 11:00 a a COLLEGE BA8K£T1aALL St Jotln ·a vs. Georgetown at Llndove<. Md . t 1:30 CID INSIOE THE NFL AFTERNOON 12:30 II Cl) NCAA BA8f(£TBAU EV£HINO 11:308 SPORTS FINAl Monday sports · nBAUARY 1, 1M2 EV£NlNG 8:00 D COLLEGE 8ASKET8AU .. Pac 10" Arizona vs St•n- lord Tuesday sports FOAUARY 2. 1M2 7:001 LY ... 8HACK£1.FOAO 7:20 NBA MSKETBAll Golden State Werrlora vs Los Angeles LakMI 10:30. CAOSS-COUNTRY SKlacHOOL Wednesday sport s FE8AUARY 3, 1912 EVlHIHG 7:00 (0) THE WAY IT WAS •· 11118 College Baalletbell Flnllll: Houaton Va. UCLA" 1:30 cm H8A BAIKET8AU. SWINGING A HOT CLUB -Lanny Wadkins. one of the leading money winners orr the pro!essional golf lour. will be one of the golfers to contend with during the Wickes-Andy Williams San Diego Open from Torrey Pines Golf Club in La Jolla. The third and final rounds of the tourname nt will be televised Saturday and S unday on NBC,<Ch. 4>. Costa Mesa's Only Complete Funeral Facilities "Serving All Faiths" ~-llarbor LaW11 ·Mount Olive Men1orial Park· Mortt1aiy · Mausoleums Burial In Any Cemetery -Shipment Cremation, Plans Available ·1825 Glsler Ave. Costa Mesa {Glaler Ave. at Harbor Bivd.[ -. ----------------------------··--·----------- .. ~ . . ' Valentine as 'Muggable Mary' "'i _\ OLIVIA NEWTON-JOHN ... Has own special. 'Letters J By JEFF PA&&ER Of .. .,. ........ Karen Valentine has come a long way since "Room 222." On Feb. 25 she'll play the lead role in CBS' "Muggable Mary : Street Cop," the story of a young mot.her who takes a job as a cop, becomes undercover bait for a rapist and finds her life stuffed to the gills with conflict. Co-starring with Ms. Valentine are John Getz. Vincent Gardenia and Robert Christian . . . "The Great Santini" makes its television premiere Feb. 20, starring Robert Duvall and Blythe Danner. This cr:Ucally acclaimed feature film tells the story of a bull-headed Marine pilot who tries to make his sensitive son fit his mold . Beau Bridges, who plays Ray Johnson in the Feb. 9 tv movie, "Dangerous Company," learned some vatuable 1ips from the ex-con before shooting began. "You're walking way too fast," Johnson told him as they shot a prison scene. "Slow downr Just amble along. In prison, nobody hurries; there's no place to go." Johnson rose from a damaging childhood and years of crime and imprisonment to earn a law-abiding place in society and run a successful legitimate business. Lamont Johnson is directing the film ... Robert Preston and Linda Gray will co-host 'U.N.C.L.E.' gets film treatment cav U.N.C.L.E. -Did ador Boben v .. ,.. ever star la a series oUter Uau ''TM •u from U.N.C.LE."! I laave a bet• tlds. Napoleon Solo was Vauehn's second series characterization. Earlier. he played Capt. Ray Rambridge opposite Gary Lockwood as "The 'Lieutenant." "U.N.C.L.E ." fans should be pleased to know that both Vaughn and David "McCallum have tentatively agreed to join once more against the evil forces of T.H.R.U.S.H. in a movie to be' caned "The Man from U.N.C.L.E. -The Feature Film." THE LOST ARK -Joaa Vu Ark of "KllGU L•adlag" played a bltclly faalOB~a sitcom of a few yean back. Tom P-.. pla1ed Ute faalill• pllMograplaer, aad tltey were bo< frte.ds of a laaabaad aad wife wllo Iliad reversed sea roles (I doll'& bow Ute adon bl Uteee parta). Please tell me Ute aame of Ute aeries so we caa clear ou lao!De venioD of "Fam Uy Feud." ·TV puzzle The name·or the UT77 series was "We 've Got Each Other," which was about the only thing stars Oliver Clark and Beverly Archer had when the show was canceled after three months. Clark and Oliver played the Hibbards -she worked, while he was a househusband. 'TAXI' TOPIC -Please tell ll)e lite aame of the old character ac&or who played Jlldd Hirsch's father last year on "Taxi." Jack Gilford was seen as Alex's troublesome father. FIELD'S A WARDS -I know Sally Field won an Oscar for "Norma Rae," but did she abo win aar:mmy for "SybU"? Miss Field tuned up for her l979 Oscar by winning a best actress Emmy in tm as the young woman with the fragmented personality. Sf'fld your letters to Pepper O'Bnn. United Feature Syndicate. 1J)() Park Aveniu, Room 602, New York, N. Y. 10166. ACROSS 1,6 Shown 1tar ol Je11ica Novak 12 Moon goddess 13 MlaaTyaon 14 -You Knew Susie 15 Max -Sydow 18 Galena. e.g. 17 -Wanda Page 18 Mr. Gulager 20 -Balo plays Schachi 22 Plsclne feature 23 ACarson 24 -trly. 25 -Angeles 26 Sha·-·- 29 -·s Landing 31 Miss Bancroft's sign-off 32 Mr. Young's lnslgne 1 Francea or Van 33 Memorable Smith 35 Diamond or Sedaka 38,37 Ptays Barney Miller 39 -Tayback 42 -Reid plays Venus 44 Roddy McOowall role 45 The Bad News - 47 -Dey at a Time 48 Mr. Little's sign-off 49 The -Sleep 50 NHL shutout 52 Robert -Niro 53 -Peters on The Young and Restless 55 -Sttlp 57 Tatum and Ryan 58 American painter John- the 39th annual Golden Globe Awards show Saturday at 9 p.m. Susan Anspach, Richard Chamberlain, Connje Francis, Timothy Hutton, Michele Lee. Dudley Moore, Tom Selleck and LHy Tomlin will also join the fun . . . Turning to the classics for fresh tv shows, CBS will broadcast "Ivanhoe" hb. 23. The 12th century romance, originally written by Sir Walter Scott, wiU star Olivia Hussey and Lysette Anthony as women who are in love with chivalrous Ivanhoe Johnny Carson will again be host or the S4tb annual Academy Awards Presentation, set for live telecast March 29. The broadcast will originate from the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion . . . The s pecial ABC News presentation, . ·•American Held Hostage : the Secret Negotiations," has been nominated for the Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Award in broadcast journalism. The special was reported by ABC News Paris Bf.!reau chief Pierre Sajjneu. and revealed the secret attempts at negotiating for the release or the American hostages. Some 1,200 submissions were made for the award and the winners will get $20,000 ... Master illusionist Doug Henning will star in bis seventh NBC special Feb. 14, when he joins See Karen. Page 21 Word game FILL ltJ Tl4E Ml~SING L.E'TIER? ltJ l~E ''TV WORDS" BELOW. I ILi INl11 WI ILi IEIRI I IEIRIRIVI ILl&W I I I 1811 161 I I IEINITJ,,pt·"J'% 11 IVI I I trl I~ IA~~ "'°'1.1 fU ARfN..16€ THE. ) ., £..€TTellS You F/l£..€D rt-.i ~ 1ro ~lll~~CEA ~~ I llfWUIRG Sllli6~ ! ~ f1111111 1111.1 tl f •)#'t~ 't'Vl'63f' -.52:k:1J. f'i""I ~a ~IS ~ ~' mn h?Jg;-·~ Jl'll7.? : ~v 3 Bulgarian coin 4 Role for Shroyer 5 Dianne Kay role 6 Aberdonlans 7 Trumpeter Al 8 -In the Hole 9 Mr. Edward's sign-off 10 -Carlin 11 Mr. O'Neal and namesakes 12 Ailing 19 Miss Hagen 21 Truth -Consequences 22 Role tor Polly Holliday 27 -King Cole 28 Mr. Vlgoda 29 Lyle Waggoner's home st. 30 Comedian Louis - 33 Stars on Lewi• & Clerk 34 Catc .. and- 36 Quincy co·atar 37 S.. 38 Acro11 40 NelghbOr ol 111. 41 -My Heart 43 -the Press 45 Cosby or Dana 46 Singer/actor David 49 -Arthur played Maude 51 Yoko- ~ -andMyGal 56 Mr. Allen's lnltials SOLUTION l A SILENT KILLER -A mysterious kille r disease made headlines when it started claiming victims of American Legionnaires who had attended the Philadelphia Bicentennial celebrations in 1976. NOVA traces the medical detective story that followed in ·"The Hunt for the Legion Killer" Sunday at 7 p.m. on KOCE <Ch. 50 >. From Page4 positions _. t.-ponsible few the .-. of Md! f9\IOfH• • '"Guys Md Dolll00 and '"How To Suc- 0-S In BuU-Wlltlout ~Tl)fhg."' e.•o ~vTV John Ritt• ..... -• young mlnlst• who la lorceO to chOoM ~ the c:onwntlonal church and • mlnlttty of the ---10!30 • TOM 8TC>PftAN> An Int_... with the Tony award-winning Brltlah plllywflght. wtlidl lndWM • -omen• from -of his moat re ca nt worka, ""Mackoon·a Hamlet. Cehoot"a Macbeth,'" par- lonnad under la direction et Sen Oiagc> Steta lJnl\oar- aity Tuesday specials MON•• t:01C8>.,._WAS:THI!1- 0ld! Cawilt uplof• tM decade of Iha Great Dapf'Malon. wNctl Mo oaw blrttl to redlo. l91IWI Ho1t1 ood ......... MCI ttlaJMtnuo, 7• Cl) IHOWT'llll LOGeC8 AT,_ A Mllrtc loc* la ._ M --"' .. ,....., -.... ,...... ... _... ol 1tl0. W(l)...,_LOaa r-1 'I" j/\~pt The ,_ atorlat. people and -ta of 1981 are laaturad In !Ne yeat-.nd ,..,..., 10:00 CB> ICM ICNITOFAMON ANO ANNIMUAAAY Two of pop-counlty'a hOI· • .... ,.,.. perform • mad· fey of their grMtaat hlta, plua an Everly Brolhara duet of "let It a. Ma .. · 1:00. NTP PAUL & MAllV The popular folk trio of \he aarty ·eo. perform tneny of • their ~ ·-.. well --lhalanai. a:ao e cee UIMRY "Animal Talk" Anthony N9wlay, who pot1raya IM tarnoue Ooc1or Oollttla, pr-•• lhtM 1torln about communication . .,.._~anderll t'Mll.(RI 4:t0 CB>~ ll'OUCE ~OOYM 0-ga Kannady looka at H9w Yort! Clty'I undatwv· • pollca Ct1ma unit•. &:00 Cl) IHOWTlllE LOOKS AT 1tlO A Mtlrlc IOOll la taken at -of Iha mefOf -atortaa, people and _.. ol 1MO. .... l:IO eJOMN c:uwra ~ Olpip6c .told llllffal-. .,_ ..._~_. ..... CipMls' .... JoJo ......... Clwty .. Wa dlaptay of akallng ar11alry. 7:00 CB> He() IHEN< PMYWW: FalUARV A ,_ hOlf lntrodueel Iha movlaa. apaclal1 and aoort• -•• coming to Homa Bo• Office In Fabru- 7:30 00°8TANOING M>OM ~An E~ Whh Liu Mlnnalll" The 1taga and ICt9an ~ di.- play9 ti. ,.,. of talanta In •. COtlC*1 ~with muelc rainglng from clMaic bk.-lo Broad'May 8how9toppera. uo. Cl) IUQI IUNNV'9 VAUNTlNI 9ugl Bunny fella In loYa with an ~rlc rabbl1 at Iha dog ltack. (R) l:IO. Cl) 1HI l'ON-n VALINTINI IPICIAl. Aller Popeye forget• V• .,,,.., Dlfy, ()he Oyt 9lgr'8 up tot a CNIM In hOpea of ~ ''Mr. ~-"(A) 10:00. ClmME CAl.D ......,,. A look la llllan at the _,.. lltl¥e and ~ oll palntlnga of the '"Mlllouri Arflat." 10:aO Cl) IHOWTlllE LOOKS AT 1111 The-....... people ... _..of 1111 -~ In lhll ~-end ,....., 1:41 CB>.., ... ........... IUM't A,_.___.,._.,_ mo•t... 1paclala and apo'19 .._.. 1IDINng IO ~t HW.~·'-Mr ' Westcliff Chiropractic Office PAM PORTERFIELD Chiropractic Assistant DR .ROBERTA.BADGER Chiropractor LISTEN TO YOUR _ BODY • Pain between Shoulders Frequent Heaiaches Stiffness or Pain In Lower Back Numooess in the Arms or Hands r-----'4umbness Leg or Foot Cramps._...,.. or Pain in the Legs If something's going wrong, it wi II tell you. Fllll CONSULTATION NOW ACCEPTING MEW PATIENTS ~45-5300 I ~~·-------~~~~~~-2~3 Westcliff Sr., Suite 108 Newport Beach (neerCoco'1et17th & l~lne) 9 .,__ ' lO frtday Grid N ~r;===::;::===::::;====:::;:::::==::::::::;;::::::========:;=:===;::====::;:::====::;;::::::::==::::;::::====;:::=====;i .... ~~ ::> KNXT II lei~ KNBC D lei ..... KTLA " &MMllM KABC fJ lei ..... KFMB 0 S..°'91e KHJ 0 lei ..... KCST ml IM°'91e KTIV m KCOP m l ....... KCET m KOCE m ,._. iea . --· ~1.!:::====~====::::t======~======~==========================::::::::!::======~====~=======~======~ ,rr===::::;;;;;;;::::;::====;::;::;:::::::==::::;~====::::::;::;:::====::;::=::;====:;:::;:::======;::;:::::====:::::;::;:::::====::;:::;======:::;:::;:======;:::=====::::;i ~ 700 Mor'*'O T*r, 700 Good _ Momrlg' The Todey c.toon Bugs 8uWoess :'g 80 ~. .. Otub.. = ~. =:: .. ~:" ~ =°' u. .. .. .. .. .. A Way .. Flintstones KarnlvaJ Htlltll ~ R, _oo " .. .. -" SLrlUP Jack .. Fu~ .. Big Blue _, " " " " Sin Oleo<>,. LI lime " .. M1tble ~ " - _ .. _ Hot " Jim " G«ttle Poper,e VM " " Fudge " .. Bakker " Ben Alegre 00 OneDly 9 AIATlmt ao Ab 1 000 'Tiie Price Is Right ao .. 11 00 Ta~ 80 YoungAnd Thi RlstleSI KNXT II ~ ....... 00 Turns 130 Sear~ For Tomorrow 200 GUldtng Ugtlt 30 700 CSS News 30 20n The Town 800 Channel 2's Golden 30 Anniversary Spedal 1 03000 Falcon Crest .. 00 monition .. 1230 :: WfieelOf Fortune Battiest an KNBC D t ........ DaysOI Our lJY9s Anotller World Texas Bob Newhart Enter- tainment ' .. .. ' NBC News Family Feud C6SSle &Co SClY - Network 90 Rlc:Ntd A.M. One Dey .. Donahue t lOYe Rom!* Seslme Simmons Los Al A Time " " Lucy Room Street LN"e tt ~ Alice MiOmomlng .. Bewitched Movie: To Women .. L A. " .. "In The !Ilg Love The Price .. Richard I Dream Of MOI~( veaer, Boat.. ts R~t :: Simmons Jeannie KTLA " Loe ..... Twilight Zone TWiiight Zone Hour MagazJne Richard Simmons Utt le HouM On The Prairie Happy Days Again Laverne& Shirley Bmetbllll 019000 State Vs UCLA Saturday Nlgllt .. Al My Childlen One Life To Live G«lelaJ Hospital EdgeOI Nigllt People's Court ABCNews FDA Fridays Young And Thi Rtstle5s KFMB 0 *"'Oietlo News As The W0<1d Turns Search For Tomorrow John DaVldson MAS.H News CBS News Tic: Tac Dough PM Magazine The Dukes OI Hazzard Falcon Crest News CSSM<Me 'The Pre- monfllon" TrNIUle Hunt Match Game KHJ 0 News Ironside M<Me. "A Man Alone'' While Shadow You As>.ed For II Butt~ Basket ban Air F0<ce Vs. Umver slty OI Las Vegas B4ttles1ars Ghost And MOVll!. Password Plus The Doctors Days Of Our Lives Anothef World Texas ultle HOUM OnThe Prairie News NBC News Ne-.s The Muppets Famdy Feud NBC Meg~ CasSle & Co. Tonight SCTV • Network 90 Mrs MUii .. Pals OI Super Thi Saddle" Pay Cards News KTTV m lee ..... E!<ady Bunch The Jetter5005 Welcomtl Bau. Koll!!( MASH MASH PM Magazine Att In The Family TM JetfettonS Odd Couple Mille ~as INNNews KCOP m LMUfllee MO'M' 'W ings Of An Eagle'' 8u9s Bunny Heckle & Jeckle Kartoon KarniYal The F~nistones Sc:ooby Ooo Hawaii F1ve-O Joker's Wiid Tc lac Doug/I Movie: "The Man Who Shat Uber1y tNNNews Sanford &Son Basketbd Oregon Vs USC Clawoom TV Wllyln Th1Wotld7 MacHeil Lehrer KCET m Lee ..... ClaSSfoom TV OnceUpon A Classlc ToBt Announc:eCI Sesame Street Business Report News L.A Weelt In Review WathlnOton Week D7, ~r&1w df:$<t.wr1 we have Oil Plintina 3-2·1 ContlCI Eleclllc Company KOCE m " " ... llMCll Guten Tag Mister Rogers Sesame Street 3-2·1 Contact Didi C8Yetl Over Easy ll\Slde St pry Creativity Mac Ne;! Lehrer W1111 $treet Weeli Wastltnoton Week Creatmty Votet's Pipel#le Inside StO<Y Finng Line Cllitomia Week Captioned ABCNews Fridays Details .JAMOAll('( 21. 1912 EVENING 7:00 II HAPPY DAYS AGAIH M11r1on tranatorms 'herself Into a velfeel t>eauty When she feats she might kKe Howatd to a younger wom- 1111 0 YOU ASKED FOA rT Featured 'Egypt's Deadly Cob•a Hypnollst' and The Americ.t1 Indians Are .&11USh.." m M·A.·s·H The surgeons at the _ ~0771b decide 10 '.fewt•t•" an Army documentary spotlighting their unit fI) OVEAEASY Guests acttMs Eva Le Ga111enne, nutrllJon e•pe<t D< Marion Nestle (RIQ @) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT Steven Ford doscus&ell his KhOQ C811!8< 09t THE MUPPET'S Gutl$I RuaOlt Nureyev C MOVIE • • • The Bame Ot Algiers ( tli671 Yacet Saad• Jean Mat1on 01MOVtE * * * "TM Blues Broth· ers" ( 19801 John Belushi. Oan Aykroyd 0 LOU RAWLS IN CONCERT Swee1 and mellOw soul songs •• 1nctuo1ng "Lady Love a.no ·1 heM Are TM Songs I Song' are P8<· IO<med by Lou Rawls Z MOVIE • • .. T l'le Incredible Shronkmg w oman" (19811 Liiy Tomhn. Cl'larfes Gro. don 7:30 tJ 2 ON THE TOWN Fearurect • IOOk at Iha AS$0Ctlllon F0t Troublee! Chll<l•en ,. look ar Some, by Park Befnel •premium art auct1<>n hOU$e. s look al how the Blind ChllOren 5 Cenl0t is helptng lheu pr•· scl'loolers 0 LAVERNE & SHIRLEY & COMPANY Sh.rtey cAus.o~ ha1i1oc. at llW' bl8'W1'•y when sht' gets promote<! ano t11es 10 cnange evPryone s wo1k habllll aJ M 'A'S0 H Col POll•>r pl1"" to snow hos oll·llmi> tBvorne West- ern •~ a pock me-up tor the co•.,pany ' b&dly uggong morale '1i) WALL STREET WEEK Are You Bettflf On? Guesl AIA.n Grtlflflspan. pre$4denl and otl&Jrman. Townse<1d·Greanspan and Co Inc m P.M. MAGAZINE The secrel behlnO the "Rubllc's Cube' P<JUle a tas"'<>n •• per1 who per· forms beauly matieovers ror men YOU ASKED FOR IT Featu•l<I Egypt's Oeedty Cob•• Hypnot11t" and "The Am11r1can tndlM$ Are Brltlan .. See Pridny's. Paye 1 J e~• V Cr::uiw Jcwdcrs.'fnc. . ~earts of gold ~ -"~.ennue ~j'IUll'~ ... £ ~I' Jrwif'/{y .(Warm the hearl of your valentine '--~ I E P lfl C t Hl,.h. a y M•\lt<EH with these precious heart pendants ~ 2610 aat ac c oas • w at Id K 11 Id . · • Corona del Mar, California 92625 ~ crafted of so I 14 ye ow go .. : . ...,. ACROSS fROM SHERMAN GAR DE.\'.') C"Al~lllN~A They are be autiful and affordable: ~~ ,,.,. Le' 0t-ft Wtt~Amtrk1111 C.Pf~~~·~.1 · -,.-"l..Pvl1I'-=" 11i,,~'n•t1tt:.t ~l~~hli60-~1 ~ \.t_.\i~.J.-_ "••,,, ~ ~ i~ ' ' ------:w.I ();) 1 - ----- ----- ANOREXIA & BULIMIA These and other eating disorders are treata- ble. The Hacienda Psychological Services of- fers a special program of assistance with ··a former Bulimic and Anorexic and a staff of State licen se d Psychologists. For Confidential Information Call 1213) 336-1292 • Open 7 Days 5 pm 'tit M idnight 3840 E. Coast Hwy • Corons del Mar 0 > ,.. r-a :D .,, :D . m m m :D 0 0 :c c :D m m ~ ~ > (714) 673-3933 •L SP 0 0 a c 3 CD (il I 8 ~ c: ::i: ~ KNXT 8 8 :00 -"Channel 2·s Golden Anniversary Show ... KNXT celebrates 50 years of entertainment and service to Southern California viewers. KABC 8 8 :00 -"FDR ... David Brinkley presents historic Cilm footage of the Roosevelt era. KCOP GP 8 :00 -"The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance ... Classic Western film in which John Wayne and J ames Stewart fight over Vera Mile~· KNBC It 10:00 -"Cassie & Co ... Premiere of Angie Dickinson's new series iR whicA--she p~a-ys a d~vorced woman adjusting to single life fddex• Details From Page JO l:OO. CHANNIL 2'1 eoL.OIN /IMfNfMAllfY INOW KNXT ~mtw 60 yews of enlet'lainment and -· WOI to ~· of Southetn calllomla. •a~ AActlot1Nn Oellld 8rinllley ~· llist«lc film loot- • ol Ille AooMYelt •• and lnt.m.w. wlttl fomw Ao--" wocl .... and currant polltk* IMderS on tM 100tll annlwraary of Iha birth of Franklin ~Ao--". .P.M.M~ A tamale magician·• •"empt to catef'I • ~ .n her mouth; a IHhlon ••P•rl who parlorm1 beauty makeover• tor men; Joyce K~ on how comput-wlll ~ lemily Mte; Cheiryl "-1 on ulllng money In .... 8'1C*· INftlel. • MCMI * * * * "T1141 Man Who Shot liberty Valance" ( 1H2) JarMI Stewart. JOhnWeyM. (J) THI DUKU M- HAZZMD 8oM Hogg Ir-Posl· rnlatr-Tied... and th41 °'*• tC)( • phony m.il «def ICheme. (B)MCMI * * "Friday TM 13th .. (IMO) Be1ay Palmer. Adri- enne King. Cl)MOYIE • • • ~ "Privet• eanie-mln" ( UMIOI GOidie Hewn. Eiieen Brannan . eMOYR • * "'TM High Country .. ( 1N 1) Timothy 8ot1om1. UndaPurl. UO. AU .. THI FAMILY AtcNe muat atey calm '°' an antw• weekend In °'"*' to pwa a c:ompeny pnysi. cal. e CMATMTY MTH a.L.MOYEM a. Moy..-1 looka Into the speqal world of )fflentOR.. OO MOYE '* • v. "Back Road•" (1N1) S.ily Flelcl, Tommy Lee~ HO.Cl) DAUM J.R. -M.,,._ St-In -an 9"ort to regeln hta ltandlng with 1he cartel. 8 9 MCa AIN'I LAW 8aflled by • --of ~ random lie)'· Inga. McCleln PoMa .. a membet of an under- ground 0toan'Ufl0n to get ~ on two of "9 memllln. (Pert 2) • WAUfnBTWmt "AB You e.tter Off?" OU.: "*' °'-"'*·· ,,,..._. end ~. =-""• rm • -we Co., lne. • YOTIWI PftUNE "~borhood Houslt19 s-vtc.a•• Jim Cooper and guwll dleQ.a th41 eftort• of th41 Santa Ma and la Habra Neighborhood Housing ServicM Organi- zation, peoc>1e wno aid lemillea that live In under. pr1Weg9d ne1Gftbottlood8 and Wleh to UPllfacM lheW hOmM. (C)MOYll ••••. Ubel .. ( 1958) Ollvla de Havilland. Dirk Bogetde. t:IO. INlll>ESTOf'Y "The Ball Picture In Town" Hoddlt19 Cartet looks at -ptlotogr8')11y and Ille eltects 11 hu on Iha II-of normal peoc>le who ec>PMt In th41 media. (D)MCMI *. ··MeMn And Howwd" (1NOI Peul LeMal. J_, Robetde. 10:00. (J) FM.CON CMST Vict«le. angered by '* parents' ov.protecti-. ,_., rune -wy to San Franci.co. e a CA111E a co. (Premie re) A recently drvotced woman (Angie Ok:ttlNOn) 8dfUltS 10 IM Nte of a single, worlllng woman. • CMATMTY wmt a.L.MOYEM Biii Moyers looill Into t1141 apeci.ii world of lnvent0ta. ~IT ANDING M>OM ONl.Y "An Evening At Tiie Moulin Rouge" George Hamilton hOell an .. citing _,Ing lr«n 11141 Moulin Rouge In Perla teeturing laWlh coa- tumM. provocallw dan<:- •• and topnoteh lnterna- 11onal variely acta. (l)MCMI • •V. "It"s My Turn" ( tHO) Jiii Clayburgh, Mlct\MI Douglas. .MOYIE • ••v. "Bt.Uer Morant"' (IMO) Edward Woodward. .I-* Thompeon ~CZ>MOYll * * '*'-' "TM Howling .. (1981) OH Wallace, Patrick MecHaa. 10!ao. -ITORY •·The llelt Picture In T°""'.. Hoddlng Carter IOOll .. 1 newt pN>tl>grilC)lly and 11141 eltecta It Illa on th41 W-of normal P9Q9le who~ In the media. 11:00 • IATUN>.\Y NIGHT Holt: Elliott Gould. ~: "'-"9dbone. • KQMI( " '°""' trP9Y gtaduetea from emelltlma eona to a ~..., c:rlma. • TMIAilbda..I Gwwa'• ""' to ... "-'l"="lllil& '13oncltl fl ome eare eomJ41dO~ I 'Aili Service Care For Your Home, Plants, Pets, While You Are Away. Long Term & Short Term Hou~slttlng. 714-IJJ.1471 Annual ClearaMe Sale Saving• From 20. 'JO"ID Decorative Hardware By 1\.1'£CO . ~~\~DEBS Sl!pp(,1-' Spttlallzlng In the coordination ol IM dttor91Jt'r bardwan for your projttt. Flnl$hftl hardwatt for: DOORS, BATH, ~ITCHEN, BARS, CABINET AND~. BATH ACCESSORIES (714) 642-4184 CloMd Molldays 1514 Neqort lml. Cou Mela, c.llf. 9J6%7 Who to see~ this .weekenct? r.I ENTERTAllllllENT MAGAZINE I.I.I New loolll New .._I lwefY Frtde,t ---------- -!. ll l 7,UU °'*YI TtelllcMI IO Mlr1o 00 Aoed 10.~ 00 .. 11 ....... ·PM KNXT IJ ........ I 00 Trolkn l 2ao Tom And Jeny 1 00 ~ IO 30 Mlnulel 200 McMe: "Gen111 IO Gllnc" 00 .. 3.~ ~ . 00 TheNFl'• 5 S..Ewr IO " 600 ces,.... ...... 800 ~ IO .. 9oo g:n IO A.-dl 10: KN8C D a. .... KNBC D ........ NICNIWI Loolc AIU. 1=-' SlllNINI .. Ttn1r1 LOii in ~ Mnw" Stir Tttk McMe: "The Roundwl'' Va. UClA KA8C • ... ....... " Wide World Ot Sports Oemoc:rltic Aelpot1C8 Omni Low Boet ABCNewl MM: "B Ccndo(' KFMB Q ....... """" r.., Lone KFMB Q ....... Trolbls Tom And Jerry M.A.S.H .. W*1ome Beclt, Kotllr ces ..... lns..dl Ot .• Omni McMe: "lnOld .. Ftom ...... WldWortd Of Anlnllll Wld, Wiid OfThe T...,. .. McMe: "Dey OfThe Trllllcla" t.l<Me; "lnatdlble TwcHWdld T rlftllPllnt" t.l<Me: "Thi~ And r· " .. KC8T °' .. ..... KCST w .. ..... McMe' "TrtMIKe ltilnd" N8CNews The Muppets -------- KTTV • ......... Tl.mlbout " McMI: "X. The Ur*llown" Soul T1'11n KTTV • .......... Ot Prlvsle sio." The Wlltons Children OnThe Run KCOP • ........ Adlm-12 Adlm-12 Mowle: "TllCher"S Pet" Solid Gold Rona Bwrltt Portrllt Alrice'a OtAl..egend ~ ..... MAS.H MM: ''Suowttnd EqQa" KCET fD ... ..... YogaFot Hellttl IAlnA Fool Tory PMIOn" lnllde Story Alwirlng Your World Soccer · Mldeln OnceUpon AC'-lc Were You There? Why In The Wortd? Cllldtlng n0u1 Preeentel UleOn Ear1h KOCE m I °$ 0 . .... KOCE ., ·= Wrlle Onl Soccer Mldeln Germeny Matinee At The Bijou .. ~ Satunlay• Details JAHUNtf ao. 1112 EV....a 1:00 9 .. IEARCH M ... "HlrMhlma Survlvon" • THI HANJY llOY8 I NANCVDMW MVITENU Nancy reports ...ing a eat plunge Into • rav111e, but an ln-togatlon tails to hH n up eltnet 'l9hlc:le or dnY9f . • LAWNNCE WEU< "Morning-Noon-Night Mel· odiet" • WALTWAGNEA IHOW au.t: P-ogy Aenilng. • CHEOUNG IT OUT Miiie McKinnon report• on an epidemic of killil1g and warfare among rlvlll youth gang9 on CNcaoo'• South Side fD MATINEE AT THE -..ex.I l.8urel and Herdy, Jacl< Hai.y and Patsy Kelly - INtured In "MOVlealruek" ( 1937): the tlhOr1 aubjecl• lnclude_Shirley T9mC)le In "Kid In Hollywood" (19:l31 and • Betty Boop cartoon. and the -1a1 la Ctiapler 2 ol "Junior G-Men" starring HuntJ Hall and the Eas1 Side Kleis (RI 8 THE MUPPETS Guest: Beverly Sills. CJ) THE WM:K:.Y WOAU> OF JONATMAH WINTfNI Guest Joe Namath 1=*> 8 DANCE FEYER Celebrity ludgn: Anthony Geary. JayM Kennedy. Many Col\an Guat The!· ma Houlton. 8 (I) OMNI: THE NEW FAONTlE.R FNlured: • modern day "El11phan1 Man" who hopel to have his ,_ restored to normal, a loo6c at manmaoe llllOIUtiOn 1hat could all• the cffmale end conditions of Mara Q! TIE MIJPPUS Guesl: Liu Mlonelll (C) MOVIE * II "Days Of Fury" Nai- r ated by Vtnc.nl Prooe (SJ ~-A· THON A comedian ho.I an<I four comic contestants who compete against o na anotflW are 1 .. t1Ked.in 11\11 unoeneored comedy game &llOW. 1:00 8 (I) WALT DelHEY "The Cat From Oul., Sp-" An extraten•lrlal tomcat et NI\ lencla on Earth. (Par! II e a ONE~ Tl4E llOY8 Jonetllan imagin. thel 1\19 vlllllno mother le having a hOI eltelr with OW.. ewow II** "The Roundete" ( 19651 Glenn FDfd, ~ Fonda. 8 0 KJNG'8 CAOl8INO Carey euempta to promote • ·-be1-Jiiiian and Bllty. •n<I Lauren con· tront1 one of her blggelt See Saturday's. Page 13 • 'Capitol' idea comes fro~ CBS By LYNDAlll&SCH Starting Monday, March 29, CBS will air lta new ball-hour daytime drama, "Capitol." The show will center on two youq loven caqbt in the crossfire of a bitter feud between two ambitious Wastuniton, D.C. families. The main families are tbe Clegp and the llcCandJesaes, who've· battled one another for four 1eneratiooa. The two lovers will try to cut throup the barriers that have divided their families. (Sounda to us a bit like a cross between "Romeo and Juliet'' and "The Hatfields and McCoys Go to Washington.") John Conboy will produce "Capitol" for hi4 · own proouctlon company. He bas been the executive producer of CBS'a daytime aeries "The Young and the Restless'' since that show's inception. Head writers for the show are Stephen ·Tube KABC e 7: 30 -·'Omni: the New ·Frontjer." A modern day Elephant Man hopes to, have his face restored to normal. KNXT 9 9:00 -"Golden Globe . Awards." The 39th edition of the awards. honoring excellence in motion pictures and television. will be broadcast from Beverly Hills. , ~ KNBC 8 10:00 -"Billy Crystal Comedy Hour." Robin Williams and The ' Pointer Sisters guest on this season premiere. KHJ lfJ 10: 00 -"The King and I. .. Oustanding· musical starring Deborah Kerr as a widowed teacher who runs head-on into the stubborn king. Yul Brynner. and Elinor K~ whose TV shows _ln..c.bul.e_ •·'---------------------"Marriage: Year One" with Sally Field and t.be mini-series "The Capt.ains and tbe Kings." So far no casting bas been done for the Los Angeles-based soap. ---~ ------ IF YOV'&E WONDERING who's playing t.be newest love interest for "General Hospital's" Luke, she's Demmis Moore. The 19-year-old New Mexican native bas been modeling since she was 17 and was one ol 50 actresses who tested fort.be role of Jackie Templeton. Demmis is married to rock singer-songwriter Freddie Moore, who is part of the group Boy. RETUllNING TO THIE CBS schedule is the game show ''TatUetales," which airs at 11 a .m . Western time. Bert Convy will once again host the show, which pita celebrity couples against each other. . DENISE PENCE, who plays Katie Parker on "The Guiding Light." is also a crack amateur photographer. Denise, who is married to Steve Boockvor , a well -known Broadway actor-choreoarapher, recently deci~ to create a mammoth collage of over 100 photos that she anda friend have taken at the studio over her-four years on the show. The coUage is now banging on t.be studio bulletin board. We doubt that it will ever get a public viewing, but Denise bas made smaller collages for castmates as gifts. and says the hardest part is Lbe gluing. Q: I rttently saw tJte mom "Taps" ud tlloa1llt It was excellemt, especlaUy Tlmo&lly HnU•. CU yon &ell me U t.lae mu wi. played lab father t. ta.e movie llas ever dcme uy aoaps! -A.B., Cllapel BUI, N.C. A: Yes. Wayne Tippit currenUy pQrtrays Ted Adamson on "Search for Tomorrow." Wayne, who has done voice work on many commercials, also starred u Jerry Ames on the now-defunct "Secret Storm." By the way, be is one of the nicest actors in the business and is respected by cast and crew alike. Q: Mat ever llappened to Jolul Fl&apatrlck, tile orlCIDal WUU.. on ""9o&Mr World," aDd wi. was Ute ador' wlao replaced Mm! -K.B., Utica, N.Y. A: Jobn is out in Hollywood and baa done an occasional nighttime auest spot. He left "Another World" of his own volition. The actor who replaced him was Leori Russom and was written out of the show along with Dorothy Lyman, who played bis wife Gwen. Dorothy can now be seen as Opal Gardner on "All My Children." Q: Cu yw plea• teU me If Trlltn •sen, wllo plays SHrplo oa "Gemeral llMpJtal," 11 married! Abo, caa yon 11Ye me u address to send to wtaere k'• eertaia to read my letter! -J.S., RM Buk, N.J . A: Tristan is married, bu no children and his wife is an actress. The best place to write Tristan and any other member of "General Hospital" ls at their studio al Gower and Prospect in North Hollywood, Calif. 90028. He does read all bis mall and tries to answer it, but please be patient, since he is swamped. (How a qwlffon abotd pr /ot10nfe IOGP or IOQp 1iar? Write lo LJ'ldG Htracla, c/o ,.Id N..,,,,.., Sllftdkcde, P.O. Sor IMO, lrvfM, Col#. IJ1l4. SM tofU ~cu con~ 1wr colMtM, ht From Page 12 .... .... beifore • big '*"'° c:omipMltlon. • MO\llE * * "Tillt lneteditlte T~ Heeded Tren1p1ent" (11171) ltvoe Dem. Pet Prleet. • THE WAL TONa W1'llle Yieltlng Welton'• Mounteln. OIMe'• uncle becorri. lmlolWd ..... M often.merried dhlclrCM. • .,... ..,,. CNlll Ha.ii: SIM Mool~. Cwol ~ au.eta: Milce Doug!M, Olcll VM Peti.., MautMn McQ.). -n. • LRONIMTH "The Fltll FOJ991t" Devld Atlenbofough looll1 It ttle Weyl Qlent .... --ttle dlfllcull prOl>lem of mlgrlltlon fl-om -to lend. &MOVIE * * ,_. "Beck Ro1d1" (t911) Siiiy field. TOtnnly LM.1o1'91 llMOYll * *'4 '"Sphinx" (11111) Frlftll ~·· Lniey· Anne Down. l:aO D 8 HAIW'l1' VAUEV When IOD«ed "'• uleCy atllldlwO. thf .. ten the town. S.... beconlM ac1- lng ~ hdllef. -~P'MYllWB Roger Ei.t Ind Gene 51, .... ,..,._ "On Golden Pond.'' "Whc>M L... II tt Anyway?" 1nd "Four Frleftdl." (ll)MOVIE * *. "Scanner•" (1ta01 St9')flln Leek. .i.nnHer O'Neill. 1:11 CZ) MOVIE * * ,_. "On AfT'/ Sunday" (1971)~tery. St- ~. M«t i..wwtll. l:OO. Cl) GOLDIN Ck.O. AWMOa The 3ttti annual edition ol lheM .,. .. d.. '-lno ~ In lM fleldl of rnotJon plc1-llfld 1119111- elon, wll be le6ecMI from ttle a.-ty.,..on ~ In e.-ty .... Cell! ea~ WNDMLL ANDT.- WJC)MU.19TW au.ta: Donny Olmond. R8YS'-80 LOWIOAT A .-i "'"'8 1 -he tl'llM• 111 -mw'<ted to 100 )'N'9 ..,...,, and • mela PIHlrlOlf llw• I Merel ..etll • ledy Ind '* llOl'l.Q • OHLOMN ON ™I NIN JolltWrt MIN\ "°"' • doo- -*Y "'°"' IN -. '°"' of dllld ,...... In .... , ...... j~~ ·~~1·· YJ CHUIMN ~of the wortcl'• CIM- dren he In •~INll- -.,.,._ Ille Md '*"'· l\ope' and delpelr. .GNAT . \ I BU ONl.'NCR "Brldfflleed Revl11ted: • Home And Abroed" Sebeetler'l taliel ~to ¥llllt 1119 f8tfler (LAurenoe OIMer) In Venlcl wtiere he ._ with Ille mi.t- (Pwt 21 Q • THE WOODMUGHT'I ...,.. "Dumbfleedl In Action" Roy UndetNI completee 1111 upper per1 of Ule lfllV. ~=:RI * * "MIMn And Howerd" (IMO) PM ~. JMOtl Rob9rOI. 10:00 8 8 M..LY artaTAl ~HOUR (PNmiete) au.ta: Robin W...,.,,.. The Pointet Sle-1.,.., °""" ThomM. Rid! Morltlla. Jotw'I Candy. 8 9 FNITltl/Y 11&.MD A ~to.be y9wna for ,._ lbeMI telher to give ,.,. ~.and M ~ ogil1 ancounllt'I the 9Plftt wortd 0 -~ * * *'h "The IOng And I" (19Y) Deboreh Kerr. Vul ltynnlr. • PORTIWTMA LIOIND ''8f'erldaLM'' • AINCA'S ,.wt.,m-1NG.1ta .. IUT WHO'I UITll•IG' Hoetl: C.ol ~-. SIM Mooneytlem. Gu.'9:, E119m Zlmballal Jf .. Deen Jonie, Wiiiem SNltn«. • ....... CJ(.N Pl.AYHOlm "Seguin" Tiie lraglc Mle ol uneut10 IMWO JuMI Nepo-muceno Seguin, one ol ttle IMdws of IN TeaM •-luttoll, ta dramllized. Q ID AUl'T1N cm LMt9 Johnny Lee end Cllllfty ~ -IMIUNCI In ~-cm uovw **"4 "Sphinx" (1Ml) Frank Lengelle, L..tey. MfllO-.. (l)MOVW •• *.,. "Oona Flor And Her Two Hu9bende" ( 11171) 5onll ••• JOM Wllll•. .MOYIE •• "MllWI And Howen!" (19801 PllUI IAMet. Jmon ROO...dl. tO:Cll CZ) MOYIE '* *. "The Big "9d One'' ( 1N0) LM MaMn. Wert! ...,,.. tO:IO (]l)THI YIM THAT WM!• ., Paetldl O'NMI hOllfl ~ loOa .... "'°" -· 1111t1-ao1-.~· >'Sf.A I y »Ae MnG lJtlst 1111• Texas Chainsaw Massacre Dr. fi> Uanes Bond) Victory (Sylvester Stallone) Great M~t Caper ... .. ---.. --- History of The World Part I (Mel Brooks) Cavenm (Ringo· Starr) Moovny Dearest (f aye Dunaway) Paternity (Burt Reynolds) First Monday In October (Matthau & Claytugh) Fort Apache of The Bronx (Paul Newman) r-O:v-::"-1 i TAPE IALE 1 r;,;;.- 11 a. ......_nfllp 1 I Tll T-1a 111CA VI 1111 °-:-:a::m-iiiii:i m I , .... • , .... • I • .-. .. °' ctt,2."::"'" I L'1P .. I 112".. ~~·· 9239" -·-~ ___ ..,..I -""!!'!r"J l_.,..._ - LAROE SELECTION Of ATARI AND INftLLIYISION CARTRIDGES IN STOCK. ... 1m•Dn ..... t1CD,lnlne _____________ ..,........,.. o.---.. -ui.•t-· -··· ..... ~ UIJ Of .T~ .tllMAli> IU( ,AV.Ml .. ~6'1 .Y W~1°"1 110.ttt-•t•. ,.,,,.t;>A11 .~ 1' " .... Grid...--.. ---- N Sanda)'• s KNXT KNBC KTLA KABC KFMB KHJ KCST KTlV KOOP KCET K<>Ce - I ~ ~ II D a D a D m • ., tD m> Details I ~· ........... ........... ........... .... ....... .. .,.... .... ....... .. .,.... ........... Lm ..... .... ~ II .:.t Clll I :l c -JANUARY 11, 1812 I Clll , 7: Todl(a • .,_.,w Top " .. IMllOIY KtnnlCll Sunday DlyOI Clf1oont Yoga For EV£NWO t Allgiofl TillAoboe c. Writt«I Morning CopUICI MllS OllccMry .. Helltll Commitment Rllnbow Uttll Vllwpoinl TV8lookl .. · TheWOfld ~ .. Mist• ~ 1:00ee~ ;£ .. Plldl ,..... On Nulrlllon Allllming .. Tomorrow .. Roaert 8HOWCAIE a: :; TI*ll = ~ LetThn uo,d Ru .. .. EJectrtc ..Earthbound" " hotel gi Thel.Jte Oimenllonl Bt~ Oglvie Humbwd .. .. Compeny owner Ind his g•andton _J ~ Frllndl Todly'1 F~ Meeting KnowYOUf Ever .. History Of 1ry 10 help • femlty ol ~ .. --,. Blk. Wom111 Ute Time Bible lnctllllnCI .. ASunbNm lt1endly 111ens HCIPI bef<>t• the Ghlrltt and his § 9: .. Mewl .. VIII ' Orll Orll .. F~h .. 5-111 posse gel their hands on .. Conllrtnee .. ,... Roberti Roberti .. " .. Slrlll them. (Part I) ii .... MlllThe .. It FICIThe DlyOI Miii The WOtld .. .. 8 9 COOEAED (J .. Journll p,._ .. .. NltiOfl DllcMry Prlll Tomorrow .. .. The ftrefighle<I throw 1 10: Bllkllblll SpomWottd McMI: NlwZoo Bllkllblll Hlrlld Sport1WOtld Rel .. The Oil surprtM blrthd1y party for AM-Stir .. "Uttle AeYIM Al-Stir OITrulh .. Humblfd .. llwmlkn Pllntlng Danny. Glml .. Miii Kldl "'' Glml Roblr1 .. Jerry .. Open Oil D CAl8l8 ... THE HOAN .. " Merle«'' ,,.. " ~ .. Fllwll .. Mind Pllnting ~AFRICA Sten Mooneyh1m end 11: .. BMllllblll " Too .. .. Basltllblll .. McMI; Mlllerpilce Wllhington Cwot Lawrenoe host this .. Glorgllo.n .. .. " -.. -·Geligecown ---. M 1'lleftel1 Tli4iitr1 -w..------oocumenllry ~ the mO'te .. Ve. .. ThilWllk .. Terry Coll VI. Churcll In Pll" "AlmeTrllS WtlSlreet than alx mUUon people In . .. St. John'• .. With .. Whhtaltlr St.John's TheHoml .. Of Thikl" Wiik Afrtca w~o have been . 1flected by Wlr end KNXT KNBC KTLA KA8C KFMB KHJ KCST KTIV KOOP KCET KOCE drought and thl results ol sueh1vent1 Pi\{ IJ D a D 0 -D ~ m Ill m ~ E) NOVA "A Field Guide To Roger ......... Lm ..... ........... Lm ..... .. .,.... .......... .. .,.... .......... ........... .... ....... I I 111 Tory Peterson" A portrlllt ._.. of the man whOSI bell· 12: .. .. Loll In Ol'flcl 5-dl .. Movie: .. The OUClllla MatNe salhng guidebooks on .. .. S9ICI llrlr*.lly .. .. .. "TlnMI .. OIOukl AIThe ornttnology have play«I 1 8lllc«bll .. .. OlrlCtlonl Bllkllblll The .. AndThl I> . . Street 8ijOu ptVotal roll ln tutnlng bkd 1 watching Into a m11s 1port South .. .. .. .. Bax1lrl .. Amlzona'' .. .. .. ~ lspreMnted O 1: Allbel'lll Andy The The Pro .. T1111 Andy .. Adllm-12 Whlnllle struck" 7:30tl) AOAM-12 Ve. w..n. ........ Bowl .. T• 'WlMarns .. .. Boat .. Malloy Md Reed matCll w.. 8-IOllgo F-Troop .. .. Wld. SlnDllOO M<wil: Adam-12 Comlsln MM: wits ""1th a pair of burglary Vlralnll Open .. .. Wild Open "The .. .. "SonaOI 14l11>9C11 lntldl a factory I ' 2: .. Gimgln'• .. .. w. .. Gl'oundl11t McMI: ToBt Freedom" • El OOAAOO: TlfE .. .. llllnd " .. .. .. ~Icy" "Big Jim Announced .. OOl.O BEHINO THE I .. .. ..,., .. .. McMI; .. Mclain" Pr111ntl! .. l.EGENO I .. .. llllnd .. .. "Sherlock .. .. " .. .. Thia special e•arntna thl truth bltllnd the legend of I 3: LlltOI ISCIOIU ...,. .. St« H<*nll Suger Rly .. .. Amlr1Cln M<wil: the gold kingdom I TheWld Alleld "°"'P« " Trell AndThe Llonlrd'•. .. .. Sk~ "Lmln ~MOVIE BIG On ~The .. .. FW10f Golden Movie: .. LA.Wiik Rualll" . ..... "'The Frl9CO Kid" LAldlrlhlp Campi.-Oollln'' .. .. Dllttl" GloVll "The .. In~ .. (1979) G-Wll<ler, Harri· 4: lntlrtlcl I ~ .. The Vletory McMI; McMI: Exlcution M<wil: WllSlrlll .. eon F0<d .. Super1lar1 AISie '1ncnclbll "Mldn Of PrMtl ·~· Wiik " (D)MOVtE Nlwllnlklrl .. .. .. ~ Two-Heeded GI.II SkMc:lt'' Wlll*lgton .. ••'h "Footin' Around" .. .. .. .. JowTlll Trlnlpllnt" McClln"' .. .. Wiik .. ( 1980) Gery BUH)'. I Annelle O'Toole. I s: F .. The .. star U.S.A. M.A.~.H .. .. .. .. Ar1ng Victory C%)MOVIE . NltiOll .. Trell Ve. The .. .. .. .. Uni 0.den . ...... "Thi How4lng" ' I CISNlwl N8CNlwl .. WOtld In Wlk:oml .. .. .. .. . . ThlsOld (1981) Dee Wallace. I " .. " $polU BD.Kotllr .. .. .. .. " Hou. Patric* MKnM. . s: ..... ..... McMI: ..... CBSNlwl Kojllc NBCNlw M.A.S.H Movie: LMI Bordettlnll 1:00 II Cl) AACtflE " .. "The .. .. . . ,, .. UJeell'• Around Us .. BUNKER'S Pt.ACE .. F1gh( O.tng That'• ..... .. ""'" The Girls" Whyln Checking Archie tallM thl law into I his -n hands 1h1< M• .. 8ldt Oobennlns" Holywood .. .. .. Jlllerlons .. TheWOt1d? tlOut van RanMIMr tS muggecl J 7: IOMlnuW Pl'ojlc:t .. Codi eo~ Crllil Projlcl Somy& .. T utankl\MU'l't NO'll and the pollcl can ·1 find ~ .. Aid .. Alll1 PtlCOdt a. .. EOYPt "Roger any~ I .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Adern-12 To Bl Tory lllBCHIPS I .. ~ -'!--~ ----.. H•--.. -·--.. . Mtw:iira4 Plllrlon" Pondl con.id«& qultllng .... -............ ------ I a: M:Htt CHIPI .... Todl(1 Ala. tlll C..IPI McMI; Sold NO'll Ut• 1 plecll thl CHP to tiec:om. a roek Bins .. CCIUlelal FBI Bunk• Wrtltln .. "Sllgnnd Gold "Hunt Fot n.n llnget. °"'°" .. .. " OnlDly WOt1d .. e.-·· .. The Legion ''fWNT,_ 8 l!I TOOAY'S F9I 1 AIATlll'll .. " .. A1A Timi Tomorrow .. .. .. Kiii(' Ofll*a" Ben -en. lor an -. 11111 ~ on lorlign offt· 9: Ab NBCMcMI: Wld ABCMcMI: Aloi Or. NBCMovle: .. Hie ~ Anllncln clals who have r~ted to " "WOt1d ~ ··~,, .. Cho "WOtld .. Hft ~ the United Slat•. na w .... WoltdOf The 8rlllll WwHI" .. .. "Aimil,.. ·~" .MOW ......... Plrt 1 .... .. ..... Ofllll P#t 1 .. .. Ofll*a" •••'h "Thi Sugerland 10: T..,., " ..... .. T~ &nlll .. ..... INNNlwl Miiiing .. Expr ..... (1974) Goldie I Jalln. " .. .. JoM • "'9!! .. .. .. Of Mlrldl .. -H.-., Williem Ather1on. M.D. .. .. .. M.O. " Jerry I~ " 8tlty e eouoGOLD .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Fllwll .. Boop Holt: Andy Gibb. Coholt: Matllyn MQCoo. GUMta· 11: .... .... .. ..... WOt1d ..... .. Top Of F9llvll KISS, Ollvfa Newton-John . CISMM " " " .. VIiion .. " .. TheWortd .. Eddie Rabbitt. The Four ......... .. 100 ..... McMI: CrUlldl N8CMcMI: McMI: T .. OIThe Snelk " TOtJ8, Mike' Lcwe. Allcla ....... NBC~ CM! .. "DlllA .. "Tiit .. The Pr.-.. .. Bridges. Ronnie L-. 12: ,... "'111 .. ~--Did/ Glnglllr EMQlllon MM: Tlltl>udlm • NOVA .. ~ .. MGM .......... awonldlt" Of Pl'Mll '1'1ndy Of[Mie "Tiie Hunt For The Legion " QnNc:tll'' M "Jani " Plrt• SlcMct" .... StNll !(Iller" The 1n1--.. '"-- tigellon ~ by IM "°"" Plrt4 .. Eyr9" " .. .. Ntc!rfe" " See Sunday's. Page 15 ·. 2823 ·east' coast highway" 675-1010 cmna del mar· .... l 1-1 FAT J. PANACHE 1().5:30 221 MARINE BALBOA ISLAND 873-1810 Where to go this weekend?; _a PUotWeellencler ENTERTAINMENT MAGAZINE New look! New size! Every Frtd•Y! For home delivery, can 142-4321 THE BlqGEST GARAGE SALE ON THE ORANGE COAST IS IN THE DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIEDS ·it . • ~ :-oV. 642-5678 ilaily Pilat ,. :'fube .1 KCOP. 8:00 -"Solid Gold." .Mike Love and KISS a re a mong guests. KNBC 8 9:00 -"World War Ill. .. Premiere of mini·series starring Rock Hudson and David Soul. KABC 8 9:00 -"Slapshot. .. Paul Newman plays an aging hockey star. KOCE 9 10 :30 -"Betty Boop Festival... Some or t he best films of Betty Boop are sho~ _ _ __ From~J4--c.n1eo lor ~Control to di.co-the ~obe I r9e90"elble IOI' Leglon- Ml(e'a ~ la tr8C*I ·MAS~ THEATM "T'he Flame Tr-0 1 Thi· ka: A R41.i Sportsman" When a leopard lnvadee the P"'"* home, ._.. --d ~ It must be hunted Clown and dfttroy9<1 (Part 5) 0 MOYIE * * * "P0t>9ye" ( 1980) Robin Williama. Shelley Ouv .. ())MOYIE • ••n "Th• Shining" ( 1980) Jack Nlcnotaon. Shelley Duv ... DlrKlecl by Stanley Kubrick UTHE FOUR TOPS The pr~ ,,.,_ of the Four Tops ate 1 .. 1urc; in such aoul ctuslc• as "B«nadelte" and "Stand· Ing In The Shadows Of Love." t:OO. Cl) Al.IC( Vera. hoc*ecl on ~ oper... quill •lier Mel rel-to allOw her to -·ch them •t ...otk G QIMOYIE "World Wer Ill" (Part 1) (Premiere) Rodi Hudaon. DaYlcl Soul • Will> KlNOOOM "Lernur8 01 Med~r" 8 0 MOYIE ••• "~t" (1977) P1111 N-man. Michael °'"""'· • HEEHAW Gueats: Bobby Bu•. St-FMM!y. GI._ Brothen, l(lppl er- • MASTE#ll!Ce THEA TM "The F1*ne Tr-Of Thl- ka; A A9lll 590f"ttJman'' When • leopard lnV9del the Palln« home, Here- ward 1nt1t11 h must be hunted down end dfftroy.cs. (Pat1 6) 0 • AMENCAH ~YH<>lME "Seguin" The tragic Ille Of untung llefo Juan Ne90- rnuoeno Seguin, one of Ille INderl of ttle Texas revo- lullon, 11 dram11IHd. O • GAUMIHIJt MAO Al .-..&.. The lrr-ent com.&t1n -polta tun at 109(CI rq- lng trom aviatl'llM to en In TV commen:llla. NaCl)MOVIE * ** "The Boy Frleond .. (1911) Twiggy. Christopher Gable 9:30. ()) THE .lllffW One ol George's "°'" 11 deltroy9<1 by 1 fire. (C)MOVIE • * "Double Trouble" ( 11187 ) f:lvia PrHley, Annelle Day. CO)~ • • Y, "Bick Ro1d1" (\1141) Sell)o Fielcl. Tommy LMJonM. 10:00 • ()) TMPPE1' "'°""· M.O. A aoclai worker la brutally beaten while trying to ref\abllit1te • !Ml" of teen· ~PfOllilutea. -~c:w..ae Margeret Singer. MINI· m1 Gandhi and Adam Smith join St-Allen IOI' 1 discualon of population control, lrM ent«J)flM end aoclal m0tlllty. (Part I) ID•ATHME· LETTUIWON> M•n ·on·the ·alreet responH• and ••P'f1 ~ .,.. uM<I in 11119 ~lery to - -of ,,,. mOlt·asked ~IJOns on the subject of Maullily. llMOW • • "The Return" (11141) J in.Mich••• Vincent, Cybjll Shepherd 10-.30 • ..nv IOOf' FUTIYN. Somt of the beat lilm1 of the 1tr..i.ti*"8 Belly Boop -teehnd lnduding ~Ulue King," "Cray lnven- tlona" Md "Little Pal." ®MOYIE • • •'A "8rMl!er MOf'ent" ( 1980) Edwerd Wooctwwd, Jack Ttoompson • (l)MOYE • "The Chlldren" (1980) Mat1ln Shltter. GM Roger• t t:OO (CJ MOW( ***'A "Dey FOi' Night" ( 1972) J acqueline BllM4, Velenllna Cor1-Direct· lld by Fr encoil T Nfteut. fl)MOW *'A "Llp91icll" ( 1978) Mar· QIU• Hemingway, Anne Bencron. New film company formed ROLL. VWOUD -c AP) --Norman -Lear -and J erry Perencttio, who recently purchased Avco Embassy Pictures. have formed-Embassy Communications, an entertainment consortium combining Avco and the producers' T.A.T. Communications Co. As the new pa;ent company, Embassy Communications will consist of three divlaions: Embassy Pictures, Embassy Televlslon and Embassy Telecommunications. The Norman Lear and Bud Yorkm-owned Tandem Productions. Inc. ..: -- HAVE YOU iEEM INJURED? • AUTO ACCIDENTS •CONSTRUCTION ACaOENTS •PERSONAL ACCIDENTS The Law Offices of R. Steven Peters Emphasizes in the Handling of Personal Injury Claims that may be the Result of Accidents. ..... We will Make Sure That you Obtain all That you are Legally Entitled. Call for a FREE Consultat10.n ana Determine What Rights you Have against all Parties. Including Insurance Companies. Housecalls or hospital visits can be arranged. Law Offices of 834-0133 . Z4 .. S R. STEVEN PEIERS, INC. 601 M.r.tiC-...Dr .. S-.A. Sales • Leasing ASIC ~.OUT VALET ~~ . too So. c .. t Hwy .. L..-. hodl 494-1 131 or 546-996 7 ~ .............. t-7, W . t -5, l-. LM The buck 1 starts here. ' ' M~£~~~t *" '°'""' •vint. 1'hcft ie I WIY to ¥.t the initial l&ep ~ know you're on the ri&ht trick toward a ~ulv. ICheduled n vinca. J utt join the Parroll Sa\ines Plan at wori<. A lit!X i1 taken out of ..,.. udl.par~Juoward.&hcflU~b111u( V.S. s.,;np Bonda. You don't ha\'e to wony about makin& a Sf)eeial dl'ort to pul tomethin& uick nch ~yday. lt'1 ell done for rou. Automatically. The buck11tart pilini up, the inteftlt .,-ow1. and )'OU rnliu rou\-c Found one eurefire WI)' to 11\'e; It~ 'VM"l/(l"li"''NlrfO/ll(lurtou""' in~s~ '"'" c.: allll,C• llon(/f vo1i'no /11l11lnic In bwf/d" '"'"'''c" /u11u-. fr" l/Ollf '"'"'!''V 1tttdfor ljOurw/f -A~--Of "'9 Delly l''llol fl)3 ..... ~eo-·~ 1-l .... ,.,Grid --;.1 ... . KNXT KN9C K1\A KA8C KFM8 KHJ KC8T ! K1TV KCOP KCET KOCE ~-! All• -'Details . • D • • II • • • • • • . ~,_YJ. . .... La ..... La .... '-....... '-....... .. .... La .... ....... '-...... '-..... '-....... I= ---· -• 7: ....... T«*! 1118 IQOOCI Mon*'o n. T-r. \;mnoon .. .... .... ll'BAUNIY 1, tll2 ..... c.111 Mor'*'o ..... Ffoollll TOMI ~ Allport Mlrtlll ...... " .. " ~ .. Tllnll .. Tiie Kltloon Yoga for OI .. .. .. .. .. AW. .. Flllllllll• . KlrTMI ..... ..... 1:00 • ~MY8AGAIN a: .. .. .. .. ::;. .11111 H ~ .. ....., -Ala~··~ .. H H .. lllllklf .. .. """" ...... lion, Fonzie llartl bullcllng .. .. Hot ... .. .. Glllll '°"'!' VII ..... ~ .. an outlet 10< .. .. Flldll .. .. H .. Bin Alllre "°°"' Illa.., ....... lnellnc:la • M"A"l"H 9: UM~ =· ...a A.M. one~ .. Donlll&ll ILooie Aon.-..... S-1·1 8.J. ~ 1 vlall from AtATillle ........ Loa At A Tillle Lalanl .. Lucy Aaatn .... COfltlcll an old COiiege Irland who Ab ... LIMll ~ Ab Wlnolniig .. "'*'* McMe: .. a.tc ptoceada to play ptac1ic.I H ...... ToW-.. LA. .. .. "lowy .. ·~ lc*M on the M'A'S'H ~-. 10: llllPrtcl WlllllOI Ilg Lo¥t n.mca " llClllr'CI 10r9MIOI ~· a.room Edlalolllt , ·~ ForUll v111r, ... ....... .. ....... ..... .. TV ~:"""*" • OVlltEAIY . ~: COINOlarl Morey .......... .. .. ......... GllOll And MIMI: .. " .. .. .. .. .. .. ,.,., ... ...... Of .. .. AINletdam. (R)O • DICK CAVETT ' 11: ITlllltllll ...... ..... hlfrltt YouneAnd T,.... ...... --Dlllln(' a.tc " o--t; MhlK Mltdlell. .. ,_.. " Feud n. ..... IUlt ,_.. ~Clt'dl Con!plny .. 9 INTERTAMllEHT YouneAnd Tiii .. ~·· " ..... n. ..... ........ ...... .. TOMCIHT "",.... Doc:al .. Hopi .. 0... OocWrl .. .. LIMr .. Part 1 ot an Interview with 12: ... °"'°' r..-AIMy ..... MIMI: °"'°' MIMI: MIMI: I '** OED Alc;Nrd Button . .. owu. lAIM a.dr9ll " "ClnyOll. OWUWll "Thi ~· CMilt Miii 8 TME MUPflETI Oua9t: Judy Collini. AIT11t .. r..-.. AITlll Clbbla" .. aoc:t" 0. Up& (C)YOYE Wottd .. lAIM .. Wortd .. .. .. .. Eaw . COlllllla •• "Sllpwdoma" (1978) 1: Tilml ,.,.. Hour onel.111 Tuma .. ltN/(tWt .. .. a.room EdlalOnel David JanaMn. Donna .. Wottd ~ TolM .. .. World " .. TV ProglMlllWIQ ..... 119difor .. .. 9-dlfor ..... .. .. .. .. .... {D)MCME r.....,. .. .. .. TOlllOnOW " .. .. " • .. Mlrtlll ••• "The Oflenc;e" - 2: I=:" r-Jolln °"""' Guiding lnnida r-Open Suparmen .. °'*" (1973) 6-1 Connery, Tre-.. OMtlorl ~ Uglll" .. .. l..N .. T11 -Howard. .. .. " .. n. ~ .. ..... 7='0. I ON TME TOWN " " .. .. .. .. .. Wiiona .. ....... Feetured: the -wtlO pldl• Olll the '*'-tor a: I ..... l>oMflll .. EdgaOI "°"" MIMI: Hour .. .. T111Hallng -1treet• In Loa Angella; Fiii .. .. ... OMtlorl ...... ~ .. 8unnr Ar1I Slrelt actOt .Jorv't ~an: • " " AlcNrd ,..... " In...,_,,. 8'ady Hldcil .. .. loc* .. 8hor1 •1t1•; the " .. ......... Cow! .. Pllcl" .. Bundi &Jall .. " healttl -ciectl of high 4: lnlr lob IM.f"ICJ ..... .. " Lii* Brldy Kltloon W-1 W-t . hem. ...., ....... .. .. .. Holdt Bundi l<lrrWll Conead Conl8Ct • LAYIMI I 8HtAl.EY ..... fnelr· .. .. M.A.S.H .. °"The The .. ..... MadW I °"""NIV .. ........ .. .. .. .. PrlWll ...,... .. "°°"' "'*" After loalng their job$, Iha glt'1ll decide to mow 10 s: ..... ..... Ullll ..... ..... ~ . ..... lnCfdlll The -0. CalfO<Na. .. Holm .. .. .. Hulk Flnlllonal """ EMy • ~ONLA. .. .. OllTlll .. .. .. .. .. Scooby .. 11111 -A trip to !tie prenwer• of .. .. Pr*'9 .. .. .. .. .. Ooo .. Tllllh "SopNstlc:a&ed Ladiel"; • ptotlle of the MW ........ . KNXT KN8C KTlA KA8C KFMB KHJ KCST KTTV KOOP KCET KOCE band "The Bleatera:· . • W"A•a•H I PM I II D " • D D ti!) m .., fD ~ When Hewtl9Y9 la denied . anRandR~hefeelt '-...... La ..... .......... w-.... ..... .......... ..... ....__.. ....__.. ....__.. II= he needs, he l\IOIWlll • ""'cl caM hlatcwy f0t an Army paydllatrist lo study. s: ..... ..... a.ti'• ..... ~ ..... WNll N8CNlwl The Hawaii Bullne9 "RlmtTreea ID OMAT .. .. Al'lglle .. .. Sllldow .. Jeltnonl FNe-0 "*"°'1 OIThlkl" ~ .. .. ..... .. ..... Wtlc:omt .. COi 9tllicll111 .._ "8rld11hl•d Revlelled .. .. " .. .. .. .. Ba.Kotter .. Report Alport The Bleak Light Of Day" . .uo l<B~ 19; .... =°"' ABCNlwl TlcTac YouAlkld The MAS.H Jl*er'• 0... Die* Seballlen retu rns to 7"' .. .. Dough Fortt Mupfleta .. Wild EMy CMt1 KllOOI ~ bent on hit own destruc11on attar 20n fllftly LIWlme& E)'IOn PM ~ Flmlly MAS.H TlcTIC MacNell Gt.at hit mothlt (Clalte Bloom) llllTo.n Ftud tilly LA. MIQIZlna Ftud .. Douml lAllnr -_.. arr °'10td dOtl lO -~--Mr.-Ulla -----"Thll'• l'UOIC 8llkelbeil Lima PM Mowll: Or9ll '1io1dtlllllld -tell ~ hit son. (Part 8. ..... .... ''Noeortaul" lncrdlla ""*' Mrona Holm MIQmlnl "Klldozlr'' ""'°' "*ICll ,... 'tad" ~o ,,..... OnThl .. PrMlt Va. °"The Al In The .. "llrtdlelllld Blfnlla.~ P.W.MACJAZJNE ......,., Pr*'9 .. .. lllrilnin 8'nord Pr*'9 flmlly .. Alwllllld" 8lelflMll People who atrudc oil In 9: .. ~ i.;Mowll: .. Prly!" MA$.H .. NICMIMe: Marv .. ~ " their bedtywds • 1IMI 1'1 "Wor1d .. .. .. "WClfld Gtlllln " 8lelflMll .. Gtouodhog Dey prediction la reviewed . .... .... .. .. Houll .. W11 IH" .. Adlln-t2 .. Shoc:t Of ... • Mft. MlkJN c. PM2 .. .. c.· .. ""12 .. . . .. TheHew . When be: atand• up t- 10: LOU .. ..... .. Lou ..... " ..... ..... Amlltcan " gltla on the -day. Onnt .. .. .. Onnt .. .. .. " Al1 .. Mer11n -'Cit Ale• Into the .. .. " .. " .. .. lNHNlwl Tom Arnllbn high ICtloOl IO give Ille boy .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. SIODOlld Art a tMtl of his -n medl· 11: .... ..... MUGIY ..... ..... KOj9 ..... The 8lnfofd '** llllglrl Wiii cfne . " " . • .. .. .. .. .. Jlfler1ona &Sor! CMcl Goodbye 8 8 um..£ HOUSE ON °'*' ... Of AIJCNIM ~ .. BeltOI Odd The coiv.-. ... CIPlonad THEl'MRE c.ton .. I IMllllrll " Canon Couple Roc*laa ! "*"°'1 AICNlwl An elderly relative sun to get ~ody of Jamel end 12: .. .. ltllNINI • I MR; lllCMI .. McMe: .. ..... .. ~ .. o .. .. .. "Altlel . "Ml.fdlr .. ~ .. . ...,. ..... o.td Gn OIThl ..... In Ptrton l*lcl INN .... •••• "Notorlo ua" .. ......... IAMlrY Rold" .. ,.. .. Ltltlrman .. .. See Monllay's, Page 17 . . . . . MONDAY . "fRIDAV Cooking School TUESOA9i WEDNl:.SD~V ntURSOAV ·SATUROt\V . 1 . 8M\C 2 3 4 5 6 JANUARY IL. Ol l.A T NO Wf .. AllE 71'M 7PM 7PM !OA.M ICE OMAM MAKE,_ PN'ffY MHT Al.I MICMAELS ftNI M n. YINO ·~·· •IQOI Al C()Oo(S , AND "°O MODOO T()OI JQMA™AH WAAMAH l fTSY MOUL TON loWlMIE WONG IWIPIHUTZ 'ICMlllOOO FEBRUARY 8 t fASSllO'I .. YAL.J!fAUAM ~W--N I TMIU IJ 13 11A.M ~ 7PM. 18 11AJMPM 11 12 fl. Q(l.AT NO NClllUtO 7PM. 08M) Schedule • "' -.COITA ==.:a IPM, .,...,.. ........... °' PMTA&PASTA MSJlllllWff OOllQIM II& ...,. ,. ... llM091H ' • 1111 s. COMt ~·, c..a ........... • • • . ABC shuffle From Page 2 "Open All Ni&ht" and "Makinl a Living" have already been taken off the air once, and thear Friday night revival can only be seen as a temporary Band·Ald treatment. ("llaking a Living" bas suffered the additional indicnity of three name changes in it.s two season run.> And ABC has more program shills in mind, according lo Anthony Tbomopoulos, president of the network's entertainment division. "This is the first of several adjustments we will make in a continuous review of our scheduUng process." he expl ained. "This multi-staged programming plan will enable us to test programs in new time periods where they can be sampled by a udiences of different size and composition." Uh·huh. Sampled and forgotten That sound you hear is toilets flus hing. WAITING FOR PRAY: ABC's tele·fiick "Pray TV," to air Monday evening , has made a number of electronic evangelists rather nervous. Will this be a thinly-veiled attack on the likes of Jerry Falwell. an opportunity for the moguls to strike back at the Moral Majority? Network fathers assure us that it won't, but the video preachers remain apprehensive. .. Pray TV" will reportedly deal with the relationship between a big-time television minister and a young, idealistic pastor who is attracted to his multi·million d ollar o rganization. The underlying philosophical question deals with the nature of The Calling : ls Christ better served by reaching la r ge m asses o( people. however removed you might be from them, or through a personal, one-0n-0oe ministry? OC more immediate concern to the likes of Donald Wildmon, head of the Coalition for Better Tele vision, is the nature in which tbe TV evangelist will be portrayed. Wildmon and others fear he will come off as a huckster . a modern-day Elmer Gantry. "I think it is critica-t-to see-how-1\BCtTHl!"the lead character in the program." said Wildmon. "That will be the central core of the message ABC is airing ... However it turns out, ABC will be doing ooe thing that Wildmon claims the networks Mver do airing a program about Christians. 'The Hunchback' From Page 2 detailed facade and replica of the SOO-year old squa re. The base of th~stunning church is covered in lhick peal (anyone walking across the area when not in a scene had to wear boots). The first 75 feet of the cathedral's face is made of plaster, the rest wiU be reproduced using special optics. In addition to the cathedral, a torture chamber and the famous beU tower -all 387 steps of it -have been carefully reconstructed for this production. Making a brief performance as Charmolue, the Official Torturer, is Sir J ohn Gielgud, the dis tin guished British actor. Fresh from his performances in .. Arthur" .. and "Chariots o( Fire," Gie lg ud brings his us ual command to the thankless role of the tortui-er. Gielgud was on set only three hours to complete filming of his part. "I never accept parts that are going to tie me down for more than a few days," he said. "But even by my own standards. this was completed in double·quick time." The Official Torturer's job in "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" is to force a confession from Es merelda for a crime she didn't commit. Choosing from his many implements of pain, Charmolue settles on "The Boot" to make the young gypsy confess. During the shooting of the scene. set technicians forgot lo loosen the screws that make "The Boot" such a wonderful torture device, and Lesley·Anne·Down was fee ling the real thing when the cameras rolled. "I was brilliant,'' she qujpped later. "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" was . direcied by Mi chael Tucbner from an adaptation by J ohn Gay. A Hallmark Hall of Fame production, this marks the 31st season tttat Hallmark has bro ght show to commercial a .-------------------------------------~ ~ Tube Toppers HEATING SPECIAL! KTLA e 8 :00 -··Notorious.· Top-notch espionage tale directed b\' .Alfred Hitchcock. · . KNXT 9 9 :00 "M•A•S•H." The unit is overjoyed with a shipment or fresh eggs. KABC D 9 :00 "Pray TV." John Ritter plays a young minister forced to choose between a conventional church and a ministry or the a irwaves. KNXT 8 10:00 -.. Lou Grant .. An orficial complaint is made against the Trib. 200/o OFF -_, Mrllce .... : WI SHVICI ALL MMIS. Mond!f5-Detalls-- From Page 16 Tiie ltOCJC>S 11 Fon Br.Oley· ... Grdef'ed IO Sl-.il a reporter checking oul rumors of polluted gtound •at et Heating/ Air Conditionin9 ( 1946) Caty Grant, lngrtO Bergman 8 9 THAT'S INCMOl8l..E Featuu10 a blind typ1s1 solves the Rubtk's cube puzzle In under five min- utes. '"'° team• of ath- letes. each ca1ry1ng 1 111ree-bedroom house, compete · In a 50-yatd· dash • AU. IN THE ,AMtl Y Gloria auapecta Ille l#Ofst ell., Mike's ono.-a·'°'"' JoO of luloring a curvle COi· lege cube tUfn• 11110 a IW109-a·•eek job, al ,,., apar1men1 545-5542 SIKe "" '79-1770 • P.M. MAGAZINE People ""'° Slrueit Otl In tllelr backyard•. 198 l's Groundhog Day pr.OictlOI\ 11 revtewe<S. L.Jnda Harns t>uta dances in Ha•.il, a.ti Hams •1111 a contfft lor Ille worst mo•,. of Ille year • MOYIE • • 'K1lldoa1" ( l974) Clint Walllet. J-Waln. wright .GNAT P£AfOMIAHCU .. Bridesllead Rev••lled fne Bleak Light Ot Day" Sebasllan returns lo 5CN>ol Memingly bani on 111s own destruction altet his moU>er !Claire BIOoml asks an OICford don to watch over he< son 1P111 3)0 IDMOVIE • • • "MOdern Romance" ( 198 I ) Alben Brooks, Kattwyn Harrold ( ~. WHA rs UP AMEAICA 9MOVIE * • "'Tiiis IS EIV~·· (19811 Oocumenlar; 8:06 (Z) MOVIE • • ·~ "Carny" ( 1980) Jodie Foatet. Gary Busey 8c30 8 (() PfWATE ~ .... MtNAfUlll ~I IMAU.Mla ...... coca a 1"91110• ICttMAUU• .......... QD llEAHSTtlH I IHTHOVE.N Leonatd 8ernateln end the Vienna Pllllhahnonic pe<· form Beetllovan·~ "CotiOlan o-ture," Oput 62 end Symc>N>ny No 2 In o MaJot. Opus ae. e:ooe(() w·A·a·H The unit ii -jOyed by 1 fUlp!'IM 111\lomenl of lreeh iraMOVW "WO<ld Wa< Ill" (Part 2) (Pr..,,..., Aoc:ll HUOton, Da-...d Soul 8 0 l'AAY1V John Rlllet lfatl u I young mlnlltet whO II forlled 10 chooM ti.t- tlle con'tentlonal cllUfch and a mln111ry of the .,..._ • BEAHSTEIH I IUTHO'llN Leonard Bern1lein and the Vienna Phllllarmonl<: !>*· form Beethove n's "Corio&an Overiwe." ~ 62 and Sympllony No 2 In 0 Major. Opu13e. (C)MOYIE * * * "Wllleh Way II Up?" ( llln) Akltlard Pryor. Lonette M<!ICM (O)MOW! • • "Hoptcotcn•· WIMr ......._, COMPUTI GIOOMlllG Oii THi fOUOWHIG DOGS .. AYWGI COllDITIOll ICOfTtl MUIY ........ , ..... '°'"'" eo•• auu.ooo CA ... 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VIDEO FROM RECORDERS 5569 WE HAVE A COMPLETE CHOOSE FROM THESE SELECTION OF: FAMOUS BRANDS: • VTRS • TAPES • CCTV • •Advent • Akai • TDK MOVIES• VIDEO CAM ER· Magnavox • RCA • Hitachi AS • WIDE SCREEN TV'S• e l'anasonlc • JVC •Sony ACCESSORIES• RENTALS • MGA • G.E. •Quasar CPEN MON. THRU THURS. 1 0-6 •FRI lQ..8 •SAT 10-6 •SUN 12-5 YOU'LL LIKE OUR PRICES AT •.. IDE 1421 WEST MacARTHUR BL VD. (JUST WEST OF BRISTOL) SllTI 111 • PllHI 540-1322 2 MOVIES for 2DAYS ONLY •••• ·Cable Subscrlgtlon Ser.Ice I 7 7 - Cable Toppers .,. - SHOWTIME (S), SOMEONE'S IN THE KITCHEN WITH JAMIE A high school baseball star enjoys cooking as much as athletics. HOME BOX OFFICE (H), HUNTER'S GOLD Danger and excitem ent embroil a 13-year-old boy as he desperately searches for his missing father. SPOTLIGHT (S}, LOU RAWLS IN CONCERT performed by singer Lou Rawls. · Sweet and mellow soul songs are . . . .. CNN cC:l -Cinemax {()-ESPN ·00 -HBO cm -On /Select (I) -Showtime D -Spotlight CZ) -Z Channel (!) WOR (N.Y., N.Y.) Ill) -WTBS <Atlanta. Ga.) JANUARY 29, 1982 FRIDAY EVENING 7:00 I 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 I 10:30 .. fr-lllpcwts -Sports Ntwsdfsl w Coal Rep l'eoc*Mow CC) Mo..: -111111 Of Alllers" Mime 't lbel'' (!) a.Mtbll Cont'd Sports Center Bol.lllC Top Itri CID .. TheNfl. MoYif· ·r rilUy Tht 13111" SUncq Room Only cm liloN: "Tiit llllleS 8'otlle<s'' lllovir ··1i1e1v111 Altd Howard .. Cl> lloNC011fd Movie. "Private BtllptNn" lllo•t1 ""'s My furn" ., • Lou lltwls Ill Concert liloYlt' ·-n,e Hien Cou11try" Mov1t: "8'rNer Morini" CZ) Mo~ "lrlcredible Slmnktnc Wom111" Mov11 ... Back Roads" Movtt "Tiie Howiln(' (!) Hockey: Colorldo RockltS Vs. New York Ra,..rs Cool'd Movt1. "Knute Aoc1ne All Allltrun" @ News All In hm~~ MoYlt: "'Ship Of fools" JANUARY 30, 1982 SATURDAY EVENING 7:00 I 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 I 9:30 10:00 10:30 m h s Si>o<b Prru Bot rrfft!'an Rtp0m Ht•\ St1lf ~ ~-lw-~r.,, Me+tt Mt4.111 w ._,_. --~ CE) Hocb y 1'1ttsburp Pt"fUllU Vs W1Mlllfl Jtb Cont'd $po.ts Ctnt•r l 8ilsa,t"'11 CID Bou11 Cont'd Mo•tt Sun11t<s YUi lhat Wn cm Olym~ Bilslttbllt Orqon SUI' Vs USC "'°'" 5'llltn• Cl> I Wonttn I UllHhon lolo•ie 'Back Ro.ds" Mo•lf "Oon' r1o1 g Mone Cont d Movlf ··Spliin• "'°"' Ml'l•on & Howard CZ) Mov1t ··c.rny' Contd Mo•lf "On Any Suooa, Mo;" · 1~' Bir Rl'd Ollf Cf) Cr!SIS Alert P1ul Holan Racine Wrulll"l Mcwe · Harror I •Cll•SS @ News World At War Mo"f W~ll On Wold Sodr' JANUARY 31, 1982 - SUNDAY EVENING n 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 I 9:30 10:00 10:30 m ,.OS Soc< ts BuSUltU ,,1, .... NPIWS r"r,rn CC1 . 1..., ... 0o<. bit 1 r DUtltt .,...., • c.o.>t d "°'" It.. fr:s.,o ktCI m WD<ld c ~o Sl"'IC Soo<ts Crnl, 'llCI ltM \ CID 111<-'llt PIO!ilon Conl • "'°"' P~• St1 Is A WC'ld ""··· CQJ Mowit Contd lolowor Footi~ A111111'1! 1 ... .,.,, s~o Ro.llh Cl> Mo•lf Cont d Movrt • The SIMNl!a ~'it • Mo~Conl'd lllf.fNTops GaiJ¥""1 M.idAl Hf• Mo woe Ille Rrlurn .. CZ) . Mov• Cont'd Mo¥11 Thellowllll(' Movit 'lllf Boy fntnd (!) Ml'1IC Wo!td Hockey Los Ml*s ~rnes Vs-New Yotk R•"Cfll Mo~ Ill) Nm c.nbbt'41 Open~ l MoVlt. "Sea Of losl $111Pl · ,r _ .... ! c FEBRUARY 1, 1982 -MONDAY EVENING 7:00 l 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 I 10:30 • r,....11eports Sports ....... w. c-t Rip. "'°'*Now CC) llloN:" ..... " -. .. : "'Midi Way Is Up 7" (!) "-INlbc-. SportsC..., HocMy:.....,. TM-I CID .. c.t'. llillMl'."'Mocllr• ....... ..... "The Ellpham ...... cm llM: '1lle ott.nse" Mov11: "Hopscotch" Cl) ,_..,frllll Whit's Up Mera llloM. ·Mer Id StJta" • llM: • ._.. Collt'd llofie: "'This ls [Ms" fllo'lll:"'[Ms" CZ) Mo-. "llltk Rolds" Collt' d Movit: "C11ny" lloYll: ''SlwtnllflC Wotuft" (f) llloN: ...,..,... ...... Collt'd .. .._ ·111t ViGllllt c-1· Ill) News llloYll: "T-., ls The Ni&flr' FEBRUARY 2, 1982 Tt.JEm>AY EVENING 7:00 I 7:30 . 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 I 10:30 • rr-lllpo<ts Sports ~ w. Coast 114!>. Ptople Now CC) llloNCollt'd llloN: "Shoot The !'IMO Pllyer" lloY11: "l'ortlloy's ~· (!) HocUytoM'd Sports Ctntff Wotld c. 5'111 • U.S. s-nq CID S...Pr1. l SI~ Room Only Mov11: "Frldly Tiie 13th" cm ..,_~ .. "'°"' "lli$1Jaa" Cl) Ml"9Col!t'd lloY!e: "Horth By Northwest" I S>lowtime • ~Cotlt'd Movie.''The W1y We Weie" Moyie: "Mll'l1n And How11d" CZ) llloN: "Ullcll Veay1" Mont .. ,ffcy'' (f) lllMtllil: Olnwl V1. Nttr YOI' Cont'd ~ lliloM' "Across The Wide Miuovn" all ..... AH kl £anuly Movlt' "Cvns At &llSI" FEBRUARY 3, 1982 WFDNESDA Y EVENING 7:00 I 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 I 10:30 • rr-lleoorts Sports Ht~ w Co1St R$. People Mow CC) 1i11rN: "Tiit Pmwoid ls tour ace" Mo'llt "fht Chi111&ehfll" Cl) IMSttnOoor Socter $(loris Centei Basllel~U Al~m1 Vs ~S<llOI SI (8) .... ClwlStJaft Andt!Stll Mont • Clupe From Alc1tru !flt list ~o•IK S"<I• cm W'Y • WIS I imkttmll los Meetts la~m Vs New Yot' KnKh MovH! H gh Cuuntry Cl) Mo~ "lloprllbo .. Cont'd S.mre JtVM Movit r11so· I M1Vfil ., .... Collt' d Molt Fat'iCI M<i•>t Sel>M•'' w.,. (%) .. Movie· "lncled1blt Sl111n,1ng Woman Mo•lt fo·e~ I Movoe ([) MNIMayo<s I eas,'1ba!t Los MftlH l1le1s 'il Ntw ~nr~ ~ndl Ou!,, l 1m1ts @ Ntws AU kl r11..,~r t\lc;vrr 8lOod On 1 he 4rr~w I Mii'" FEBRUARY 4, 1982 THURSDAY EVENING 7:00 I 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 8 r '""'"' lltiiOfU Sports ~ W CoHI Rtp People Ito" CC) Movlf "Clo"*'t r otr .. .. MoVll' '"S/lool Thi Stin Down Mo•le (!) Some T09 RMI\ Collt d Sports ~ftf SportiCllilll Prof~ Rodeo CID Ottoys Pola U'IC!er &Mr Mime fht ldo!llllllfl Mov•t . Potlfr• CID . Mo wit lilov1t 'lrt Tht Balloon Go" Mo•ll Fin,. [um (I) ..,,. Ctefd ~'BK'~~ lkuoe Lill A Tha11 • .... Cont'd Movie "Blulet Mo/1111" Mo'llt "ScMditr Of llfanie" (%) 9'1we hllltk l!Nds" Mov1t. ' Ille Howq ' Mo'lle Cf) ltocltY Com' d I ltoclty c.lpry n-VJ W&S111111ton Capt•' °""' litlvl$ al """ -··-1'111 fa'"417 Mimf· 'A Somnltf !'lace~ .. -.~ ~ --·~. -=------------------ -,.~· Send a Valentine meSs:age to that special person in your life. Put it in print in our special Love Lines col- umns on Valentines Day. Sunday . Feb. 14. Here are some examples: ....... CtmSTIME UNTIL THE (A) 2-lnch Ad OCEAN FIHUS $11 .00 SOLID LOYEALWAYS JOIY ltl2 Ovist.ml1 ls for 1ivin4; New Yean is for fun ut Vlleati.oa Day Is the (B) 1-lnch Ad Ume to remind you $7.50 YOU'ii THI OHL Y OMI! Love to 1-ue from Bob To Donna from Eddi~ (C) 5-Line Ad Roses are red. $5.00 Vi°'eu are blue. I know this is com) But I do love ou ! (0 ) 3-Line Ad FRED Hlppr:alentine's Day $3.00 v.e, Glori.a Just fill in--the form-below. o r-ca11 us at 642-5678 and we'll bill you. But hurry. all ads must be in our office no later than Fri- day. Feb. 12 -----.---·(COUPON)-------- Please pubhsh my Valentine message as written below on Sunday. Feb. 14. (Write one word per space. 3 line minimum. Com- pute charge at end of line.) $3.00 ---- $4.00 ---- $5.00 ----$600 Name---------------- Address _________ C1ty ___ _ Phone __________ Z1p...._ __ _ Check or money order enclosed Please btll my VISA or MAST€BCARO (elrcte--one) Brtng or mall to · Daily PHat l Card # 330W. Bay St I Costa Mesa. CA I Exe. Date 92626 I ---------------~-----~ t • tO 1'111 rd.,-Clrld -----'~ ·' • ~ L ~ i ... KNXT KNBC KTLA KABC KFMB KHJ .&_ -• ~ ..-• D Q a ~ '-..... '-..... '-..... '-..... .. ... '-..... 7: ="' r-,, -Momno ITlll cu .... ..... Froadll .. .. .. -.a .. Tllnll .. .. .. .. .. AW., s: w .. .. .. 8lllUP Jim .. .. .. .. Sin~ a.a. .. .. Hoe • .. .. .. .. Fudge .. .. .. 9: OMDly ,.. Alclwd A.M. OneDly J.:11 AIA Time Phlbirl Simmons Loe At A Time La LIM Ab Blodl-Ltlwn I ~ Ab MldmomlllQ .. l>Ultft To Womtn .. LA 10: Thi Prioa Wllee!Of Big Low The Prioa .. lt~t Fortune V*t Bolt -~· .. ~ ... " .. .. .. .. " .. .. 11: T ....... PllllLIOtd Bonanza F""!Jl Young And Tr_,,.e PM .. Feud The,.._ Hunt YOU119 And The .. RyM't .. Maid! The .... Doctort .. Hope .. a.. KNXT KNBC KTLA KABC KFMB KHJ PM tJ 0 a D Q a ......... ......... .......... ......... ... ... .... ...... 12: .. DlylOI Twllghl AIMy ...., McMe: Our Llws Zone Children " "Funny Al The .. Twilight .. Al The Cit World .. Zone .. World Summer'' 1: Turrw Another Hour One Ute Turns .. .. World ~ To lJ'le .. .. S-d!For .. .. Sewell For ..... Tomorrow "· .. .. Tomorrow .. 00 ~ Ttua John Gen.II G&lldlrlg lfontide 230 " DMleon ~· Ught .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. " a: ~ eonn. .. EdgeOf John ..,. ..., .. .. Hight DIWilon .,.... C8S .. Rlchn ~·· .. ewit:: Ubrlry .. Sinmone Court .. 4: ""'*"" 8oO &rltt.~ ..... .. .. T .... ......, " " .. ..... EfW • .. .. M.A.S.H " .. talrwMnt .. .. " .. s: ..... ..... Uttte ..... ..... K~. .. " Houle .. .. .. .. On The .. .. .. .. .. Prllrle .. .. .. 6: ..... ..... Clllrle'• Newt C8SNewt WlllM .. .. ~ .. " Shldow .. .. ..... .. " .. .. .. .. .. 7: C8S Newt N8CNews HtWYOl)'I ASC Newt ncTec Lynn " .. Aglln .. Dough Sllaotclltord 20n Femly l.Mrne& EyeOn PM Bllktlbell The Town F-.d Slllrll'1 LA. MlglZlne GoldenStale a: 8llgl fllher ""°* ~ .. Wlrrlorl IMwly ~ MTom Dlyt ~ v •. ~·· CUttlln'' LMml& Poplye'• LOIAnglile v ..... .. .. 8lllrtly Vlllntlne LIMr1 9: C8SMowle: MMrtc* .. Tlnl'• Cl8McMe: .. "timon .. .. ~ "timon .. OollW .. .. TooClole Oollr " lnlllld" .. .. FotComfort lnlllcl'' .. 10: .. ~ ..... Hirt To .. ..... .. Rold .. Hart .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 11: ..... ..... SeUdly ..... ..... K~ .. Nlglll .. .. .. Ab T~ ABC.._. Ab .. .. ft Nlahh .. .. 12: WKRPln .. SNNINt F.U., WKRPln McMe: Clnc:lnnlll .. .. lllMd Qlc:ilrNI "Olwl'• McCloud Olwld ..,. " McCloud ewit:: .. L'""1nln ''Msnle" .. .. - KCST KTTV KOOP E ID .., .. .... '-..... '-........ r-,, Cettoolt Buga Town Bunny .. The l<M1oOn .. flrllllol111 ic.Mll .. ~ .. .. .. .. Gentle ~ .. Bin DoNhue • ILow ~ .. lUcy Room .. Bewitched Mcwte: .. .. "'Jiii Rldwd I DrlMI Of BultltS" S4mmons JNnnil .. Blttleltw1 Ghot!And Movie: .. Mrs. Muif "Sagef>Mh Pmword s., Trlil'' PM Paye.di .. The ..... IHNNewt Doctofs .. .. KCST KTTV KOOP a!) m CE ... ... .... ...... .... ..... DlylOI MO'lie: M<Me: Our llv98 "The "You Only " HaMy u.,. .. Girls" Once" Another .. .. WOl1d .. .. .. " .. .. " .. Teus Open ~ .. Line .. The ~ " Wll1ona Hour .. lluga ~ .. 8urlny Brady Hel*le .. Bunch &Jeckle Little Brldy Klt1oon Holm Bunch Kanwll OnlM The .. Prllrle MOppels .. Newt lncr.dible The .. Hlllk FlntatOnet " Sc:ooby .. .. Doo N8CNewl The Hawlll " Jetlerlons ~ Newt Welcome " .. Bick. Kotter .. The M.AS.H Joker's Muppets .. WUd Femly M.A.$.H Tic Tee F-.d .. Dough FllNr PM McMe: ~ MlglZlne "ACry All In The In The .. Femly Wldel1..e" Mlwricll Merv " .. Gr'ltltn .. .. .. Adlm-12 .. .. .. Fllnqo ..... ..... Rold .. .. " .. INNNewt .. .. .. ..... The SMbd .. Jllllr1onl &Son T~t Odd The Couple Aoi*lel .. Mike .. .. OOuu!" .. Olwld INHNewt L""'1nln .. .. KCET fD '-...... ...... Alport Yog1Fot Hllllh ..... Rogers VIia AillJe s..ne Str• .. .. ca.room TV .. .. Electric eomp.iy MlcNel LAlwer KCET m Loi~ Oic:ll Cl"9lt ()yer Easy Clastroom TV .. .. .. " .. .. TheHMlng Ms " .. 3-2·1 Contact Milter Rogers Seume Streel " " Bulinelt Repor1 Newt .. ()yer Ealy MacHell Ltllrer LMIOn Earth .. .. Amsan ~ "SeneeOf Humor'' ... Of Gr..i °'°" Cnlry . SldSdlool Oldt CMlt ..... .. KOCE m . .... OI ;.,_.. -8uddlll ....., I AoQlrl 3-2-1 Contact Electric C°""*'Y Educadonll Progremmlng .. .. .. .. .. KOCE '1!) "_. ......... -· The New Voice Wiiy In TheWorld? Educatlonel Progremming .. lee Gemma Miller Roger1 s...m. Str9ll .. .. 3-2·1 Contact MICHeil Ltllrer °'* E,.y Shodc or The New " .. BusilllSa Report Dick c-11 News .. "°"' "Hunt For Thlllgion Kiie(' LMtOn Elr1ll .. .. ..... .. Amsan Pll)'tloull ''SneOf tunor'' Ceplloned ABCNewt 1'uesday• I --Details ~ 1i00e ~DAVSAGAIN Howerd and Merion jOur- Nrf to IM lodge where they "*" their hOM)'· moon to try and rekindle the old II-. • M•A•a•H Re<J., ~ deP<essed wn.n he realaH that noth· ing hN h~ to htm to mall• him feet thll his menhood hu .,_, lul· filled • OVEREASY Guests. t:>luegr us mu51 • Ciani Dec and M.,le Wal· ton (RI O fD DICK CAVETT Guell Barbare Cook (Pat1 I) 9 ENT'ERTAINMEHT TONIOHT The Statler Brothers pef· form and talk about the help Johnny Cash has gtv· en them Q! THE MUPPETS Gu.t. Elton John HBOSNEAI< PREVIEW: FBIAUARY A new 11<>11 1n1r0cluces tne mov1e1. specials anCI Sl)O(ll -•• c;c)(!'l•ng to Home Box 0 11"8 on Febru- ruy 0 MOVIE • ••~ "'Sph1n1· 1198 11 Fr11nk Langella. Lesley· Anne Down. ,Z)MOVIE • • "Unde 'Venya 7:30 8 2 ON TiiE TOWN FMtureo: Jack L411'1mon. PhylHs Otller anCI the.r trav- el agents, a IOOlt at the latge community of 8'1tons rrv1ng on Soutllem Califor- nia: a k>Oil at 11ems oe<tam re11aurant1 refuse to -9 lAVEAHE& SHIRLEY &COMPANY The girls meet their new neighbors and •• peuence their llrll earthQuake D EYEOHLA A report on wf\at the health spas ol the future may be like, a PfOl1te ol chautteurs to the cetebrl· t-. an 1nterv1eo-••11th Hugh Hefner • M •A•&•H When Ifs found a robust nurM ls !onely anCI aao. the Othet nut-dec;lare they will holCI bectt ,.,.,, ''"°' s untN she gets a boylfHlnCI CJ) P.M. MAOAZIHE A 16-yeet-olcl girl being groomed for modeling 11atOC>m: en L A ·lc>New Yortr. llltemetiw fuels car rally (ID STANOINO AOOM C*lY "Liza An E~ With Liza Mlnnelli" The stage end llCf-supertllr CllS. plays her range of talent• In a concer1 appe111ance with mualc ranging from claulc: b4IJM to Btoedway showslOl>"8f'•. See Tuesday's. Page 21 .. "' MARSHA MASON ... Star of ·Love Canal.. ..• l(qren V alenline · From Pages Bruce Jenner, Ann Jillian and Billy Crystal in ··Doug Henning's World of Magic.'' In this show, Henning will take bis guests on a tour of his "Magical Dream House," where they will be treated lo maeic of the past, pr~nt and future. as they tour the various rooms ... Bill Murray, Steve T.esich and Don Herbert ·will appear during the premiere week of NBC's "Late Night with David Letterman~• l>eginnlng Monday, Feb. 1. The show will follow "The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson ... " "Steve Martin's Twilight Theatre," a latenigbt comedy show, will debut Feb. 13 on NBC. Joining Martin will be Roddy McDowaLI , Martin Mull, George Peppard, Pam Dawber, Carl Reiner and Michael York. The show will be built around a series of parodies and vignettes . . . In a rare tv interview, Walter Cronkite will- talk about his career, bis popularity and bis regret in letting Mayor Richard Daley off the hook in an interview during the 1968 Democratic Convention. Dick Cavett will host the special, and explore Cronkite's phenomenal success as a J)ewsman. "I've never known why I became so popular," Cronkite said. "I look at myself on tape and can't rigure out how, why ... I think it must have something lo do with the fact that I'm terribly interested in the news and I'm working with it all the lime." The special will air Feb. 8 . . . Olivia Newton-John will be the star of her own special Monday, Feb. 8. Beginning in her home in Malibu, Olivia will take us on a musical journey from Malibu to London, enticing us with songs from her latest album, "Physical." ... Marsha Mason makes her tv movie debut as N v York mother who tries to save her family r n the hazards or chemical dumpiA1 in "Loia Jbs and the Love C•Dal." set f• Woaclcut Feb. 17 at.9 p.m . Also appe.rin1 wiU be Robert Gunton, Penny Fuller and Roberta Maxwell . . . The personal dramas of avera1e people, "Jan babies" and leaendary Wall Street wisards are chronicled as events Jead to the calamitous crash of Wall Street on "The Day the Bubble Bunt," set for Feb. 7. KTLA e 8:00 -"Tom Curtain." Alfred Hitchock thriller about an· American scientist pretending to be a · defector. KNXT 8 9 :00 -"Million Dollar Infield ... Rob Reiner a nd BoMie Bede Ii a star in this TV movie premiere . KCET 8 8:00 and KOCE 9 9:00 - "·Life on Earth." David Attenborough looks at the strange courting techniques of flowers and insects. KABC e 10:00 -"Hart to Hart ... J ennifer is brainwashed into stealing jewels from her friends. From Page 20 ... Cl) ... 9UNNY'I VALINTINE llOtOftOul ........ ··~ OOtllHMY YOU DESERVE TO FEEL GOOD CALL 64WJIO __ _ ,..c ......... ,c ••••• WISTCUFf C•Of'IACTIC OFHCI · •r ...... A. ..... ZMJWetlclffDr.W.111 ............ c ... c... .... ,.. ......... Most lnsuranc.~~ ... Bunny .... In IOYe Mll'l Ml 96eelrtl: relltlit ~ ""' dog "**· (A) Jade, Terri Ind Mr. Fwt.v try '° ... '" . dbnoxioue •fflc:ll11c:y expert off ~=====~==~=~~~!!:!:~~~~~~ ........ becll. Q •• ,ATMIR~ A k..,,_.e group of hood· ed bloat• _,, MoMI Gmge to ...,.. the ldlool- ~ Of ,_ dMlfl. • MOVIE • • • "TOfn Cuttaln" (18M) PllUI Newman, Julie ,,.,._, • «I HA..v ~vs Fon8e lfiel to convtnce tlle Piii to IWltdl from roelt to c:leellcll muelc. Q • , .... lllWl!NE A 16-yew-oed g111 being groomed lor 1t1odellng 1t1rdom: In L.A.-to-New York eltemlltlYe 11.-_w rally; Qhlf T Ill INll• ._ plqulnt; Peul1 N9llof\ on llndlog ow your orlldil •t• 11111. .MOW • • • "A Cry In The Wll- def,_" ( 1974) George Kennedy, Joennl Pettet • LJFe OH EMTH "Tiie Swarming Hordes" OeYld Attenborougfl looke II the atrenge ~Ing tectmlq..-Of flow«• 9nd lnMCtLQ Ci) NOYA "The Hunt For The Legion Killef" The lnlenslw in-· Ugdon ~ by Ille. Center lot OiMaM Control 10 dlecover Ille microbe responelble lor ~· r\llire'a di-ii trlle:ed ~MOW • ** "SllOot Thi Plano Pie ... " ( IH21 Cher'" AzneYOUr, MMle Duboll. (J)MOVE * * • "Nor1h 8y North· _, .. (1959) Cary Grent. Ev1 Mlrie Sein!. OMOW * * * ~ "The Wirf We Were" (1973) 8erl>ra- Slre1Mnd, Robert Redford. &::Ml 8 Cl) THI PONY! VALENTINI IPICW. Aller Popeye fotgell Val- entlne'I Dey, ()llw O)'I tlgne up lot • cMee In hopee of ~ "Mr~ ~."(A) ··lA~I --..v . L-Ind tiiey try to dig up -dlr1 on • not· IO-fllce <**tty. Q • AU .. TMEFN&.Y Ndlle end Mike Ioele llOfnl -"" -..to-ti. born beby 81MC'1 religion -or--on. .. • Cl> fllCWtl ....... Doller~·· C,,_...I,.... ........ .......... .......... 4 ~· ........... ............... • 'MBICAK "-AYttotm "S.-Of Hu!Mt: Who Am I Thie Time?" Chtteto- P'* Welllen Ind S.- Serendon portr~ ec:t0f9 In • llMll town p1ey who hlll In 1owe In e '8lllpley of Kun VOftn99UC Jr. 'e llCdelmed lhort ltOfy. Q • LR OH llMTl4 "The s~ HordN" O.llld Attenbor~ look1 .. "" ltr'"OI courting ~ofno-.lnd IMKtLQ Cll)MOYll * * "Friday The 131h" (IMOl ... 'Y P81mer, Adrl- .,_Klng. l:mMOYIE •• "0111ence" Paul Benjamin, Woodl. (Z)MOVE •• "Petrey' (19711 HY" Bennett. Denholm Elliott. f'.llO 8 9 TOO Ct.oeE F'<>f' co.FORT ~ Ind Jackie try to force • reconclllellon ~ H«wy end his brOther 8111. • ADAM-12 • A p6eulnt ~ I« Malloy Ind Reed .. In,. .. rupled by e 1-.ege neighbor w11o Is high on druge. (C)MOYll * *14 "Por1noYI C- plalnt" ( 19721 Rlc:h11d Benjemln, Keren 81ec:lc. 10:00 D Qt~ ROAD Con11enc:e end Jutlo'1 .,,. " In dlngllr of being eitpOMCS, LUl ..... M IMrn9 lhat Tyrone wen11 '* to run hit c..ino Ind Sam propo1e1 merrlege to LMM. 8 9 HART TO HART An wnknown IO-ne tw• ...... ....,,., lflto.. ateellflg jewels "°"' ..... lriendl.Q • QIONll CAl& ~ A IOOll le tellen 11 ltle - lftM Ind~ ol ~ .............. At11et.'' .MOV!m .......... And "-If" jlllO) Peul L.etMt, Jelocl ...,.,.,.. tO:IO. :tuM• ICAN "-A~ - ....... Of Hulnor: WttO Alfi I TNI Tlllle?'' a....o. "'* ......... .... ........,.,.,., .... .. . ............... .. .. ................. ... v--.. .. .. ..... ...., .... Classifieds. @642-5678 charge it~-by phone From South Laguna & North County call 5.40·1220 toll-free, · .. ' ... ! • ' ... I .l -· a ·- ·11 Wtnty811d r.~~~--~:~~-~--~~--~~~~~~··~-=~ .... -~~~~~.~~ .... ~~--~-~~~~·-==~====:;::::======:;::======;::::::====::;======:;:~~-:!!1 :$:!ii:::~:~;:;t'~~ j I KNXT KNeC KTLA KABC • KAia KHJ KCST KTTV KCOP KCET "' KOCE -· g .~ 11 • ; ·a • CJ a m • a e -&.. pa,dls I ~~!i5~a..~§· §·~"5~a..~·§1s7~iea..~--§§!~a..$...-~~~§ ... ~ ...... ~~~L.el~--~~~-~~ ...... ~~~~$ ..... ~§~L.el~ ..... §§5§L.el~ ..... §~$e5~~ : <·-.1 ~ ..... - 7 .• I:" 1T~ ~ ,=.a ~ ~ Todly =' ::,, =-:::: -~ i... _... li' • " " " ~ " Thn II " Tiie Kettoon VOii '-OI .., ~n---~r+-~"~--4-~·~·--~.__~"~---+-~ .. ~---+r--"----+:A.;,;.;iW..__ __ +--::"----.+::Fll~nlllol:;;;;11t~.__+Kll~~mlvll~=---~l~lllll~1----h ..... ~;;.;&.--~ Jllll~~~t. ~ a· = :: :: ~ IWlc> :.. -~ ~ :: =· =---_!:= c:.n:t" cope ~ -.~ 1-.-: - -: Hat -=-= .. -a.:"9° :: :~ :"' -~ 1::.. 1:!. =~=~~~ ~ I~ -~~ 9Ull Ulll IJIJ ..... I ...WO A.M. I Ulll ~ JD Donlfl'9 I UM "°""* 1111111111 3-2-1 au.; liliger Vic o.mon. At A me ,..., ....... I.ell Al A me La Lane '' Lucy Room Sii-:! Conllce (R) Q IO Aloi llocl-LIM It ~ Aloi Mldmolnlng a.lcfllCI McMe: Elldrlc • DICK CAWTT '' llulllre ToWomen " LA " " "JllopV" " Conlplny G.,.11: 881bere Cook KNXT II '-..... 1 .... ·-· .. . .. • s.ClllFor TOlllOnOW . Ulll IWClllll 2. Light .. 400::' ...... 7~ CBS,_. • • 20n TlleTOMI oa ICllMM: 9 "Aflllllo . ,.,..,._ . uu.....,..· I 12. : Wlllll Of Ilg UM Tiii Pltc:a " RlcNrd I DrlMI OI " a..oom EAalklNI (Pert 21 =.. Ylilr, 1*1.. ll"'J!" ' :: = =Arid ~ TV .. PIOD:~"lllll• ~IANmfT " " " " " " Mrl. Muir "SUir " " An ~ -Mth Semm)' KNBC D KTLA • a..-.-a....- DlylOf Ourl.MI .. I Donlfl'9 ..... .. N8C ..... .. T~ MM: -.. ~ .. KABC a . KFMB 0 KHJ u KCST m> a.-.-........ a..-.-IMDleae OneUll To Ll\11 ' .. ABC,_. EyeOn LA A8CNlws lfllat!llM ..... Al Tiie World Tuma .. 8-dlFor Tomorrow M.A.S.H IC8S,._ -.WKAPtn Clndnnlll Tiie Two OIU. Cl8McMe: "APllno forMrl. ~·· MM: ''Sc:udda Hoof DlylOI Ourl.MI _Solddl - Htlyl" ..... VouAlked For It ~ Ttxa .. -..... .. NBC,_. 30 tabs Reg. $5'.95 --'4.90 60 tabs Reg. $10.95 --'8.95 While &c>c>tY LMts. &..., Pldl«'' ~ " a.. Jf. _,......._ .. .. r-. " 8THI MUPNT9 r., ....,,. --'1 Oueet; Lou ........ ...... INN f!-' MldW Big Biiie (C)MCWIE LalWw Mlrbll * • * "The P-d la M.A.S.H .. M.A.S.H KCOP ti) a.-... Mowla: "To8e OrHoC To Bl"' .... Wiid Tlc:Tec Douall INN,_. SIMord &Son Tiie Aookill IHHNlwl a..oom TV < ' KOCE ~ ..... ~, Specla •. G.Adlrnlon s.lngin' Tiie ... ~\\O G'-*itno THE NATURAL WINF• The pride, Cfliftsmanship and rare dedication to the traditional. natural wlnemakln9 methods ol the EMILIO GUGLIELMO WINERY Is reflected In t~ rich charec1er and tupetb taste of their wines. This third gener9'1on wlnemaldng family conS1stent1y produces superior produoc. worthy of any nutritionally con· ICIOWS rmet. Couree•" t 1H31 Dirk &oow•. Marie Per8dty. (Z)MCME * * •'\ti• lncr•dlbl• Shrlnldng Women" (18801 Lily Tomlin. Ctwte8 <Mo- din. 1:30 8 2 ON THI TOWN FMturecl: e lclCMc M how t~I rOdl .._ dlflllF trom the wey tflW -d eompen;ee Ilk• to promote them: vlelt Mexico City; c-cun. the·-.,..,. bOm In ~ • lo<* et the Bledc OeHle Murder C-of t947 thel remelne ur..aNed . 8 LAVIMI & INMEt &OOMl'Nt't Lenny end~.._ •• motel room wilt! Ille glfla 8 EYaONLA. A report on the Loi Ange- ... Police Depenment vie. Squad; • lclCMc •t hOw -•lthy gem collector• barte< their jewel•; • vlttt to • llChool tor stunt peo- ple: en lntervl-with ..Penth~" end "Omftl" ' , publilher Bob Guccione. •. M•A•&•H Reder get• a .. Ont John" letter -on a •-d -end the ooctore try 10 come 10 his aQbtenc. with a ,_ ·11 &;·NATIONAL OEOQAAPHIC SPECIAL "Egypt· Oval For Eterni- ty" The worka of Ramsee 11· et• l••tured In a look at 101M mejor erctlNOlogical project• lllhk:h .,. uncov- wing end P'--'9 the legecy of the • Egyptlen phareott•.o Cl) p .ail. MAGA.ZIN( P.M. lekM e look et e dey In the ... ol en ectrns. 1:00 8 Cl) WKAP IN CINCINNATI v-. end Hetb limult• ,__.Illy undergo Mpllrete identity crlMI end both edopt ,_ pereonlllitiM a a MM. PEOPl.E FMlur.O: a p<ofelsionel dOg w1lker: a men whO built • fUll·IQle replic:e of e Viking INp: e doctor wt'O 11 alto . ltend-up com.di· Ill\. • ,.cME See Wednesday's. Page 23 TURKEY BUYERS: We're going to Sheftons for fresh turkeys on Feb. 9: order by Feb.5. Big Week. Small Price. 0.-.......... , ,,_,, •• -...... . TM MW Dally Plot 8·Day~ek PLUS -DAY WEEK 81)ays :·3 .Unes 8 Dollars t . ' =..~:"a. .... :."'!"..:C:S =--=::==-·-~· .... "Tube TopperS KTLA It 8 :00 -··Psycho." Alfred Hitchcock's black com edy stars Anthony. Pe rkins and Janet Leigh. KHJ tJ 8:00 "Getting Straight.·· Elliott Gould mus t choose between academic double-talk and his beliefs. KOCE ~ 8:30 a nd KCET Qt 9:00 - Th e Mo s t Endangered Species ... George Adamson." Profile of a man who has spent most of his life devoted to the care and survival of wild game in East Africa. KOCE 9 9:30 ··swinging the Blues.·· Premiere . Count Basie a nd others share the ir re miniscences of Ka n sas City with Jazz pianist Billy Taylor. From Page 22 Tootle ieopardlze• her * * * "P1yc110" ( 1960) ICllOol WOf'I( and trlend· Anthony p.,1t1ns. Janet llllpa In an allempt to Leigh. tnNI • ~Ml rOdl atar 8 0 THE OAEATUT • 0 TH! FAU. GVY ~HERO Ozzie 1elll Colt that he Ralph and Maxwell are lloM a Cit, bu1 doevt'I aulgned to find a SUC>C>OS· menllon that he was edly 0tdlnaty clown from a escaping from Ille toer>e ot travelling c:lrc:u1. • mutd9r II MOYIE • THE MOST * * * "Getting Straight'' ENOANOEMD IPECIE& .. ( 1970) Ellio11 Gould, Can· GEOACiE ADAMSON die. Be<gen. John Houston ne<rat" a • P.M. MAOAZ1HE profile ot 0.0.ge Adam· An ir\t.,....., with humorlal aon. • man wllO has "*11 Erma 8ombeck; a looll at most ot his lit. devoted to m edicine·• progrH• Ille care and IMVfval ot against cencer In tile put wild game In ENt Africa O.Cade. Marla Shriver a:J MOYIE -now non--1>el uu... * * * "Tiie Changeling" enoea we~ 10 sound· (19e0) a.orge C. Scott, track•: Of. Granlch on Trlah I/an 0.-e. lhr"'-l!lng. •.JO D a LOW. U>NEY • MOVIE Laurie conalde<• throwing •'h "Sky ~r· (1975> S10Ny OY91boerd becauM Don M«edtlh, Stefanie of hil constant CC>mt)lalnll P-a. abou1 ~...,.Cl of their e NA~ ...ca11on cruiM GEOGMPttlC SPECIAL It 8WtNOIN' THE 8l.UE8 "'Egypt· Quest F0t Eternl· (Premiere) "Goin' To Kan· ty" Tiie works of Ram-11 sas City" Counl Bale, are fNlured In a look at Mary Lou Wl"lam1 and some major archMOioglcal other's perlorm and share · pro,ecll Wllidl are uncov· their reminiscences ol .,,ng and pr_..,jng the Kansu City with jazz pl•· legacy of the Egyptian nist 8Uly Taylor l)hataons. O C01 MOVIE CH) MOYIE * • ""High Country" (19811 • •·~ "Eaeac>e From Alea· Timothy 8ot10f'M. Linda tru" ( 1979) Clint East· Pur1. wood. PatrJclt Mc:Goohan. 10:00 D a QUINCY Cl) llll.ARAIE XW1 Outncy lnYMtlgat.. the John Byner snows you dealt! ot an Infant wn.n Ille thlnga ttr81)98' then tru1h, compet.anca ot a 1h0epltal larger than life. and zanier 11 QUMtlOned than anything you· .. -8 0 D't'NA8TY _..In this enc«• pr_. Blake ...,_ out at tile i.tlon ~om the Showtlma uaallanle who bllNMd BWrre litlfary. him. Sammy .Jo plot• • MOYIE againat Fallon. and Krystle **'A "Fatao" (UNO) Dom l1t\lgglea ~ kMt lor Del.ulaa, Anne Benc:roft. Nldl and loyalty 10 Blake. 1:30. ()) THE TWO OF UI • NEUJl A lllelt by &renlWOOd'a par-Nellie Lutc:Mt. • popular an1• ,..,.,, In • declara· jazz alllgel of Ille 30a and lion ot Independence by 408. perl0tme aucih c&u- hll mottler. I.lea M "Alexander'• Rag- • AU. IN THE FNll/4. y lime Bend." ··c.t>eret'' Gloria , ... out ._ IYva-and ''The l.8dy'• In Low ttetlona about being preg-W11fl You ••• '*''on Mike. CB) THE lMT AWAJIOI • THE M09T IHOW WHO:ll Im INCB... Orlld Steinberg llOete an ..,...M».-ON . in-.nt parody ot , ..... Jotwl HoUlton l*Tetea a .. _. .,__ · prOfl!a of ~ Mam, • MCMI ~. a !NII Mio hM apant * * "S.0-ate Ways" moet ot 1111 .. d9¥oted to (1M0) Ker9n IMadl, Tony Ille C«e and ~ ot Lo Bianco. wild game In &al A~lca · 10:11 (%)MOYIE ())MOYIE * * "l0¥9R And LlaR" *•'A "Fatao" (1MOI Dom 10:80. Nftl Del.ulM. Anne Bancro". The car.-ot cl«tnetlel (%) MOYll P9te Founfeln la I.raced *~'A "FOJCet" (111101 ~om hit rootf In Dixieland JOdle Foater, Slllly Kelllf· to 11111 ~ Nt\11 M lop !NII. tourtM attl'actlon of tM ... ()) lllCMI . Ct.eoent c:Wy. "A PIMo Fot '"-arNnO" ()) lllCMI ' -(~). 89"9 Dellll. ·~ ''TM Stud" (1179) ~Nier. . Joml COllM, 0.-Tt*- L~U.MCDGF . .. fl ":>c1 • .w .c.. --.l'lt~.,.,.J,,~ ... • "POPEYE" AND "BRIDGEm IMDOT" PANTS • RUFRS> 11.0USES • PEASANT SKllTS • BATHING SUITS • THE ROMANTIC LOOK • KNKXERS-All COi.ORS • YVES DAllB. DESIGNER PANTS • WAOONG SHORTS • TAI.ORB> JACICETS • GCIJ) AaBmO' \ aOUSES \J I 7tD E. 17th ST • COSTA MESA 645-6731 BUTTONS & BOWS BOUTIQUE M-W & SAT. I CM THULFIJ. I O..t LeuW .. ·-::::· ... C..tw Mnt Te C '-6if ~==--===~-==~ Jbuth Coast Repertory The 81-82 Season .., ............ A ~nt castle on the Italian Riviera is the locale for this witty expote of the theatre. This laµgh+minute romp, full of frivolity and ribald rttpertee. ja Hie comedy for theatre-lovers. Mainstage Curtain Times'. Tuesday-Saturday at 8 p.m. Sunday at 7:30 p .m. Sat. and Sun. Matinees at 2:30 p .m. Limited Seating Still Available 655 Town Center Drive. co.ta Mesa. CA 92626 For tk:Mt Information or r818fVaticn. Cllll (714) 957...o33 , t ~ n\ · .. U'.I ~: . : •1= .. ·~ i '.: ... ! .. ~-. =, :c:;l 0 • -,_ ~ -...z·~o-.... ~ z . ·=: .::» a · C::.,, ~ ·;:. z :.,, l ~·u=·· ··~ .. . • . ~l ~· .. :.. -~ .. -... . Ill, -Wt . . . - ' 1"" I . ,,~ ll~;. -~ ;t ; !! l · &> •. ~ i ~f '01~ :;19' :~ -I§ a l = i" . fl ~l~i ~ !" ' ' •l N. ~ ~ JJ n · F r .: a~ ~a-. !"Ii g t·& >1 .. ~-! ~,.. 0 •. i. -· < 8 ~· i !I~ ~a. ·I -t 1• 1»fl r· ~ ~ ~., !, I : n n 3 0 Pilot lV Log, Friday, J8nuery 29, 1982 ;i ~a ---£«.'• "' .......... I I I -HU - CC> -..J O') C.11 • ~ N ._,. N ·t;T · ._,. 0 I I I I I-I I-I I I I I I I I II I II I I I II I S I I t:all I I I I I I I I I i e I iQli .,.f ., ... i I I llJ Ii ii ... ( ... I~ •-c ... ·! f1:i 1 .. ·l · .... • 1 · :-. r!i' · r · .. · .. · .. 1 .. • ti. Ji i .. i 11 ~ ~ ·I .. f 1 · i' .. .. .. P ... 1 ,, .r11 rrn ... i 11 ·I · . .r .. ·' l'I' .. ·I ...... 11 . ·If i •a P'I ·I I! in• .... _. . .. i •I _.1.! .. IJ ... 1 ..... ~tU(tf .. 11 nr~ ... II .... p .. f "l'i i' 2 .. ·I .. Pf !ff P .... e1 i' 2 ... t II J ' .. : ,ilJIUf >:i ., .. J "J ' .. Hf I! .. u .. ~i .. f: i. i f1fJ .. Ii .p~ "" .IJI i. ~ i i f i'Qli i!f f liii11 ·1 H 1 c fl i• ... , ... 11' 1 i < ·i 1 ;r r1 fJ .. , 'I .. ·l . " " I I " . ~. . . f ' .. . ~ .. " .. J h . h l . I f3 2 "11 .. fl . ii ",. .. I f3 2 ., .l: I f ~I Iii fi l: ~1 i I ti i fll-4 ~J'"' ,. >ifli T .. , ' ,,"I ' ... " " ... ·1 ·1 "ft . .,"I " " "~ • "I . " ... I G l I " " i .. ~! I Cll ~ p ... 1.1 .rP 11n ... u1r .1 ·~ .. .r 1~11 .. p ... 1 .. 11 .. If 16 g P'I ·Ill ... f ....... 1 11 g .. JI Pr .. J .. lf~H' .e ·E:f r .. 'If in U .. pii .... ~u1 i e ~ .rp ~fl! .pt 'I.I r11 i e ~ ·I ·.pi( ·I J . ' . ' .. OU1! .. u i'Jr .. n jiff .f ·f . ' .. ~~fl le~ ,,,,ii .( •U f .f .. If JI 11 ~ ' 'b 17 j -F -II' I I l-. · 1 .1111 ·III .. J!f 111 tin .f If .. l(f f I\ . 1j ...... ~f U[I! i 1 S iii! .. ~f .. f_(lilf flf If i 11 S • ] I • 1• i•11:11 - - I. ·f ~· fp · ~ i <''=I!'.. • f :. ! ~. l ~a ·1= i Ii : r ·= I ~. n ~ ~ !. ;•=~s. ! . HP r J if If HI' .,11 11 11 ·f flH ii(!:· .11~111 ''f 1!18 ~Ii .... '·f llll!~f Pr q. i I • ~ ' I I i i l ·1·•11 :•t l i ! l•I! !~ srl ~ ~ i8l i I! :11ifa:1 f :•fr:• 11f1•ii :s1 ~ ;§1• If i @k ~§f•f ! I'~ fei i (•11 1 ~·1J11• 1-··1 r: ~1~s:5lfl 9l!rf 21 :s •~~,. !r~-:· I sJ:·s· f~5 ~ .. ,~~51::~& ~i lRi (&J.ilN ! •1-01 1•~11~ 1111 ~f1J~iifi I lli!i i~!1 1 !l!t!~ 'i=;1ii!i ij 1llt'i; J~al;'li1Jlhr 1 i1f~ ! ie 1l1!' '~ J:tl~ ,. :1 ~!i 11 iul & 1 1!1 · ~:1!1i'1fi~ IWW :~ .1:1n !; · h rtf H! ' · 11 ~~ fi J1 1·! id • ~-., l'lf ! I ~[i' ft r ~~3 2e 1 ·~J1 j: IE e-·-Ir f II f •I ~i ~, · !o · .f : f ~~,. ~.. ~!fll~ a~ isl. J•: J~ . !. i ! .f . l IJ • ., 'I • I I . DOVE STREET • NEWPORT BEACH • (714) 833-13 Le Petit Cate Bakery & Catering * Open for Breakfast •Brunch•tunch • Quiches, Crepes, Salads • Sandwiches • Fresh Soups Daily • Fresh Croissants and Pastries Da ily • Gourmet Coffees • Teas • Candies Special Brunches Sat. and Sun. All Food Available for Takeout 514 W. l•oa llYcl. l•oaP•llMa 675-6135 -~ Tmn.-S.. CClotH MoiHJiysJ EURIKA AUTO REPAIR Foreign & Domestic 0,..10.,.w• ISat. & s... Toon la.atollp.a 15112 ... Clllca H• ...... leacll 195-1192 (213) 947-2828 Wlittier Domestic Empleyment Tube Toppers· KTLA II 7 : 30 -.. Family Plot. .. Tongue-in-cheek thriller directed by Alfred Hitchcock. KNBC 8 8:00 -"Fame." Bruno falls in love with a girl with an incurable illness. KNXT fJ 9:00 -"Hunchback of Notre Dame ... New adaptation of the ~lassie Victor Hugo tale . KNBC ID 10:00 -··Hill Street Blues ... Captain Furillo and Joyce Davenport get into a courtroom battle. From Page 24 IN Palmer llOme, ...,. Loe Angelel Alm Crltlca Wllfd lnllstl It mul1 be Aw•d9: """ men wtlo hunted down •nd I~ It rldl In the Tehltlen deetroyed (P8'1 5)0 hot•I bu1lne11: Jo•n Ct) MOYll ~Introduces •n... * *°" ··Shoot The Sun ptlllnt: llOuMhc>ld orgenlz-0own·· ( 1980) ChrlttOl)her a •=ont dOOf'. ~-~Wgol Kldc* * * * .. Flr•I" ( 1977) **'"' .. Flnel EJtwn .. (1981) E,rneat Borgnlne. Vera Joel S Ric. Cecile Bllgd•· Mllel. di. • THl8 0t.0 HOUSE e:• a a GIMME A llMAJ( Bob Vll8 disa.1-pi.ns The reuon for K•lle·s tor lnstllllong e wood-burn· -gency trip to the hoe- ing atC>lle end Norm Abrwn plt8I c-u • lhOdc to checlla ,,.. root. O Nell lll>d the Ctllef. Ci) 8NEN< PAEVIEW8 8 9 TAXI Roger Ebert llnd Gene Llllk•'• g.nfrlend from the Silkel review aome r-t old country Is bOlnl>llfcMd tNms 1h•t nellfly ~ by romantic OYertures missed the 11111 lime from boll\ sides ol Llltka's around Including .. Fin· spUt~sonllllty. O oers:· .. G•tM 0 1 H••wn" 10:00 D IB Hill Sn.arr llnd "The Onion Field." (R) Bl.UU (H) MOYIE Cepaon Furillo eno Joyce •• • "The ldOlm•ker .. -08Yenpor1 get In• court· ( 1980) Ray Sharkey. Tovllh room l>•llle o...., the possl- Feldahuh. l>le en tr epment of • tus- (1) MOYIE pect, enc1 So• &•em-**.,., .. B•ck Roads.. 1Mrn1 he m•y aoon l>e • (1981) Selly Fleld. Tommy lather (R) l .. J~. 8) FAWLTYTOWEAS g MOVIE B•sll F•wlty, the most • • • •.; .. Breeker Mor•nt.. 1nc::ompett1nt tnnkeepe< In ( 1980) Edwerd Woodwerd. Englllnd. IS ..wc:t horn Jeck Thompson ruon t>y his ethc:lent wife 1;30 8 di) 8080M BUOOIE8 (Par1 I OI 6) Henry •nd Kip lose • box CID MOVIE they -• guarding tor an * • • .. P~.. ( 1980) und4<world figu1e o Rot:Hn W1t11ams. Shelley • AUINTHEFAMll..Y Duvall It eppe • .,s th•t Glorte may (}) lllZAAAE h•ve her first b•by In en John Byner IN>wl you It.lien r..a-em. (Plll't 1) t!Mge strano-411en trlfffl,- • SNEAK PMWW1 lllrger then Ille. end un!er ,Roget Ebert end Gene then enythlng you'ye - 518*1.C rlllliew -r-• -· lllmt th•I ,...,.iy evetyl>ody llt MOVIE mined lhe flrll time • • • \.; .. Sotdl•r 01 around Including .. Fin-Orenoe.. (1979) Edw•d get9. .. ··G•IM OI HMven" FoJC. s-Penhllligon. encl ••The Onion Reid " (R) 10: 11 (Z) MOYIE G flORTMIT8 IH • '), "Llps11dc" ( 1978) Miii· PAITEl..I gaux Hemingwey. Anne "The Cowboy" a.nc:rott. a:a& CZ) MOW 10:aG. IUTTEAFl.D ***°" .. The Howling.. Ben deddea lo reeume (1.981) Dee W•llace. c:ommunlcellon wllh Ru•· P•trlck Mec:nM. Mii; 8nd Ala liM to Leon· t:OO 8 (I) THE HlJNCH8Aa< 111d at>out her ege. ~ NOTM DAME • THE 1.AWllW<IM Anthony Hopkin&. Defllk CorrHpondent• Lind• Jecobl end Lelley·Anne W•rll1elmer lf!d ColcJ. Down •l•r In • ,_ ed~ Roberti foll! PllUI Dulce tot tatlon of the cluslc tlllll by en up-to-t~te ltHT'I· Victor Hugo. m•ry of Congruslonal 8 al DW'MNT K1Mt1M. IT'fQCR (Cl MCMI Arnold' I dlMbled friend * * * "Which W•y Is K•thy llelps him o....,come Up?" ( 1977) Rlcl\8rd Pryor. his siege frlgl\t 0 Lenette Mc:KM. 8 0 MANEY Mil.LEA (Q1 MOYIE Bun•y •nd hie m•n • * • .. The Europe•ns" ec:raml>te 10 cope with ( 1979) l.M Remick, u .. g•no wertere In Chinatown Eichhorn. wt*1 the m•ycl( demenda Cll ~THC* llcilOn. (Pwt 1) 9 A c:omedlMI llOs1 llnd IOU< • SHOCK~ THE NEW comic conlestents who "Trouble In Utopia" Art compete •g•ln11 one critic Rober'! Hugflee IOok1 enolhet -fMtur.d In 11\ls et modetn wc:Mec:Wre In ~ed c:omedy ~ tndle. Brull. IN Unl4«I .-.. StateundelMwMl•.(R). 11:00• IATUfmAYNIQHT • MAit&#-. Hoel: Burt Reynold•. 'iiuUm1:1 nhs iisi:ii.,.ir ... wtten • teop9td .,..,.... eddlct kif ,.., ; f'ili•oJrauOailSU,, HAS MOVED TO COSTA MESA *GRAND OPENING• JANUAR'r'S Salon of ......, The T otat look by Newport's finest Artists offering: •M~ • Hairstyling • Juliettes • Make-up Lesaons • Maincures • Facials • Pedicures • Sculptured Nails Sculptured NaYs 2 sets for the price of one valued at $55.00 2400 E. Pacific Coast Highway, Suite "A" Newport Beach, Across from Cano's Restaurant (714) 64~3418 Famous Name Brand COMPAlm ATSnt -I L t6 ).:> Hltblltbts for the Week From P, age9 Wed.nesday specials e:oo CID HUNTlllt'8 CIOlD Deng« and Pd'-'tt -0.oil. 1S.,--old boy aahe~-ci IOt Ille mlMlng ...... (Pw1 • JCHf CUMV'I ICBWCNG Olympic: 9old medal-..,_, p._, FlafNnt and ''lea Capedea'' Itel' Jo.Jo Slarbudl ~Cuny 10t thll dlapley ot abllng wtlatry .. CIDTHMR TALL TAlD Ludwlf Von Oralla lloat tllrea~ daaalca.. 1:ao CID HAHi CHNITIAH ANDIMIN'I MMMC ADYINTUM Anirna1ad. A boy and git't tlnd llCl..,.,..ture with • ..... of""'** stcwyt• .,.. Including the ,_ and belov9d .. _ Chrls- tlan Andw-. 1:00 CC) THE~ OIF ..VAWUZ In It* anltnaiad comedy. lhe graady J.8. T"""Pf!Om er~ on tM laland of NeYaMa and trlaa to modemlle It for Illa own perwnal gain. l:OO CID HUNTfMt CIOlD Oaf9w and ~· ...-o11 . 1)-~-old boy .. he daaperately-a- lor Illa mlealnf Idler. (Part 1:10 ~ THflft TALL TM.a Ludwig Von Orab i-t ,,.,,... ...... ad ct..-:s. AM 7: a: 9: 10: 11: 12: 1: 2: 3: 4: 5: KNXT IJ ........... =" .. .. .. .. " .. 1une ~ At A Time Alcl .. llWPrlce .. "'!!" .. T......._ YounoAnd In.,.._ .. .. AIThl World ITWM .. 8-dlFOI TOINr'IOW ~ .. NICDlrCI Riii " .. =' ..... .. ..... .. .. - KHIC KTLA KA8C KFMB KHJ KC8T KTTV KCOP -D ., • 0 a cm m ti) ........... ........... ........... ....... .... ....... ........ .... ....... ........... TodiY, .. .. " .. .. :, Bloc&· ...... ... Of F°""'9 .......... .. ~ "" Thi Dodon Dw;tOf Our U. . .. ~ WOltd .. .. T-.. .. .. Donlfll'9 .. " .. Bob ......., Emir· ...... ..... .. .. .. 1VU (JOOd Mar'*'8 ,,. r• Certoon ... CM> Mar'*'8 ..... FfoGdll Town ~ .. Alnstc. .. Thnll I .. Thi ~ .. .. .. AW., .. FlnllltoMI KanMI .. " lllll-..p Jedi .. Flpper .. .. .. Sin~ lalnle .. .. .. Hot .. ... .. a.. ~ F\ldlll .. .. lllkk• .. .... lmllfG A.M. one lllly .. Oonlh'9 ILM Romper 8lmmoM Loa AIA Time .. .. Lucy Room L.-.11 ~ Ab Mldmolrq .. ~ MIMI: ToWotMn .. LA. .. .. . "Hold ~ lM ThlPrlcl .. AldW'd IDNMIOI Tilll Boll .. Slmmona .... Boil' .. .. """!!" .. Blftllll#I GllOlt And ..... .. .. .. .. .. -I "~ YOUftO And T,_.. ~ " feud Thi ..... Hunc "" .. ~·· " "'*" Thi .. Hope .. °""' Dodon ~ AIMy ..... MIMI: Dw;tOI OMen .. ''a.ctl OurU. r-.. .. AIThl W' .. Zone .. World . .. Hu 1onelll ITLIN .. Artt:llts ~ ToLM .. .. WMd .. 8-dlFOI ..... .. .. .. Tomorrow .. .. Jofll ~ UUIC9IO lranlldl r ... DMlaoll ..,... L.Wil .. " .. " .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. tagtOt Jotln Mollll: Hour .. .._.. DMlaoll "Jaflnnr ~ Aldwd ,.. .. .. ~· ..... Ccut .. .. .. ..... .. .. l.Jllll -·~·.~ --, .. .. .. HcMI .. .. MAS.H . OnThl .. " .. .. Pr1lrte l.Jllll ..... ..... ~. ..... HcMI .. / .. .. OnThl .. .. .. .. Pr1lrte .. .. .. .. RETURNS TO BIG APPLE -Emmy Award winner. Comedian David Letterman. takes a wa lk through Manhattan. which will be a frequent setting for his off-beat. nocturnal jaunts on his upcoming series ... Late Night with David Letterman." on NBC <C h. 41 starting Monday at 12 :30 a.m. following the ··The Tonight Show Stat""ring Johony Carson:· Jolln ~ "'-~ ....,........, ... ~. .... ~ ..... .,_ .,,,.... ~·ve --"'Ml-..-.. . ..,.. ... .. ~ LM,~. ! '-rClrde Styli - ..... i.o.e. "'-· .. "* MIMI: MIMI: "Ounl "llrtgllt OIT'hl t.r' .. ~" .. .. .. .. .. .. uplll ~ Jill_ .. --Thi ~ Wlllonl .. Suga .. 8unny = HICll.ll , ..... Indy ~ Bundi ~ Thi .. Muppeea .. lncrdlll Thi Hull AlnlllOMI .. Scooby .. Ooo pet1orm -ot '* ""* hill , lneludlnf "Sorry ... "i..uotl In LMY1ft9" and "AIMflca-Trilogy " Thursday specials ~•.1112 MOfMNO e:11(8)~ THE a.ACK LIOPAN> OIF ~OH E1ram Jayaalnglla and Fradf'lcll Steyne 11M in tllil ad..,.,..ture. M4 in Ceylon, ot • llOly man wno ,_ • i.op.,d c:ub trom • 1rop- cal pool.(Part 11 1:00 CH> oec:ova: ll"Ol.D UNDIRCOVBI Georfa Kannaoy looll1 et New York Clty'a undarocrv· ar pollCa Mme unite. t:GO CJ) NRFKTLY lJMNK Clorta leedlman .. .... twad .. Broadway peya trlbul• to Frarlll l-. the aongwrllw wtloaa -poaltlone -e rate>ONlble for tM .-. of audl f-"-M "Ouye And Dole" and "How To Suc:- ceed In .,.,_. Wltlloul AMlly T r)'lng ... HO CID r-.. WM: THI ,..,. Didi cav.tt OplotM Illa decade ol th• Great o.preuion. wlllc:h •lao eave blrtfl lo redlo, ........ Hollywood mualcala and IN jlMrbug. lcaO. DIXTIR QON>OH .. CONCmi O.• Ootdon ~In • OOflCert leped In ... "' ................. MIClltDi luM Oft Ille Ohio --~~· KCET KOCE ., «!) ........... ,11 = ..... ""'°" Y0g9 For OI ..... PlintlnQ ---&Ody Mnle 8uddill VIII ..... Allar9 "*" s-ne 3-2-1 8tr9ll Contlcl .. Elle1rlc .. CCllllPMY CIMwoom Thi .... TV Anl.tclne .. EMelionll .. -,...,_ ·~ Blctrtc .. ~ .. ..... .. Lllnr .. Didi .. CMilt .. °* .. &lw .. ClllwOOlll .. TV .. .. .. .. .. .. °'*" " y.., -.. ..... .. Aoaera Honie s-ne .... Str9lt Honie .. .... .. 3-2-1 $-2-1 Conlact Conllct ..... Didi "°"" CMilt s-ne It.Mr s.r... ~ .. llllildl .. IStorv " t.:00 CID ~ THE kACK LIOPAN> Of ~OH Earam Jaylalft911• and Fradrlclc Stayne allr 1n tllia adventure. Ml In Ceylon, of • l\oly min wno rescues 11aopa<d cub rrom a 1rop1- ea1 pool (Part 11 7:00 DeCOY8: .-olJCE ~cova George K9'1Mdy looks at New York Clty'I undarCoY· ar police erime units. t:OO 8 CJ) THI H4 llllCH&tiCK CWNOTM DAW Anthony Hopi< Ins. Oaralc Jac:obl and Lasley-Anne Down 11ar In • new adap- tation of the dalalc: tale by Vlc:tor Hugo tO:OO Cl) 9llMM John Byner &hows you tlllnga llranget than truth. latger than Nfe. and lartl« tllan anytlllnf you've ..,., -· 10'.iO Cl) L»F-A-THON A comedian float and tour c:omlc conlMlanta wtto compete 1galnal one "'°''* we featured In Thia ~ oOfMdy..,.,,. "-· tl:CIO CID ID. A THME- LBTat WON> Man -on -t ha -1t r•1I re1pon••• end Hpert opinlona -UMd in Ihle ~twy to -- -of IN tMat-allllad ~Ions on ttla IUbject of ... ua11ty. a:OI CID oecova: llOl..ICI UNl9~ IClllB't' LOOICa AT NIW YONl aTY'a I.KIMCO""' ..cKJCI a.II UNl'T8. a:ao Cl) mAMI John~.._.~ .... :t.""" "*' trvttl . ··:i..,...t~~ -· Daytime Drama -~ .... Ellen agrees to have baby By LYNDA lllRS<'ll ALL MV CHILDREN: Leaming that Melanie and Chuck haw agreed to a rendezvous in Switzerland, Palmer decides to take Donna there and confront her with Me lanie and Chuck's relattonship Melanie 's mother Judith relieves Melame's guilt over her brother's death by admitting that the night of the accident he had asked he r to pick Melanie up when her car ran out of gas , but Judith was too absorbed in a television concerto and had him run the errand E llen ugrees to have a bab)' Tom Lakes lo drink due to guilt over Sean's imprisonment and his fa ther's heart attack Frank wants to play m atchmaker between J essie and a patient named Angie. but the get-together 1s a fiasco when Jessie insults her When Greg gels al·cepted by Purdue, he docs not tell his mother. which puzzies Jenny ANOTHER WORLD: Rick's former patient Anne Whitelaw bet•omes new managing editor for Brava and Mac s eemi. delig hted with her on pcrson:il and professional basis Clan<~e fearful Larry v. ill no longer lo' f her son Cory now that she's expecting Larry's natural child Thinking Jamie·~ book will be a film hit. Jason gives him SIO.IJOO for Cilm oµt1on In an llttempt to recapture Sand~. CcC'1lle s hov.' u1) JI '.\t ac·, cab111 Quinn and Bob are interl'~tt•d in ••ac·h othe1 AS TIU: WORU> Tl'R~S: <'att·hing Stl"<I~ al tht· apa(lmenl tr) mg 111 Ac.l...hu-~~n. G<tl'-Ot_.~h for getting invol\'ed "'11 h drui.:~ St('\~ 1s <irn·~tcd lll the airport Barb;1ra. st unnl·rl In James druA l'Onncc•t1on. ·~ unsure about his stor~ hut know!> '\he has no respect for him Tom and Margo '>teal \1 r Big !'> plllne unav.an.• he 1:. also on board Artt·r Mr U1g par:ichutes out, Tom and Margo make c•merl(<•ncy lundllli.{ due to lo"' fuel and are strandc.'<I for dayi. in the "ood, until the) discover a man!>ton '.\hranda. arre~tt·d at tht• greenhouse. send~ mcs:.age lo Rob that she "'arncd him to !(l't out of her 1tre DAYS OF Ol.'R Ll\'ES: Romlln and Don behevc Marlena has been kidnapped by the Sal<'m stranglc•r after Marlena decides to pursue one of her patients who fits the slrangler'i. description The Count's father. Stefano. comes to lo"n ii nd l.l'<' plan~ to res ume hfe a:. his mistress. When Alex l'unfosses all his knowkdgi• about his shooting. David Ix-gins to start life anew J essira and J ake considl'r m..irriage f earing Maggw getting too dose to th1.• bab) f:, ;.10 .. ~·ks dtrt•ct c·ustod\' DOC70RS: Afll•r learnini.: uf Bil ly s plot tu 'v.indll' Greta ="1ola fire!' him Jnd en<b lht•tr afrJ1r \1una promises to gc•t Ril l\ his 1oh hat·k. hut lt•.1rn~ ~ola and .Jess1r;i are planning a n t•xtt•m1ed Inµ Stl·H· c·om·mct•s :-.;ol<i to leavC' the hab\ ''1th \fonJ \\'h{'n Btllv threJll•n., :-.;a1ahe for !>hll\\ing o\;olii lht• dwn. l.uke protl'cl~ her Gret~t rcfu!'>c~ to t:.ikt• Btll) hac·k l.t•t• 1\nne·' li~tll· .... nc.,., r auses Grl'ttl<.i ~rn v. ing l'HIH'l'rn 1\llhca dot'' not onderst:Jnd J <'ff"<; mtcre-sr in he•r EDGE CW NIGHT: Wh.-n ('ah 1n goei. to the hol.tpllal to sec Damien. who was n·portedly !>hol Ill the chest al close range by Chumm) D:I\ 1~. hl' 1:. stunn<.'<.I lo find that Damien is not there Derek C'XplJtns r>am1C'n "as s hot with blanks and onl) ~ufr1.•r1•cl powder burns. but reports of Damien's shooting marll' 11 poss1blC' for Damien to go to S"'ilzerland and s<'1ze <;k) In S\\ttzC'rlJnd. Damien confronts Sk) about Bobht' murder and Gunther·s death. Sk) remains calm unttl Roxann<"s letter is mentioned Dain1cn decide~ to ski aft er Sky, but thl· rourse hal.t been altered :ind Damien 1i. tnJured Sk) a lters the btndmg:> on Raven·!> skis Jmx derides to accept Derek's marriage proposal. but doesn't mention her terminal illness G ENERAL HOSPITAL: A reluctant Luke ftnall) believes Scotty about the <:assadine curs e a(f.er two fis hermen dtSeovcr toy boat f,,uke and Laura i nt for wedding present. v.hen l.uke smashes 1t he discovers Laura's earrtng .. L<'Sl1e unable to handle Laura's dis appearance. Dr B radford interes ted in the Quartermaine estate . while Alan and Susan are upset about Monica s plans to sell I.aura T and Mel rear David and they decide to kee p a low profile Delima and Luke decide to hit New York in an uttefl'\pt lo find Laura S To help Laura forJ?et about his m1sde:iltngs . Oav1d hypnotizes her and she "111 onl) n •membcr about the lenses if she hears words "slur sapphire " GUlmNG LIGllT: Amunda tums cold and eonc;1drr-. Ben dead Nola fear!' Qumt and Mrs Renf1eld have de\riOus plans for her baby Quint gives Nola a chinchilla cont Hilary cannot gel over her feelings for Kell) but does not want to hurt Derek Under guard. Alan test1f1es at Carrie's tnal and must admit that following Diane and Joe's murder. Carrie i.eemcd per!cctly normal Returning to prison. the car Alan Is rldmg In blows a lire after a nne shot is rlrPd. luckil)' no one 1s seriously Injured. Ross fears lhat m order lo save Carrie Crom murder rap, be must reveal her secret past. NE •UFE -TO LIVE: Wanda tells ·K11ttn to stop ~Ptli'Mll~~ne's pro•~tt~ hfe ..._~ "'11 owtf' "'1• ·no '""~ F SE?rlr S'C ' RETURNS TO NETWORK llost Ht'l'I C o n \' ~· I <.' a d ~ L h 1.· f c• s t 1 ,. t l 1 l' s o n ··Tai 1 ll•lall's ... llw li\'t.'ly n·ll'hnt ~ gam t' senl'S featunng "e ll KOO\\ 11 ('uupil' <rnd inn>h·ing th<.• studio auclt<•nn· wt•ckd<.t\'~ ul 11 a m on CBS 1 Ch. l • · Whl'n Asa dcc1Clc~ to gt\'{' M1m1 otl i.tol.'k for wcd1.Hng presc•nt. hl' lc:irn5o Hrud ""n~ thl" stoek and re member" that Brad !."and led him b~ a<;kmg him lo s111n ;i ~lark or paper!> "'hu.'h mu"t h :t\l' mcludt•d ll ~tock tran ... fer Whl•n Rrad rl':tl'S lx•ing thro"n Ill J:1ll tf h1.• doe~n't l'IJffil' up "'1th Ill onu h1· dC'l'ldt•, to tak1· tho· mnnl'' from th1· I.Ian\ It'"' \1.1•,t '>aft• hut WJ111l:1 1·utrhe!o him and he d:itm!'! he• "' .... l11k1111-: mon1•\ tu th\' hank Ot•,,peratl'. Hracl pa" n~ Samanl ha ... l'n1;:,1i:ern1·nt rm.I( Wht•n ,\,a rl1i.rn"'r' SJm h<i' rcturm·ll all thl' J"" ••h hut her 1•ngag1•nwnt 11111: h1• thank' 11 m1•an' <,he• '1111 1·ar1'' Learning ,Jcnm 1·~1n1101 h;l\·1· unother 1·h1ld. l11•11•r cl1•c1rte ... to rush ado11t11111 hl i:Nlrni: l'htld from San Carini. RYAS'S llOPt:: Allov.l·d tu Ir) on hr,1c<'let from Maril Kara s hnnl'. l\tucve 1!> "'rat1·hl'd by rough edge. Maevr latl•r 1.·ollap~l·~ and •~ rushed lo the hnsp1Lal b~ Sl'nec<i. her hfl-hanganl( b~ 11 thread During eeremunws Cor opcninA c1f shrine. An discovers second box with h1eroJ(lyphici. that make him reah>:e why he's been followed Delia.finds J ane's reformatory cellmale Doris At party for Roger and Jane. Delia brings Dorii; out , and Dons explains her relat1onsh1p with Jane Jane admits her pllst but explains about a crut'I stepfather and a loveless childhood, rausmg l'Vl'ryone lo pity her <ind be angry with DC'ha S t:AR('ll FOR TOMORROW: Professor Doi an arnves in llcndl'rsnn In work on Operation Sunburst She seem" very efficient and ver) aggressive Travis decides she 1s the right person for the job. Cissy tells L~e thal either they get marrierl or the relationship must end. Roger Lee becomes seriousl) ill and 1s rushed to the hospital. Reye's syndrome 1s diagnosed Ted fi nds Gramte. persuades him to enter hospital for operation a nd offers to pay ror il Dr Oozan decides lo hold press ronrerence on Operation Sunburst Tf:XAS: Ruby and Lurlc•ne arc spooked because Beau·~ corpse seems to be everywhl're Looking for thl' fire compas:.. M1lei. and Mr II wmd up at Billy Joe's apart m1•nl Kuh). rindmA flpau's corp!>e. 1s only able to get part of the fire c:ompa!>s out of his hand Justin remind-. Rena she 1!> losing hrr bet. JUl.tl as she Is about to become• IO\OlvNI "'1th (;rant .Justin tells her It's time to colll'N. meaning he plans an affair "'1th her Ryan warn:. Ren<• that Allison 1~ no one to be tnfled with Vicki 1s drinking heuv1Jy YOUNG AND Tiit; Rf:STLESS: Nikki learns that Victor has boughC the Uayou During a verbal argumrnt with Jack. Carl beeomes a ngry and punches him An a ngered J ack filei. charstes and Carl 1s visited by Internal Affutrs. Patti takel> Jack's part against her father Recovertng from her appendicitis attack. Chris tells Snapper she 1s tired or pla)'lng second fiddle to Chu~~ de.fends his position and says he.'~ doin . tlM for GIR -.S.~111 illl11110 ~· -•cw·~~ '*11 ----·- I . ttJ •h,. ru"""'nt. (,.._M.-.n .. hl,. ••~ of •tn-~UJ -tlfl'"~'"•· •rdu,i-.. ,, l•J.,tmf'•hin• •t\li•t., ft.911•· It ••""""' of •·urrrn1, •UtttM tJrtii.n. 1· > ,. ftt•hion.-hl ... l1nuri@u .. r\. .. lf'Hf"f", 3. 1lt.11m'1;un. _., ... ,..l,,.n••· or4.inttilil\ 1ttltf rhMrart,.r In nth (onu o l urlt•IW-or lhfl'Tftr\ r\prri-t1Ht I . nll uf thr fthtn.-, ""'' roor·-r. In • tH·-"unrl1tt 9'f'f"tJon l'Ul>li•hNI I» lhr l lnt1J~ I fln•e llAlh l'iluc. "°'191 ..... oet>I¥...., "' ---'·:•~ :Y. §: ~ r $ -n ... a. ~ <-~ c I» -< f6 ~ N ... t8 i Friday i movies -, ~ JN#AJNf'( It, 1 .. 't) -= u. EWHMa .§> 7:00 CC) * * * "T1"4 Batlle Of > Algl•r•" (1967) Yeeel I-SUdl, ~ Mar111" Alg«le w-oee a dMperata atrug- (lle lof l!Klepal Ide! ice If om 195' to 1962. CD)••• "The~ Brother•" ( 1980) John Beluafll, Oen Aytcroyd. Two .... 9ingerW ll'IUl1 con- tend wtth the Chlc:ego polkla, 1M CIA, neo-Nula and the U.S. Nm'f 10 put together • btnell1 concert IO raiea money tor their perllh. 'R' CZ) * * "The lnaedlble Shrlnldng WomM" (1N1) Liiy Tomlin,°** Gro- din. A~ 00... wife ~ herMlf getting sm.,.., u her uncon- cerned hulbend IQol{c on 'PG' • 8."00 • * * * * "The Man Who Shot l iberty v.ienca" c 1ee21 J- s1-en. John Wayne. A men ri.c 10 glOry wtMlft he wrortgtr 9CClepl• the ~edll for gunning down a notort- out outtew. 00 * * "Friday The 13th" . ( 1980) Betsy Palmer, Adri- enne King. The reopening of. -camp. cloMd 20 ~_..,after ttwee muraiiri, at1riicta a ~ live klller who knllH ~""' 1--.gefl 'R' (I)***"' "Prtvate Ben· l•mlFI" ( 1980) Gotdle H_,, EJIMn Brennen. A ..-.1o-do young woman mlllellenly join• the Army following Ille dMtll of her new~ on their wed· ding night. 'R' • * * "The High Coun-try" ( 1N 11 Tlmothy Sol· toma. Linda Purl. AFI MCeped c:onvk:t and hie 1\81~ girlfriend run IO the mounleins flMing a 90Ciety that rajecll them. 'PG' l:30 CZ)*.·~ "Bee« Roads" (1911) Sally Flald. Tommy l .. JonM, A hooker and• down-on-hl .. luck boaer "-' and hMd _, 10 find IN child ehe gave UC) for edopt!On two~ -lier. 'R' .. CC)* •• "tlbel" ( 1959) OIM9 de HllYllland, Dirk Bogarde. A man at1em91a IO prow he hM ti.fl libeled bul ruinl Ille ceM when he ha• trouble remembering ctetalle. ... cm •• ··MeMn And How- erd" ( 1980) Paul "leMet. JMoo Aobarda. An other· w1M unk,_ OM .tMIOn a119"dant clalrna lo be the rlgfltful heir to Howerd HughH' bllllo" dollar ..tate.'R' 1ct.110 (I)* *'A "11'1 My Tum" (1180) Jiii Clayburgh, ~ Oougl-. A M- llent CflicagO meth profec. -,...... .... problama In har ~ nMtlonlNO wtlell • flndl • -loYe wNle In New Yortc for her tether'• ,..,,,.,,.... 'R' ····~"llreaker Mor.n1" (IMO) Edwatd Wooctw.d. Jadl ~ ---· Awtrallana oonacripl· ed to fight on !England'• .._ Ill IN Boer Wat .... to tlgM.,. a-...... on ... _ --. -CZ> * * * i. ''Tiie Howlng" (1111) Off Walleo•, ,..,. ........ ,._.. .,.....__..._ ..... Is .......... mooller wtWI pcruu both .u.,.rhumen •Fld eupernatwel ~. 'R' 11.00 CC) •• ~ "The Cel And The CM*)"' ( 1939) Bob Hope. Peuletta Goddard. Ill Otder 10 c:ollec1 their lnherltanoe. • lwnly mull aper1d the Flight '" • hAuol· edhOUM. 00 •• ''lme>roe>er Chen-'*-" (1981) Alan Arklll, Matlelte Hertle~'. A -* of ml1ulldaral•ndlnga ~ a IOClel wortier to belleYe lhal lhe 5-~-old c:IAUghter of • eeperated ~ .. the vk11m of child 8buM.'PG' 11:80. (I) *. "The Prernonl- tlOn" (1978) Slleron Fat· reH, J eff Corey. Th• deranged, MlurAI mother of • nve-year-old girt unlenhU her p•ychle ~ on the Adaptive molher In order 10 get her dm.qlter bAdt. cm •• "Br .. kerl Break· .,,.. ( 1977) Chuck Norrie. George Mutdodc. A CB- odmlled b'Ud!Mr wl>O AIM)._ NippenC to be an eapert In k•t•I• 1echF1lque1, -c:hee tor hie mlHlfto younger brother In • towo ruled by corrupt olflclalL 'PG' (I) • * "The Incredible Stlflnlclng woman" ( 1980) Liiy Tomlin. ChW1el Gro- din. A eut>urban hOUMwlte llFldl herHlf galllFIQ Mlellet u her unooo- cerned hulband too111 on. 11;41iif** "Percy"(1971) Hywel Bennett, Denholm Ellloll. A man ~ An 1nat11111 celebf1ty after • c:ontro-tlal tran191en1 lion. 'R' 12:00 .. * "MeMn And How· ard" (IMO) Paul leMet, Jeeon Rol>atdll. An other· wlM unk-QM lletlon attendant c:laltnc to be the rlgfltlul heir to Howard'• Huger' bllllon dollu ectate 'R' 1t:a0. * * ~ "MM On The Flying Trac>a•" ( 1935) W .C. Fl4l'dc. Mary Brien A d9ugflter helpa her unh•e>· py IAlher eland uc> for hie rlghtl. . II • * ... A MM Alone" (~) 111.y Miiiand, Mwy Mufpt1y. A gunfighter llndll raluge at • •h•rlll'• ~atltlned home. CC} * * "Superdome" ( 1978) David JAl\SMfl, OonNI M.. A tariellc: wlll •top Al rlOthlnQ to keep a lootbAll t..n from winning IM~Bowl CID** "Loophole" 119eo1 Martin ~. Albert Fin- ney. Teneion build• to • INttertng dlfMll among the mem!Mn of • gang wtio at• planning to eae- tule "' elMlorate benk rotlOefy from the -• bekJw tM .. ,.... of Lot>-··PG' 1;00. ***"The Med Aoom" (1919) St• St• -. Sheley Wlnten. A wtclow le murdered lly two demeflted dllldran who -ualrlQ her ia.. llu8- 1>1111cf 1 etudy f0t their ;':9,,; "A 8efl From Hell" ' ( 1970) Vtwca llndfor1, Renaud Vert.y. A .., ..,.,.Ive young men -r-. egalnet hie AUnt Md ttww couelne ,,.., !tie, COfl'lmlt him to • -lei lnetltutlon. (I)*** "t To 5" (1tl0) .... ,..,.. Dolly Pwton. nv,. llOflllnO -,..... ...... ,,. .,..,.. ...-iiiy·--~ lllloaa. 'N ' ,. • ••i. . .,... And Gui" •-> w.c:. ,....., .... _ ... ,.. ....... ----. -_..._ =-~ (CJ. ••'h "Searl-" (1932) Peul Munl. George Rafi A llNll-tlme hooO- lum rlAN lo IN top of IN hNp during Prohlbl11on 0••• "TheHunter" (1979) s-~. E.14 WallllCll. Ralph "Papa" Thoreoo tea01 a dAnQ«· our Ille as • modern-day bounty hunter. 'R' 1;46 CZ) * * 'h "Carny" ( tNOI Jodie Foeter. Gary eu...., An ed,,.,,1urou1 young woman join• • '8rnlVAI troupe and IMrM about the hidden emot!Onl ano lru11ratlon• befllnd the IUtf-h~ of , .... perlormer1. 'R' 7='0 (CJ * * "Deya Of Fury" Narr•ted by Vlneenl Prtce. Art 111-llgallon of lhe chllting _.. of death end clftlruetlOn are rlu<I· led. t:OO. * * * "The Rounders" (1985) Gtenn Ford, Henry Fonda. Two cowpok" hire out 10 breaa hor-- drNtnlng 1~·n someday eneoun1r11 "90 lh•t ectu· ally enjoys the lute of whlaltey ~ tz) * * * "The Big Red One" 11980) lee MtMo, Matk Hemlll A tough Army -oean• lead• tour young, lne•perlclnced r~ulla into Ille ~filled trey or World W81 It eombAI. 'PG' n :OO ~ •• ~ "The Night Por. ler" ( 1974) Dirk Bogarde. Charlotte Rempll"g A bizarre rel•tlonahlp Is reew911eneci belweeri a former SS offtoer Md a former c:oneeFllrttlon camp l>fl.Ol'ICll' when they ,,_. by cilAnCe IO I hOtet after the w., 'R' '1:80. ***'Ai "The Sug11- tand ~ ..... ( 19H) GOI· die HAW<t. Wiiiiam Al'-· IOFI. A YOUFICI mother bec:omea • fugitive and e te>MI hero during • cnme r am1>1199 decagoed IO Pf• vent her inl•nt son'r edoP- llOn. (I) • • "In Old CA11forn1a ( t942) JOhn W1yne. Binnie 8arnec. When a young BoatoFI ph1rmac:1 st attempt• 10 oe>er> • 5hOp 111 calllomla durtngltie GOid Ru~. he eneounlws some big head.a-from the lowo'1 l9Wiels leeder ANGIE'S BACK -Angie Dickinson stars as Cassie Holland. head of a private investigation agency. in "Cassie & Co .. " a drama series premiering on NBC 1Ch. 4 J Friday at IO p.m., marking the actress's return to network lelevision. II * * "The Incredible Two-Headed TrarisplAFll" ( 197 t) 8'UC4 0.11, Pll Prial A two-hnded moo· ater 19 de\lelOpCld during • erar11A1 trantplant (I) ...... "Bee« Road•" (t9111 Sely Field, Tommy l .. Jones A hooker •n<I • down-on-hl•·luc:k boHr meet and head _, 10 tind the Child she Cl'"" up tor edO()llOn two years Nl'lier (II **'A "WlFlter IC.Ill" (1974) AF1dy Griffith, Sher" North A mouFllarn eommunlly 11 terrorized by • mysterlooa murderer ***'A "My Body- guArd" ( 1979) Chris M•kape1c e. Ad Am 8'ldww> The MW kid •I • Chtc:•o o high I C:hOOI mak" llienda w.th the school outcast Ind 1oge111- er they 11and up to the CO.· .. gang ~ had e>er· MCUled lherrl both. 'PG' pretend 10 be WNl!hy In .,, attempt 10 get money trom their Fllece. CZ) **'Ai "Foxer" UNO) Jodie Fo.ter. Sally K..,.,. man. The vlellml of brOll9" hon.a and unc:attng par- .,. ... lour 1-n-Age glftl try 10 o900lhe their emotional wound• through dN9• and Mll 'A' 2:00 ••• "Wiiiie & Phil" ( 1980) MlchMI OnlkMO, Margot l(~Thter peo- ple begin 1' trtlngulAt •-In GrMnwtc:tl VM· ••o• lh•I c:onttnuH 1111ougnou1 the mercurial social """"' ot the '70. '"" 2:11 00 •"Blood Barrlet" ( 1980) Tally Savelae. Eddie Alben. A border patrolman ""' 10 bring landowner• wtWI trafllc: In lleoal allan worti.,.toiuattc.. 2:20 8 * * * "The OCly Of The Jaclltl" ( 1973) Edwerd Fo11, T-Alellander. Art llltemetloNI hit man and quicll-c:hange ertilt c:alled "The Jeclltl.. It hired by IM OAS to - tlnete ChatlM 0. GAUiie. 2:ao ••• "Hortzone Of The Sea" (19721 ~ary. Three ...... di-. find adwnture atld-eadt-• .. lhef uplOre tM oft· ~ t9glone of Auetrtlla. •• ~ "The ltland Of liv- ing Honor" ( 1Mt) John ,,,..,...,, Kent T 9Y10t. A reeeardl teem lllv.!lgat· Ing plflllt and fltlllNI ~ llonc due to atomic letting dlecoWr1I • humeri mula- llOn. CC)•• "~"(1NO) Pe11I Michael Gl11er, Sutan Hogen. A gtoup of rMntat petienl• -mur-cl«ed llCCOfdlng to tMlr lndMduel ......... 2:418 * * ''Cfeeture Wlltl 1lle A'-•••• (1956) RldWd °""*"' ,.,..,,. St•Vlfll. A notorlou• ...... ion----.......... -~ .... ,..,.... out °' .... -. It ti (I) * *" "CW"¥" (ttlOt • .... ..... .., ..... An 1dventurou• young women l<>fn• • camtvAI troupa and INtn• about IN hidden emo41ont and lrualretlona behind the .urf-~-of ,,.. pertormers. 'R' s:ao(I) *••~"Private Ben- l•ml"" (1980) Goldlt Hawn.~ Brennan A ,..._,o-do young woman mlalAICenly )otn• lhe Army IOllOwlng the dMlh Of her new huM>and on their wed· ding night. 'R' S:'6 00 * * * "Coll MiMr'a Daughter" ( 1980) Sluy Sp1cek, Tommy lee .ion.. Based Ofl Lorell• lyon'1 AUl~apfty. A young gift from a poor lamlly Ill rural Kentucky marrlee • much oldet' local boy who~ her, ... 10 11erdom Ill the mualc: lnduetry. 'PG' 4:00 CC) • * "Pmrlormance" (1970) J-Foll. Midi J1Q08'. A llOOd on the run from the mob nnctr unctu· ary Ill Ille hOme of a ~I IO<'mer rod! •tar. 'R' 4: 10. • i. "The Giant Claw" (1957) Jeff Morrow, MAt• Cord«y. Jet flghtera are c:alled In to deelroy a ~h. d9edly bird tl\at .. "*'*""' the popule.. t!On. 4:IO ••• "Unlcric:iwn Wilder· _ .. ( 19731 Two '-'"tlO' 1>oy9 ·~ the mountain NO'°"' of Wyoml119 and Mon•-111 -di ot • ,,_,,. f'Clc>Utedly bvrted th«•. Saturday movies 'R' g * * v. "Sphln•" ( 19811 Frank Langella, Lnley· AMCI Down A ruthlea blaek market Mllq\llllec ring enernpll 10 11op "' EgyptOlogill from dltc:ov- ertng the wh«Nboufl ot • l>flc:eleM 11a1ue w.. wes ~mined to view. 'PG' t:30 CID • * • "Sc:enners" (1980) Stec>f*I lllcic, Jen· niter O'NeOI. A llerce struggle de\1910pa bet_, memW. of A rare QIOUC> of peOple With Uloundlng, and lethal, e>tyelllc power. 'R' 1':A6 8 * • V. "El Condo<" (1970) Jim Brown. LM Van Cleet. A c:lllin gang escap- M and a whlte APAChe teadClr heed lor MeJCoco 10 ateal • mllllon-dofflt tor· IUM IFlgold ,2:00 (.Q) • "ue><>Nd" c 19191 John Lmlle. llttty Sii-A man who once stirred In .outt movies must tAlte part In one mot• "'° hOPA hll MW Wiie dOMll'I find out what he really does ror a ltvlng 'R' (%) * * * "Ned K.ity" (1970) Mick Jagger. Allen Bick lord. Ao Aus trait." .... (%) * * 'h "On Any Sun· dey" (197t) ~laty. Steve Mc:OuaaFI, Merl u-111. The world ot outt-_. r--. on motorcycle racing I• -thoM rerc>OM!ble for put· • ...i~ """' f ting hit mother In jail = ,,_ 1""11 .......,.tt 0 '2:*' ••• * 'h "The Gam- to:OO (C) ** "Melvln And How-bier" (t97•1 J-Caan, ard" ( t980) Paul LeMAt. Paul Sorvtno. A young pro- .Juan Robards An other· leMor larclnAled by gem-. .-.. Ion bllngllllls..,lnlodebt wlM ....,.,_ QM Ital rl!'\ * * * "Fltst Femlty" attendant c:talme to be the L-.i rtghlfUI heir lo Howard (tNO) Gilda RedMr. Bob Hughes' bllllon doll•r Newhart. The , .. ually est•I•. 'R' r~ deugtiter of the 10:00 D ***'Ai "The King And oouolry'1 weirder! presi- 1" ( t958) Deborah Kerr. Yul denllal ltMnlly cornpllcater Bl'ynner. An Engliah GOV· her fllher'I a11empt1 10 -trawtr to Slam 10 conduct the alfAlrt of tlete. 'R' tM!Ctl the chlldr9" of the 1;00 ~*.*•Ai "ScatfllCI" ~ ...... "SpNrla"(IN'I (1932) Paul Munl, a-g. UIJ Rall. A ~time llOOd· Frllt\k Langel!•. lelley· lull'\ riaer 10 the top of the Anne Down. A MNerit ,....., during PYotllDlllon. bledc market ~lqutt-• * •v. "Slat TNll - rtng ettemptl to atop 1111 The Mol!On Plctunr" 11979) Egyptologil1 from dlec:oY· Wiiiiam St\atner. leonatd er1og the wMIMbout• °' • NllnOy The former eom-~ 1tatue etl4 wer permitted 10 view. 'PG' mender of the U.S.S . C1J * * *.,.. "Oona Flor ETtterprlM r~ hla And Her Two Huaband1" old a-and Mts ott °" • ( 1978) Sonia 8rf1C1a, JON mlMlon to find the mysterl· OUI VMMI rerponelble for Wiik., A young Bra:rillan the dertruc:Oon of numer. JNIAJAllf'( 80, 1t11 woman·• bortnQ teeorld °"' ~••Ion atattNpa. rnen1ege .. ~ by IYINNG the lllTIYll of her flret hu.. 1:80 i * * y, "The TeQN" eoo e * * l4o ''Tiie Doeemiflll band'• .-.ione1e gt1oe1. t 11311 Joen eannen. Ran- Oane" ('972) ltyon Mabe, & * * "MeMFI And How· dolpll Scol1. "'°"'*"poll- Hal Aead. Mlflll • pe1r of atel" (IMO) p.,. LaMet, tlOlaN trlM to trill• Teaer croob train • .... °' JMoft ....,... All Otfler• br --...... doM of lflaCMIWat. Oolsrrmei• to ..... and .... unit-oae Matton 8 ** "lfts-dlOf ....-to con-• lly atl9nclant....,.. '°be.. ...,. •• Ml" ('t7t) ~ ...... .. ... ... ..... """"' ..., to Howwd'• •ad ..., ____ ., ... _ ... _ ........ t~----· -......... -............. _ .. ...; .... ~--;...:.:_·~~, -----,.~ ... It ··----,....~ Mailtenance Free WINDOWS For Life! ARE YOUR WINDOWS ... OXlllZED -DUE TO OCEAN AIR INFLUENCE? DRAFTY & COLO, CAUSING HIGH FUEL BILLS? EXPENSIVE TO PAINT & MAINTAIN? DANGEROUS TO CLEAN? ARE YOU FED UP WITH YOUR OLD & UGLY WINDOW PANES? SAVE ENERGY, SAVE MONEY•. WITH I 000/o RIGID PVC FRAME WINDOWS & PATIO DOORS YIS. PLEASE S84D Ml MOU INFORMATION ON: =:J RIGID PVC WINDOWS =:J PATIO DOORS NAME: .................................. Phone:( .... ) ............. . ADDRESS: .......................................... ··.:...;.· ........ . CITY: .............................. STATE: ...... ZIP: ........... . Eich Corporation L.A. TAOCAL,. WINDOW DIVISION -ATTN. MR. W. KINDOR I I 08 W. Colorado Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90041 12131 254-6885 r-~--...;.. ___________________________ 19 JoaNB1,osSEa 0.BPBT~ The Oldest Floorcovering Retailer in Sout_he_rn California Family Owned· Iii\ Serving California ~ Since 1879 . 1Jo-_,,466unuu:11 o/ &c11//.nc11 .... li N r,=:::.============================~·~ J/tJ~t/r_ikod~~ ~ 1912 · WINTEI AVIUIU * * * *LIMITED NUMBEI COIPOIATE AND REGULAR MEMBEISHIPS · COIPOaATI MIMIHSHiPS have fulJ club prlvllegee including • tu advantage. Members freq114tntly use our attractive faclllties for banquets. board meetings, client luncheons end aoc:l.i activities (minimum 2 families). ~ t• WMSHIPS for families and single people ere offered 'n a vwlety of membership programs Including exten91w Jr. programs 12 yrs. and up. Wedding receptlons and private pertles ere • epeclalty 8l N.B.T.C .. for members only. 11 NEW 11 **** AllOelC MIMIH5HIP Taught in our Aerobic T ellciling Center by Phil Johnson with 12 years ex,,.nence in physical fitness. S 150 initiation fee lncludet 2 months free or 24 ct-. PLUS e months of enjoying • FAIULOUS SOCIAL UR S 100 Initiation fee will be applied to any other type membership et M.l.T.C. TIAMSM.ULI for e momtha only. JHI ••• end experience the "good life.·· Find out why the N.B.T.C. has been sucoeeafully satisfying its members for the past · 17 veers. For membership application and Information, please cell our S.. Directer • ..... S.LWi.64400IO. //f/HjPIJl/ r;lJavA,;y~ ce~ 2601 EASTBLUFF DRIVE, NEWPORT BEACH, CAUF 644-00IO . 1/ing/ ~fooring anJ WooJ ·p ar'liµ!/. I Conlracl • Comnu1rcia/ • R116ul.ntia/ COSTA· MESA J . . ' • • cat. c.e. .... .,. HO URS: Mon.-Frl. 9-6 Sat. 10-S ' Ntv.c.t.•.n• ,LOSc.ANGELEJ LONG 'BEA~H, -~ > 50 N s ~ ~ l'O ~ c l'O .., >. l'O 't) ·;: LL 8' _, ~ £? ~ • Movie Gulde for the Week --------------------------------- From Page 28 C<andalt A df81MllC ... c:tNllon of Ille biblical •to- ry ol the GrMt Flood hlghllgllta this eccount of the -ctl for areheeologl- cal and hlatOfleal proof 01 "'8 IWll'• ••lstence • **"' "ShOck TrNI· menl" ( 1964) Stuart Whit· man, Cerol Lyntey A psy· chlatri.1 subtec1• a private lnYHtlgator 10 e•tensl11e ihock trNtmenta In an at1emp1 10 gaon po-.IC>n ol an inmate's stolen tor- tune 1:46 * •'h "Back Roads .. (1981) Sally Field, Tommy LN Jones. A hooker and • down·on-hlt -luck l>O•et meet and head_, lo flnd lhe child she gave up tor adoption two years earher 'R' 2: 15 (H) • * 'h "Zulu D1wn" ( 1980) Bun L•nc••t•r. Peter O'Toole,, The English wage • bltter struggle agalntl the ZulU l\lltlon In 19th-century ~lea 'PG' 2:30«:) * * .. MeMn And How· ard .. (1980) PIUI LeMat .. Jason Robards. An other· wlM unllnown on stetlon attenc:tent ctalma to be the rightful heir to Howero Hughet' bllllon dollar estate 'R' (I} * * * 1A ''!Veaker MOfant" ( t980) Edward WoodWard. Jack Tl>ornp. son AuS1rellens conscript- ed to light on Englancf1 side In the Boer Wer decide 10 light the Boer guerlllu on their own tetms 1:108 * * "ThOM Ende&tlng Young Ch1tms" (19'5) Robert Young. Ltralne Day The happy twosome ol • pretty young Mies Clerk and an Air Force mec:hanlc: becotne$ lhrMI· ened by the pretetlC41 of anotr-man 3:20. * * "Blood 01 The Vamp1re·· ( 1958) Qoneld Wotlll, Barb8fl Shelley. A young B1varlan doctor becomes lnVOIYed Wllh • vaMplre 111 a prison for lhe lnMne 3:30 8 *,. • ·The Tall Tex· an" ( 1953) LIOyd B<ldges. Marie Windsor. A band ot lteMUf....--MtSout for the ~ on Mlrctl Of gold that Is reputedly conc..ied In 111'1 lndiln buflal grOUnd. 0 **'A "HollywOOd Bouieverd" ( 1976) candlee Rlelaon, Olclc Miiier. Fraall lrom lndlene. • young Mplf'tno ltlr1et ti.coma lnVOIYed In • rHI robbery that the thinks Is part ol her mcMI debut. 'R' Cil ·-·."' .. The Howllng" (1981) Dee Wallace. Patrick MecNee A --lr'll'Y "°' mal human being tf9119'otm• Into e kilter l'llOl'\118' who~ bolh suparhuman and ~natural pow«a. 'R' 4:30 CC) •• "Death Car On TheFr--t' CJ) • *'A "Bad! Roedl" (1981) Sally Field, Tommy i.e. Joi-. A hOOker and a down-on-hl1-luck boxer meet and head _, to !Ind the child tile gave up tor adoC)tlon two yMr9 earlier 'R' Sunday movies JNIAJAlfV 11, 1tea Involved with an all-woman ltlbe. CC) * * \41 "Tr. Frlt4;o Kid" l1979) Gene Wiid«, Hanl- aon Ford. ,,. POlltll tabt>I finds hlmNtt lnvo!Yed In wild frontier mltadven· -""• .wlUI a dattno banM rot>baf when he tr...,... to San Francltco to taka over a new congregation 'PG' (I} * * * "Boyt' Night Out" (111e2) Kim Novak. James a.met. When a 111ape1y young co-ed un<l«takff a sea r-arch ptOjeell. the llnda lour t>ualne:satnetl more than willing to leaM an apart- ment to aid her In ._, .stuely U * ** "9 To 5" (1980) Jane Fonda. Dolly P811on Thrff working women r9bel aoaon11 their wbtu· gallon by a male chauv+nlat bOU 'PG' (%) •*'-'"Carny" ( 1980) Jodie Foater. Gary Busey An adventurous young woman joins • camlvll -troupe end tearnr ·about the hidden emotions and lrut1rat1on1 beNnd the sur1ace happlnesa ol the Pfl'lormert 'R' 12;30 • • • 'h ··Btea1cer Morant" (1980) E<lw•rd Woodward. Jack Thomp. son Au1trallant con1er1p1. ed 10 tight On Engiancf a side In the Boer war declde to light the Boer guerillas on their own I ma 1:30 **'-'"The Groundstar Consp1racy·· (1972) George Peppatd, Mk:hael Sarraz>n The Ub· CRISIS IN ALASKA When the armed for ces from the Sovi et Union invade Alaska to seize the pipeline. Lt Col. Jake Caffey <David Soul 1 leads a bl'i~ade to de f e nd it in the powerful f our-hour miniseries ... World War Ill ... on NBC < 'h .i l Sunday and Monday at 9 p.m . otage ol a secret sp-the ~ large Gilbreth project Mii otl a rulh14151 !amity Investigation. 8i) • • • ··un1an Ruaaell'' 8i) * • • "Sonil Of Fr.. ( 1940) Allee Faye, Don dom" ( 1936) Peul Robe-Ameche A glamorous son, Ellllbeth Welch A g111·s Nie '" the 1.11te 1800e black stevedore wk>a •-ts lilied Wtlh mueic 111'1<1 aa e Conoet1 llnger end dedk:aled admirers. journeys to Africa tn 3:30 GI * • • • The Eaecu- seatch ol 1111 roots toon OI Pflvate SIOvotf ' 2:00 e * * * "Big Jim ( 1973) Martin Sheen. Ned Mclain" c 19521 John Beally. The first Atne<ICan Wayne, Nancy Otaon A 10 be eaacute<I '°' d-· special agent and hos loon since the Covil War astlatant attempt 10 stem rep<esents the perpetual the ll<Je ol terrorist ecuvt-ballle be1-1nd•vld0al ties 1n Hawaii and n111ona1 r1gnts In time CC) • • "Double Troubki" of wat ( 1967) Elvis Pretley. CC)••*'-' "Oay For N>nette-Oey A young &ot-Nog!tt" (1972) JllCqueim. lsh heueu becomes Bisset. Valenllna Cot'l- ettrecte<I to a famou• Ol•ec:ted l:!Y Franco!t Trul- Amerlcan P09 singer faut The 1-and loves ol (S) • * • ··Sunday In New film performers are t1Ud· Yotk" {1964) CNff Robet1· led In e ~wlthln ... son, J-Fond• Alter movte ·pa· being ~lted by her boy· 4:00 II • • "The Incredible lrlend end trlMlllng to New Two-Headed Transplant" Yortl to Ylalt her brother,• (1971) ~ Dem, Pat young woman conllders Prffff A two-hellded mot!· her position on virginity Ster It developed during a CZ> • • "Uncle venya .. 5:00 (tt) * •'~ "Pepillon'' ( 1973) Steve Mc:Oueen. • Dustin Hottman. I'-peor ol Devil's Island convicts spend the" time planning their escepe (0) * • ,.., "A Flsllul 01 Oyn1m11a" j t9721 JarnM Coburn, Rod Staiger An lnsh revotutlonary and a Mexican thief who 111am up 10 rob banks ~ wind up being he<oes ol the Mellcan revolution 5:30 (C) * • •i, "Quentin Dur· ward" ( 1956) Robeft Tay. tor. Kay Kendall King Lou· IS XI attempta to c:teate • n111on11 slate OUt ol a leu· dal system ( * * '-' "FrMky Friday" C 1977) Jodie Foster. Bar- bara Hams The world la turned upside-down tor • mother end daughter who magically switch bodies one tetefUI day 'G' 0 * * • "The Hunte.-· c:tanlal tr*'9plant t:OO e *•,..,"The Daring (1979) Steve McOueen, Ell e • *°" ··u1ya-·· ( 1955) Doberman•" ( 1973) Wellec:h. Ralph ··Papa" Kirk DouglH, Anthony Charles Robinson. Tim Thoraon leeds a danger· Quinn While Utysset Con91dlne A group ol con out Ille u • modern-day m•~•• • roundabout men train a gang ol Dober· t>ountfhur1ter. 'R' retum jOutney lrom the men plntcnwt to carry out CZ) • * • "The Boy Trojen Weu. 1111 wile a _ ... of robberlaa, but Friend" ( t97 t) Twiggy, struggles to protect Illa they are outlll'larted by a Chri.1op11er G-'>le. When throne. youllQ Indian bO)' wflO an llllle1ant slag9 mane-Q) • * * "Ml!Chlne Gun IOvaa the dogs ger repl8C4ll the female McCain" ( 1970) JOhn Cu-• • • "Jeurs Glrla" lead In a 1how. the aa11etae, 111111 Ekland. A ( 1975) Sondra Currie. Roel becomae • 11ar and llnd• paroi.d convkt plans to Cameron An embittered romance u well. rob • M11i1-contro11ed Widow organizes a groue> 2:30 G • • * "Sherlock ceslno by bombing much ot women to svenge the Holmaa And The Pe.I DI of Laa Vegu vlciOUs murder ol her hu• O..tti" (19«) BUii Ralh-Cl)*·~ ··Fatao" (1980) band. bOne. Nf9el StUQe. Sher-Oom 0.LuiM, Anne Ban-llt • • • ··Popeye" ( 1980) tock HolmM and Wetaon c:ton A portly compulslYe Robin WMllama, Shelley ..t out to lnvwtlgate the .. ,., linda that nothing Duvall. Whlle ... rchlng '°' my11ary surrounding a can dampen his deelra for 1111 lather. the 19lnech-eal· tlollfl ~· food untll he I ... In lo..-Ing Allor llltlTI a qulillt CID • * * "9 To 6" C 1980) 'PG' hamlet where he pleka up• J-Fond•. Dolly Pinon. O ••~ "Spllln•" (19411) loundllng and a tklnny ThrM working WO-Frri ~ l.eeley-~'PG' rebel egeillet !Mir tub)v-Anne Dowft. A MNlee CJ)**"' ''On Any Sun· gatlonbyamelecfleuvlnllt bleck ,,,.,. .. 1111tlqulllaa Clay" (1971) Dooumentary boea. 'PO' rino .. *"Pt• to etop M Steve McQueen, Mett 1HO. ** "TananMc!The ._. *** "~lly EgyptolOglal tfom dllcov· Lewwlll T'M world of "-" (19451 .Mitwtny The Doaen" ( 1960) Cllflon erlng Ille ~ta ot • motorcycle 111Clng le _, WelMmUltt . .Mitwtny 8tlef. W.00, ,..,_ Ct91ft. l.lfla ~ tttllVe ft -from verylnO point• of ......... .._ _________ _,...__ .... _ ........... _ .. ...._'' l1r:· 7:80 ~**Of "The FrilCO Kief' (1979) 0erie WIOer. Harn-'°" Fotd. A Polllll rabbi llnde hlmMll Involved In wild frontier mlaadven· lures wllh a dating bank rabbet when he 1r1Y811 to San Franc!llCO to take over •new congregation 'PG' (Q) * ·~ "Footln' Around" ( 1980) Gary Busey, Annelle O'Toole A naive c;ow11ry boy lttH to wtn I l>Nutllul. scc>hl•ll· calfld college c:oe<I away lrom her snobbish llence end ,_ equally upptty lam1ly 'PG' I ZJ • * • 1'> ··The Howling ( t98 I) Dae Wall1ce. Patrtck Macnee A woman reporter Is menooe<I by a k1llet who seem1 to be 8 wer-oll 'R 8:00 GI * * • ·~ "The Sugar· lend Ekpress" ( t974) Gol· die Hawn; W1lllam Ather· Ion. A young mother becomes a tugltlw ltld • Iott< he<o during a crime rampage designed lo pre- vent he< Infant aon·s aCIOC>- llOn (R) * * • "Popeye" ( 1980) Robin Wllllama, Shelley Duvall While Mlrch1ng lot -~ther. theec>Ml9Ch ... I• lllQ UliOf VISlll 8 Quaint hamlet wt>e<e he plekS up a loundllng ~nd • a~lnnY -thear1 'PG' * *'" "TheSNNnf'' I 1980) Jacll Nleholson, Shelley Duvall Directed by Stanley Kul>rldi A former sct>Oolt .. cher hired u a winter cerataker tor • remo1a, and apparently haunted. ColOfadO llotel. is enowbound there with his Wiie and clalnroyant young '°" R' 9:00 D a ''World War Ill" (Pett I) (Premiere) Rock Hudson. DaYld Soul The Soviet Union retaliates against e U S grain a<nbargo by Mlz.ng the Alesk1n pipeline, cumng off the United States· Oil supply 8 {!)) • * • "Slapsho1 (1977) Paul Newman, Mocnaf!I Ontkean A ml,_ league nockey team gives the sport ot noelley a new name when 1t decides to spruoe up 111 Image by· playing dirty. O 9:06(ZJ ***"The Boy Friend" (1971) Twiggy Christophe< Gable When an USISlllrll stage marta· ger teplacel Ille lemale teed In • allow. the becomee a •l•r and llncls romance as well t-.30~ ••"Double Trouble'' C 1967) Elvia PrHley. Annelle Day. A young Bnt· lah nelreu becomes •ttrected to a ,_ American P09 linOet· Cal ••'h"e.dl~•" (19811 Sally Fletd. Tommy Lee J onM, A lloc*er end • down-on-hie-luck boxer meet end heed _, In -en 01 a new Nfe 'R' 10:00 0 * * "The Return" (19811 Jan·MichM Vin· cent, Cybill Shepherd Two people """° had • c:loee encounter with en eliefl epec.crall H chlldrer1 -111 the aliens' Imminent return. 10:acl (ft) •*•'-'"Breaker MOfl.l\t'' ( 10801 Edward WOOdwerd, Jacll Thomp- son Auttrallana conterlpt- ed to light on England's llde on the Boer War decide to llghl the Boer guerillas on their own terms. Cl) * .. The Ctllldren" (19801 Mar11n Shaker, GM Rogers A strange ra<lk)ac- 11118 cloud turl\ll • ll'OUCI of sc;hoolenildren Into mur • deroua JOmblet with blade ~l~nel.._ 'R' I 1:00 C.CI ***"'"Dey For Nl9ht .. ( 19721 JllClqU9llne BlllMt, Valentine Con-. ow.c1td by Frencole Truf-,..,. Jtte 11-end lovee of lllm per1ormera 811 llUd· led In • movie-within·•· m<Wle. 'PG' * ~ "Llpltlck" ( 1978) Margau• Hemingway, Anne B1ncrol1 A top lull· ton model Is h\>mlflate<I end lrustrlted by lier untuCCHtful auempta to sentence the man wno r~ her to prison 'R' 11:15 (Q) * • • • .. Altered St.tlH" t 1980) William Hurt, Blllff 8'own A Her· va10 se1en11s1 s genetic; SlrUCtUfe Is alteted when he conducts m1nd-il•Pand 1ng e~P6f 1rneni. with 150!•· I~ lanka and power1UI halluconogens 'R 11:30 ID * • * * "Tne faecu- hon Of Private SIOvlk" ( t973) Marton SheM. Ned Beatty The '"" American to be eaecuteO for d-- tton StnC8 Ille CIVIi W81 r89f-ll the pe<petual battle between lndtvodual and natlOnll tights 1n urne ol w 81 Cl) • • "Dial A Deadly Number·· I t97SJ G.,y Col· lins. Gemma Jones An unemplOyed actor poMt as a psyc111atr1st 1n order to con mG<l4IY trom a woman tormented by-nlghlmarn a * * 1,; "The Gangster Chrontc:let" (Par1 4)11981) Michael l\jour•. Bt1eJ1 Ben· ban lucaano dlscov8r"I that Legs" Otamoncl II Infringing upon Ills territory and arranges to have him eUmoneled permanently IRI 11:460 ••'n "TlleGangster Chronlclea .. !Part 4)1198 1) Mlcll ... Nouro, Brian Ben· ben Luciano discovers that .. Lega·· Otamond IS lnlnnging upon his tetrilory end arr"'!098 to have him eliminated permanently (RI \ 12:00. •'It "R1ndy Rides Alone" ( 1934) John Wayne, Alberta Vaughn A cowboy rnhltrates an OUI· law gang to gather evl· <lence ega1ns1 thieves who raided an e•prau c;omp•· '!!'.. offocti Qg * • • • Money From Horne ( 19!>31 Dean Ma1- un. Jarry Lewis A man IS IOfced lo slop thf! fav0<1te horse from w1nn111g an lmporlant reoe when a gangster tlli<es ca<e ol the debts the man-· r~ • .... The 1118fld .. 11980) Mlcheel Ca•ne, David Wamw_Whill.VIVH• ligating • rash ol lhlp di• 11>P411t8nc4ol in the Bermu- da T rllngle. • IOurnlhal ttumblet llCltOU IUI lsofal· ed. 400-year-old colony of plr•t• 'R' 9 * * * 'h "La Cage Aua Follea" ( 1979) Ugo Tog- nazzl, Miehe! S«raull A nlghtdub -tries to l)fepate his trensvesllte lover tor • visit by his son's flancee'• lather. the morals commlaslonet 01 F~ance 'R' 12! 15 8 • • • "Jene Eyre" (1971) George C Sco11, Sueennah VC!ftl. Baaed on Charlotte Bronte'• novel. A • young Engllth governess lilts on lo'll4I with • man whOse wife is rnacl. 12:20® **'-' "Paplllon" ( 1973) Ste\19 McOueen. Dustin Honman A pelr ot Devll'f Island c;onvlcta spend' 1helf time planning their escape I~ CZ) * * "The lnc~edlble Shrinking Women" (1980) Liiy Toml!n, Cllartea Gro- din. A housewtle find• II hard to cope wtl8'I she 9Uddenly beglnt IO tllrlnk In tile. 'PG' 1:00 (J:) *. *'" ••8enenes'' (1971) Woody Allan, Louise laMr. A prOdUC1 t8118', bored with his ~•Y rOUllne, goee to a amell Latin American oount,.Y end beoomel a dictator during a polltlcll See Mew:. Page 3?, J ~~~~~~~~~~~~~----~~~~~Jm I Wherever yru busy 1tlll8l'My tJkes you ... few tJomess CK pleme, before you go -pla1 a stop to Pat lbley's. For ll )US oow -Pat Marley, hmsett, nl associates continue to present men's fashioos that eRire in dress or casual! Now we've exteOOed to ladies' trutins! We akG'fs have a hideaway sale upstairs in the attic r0001. Plus all •Ollld the store )OU'll find inxpected collectties nl gift items for MtY special gift! The Look of Satisfaction Old fashioned cour tesy and sensitivity to your needs Complete line of Victory Quiotessence eye wear available Owner Operated Under new ownership All New quality custom eye wear All New quality sunglasses All New fair prices All Rx's filled accurately OPTICAL FASHION CENTER NIWPOBT 3417 Via Lido, Via Lido Plaza Newport Beach, CA 673-1883 Open c;>a!IY 9:30-5 :30 I ROOM ADDITIONS -REMODELING j- . AS LOW AS 596°0 A MONTH* THERE HAS NEVER BEEN A BETTER :-' TIME TO ADD ON THAT EXTRA BEDROOM : OR BATH. OR ADO A COZY FAMILY RO OM .~~·) . , WE ARE ALSO SPECIALISTS IN KITCHEN ..,._ AND BATH REMODELING . t(Zj CALL NOW FOR A FREE ESTIMATE OR~ VISIT OUR SHOWROOMS AT ~ 2tJ WISTMINSTll MALL : ISa!I -cu•••Ll'tMMI SIAISI :JJJ I i;Mil QQ.% _P..E B f 0 B M A-N CE B-0 N-D --~ -__ .. _ =COMPLETION DATE GUARANTEE -LIEN ~ 1S:1iUFREE CONSTRUCTION. ~ :IlJ 714-lt .... 17' ..:.. 714-lfl·4tl7 i a LAMO -.. B D . (H CONSTRUCTION m 'BASED ON SALES PRICE OF 16.000 , ·~ ~ 19% A.P.R. O.A.C m ~~ 8 1-373261 r:-:l' -. "811-help you build the ultbnata car •lll'D-syslem. /ILPINE car aadla systems • We' re the largest Alpine car stereo dealer in Or~nge Co. -Come in & see why like your neighbors have. c ..... lf'h-I g0 1.-..t & fwl .. ~ ~ ,.:......-... -... , ...... ow lhn.a w•1-'r. I W ...... 1600 Welh .._.. ,,. ..... • Fl& T·S .. IT WITH THIS AD ' > ~ _!from Page 30 c ~ll 'PO' ~ 2:00 Cl)**'~ "Fetao" ( 1980) Dom Del.ulM, Anne Ban-- "°"-A j)Of1t)' compultlYe .. .., lnde "* nottllng can_d*"'*1 l'IL~ IOt food umh M telle In love. 'PG' • * * "New Y-'• Evil" ( 1980) Roz Kelly, Kip NIWrl The dllc jockey at e P<ri roek club reeel-• -'-of phone calla prom- 111ng tNll 10tNOM .;ii De murdered In her honor ~ "°"' ~ nine and midnight on N- v-·1 EW1. 'R' (%) • *'A "On Any Sun- dey" (19711 ~laty. Steve McOueen, Mert t..t-111. The world of motorcycle raclno I• _, ff'Oftl verying polnte of view. 2:iO (C) * * ~ "The Frteoo Kief' (1979) Gene Wiider, Herrt- _.. FOtd. A Poll8h rllbbl tlnda ........ lfwollled ~--........ --~~~-·· wld fronllef -miudven- ..,,.. """" • derln9 ben6c rot)ber wMrl lie tr.,.. to s.,. Erencleco Jo telc• <>* a MW congr410Mlon. 'PG' l:OO ® •• "' "c.llfomle ~ .. (1979) o.rww Chrlalopher, Glynn!• O'Connor. A equere young men from ClllCago arrlvM °" IN Cellfomle bMctl acene end become• ir!volYed with Ille daugtlter of en egll'Q bMc:ll bum. 'R' J:IO CJ) * * '~ "The Shining" ( 1NO) Jeck Nlchojeon, Sheley Duvel. Olrect.d by Se.Ney Kutwlclt. A former ~ hnd .. • winter cetetelter for • remote. end 11C>PWenlly heunted, Colorado hot ..... ~ there with hie wlle lftd ~·young --..·R' •• * 1-t "Serlel" ( 1980) Merlin Mull, Tuetd•y Weld. A heppily married ~a-WI County couple are apuned by tl*r trendy neighbOr• Into exploring .. temellwi hl•tyles 'R' (%) * * * "Tiie 8lg Red One" ( 1980) Lee M8'Yln, M8111 Hemlll A laugh Army -QMlll leed• four young, lnexpertenced ~tt• Into Ille vlolence-filled trey ol Wond War II combet. 'PG' 4:30 CC) • • "Ooubte Troubte" ( 1987) Elvla PrHlay. Annet1e Dey A young Brll· 1111 helreu become• attrecled to • famous Amedcen pop linger . ..U®*** "9To5"(1980) J-Fe>neU, Dolly Parton Thr" working women rebel egell\81 tlMW IUbfU• getlon by a mele cheuvlnlat t>ou. 'PG' Monday movies ~1.1982 ~ TIME TO Pl.AV DIRTY -Paul Newman (center) is a. player-coach who isn't gettfng any younger or any more successful -his hockey team is falling apart, his wife is walking out and his job is caving in and Michael Ontkean (left> is a young team member opposed to Newman's new and winning style of playing dirty, in "Slap Shot." Sunday at 9 p.m. on ABC <Ch. 7 l. -ch oh -lite. 'R' ~ agent It aided llflriN!lng WOfMll" (IMO) 7:00CC) ** ''Superdoflle'' by an old llM'9 1n dodging Liiy Tomlin, en.,... Gfo- (1978) David Jana_,, the KGB end Ille CIA. wt'O din. A ~ finds It Dome Mila. A I-tie will are I~ lo pr-I him lwd IO OOCM1 ~ llhe '1QP et tlOINllgfo keep • from putlllalllng Ms rnetn-~ begll'8 to btnk toatbllll *'" fl'om wtM1nQ oh. 'A' In -.:-~PO" · Ille Super Bowl. (I} * * * * "Alt«ed ta.. 9 * * "Rebel Of Tiie cm *** "The OH-" Stet•" (1980) Wllllem Road" 11979) Grego Hen· (1973) Sean Connery. Tr.. Hun, Blelr Brown. A ...,_ ry, GrMt ~.A,,_ vor Howard. While lrad!lng vard tclanlltt'a gerwtlc ~young men 1ek• dowtl 1 c:tlltd moteeter, • atNCtur• le llt....S when lo tM °'*' roed for • London detectlYa tlowly M conduc:tl mlnd-e11pend· oaar"9rlndlng run agelnat edgee lllmMlf toward a tng experlmenll with ltola-llMvy Oddt CR) '*"®I tlfultdown 'R' tlon laNcl Md ~ D * • •!Murder In Peyton 8'°°. • * * * "~orioua" halluc:lnogena. 'R' Place" ( 1977) Ed Neleon. ( 1948J Caty Grant. lngrld •..30 ® • • • ~ "The~' Dorothy Melone. The mur· Bergman. An Amerlc:en Man" ( 1980) John Hurt. ders or two Peyton Piece undercover agent per-Anthony H1>911ln1. A dedl· retldenl• trigger • wawi ol ~ Ille daughter of • cited phy1lclan tallH Intrigue end suspicion treltor 10 lnflltrale • geno under Illa wing • horribly wNeh s....apa the town_ of Null llvlng In South deformed men whoM Ute 12::30 0 • * "Melvtn And How- Amenca untu 111en hed been apenl etd" (1990) Paul LeMet, e * • "Kllldozer" C1974) In cllMp lrNll nhiblttons. Jeson Roberd•. An 0111«- CMnt Walker, J-Wein-'PG' wlM untcnown get •l•lk>n Wftgnt. A gi8n1 lftnlllMd 0 .._.._. "EMe"l19~) ~I ~be Ille Hrlh-movlng mechln• Kurt Ruuell, SealOtl Hub-rlgllll\il '-to Howerd'1 goes on the rampage et • lay. EMt ~ rteM from HugH' bllloon dollar remote contlruc11on eight. pover1y end obtcutlty to Hlete. 'R' CID * * * "Modern ecllleve fame and tonune 12:.46 Cl) * * "S-t ~ .. A Romance" ( 1981) Altieri .. • euperatar mu9lc:el per-young girt, forced 10 "'°'" Broollt. Ke1twyn Harrold. former. on • jungle ptentetlon. "' fllm editor lrlal r90MI· 10:00 (%) *. "The lncredlble mai<H plan• IO ..... ti« edly to win bade Ille heart Shrinking Woman" (1980) revenge egalnal Ille men In of Ille woman lie IOWll. 'R' Liiy Tomlin. Chattea Gro-cherge_ 'R' • * * "This It EMa" din. A houMWtte finds II 1:00 8 "Siou• City Sue" (1981) Ooc:umentary, Fllm herd 10 cope wher> .,,. (t946)Gene Autry foot•o• and dremelic IUddenly beglnt to thrink e * * 'h "The Vlsll .. recreation• are uMd to tell In size 'PG' ( 1964) lngrtd Bergmen. the story of Elllll Preeley's 11:00 CC) * "Klondike Fewr" Anthony Quinn. A -althy ..._and cer-. 'PG' (1980) Jell Eut, Rod woman otten • generous 1:06 (%) * * \t "c.my" (1980) Steiger. The young Jec:tl endowment to her home Jodie Foeter, Gary 8uMy London Mii out 10 -Nek town II the realdents agr-M An edventuroua young Ills fortune during Iha Gold to murder lier lormer tov- woman Join• • camlval Ruth 'PG' er. troupe and IHrn• l bOul cm .** "Motel Hell" cc * * "Perlormence" ,,... hidden emotlona end (IMO) ROfy Cdloun. Peut 11970) J-Foll, Midi truelr•ttona befllnd Ille Unka. Fwmer Smith -Jagger A llOOd on the run l:OO e • * • .. Agatha" ( 1979) turf-happinMI ol IM hit badlroedt motel 10 from the mob llnduenctu· Outltln HoHmen. v-pertor~. 'R' procure and t1tten Ille ery tn tile home 01 1 Aadgraw. In London In t:OO. Qt "Wortd Wer Ill" ChMC> but """ ~ . burned-out former rO<:tl 1828, an Ametlcan --IPart 2) (Premiere) Rock !Met M nMdt for 1111 ~ ltet 'R' ~ reporter ,,_., and HudsOn, OeYld Soul. The eage bulln9e 'R' 1:06 * 'h "The Jaa Singer" .._.,... lnvOIVed wlttl American and Soviet CJ)•** "Ceddyehacit" (1980) Hell Diamond, Lau- lemed myetery writer Age-llNdt o! alate mMI In le. (1980) 8111 Murrey, Rodney •enc• Olivier. A New York th• Clltltlle, wf\o hu left lend In • latl-dttch ellempt Oengerlleld. The demenl· centor l>feelce with family her U<'hlithlul huabend to stoP war lrom braal!lng eel gtoundt-keeper ol I trlldttlon In hit dealt• lo De 'PG' out. aw11nlly country club •.£OP mull<: atar. 'PG' teao ® * * "The ~edible CC) * * • "Wtllcn Wey It ...-wer egalntt the 1:ao (ZJ * • • 'h "The Howling" SMnklng woman" (19801 Up?"(19n)RlcllerdPryot, gocllllwslflll•bltlng lllaturt, (1981) DH Wellac•. ~ Tomlin, Clletlee Gro-Lonett• Mel<... A M ii· 'R' Petrlc:lc Mac:nee A woman c1111. A ~ llndl 11 etlWWCI fruit !**« .. 11:IO Cl) * * * "The Boy report9r ii "*'**' by a IWd 10 ~ whel\ .,_ c.euglltlnacomlc«OM11fe Fr*'«!" (1971) nwtoQy, killer wtlo -to be• aiddenly beglna to etw1nk ~ Ille union and Ille Cllrittopller GMlle. When -f'WOll. 'R' tn ... 'PG' Mob. and • "W>Oetltlcel an ...iatant atage l'Nne· 2:$0 •• •'A "TNI 11erd Wey" t:l8 (Z) **'A "&Mk Roedl" ptMCh« llnde hM¥en In a gar r.,,a-the ....,_. (IMO) Pattlck McGooNn, (ttl1) lll!r Alld, TOMl'lly ....... OflOlr, 'fll' lead lrl a ettow. IM Lee Van CIMf A hlted ~:,_•·liol~llWW~~Mll!fllE~-~"er~'----''P111Al.iW*l..;')lliullll'IMl;l'I.' ----~e..:;':o ;1•:.:·~-::.:.,..=.!•!1::~__,,1 e.....in Nia 10 ma61• -~ iOii ""81 W "aihL, IWWW& & W . lnOf'9' 1111 .,.,_ 11e tao !Niil and heed _. In Glende Jeok~. A fof'mer 11:11® **"The lncoeoible r«lre. 'A' ~ •• *. ~ ''TN 8cattlit ~· (18136) i...-e Howard, Mer1e Oberon. In dlagulM ... gentleman of Ille Engllah Court, an underground hero rncuee ~ "°"' '"' gulllo-tlne during the French Revolutlon. 3:00 (C) * * * ~ "Tiie Cal And Tiie Cenety" ( t939) Bob H()j)41, Peuten• Goddard In order IO COllKI ,,,.., Inheritance. • remlly mutt spend Ille night In• haunt• eel l'IOUN '-'Ot (8) * * •;, "Sidney Shel- don's Bloodline" ( 1979) Audrey Hepburn, Ben Gu· ure. Aft• lier rather dlft, • woman Inherit~ one ot 111e world's -e11111es1 cor· por9110n• •nd becomes the tetget of lier scheming rel•t!YM, et .... , ooe or whom It a murderer 'R' (%) * ~ "Uptlldt .. ( 1978) Margaux He"'lngway. Anne Benc:roft. A loP INh- lon model la humlllated end tru11reled by !let ~·~110 eentence the man whO r_lpe<I her to prltoft, 'R' S:aG Cl) * * * "Caddytlheclc" (1N0) Bia Murr~. Rodney O.IQ9rllaid The dement- ed fll~MP« of • 1wanky country club WagM Wat egalnst Ula gopMrl lnNtlltlng Illa turf. '"' . ........ "19ec* Roede" (1911) ~ Fleld, TOMmy LM Jonee. A hooker and 8 down-on-hlt-luc;ll boHr ,,,_. and ._, .... In -<:fl of• -.... 'R' 4:30 CC) * * * "Whldl Wey la Up?" ( 1977) Alctlard Pryor. Lonetle Mel<•. A N X· •larwd '"* pica• .. caught In • comic era.Ire --hie llflion Ind the Mob, end • llypocritlcal prMClher .. ~In. ledlM' choir 'R' 4~ (%) * * * "TM Bio Red One" (19801 L .. MaMn. Mark Hamill A tough Army -oeen• lead• tour young, lnexper*'<*I rec:rultt Info Iha vlolenc.-flllad fr ey ot World Wet II comblt 'PG' Tuesday movies l:OO ff •• "King SOIO- mo n 't MinH" (1950) • Oeboreh Kerr, Sl-•rt Grengec-A white hunter JIUldee a perty through dark-Afrlea In -Ch of • -·· hueband. l :ao CJ:) ••• ,. "The HouN Of Tiie Sewn Hewlca'' ( 1959) Rober1 Teylor, Lindi Cllrlttlen When • paullln· oar It tound deed on 1111 ahlp, a allar1er boll allipper discovers • etrange mep tllet lead• lo e hidden Nail fortune 7:00 cm *. '-t "Sphinx" 1198 t) Frank Langella, Letley· Anne Down A rutlllnt bleck merket antlqulllet ring a11empt1 to •toP an Egyptologlat from ditc:ov· erlng tM ~II of a prlceleta •••tue .,,. wu permitted IO view, 'PG' (%) * * "Uncle Vany•" 1:00 e • * • ''Torn Curlein" (1"61 Peut Newman, Jutle Andrew• In order to obtain a MCret formu•• _,-y tor pertec1ing a MW ~. art American phytlclat pret•nd• to defeat to Eaet Germany. • ***"A Cry In The W~''(t97,)0-ge l(erwiedy, Joanne Pettet To protect hie family, a mart dlelnt lllmMlf In tilt batn •Iler t*ng bitten by a rabid lkunll (C) ***"Shoot The Plano Player" ( 1H2) CMliel ,..,_, Merle Ouelo4a. A _.,.. con- ~--·muak:l•n boyfriend to anempt I comebaoll. CJ) * * * "North By North-.!" (1959) Caty Grant, he Marie Saini. An ild""11ting rNltl'I ~te le changed drutk:elly wnen lie 11 mlttekan tor a CIA ~**'A "The Wey Wa Were" 110131 Barbra Stta!Nnd, Robert Redford A young COiiege couple In the 1930t d!Kover th•t tllelt pollllc:al doHerencee -a1rong enough lo iec>P- ardlze their marrlege 9-:00 8 (I) "Miiiion Dollar lnlleld" IPremlere) Rob R4ltn«, Bonnie 8edella. A eucoetslul bu~an devot• more ent11U111atrn 10 hit IOftbaN team thMl lie' doet lo hit crumbling per- 41or181 llte. CID •• "Friday The 13th" ( 1980) Beuy P.._,, Adri-- .,_ King. The reopening of • eunvner CM\P. doMd 20,...,.....,...., lhrw mutders, 8"ractl I vtndio- tlve killer wtto knl ... uneuapectlng 1-..gera. 'A' cm • • "D19Unce" 1 tt15) Paul hnJIMln, J- Wooda. All Amry ........ ~ • ~ c:rtllle Ill* .... _, • .,. by an~~· .... (%) •• ''tlWo(' (1111) Hywel ......... DlnfloMI EJloll. A "*' becoMee an lnatMt ~ .,.., • c:ontr-alal tr.,..._,,I Mlon. 'A' 9:30 ct).* 'h "Portnoy'• Comc>lllnt'' ( 1972) Alc:Mtd ...,...,., "-..... ...., on die nowc by ~Roerl.A~Jew llltl t>oV flGCIUl"9 hie oftM hllatloue and -OU• ~t-IOhle~ trllt. 10:00. * * "MelWI And How- ard" ( 1980) P9UI LeMlt, Jaaon Robatdt. An other- ...,... unknown o .. stelton attendant c:lelme to be tM rightful half to Howard'• Hugu' bllllon doller .. tete 'R' 10:46 Cl)• •'A "Beck Roeda" 11981) Sally Field. Tommy Lea Jonee. A hoolt« and a down-on-hit-luck boHr ~tend~-• in -•ell ol a ,_ Ill•. 'R' 11:00 CB)**' "The Return" ft981J Jan-MIC:Mel Vin- cent, Cybill Slleptlerd. Two people who had • doM encounter with an alier\ 1pecectaft •• children _ .. , ,,... eliene' lmmlnerol !.!!.""'· (g) * ..._,.Fuc:lnetlOn" ( 1980) A young man'• fam- ily Int.,._ with hit plw\1 alter M mo-Into an .,_,,,...,. tNlt It perfect tor Mduc:ing IWMt young ""<>men. • R' 11:SO ct) * * "Melvin And HOW· ard" C 1980) PIUI LAMat, Juon Roberdt. An other· ..... ~gMltatton attendant cilllmt to be the rightful heir to Howard Hugh••' bllllon doll., fttete, 'R' • • ''"The lnc:redlble Shrlnlllng woman" ( 1980) Liiy Tomlin, Char ... Gro- din. A houeewlle flndt II herd 10 cope wher> llhe IUddenly begln• 10 llhrinlt I 14D 'PG' 12:00 D * • "Oellll'• Eight" ( 1969) C hrl1lopher George, Relph Meeiler. A federll agent goee under· COV9f es • member ol • _ roed geng to eHect the eecepe of six oonvlcts wflo are needed lo braek up • gang 01 bootlegoerl dNl- 1~ In moonelllne g •·~"Baell Roede" ( 1981) Setty Field, TOfl'M'l\y LM JOMS. A lloo6ter and • down-on-Illa-tuck boHr mMt Md llNd -1 In Merell of• .-111e. 'R' See Movie. Page 34 • . • • The Performing Arts Association of Orange County presents John Alexander. Director Three B's and a Unicorn Bach ................ Slnget dem Herm (Motet No. 1) Britten ...................... Hymn to Saint Cecilia Brahms ...................... Liebeslieder Waltzes The Unicom .............................. Menotti A charming program of varied chamber works featuring BALLET PACIFICA original choreography by Lila Zall and members·of the lrv.ine Chamber Symphony All seats reserved: $10.00, $7.00 and $5.00 Senior/student -$2.00 discount • Saturday, February 20, 8:30 p.m. S8nta Ana High School Auditorium 520 West Walnut Street For further information, write or call P.O. Box 1891, Santa Ana, CA 92701 , (714) 542-1790 MasterCard or VISA, Group Discounts A public service sponsorship of the Orange Coast Daily Pilot ---------------------: Pleaee publish my Valentine message as written below on Sunday. Feb. 14. (Write one word per space. 3 line minimum. Compute charge at end of line.I Extra lines are 11.00 each NAME~--------------------------------- ADORESS __________ CITY ____ ZIP __ _ • S3.00 ~()() S5.00 18.00 Bring or mall to: : Diiiy. Piii ~ ·n eliil ••lo~-. lot :.1qo'\ .,. ·o~ ' ~ • ··~ ·""'~ •rt.) •M.J ~ A .W>ltiJO • AIWton Plus• n)'IOn ll'le ,... WI!""' IOll -·-, __ ·--PtOtec:llOtl "'-.,.. -.-ic-. • ........, ...,ony con•NC:loon ol· ,.,,. ,,,. ultlf'lllle •n ~ •ncl lullUtY -. s--·--8dd• IOOli ol llyle -De ... y 10 .,,.,_ Sale Runs from 2/1 · 2/22 . ""'° ..... ""'°" -· .,., , .. .,... Clfft 11quo0 ""''' ano ·--ie OtOlflCllllO •ll&lnsl lhllC lllOCic • u"...-...,ony 01u11> conlltUCt-4 ~ IO~ t\lgNy ,..,....,. -lu•utlOUS underlool •• • AICll 90iod C010n are a oeco- raiO>'s °'"'"...Ch• ge~ ....,_ot ...,ur•• -••· --SJ6~ . """°"Ill nyton "'-••c:ellenc Our~ plus tol~ hiding-.......... -... • EJC!ing tculofureo -y ~-"'°""°". Ottt1nc1t..iy ncl\ 101ut• d•.._ ·U~nclleolcrahOnt .,. -..ally Wit-lot Doi/\-.. .. -,_ .... o1.,.. -5 14~ PRICE INO.UDES INSTALLATION I PADDING WITH NZX.3'00PADDfNG 1 ~J I Blott A 1M11 II--. M CQIMc;t ..... I .._ "'81 lnll•t ~ .,.., I tieoom. I reglng lorlll oontr011Wllal ttan..,i.nt fir• t~ 1 1m111 ~lllan. 'A' town In ofeoon. 1l:IO • "SctMfll Of The (8) • * • "The ldolmlli- !.MoY:le GUide for the.Week i From Page;,_ - i ..................... . • : ,_. "8dNn. .... c.. ~ iwy. A _, ...,..... to ;; -... ................ ;f ol 1111 _.a_.._ ... .......... twmonr kl ci ....., merneg.. .3 (B) * *. "Cfleec:tl And > . C"Oft9'• Next Movie .. f-(1tl0) Ak:Mrd .. ~ .. _2 Merlf\. Tl\omu Cftont. a: Two potlte1d1 h1v1 numereue 11'111111 ~ tur• wtlill roernlng the ....... of Loi Angetla In -di of the "plrlect ~"·R' (%) * * 1h "Carny" ( 1980) '4ldle Fosler.~ Bu.-y. "" ldWll1urou1 young -)oin• • c:ernlvll tfoupe end lelm9 llbout the hiddll'I en,oOon1 end lrvslrellona behind the -iaoe ~ of the ~·A• 1:00. * •• * "Goodbye Aolllo" CtM11 tngrld &erg· r111n , Yves Montend. Negiactlld by ti.-lover. • Pltilllfl lady accepts IN enentlonl ol another men. • * * ·~ ·•Gu1>9 Al &Ital" ( 1964) Alc:Nird Allenborough. Jedi Hew· klna.A protocot-mlnd9d 8rltiatl officw r"'-to cooper111 Witt! rebels In en Alftc:9n netlon. Cl) * ..... "Dona Flor Anet Her Two HulblncM'' ( t971) SoNe ••• Joie Will•. A young Braflen -·· bOrfng ~ marriage is ..__. by -•l'MI of her ftr1lt .... bend·• peeelonMI gf-'. 'A' 1~10. * ··~ "Qs-1tlon Mid 8111" ( tl57)"Jaclc Lemmon. l!mll koYeca. A prtv1t1 ~ his fellow recnilts, lftllaled men. officers, ,.... end prtloners In ~ ol1 IN .. Mid 811."awldpeny. 1:IO (C) * * ''Oaya Ot Fury .. Hllrrlted Illy Vincent Prial. An "'-tlglltlon of Ille dMlllng _.. Of deaUI end destruction .,. 11\.16. led. 2:00. * * "$eparllte Ways" (ttlO) Keren 8ladl, Tony lo 81anco. A young cou- •'s fellur9 to~ c:ete ~..Jn 1be deelrucelan of INlr met• ,.. ..... 1:10® *··~"My Body- guard.. (1979) Chrla Mekepeu:e, 1'd1r11 ........_.,..._kldlt• Chlc1go lllgh 1choo1 maue lrlllnde ... IN lldlool <'UtCeat end IOOMh- • lhl¥ atllnd uc> IO ... en.- II geno wfllcfl Nd Pl'· MCllled them both. 'PG' l:IO CZ) * * •"Tiie lncredlbll Stwinlclng Women" I ttlO) LIIV Tomllrl, CNtfll Oro- dlrr. A -....... lllldl It hard IO cope wtllft lifle lllddenfy blglfll IO -** ln...._'PG' ..... "The Olr1 Who KMW Too Much" (t .. I Haney I<-. Adllm w..t. A men l*ed by Centre! fli....,..IOl 10 find out wflo ,_dlfed • Cr1rnl kingpin --• communlat plot to llk•-the~ a.CC>•··~ .. ~·· (1132) PIUI Munl, 0-91 Alift. A _..lime lloOd- lum ,.... te IN top of w.. ....., dwrtrlg ,........,, 1:10 ••••. 'Edg9 Of Doom" OHO) Den• ~ ,~ Grlllger. A,_..._~ ...... --..Y.hdlm'Clll ........ ..__._. ..•.. ,. ......... . ._... C"'4l ...._. Celln, ..,_,. Min. A ,-.---te I I .. -....... ...... to wortllng It • o.non l-" 11•111 Jeff .... (1tl0) Rev Slwk.y, cew-, JennlW ....._. T OWlfl Rldltlufl. A menl- CC>***"' ''0.V F°' ~JNNOlf-Vlr• NlgM" (1972) ... .... ._ '*>YI to eetepult two ..._., VllentN CoNM. ~ Into pop ling- OINcted by Ftancoil T ruf • lf:l9 ltlrdofn. 'PG' leut. The~ Md ~ of (I}•*·~ "a.cit ROid•" lllm petbmen -IMI-(1911) Siiiy Reid, Tommy led In I ~ Lie-'-· A hoolcer Md a movie. 'PG' down-on-hlt·luc;k bo1t11 tl;AI (B) ..... "Zulu 0-" mMt end hNd -· "' (1N0) Burt ~lnealtw, -di of 1 ,_life ·R' P .. •O'TOOll. n..~ •***'A "ilfNker wege • bitter ltruggle "°'em·· (tHO) EOwaro ~ the Zulll IWMOn In WoodWwd, JIC!lt Thomp- 1""'"-11uty A"1el. IOI\. A--.,,. conac;r1pt· 1:00 • ••*'A "Thi Ruisi.-ect to light on Englano's Ari Coming, The AUAlant llde In the Boer W1r Ale Coming" ( tMe) Cert decioe to light the Boer Reln.-. E-11 Mttrle Selnt. guerlllu on lh11r own Cepe Cod r11id1n11 term.a. become ·lnvolwd In 1n l:M (%} * * * 1~ "The HOWiing ln1ern1honat lnddlnt whlt1 ( 1981) 011 W11l1ce 1 mlld1~ Solllet tub-Pltrlcl< M~ A woman menne llPl>MfS '" thelt rec>O<ter • menac.d by a Wllert killer who -S lo be a • * l 'h ··The.BllCk -ewolf ·R Orchtd" (1959) Sophie t:OO(t) *'*'It "Sl>Oot Th4!Sun Loren, Anthony Quinn. A Down" I 1980) Christoplle• llW·•bldlng bullnesam1n Walken, M1rgo1 K100er In and the tovety wltlow 01 1 t836. roor d•~••t• m11· ~tier 1111 In love fill use an Old m•p 10 (IJ * * * ~.+ ··BrMll« -•ch lor bu<ied gOkl .._ A CALL TO SERVE -Ministering to the people is hls calling. but recently graduated seminary student John Ritter lrighU faces the dilemma of choosing between practicing his faith via television evangelism Like successful "televangelist" Ned Beatty Cleft 1 or going into the comm\Jrtity and establishing a more personal and grass-roots parish in .. Pray TV" Monday at 9 p.m. on ABC (Ch . 71. Morant" (1980) Ect.wd 'PG' WOOd\llterd. Jade Thomp. ©:J * * '1r "Fll\lf Exam IOll Auetr.._coneetlpt· (1981) .Joel s Ric. Cecile ed to light on &\glend'• Bagdedt A kKllr stalks his llde In the Boer Wer 'rictlms on a COiiege cam. decide 10 fignl l111 Boer pus 'R' gU9'1llH on their own 1ct00 (8) • * * "Popeye .. ( 19801 terms RotNn Williams, Sherley i.,.. melropoNten ~ .... l::IO Cl> • * • ••Hofttl ~ Hortll•••" (1tlt} Cary ~""'· Eva Mlril Selnt. An ed-1111119 "'81\'s ... ii ohangld drlatlcllly when hi II miatuen for a CtA 4:00 r. * ''ll'llprooer Chan- nell" (1911) Alen Arkin, Mwlene Her119y. A _... of misunderstanding• ~ _. IOdll wortcer 10 suapect th• 5-yeat·old d41ughtlr of • aepatlled c;ouple 11 lhe victim OI cMd ...._.PG' (%) * • "Percy" ( 1971) Hywll Bennett, Denhoifn Ellk>tt. A ~ beoGft"8 en 1nS1en1 Clllbrtty Iller a controv4tfal1l 1renepi.n1 Q9Wlllon •A' 4:11 (B) * * ··F~ Thi 131h" (1980) 8Ny Plllmer, ~ _!!M!tKll!g. n.~ of. -... ctoaad 20 yeers ..... .,.., ltwlll murders, ettrecte • Wldlc- tlve killer who knlfea UlllUlpeetlng ._......,... 'R' .. (C) •• """°'*" ( 1tl0) Peul Mk:h11I Ol11M, &den Hogen. A group of "*Itel,..._,.._ mur- dered llCCOrdlno 10 111111' lndlVldual '--. 'R' Wednesday movies 1:108 **'A ··100 Rtltes" Duvllt. Wlllll searching 10< ww ptl.-Ing.. ( 1980) George c ( 1069) Jim Brown, Raquel Ills 11~. the spinach-eat· (%) • • ··fhe lnctlldlbll Scott, Trlltl Ven 0..-.• A W*ll. An o.itlaw lndiln. a Ing ..not "'"" a quamr SMnillng Women .. ( 1980) widowed f.-lc pr°"'9or bl.cit 18wm1n Ind• temell llMWt wtllre he picl!s up 11 lily Tomlin. cn.111 Gr<>-rents ., old ~ fNt r1v04utlon1ry help lhe foundling Ind 1 Skinny din A nou-tte fln<tl II IWM'I to be haunted t>y MeJ11CAn lndiens dlpoM a SWMthNt1 'PG' Nlrd to cope wtien ttll a ,...,_ tplrtt with 1 60-CfUll go-nor. O • • • ·~ "Soldle< 01 toiddenly begins lo shrlnli yeer-old-. to Miiie •• ,.. 1:46 (%) * * • "The Big Red Or.nge" ( 1979) Edward In tin. •PG• •M (Dl • • "High Country" 0ne·· ( 1980) Liii MIMn, Fox, Sullll Penhaligon t:OO. * * * •'Ptycno" ( 1IHIO) (1981) Tlfnoltty Boct-. Metk Hlthill. A tough Anny Six clUlmlln at 1 Outen AnthOny Perkins. Janet Und• Purl. An llCaped sergeenl Ileen tour young, unlvenity go their MP•· Leigh. A young woman ' convict end his hand!-lne~ recrvil8 Into rate weys when war breaks encoun..,. a psychotic ~~ gittfflend flee 10 thl 'lllolencl-lllled 1ray ot out In Europa. 'PG' killer after alealing I lerge the mountllnl. ·PG• Wortd Wat II c:omblt. 'PG' 10: ti (%)'*~ ··~·· ( 19761 Mini of mon.y from 11ar 10:000 ** ··Seperate Ways.. Marga ux Hemingway, ~· (19t01 Keren Blecll. Tony Th sd ~Banctotl. A top lash-D ••• "Get11ng Lo Bianco. A young COU· u r ay Ion n)Odel •• h<.lm11ialed Straight" (1970) EJllott p1e·1 ffllur• 10 communi-movies and tnJet11ted by h41f Gould. Cendlce S..gen. A call r11erly result• in the unsuooesafut attempts 10 former mllltant return• lo destruction ol llllif mar-FDAUARY 4• 1112 _,lance the man who c:olllOI lo get • degf11 rlege. 'R• r~ her to ptison 'A' and finds hlmHlf 10:t8 CZ>*'* "Lovera And ~ 11!fl'lllhed In modern ..... llllrl" tO:IOa:) ***"Which Way Is dent ptoteats. 10:30 (I)•·~ ''The Stud" (1978} ~ g * *!4 "The Men Who Up?" (111771 Richard Pryor. • •'A"Slly.._. .. (1975) Join ~I. Oll¥9t Tobi-s .. TomotTOW" (1981) lorlltta Mc;,Kee A M•· Don ...._..h. Slelenle ._ A welter lldvancea hie l>oc:urnenlMy. Nerrlted by llllYed lru•I picker 11 Powers. Los Ang•le• car-. by 11111p1ng wlttl '* Onon W ..... FootllQI of ceughl in a comic croufor• w'll4.....,......._ IO ..._ llW'sW191:-A' ._.. ._ llfldiceld Md ~ lliil unlon and the lky 1n hellc:op1.,. 10 trlidl 11.o(C) •**IA ••911n8Ma" dfwMtlc NCN1tlona of Ille Mob. and a hypocrlllcal down a pelr of gold (1971) Wbody Allen, Ille~ ltlls loall II Pf'llllOfllr flnda heaven In • thievll. lOUiM ~-A l)fOduct the 171IH:lnlury French lldles' ctloir. 'R' (B) **lot "Eacllpe From l11t.-, bored with Illa phyaiclen. lltrologlr end CD) * * * "Thi eute>- Alcatru .. (1979) Cllnt ~routtne,,._101 myl11c Mk:hll de Noltr• petna .. (1979)LM.Remlek, E11twood, Patrick •m•ll L•tln Am1tlcin o.m.. k,_, • Noltr• UN Elchnom. A weelthy McOooflen. A l'lllrdlned cllunt.., end blcon'll 1 clllrnua. 'PG' Bolton family P<IOll'll IO 01 7:00 ~ • "Klondike~·· COfWtc:t. l'litUrned lftlt 1111 dldllCW durtng 11 polltlclil '-'"' .-come two Vititong COUS· tnt ~ from ''the ~ ·pa• (19'0) Jeff Eat, Aod 1111 MtO -ec:tuelly 11111·. Aodl." ..,_ to br91* out (JI)•* *'.t .. ~.. Slliglt. Thi young Jedi Ing• wey to cull In on 1111 'l'i" !PG' 119811 ....,,...., 0.,..... LoMcin 11ta out to 11111 Clen's tonl#ll. ~ ~:.~~!:9:n. :~~!~k c~~:~h:~j .. : ~~:.": durtng IN Gold 11• ~.::~:..he~~~~~- crofl. A portly compulllvtt be'-' two 11m11f1 groupe CD) * * '~ ••L.i Thi lllllOOll Shelley Duvall, D4recled by Mllr !Inda lllal nothing o1 ~ wtlOM .. ,,_~ Go" (1978) Robin ~ Slllnley Kubrick. A l<lf'mW cen dlfnPllll 1'111 dlllre 1or n1ry p1yc,.lc: power• Jen Klnglllury. A polio-KflooltMC:hw hired N • food untM he Ills In io.... lnCludl w.. llblllty to kJI atric:ll9" youth ltNflCllll to winier eatllal<er '°' s 'PG' t~ •• ,.. ,..,._. tNI the Ciippllo'lf lWMte. Mcf lppllr9nlfy t:.ao ()) * * •.t "FatllO" (1M0) 11:.IO. * * ............. dlMme hie not rOl>bed haunted, Colorlldo hotel. It Dom DeLuillll. AN'9 Ban-SlrllllQeB" ( 1977) Siiiy him of hll potentlel lnOWbound th.-1 with 1119 lcOO Cll • • * .. Moglll\bo" crofl. A ~ comp.....,. S""""'8. o... w-. CZ> * • '.t "Bick Roedl•• wife and dalnloyent young (1954) CW1t Gable. AV9 ..., tlndl tNt nothing A meMec1 couple'a aaem--..· (1911) Sally Field, Tommy IOn. 'R• OerdNr. Wfllll • ,..,,... c:en d1mp111 1)11 dlllre 1or lnOIY llClnMll th 11 11 fll:llM '-Jonll. A hOoker anch t1:48 (%) * • * "The Big Red tlon _..., ,... Ill love food until he f""' in love, hldl119 YkMent phyalcal dOWfl-on-hla-luck boiler 0ne·· (11180) Liii Ml/Vin, ...,. IN .... ol M ...... 'PG' ..... _,,_. ..... endo .... ~ ..... ~R.' In Merk Hamill. A laugh Army ~.conllctt lrile. (%) e *IA .. Fox11" (1N0) CD) **.''MIMn And How-"" • • ·-"... M<geent feeds four young, • * * * "P•lldlll ,,_..,.. Jodie Foeter, Siiiy 1(..... erd'' (1tl0) Plllf lAMllt, 7:JO. * * * "FMllty Plot" lnexpetilncld ~ lnlo (1978) 8~ Stelofw, men. TM*tlmeofbrokllt .Meon ....,di. All otfllr· (197') 8"'bllta Harris, the 'lllcMncl-ftlled lr'ay of ,.,_,. A--. Tine ~ end uncering par· wlal unk-OM ltllliort en-Dim. A aplrituallet Wortd Wer 11 comtlet. ·pa· ecNmll'I brotMra from 9"18. tow t-.ege girts tr; llttendlnt dlllll'll lo be the Ind "-111~ bey· 12:00 D * •~ ''Wllltd" (1971) Ill Hiii"• IC*'-' lldlol\ 10 aootM their emotlonal rlgMfUI ,,.., to Howlltd tnend ~ for • mllllno Brvce D1vlton, Ernest ol New Yarll C11r ....._ _.. thr~ dr"91 Ind Hughea' l>llllon doller heir wflO le • piol...,o.lal Borgnlne. An Ullbllenced ~ lrelil ol --.... 'flt' ....... 'A' ~. young men lrWnl M army -r-: ,.._..., ...-. * *' .. "T-T.. ........... of ~.._ lriMl'llt...,....,_.• e:eoeCl)·•APlanoForMra. u.o••*~"AcllHlgh" -"-· -· retalodlltroy. __ er.-...... ..... .._ Cimino" (PrwnleN> Betti (1t77) Mllcollll MOOowell. (1961) Burt Lllnclilllr. Qll, ,.,..., ._ileiwa'N' 0.., ....... Aller. All C.ltUJ .. ,....._, A blrtAoMnct.Wtllnlllglan-••••l4o·'L1CegeAwi J:tl(C)•**'""-~ ..... _. ........ *"lol ... Uli ... ...,_ ,.._try to *Pa Nf Folllll" (197'1) Ugo Tog. II c-.er· (11G) Dlrll lllM ....... _, ...... .... _.. IMll _... MteOll onTerta., ....... Miii, _... S-11111. A ...... ..... ......,.A ,..._............. .... lit .. .._... ........,..... .... _, lllgMdlill --trtea 10 ................. .. ... -•11•1t llurope ..... w.td w. ............... ·=-·'J._f') ........... ~It• a..tll eo...t. ,......_ • ,..... 1ec1 li1rit 1r01ft • l ..., tar a,.....~ h61 IOn's "' =, 5 ... l2 , * l.@lf•H'~ l•••, .............. ~riii"lii*I.' lli'tSiliiii' lvii .. ii1••1i'l11ii11iicii•i•l'1i1'ii'ii'"i'ii'l'• 1h• ........ II llald~hlill~ .. -.-_.-;:;...._..llPR"'U* "TN -:Ef:'•b:: 1P ol from 1119 ~ pler'9. • Fr-. 'A' ; Designer of the Week Every Sunday • .J . -· i .... AMERICA 'S FRESHEST ICE CREAM "1/ DID YOU KNOW 1 C'Q/UIJ started In 1934 Where?? Hartsdale, New York Why?? As young Tom Carvel's dream of manufacturing and supplying super smooth, premium, heavy weight Ice Cream. Th is dream has become a 4 7 -year tradition . . . . Im i tated, but never duplicated. * •BULLETIN* * · Latest Reports indicate our third Orange County loca· tion will open Mid-January .. Watch For Details " OUR FOU-NTAIN CAN --OHER-OV£" 189-FtAV VARIETIES IN CONCOC· TIONI 8EVOND YOUR IMAGINATION. CllJB NE"'S ~ your club. orpnizarion or olfil:r un orckr lar1r quan1hlft ol a cram lrom Carwrl at sp«ial dlecoun11. No-that ii ¥«y, very GOpDNEWS! ' ··"L-ATEST scoop·~· NOW AT TWO LOCATIONS IN ORANGE COUNTY llHITIGTll BEACH •d SAITA AllA HERE 'S WHERE WE ARE .. CARVEL STORE No. 2187 · .Alpha lete Shopping Center 2131 South lrt1tol ltmeJ 11...YW:M lanteAna Phone 751-4771 CARVEL STORE No. 2200 lucky•• Superma"'et Center 11571 lolu Chica RMd at Hell Huntl,.ton leech I Phone -140-1370 Moet Ice CiMme are made wfth grenuleted aupr. Cer1et uH• only tructoee. the Mturel eweetener. Moet Ice CNeme UH enlmel feta In their emutafflera. eteblbere, end flevortnp, C.rlel doe• not! . C"arwrl "'rotr thr boo!. on ict crt1m no\tllits. Sno·bllls. 1onh. car\tloa~. n yiftl YUCtr~. Ind parfarl~ ... )"OU Cln purdt1w thrw indi'ldually or In convrnirnl six·pech . CAIVEl-THE 10 CUAM fACTOllY If you come Into UrYel lhinll- ln1 JOU .. find a few ...... of ke CTfflll COMI and Mil. -.. :IN"ft-we-pt-a-... ptlle fw you! A C.nel llore it an ice ere•• factory, a fountain and • itt cream superma.t&et. We lwlve an ·an•y of ke cream cal&e1, ke cream noveltie1. lhllles. ~banana 1Nrpa, and cone1 In soft and hard lnon. Al the .bowe Is ahwlJI ...... _. .... ,. frefh. Since .......... a cream .. the ....... Nl\'Bt "'" oulll THE ICE CREAM MACHINE COMETH ... Carvel h.s its own manufKt· urlng fecility producing much of the equipment ·used in t~y·s stores. This penicular ma- chine is our custom mede. dou~lt hnder ice cream freez· tr. When you come to Carvel you can lff the machine in operetion, ectually making ice ertem. · AME RICA'S FRESHEST ICE CREAM ~- America's Freshest Premium Ou•lity lceCl"IM1 Business Now accepting applic:8tion1 f0t Orange Count'/ FranchiltS. Minimum Investment $150,000. All Ice Cream ManufKturad Daily on Premises . . . Feetur· ing 45 yeen of Tap Quality Founttin Products, Novelties tnd Ice Cream Ctktl. For Information Cell (714) 54s.8111 WHO'S MOM'S- NEW BEST FRIEND]\ Carvel, of course . . . one visit to us t nd she can stock her freezer with delightful novelt ies for wteks. ICE CREAM _CAKE$_ MADE WITH MEMORIES --- Remember thtt Honeymoon Cruise, great fishing trip or week·tnd In San Frtnciaco7 Carvel would like to remember it lglin for you, on en ice cream cake. Bring your llidt of thet IP'Ci•I memory 10 c.rvtl end ·we e1n duplicate It on top of your deticlous Cerwl ice creem cake ... It will mekt r.rnemberine lllln Mrd • fwtttl . Brian Rasmussen (with glas.,es) plays Wally Crump in "The Fitness Game." In the photo above, he encounters a heart and two lungs played by Cheryl Crabtree, Mark Daukas and Patti Wojcik (from left). At right he discusses flexi bility with Patti Woj cik . T • eekender· '1 ( ) I I < ( ( J \ l i I I i I I I ' ' : I j I ( ) ( ) I \ \ '' ( I I I ( J \ 'l I I ) I \ I I ·' '> I ( ) '' '--, i?a~~ido the neighborly touch Page3 \. 'Fitness Game' SCR group tours schools telling kids to stay in shape By MARV JANE SCARCELLO Of ... Deity ""' IUff Wally Crump is a lump. No one can accuse him of being a physical fitness dropout, because he never even dropped in. His idea of a strenuous workout is tying his shoelaces, a nd a bris k warmup exercise for Wally is rubbing his hands together. You couldn't gel him to break into a run if you threatened him with a starter's pistol. Wally is the hapless hero of "The Fitness Game," South Coast Repertory's 14th annual educational touring production. The musical shows are a sugar-coated dose of learning, a nd each year the subject deals with a universal theme couched in terms so simple even an adult can understand. . This year's s how is based on a te levision gameshow format. with Crump the Lump competing for~ physical fitness prizes. The show's hosts. a frighteningly energetic crew. das h about in brightly colored sweatsuits urging their rel uctant contestant to feats of brilliance and endurance. Encouragea1o touch his toes, Wally stretches all the way to hts upper kneecaps, . protesting, "I d1dn 't know my toes were so fa r away from the rest of me '·· . He learns about stretching from "Hip' J oint," a jive character who boogies across the stage and s ays , "Get down, brother." As Wally works harder. he's alarmed by an ·unfamiliar vibration in his chest area . A life -size heart and two lungs pump out a tango and sing, ··Feel the beat." Wall~··s progress is threatened. though. by t he evi l Count DeLack-0 -Motivation. Exhaustion a nd Carlo-ada Calories-; who croons-htm1nto a stomach ache with. '""Slurp . Gurgle, Munch Munch." But before the clock can run out on our he ro. he wins the Grand Prize by competing against his wors t enemy -himself -and wi nning. For a former lump. all too familiar with the agony of defeat , it's a thrill or victory no one can take away from him. The play makes its point like a knockout punch in the 12th round. keeping its youthful audience involved in the action from the opening buzzer. Adults may appreciate some small touches lost on the knee-hi gh set , such as the off -stage announcer . a dead ringer for the syrupy voices-without-bodies populating daytime TV . For any age or stage. t he production sends out a clever. well performed message for our mechanized . computerized a nd digital society to ponder. The 45-minute s how stars Cheryl Crabtree. Robert Crow, Mark Daukas. Bryan R as mussen and Pa tti Wo jcik and was directed by John-David Keller with a!l assist fro m Diane dePriest. who also choreo- graphed the musical numbers. It was writte n by Jerry Patch a nd Mi chael Bigelow Dixon, and original music was from Joel Kabakov. The tour. lasting until J une, will include 200 performa nces for schools and youth groups all over Southern California. About See Fheu , Page 4 ·, t t !DWerslons -- ~ ~~PLAYS-----, C-"COME BLOW YOUa ROaN," ~ Neil Simon's first comedy, opens it tonight as a production of t,M Mission i Viejo Playhouse at the Forum Viejo C! Playhouse at the Forum Theater on 11 the Festival of Arts Grounds in j Laguna Beach. Curtain is 8:30 p.m. ~ Fridays and Saturdays through Feb. ~ 28, with reservations being taken at ii: 830·9?52. ''BULLSHOT CRUMMOND," a parody of popular detective thrillers continues at Golden West CoUeee'. 157« Golden West St .. Huntineton Beach. Curtain time in the school's m a in theater is 8 to night and Saturday. curtain J an. 28, 29 and 30 is 8 p .m . with a 2 :30 p .m . performance Jan. 31. For tickets. call 894-6070. ··~o~NTIC COMEDY," a story of inti~.ate colla boration by a playwr1t10g couple continues al Laguna Moulton Playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road. Laguna Beach. Performances will be given at 8 p .m .. Tuesdays through Saturdays until Feb. 13. Reservations 494-0743. ''BODIES," a new British drama continues on the Second Stage of South Coast Repertory. 6SS Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. Curtain is 8 :30 nightly except Mondays with weeke nd matinees at 3 p .m . Reservations 957 -'4033. "WHAT ARE YOU Doing In My Lire?", a comedy starring Vivian Blaine, is in its world premier at Sebas tian's West Dinner Playhouse , 140 Ave. Pico, San Clemente. Plays nightly except Mondays at varying c urtain ti mes . For tickets , call 492·9950. "PETER PAN ," a production or the Children 's P lay Production W otlshop of South Coast Cultur~I Ser vices League, will be presented at 8:30 wuight and at 3 and 8:30 p.m. Saturday and Sonday at Irvine ------------------------------ Cultural Center , 17302A Daimler Irvine. ln!ormatioo . call 979-lS82. ' "THE SEVEN-YEAR ITCH " G4:orge_ Axelrod's comedy about' a m1adle-age man who falls ror a eirl half his age, continues thro~ Feb. 6 at Westminster Community Tbeal~r. 7772 Maple St., Westminster. Curtain is 8 :30 p.m . with performances Fridays and SatuJ.days. "THE PLA Y'S THE THING," a comedy about the theater, continues through Feb. 14 at South Coast Repertory, 6SS Town Center Drive Costa Mesa. Performances ni1htly exceptMoodays at.-8 p.m. and at 2:30 weekend 'afternoons. For tickets call 957·4033. ' ·-CLASSICAL MUSIC- THE PHILADELPHIA STRING Quartet will perform at 8 tonight in the Instrumental Music Room....of the. Cal-St.ate Long Beach University Music Center. Tickets are $15 each. Information. call (213) 498-5526. "OBJECT D'ART," a program of classical nut.e and guitar performed b~ Va,erie King and Anisa Angarola, will be presented at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Fine Arts Concert Hall on the UC Irvine campus . Information, call 833·6379. the Caged Bird Sings ," will be .presented at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Cra wford H a ll at UC Irvine. Information. call 833-6379. A S<XJ'ITISH FESTIVAL will be held at Knott's Berry Farm, Buena Park, Saturday and Sunday. More than 100 Scottish dancers wiJi compete in the 1982 Scottish Nationals Hig hla nd Danci"ng Competition. COMEDIAN ALEX VALDEZ will be master of ceremonies for a banquet at 6:45 p.m. Saturday at Camelot Restaurant, Santa Ana. The banquet is to observe the completion of the International Year of the Disabled P erson by the Orange County Task Force. Information, call 834-4796. THE YELLOW JACKETS, jan recording artists for Warner Brothers, will appear in concert with guitarist Robben Ford at 8 p.m . Saturday in the Fine Arts TheaU!r. Saddleback College, Mission Viejo. "AROUND THE WORLD IN Son g," a ~cert by the ftO.voice Irvine Children's Chorus , will be presented at 7:30 p.m. Saturday at University United Methodist Church, 18422 Culver Drive, Irvine. "FOR MY PEOPLE," a program starring Academy Award nominee Beah Richards, will be presented at 3 p . m . Sunday at Garden Grove Community Center. 11300 Stanford. Garden Grove. Also featured will be th" music of the Rickey Kelly Trio a nd Robert Hooks. co-host or KNBC's "Everywhere." Information, call 730-3747, GET ACQUAINT ED DANCE sponsored at 8 p.m. tonight by the Singles Enrichment Program at the Garden Grove Community Center , 11300 Stanford Ave .. Garden Grove. Live mus ic. Admission $8. For information , phone 667·3097. MISS ANGIE'S SINGLES DANCE Club will bold dances t.onisbt and tomorrow from 9 p.m. lo midnight in the American Legion Ballroom, 143 S. Lemon , Orange. All ages invited. SINGLES OVER 45 are invited to gatherings at the Monterey Bay Cannery in Cerritos Mall at 6:45 p.m. Satu rday and Blackbeard's in Newport Beach at noon Sunday sponsored by the Wheel of Friendship of 0.r-ange-County. Reffrvations required. Call 956-8669 or 535-8563. PARENTS WITHOUT PARTNERS will hold several events over the w eek e nd . O n Sa tu rday the organization is sponsoring a "Dads for Kids" miniature golf party. Phone 893·5905 for information. A meeting that night will enable members lo speak with board or directors candidates. Call 968-8175. On Sunday, the group is holding a brunch at Delaney's at noon (call 979-0139>. tenois at 1 p.m. (898-9302), a "Supe r Sun day .. a t 4 p .m . (894-5732) and a "wine and wit" gathering at 8 p.m (839·2794), IRVI NE SYMPHONY Orchestra wi II present a free concert at 2 p.m. Sunday at Turtle Rock Community Center 1 Sunnyhill Drive. Irvine . Hande l1s oratorio, "Is rae l in Egypt ," will be performed. ---=--=-----:------------------------ -ETC.----- A BLUEGRASS PROGRAM with John Mccutcheon will be presented al 8 p.m. Tuesday in Social Science Hall at UC Ir vine. Information. call 8334>379. " AN EVENING WITH MAYA Angelou," author of "I Know Why A KITCHEN SO BEAUTIFUL Your friends wiJI hate it Intermission ~~,i· ·\'i ·1 -- -- Saddlehack in co01petition By TOM TITUS Of .. .,..,,.. .... Those broad erina a round Saddleback College 's d rama department these days are justified -the Mission Viejo school's production of "Night and Day" bu been chosen for the re1i onal eliminations of the Ame rican Colleee Theater Festival at UCLA next month. The Tom Stoppard drama dirttted by Brian Donoghue, was ~ of only four from a field of 40 to be selected for the UCLA competition. The others are "Strider " from the University of Arlaooa, "Amelia" rrom Rio Hondo CoJJe1e in WhiWer and. "'Jbe Royal Family~· from Cal State Fullerton. "Nilbt ud Da1" 1tar9 Catherine Rowe, ~ Tbatcber and DaYkl Mean with Bill Wood1, DaYid Gramlich. Pete lCoebler, Dani• O'Donnell, Gary Davis, Tom Minter and Carrie Fowler completing the cast. The play will be staged twice al UCLA's Ralph Freud Play.house on Friday , Feb. 12, at 8:30 p.m. and Satur$lay, Feb. 13, at noon. You can reserve tickets by callln1 the Bruln campus at (213 ) 825--2581. • CAS11NG HAS BEEN announced for the lrvine Community Theater's opening production of the 1882 s eason. Edward 'Albee's Pulitaer Prise·winnins drama "A Delicate Balance.'' whicb opens Feb. 13 foT four weekends. · Eileen Flahbach la dir'ectina the play. which featu~ Art Winslow. Jane Nish. Valerie llellroy, Corbett BarkUe, Richard Drake and Betty Y oaa1. Tbe produdioa will open oa a Sn Soddkbock, Page 4 ---3 Mo Vies - --------------- ------------ 'Whose Life?' explores troublirig conflict "Tl :l. ci., "Whose Li/e I• It A•wwaw?" 1ton Richard Dr~Juu. ClariltiM Lahti oftd John Ccwowtea Ofld ii r~ed R. It ja JJOtD ~ at-~ litiretinfiton , Saddleback, Woodbridge.and South Cooat tMolera. By JEFFPAaKER Oftlle.,...,Hle ..... Richard Dreyfuss, who plays the quadraplegic Ken Harrison in "Whose Life ls It Anyway?," is the perfect actor for the part. He can't gesture cute!)t.,...he-can.'-t-~oot.~around the set ln bursts of outrage, he can't wiggle his pudgy fin gers at us for dramatic impact. All he can do in this movie is lie in bed or sit in a wheelchair and work us over with that lacerating, deadly voice of JMs. Dreyfuss is a master talker. His best scene 'an "'Jaws" was the autopsy: when be recited the condition of the. young swimmer into his tape recorder, you could feel the nerves fraying in his voice. In "Whose Llfe Is ll Anyway?" his final speech -an eloquent and perfectly delivered argument on his richt to die - is the kind of soliloquy that Dreyfuss must dream about. He's a Caruso of prose. . "Whose Life Is It Anyway?" is less ofia movie than a dramatic essay arguing the right of sane people to control their own lives -and deaths. Harrison is a aueceaful sculptor when he shreds his car under an out-of-control semi ric, an accident that crushes· his third vertebrae (and assorted other bones> and renders him para yzed from the neck down, He comes out of traction full of wit and optimism, in spite of his injuries. He teases the doctors and nurses, verbally rurts with his girlfriend, Patty (Janet Eilber), and seems intent on making the best of his situation. When he finally mounts the courace to ask about the chances of regaining the use of his body, and hospital medical director Dr. Emerson (John Cassavetes) assures him there a re none , Harrison's spirit is as crushed as his body once was. He breaks off relationships outside the hospital and demands to be discharged, knowing Table to Table· example. If writers Brian Clark and BestnaJd ~ Rose bad gotten into Hirriion u a personality -fi' and they almost do, when bis doctor, Claire Scott => (Christine Lahti) visits his loft and finds the ~ exquisite work be bas done -we would have been -< able to get our emotional bearings. But the ~ Harrison we get is glib and untroubled: the bitaest :.... issue in his lile is ending it. 1bere's a lack of ~ tension in him that rings false: can we let a man "' die who has such spirit and wit about him? We can't feel right about sending a man to his death with a sincere grin on his face. Jl Harrison can't show us that bis life is hellisb, how are we to know? - This question raises a larcer one, namely, is "Whose Life Is It Anyway?" telling us that people with less to offer <and get from life) than Ken Harrison, are better off dead? 'The flip side of •t.:......J:j•ML...:..!~-.--'--.J' 'despair is hope ahd faith, and those are t.wo things that Harrison won't embrace. He's a phony bero - he's got all the trappings of optimism and faith, but he won't use them. There's something disappointing in his desire to die, and I don't mean that in any small way. If you make a hero out of death, you insult people who live with less than what Harrison has -you demean their existence. As this movie plays, it makes a clean case for Ken's dying , but an even stronger (and inadvertent) one for making us want him to live. Harrison doesn't have family. friends or acquaintances; the filmmakers have frozen him off from everything but their own purposes. His death is treated as if it were his last artistic act. but judging from what"We see, he isn't ready for it. When t~ hospital workers wheel him downstairs to hear a quick concert from a local band (actually they're the Rebel Rockers of Laguna Beach), HarTison loves it. A few scenes later when he's letting himself die, you wonder which scene is ON THE SEY -Richard Dreyruss. left , confers with co-star Janet Eilber and director John Badham during shooting of ·'Whose Life Is It. Anyway?" that two weeks without kidney dialysis treatment will .kill him. It's a wonder that a mm dealing with the fundamental issues of life and death can be so fundamentally unmoving, but the reason is built rieht into the premise. We 're supposed to cheer Harrison's victory to control his own life, but we can't help but lament the fact that be chooses to die. There's a stand-off going on right frorQ the start. We're caught between an unstoppable force and an immovable object and it paralyzes us as an audience. Yes, we have to agree that sane people should be able to determine their fates ; yes, we agree that it's sad when they cbocSae to die. In this context, Harrison isn't a character, he's a living telling the lie. 1 ------------------------------- Cafe Lido takes the neighborly approach By MICHAEL DOUGAN Ol ... D.; ............ Cafe Lido, 2900 Newport Blvd .• Newport 8NC#i, 615-2968. Lunch snwd 11 a.m . .J p.m . Mortda11·Frido111 with price• rangmg /rom $3. 75 to $5.SO. Dm~r aerwd S p. m.-JJ p.m. Monday-ThuTsdaJI, Sp. m.-mJdmgrat Friday and Sat~Jl._COsting IJ.25 !O JJUS. Ciowd Sundays. 1''or 11ve years, Joe Sperrau ran what he calls "a little neighborhood restaurant" in New York City. Then he sold the place and came to Newport Beach, planning only to visit fr\ends before venturing to Colorado "to be a ski bum for the season." "But I fell totally in love with Newport," Sperrau said. He decided to open -what else? - a little neighborhood restaurant. And that. in brief, is how the Cafe Lido came to be last November. lo both decor and tbe demeanor of the employees, it does have an. intimate, neighborly feel to it. Althouch seating more than 60, the restaurant is divided into two dining rooms, each with its own aura. This place isO:t geared for the masses. The food, thouch. threatens to attract them. The Cafe Lido boasts a pleasing, if not extensive. array of entrees divided Into veal, beef, chicken and sea food dishes . It 's an Amer · icanlzed-cootinental selection -roast prime rib of beef au jus, Alaskan kinl crab Je11, veal oscar, chJcken parmesan -prepared with a . tralned-ol naww. We had veal oecar <aauteed veal covered with crab meal, uparacua and bel'naile aauee. $10.ts) and ddcken cordoa bleu <ddckea bre..U Ruffed wJ~ Jaam and Swill a..-* coYered wttll but whaLstobd out. in our minds on-the following day. were the outstanding side courses. We opened the evening by splitting a $4.95 appetizer dish of oysters Rockefeller. fresh Bluepoint.a baked on the half shell in spinach florenline and covered with hollandaise. These made for happy mouths. They were tender and sumptuous little things that would probably appeal even to someone who basn 't developed a taste for oysters in their unadorned 1ta1e. Tbes alad wu topped wiLh Cafe Lido's house dressing, which boasts a Dijon mustard base. It was spicy and good. But the nicest surprise of the evening came from the mqst basic of things -the bread. Cafe Lido serves a steamed combination bread: pumpernickel, SOW'dough and squaw all in one loar. Not only is the taste a oleasure. but the unusual loolt or The bread is visually appealing as well. Also noteworthy is the Cafe Lido's wine list, with SS vatietles of California wines selling, said Sperrazz, for standard retall price plus a S2 corkage fee. The prices range from just under $10 to $70 for a bottle of Dom Perignon. Sperrazz said he hopes to encoura1e people to sample the different wines, rather than limply rely on the house wine. _He may have a problem there. because the house wine -Foppiano from a small boutique winery in Northern Caiifornia -is unusually navorful. Sperra1z said he hopes the Cafe Lido will appeal primarily to locals. "It's seared toward the local people," he explained. "I wanted to create a New York atmosphere rlcht here in Newport Beach, a little neichborbood restaurant." So welcome to the neighborhood. , Irvine Symphony slates 'Israel in Egypt' Choral conductor Joseph Bela Hu11U - recognized for bis work at the Tan11ewood, Ambler and Eisteddfodd, Wales, festivals -will conduct Handel's oratorio, "Israel ln E(Ypt," in a free concert Sunday in Irvine. The Alumni Choir of UC Irvine and the Irvine Symphony Orchestra will perform durio1 tbe coa,..-t. The free concert will be presented at the IJ'urtle Rock CommwUty Cen&er, 1 Sunnybill Drtve, lrvlae. h t. made poatble by donations and Cl'IDta from tlae at ae, UC Irvine, lrvlH Unlfted . . School District and various individuals, corporations and foundations. The Sunday concert Is set for 2 p.m. In addiUon, the rehearsal from 10: 15 a .m . to noon will be open to chiJdren in an effort to encourqe their musical appreciation. In addition to Sunday's caac:ert at Turtle Rock, the lrvtae Symphony Orebeltn will Perform in a series of three coneerta for which tlcnta are priced at. hi and 122. 1be aYIDPboay!• mbri-terieB "WIU be played Feb. at, Jlareh ao and April 10. For tickets ancl lnformatioa, ~ 5$MJl'1. '" 'u , ..... ,.,, .. •1' ,,,,.,. • ·~" ~·Ltl'f {) , 'ilrl•1'1;t •,)Cjq ,lblJmr; ,:t ! . . . Sad·dleback gf ~From Page 2 ~ Saturday since the Turtle Rock Community Park i _Cl!lbbouae is closed on Lincoln's Birthday. : 'Performances will be stven Feb. 13, lt-20, • t »t1 end March~ at 8 p.m. and Feb. 14, 21 and 21 :g at~.m. at \be Turtle Rock tbeater, oa Sunnyblll u.. R off Turtle Rock Drive in Irvine. Tickets will ..: be •allable at the door and no reservations are ~~ req~. * J TllEATE& FOa Youth, a drama ptolJ'am for kida from 10 to 15, will belin Feb. 6 at the Oran1e Cout YllCA. The pro1ram is teared toward B providing young people with a chance to write, ii direct and perform in a production. The troupe of 20 youngsters will rehearse Saturdays from 1 to 4 p.m. and will ataee two performances over the weekend of April 30. Further information is available by calling the Y at 642-9990. * CAILBOARD -Singers, dancers and actors 'are being sought at Golden West College for the spring musical, "Oklahoma" ... auditions are Monday and Tuesday at 7 p.m. in.the main theater on caippus, and the company will be composed of 70 women and 22 men ... call 892-7711, ext. 450, for detai - -Also auditioning Monday and Tuesday Is "Scapino" at the Gem Theater in Garden Grove ... a cast of 10 men and four women is required for lhe semi-improvisational comedy, which will open March 26 for 17 performances . . . further information is available at 638-6747. .•• 'The Fitness Game' From Page I 50,000 children will receive t he fitness message. Bookings are still available by calling SCR Community Services Coordinator Chr is Hagen at 957-2fi02. This year 's produc t ion ha s bee n underwritten with a grant of $25.000 from Mervyn's department store. Whale Watch .....,.,_..;;::!~, TrlM! the lligtl .... IDolld the bNutiful AU.URE, View 119 "'-~ Mlle wn.lt. a II WU IMf'I In dliys gone by. IYom -decll of this 52' """°°'*· Wltl'I ecoorrimodetJon. '°' 38 peraons tl'le Allure ,,..,.., from Lido M8'ina Village tl'lru scenic Newport Bay befor. vttnturing onto tl'le ocean for a f~lous. MYer" to be forgon.n lo<* at one of netur9'1 mlgl'ltlest crNtures. ~ .. c. Git,..'° 1811 ~ ...... FiiifW;y t• Cll ... ,., ........ ft "" s*'• A.. n , ...... •-..-......... _ -~~ NOW YOUR'S FOR PREVIEW OR PURCHASE NEW RELEASES ------~ORTAPACHELTJi£8/'UJ,'JVl.~~ CANNONBALL RUN GO TELL THE SPARTANS AND GOD CREA TED WOMAN TILL MAR/AGE DO US PART RICHARD PRYOR-LIVE IN CONCERT A HUGE SELECTION OF MOVIE HITS INOUOING •NOSTALGIA • llUGIOUS • CHllOllNS • ADULf fAl'IS •VCIS • llG SCHINS • COLOI CAMllAS • COlOI TV'S • VIDIO GAMIS • ACaSSOlllS ONE STOP FOR All YOUR VIDEO NEEDS 369 £1u1 St111t1nteenth Stttl/H Costa Mt1S11 C11/ifom111 92627 (714/631 ST0Pot631 ·7IJ67 AC:ROSS FROM RALPH'S 1 __ _ .. VIDEDI> G01'DEN BEAR l'ROUOL V l'AESENTS • DIRECT FROM ENGLAND • INTERNATIONALLY ACCLAIMED VOCALIST r • NOMINATED FOR 3 GRAMMY AWARDS *** "Cleo y ine ••,quite simply. the belt smger in the world. She is 1 towering 1rtt1t." -London Times "Th..-e is no getting tround it tt\1t Cleo I.lone 1s the finest 1ll~ound singer 1n the world." -L.A. H•reld·Exeminet An opportunlry to $lie Cleo Laine In an intimate setting with t1xpart production. CLEDLRINE Et;EDLRINE TICKETS SI.SO SMOWTlllES: WEDNESDAY, FEB. 3 THURSDAY, FU. 4 9:80 P.M. lfllF0:714-53f.M08 RESV: 714-MI Ml& CHARGE : 213-528.f111 GOhDEN ·BEAR 3DI PACIFIC COAST HWY. HUNTINGTON BEACH with John Dankwonh IARAIE • tiUU -Calvin Kl~ln Jeans SALE ~----------------- ~~~ 56 ~ASHION ISlAND · NEWPORT BEACH · (714) 644-7030 Currently screenln8 ABSENCE OF MALICE: Rated PG, Paul Newman and Sally Field. A carerul study of lhe- power of the press and its con.sequences, directed by Sidney Pollack. The PG ratinf is ror adult language. BEAU PERE: Rated R, a French adult comedy written and directed by Bertrand Blier. The-R rating is for adulCsitualions. BODY HEAT: llated R , starring William Hurt as a bungling, lovestruck attorney and Kathleen Turner as the femme fatale. This sexy. devious mn tery takes place in a fictitious Florida town so hot that people in cares order iced teas two at a lime. Directed by Lawrence Kaadan as an homage to film noir, the R rating comes from brief nudity. salty language and a general air or steaminess. THE BOOGENS: Rated R, stars Rebecca Balding and Fred Mccarren in a supernatural tale or horror. Directed by James L. Conway, from a script by David O'Malley and Bob Hunt. The R rating is for violence. THE BORDER: Rated R , stars Jack startipg a o_ew Ute. Harvey Keitel, Valerie Perrine and Warren Oates also star. The script was written by Deric Washburn, Waloo Green and David Freeman; the direction is by Tony Richardson. The R rating ia for strong languaae and violence. -. BUDD-'\' BUDDY: Rated R , with Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau. An encounter between a suicidal network censor and a mob bitman, filmed ln Riverside. The R rating ia for lan1uage. CHARIOTS OF Fl&E: Rated PG and starrint Ben Cross and Ian Charleson as runners in the 1924 Olympiad, where they run races for different reasons but mana1e t.o win just tbe same. A • rousing synthesizer sounclt.cack by Van1e.Ua... The.. PG rating must be for its lofty themes: there is no nudity, no violence and very little offensive language. COME HAVE COFFEE WITH US: Rated R. is an Italian comedy directed by Alberto Lattuada. The R rating is for adult situations. A VERY SPECIAL JAPANESE RESTAURANT Award winning traditional Japanese cuisine and superb weste rn-style specialties. Yo ur fa vorite seafood, chicken, a nd ste ak. Delicate soups and delightful salads. Impeccable service in a most beautiful setting. Discover Yama to ... a very special dining experience. 60 Fuhion Island Newport Beach / 644-48U Century Plaza Hotel 277-1840 Nicholson u Charlie Smith, a border 1uard who DEATH VALLEY: Rated R, stan Paul LeMat moves from Los An1eles to El P-uo in hope-of -See Currently, Page 6 February 9th· April 11th Rodgers & Hammerstein's Sonlb facific Director/Choreographer · John Spindler One of the great mus1cal·comedy su~ of all time. SOunt PAClftC 1s a blend of touching wartime romance and explosive GI humor. accompanied by one of the greatest collections of song hits ever found in one show: .. l'nt Ill Lowt Wiii A WH•1t11I Glr" "SW Elclllllltl Eftftint" "TWl's ........ Ulll A DI•" "Y .... n. s,Mtllme" ....... a.. wm Tllll .. ..._a.tor.,"'"" Make your weekends "special" with a magnificent champagne brunch overlooking NewPort Bay. Smot'g8Sbord buffet. only SI.ta ( S4.50 undef 121 S......, 11:00 a.a:· l :OO pA· s..-, 10:00 .... J:OO ,... . ESTATE FURNISHINGS Our new Thrift Shop is so full of a variety of items, it is hard to list them all. Come in to see ~erything! Better make it early for the best selec- tion. There are lost of interesting items. son-e quite unusual. How about the Hom-0-Zone and Health Regenerator? A very early ion machine. A signed and numbered set 6f We<kJwoed China-or an-arr deco toaster? All of our slock is above average quality and . there are good buys for the young . couple starting out. There is a set of Nori take China, Olympia pat-tern and a set of hardrock maple beds wifh a dresser that has a glass on the top and even all the bed rails! Chrome and glass coffee and end tables and a hi-tech lamp for the modern room . . Copper decorator items in a large variety and pictures of all kinds. in all price ranges. NeW de-corator polo shirts and jeans. Dining tables im maple and pecan wood. A china catimet that is very nice and appliances. Come in and visit us to- day! Who knows what you might find? Our store is operated by Southern Qllifornia Presbyterian Homes and is staffed by volunteers. We have a lay-a-way plan too. EEJbbEETBRS EEITTAEiE A UNIQUE THRIFT SHOP . - 789 W. 19th Street • Costa Mesa .. I I I. J714) 631-8030 10 A.M. • ·tP. . MoNDAY THROUGH .SATUAD~Y t 5 ~ 0 - l F Current!! .scree.ngs Fr<Jm Page 5----·-----and Catherine Hicks. R ratinC is for violence. EVILSPEAK: Rated R, stars Clint Howard and JOMpb Cortese in a tale of revenge and terror. Directed by Eric Weston from a story by Joseph Garofalo. Th• R rating is for violence. FOUR F&IENQS: Rated R~ stars Crai& Wasson, Jodi Thelen, Michael Huddleston and Jim MeWer in a study of a •roup of friends whose lives span the turbulence of the 1980.s. Steve Teaich wrote t.be screenplay. and Art.bur Penn directed. -dow.nfaUa ..whicb--.ar~to-eompa,... ud contra.st with the Victorian aeque e R raU ia for adult sexual situations. GALLIPOLI: Rated R, stars Mel Gibloo and Mark Lee as two young Australian soldiers who fight-in the tragic batt~e at-Gallipoli in-World War I. The R rating is for language and viole~ce_._ GHOST STORY: Rated R, stars Fred Astaire, Melvyn Douglas, Douglas Fairban.U Jr. and John Houseman. The R rafuig is for nudity and adult situations .. The R rating is for adult situations. --~·· ~ . ~,·,.non .·' ·. __ ~ THE FRENCH LIEUTENANT'S WOMAN: Foo~: ~~~~~rrn<:~~~b~~spa~·:;n~ !~~~ f!Jiliil.i .,.?7 Rated R, stars Meryl Streep in the role of the returning to live on Golden Pond. He's filled with GENU• OINESEMMWIN DISHES heartbroken and h eartbreaking Fren c h anxieties about death ; she's interminably Spec. 1. · I ~:~-• L r--n:-~~ Lieutenant's woman and Jeremy Irons as the cheerful. They bicker politely until the arrival of IOtZtng """"lalJ" O\.UI~~~ Victorian genUeman-who 1ambles fU.S 1ovc and t treir daughter (Jane Fonda ), her latest . _Lunch. Dinner Dallv • Food To Take Out reputation 00 her. The Victorian love story ls boyfriend, Billy (played brilliantly by Dabney : 4111ct •O .. MH .Jill...._.,. 1 the od d r·1 Coleman) and bis 13-year-old boy. The PG ratin1 ,750-717 I ~ 1,!!:~ COSTA MISA lntercut with another p ot: m em ay 1 m .__. crew making a movie of "The French Lieutenant's is for language. -~~--=-~==·=· ;:::··=='4=Z=·7;1;'2;•;6:J:l:·'='='~'~r=W~o~m~an~·=· ~h~a~s~ita~~ow~n romantic dramas an_d __ s_ee_c_urr_ent_ly_._P_a_g_e_7 _________ _ Colonial ~ .. ~~ ~. J!ittbtn . ·~-~ ~la..aHI ** OPEil 1 MYS I l£EI ** ...... ftl ............. ., .. IBlflSJ • •Y &la &-SfBIAS .... ,.,.Oilt ls48-o36~ 512W •. 191i.CodaMna c.rw-.,, ... & .... • J 1 Old fashiooed, romantic dinner-dancing is back in style._ ... and the Grand Portage now offers you an nren.ing to compete with your favorite memory. Soft tinkling dinner music, elegant candlelit table setti~. the grandeur of flaming tableside cookery. The ultimately danceable Fred Carroll Trio is featured Thursday through Saturday 7 to 12, ~ soft piano other evcni.. V..let parking. THE REGISTRY HOTEL 18800 MICAnhur Bciuln'llfd (714) 7,2-8777 Charbroiled to perfection. this skewered combination of thick top sirloin steak and plump shrimp is se~d with rice pilaf and "' broiled skewer of fresh mushrooms. onions & bell peppers. }'.11us your choice of clam chowder, soup of the day or mixed green salad and a half loaf of warm bread & butter. ~l.9.£ --BUAJOZAST ·LUNCH· DINNElt C'oddaaa ~ "joUy How" daily from 4pm to 7pm featuring Bucc.anttr Buad cocktails and compllmmtary hors d'~s ....,_ ,.._. · 203 Marine Avenue (Beer and Wine S«Nlce Only) C-. ..._ · Harbor Shopping Cenu~r 2300 Harbor Blvd laM ....._ · Offl·S a1 Lake Forut DrM 22873 Lake Forest Dnw .,.,... · Newpo11 Freeway at East Dyu Rd, 1721 East Dyu Rd, .... renti, screenlnJI _ _, ~rom Page6 . -itOD'EltN" P&UBLEMS: Rated-Pc"-G~.-s-t-ar-s Che~ Chase as a hard-luck air traffic c90troller who receives telekinetic powers ·when nu~lear waste is spilled onto his new car, and Patti D' Arbanville as his girlfriend who sees him through these trying limes. T'he PG rating is for language and adult situations. MY DINNER WITH ANDRE: Rated R , is an intimate dinner conversation between playwright Wallace Shawn and film director Andre Gre1ory. A ce.r.eb.ral.romp. The R rating is for laniuaae. NEIGHBORS: Rated R, stars John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd as a mismatched pair of neighbors on what begins as a quiet suburban street. Aykroyd's Vic is a pathological liar and cheat who drives the comenative Belmhi craay. The R rating is for languase and adult situations. NIGHT CR~ING : Rated PG. stars John Hurt, Jane Alexander, Doug McKeon, Beau Bridges and Glynnis O'Connor as a German family trying to escape acr06S the iron curtain by balloon .. Directed by Delbert Mann. The PG rating is for adult situations. PENNIES FROM HEAVEN: Rated R, stars Steve Martin and· Bernadette Peters in a throwback lo 1930's musicals . Set against the depression, the story is serious, even a little black. The R rating is for adult situations. llAGTHIE: Rated PG, a screen vers'on of ~ ""D"<Rtorow•s 1975 nl>veJ, wtflch weaves historical characters -Harry Thaw, Stanford White, Evelyn Nesbit, J . P. Mor1an -into the lives ol what lries very hard to be a typical American family. The PG rating is for nudity and som~violeoce. REDS: Rated PG, stars Warren Beatty as John Reed, the American journalist, and Diane Keaton as Louise Bryant, who becomes his wife. The PG ratin1 is for lan1ua1e and adult situations. ROU.OVER: Rated R, stars Jane Fonda and Kris Kristofferson in a tale of international intrigue. and passion. Not for those who expect heavy action or violence. The R ralint la for adult situations and vul1ar language. THE SEDU~ON : Rated R, stan Morgan Fairchild, Michael Sarralin, Vince Edwards and Andrew Stevens. The R rating is for adult situations and some nudity. SHAUY'S MACHINE: Rated R. stars Burt Reynolds as a tough cop caught bet-een a corrupt department and ever-present bad cuys. The R rating is for violence and language. TAPS: Rated PG, stars Timothy Hutton and George C. Scott. The PG rating is for violence. So. Ctlf.'1 Top P1 ofeul ..e Mideast O.C...A•••11 ,_._'-:e.a.s, ,........, B~PICTURE OF THE YEAR a.u..u F.-cta.n. Call P.ceset1ef' Promotions 17141157.090 I -New Tom rum omca AWClld -National loclld of 8"iew Awmd WARREN BEAlTY DIANE KEATON This week you c•n '" REOS •t theM th .. tres ·--' c .. .,.....,.rw..~ --_.,, 144 0760 .__ v,. IJO 1no 0...134 7S~l OW-CMllA WHY rlWMll llnll -.T PUU w..-H t ltl~ J-caTlll C... C..1' llt\O l~t •tt• U ........ t90 t01'1 "° _. .... M:C-UtlO '°" , ............... •ACAOl°'Y "'EllllUIS Y°"' Cal<l ..,I_.,.... -,.,.., pei. 10...., -·''"""-___ _ 7 ~ 2 TIUIEF ' Rated JL_ stars James Caan as a I lligh7tec Chicago bur1lar who sta es bis new J wife, child and life on one last heist. The R rating .,, is for·violence and language. i TRUE CONFESSIONS: Rated R, is a study in i::- CatholiC guilt and -exfs(entiaJ anguuh, embodied 5 by Robert DeNiro as a manipulative mooaicnor i and Robert Duvall as his brother, a detective. The -< screen play was written by John Gre1ory Dunne :-g and Joan Didion, based on DUMe 's novel, which in · tum was based on the Black Dahlia murder in Los i Angeles in 1947. The R rating is for langua1e and N adult situations. TIME BANDITS: Rated PG, stars John Cleese, David Warner, Sean Connery and Shelley Duvall in a bizarre tale of lime travel by a rapacious gang of dwarfs and a young English boy. The PG ratine is for adult situations. THEY ALL LAUGHED: Rated PG , stars Audrey Hepburn, Ben Gauara, John Ritter ani:I Dorothy Slratten in a romantic comedy set in Manhattan. Peter Bogdanovich directed from bis own script. The PG rating is for adult situations and language. THE WOMAN NEXT DOOR: Rated R, ls the latest movie by French director Francois Trufraut. The R rating is for adult situations. .. 'THI 80RDIR' HAS A LOT GOl•G FOR IT ••. TE•SIO•. A•Glll AND PASSIO•. Jack Nicholson is mesmerizing ... watching him work is a pleasure. In Tony Richardson· s rousing ~ movie. Nicholson becomes a hero bucking bureaucratic corruption. Tlli1 is Nicholson at his grungy, glorious best." -DAlltd AnHn, NtWSWtek ~Border I successful Invasion of Peckinpah County. where bogus high life and a quick ugly death too often Intersect. As for Jack Nicholson. he shows again that he can embody as much of the 20th century American male - sexy. psychotic, desperate, heroic - as any movie sur today.'' -Alctiard Corliss. TIN JN:X NICHOLSON • ..... . . . . . _] . ,......, ·--AtON\'--rHI_.,.. _.,. HARVEY KBTB. \N.ERE PERAWE \UUR:N~ ELPIDIA CARRILLO _..,,DllllC----~CllllN-ONIO-__ .,,_..,__, ___ ..,,,,.,COOOIJI (---~ --..rOGN-• Dlrf( ... ..,,ICN'fl!O.-oN .. --J 8 !-Live_ ·GtgS ~ I ~ EDITOR 'S NOTE: Live Gigs is a complete i listing of Orange Coast nightclubs offering live : entertainment. Acts arf! subject to change without i;' t . "C _no ice. ~. 'i: A.JR PORTER INN I 18700 MacArthur Blvd . J t.Ylne -833·2770 _ IJ;ntertainmenl & pancing Nightly ~ ,. o• ~LISIO'S ~ ..)676 Newport B1¥!L_ Costa Mesa -642-8293 ,p ancing Nightly j~' NCIENT MARINER 1 7 W. Coast Highway ewport Beach -646-0201 S AXT ER'S 14346 Culver Drive lrvlne -857-2103 BAXTER'S STREET 4647 MacArthur Blvd. Newport Beach 540·2475 BEACllBALL 2116 Ocean Front Newport Beach -673·5894 Stan Orlow BEN BROWN'S 31106 S. Coast Highway South Laguna -499·2663 lllLBO BAGGJNS Mesa Verde Shopping Center Costa Mesa -:>45-1718 Live Contemporary Rock Nobody leans on Sharky's Mdehine . t; .... '-·-~ From immigrant pasRJrts fired in steel mills .•• to the icy power oftbe ! super-rich. BLACK ANGUS 17920 Brookhursl Sl. Fountain Valley -988-4477 Dancing Nightly BLUE BEAT CAFE 107 21st Place Newport Beach -675·3333 Entertainment Nightly BLUE PAllROT South Coast Plaza Hotel Costa Mesa -:>40-2500 Oancin& Ni&htly BOARDWALK 1516 $. Coast Highway Laguna Beach 494-8588 BOB BURNS 37 Fashion Island Newport Beach -644·2030 Music Nightly BOBBY McGEE'S 353 E . Coast Highway Newport Beach 673·5380 Dancing Nightly EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAQEM"'1 18528 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 962·9010 Dancing Nightly to Country CALABASH LANDING 179 E. 17th Sl. Costa Mesa 642·9855 CALIFORNIA SUN 19070 Magnolia St. Huntingtoa Beach - 963·2078 Country Rock Dancing CANNERY 3010 Lafayette Ave Newport Beach 675-5777 Music Nightly CRAZY HORSE 1580 Brookhollow Drive Santa Ana 54!H5l2 Top Country Artists See Gigs. Page 9 ORANGE COUNTY PREMIERE pf us ··eo.,..... Coualne" ''°' "If""" mm ·CIYriot:J of 11re·""" wUl mm one of Ute most exhlla...tmg pktaues In ntMtlJ years.·· -Gene llfleltt, Tod9y IN>w,,_~fV "M~ .. n&aterful, uultant, triumphant and joyful The finest moments a scnien can .chieue.·· -t.. .. a,.......t~t ~lv-IOA "It's •n ~I film about some ~people. Rousing, Invigorating. A5 festf ue a film as one could imagine ... -flf•• •0t11o t•mit• V1"'-•nl C..tl\O~ fJt5 =;;;;=========:t=========:::::::: ™rnr()ftlRE ~ __ . ..,.. From Page 8 CAPY'S 114 McFadden Place Newport Beach 675·1094 Music Nightly CR~SS ROADS 18050 Brookhursl St. FoUJ1lain Valley 963 6711 Dancing ~1ghtl} CRO\VN HOl:SE 32802 S. Coast thghwa~ Laguna Niguel .. 499-2626 M~SIC Nightly CR\'STAL SALOON 1700 Placentia Ave. Costa Mesa 646·757 1 Dancing Nightly to Country DANA TRADt:R 34150 S Coast Highway Dana Point 493·2603 DEJA Vl: 2285 Newport Bl\•d .• The lMIWfsity of Callforma, lrwte invites ~ to: An Evening With Maya Angelop linger, dMcef. poet, end author of "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings" and how "The Heart of a ~oman" w .... .., ..... _, J, 1912 I ..... UCI Cf'ftfford H .. Tickets ASUCI Box Office: 14 general: s3 faculty. 91Wf, 00 Alumni Association mem- bers. other students; •2 UCI students; .. .._..,,m:IJWJ7t ECONOMY SEATING II.SO 'til 3:00 PM a>cc•n v•clAL. AUIHNTS NOT•O Warren Batty Jeck Nicholson Costa .Mesa 833-1160 Rock r>undng Nightly DELANEV"S 630 Lido Park Orwe Newport Beach 675-3145 Honey Bees Fl VE CllOWNS a ESTAVRAm' 3801 E. Coast Hlgh~ay Coronp del Mar 760·0331 Mllry Lou O'Toole Showcase Singers BEST PlCTI.JRE - DRAMA BEST DIRECTOR Marie Rydell BEST SCREENPLAY Ernest Tho mpson BEST ACTOR Henry Fonda BEST ACTRESS Katharine Hepburn BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS 1 Jane Fonda t .. FOXHUNTER 17927 MacArthur Blvd. Irvine 549-8728• Dancing Nigblly Variety TH E GALLEV 34734 $. Coast Highway Capistrano Beach 661·6243 GOLDEN BEAR 306 Coast Highwav Huntington Beacti 536·9600 iO~~w vur.10 -. ~ ,,,,, .. lltl/(fnlll<' ~ ,..,,,,.,,,.,, Ctm•flll . \ r1lflilr.\c'rfT ~ J 1uh11J r ru11WT>1tn' c'XR.,'111.\ ) 11m1r "'" -- Oilnnt Katon llllllEtl (R) 1~~-111.--11£111-U'-G) SH0~,--~.-..~1..,._. 12:,: ::30 a :JO 1 :08 3:11 i :ZO No £-...y-Y..113 7:301:40 Sneak Preview At 1:00 Paul Newman :-=:.: '::,:r 12 .. 30 3 •. 00 s.·ll lO·.oo 12:15 2:45 s:1s c:u•tTllf ,_(PG) 12:31 Z:5G5:15 1:4& 18i10 7:4510:19 ........._¥ CllHI IOUID It Dri...U. YoVI AM c .. ll•t0,. yow....,.. II"° AM .,·-w•tll ..,.., __ y .... tt-.lw"'t ,...,. -AM~ .. , ... GtOr)I c. Scott TAPS (PG) '•11 0 '"-IPG) Mor~ flirdlil4 TWE•...a.(R) ._.TemlR) .11cti Nidlo11or ..... (R Also flllym ..... ) Bwt Reyaol• alMKY'I IMClllE(R) 1-lllil(R) )""' \lc'Nt.,IAHrn' • VH'llfl IH•H11111/l..A Tl-. '"""" .'l#<IAI• V.11rfl/ A/tc'f' l)ttrlt .ti~ Hnh IWmltO/A I' Jc•{frt'l' l l•mtlV'l'IXIC\:\· \lmv1rt KWi11/W-:itJ..•:n • HARPOON HENRY'S 25062 1'el Prado ~..,.. Ouna Point 493.2933 HOTEL LAGUNA 425 S. Coast Highway LaJ(una Beach 494·1151 HU~GR\' TIGER 3201 E. Coast llighway Corona del Mar 675·7575 I CH A BOD'S 18582 Beach Bl vd. Huntington Beac.-h 541·6331 IVY HOUSE 384 Forest Ave. ·Laguna Beach -494·9491 Dancing Nightly J EREMIAH'S STEAKHOVSE 8901 Warner Ave. Huntington Beach B-48·2662 Music.-Nl ghlly See Gigs. Page 10 9 IO From Page9 ,.P. MAC'S 10142 Adams Ave. Huntington Beach -963-7829 • Country Rock Nightly . . Santa Ana -751·7867 Comedy Stars Nightly LAGUNA STAR DISCO 1184 S. Coast Highway Laguna Beach -494·8564 Committee for Arts presents OIJET D'ART CHAMBER DUO CIMlical mulic: on flute and guit# T....,,M.2.1912 ... Cw:erttw JOHN McCUTCHION & RICI_. LOllAIMIUI Folk Music of Appalachia -on fiddle. 'banjo. hamnw cutcimer. aulotwl>. gull# & 'piano. MISSOURI COMPROMISE ·23020 Lake Forest Dr. Laguna HiUs 855-4248 MOON RAKE R 18542 MacArthur Blvd. Irvine 833-9600 202 Ne" port Center Drive Newport Beach 640-4110 MUSTANG R,\NCH 428 J 7th Street Costa Mesa 631·2331 Dancing Nightly Country Rock See Gigs. Page 11 Chevy had ~ power to make this ~ Y ecr the funniest ever! w ... ..,,,.J. 1m .,. c_.... ... Ge,,.,., H . UO Fae/staff, Sr. Cit.. UCI Alumni I Other Sludents ••. UCI Students 13. Tickets avei'*9 It the ASUCl Box Office. Mon.-Fri .• 9:30 am to 4 pm. For further information, call Commttt .. ~Att9833-e3i7Vii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiliiiii~jiiiiiiiiiiii!!!!iii!iiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiii In a Boston hospital a love affair ends, a new one i.epn., a Doctor battles Ida patient, and a man learns the trae · mu•ing of courage. Whose Ufe Is It ~1 Metto·Oolclwyn·~ ~ ACOONEY·SCKJTE PAOOLCTlON ROiARD DREYFUSS · ~ CASSAVETES A Jctw> a.dtwn Fn WHOSE LIFE IS IT ANYWAY?" 5llll'rn; CHRISTINE LAHTI 808 IW.ABAN Elleeul ... ~ MAAT"'C SOfJTE rel RAY Cl:x:Hf:'f Procl.cban°"918C1 bl' GENE CAU.AHAH ONc:od ~ ~lOSl.ASC. ~bl'NmUIB IU!NST~ ~bf ~a.NI< rd RE<3l'W.D A06E 8-on l'e Sloge"""' WHOl!IE lff IS If N-rf'Wlf(? bl' BRIAN Ct.ARK Ploclad bl' UIWADQ P~ R .,,;..._ l~ Oreclldb\'JOHN~ Mlllrocab' A--MGM1~.,.._ ~!.·t::.~ ,..,w~-. ..... ,...oo ... .._.""!',....,,,-.fO .W _...... ......... . NOW PLAYING IMI a TW llUJJJ•l• IUCll ,..,.. ·a-Bfea Pim Edwlnls SlclllliMck fdwllds CNma Edwards Woodbridge CinedoMI 529.5339 511-5180 141·0311 551 -0655 134·1553 COITA .. Edwlrds Saulll Coal Pim 541·2111 ''> .. Live Glas From Page IO 34 130 S. Coast Highway NEWPORTER INN Dana Point -661·6688 1107 Jamboree Road PLANKHOUSE Newport Beach -644-1700 6060 Warner Ave. Dancing Nightly Hunlington Beach 842-5111 OH BROTHERS PLANKHOUSE 199 N. Coast Highway 18872 Beach Blvd Laguna Beach -497-5011 Huntington Beach OLD WORLD 964-2786 7561 Center Street w PLUSH FOX Huntington Beach -25192 Cabot Road 897-1470 Laguna Hills -830·8220 Live Entertainment Nightly llONSTADl"S PANHANDLER 719 W. 19th St. NOW PLAYING UIWMlll IOUTll .. QmllA lDWUDI ..,.._ ceAlf rtAU Wts-893 O~ .,.,.,. ~51 0655 , ... can.a~ u can a... Cosca .,._ 7~1 .,... Orlllge .,. 3911 :::=:.:=. I ACAOE ... Y MEM8ElllS' -.,.,., •"' _1.,... __ _. 10.,,,., . ~-·· .... ----. A UNIQUE AND PROVOCATIVEftLM, IRONIC, FIJNNY, CRAZ~1 ANDMOVING -Aal KMU...N'l!W8Wl'.D EXCLUSIVE ORANGE C81JNT~ ENGAGEMENT Costa Mesa 642-2973 RENDEZVOUS II Live Country Rock ,, 7492 Edinger Ave. Nightly Huntington Beach QUIET WOMAN 847-4300 696 S. Coast Highway REUBEN'S Laguna Beuch 494-0162 155.S Adams Ave. Costa Mesa 540·9672 RED ONION 2406 Newport Blvd. REUBEN E. LEE Newport Beach -675-2244 151 E . COast Highwa)' Rock , Reggae. Variety Newport Beach -675·5811 Call for schedule Entertainment Nightly and Sunday &EGISTRY HOTEL 18800 MecArt.bur Blvd. SANDPIPER Irvine -752-8777 1183 S. Coast Highway Dancing Nightly Laguna Beach -494-4694 ~ .. hollS ol •n-stap thrills." -Rex Reaj A ~l{;l\ff flO r-.<~llO tt/Ll-WI ... - .......... ,. CMll PlAU ...... ...... •IHUllll ..,,.. ~s• °'~~ 5-Catv "'°"' C...• ....._ f~ .. IMUf ~•6 1111 fNOMIY*"lll9 1* ·~Or.nQt6'41~~l " .... " ... '°"""91, • ._.1., .. ,..r Ot•noe 6391110 !00-AC-e '°",.... _.._..., 1---.---... -·_ .. ..,_, *BARGAIN MATINEES* Monday thru Satutday All Perform•nces before S:OO PM (E1cep1 Sl*!ll Engagements Ml Helidlys) -c.-.n·------"TAPI"-,_,_..., __ ......... ..._ •• PIMllMY ___ _,, --· -=-===---"R•DS"'-·"•- ''9MAMY'S ~ .. ,., --··-------"'TMR MDUCTIOr ____ .............. :s,., _ LAKEWOOD CENTER WALi< I ... .. -~·-. ..... ''ON~ f'OND" --.-... -.--_c. __ ,_,.., __ ··rus .. ..,. --.... -- LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH W•l k IN --·-C-. • ....,_ Lft II IT ANYWAY?" ·---Na.•• ... --··-· ..... ;:-~ii.- Focully 01 Con01e1rooo 211/H1·95IO --· ''SHMl(Y'l llAC .... " .. '"' __ ....,_ ------·-·-··-"VINOll'"• ·-~---.··· focul!y At Del Amo 211/614·9211 ~~~--~~~~~-...-~~~~~~·-~~--------"IWOIRI Of THE LOST MK" ••.1::11.•1 ....... u rtt -I -----"CHAIUOTI CW F'IRI" - lttl, -............ . -Soutll Coo11 Htwoy J 01 lfoodlrOy 494-1514 ---· ·~.;.· -·----. .... ---·--'""°"" ,.._. .... _.,._ -------- ST UDIO CAFE T.C. PE PPERCORN'S 100 Main Street 8052 Slark St. Balboa Peninsula -Huntington Beach 675·7760 842·5535 SUTT ER'S MILL WAREHOUSE 7891 Warner Ave. }450 Via Oporto Huntington Beach Newport Beach -673-4700 848·8860 SWIZZLESTICK WHISTLE STOP 19022 Brookhurst St. 31952 Del Obispo Huntington Beach -San J uan Capistrano 968-5022 493.2227 TERRY'S WHITEHOUS E 2901 Harbor; Blvd. 340 S. Coast Highway Fountain Valley -754·9963 Laguna Beach -4.94·8088 'ACIFIC THlATllU IMllVf.111 niu MEETS SllfTCJI ._MU -"" ... 1111 to\t Al HAAIOll llYD IMllVf·lll 6 OMll4if IMltV( ... ..... J .. '411-···-· ,. .. _,_,,.,_ .. "_ --· -· -8;16 \ .. , .. ,:00.-........ 9.45 IM,OlllTHT ltOYICl! C .. 11 ftllll• UltOO I Z flll((! M.,..,.., • .,..,-'"'•'"630•hl Svo -4·30,. ~ lllUlll • l'CU AM ._·~ ¥00 IS 'IGllll Sf'fM(ll If llO 11111 CM MOIO Wlll4 01110I ACa:SSOlll l"OSl!OI ...-1111 l'GIO'lllU l•AU CM-A lllllfMll .. Oii "' - A .... /I.'' ._, ANAHEIM ORIVf IN P\ I '~ A • A 1J t BUENA PARK ow :~1 1w "-•-...... ~-12M010 "' ....... ' LINCOLN ORIVI IN l•ft<Oll\ Awe ••" ot w~" 121·4070 '''ll'i!llU!!' SOii °"'Vo 1,_,, 0111oot~11ttt (So) M2·2411 ------·-IA ___ _ "WNOlf"111 -··NIGHT ICMOOL" 1111 ---.--. "THleooGINS"'111 -"'THEY CAME l'WOflll WITMN"' _, _, __ . __ ··THE UDUCTION" 1111 -"L()()l(Ult" "" ____ ...... _ ,_ WLnll.19 • ..._ "VINOW'1111 -"'MtCMfT ICMOOl."" 1111 ttlll Jt- '""'~ Gol_G<_fl_ ..... 3693 . -I -c.-·---'"IT'lt:!9"' ... ' I "T~ --"ITHll ~· ,_. ''TMICAW~ RUN"- , Cllll JI SOllllo • ~ Clllt..PUOUMO • UtWWW -·WOW ~--· "ON CllO&.MJt l"OtlD'' ----• -....., "T .. 90Mla" Ill • .,... COllCORDe-I -AWT '19'' -"'TilACICOOWN".,. , .. ··-• C"1( .. _ ... . .... ,. .. LA HABRA DlllVI ilf -·-·-· .... -... 171-1162 ----..... O~A NGE 0111\.E '"' ..,..._ ......... ___ .,. __ "WNOlll"1111 -··NtQHT ICHOOl" "" io•OO "'"° 1,_,, ~ a-c-.. io.;,E' 551·7022 ~i~ ----· Clleecll • Oleftt'• .... 0.--·~ -·-··· -... ''ntm •10~,?..~a111••• .. "" "ctleedt a c:a...e•e Nest....._ .• ''TMhc:AmPROll..,..... -.,. ··u~tNllllC)l(l"tlll .... ... . ... MISSION 0111\ll IN - '• " . WA RNFR t1Q1\t 1N --· "lllOOalN ~ .... .._ -"NINITOl"lft' ... ----VIACRUCtl llM:IO'IW a -NOANIM II 3! ~ • i ~ i ~ 'Tl ~ a: ~ c... DI ::> c DI -< J'6 ... ~ N • • - II • I -g i • t "t: I&.. . . I . .... :~ "· ... • George C. Scott In "TAPS" CN . -. II. "BOOG ENES" 11ARTHUR''P1ue Ill. 11TIME BANDJTS" CPO> Midnight Shows Frt.-S.t • Pdw.nd<, r OWN CENTER I t., ' ~ ~ ' • I ', ,' . ~ ·.: ... '.· . 751--t18-t .Mca---"THE BORDER" ..... ....,,.. ~~ .• _ _, ..... m ,..,., ... .,. •• ,_ hll.4'11. :t tl:-11 -~ "WHOSE LIFE II IT . ANYWAY?" (R) ... ,,.,_ .. _, ..... ......... ... = ..,_, "" ........ ~· llMTIO M.,,.._ M.lt•-Mflll* ..... 1:11, 6ALLIPDLI .... .,,.,,_ .. ,-... ., ... ,_ UAUllW•---"THE SEDUCTION" "THEWOMAN NEXT DOOR" (R) ,., ... .._,_ .. ,_, ........ ..... -·--"FOUR FRIENDS" ---"WHOSE LIFE ISIT ANYWAY?" (RI ,... __ '* llWllAI IAUY ftWI All EICE OF MALICE >-·-· "AIRPLANE" "VENOM" ""'-"'".._,_ MYl£Jft1£R WITH AllDRE --·-··-... , ..... -. ... -.....,_ .... , _____ _ ,,, ....... _ ... -----t•dw.ird<, VIEJO TWIN ... : ..... -.... ~ .. ,' .. 830 -6990 • • • II ' Pdw,lrd<, CINEMA "'"' . . : : _:, '" ' "" 546-3102 ~. ,.., ..... . .. ,...,. ..... a:ie. .... -...,.. ... ------··dw.11 .I-. l IDf1 t INl MA · · .. • -: -6 7 3-8J~O 'llLll•(lll ...,_ t:ll •• , ... "* -,__. .. "99£'-N ,,_'EMS "THE ........ SEDUCTION .,.,.,... '"'· ''''· - "AIRPLANE" • ~iiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiltiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiii~i;;;;;;;;m~~~;=::=-=-=-~~==~ ........ ------~~~--~..._--~~~~~· FRIDAY. JANUARY 2g 1 '.I~:' , ·~, , • • • • • Ylll 11111111 DAllY Pl'IR OR ANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Schnrltz has bomb scare Newport Beach office evacuated in phone threat hoax ~ . TARGET? -State Sen. John S chmitz' office received a bomb threat s hortlv before his r e primand in the Senate. Second gunman sought LOS ANGE LES (AP ) - Determined not to spoil their case in the assassination of a -Turkish diplom at, police have de layed the a rraignme nt of Hanpig "Harry" Sassounian until Monday and kept searching for a second m an, officers said. Sassounian, 19, of suburban Pasadena, who relatives said ha d been raised on Armenian nati o n a lis m , was booke d Thur-lday-ni.gbt for in-Vestigation- of murder in the red -lleht ambus h of Ke mal Arikan, Turkey's consul genera l in Los Angeles. Arikan, S4, was shot to death . while. driving to work Thursday morning. Two young men were seen emptying their pistols into Arikan's consular car at a busy Wilshire Boulevard intersection. He was alone in the vehicle. Detective Ma rvin Engquist , an investigator on the case, said today that while police believe they have strong evidence, they want to take the maximum time allo w e d b e f ore b r ingi ng Sassounian before a court to be certain they have everything in orde r. A second gunman is being sought, Engqujst said, but he added that it was too soon to tell if the ambush had been the o ut g r o wth o f a b roader cons piracy. However, minutes a ft e r th e s h ooti n g , T h e Associated Press received an ano ny m o us tele phone c a ll claiming responsibility for the a ssassination from a group identifying itself as ttre J-ustice- Commandos of the Armenian Genocide. "We have an awful lot of information we're trying to put togeth.er and we're just getting sta rted on the case," Engquist sajd. "The investigation is still in the embryo stage." Sassounian's relatives said he was raised with tales of the Turks' World Wa r I slaughter of 1.5 million Ar m e n ians. a ma ssac r e t h e T urki s h g o v e rnme n t h as n eve r acknowledged. I · · ff e l i v e d w i t h h i s· grandparents most of bis life I and they would tell him all the time about the fa mily massacre. This is bow all Ar m e nian parents are with their children," said · Koharik Sassounian. the youth's aunt, who also lives in Pasadena. Meanwhile , in Ank ara, the <See TURKISH, Page A.2 ) B)' STEVE MITCHELL °'_.,...., ........... St a te Sen . J o hn Schmitz' Ne wport Beach offices received a t elephoned bo mb threat ·Thursday. just hours before the se nato r wa s f o rm a ll y reprimanded by his colleagues in Sacramento. The caller, believed to be a fe male, told a Schmits aide. "The bull dykes of America h ave placed a bomb in the senator's office. It will go off in 10 minutes." Schmitz' Campus Drive suite was evacuated and police were called. A search turned up no bom bs. M e anwhile, a t the s tate Capitol, the ~nate voted 28·10 to formally conde mn Schmitz for his remarks in a Dec. 22 press release in which he attacked abor tion-rights ad vocates in derogatory terms. Six Republicans joined all the De m oc rat s pr ese nt in s upporting a r esolution by Senate leader David Roberti, D-Los Angeles, that called Sc hm i tz ' co mm e nt s "outr.,eous," and said they p layed "upon prejudice and intolerance." The formal reprimand, which falls j ust short of censure, is the ,first applied to a state legislator in modern times and has Leen ca lle d unpreced e nted b y members of both parties. ·'This Senate cannot tolerate t he in~ubation of prejudice within its r anks, prejudice .......... REUNITED -Brig. Gen. James L. Oozier and his wire Judith e mbrace in Vicenza. Italy, following his rescue by Italia n police. Oozier was held captive 42 days by terrorists. Freed Dozier lauds 'power of prayer' VICENZA, Italy CAP> -U.S. Br ig. Gen. J ames L. Dozier today called freedom "the most p recious gift" a nd said his You auto check cars out today Looking for a new car? Check out the latest models in today's "Auto '82 Update" in the- Daily Pilot. Tbe 18 pages in two special se c tions de tail the ne west features, in cluding highe r mileage and impro ve d performance, and looks at the prospects for lowe r inte re,;t rates on auto financing. It will give you a fresh look at the new line of '82 cars. rescu e from Re d Brigades kidnappe r s was la rgely the result of the "power of prayer." The SO-year-old general, clean shaven and clad in a green dress uniform , also paid a glowing tr ibute to Italian security forces who freed him Thursd ay from a Red Brigades "people's prison" after 42 days' captivity. "As a military officer, I would very much like to have people like this under my command when the going gets tough," Dozier s aid. Italian authorit ies made 17 more ar r est s t o d ay and uncover ed hi deouts filled with arms in renewed effor ts to s mash the Red Brigades. Italy's mos t f ea r ed ter r ori s t or ga nization. Most of t hose arrested were from Verona, but a few were picked up in Mestre. near Venice. Reagan· def ends plan at FDR. ceremony Oozier made extemporaneous rem a rks to 250 r e po rters gat h e r e d a t th e non·de moninational cha pel at the U.S. military base in this northern Italian .city. He did not take questions, explaining he was still being debriefed by It a li a n a nd Am e r i can authorities. WASHINGTON (AP ).- Preaident Reag an , once an ardent New Dealer, paused during a tribute to Franklin 0 . Roos evelt to defend bil campaign to revene the coune of 1ovemment established by Roosevelt nearly a half.century ago. Americana, said Reagan, "are practJcal peopJe ... We sense when thino have aone too far, when the tf me has come to make fundamental ch a nges ." (Related photo, AlO) Rea1an'1 evocation of Rootevelt'a political pbllolophy tame al a White Houae luncheon TbundaJ, attended ~ by' about two dosen members of the Rooaeve1t family and former offtdall ol tbe New Deal era, t •••rr•u1.• the 1ooth a nniversar y o r the 32nd president's birth. peagan praised Roosevelt as ' o n e or his t o r y's t ruly monumental figures . . . an American giant, a leader who shaped. ins pired and led our people through perilous times." T he president recalled the "wave of affection and pride" that swept a crowd in Des Moines , Iowa, in 1935 whe n Roosevelt passed throu1h. "He really did convince us that the only thing we h•d to fear wu fear ltaeU," Rea1an said. On Capitol Hill, tbe R001evelt family gathered with frienda and memben of Con1res1 to pay trlbute to the president who led the nation out of a deva1tatJn1 economic depression and rallied (S..J'Da.Pap.U) j I The general said nothing a bout the time he spent in captivity. He appeared relaxed and gesture d repea tedly to make hla points. Before Dozier met with the press, a spokesman, Lt. Gen. Col. J ac k Barham , told reporters that the general bad n ot bee n "ph ysica ll y mi s tr e at e d " a nd w as "sufficiently fed " durin& the six·week ordeal. Dozier was flanked by his wlh, Judith , and their 24·year-old dauehte r Cheryl. Mra. Doaier bad lean ln her eyes and nodded frequently u the 1eneral spoke. Sbe also received a belated Christmas present at the news conference from Dolier. · against people wbo are blithely accused or deviant behavior. prejudice against people who are attacked for their ethnic background," said Roberti. ''When I first saw that press release, when you fi rst saw it, you knew it was bigotry." he added. But Schmitz, a Corona del Mar R e publi can w h o r a n f or p resid e nt in 1972 o n t he American Independent Party ticket, expressed no regrets and predicted the action would aid his campaign for the U.S. Senate this year. "Tonight when I go to sleep, guys and girls, I am going to sleep very soundly,·' he said d uring noor debate. In a press release .issued on committee stationery late 1Jl year , Schmitz used the terms "bu lldyke s," "m u r derous mar a uders," and "queer" to desc r i be a b o r tlo n ·righ ts' advocates who attended a series of hearings he chaired. At a Los Angeles hearing, Schmitz said in the release, the front rows of the auditoriu m were filled with a "sea of hard, J ewish and (arguably ) female faces." H e a lso called fem1n1s t attorney Gloria Allred a "slick butch lawyeress." Ms . Allred later filed a $10 million libel s uit against Schmitz Schmitz said Thursday he was being attacked solely for using the word "Jewish" in a cont.ext <See SCHMITZ, Page A2) Remap decision rapped Coast communities may be without representation By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL 0. .. 0..., ...... , .... Many com munities along the Ora-nge Coast may be without representation in t he state $enate fo r a two.year period ending in 1984 as a result of Thursday 's reappor tionment decision by the state Supreme Court. The court, in a 4.3 ruling, held t h at r e di s tricti n g pl ans approved in September by the Dem ocrat-controlled s t a t e Legislature and signed into law by-i}ov:-Edmun1' G. Brown Jr., also a Democrat, will be used in the June 8 primary election. The court furthe r ruled that a Republican·backed referendum that would block those plans also will appear on the ballot . If the re f erend um i s s uccessful , candid ates elected in th e s ubs e quent Nove mber gene ral election would serve in the new districts until 1984, by which time a new redistricing plan would be prepared by the Legislature. If Thur sday 's rulin g withstands a likely challenge in federal courts. voters in Seal Beach , Huntington Beach . Newport Beach , Laguna Beach, San Juan Capistrano and San Clemente will not be permitted to elect a new state senator until 1984 . Most of that territory today falls within the 36th senatorial district, represented by state Sen. John Schmitz, R-Newport Beach. When the new coastal distr ict was formed. 1t was assigned a new number. 37 Under the reapportionment p l an . e le c tion s in even numbered districts a re being held this year; In odd numbered districts in 1984. Because Schmitz' term ends tliis year and no new election would be held until 1984, the new 31th d istric t , w ith party r egistra tion o f so per cent R e p ublican a nd 37 per cent D e m ocr at., wou l d r e m ai n without Senate representation. Beyond that, even if the Republican·backed referendum succeeds it would be 1986 before a new reapportionment plan is devised by the Legis lature. It would not take effect until 1!184. Potential Repub l ican candidates generall y had been banking on the state high court ruling that old district lines would be used i n t he June primary. For example, Irvine Mayor David Sills was planning to seek the Republican nomination in CHANGES DUE? The present s late assembl~ distrn·ts <l op) will be altered to the new reapportionment t hottom 1 11 a ruling by the s tate Supn.·~ Court i~ <.11lowed to stand ' ' Sch m1tz' 36lh District. Now. Sills is a candidate wit hout a district in which to run. He called the court's decision ··Pu re politics under the guise oi judicial interpretation." Sills sajd his political pla~ will be held in abeyance pend.iDg the outcome or t he expect•d Republican party appeal of the state high court's ruling. ~ Assemblywom a n Ma r i•n Ber geson, R·Newport Beatjl. said this morning that she was "deeply dis appot.n.U.d:' Jn .. tie.- state Supreme Court ruUng. a dec1s1on which s he believes reflected "an obvious bias." Mrs. Bergeson said she was (See REMAP, Page A.2) Woman hurt in 4-vehicle accident A truck·tractor that jumped the center divider of the Costa Mesa Freeway prompted a f o ur ·veh ic l e acci d e nt. hospitalized pne wom an aod stopped commuter traffi c . Ca li f o rnia H ig h w a y Patrolman diverted cars on to tht: Garden Grove Freeway from 4 30 to 7 p.m, Thursday after a lhree·axle rig, driven by Am brose Russell Balla ntyne, 42, of Wilrtnngton. failed to stop for ~tailed traffic south or Chapman A venue in Orange. In vestigating offi cer Dennis We lch s-a-id wh-en-B11llantyne- braked. his truck swerved from the slowest southbound lane and bounced into the northbound lanes. s triking head·on t he car of Marga ret E. Schaefer. 53 , of Anaheim. . Next in line was Alan Scott Rodgers, 19. of Corona, who laid down his motorcycle, avoiding a collision and escaping serious injury Such a quick maneuver was not possible for the pickup truck driven by John Henry Hays, 28. of Riverside a nd it hit the Schaefer car from the rear. Sbe was taken to Chapman General Hospital suffering from brok~ legs and facial lacerations. Welch indicated the roadway wa s s lightl y d a mp from afternoon rains. The freeway closure after the accident was due to the cleanup or spilled gasoline. No citatlou were issued pending further investigation. DRAllil CIAST 1111111 F air through Saturday Lows tonig h t 53 at beaches, 46 inla nd. Ki1hs Saturday along coast, 70 • inland, Details Page Al. llSIDf TIUY UC Irvine conhnwd it• '°'" st reak by downing l..ong 811ach State 11.Q to ut~ ff• record to 16·1 /or tr.. secuon, Page Cl. INllX ,.,.,_.....,.. .. L.M..... "' ........ .... C.-.nN "' C..,Mc ... •N C ....... N C...• "' c-... "' ............. ......... "' ....... 1 ••• W I II """... .. "'~ .. -~ "' ............ ..... 11112 aa.w-.. ............ , ....... =-"= ....._ .... , ........... ":I · ~--JJ ......... ! ......... , ........ ~ ,........ .. ..... ----- • • • • • Or•np• Cont DAIL V PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 II ') .1 •) 11 ~clflc . • 0c .... J a o.lly ......... .,... ~' NEW CONGRESS -This will be the makeup of Or ange County's congressional districts under reapportionment. ., increasing California's seats from 43 to 45. 'll· ,11 From Page A 1 ~'::REMAP RAPPED. • • s ure the Republicans would ftappeal the ruling to the federal 4,pourts. Of significance in that 11 appeal, she said, was the split :.r.vote of the court's ruling. · In the meantime, she said, voters' were faced with a "lack of continuity" between the 1982 -and 1984 elections due to the ruling's effects. The part y's executive committee is scheduled to meet tonight in Monterey to decide whether an appeal will be ' pursued, a party spokesman said. Party executives are , m eeting in Monterey this weekend to discuss 1982 election st~ategy. Kepublicans have maintained that the reapportionment plans are designed to ensure that Democrats retain control of the state Legislature for the next 10 years. And, they view the plans as ensuring that Democrats will pick up new seats in Congress. Under the congressional plan. Cali fornia gains two congressional seats, increasing the size of its Washington D.C. delegation from 43 to 45. Legislators and congressioanl district lines are redrawn every 10 years to equalize voter population to comply with one man , one vote requirements. Windy, warmer weekend forecast . A wind)' weekend with warmer days and cool nights was forecast for Orange Coast ' residents today by the National Weather Service. \ A weather service spokesman ~aid gusty winds measuring 15 to 20 mph would continue through the weekend. Clear weather with no rain in sight is forecast. Temperatures will rise to the high 60s or low 70s during the weekend. Nightly temperatures will drop into the low 40s, the weather service said. F or residents planning a trip to the mountains this weekend, the weather ser vice said a traveler's advisory would be in eCCect through Saturday, with winds gusting up to 40 mph. Light intermittent showers were r e ported T h urs d ay a fte rnoon in several Orange Coast cities. In Huntington Beach , veteran weather watcher I . Sherman Denny said bis rain 1.u1e recorded .08 inch of rain on Thursday. He said this motatan brolllbt bis rainfall total ftw tbe year beginning JuJy l , i•t. to •.• inches, about...two iDdMs-&bud of the rainfall total for tbia date last year. -rutus beats rap I J udge drops charges a gainst dog LAURENS, N.Y. (AP) - Brutus, the loudmouthed dog J----w-hose bal'k-ing got bi~ght tickets and a trip to court, has something to howl about today after a judge threw out the charges against him. "I cannot seriously entertain ... , the thought that the outcome of 1 t h is matter would have a continuing impact on the history 'or development of mankind," j ·Pair chased i 50miles '1 J CORNING (AP> -A gasoline i station owner says he· chased ~ two men for 50 miles at speeds of up to 110 miles an hour because he was fed up with peo ple driving off without paying. David Rosen burg sai d Thursday that the pair pumped $18.69 worth of gas from his station in Corning, Tehama County in Northern California, on Tuesday night and drove away. He jumped-into bis pickup truck and followed them north on Interstate 5. The men left. the freeway at a Redding exit with Rosenburg still in pursuit. He said he rollowed them through the city and al one point shouted to another gas staUon owner to call the police. Town Justice Charles Mann ruled Thursday. bringing down ttre-gavetorrttre-case :- Brutus became a celebrity far beyond this tiny central New York village as the public flocked to the defense of the mon~rel. A lawyer was even hired for the dog, and a defense fund raised. But Mann played down the case, at first putting it off as• reporters turned up in his tiny court room , then reserving decision after a new court date Jan. 17. "T he possibility exists that Brutus inight not have been the cause of the disturbance,'' Mann said. "There is a dog owned by a n eighbor who ha s s i nce departed. and the barking has decreased.'' Brutus , a Saint Bernard-golden r etriever , received his first barking ticket in June. After his seventh in J uly, his owners, Judy Gunther a nd Gary Sprague, took Brutus to a veterinarian who s urgically removed a portion of the dog's vocal chords, reducing his bark to that of a tiny Pekingnese. But Brutus' vocal chords grew back, and when he re~elved h.is eighth ticket in November the couple hired lawye r Charles Bosco lo defend him. On Dec. 17, a plea of innocent was entered for Brutus. 'tiiijPi1at MAIN OFP'la • w... 9ey St., C..U M9M, CA. MMI--; ._ ,,.,C-.. ..... ,CA . ...a ---~--~~-----'----~== Viet memorial design revised WASHINGTON <AP ) - Sponsors ot a memorial to honor Americans who roucht in Vietnam will add a patriotic, heroic touch to the project's s tark d esign , wh ich some veterans denounce as a "black gash or shame and sorrow." The compromise a1reement was reached in an emotional meeting Wednesday nlgtit ln which, according to some · participants, nearly all the 50 or 60 people in the room were moved to tears when some veterans who had spent years as prisoners or war told why they From Page A1 S€HMITZ ••• that was oot laudatory. He added, referring to abortions, "The biggest holocaust going on right now is nine million people being killed for the simple crime that they have not been born yet. •. Roberti and fellow Democrats on the Senate Rules Committee last month, after the attack, removed Schmitz as chairman of the Cons titutional Amendments Committee a nd from two other Senate posts . Roberti's r esolution , SR29, supported the Rules Committee action and deplored Schmitz's comments. It stopped short of a formal cen sure, but had the s ame effect. · 'Tbe aforementioned conduct of Senator J ohn G. Schmitz brings the Senate of the State of California into dishonor and disrepute and, if passed over would t e nd to impl i ca te members of the Senate as condoning that conduct," the resolution said. S e n . Barr y K ee ne , D-Mendocino, another Rules Committee m e mber , s aid Schmitz 's press release "appears to be the first truly wicked act committed by a me mber of the Legislature." · Several other senators were as critical of the remarks as Roberti. Sen~ E~ Davi~ R·Chit$w.m:1b... said the way to avoid another holocaust was to denounce "the first Jew-baiter who makes statements such as were made by Senator Schmitt.'· Senate Republican leader William Campbell of Hacienda Heights said be supported the Rules Committee action , but contended that further action should be left to the voters. Here's bow the votin1 went in t h e atate Senate fo r the resolution reprimandin1 Sen. Jolln ~milt: ~8a;..~·~~ ltiiiiii ....... La ""911ft; Oelllel ............. c.cM:,... ~. ,..,...; "..,. '*"· G•r•e 11a; Jell11 Fara11, Dety City; Jefl11 co.r---. ~;Alu Garcia, Las,,.,,.....; 8111 Grfftl, LM A .... let; J efl11 Hol .... 111, "., ..... ; ..,,, It-........... ; J-Mllls. C!Ue VllU; ,,..,._ -ya, It-; Hl<llolH ~trlt, Oa-leftd, ltet.rl ~9$1ey, ltedle-; ~ ltalftl, Seftle 8•1119re; Alaft ltobb!M • .., .. H11Ys; Davkl A-.tl, LOS"""""; Al•" Sleroly, Los An~t ... Weller Sllern. 8elcersfleld; Row Ann Vul<h, Frnno; DI- Welson. Loi A-In. DIEMOCltATSAOAIHST: NOIW ltlEPUaLICANS l"O•: A-·· ll•verty, ~ ... A-lH , Ed Dnll . C-P•r~. Mlttoft -U. San Fren<IKO; Jim NlelMn, Sant• ....... 0... O'ltfffe,C-11no, N-R11-ll,Glendete. objected to the ori1tnal de1ip. .Accordin1 to some who were there, Sm. J eremiah Dent.on Jr., R ·Ala., wu amon1 those Insisting on a design chan1e. Denton spent 7'h years aa a prisoner of North Vietnam. "It was a fierce, emotional evenln1," said one parUcipant, who aaked th at he not be ldentUled. "ll was a nasty five hours." The original design called for o monument of polished black granite. It was to take the form of two walls, descending 10 feet into t.he ground, and meeting ln a wide "V" with the names ol 57 ,192 war dead and 2,500 atilt listed as missin1 chiseled Into the walls. As a compromise. sources said , the sponsors agreed to add an American nag and a statue of an infantryman In the heroic "follow me" 1esture similar lo• well·known statue at Fort Benning, Ga. But, even with those changes. three of the chief objections of critics would remain : The memorial will be below ground, will be black, and will be ln the shape of a "V." AP ........ WITNESS San Francisco policC' e:1cort Christina Torno from the scene of a shooting in San Francisco that left thrcc peoplc dead and nine others wounded. The gunman was the estranged husband of a woman who worked in t he office See stor._y_,.Page..A5 l- Fire rages through vacant county store Firefi&hters from Anaheim, Garden Grove and Oran1e were battllnl a three-alarm fire at an abandoned department store in Anaheim late Olia morning. The fire erupted at the rear of lbe-okl White-~l-department ,•store, abandoned a decade aao at Har bor Boulevar d and Chapman Avenue. A fire spokesman said the large building was fully involved when fire units arrived at the scene al about 10:30 a.m. By 11 a.m. the fire had spread to the roof, r unning the full length of the several t housand square foot building. "We've got al least a doz.en fire units at the scene ," said Assistant Fire Chief Martel Thompson. Re said' the fire was still out of control at 11 a.m. A fire inspector · was on the scene to determine the cause or the blaze, which Thompson said he suspects might have resulted from a trash buildup at the rear of the facilit:v . Some critics think the "V" stands for the peace sl1n lh<at wa11 flas h e d b y a nti war protesters durina the war. The National R eview. a conservative ma1azlne, c•lled the design an "outrage" and 'l7 Republican conareaamen, ln a letter to President Reagan. denounced the design as "a political statement of shame and dis h onor" and as ked that another be selected. Among the c ritics at the meeting was Texas computer millionaire H. Ross Perot, who has called the original design a "tombstone," a "trench" and "a s lap in the face." The design, by Maya Ying Lin, an ~rchitecture student at Yale University, has won praise from some quarters. J . Carter Brown, director of the National Gallery of Art and cha irman of the government's Fine Arts Commission, said the d es ign conveys "an extraordinary sense of dignity" and needs no "corny spec111c references" to the war and no "bits of whipped c ream on pedestals." . Brown made those points last October after Tom Carhart, a West l'omt graduate who .led ~n infantry platoon in Vietnam and was twice wounded , asked the commission to r e voke its approval of the design. ··one hundred y~a rs from now . long after we're all dead and gooe, visitors to the Mall will see only one thing a black wall in a trench with a random scattering of names on it," Carhart said. T o end such dissens ion , leaders of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund agreed to the design changes. sources said. and the critics were somewhat m o llified. From PageA1 FDR ... its people lo victory m World War ll. Th e h ighli g ht o f th at ceremony. featuring songs and s JLee ch e~ of Ar a.is e , we.re_ ' scratchy, r ecorded excerpts fro m memorable Roosevelt speeches. introduced by his son, former Rep. James Roosevelt of Newport Beach. Only once did the audience interrupt with 3')plause. when Roosevelt was heard saying, .. Better the occasional faults of a government that lives in a s pirit of c har ity than the con s ist ent omiss ions or a gov'ernment frozen in the ice of its own indifference." I n a vo i ce s trikingl y reminiscent of his father 's. Jfmes Roosevelt read part of a speech that FDR wrote for a De moc ratic P arty dinner scheduled for the day after he died· April 12. 1945, in Warm Springs. Ga.· "The only limit to ou r realization or tomorrow will be our doubts of today " ~~~~t--~--~--lt IE PU 8 L ICA NS AGAINST: Wiiiiam CMl"opbell, Whittler; Wltttem Cre,,..., l'etm Dewrt; Jdlll DoollUle, S«r-lo, Jim EIH•, El Ce joft; Man G•rd a , ..... lo Pe,_; A•y "°""'°"• ~¥Ille; K.,. ,,,_.,,-to. H L Rk herdson, ArYCti.; J -G. Schmitt, New-1 llH<h, Ollie ~-. Lilftt 8ffCh A8SIEHT: H«Wy Mello, D·S... Lull Obi"'°. From Page A1 TURKISH • • • Turkish government issued a statement deploring the slaying of Arikan, the third killing of a Los Angeles Turkish consular official in nine years. Premier Bulend Ulusu called for united efforts by the "entire human kind" to bring an end to the assassination of diplomats. Police Chief Daryl Gates said the bloody ambush killing of the 54 -year-old diplorl\at came only a week after Arikan had been warned that his life was in danger but turned down an offer of police protection. "We have no idea why he chose to do what he decided to do, but he did refuse our offers," Gates said. A friend of Arikan 's , Akif Keskin, said the consul general seemed to have a premonition of his assasslnation, but stopped using bodyguards a n yway because be felt they couJd not save him. "He told me, 'If someone wants to kill me, he will whether Jam guarded or not. Why should I get a young bodyguard killed loo'?" Keskln said. T h.us. Arikan was alone when he pulled bis white Ford out of the garage or the high-rise apartment he shared with his wtre, Nuran. It was 9:~ a.m .. a chilly day with, a li1ht rain be1lnnln1 to fall as Arikan turned the comer and· headed up Com atock A ven u e lo buty Wilshire Boulevard and his office al t.be Turkish coneulate two mlles away ln Beverly Hlll1. He stos>l*f at a red U1ht, and within momentt, he w11 ~ead. . ' COMP810FO MARKERM-30 W/BRAKES COMP610FO CLEARANCE INCLUDES MOUNTING &WAXING "OPEN ALL WEEDUGHTS TD.L9PM .... .,, ..... . Caner to vi•it No1"'Gy,Sweden Former Pretldent Jl••J Carter hu accepted an lnvltaUon to vlllt Norway for three days In the 1prln1 followed by a vlalt to Stockholm, the Swedish ca pital. a Norwe1ian publisher announced. Carter will be the chief speaker May 5 at a forelp policy seminar or1anl1ed by the publilhl n1 house Hjemmet Fa1Preaaeforla1, Its managln1 director NU. Scbjaader said. Carter wlll speak in Stockholm at a si mllar seminar sponsored by the daily news paper Svenska Daebladet, Sc:hjander said. CHAT WITH POP£ -Mrs. Barbara Sinatra, wife of Frank Sioatra, talks with Pope John Paul II during the weekly general audience at Vatican City. Priest at left was not identified. A divorce suit filed by Jarea Lewis, the estran1ed wife of entertainer Jerr, Lee Lewis, has been dismlaied in Shelby County Circuil Court in Memphis . . ,, ........ Divorce proceedings will continue between lbe couple, however. in Chancery Court in Hernando, Mias.. where Lewfs has fUed against bis wife. They were married in 1971 and have a 10-year-old daughter. Alwla Nlkolala , the c horeographer -composer- ~ deaigne·r , will receive the 1982 Capezlo Dance Award. The 69-year-ohl Nlkolais, who has headed his own dance company, The Alwin Nikolais Dance Theater, since 1953, will be given the $5,000 prize April 26 at the Juilliard School in New York City. The Capezio Award has been annua lly given since 1952 lo h onor life time achievements in dance. Past recipients ha~e included Sol Hurok, Martha Grallam, Artllur Mltcbell, Jerome Ro6blaa, Robert Joffrey, Agnes de Miile and Alvia Alley. . STAR OF FAME -William ··count" Basie, top jazz artist for nearly five decades. received hi s star this week in Hollywood's Wa lk of Fame . With him is his wife. After hi s .sec ond drunken-driving conviction in nine months, Superior Court Judge Huso Flaber of San Diego has been ordered Nell R e agan , th e president~--Ol~rolb&r, says he has c hanged his mind and decided it might not be a bad id~a after all to make the former Reagan home in Oi.xon, Ill.. into a shrine. "stupid," but that was before not to drink alcoholic h e v-isi~ed-othef'-presklenUal-_ beverages for three )'ears_. _ m emorials and decided ""Ffsher, 80, who remalni ~ "every president's house lbe Job, alao must stay out ol ought to be a memorial." ban and liquor •tores and Reagan, 73, is honorary ~ID~~~ c hai.rman of a committee stves him a written note to seelung $500,000 lo presene lea•e R eagan told a business group in Phoenix that he initially thou ght the idea a nd restore the boUM where Pl1i.er earlier •creed to he and Preat•nt 8ea1aa attead a Jear of drl•ln1 grew up. ela11 ... Coastal F•lr "''°""" s.t111'1My, Co•U•I IOW Sl, lnl-.... Coa•l•I 111011 4S. Inland 70. Waler SS. Elsewhere, wind• becomln9 llQlll •t10 v•ri•lll• lonl9lll lllro .. 011 S.l11rO.y ellCepl •OUlllWHI lo west • to 1S ·-s.IOKO.Y •llornoon. WHI lo nortllWHI •-II• l lo J -lonlQhl •nO s.1 .. 0.v U.S. summary Snow fell on Coloraoo and Mlnnetola •-y -colO wlr>eb Ille• tllr0119ll Ille -M-st -Into Ille NOrlllHst. Forecasters H IO • storm wu brewlno In Ill• So11111we11, ano winter ilorm watches or ,..,,.,nos were l'O'l.0 for part1 of Colorado - Iowa. A Ir-I aovtS«y WH put Into effKI for mucll of Ml-tot•. G•I• werntnos -r• In effect for l••n S-lor and Hu"'" WIO •tonv 1r. <Mill of~ -,_w Heml>lfll,.. Snow wai u pect.O l•ter In Ille O.y Lookin,' good Extended forecast SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA COASTAL AND MOONTAIN AREAS -Fair ll1r°"91' Ille period, H'9111 fn coatl•I ~ .. to IS. L~ 4<I to SJ. HIOll• •I mouf>IAlln r-11 S1 lo 60. Lows In ti. )Os. Temperatures _ ~ L.-l'ftL Altlany 3S 2S .oz ........ S2 1' Arnarlllo SJ 17 A-VIiie •2 2• Allant• ., ,. All•nlc Cl\' ,, 27 llaltlmore 41 22 lllrmlnQfWTI so .. llhma rck 10 0 llolM JA 14 -&otton 11 30 Brown1vlle IS .. Bvffalo Jt 11 .02 Clla•l1ln SC •l 0 C,,.rtstnWV J-4 21 c11e.,.nne .. :IA Chk -,, 1 Cln<lnn<lll 43 11 La1 Ve991 ... LHtle RoO '° L.oullvllle •• Memphis '° Miami 70 Miiwaukee JI MIH~Sl.P u N•sllvllle St ..... o.-H NewYortl JA NOffot• so Ottla City 61 ... .,, 21 43 " s • " SI JI n Tulle Waslllnqtn Wtclllla CALl~OltNIA Baktrafletcl SI " E11reke S2 a Fresno SO 41 Lan<Hler 4' a LOS At19tlft •t S4 Marysville SI <! Oaklano •• -r Ille -r Mlssh•iool velley encl ,c 1ev ... ft0 ., 1S °"" ... J3 4S 20 .. ,. 0 PH O ROOIH SJ 37 .12 . 1 Red BMI SJ • Ille 11pper GrHI Lakes. Sc.alter.O .,..... was 1-...1 -r Ille northern plains, -rain and ,,_ s-s -•• prtctkl.O o.,,.r tM -.tllern -untral Roclltes and ti,. eutern Pl•IH U. Sc•ll•r•O lhundefllorms were UPKled from JOUl,,..flt Tues to touthwest Ar•anw s. Stw>wen oncl thunder~ -• ••1>9<1.0 from tM Gentral •nO WHI G .. 11 coal! to MtsS011rt and -•rn K•Ma$. Temperal\Wes early t-y renoeci from mlftll< • d99r'Hs In Hlbblno. Minn., to•• In Brownsvflle. Taus California StrOf>Q "'91Y winch are .,.PKllCI to c"onttn ... IOftlOM •nd S.l11rd•Y. 0r t•<lll111 20 to 'I mph In Ille -••lftS with tocal ll"sb to 60 mpfl. Ovlly wtndll In c-1•1 M<IHMIS below --Md GWIYOftl lflouiO fff<ll 1S IO JD mpfl with IUIU to 40 fnllf\. OtlMnrlte ,.,_.,., fair _.,,., ts fefecast tar s.turday, wltll slltMIY warmer ltmperatures In <NU•I _ .. !MIC cool et.....,• •ltll - """'~ H ltfl• s.tow .. y In Los """'" lfMMlld 111 -n. wtt11111tN .. to ,. llt c-tol Md ,.....,.... ... ,,.,..,., UtoUlft_._ ...... ... Ill ... Owtlll V ellty, S4 to '2 lft ltitll ... ,, .......... ,n ... *""1s. 0.-,PWDtl•wy ........... Go411mllus •I 14 .. Drl•nclo 71 Dal-Fl-., SI Pllllectplli• 34 ltedwOod City S2 40 .OS S.Cr•m-54 • .J1 0.1>ver " 20 ,,_,. .. S3 O.sMol-» " PHtslMirtfl .. 1S S.llnH S2 JS M Saft D.... 60 JI .JI Detroit )I 11 O..lutll 2• -3 ·°' EIPHO .. 42 F•lrlllnll:• 10 1 H•rtford ill 11 Helena M " H-111111 ,, •1 HOIKtofl " tJ .2• ln.,,. ... 11. 41 20 11"11-.Me u Ptlafld, o.. .. R•pkl City 37 Reno 0 ltl<llmOftO 41 Sall Lake • 40 SHttle •• SI LOllll « St P·TeMIMI 10 u 42 20 Ot San FrW><lt<o to n . 11 S.nte Barbera SI Jt . II 21 01 23 Santa Marla St StoOIOn S7 JI Thermal 70 -l S .. 21 .. lleratow 60 40 .02 Bio Beer 4S 21 .01 Bl1110P 4' 24 J acktnvlle 12 40 St Ste Matle 30 • 32 Cetallna 60 ff .JO · 2t LClfll BMC.ti st .. .03 Kans City ,. n Scoollone l6 .04 -rovle St ., .IS Ml. Wiiton Jl lD .Jf ~,.-------------------..;;· Newport 8HCll St SI .oe Ontario S4 ft SURf llPORT Palm SprlnQ' " 47 PevdeM st " . 14 Saft Bt<...,.dino S2 >16 '°' Safi J-St '3 .)4 SeftlaAN •I SI .IO Softta CNI SO '1 ·" .• " ' .. ~ . - .... ?;;;;Ii,._~·--~· .. -------------------Tide' We're Listening ••• What do you like about the Dally Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number below and your mtua1e will be recorded. transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. The same 24-hour 1n1werin1 Nn'ite ma1 be uMd to record let· ters to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contrtbutora mutt Include their name and telephone number ror verification. No circulation calls. please. Tell us what's on your mind. · 842·8088 . • • " Orange Coa•t DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 H /f Reagan s~eks b_Dcking Looks for mayoral support for New Federalism plan WASH INGTON CAP > - President Rea1an , movln1 quickly to counter criticism of bis New FederaUsm prosram, met with three Republican mayors and won their blcking for his contention that there would be neither winners nor losers amon1 the states. W bile House aides passed out charts purportln1 to show that the shift of pro1rama and funds between the federal government and the states would be balanced in every case. They emphasized the naures they used might chan1e, but that the balance they illustrated would not. '·All states would be held ha rmless." said Whil e House spokesman David Gerten. But at the winter m'eetlnc of the U.S. Conference or Maydra. Democratic Hou se Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill called the program to transfer welfare, food stamps and about 40 other social programs "a disguised attempt to balance the bud~et on the backs of state and locel aovernments. · · Richard Schweiker. secretary or health and human servicet and the cabinet member most affected by the proposal, ur1ed the mayors to reserve their judgment until they have a c h a n ce t o h e lp the administration iron out thejr concerns. Rape convict who claims impotence Mayor Margaret Hance of Phoenix , president o f t~e Republican Mayors Association, told r eporte r s a t the Whi\e House that "President Reagan has taken a bold, creative. courageous step toward a lq, ove rdue reorderi ng o f l-e federal system." She was joined in the While House briefing room by Mayors Richard Carver of Peoria, OJ., • and James Imhoff of Tula,-, Okla. • • given six years The three mayors said that c riti cs o f the program apparently did not understand it. A convicted rapist who claims he has been impotent most of his life was sentenced to six years in stale prison Thursday for a c rime some therapists believe he is \ncapable of committing. \· Joe .Jerry Yrigoyen, 29, found guilty of raping a 20-year-old · fOrmel' neighbor in July -1!8>, was allowed to remain free without baiJ, however, pending appeal Counselors who examined Yrigoyen follow ing his conviction last year said the defendant was incapable or beginning or completing the act. This was due to illnesses which Yrigoyen suffered as a child, they said, including a bout with tubercular meningitis. However, Orange County Superior Court Judge James 0 . Perez. in a separ ate hearing earlier this month, turned down requests for a new trial for Yrigoyen on the basis or this new information . Y rigoyen, a resident of Cypress, was tried twice on the charges. The first trial ended in a jury deadlock. The second proceeding resulted in his conviction. Yrigoyen, who bad no prior crim inal corudctions.-inaisled < Reactor operator scores up Preliminary test results Indicate that 11 out of 13 candidates have passed a federal examination to become senior reactor operators at the newly expanded San Onofre . Nuclear Generating Station. Officials with both the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission and Southern California Edison Co. said Thursday that the test res ults were dramatically different from last November's, when 16 out of 18 people failed the examination. Final test scores will J>e computed by NRC" offi"clals In Was hington, D.C. Results will be announced next week. NRC s pokesman J a m es Hanchett said. Senior reactoroperaturs serve as the supervisory personnel in the control rooms of nuclear power plants. Al San Onofre, the operators are needed to man the control rooms of newly built units 2 and 3, which are expected lo be licensed for full-power operation by the federal government later this year. throughout all trial proceedings that he was innocent of the charges. ··I believe . . . he is probably impotent at this point," s aid De puty District Attorney Tom Goe thals, but ttie prosecutor added tti~t he still belie ves that Yrlgoyefl was not impotent when the alleged attack took place. Yrigoyen was convicted prin cipally on the basis of eyewitness tes timony by the alleged victim. Ri c h William so n , the presi d e nt 's adviser on intergovernmental affairs. told the mayors the administration would move to bring Medicaid costs under control once it takes therr\ over . He did not say what measures would be tried . Williamson s aid the 1983 budget will propose cuts totaling Sll billion In so .called "entitlement" social programs outside Social Security. I DMly "-'....,..,LR~ LIGHTING UP -Barbara Lundgren, a board her Palominq Everything Nice, watches new lights being installed in t he equestrian area of the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. The fair installed 48 lights for the horsy set. $. ~irst Time Skiers * New Ski School ••• ~ GE'..,~ • E'J ~ ~,E',. b ~lo, ~I ~ig1,1:'~t1· • '--: $15 For 2 Seaalona New: Call For ReMrVatlona 831-3144 r1" &.Wt: 20 people _631-3144 .. .. Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 DO. IN FLAMES Lief and Man· Lomo st•~ helpless crs the~· watch home burn fofJew.in g w h at offic i al s ca lled a • .. ~ ......... high -pressure surge• of gas throug h low-p ressure• lines. Fiv<' \\'t•n• rc•portC'd injurt•d in thl' Thursda~· inddcnt ~jacked plane I8nds in Cuba 7 Oelombian guerrillas comple1e sky seizure MaxlCO CITY CAP> -Seven Colombian s laaded in Cuba aboard a millionaire's plane, ending a hljack saga aboard a ·v~-~: jetliner in whicta as many as 121 oi -ere held at gunpoint. airport spokesman said the eight-seat Ye jet flew the hijackers from Cali, llfl Co .... to San Andres. a Colombian island in the Ca1 Mea where the plane refueled, and landed in Hal=t T:25 p.m . PST Thursday. · was no immediate word on what ha to the guenillas after they landed in Cu , 111 ... ltnev ally buried W (AP> -Soviet President Leonid Br ppeared emotionally shaken and was vi kened today as he watched the body of hl1 Kremlin ally. Mikhail Susloy Jowered into IUl honored grave next to JQSef Stalin in Red Squre. '-Whtie saying goodbve to our comrade," Bra-..V said, "I would like to tell him, sleep pea""'1Jly our dear friend. You have lived throu1h a bJ&JIM glorious life. You have done much for the part1 and the people and they will preserve the brilfl\ memory of you." ru.ne tally ordered '808T0N (AP> -The Civil Aeronautics B~-cllillg "grave concerns" about the way War)d Airways kept passenger lists. ·ordered the a~to produce a tally today of all people--" a the DC-10 that skidded into Boston Harbor. •. . ere may have been lnefficencies with worll ~rways that prevented them from making an ...,-ate list," Joseph Mullin. the CAB's .. rednif director. safd at a news conference today. "~i--to make sure that s uch a list exists." ..... lalk11 break up 8Sl'ROIT <AP> -The collapse of emergency _ c<>llRact talks between the United Auto Workers union and General Motors Corp. means fewer jobs for auto workers and no price cuts for car buyers lop bargainers for both sides say. ' The negotiations fell apart late Thursday night over job security and other issues. UAW President Douglas Fraser s aid. "It just didn't go together " Fraser said. "It's over." ' Nuke plant 'attacket4' CHI CAGO CAP> -Flares were fired into the air near the Zion nuclear power station by an anonymous group that videotaped the mock attack and warned "the next attack will be real." Video cassettes were delivered to several Chicago news media, including the City News Bureau, at 1 :30 a.m. Thursday. about four hours a fter the flares were seen. Plane de-icing urged WASHINGTON AP> -Hintinl that ice caused the crash of an Air Florida jet thia month, federal investi1aton are wamin.1 airlines to take special care atalnlt Ice form.ins on-planes-wbtte tlley wait on the irowad 1n freelin1 weather. Tbe ID...U,aton aald Ule Jo"ederal A vaauon AdmlniltntioD Immediately should notify all air carriers of "the potential hazard" of icing, espedally when planes watt a lon1 time on the runway clW1nl anow or icy weather. · Salwulor •land hit WASHINGTON <AP> -Critics of the U.S.-backed Salvadoran government are vowing to fight President Reagan's certification that the military-civilian junta bas made a "concerted and significant effort" to protect human riahts. The president's judgment Thursday came on thP. heels of published reports alleging that El Salvador's troops had massacred hundreds or unarmed men, women and children in recent offensives against leftist guerrillas. TMI leaks revealed HARRISBURG, Pa. <API -Defects ranging from leaks to corrosion have been detected in thousands or tubes used to carry radioactive water ·in the undamaged Three Mile Island nuclear reactor. officials say. The casual route calls for our exdusi~ stream.lined slacks from Asher. Handsome ba.sia to accommodate a slew of vibrant. yet classic looks. Two back fl~ pockets, stri~ ribbon belt with 0-rina. White, bana,,., powder blue. tan, beige. navy pol~ter and cotton. Sizes JO to«>; 52.50. In Men's Slacks, the Men's Store-where we are all the thinss you are. Sak Fif1h Avenue, South C<>1st Pf11a. HJ I ·emrof Street Costa Mesa ' • Missouri town inferno 28 homes, businesses burst into flames.after gas leak ~ CENTRALIA, Mo . (AP> -A stale of emeraency was in effect loday afler 28 homes a nd bu1lneaae1 burst Into flames w llhln aeconda when the pressure ln a natural 1u line waa kicked up accidentally, caualna water heaters and furnaces t-0 spit fire like ·'blowtorches.·· re1ulal o r , Mllowln1 hilh·preasure natural 1as to s hoot through low.pressure Jlnes Into h omes across town. Although the high pressure may have caused some houses to explode, most caught fire when the flames shot out of water h eate r s and furna ces. authoritJes said. "I don't think a nybody knew what was happe ning fo r a while," said Barney Walruicott, who had one son lo1e hi• home and another lose hls Insurance office. "It seemed like everywhere you went there waa a Ore on either side of you," he aald. "We got that first caU. and within minutes, maybe seconda. there were so many calla the phones couldn't handle It.'' Five p~ople were injured Thursday In the fires, which started after a 1aa line re1ulator was hit by a backhoe at the power company . Burton Knowles, mayor of the town of 3,SOO people, ordered a state of emergency and dusk-to-dawn curfew to prevent lootine. "My son just got in the front door and he said, 'Get out of h e r e, Mama, it's ready lo . blow'." said Neta Cox. who was Philly paper writes final period 30 cooking lunch. "Then the furnace· blew up and within minutes, it was the holte.s(flamt! I ever saw." Nine houses were des troyed and at least 19 other homes and buildings -Including a motel and a funera l home -were damaged in the fires. Knowles ordered a state of emergency Thursday night and a dusk-to-dawn c urfew to prevent looting, but Police Chief Jim Hollis said no trouble was reported. Hollis said he was not sure whether the curfew would be in effect again tonight. "Right now we're going to play it by ear," he said . Hollis said gas service had been restored to 95 percent of the homes by this morning. Bill Hollander , a r etired engineer, said "gas jets were blowing all over town . . . those PHILADELPHIA CAP> The Bulletin was its own top story today, and the broad letters-at the top of Page t said it all : "Goodbye." The 134-year·old newspaper, o n ce the natio n 's la rgest afternoon daily, published Its f inal edition today before becoming the fourth la rge U.S. daily newspaper to close in the last six months. "The Bulletin d ied today," began the lead story. T he ne ws paper·s familiar motto was at the bottom of Page 1, with a slight change: "Nearly everybody read The Bulletin," 1t said, putting into past tense what it once proudly ''As for us , shed no tears." pilot lights were blowing like proclaimed in the present. At blowtorches." the end , The Bulletin's daily Terry Mansfield, the chief of cir culation stood al about the volunteer fire department in 400,000, down from a high of · the central Missouri town, was 761 ,240 In 1947. on his mail route when he saw The giant p resses began the smoke billowing over the printing the final editions at 2:03 community. a.m. "I hate to see this," said "I couldn't stand it. ... -I had Charley Dickinson. 41. who had to get back to town. I thought worked in the pressroom 10 my town was burning down," he years. s aid. The Bulle tin is cea s ing "One house blew up. and after publication because of financial that it was j ust bang, bang. bang losses. The pape r 's owne r , in a chain reaction," Mansfield Charter Co ., a nnounced the added. "I don't know how it was, s hutdown Wednes day after how some houses kept from unsuccessful attempts to sell the blowing up." paper. The accident occurred when "It's over." wrote Publisher Alvin Jacabs. a longtime city N.S. Hayden in a front-page employee, was operating a message to readers . "And backhoe with a three-man crew there's very little to say, except near Missouri Power and Light Goodbye." Co. building that houses one of He wrote. "The Bulletin was, four pressure reeula.lila.Jor:. tbe _ a..ruLu to <1 a y in 1 ts r 1 n a 1 town's natural gas system . appearance. a great newspaper Knowles said. which has been part of the fabric The backhoe struck a gas line of this community. Philadelphia ' will not be the same without The Bulletin." , The 84-page pape r ·had a 12-page section on the closing, with most of the rest devoted to updates on stories The l:Sulletm has been covering. The s pecial final section featured reproduction of the paper 's last page s howing historic events like the end of World War I, the assassination or President John F , Kennedy and the Apollo moon landing. The section also a nalyzed a de ca d e -lo ng decline i n advertis ing revenue that eventually crippled the paper. Scores of employees dropped into the paper's composing room Thursday night lo watch the last issue's pages being made up and to exchange farewells. Some took pictures of the scene. The Bulletin's closing, less than two months after the morning Philadelphia Journal fo lded, leaves the nation's fourth-largest city with two daily newspapers -the morning Inquirer and the afternoon Daily News. The Was h ington Star, an a ft ernoon paper. we nt under Aug. 7. Three weeks later, the New York Daily News closed its Tonight edition. and its morning edition is up for s ale. .. As for us, shed no tears." wrote The Bulletin's last editorial. "We neither sought nor gave qua rt e r . We gave the competition our best. No one here failed. "We simply couldn't survive in this economy " "Give us instead a smile and remember the good days when The Bulletin was aH ve and weU and read by almost every body in Philadelphia. It was run. "God bless you all. .. fiFlliiil .$ -• ~ Everything In our entire stock Is on sate-two days only- January 30 and 31 . Pick from our large selection of uniquP. auto gifts and clothing. If you drive a Porsche, Ferrari, BMW, Mercedes, Corvette or Rolls Royce, you should be at this sale. We are not an auto parts or acceuories house, alt we sell ta fine clothing and gifts with your favorite logo embroidered or engraved on them. Ix satin ,acilets • suede jackets • 5001 & long sleeve sh111s • sweaters • crystal • apa paper weights • key chains • gold Charms • s~ glasses • prtlows • model cars & hats In Brea Mall At 2004 Brea Mall a ..... CalH. 92621 714·990-1152 In Newport Beach At 3831 Newport Blvd. Newport BMch, Ca. 92663 r-....,.""'"-~ 714-673-7013 Maatef Charge • VISA, American EXJ)(ess ALL SALES ARE FINAL. r ... . ,. J . . "! • -Crowd control in SF rapped SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -Dozens of complaints have been flied charging that the police departme.nt used excessive force while . tryin1 to control crowds In the 49ers' Super Bowl victory celebrations. Most of the 40 or so complaints have specified incldenta at Columbus Avenue and Broadway in North Beach -a center of clashes betwee.n police and tbe public early this week. Sgt. Mike Pera said the complaints will be investigated by the inte rnal affairs division before findings are sent to Chief Con Murphy. Seat belt bid backed SACRAMENTO (AP> -Heeding a plea "to consider the little guys who cannot take care or _ themselves," the Senate bas voted to require parents to use auto safety seats for small children. The upper house, by a ~-7 vote Thursday, sent the Assembly a bill that would require parents to place children who are under age four or weigh leas than 40 pounds in federally approved ~arety seats when transporting them in ·a car or light truck. An adult who was transp9rling another person's child would have to secure the child in a seat belt or safety seat. State pay hike pushed SACRAMENTO (AP> -A bill that would boost tht governor's salary 73 percent and give legislators and other top state officials smaller pay increases has been approved by the state Senate without a vote to spare. The measure, SB238 by Sen. Alfred Alquist . D-San Jose, would raise the governor's salary from $49,100 to $85,000 next Jan. 1. Salaries or the lieutenant governor. secretary of state, controller. treasurer and superintendent or public instruction would climb from $42,500 to $62,500. Abortion bill nixed SACRAMENTO CAP > -An anti.abortion bill that would require insurance companies to make elective abortions an optional part of health care cove rage has been rejected by the state Senate. The measure, SB1231 by Sen. Jim Ellls, R-San Diego, went down to defeat on a 19-13 vote Thursday, two short of the 21 required for passage. Under the measure, insurance companies could offer abortion coverage only as an optional rider on health insurance plans. Insurance rate hike? SACRAM ENTO CAP ) -Auto insurance-rates would jump 7 to 9 percent under a bill a pproved by the state Senate. The measure. SB1055 by Sen. Alan Robbins D-Van Nuys , would raise minimum responsibility requir ements and llabllity limitations requ1red on auto insurance policies. ampaign bill fiiltea-·- s Ac RAM ENTo (A P ) -A ss e mbl y Republicans killed a Democrat·backed public campaign financing bill, and Democrats reta liated by slaying two GOP bills. The heavily partisan atmosphere on Thursday. exa cerba ted by t h e a nnounce m e nt of a pro -De m o c r at s t a t e Su p r eme C o ur t reapportionment decis ion, meant the death of AB 2 163 by Assembly man E lih u Harris , 0 -Berkeley. I SAN FRANCl-S CO CAP> -A defe ndant accused or multiple <&layings can pay h1s ~w1er:s .. -b~ giving them rights in his life story ~e state 's -Vgh court has ruled. · ? Thursday's 6·1 decision concerned Bobby Joe Maxwell, 31, who is accused in the Los Angeles Skid Row sta bbings. The California Supreme Court ruling held that Maxwell, charged with 10 slayings in run-down are a s o f Los Angeles. "knowing l y an.d intelligently" waived the potential prejudice such an agreement could create. Alien smuggling·cited· LOS ANGELES <AP> -A "widespread international alien smuggling operation" tricked dozens of aliens who thought they were being given lawful work In the United States, but instead beca me indentured servants, a court .document s-ays. Twenty-five Indonesian aliens Thursday were ordered held pending questioning by a federal gra nd j ury a bo ut a llegations t hat they unkno win gly were led into "invo luntary servitude" in the Los Angeles area. ·- Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 H /F 41o/o sayBrown L doing poor job 1 SAN FRANCISCO <APl -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr .. his sights on the U.S. Senate. la not Impressing Californians with hJs performance as t he s late's chief executive. according to a California Poll released today. Brown's Job performance was rated poor or ver y poor by 41 percent of the peopl e questioned in a s tatewide public opinion survey by pollster Mer vin D. Field. 1 ' While Republicans have a deepl y negative I vie w of the gove rnor . Field reported , the De moc ratic p erce ptio n Is "not overly ~ enthusiastic." SURVIVOR CELEBRATES Hos pit a lize d p la n e c r a s h s urv ivor Do nnie Prie!>l cele brates his 11th birthdav with 14 of his cla ssm at es. a t th<.• Stanford l'n ivers it ~· -. ............ Hos pita l T hursday. P riest s urvived fi ve da ~·s of subzero temper at ures after a J an. 3 plar.l' cras h near Yosemite. whe re both his mother a nd stepfather died Among Republicans queried. S8 percent gave Bro wn poo r or very poor ratings. Among De mocrats, Brown was rated poorly by 29 percent. Another 33 percent said he is doing a 1ood or excellent job. Field found 23 percent rated Brown excellent or good in the survey this month and 33 percent r ated him fair. That was virtually unchan1ed from polls conducted last August and October. Between 1975 and 1979, the two-term Democratic eovernor was much more highly regarded by Californians polled. according to Field. Brown has said he will not seek re-election and is setting his sights on the U.S. Senate seal now · held by Kepubhcan S.l. Hayakawa. The poll was conducted by telephone with .A.: statewide sa mpling of 1,015 respondents. 3 killed, 9 wounded in SF high-rise shootout l : Police shoot gunman after 15-minute rampage leaves office bloodied~ in chaos I I _, SAN FRANCISCO <AP) A jealous husband had lo have her right ar m amputated below the desk. pleading for her life. The woman'was injured - strolled into his wife's downtown hig h rise with a · elbow . Col\tawe 's wife, Erlinda , was in sta ble by gunfi re. Pera said . £lower gift box , coolly assembleo a 12-gauge condition with a gunshoC' wound in her leg. "My fieart was beating so fast -wow! -I was [ shotgun concealed inside and opened fire. killing The gunman began shooting on the '18th floor scared," said David Duke, a senior insurance · two people and wounding nine others before police or One Market Plaza shortly before 4 p.m .. Pera underwriter for Mission, who said he was six feet gunned him down. authorities said. said. Office workers stampeded down a stairwell from the gunman when the shooting began. The 15-minute rampage left the offices or the with Contawe behind them, shooting at people on "My first instinct was to jump under the table ~ Mission Insurance Co. spattered with blood and the stairs. firing into the 17th floor and racing ba·:k and that's what I ds d. I heard a woman yell . plunged the 42-story building overlooking San upstairs. ·Please don't s hoot me.' I hea rd a shot and that's Francisco Bay into chaos as workers dove for Three patrol cars cruising the area arrived dl when I got up and wheeled around and just headed cover or stampeded down stairs. Spear Tower about 15 minutes after the shooting the other wa y. v:. Ricardo Contawe. 36, chatted casually with spre.e began, and three officers killed the man in a "I ran as fast as I could ," Duke added. "He 1'• some of his wife 's co-workers before he qegan brier gun battle after he fired at them from 30 told me to stop, but I ran." • ~ o.t assembling the 26-inch pump shotgun before their feet away, Pera said. eyes. according to Sgt. Mike Pera. He fi red at her Officer John Sheveland was nicked by a Cossette Hui was sitting at her desk when she a nd then began firing •·randomly" a s others ricocheting fragment, but was not hospitalized. spotted Contawe come in with a box. rushed to her aid, he sa id. Offi cers J im Seim and Bill Taylor were uninjured. "We heard a shot I was so scared I couldn't jf Critically wounded were a company vice When police arrived , the gunman had his move," she said "He was shooting all over the ft president and a woman who was shot twice and shotgun trained on a woman cowering behind a pla ce." ~----------------------------------------------------------------~ ~-----J___________ -------------------------~-- -,.,..., • <I . . --. ,.,, .. fortbC ~of your,~ second.refrigerator., Operating your second refriSlerator oosts up to $144 a year in electric bills. Older models can cost you even more. To help you conserve that energy, Southern c.aJi .. f omia Edison is making this offer to Edison ClL11l'Jmen: Donate your operating second refrigeracor to one cl the charities listed below and be m to mention tWI llpediil o8ier when 10'1 mk the-~ Get a recei and when we are noti6ed · d\e par• ticipating ~ty, we11 lllV )t>U $25 in You can also qualify for a 1BX deduction on the clonadon. The, 8AINA110N ARMY '-I Berch (UJ) '9Me9l ., t M (2U) Q0-1170 (21l)79MOU ............ ... o.rto (714) • td04 .... Am (714) ,.,... .......... ... ~ (805) ... 1111 ,. charity should give you a tax-deductible receipt and pick ~ your refrigerator at no charge~ This offer is limited to two donations per household in selected areas of~ Angeles, Orange, ~tuta and Santa Barl:ma counties. Cooperating charitable organizations are listed below. You must mention this offer to collect the reward. Save energy and save money. And get $25 from Ediaon for PJI' operable seoond refrigerator. But hurry!,... apecial o8'er expirel M.m lS, !Ml. For details, phones , •') :') .1 '· -. '· .. , .. - !I I' I I ,J APW~ PREMIERING !\lick Nolte and Debra Winger . stars of the movie "Cannery Row." leave tour of the birthplace of author John Steinbeck in Salinas. The~"n· in town for tht' mo\'ie's pre mit>re in tht• hometown of the author who inspired it. ~Modernizati.on of air traffic control eyed WASHING TON (AP ) -The proposals will be s ubmitted to Reagan .adminis tration. in what Congress calling for a 12-cent tax per would be on e of the larges t gallon on aviation gasoline. 14 cents government purchases outside the on jet fuel. and an additional 3 Defense Department. has unveiled a percent tax on commer cial airline 20-year blueprint for modernizing the tickets. nation's air traffic control system. ·'Our projections show we can FAA Adminis trator J . Lynn cover ·the program with that," Helms Helms, who gave details of the told reporters after briefing industry program Thursday, said the total representatives for about· two hours cost has not been determined, but on the 20-year plan that envisions that at the program's peak -from new computers and increased 1985 through 1987 -the government automation. would spend $1.5 billion a year. Other The ad ministration sought sources said the cost of the new, increases in aviation taxes last year, highly automated system could total but cotlld not persuade Congress to more than $10 billion. go along. Curre ntly t he tax on Helms said _the plan has been aviation gasoline, used by s mall clear.~ by P:es1de"!t Reagan and the aircraft, is 4 cents, and ticket tax is 5 a<!_m1.mstrat1on will pr~pose ne_w percent. There is no tax on jet fuel, aviation taxes to pay for tt. He saut-used by commercial airtines. 'I did not want to fail' Cooke explains falsified story N~ORK <AP) -Former to resign. Washington Post reporter Janet Cooke says tne fear of failure caused 'Wilen I heard that I had won the her to make QP the story of an prize, which was 10 days before it 8-year-old heroin addict that won her was actually announced in public, I a Pulitzer Prize later returned-by the remember sitting there and thinking Post. my life is over -what am I going to "In my case, the temptation didn't do?" Miss Cooke says. derive from ambition," Miss Cooke tells Phil Donahue in an interview to "l knew that I could not cover it up and that it would come out, and that be broadcast Monday and Tuesday it would be every bit of a scandal on NBC's "Today" show . "I simply that it was," she says. wanted to write a story that I had been working on, so that I would not Asked by Donohue why she lied on have to go back and say, 'I cannot do her employment application to the it.· I did not want to fail." Post, Miss Cooke says, "I felt that on A transcript of the interview was the strength of my own accurate released Thursday by NBC. credentials I would never have been When the story h i red at the Washington Post. ~-:-:::c~~~~=.:.r,[:.-":-~~~ appear e tn e "And J also felt within myself a P o s t o n need to be perfect," she continues. "I Se Pt ember 2 8 · wanted to be absolutely . . . as close 1980 , Miss Cooke to perfection, on paper, certainly." recalls, she could not bear to read it. Miss Cooke maintains her story "At the time I was based on information that a wrote the story . . young addict like the one she . I felt terrible described in her st ory actually a bout it,'' s he existed. After the Pulitzer-was coou says. "When the awarded, she told her editors that the paper came out ... I didn't read it. I child was a "composit~1" that quotes didn't want to see it. I didn't want to attributed to him wererfabricated think any more about what I had and that some events ijhe claimed to done." have witnessed did not happen. Miss Cooke's interview with Donahue, taped Tuesday in Chicago, She says she spent two months was her first public appearance since looking for the youngster , and the disclosure in April 1981 that parts decided to manufacture the subject of "Jimmy's World" had been made of her story "over a period of a up. The fabrication and also Miss couple of days, when I really began Cooke's falsifying of the resume she to think, 'I'm never going to find him had submitted to the Post came to if, in fact, he's out there. What am J light onl y after s he had been going to do?' -· awarded the 1980 Pulitzer for feature "And I felt that the last thing that ( writing. The award was returned by could really do was go in and say to the Post and Miss Cooke was asked an editor, 'I can't do it.· " ATTENTION MOBILE HOME OWNERS A Mobile Home Park Conversion Ordlnm1ce wlll be discussed at the H•lllnCJlon ·leach City Councll meeting on Monday, FebruarY Is~. Time: 7:30 p.m. LOc:atlon: 2obo Main St., H.B. ~II resld1nt1 ... urged to attend. ,. t I .... .. .. I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29. 1982 , Acclfti(D.ed ads' results few PORTLAND, Ore. (AP > -A pair of prhe·wlnnlng televl1lon commerclal1 fo'( two Paclflc Northwest beers have attracted a lot of attention but didn't he lp aa11tnc sales of locally produced brew. In a B~it einhard ad, a pair of truck drivers try to "s ggle" a beer from Callfomla lnto Oregon o y to be stopped by an Ore1on "Border Patrol" guard. In real life, the state has no inspection stations, but the series made a local star out of "guard" Dick Curti.s. downwards despite the company's success with Its super.premium "Henry Welnhard" brand. Olympia is one of the last independenta and Blitz WH absorbed by Pabst of Milwaukee a few years ago after sales started to decline In the early 1970s . . "The commercials haven't helped one Iola," said Blltz-Weinhard President Fred Wessinger - who dispJaya an award from the Cannes <France> Film Festival in his Portland office. And from Washington, a somewhat eccentric gardener is doused by unseen hands after suggesting that mysterious "Arteslans" are responsible for brewing Olympia beer. These soft-sell scenarios have become the basis for two enormously popular televisio11 campailJ)S but Olympia sa es continue to decline and Blitz-Weinhard salps are still heade d But Ira Zuckerman, a vice president at Ogilvy & Mather Inc. agency ln San Francisco is philosophical. ' "When you 're a small brewery and you don't have the millions or dollars to spend for air time like Miller and Anheuser-Busch (the nation's top sellers) you can have the best ad In the world and it just ain't going to work," he said. NEW BOSS -Vice Adm. Kinnaird R . M cKee, 52 , nuc lear s pe c iali s t and . s u 'b m a r i n c r . w i II s ucceed Adm . ll~·man G. Hickover .... I our 11th gr<ia.t salcz,, now in progtv..5s nczwp:>rt l::xzach storQ, onlJ it 1;:, our 1nte.ntion to haw. a sal.cz, et such a t1m<i that "Ml. can offe.r a substantial amount of mQ,rchandise. from our cz.xieti.ng stock at a ~ignificant prioz. nzducti.on . w<:L shalt continU<Z-our JX>licy of not "buying for .eaLQ,.e»; ooall ofour sal<i ikme nzpnz.scz.ntth<Z l:Jzetpur- chaSQ.5 avai labl.cz, to u,s throughout th<i yzar. VJ:Z, think that you wt 11 find an cz.xaillcznt choio:i of fin<Z-eal..cz, me.rchandisz. to chc:x::ez from. m<ir15 dnz.5~ eaction a fabulou5 ~l<Z.ction fro11i our Qal's ~pt., m<Lns dnz.s~ end ep:nt,e"W'tZar,encfboys dCzpt . at ?:tJX, to 60% off oOr nigular st.om houra wi.11 apply @)~o@@J§~ 't'i fa5hion islond, rviwp:>rt bzoch, ftH-rxJ70 - ·----'--'----- ~ ... I I I 1'8 "'' ·. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 Coast Guard cutbOck involves real risks Gambling with people's lives ls no way to achieve budgetary savings, but In ordering cutbacks tor the Coast Guard, that is what the politicians in Washington are doing. For a relatively picayune saving of $46 million , the Coast Guard is being forced to cut its military m anpower by 3,400. close 15 sear ch and rescue sta tions , decommission 11 cutters a nd reduce budgets at 16 other stations. Locally, that would mean the end of the vital helicopter station i n Los Angeles a nd cutting ma np ower ass i g n e d to ,ocean-going vessels in Newport Ha rbor and Marina del Rey. In Southern California, with its ma ny pleasure craft, the e ffects of the cuts could be d isastrous. The loss of the Los Angeles helicopter station. whose three choppers saved 80 lives on 235 calls last year . would mean -heli copters would have to fl y in from San Di ego on LA·Orange County .rescue calls. That would mean a 45 to 00-mlnute flight . a le tha l de lay ln many sea e mergencies. And what about the problem of an airliner down at sea off LAX? The cut backs would a lso hamper an already hard·pressed e ff o rt t o i n te r ce pt dru g smugglers. Newpor t ·s Poin t Di vi d e cutt er would be on "inst ant readiness" only 10 days a month, compared to 21 currently. The Point Divide would go from two crews or eight men to one crew or four on duty. Under administration plans . the Coast Gua rd cutbacks will be completed at the end of Ma rch. There is still time for Congress to remedy this frightening s ituation. and it should do so without delay by restoring funds to the Coast Guard. Sen. Ernest Hollings. D -S .C .. in troduced a bill Thursda~· to that effect. Surely. there must be other areas of the federal bu~get where some or all of that $46 million can be c ut witho ut recklessl y endang~ring many lives. Question unresolved The U.S. Supr eme Court s hould have resolved whether persons convicted of murder as juveniles can be put to death. It had a chance last week in a case in vol vi n g Mo nty Lee Eddings, who was 16 when he fat ally shot a sta te highway patrolman outside of Tulsa in 1977. The court had been expected to answer whether juveniles who committed their cr imes when unde r 18 could be executed . Instead, the court more narrowly 9oted 5·4 to overturn Eddings ' sentence. The majority held that tull consideration had not been 1iven to certain .. mitigating" evidence that could have resulted in different punishment. Chief Justice Warren Burge r . 9.triting for the dissenters in the case, said, "It can never be less tha n the most pa inful of our duties to pass on capital cases. and the more so in a case such as this one." However. he continued . "there comes a time in every case when a court must bite the bullet." We concur. The court did not disturb the conviction of Eddings. The court did not rule against capital punishment. It did m a ke n ecessar y. ho we ve r . a ne w sentenc ing procedure. Justice Lewis F . Powell J r .. writing for t he major ity. said: · ·. . .there can be no doubt that evidence of a turbulent f a mity histor y. beatings by a ha rsh father. and of severe emotional dis turba nce is partic ula rly relevant." Unde r the ruling . it is possible that Eddings could be sentenced to death aga in. ·'We are not unaware of the extent to which minors engage increas ingly in violent crime." P o well wro te . "No r do we s uggest an abs ence of legal r esponsibility where crime is commi(ted by a minor ." Still, the court did not rule on w h eth e r per son s can b e sentenced to death for juvenile crime. We can only hope that the court will find a nother case on which to rule. Social Security threat Following the lead of many o th e r publi c e mpl oyee organizations. one group or Saddleback College employees is a ttempting to break wit h the I in anc ia ll y trouble d Social Security system. Members of the .California School Employees Association. which represents non.teaching sta ff in the district. have initiated a drive to give its members the choice of either remaining in the system , or dropping out. O r gani zation officials m aintain the college's private retirement plan is sufficient to cover their needs. and additional payroll deductions for Socia l Sec urity are not worth the expense. Employees of the City of San Diego recently quit participating in Social Security in favor of a private syste m , financed by payroll deductions. lt appears more an_d more public employees are choosing to drop out of Social Security. which is compounding the problems ~e syste m is facin g by further eroding its revenue base. • Fortunately no m ass exodus can result because private sector e mployees are not allowed the o ptio n o f withdr a wing . In addition. once a public employee o rganization withdra ws fro m Social Security. that organization c an-n"Ot re-ente r . Indivi dual m e mbe r s go in g to w or k elsewhere can . however . resume their Social Security coverage. The ract that those who have the option of a bandoning the Social Security s ys t em a r e c hoosing t o do s o is a sad commenta r y on the pe rceived viability of the system. If the t r e nd continues. private employees may begin to c lamor fo r th e o pti o n o f voluntary participation. whi ch would probably be the final straw for the fragile system . Troubled or not, thousands of Americans depend on Social Security for their sole retirement income, small as it is. Allowing a wholesa le a bandonment of the s ystem would be a nationa l tragedy . Correcting the system's deficiencies is the answer. Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views ex· pressed on lnis page are 1nose ot their authors and artists. Reader comment. is 1nv1t · ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone <J U I 641·4321. LM. Boyd/Fatparrotlt Maybe you d idn't know that a 'common health problem amOf'!C pet parrots is obesity. That's right. Fat f arrota. Tbe medical examiner determines the time of death by the telQperature of the body. You've read that. Que1Uon arises If the doctor ever can ORANGE COAST lailyPil~ -- pinpoint the time exactly. Not by temperature, certainly. Clothtn1, body fat, these influence the matter. The experienced doctor ca n &et pretty close, however . Am told you can 1et a mud stain out of cloth by rubbing it with a allced raw potato . Miaht try that. Thomas P. H•l•Y Publisher ~:a. ....... Editor larNr• Krelbicll Edltorl•I P•ge Editor ... . .... Demos_ again seek 'reform' W ASHJNGTON -The leaders of the Democratic Party are m aking a sincere a nd rather v a lia nt e ffort to get presidential politics back to where they can understand it. They would like to preserve that g r and Ame r ican institution, the nominating convention . and, not incidentally . ma ke it easier ror eithe r Edwar d Kennedy or Wa lter .Mondale to win the party's nomination in 1984. But good i nte n tions a nd fond reme mbrance may not be enough. T he party's efforts to reform its recent r e form s wi ll pro bab ly fail. The convention, Kennedy and Mondale may all be things past. THE PARTY IS in the process of rewriting its r ules for the fourth time in the past 12 years. The latest "reform" commission. which met cordially in Washington two weeks ago, was called t h e Hunt Commission a fter it s cha irman. North Carolina. Gov. J a mes Hunt. The Hunt Commission is a nother atte mpt to undo lhe damage lhe party believes that it did itself with the democratized rules adopted in 1970 by the McGovern Commission (after Sen. George McGovern>. This time, in the harmo n y o r a d ea l be tw ee n r e presentative s o f Ke nne d y and Mondale, the 89 commission members r ecomm e nde d the fo llowing rule changes for consideration by the full Democr atic National Com mittee in Ma r ch : -S h ort e nin g t h e pu b l i c delegate-selection "season" from 20 to 15 weeks by moving the Iowa caucuses to Fe b. 27 and t he New Hampshire primary election lo Ma rch 6 ; Getting professional politicians back into presiden tial politics by mandating th at 15 percent of all delegates should be "uncommitted" ele<tcd omc;aJs selected by me~~ RICHARD RHVIS 1'i • Congre-ss and st a te d e mocr atic committees ; Ruling that state parties could rewrite their rules to produce a greater lik e lihood o f "winner·take·a ll '' primarie s in s t ea d o f th e proportional-representation elections or recent years; -Elimin ating the 1980 rul e that bound de legates t o vote for t h e candidate to which each was originally pledged. The DNC will p robabty ratify a ll nr m ost of those changes. The idea is to preve nt fu ture nomin ations o f little-known outsider candidates tn other words, to lock the barn door after George McGovern and Jimmy Carter have escaped. But things will begin to unravel again The Democratic professionals are trying to restore the old ways m the face of the new realities of television politics. Television the technology of i n s t a n t a n.e o u s . p e r v a s i v e communication changes all. the old rules because it transforms local events into national events . There really is no such thing as a "local" selection process in Iowa or New Hamps hire or anyplace else. Television brings each caucus and each primary into every American living room. In the new nominating proeess. those early events are the equivalent of the first ballots in the old·time conventions The winners of the first ballots under any nominating system are likely to win tbe final prize. The television cameras, the campaign money and ambitious professionals tend to follow the early winnen; that's called "momentum " IN 1984 AGAIN. no matter what the rules, the race wi ll probably go to one of t he first winners 1t could go -as the nominati1Jns in both parties have in recent years to a candidate who· has taken the lime to campaign almost constantly for a year or more before those ea riv "local" contests in Iowa and .'.':e"' Hampshire. 1 I also sus pect that Californu1 or another West Coast state will move 1b primary into the early weeks of the campaign to end the "last a nd least" in flue nce of Pacifi c primanc:s.1 · So. uld faces like Kennedy and Monda le may control this phase of the 1984 Democratic nomination game, but the eventual winner would seem more likely to be someone less s hopworn_, s uc h as John Glenn or , perhaps. one of the group of younger De mocrats who will inevitabl v be labe led "neohberals." a Gary Hart or a Bill Brad ley One angry citizen tackles lawmakers r Today's column i.t wrilllrn by Mr. Waters' a&socuite, Phil Jordan J Ra lph M o rre ll . w ho to t h e discomfiture of the state's legislators has already proved the adage "One man can make a difference," is at it _ag.ain.. Morrell doesn't look like a man who has made history. He's a retired U.S. Navy warrant offi cer h ailing from Dixon, a town of 5,000 or so population in the Sacramento Valley. He has a s m a ll·town, self-effacing .manner - until he gets angry.,. HE GOT ANGRY a fe w years back. and before bis anger had cooled. Ralph Morrell had made, at least in a small way, history. Morrell came to the Capitol at that time lo s tudy legislators' voting records on some legislation Mrs. Morrell had an interest in. In the course of his studies he discovered a pair or time-honored Assembly practices. "ghost votin g" and "vote switching." He was outraged by both. ''Ghost voting" occurred when an a bse nt assem bly m a n "voted" b y having a lower house colleague punch for him or her the voting buttons on each Assembly me m ber's desk. Morrell felt. correctly enough. that this practice allowed members to be IARl WATIRS "present" so far as the record was concerned. even t hough they might not even be i/l Sacra mento~ n\..YCh less In the chamber and at their desks . "Vote switching" was possible under a house rule that allowed members to vote one way on the floor. then, so long as the outcome or the vote in question was not changed, be recorded as voting the other way. This, as Morrell realized, allowed Assembly members to have it both ways with constituents who had strong Coping with contra~ctions The m ain reason that so much advice a bout our behavior a nd att.iludes and r e a ctions tow ard othe r people is valueless lies in the fact that such advice is afraid of seeming inconsistent and contradictory. But slnce the very nature of man is a paradox, t.he only valuable advice mUtJt RlllY II• be that which at first 1lance seems Inconsistent and contradictory. It is up to us to disentangle the threads of truth and falsity ; no one else can do It for us. Aa a prime e xample. we are sometlmee told to pay no attention to what otben think, but to do what we lndlvldua.Uy feel is beat and ri•ht. This la the •'independent'' m an that Thoreau championed. ON THE OTB&& hand, we are enjoined to pay attention to the views and oplnlona ot otben, for we want lbem to t.bink well of UJ. Even the Amencan rewolutionarlet, who flouted ., the idea or monar chy that reigned around the world at the time, a ppealed in their declaration or independence to "the good opinlOn of mankind." So what shall we do in this regard? How can we maintain a moral a nd spirit ual balance between our persona l convictions and the received opinions of our d ay, when they com e into conflict? It seems to me that the onJy tr ue litmus test for s uch a decision is asking oneself, and sincere ly answering. one question: ''ls what I propose lo do an action that is obovt the common morallly, or below It?'' IF WE DEFY convention. and scorn the good opinion of others , in order to achieve our own gain a t their expense, our pleasure at t he ir pain , our dom inance at their submission, then we are not b eing "inde pende nt"• or "Individualistic" -we ar e bein g greedy and iosensitlve and brutish, and eventually false to ourselves. U we defy convenUon when lt II hypocritical a nd oppresslve and aumbly conformist, In order to attain a 1oal lhat will elevate t.he society we live ln (and the sod ety of man), then we are truly enUstin1 our "lnder.ndente" in the service of humankln , at what.ever cost to ou lvea. .. feelin~s. pro or con. on a given piece of legis latmn Morrell started speaking out against tht• practices to a ny group that would li ste n. w riting lette rs to any newspaper that would publish them. At rirs t he was laughed at. not only by legis lators but even by a lot of the reporters covering the Legislature. Surprise' His efforts res ulted in an irate public and. earlier this year. the Assembly leaders caved in. changed voling procedures to severely restrict, if not entirely eliminate, the questioned practices. •' Did Ralph Morrell rest on his laurels? Not on your life He's lnore recenU y discovered the ex is t e nce of the Legislature's contingent fund Morrell calls it a ·'slus h fund" which, unlike all other state expenditures. is exempt from state Finance De partment budget and accounting controls NOTING THE fund had been used to purchase. among other things, "a variety of luxuries such as first class air travel, $570 gold finger ri ngs, cut flowers and beer. wine and potato ch ips" for our lawmakers, Morrell r e m ounted h i s w hite horse. He announced a drive. with himselC as chairman. "in reform o( the unaudited profligate s pendin g of taxpayer hard-earned dollars by members of the Cali fornia L~gislaturc . " "We in tend ," Morre ll stated . "either. to for ce r efor m through legislation, or through another initiative drive." . When Morrell took on Assembly voting procedures. he was an unknown. No m ore; this latest effort , only a month or so under way. has already attracted national attention. MorN"ll's photo appeared in an article on the s ubject in a recent Time Magazine . And, this time, neither legislators nor newsmen are laughing. Aller seven mama.cea. ls lt true that Lli Taylor lt thinking about a at.amna role ln ''El&~t ls Enoucb"? FAN 1 .. ,, HllTllGTDI BEACH If DUITlll VllllY Dally Pilat FRIDAY, JAN. 29, 1982 CAVALCADE BUSI NESS 82~3 85-6 Merrill Lynch is using Orange County to test equity . access lines of credit . See Page B5. 0 a P0:rking sticiers due at colleges Free space to end Monday.at Golden West , Oi:ange Coast , Coastline By PHIL SNEIDERMAN 0(-Olilfot ~ ..... BeglMing Monday, students at Golden West and Orange Coast colleges, who traditionally have parked for free on campus, will have lo display a SS parking fee sticker or race the prospect of a more costly traffic ticket. The new parking stickers also will be required of Coastline College students who park at the five former elementary schools leased as Coastline's learning centers. The stickers will be valid for the spring semester. Coast Community College District trustees approved the parking fee in December, hoping to make up for diminishing state funds. By law. this revenue must be used solely for maintenance and construction of parking lots. Rus hing to Implement the parking fees for the spring semester. which begins Monday, college officials have had to plan for enforcement. a nd m ake prov is ions fo r no n -s tudent visitors on campus. Officials at Golden West and Orange Coas t colle ges ~ said • 'Bo/,sa Bash/ to raise funds The-Amigos de Bolsa Chica environmental group has sch~duled its annual "Bolsa Bash" Saturday night to raise legal funds to prevent development in the. Bolsa Chica coMtal marsh near Huntington Beach. Ti ckets a r e $1 0 . For further information, call 897 -7003 or 897 -2039. • • Coastline art fair planned The Coastline Community College Artists Association will present its annual art fair and s a le today and Saturday at the Mesa Verde Learning Center, 2990 Mesa Verde Drive East , Costa Mesa. a.m. lo 3:30 p.m. Saturday. warning notices will be placed o n the cars of stickerless students during the first week of enforcement. After that, violators at Orange Coast and Golden West will receive official traffic tickets that will be processed through the Orange County Municipal Court system. Students who ig nore the tickets may have diffi culty r enewing their state vehicle registration, campus officials warned. Golde n West College In Huntington Beach has about 3,800 parking spaces. Motorists who park there in unreserved spa ces without a parking sti cker or a short-term ticket will be • cited by campus security, with a fine of Sl2. Terry Shoaff. associate dean for college services, said Golden West is in stall ing three s h o rt-t erm p a r king ca rd dispensers.for visitors . They will be located near entrances on inquiries or deli veries. At Orange Coast, which has a bout 5,000 parking s paces, visitors without a slicker can purchase a SO-cent day permit in the. Costa Mesa school's community services or campus oper ations offi ce. both located in lhe Administration Building. Nine 4S·minute free parking o;paces have been set aside at Orange Coast for brief inquiries or deliveries- Elsewhere . vehicles with no sticker or day permit can be given a $7 parking ticket by campus security or Costa Mesa police, according to Dave Hill , Or a nge Coast's di rector of maintenance and operations. Hill said there wou ld be no enforcement at Orange Coast for vehicles coming on campus al night to atte nd concerts or confmunity service programs Nightly enforcement is planned Monday through Thursday. however, at Golden West. Gothard Street, Edinger Avenue John Greenall, spokesman for and Golden West Street. Co astline. College, said parki.ng The 25-cent time-dated cards stickers also will be required for will be good for one hour. A students who parlcar Coasmne1 s visitor planning on a two hour five lear!1ing center s : Mesa visit can purchase two cardsand Ver.d e in Costa M es~. dis play them in the front Ro binwood and Peterson m wind.shield---~ _ ..HYnLioeton B~ch.,-Bay".'~sw-!n- ln addition, JJ spaces will be Santa ~a Heights and Finley m set aside for 45-minute free Westmms~er. . . parking for those ma'kini? brief But unJJke its sister schools. Hosts needed for foreign students Coa s tlin e has no campus security force. Greenall said a method of enforcing the parking fees at these centers is still under study. Saddleback College, which has campuses in Irvine and Mission Viejo, initiated a parking fee for s tud ents i n Aug . 1980 . Saddleback currently chargc.s SlO per semester KNEE-DEEP IN HUBCAPS ~l·wport Rl'ach Detective Boti Ha rdv chl·l'ks ove r nl'arh 500 ~loll'n wire-wheel hubcaps officl:rs scizl•d Thursda~· ·during an arres t in Huntington Reat'h. Po lil'<' ur restt•d 48-~·l•ur-nld Robert Foreste r. a Huntington I larbour res~dent , al an industria l complex. He ,,·a~ rcleasl•d on s2.soo bail Polite da1m lhe stolen hubcaps. all f rom Am<.·1·1tan made t'<ffs. an• ''orth about SS0.000. Those who C'an irknt 1f\· hulwap ... an• urgeri to cont act Hard~· at 6H-:J782 Admission lo the event is free. Art works may be viewed and purchased from 1 to 8 p.m. Friday and from 10 Participating a rtists are donating one-fifth of all sale ea rn ings towa rd deve lopment of a n e w ga ller y a t the learning center. Works on display will include oiJ·paintings. pastels, ink drawings, fiber a rts , needl ecr aft, cer ea mic sculptures, photography and stained glass. •Family trips being offered An informational meeting for residents interested in becoming host famiJies for visiting foreign stude nts during the coming school year will be conducted Thursday by the Marina High School Chapter of American Field Service. Rapist killed by clerk Fa1nilies are invited to slcn up for the various trips being offe red this s princ through the Orange Coast College Community Service Office. I Marcti 7. I And Dtaneylancl oo March 14, San Dieco Wild Animal Park on April 24, Museum of Natural History oo llay 4, San Onofre Nuclear Power Plant and Palomar Observatory on May 15 and Sea World on May 23. The meeting wUI be1ln at 7:30 ·p.111. lo the teacbtn dining roolb at the school. U871 Springdale St., Huntiqton Beach. Newport robber, prison escapee identified by police The trips offered in the "Fami l y Adventur e Excursions" include : The Alligator Farm on Feb. S, Movieland Wax Museum on. Feb. 17, Magic Mountain on Feb. 21 , San Die go Zoo on Prices vary for each trip. For reservations and ticket information call 556-5880. •Cable awards show acheduled Dickin s o n Pa c ifi c Cablesystems has scheduled its first annual "Acad~my Awards" for cable television programs created by citizens for the community access channel. 18301 Gothard Street, near Talbert Av e nue i n Huntington Beach. Foreip students between the a1es of 16 and 19 will st.ay with local families while atte"nding claaaea at Marina. Visiting students• participation fees , incidental spending money and medical insurance are paid. Many host families have children of high school age, but famllles with younger children or no children may apply. More information on tbe program can be obtained by attending the meeting or by calling 846-2607. A man who has been identified as convicted Newport Beach robber and rapist Tommy Knox has died from gunshot wounds he suffered during an alleged holdup a ttempt in R a ncho Cucamonga. Knox. a prison escapee, was blasted four times in the chest last week by a liquor store clerk, in ves tigator s for the San Bernardino Sheriff's office said. The 35-year-old Knox. officers said, was allegedly holding up the liquor store when the clerk wheeled around and started firing. Knox remained in a coma until his death, offi cials said. But invest igators s aid it wasn't until Wednesday the day Knox di ed that they learned his identity. Officers said Kn ox , who escaped fro m a Pom ona Courtroom last July. assumed the ide ntity of Mark Scott · Bradley and had dyed his hair after the escape In vestigators ~aid they do not know who or where the real Bradley is a nd how Knox obtained documents bearing his nam e · Knox was convicted in 1979 of 23 counts of rape . rob~ry , kidnap and assault with a deadly weapon O ff ici al s s aid h e was sentenced to 20 years in San Que ntin State Prison but escaped last July . Until the episode an Rancho Cuca monga, a town near Ontario, police said Kn ox·s whereabouts were a mystery The "Community Access P r odu cer Awards," presentations will be shown live over the cable system's community access channel 3, on Feb. S, at 7 p.m. T he awards are f or cr eati ve broadcas t s by citizens who've completed th ~ c abl e sys t em 's production workshop a nd have produced thei r own pr9grams with mini-cameras provided by Dickinson. Th e system c urre ntly operates 35 channels11n about 17,000 homes in Huntington Beach , Fountain Valley. Westminster and Stanton. ~\ ~\t Ah Laguna, no body escapes The invitation-only event will be filmed at the Joint Powers Training Center. • Blood'f'hbile due in Huntington The American Red Cross Bloodmo bile will be al Alls tate Realtor s, 7466 Edinger Ave., Huntington Beach, from 9: 15 a. m. to 2 p.m. on Feb. 10, Red Cross officials announced. Officials said increasing numbers of voluntary blood donors are needed in order lo meet the average da il y need for blood of 2,000 pints in Los Ang e l es a nd Ora n ge counties. P eople ages 17 to 65, weighing at least 110 pounds and in good health can donate. Seventeen-year-olds need parental consent. laying suspect's · earing closed " Court proceedings were closed bail since his arrest in Maryland to the public today as the in late September following a preliminary hearing for Thomas 10-day nationwide manhunt. Francis Edwards -charged According to Orange County with killinc a Lake Elsinore girl S h e r i f f ' s 0 e p a r t m e n t in Cleveland National Forest -i n vesti gato r s, the burly becan in South Orange County defendant admttted he was in Municipal court. the Cleveland National Forest . Edwards, 37 , a former Costa for three days after the ratat Mesa resident, is accused of the shooting. s hooting death of Vanessa According to witnesses, a man lberri, 12. one of two girls shot drove up to a location near without apparent provoc:eUon where Miss lberri and a friend, last. September near the Blue Kelly Cartier, 12, also of Lake Jay camplJ'OUDd In an area of Elsinore, were st.anding, called the forest near El Carlso to them and opened fire with a VU111e. .22-caliber gun. Miss Iberri died Edwards' preliminary hearing two days later. Miss Cartier .. LAGUNATICKS DEPT. When things ~et a touch on t he routine side in our region. you can almost al way~ count on our Art Colon~· of Laguna Beach to come up with some kind of hassle that wi ll hold the entire Orange Coas t Ill ·. ~ ~\ IUIPlllll ,~ proposed as wat e rfalls. in rapt fascination In the past. we ve all witnessed Laguna b a ttl es o ve r whales painted on wa lls, steelwork sculptures on the Ma in B each or sewer vent pipes Today. Laguna Beach is in the middk of anothe r onl' It's a question of whether or not an Art Colony mortuar~ s hould be allowed to operate a crematoriu~. • THIS HEATED ISSUE. if you · 11 pardon the expression. s urfaced before the Laguna City Counr il upon a pplication of the McCormick Mortua ry. located out on Laguna Canyon Road. Principal opponent of the cre matorium is one Larr~ llunt. whose business is right next door. Mr. Hunt operates a body s hop. Don 't get the two places of business confused. now. Hunt dispatches automobiles with dented fenders. McCormick does another kind of dispatching. Faced with this controversy. the Laguna Cit y council tried to s trike a compromise in a n earlier vote . · In their infinite wisdom. council m em bers ruled that McCormick could open the crematorium and dispatch three bodies per day. It was ruled. however. that Laguna doesn't want loved ones hauled in from elsewhe re to be dis patched in the Art Colony. To limit this practicb. t he council ruled that only one of the three bodies c remated each day could be ;1 non·Lagunan. tbll momint In Municipal Court suffered serious head injurtes BODY SHOP OPERATOR HUNT , himself. had Judi• Jobn Griffin's La1una and recovered. provided som e fuel ror the fire, if you'll pardon the Nl1uel courtroom was only The man sped off ln a truck expression , on t hat argument. mlnutel old when the pubUc and matching the deacrlpllon of Hunt quoted Oranf(e County Health De partment pra1 were excluded on a motion Edwards' pickup. Two men wbo figures to the coun cil whlch he s aid indlcat d ~ of tbe defeme. g1Ve chase were able to oblerve ~ Two l..agunans involved m another calm civic debate be an averagl' of only I 01 such t ercmonics per month. You suppose it's left to ~·our imagina tion to fig ure how you hold a .01 cremation. l c hose lo for gel 1t. Obvious ly. the La~una council's carliftr pondering of the issue concluded that it's less object ion able to cremate a Laguna n tha n it is a non-Lag\ma n. Well. it'!" a lways been tough to find a parking place in the town a nyway. VOU START J UST letting any body come around to get cremated in the Art Colony and the next t hing you know, every bod~· will be wanting to do it. Just look at how many people come to Laguna every 't'ear just to visit the art shows. And they don't even want io stay long enough to avail the mselves or McCormick's services. Today. It appears that the Laguna council is having 'second thoughts . Council m e mbers have now voted agltlnst allowing _ any non·Lagunans to get cremated whdn the city limits . THAT ACTION apparently s hocke d R obert McCormick Jr .. the mortuary owner. who wa~ quoted as reacting. "I'm not aware of any communlt~· that limits the number of client a business can have." You guess m aybe he ls now. L.....--1~..,.. .. ,.,.Ma. ....._Ja~,y-..-rw Hffll9e ~number iftd1-1--c...~· 11tt·Ol'I!,_~ lhttttcd"tO tfR ans on1y, ere wou at 8rlnfe, County J ail ·Without notiry the sheriff'!J department. ;._ ___________ ..;;. ____ ......,~--~-~~._ ............. ----..,. I ==-=:...----~ - .. . . ... .. " Sel.. Htl ~I•• Hol ~In Ntl ~In Nfl Seltt Nol P Ci ... Clew ('-Pt ,... Clew t no t> E -(IOw (... PI 1141\ Clew C"9 PI -Clo"' ("O at. .. ~ .; J!f:: .. ar.i·i~I ei;: r.'~: = 5!~~ :)-:: 1,; ::;:. ; m=: 1:: ~ B; t: • ~ l:::I' 8't 1 ., r· Vt ~ I .. 11 ' o... ., et I I • ... , ~.. .. 0 -1,17 IA IM. . fcll(ir 4 74 q1.11 ;·"' \••M Htt '· , .. "' ... , , fY>+ Ill -11 ,. 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II\ MMMI ·'°' m;; ~ -' -" .. , . • ~ r"rrr ''t: '· " , ,~ = =-~ ·::14 11 ~:': L ~ 4 "llio '·:"J' :=~·~ ~~ .:~·; t=o"t,\~i·J !i ~ '1 .·~~~ ~ 'ftit-. -~:j'.!i"' Jij:~ ~·=~:a':::> -.:!plte .... ,. , -.. 1lil~1 ••• i ..-. .. -.. I •t\'t+ .. "" ..... u·· atrerart ••I rth I t • 1 ~. ' I. ·11 ,1J ... ! ! ,: i't~sj-·:·~ .. ~.:ii • :'"i f l: •Ulloa a~ "r'!: .. ~, _ • " , .. dlJ .. ~ __ r • · ... · 1n~ · . ~ It 'WI •• • .. t .7 .. .• l l . . :t __ --· •• -· • Borrowing woes on 6-moiith CDs (Thia ii the lalt of a 10-port NrVI on how to IOU. °" 11our ltll inCQ~ tazfl.J If you're among the millions who ln 1981 \C)Ok advantage of the offer by various banks to help you raise the minimum $10,000 necessary t.o inveal ln their high-interest-rate six-month certltlcates of deposit by lending you enough to make up the fuU $10,000, you have • tricky tax problem in recordlnl the tax consequences· on your 1981 return . Unde r these arrangements, the • ~ bank loaned you m o n ey at rates generally l percent a iC more than the CD "' paid you. This meant Ollll PllJfl ~..,, that you actually ~ _ received only the . interest on the amount of cash that you were able to pay. less 1 percent of the amount you borrowed from the ba~ to make up the required $10,000 minimum. While it appears that all you would have to do is ~eport t~e net amount you actually received as interest mcome, the Internal Revenue Service sees this differently. It says that you r~ce1ved the full interest paid on the entire $10,000, and you also had an interest deduction equal to the total interest paid on the loan. Here is what this means to you. Suppose you were able to pay SS.000 toward a $10,000 six-month bank certificate with a IS percent interest rate and the bank loaned you the other $5,000 at 16 percent. You actually wound up with $375 interest on your $5,000 for the six-month CD, less S2S, or $35(1. But the bank notice will show your interest income on tlte CD as $750. And you must report the $750 on your Form 1040. You can take an interest deduction for the $400 difference betw~n the S350 you actually were left with and the $750 you must report as interest income, but only if you it emize your deductions. Otherwise, you may end up paying income tax on $750 of reported interest when you only earned $350. NOTE: The 1981 special combined interest and dividend exclusion of $400 on joint returns and $200 on single returns may help reduce your tax. This is a TRICKY tax problem. demanding careful handling. This is the last of my 10 tax columns: so below a re highlights of the '81 tax law that apply to the return you are now filing. -Your 1981 ta x rates are only 1.25 percent less than your 1980 tax rates. tr you compute your tax from the Tax Tables. the table figure has already been reduced by 1.25 percent. If you compute your tax from the rate schedules, you will find a four-line worksheet. right on the page with the schedules, that you should rm out in order to get the benefit of the 1.25 percent rate reduction . -Jl you were S5 or older when you sold your principal residence after July 20, 1981 (and met certain other t ests>. you can exclude up to $125,000 or your gain on the sale (instead or SI00,000 before July 20, 1981 ). -If you had any long-term capital gain from sales made after June 9, 1981, and you had 1981 taxable income or more than $60,000 on a joint return o r more than $41,500 on a s ingle return. the maximum capital gains tax on that gain won't exceed 20 percent (instead of 28 percent l . • t i- STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT .. DQ'w !~~~~PA¥J,R~~ •• l HEW "l'Ollllt (AP)o Se!H, T1'111r1. prl<• end Ml tllen9t ttl Ille II""" moot e<llw Hew Yart. Stock Eocl'WlnOe 11-. ........ -loMlly ........ -,, IBM 1.11t.a -• '"' HeWtetn 1,001,600 Jt +4 Ea-s "44.700 JOit. • •.to ,t,,,,... T&T 901.too 6004 • ,.. llCA '111.SOO 11~ -l'-aNMw• ... ,IOO 11"'1 • V. LTV c..,,. 153,100 I~ • '-f estl\AlrL IOl.IOO S-.. • -., Dwll• "'°"' 1•.100 21.. • '4 Or•Utlnll 11t,IOO 17\lo +I WernrGom .,,,000 "°"' • •"" TMOy t "7.600 lS"' t 7\lo P"4llp1"9I 541,JCIO Jt\lo • \/; Am Alrtll\ Slll.700 !OV. • .. IEHt 1(-s11,-74111 • 1"" AMERICAN LEADERS GOUJ COINS Pel . Up U,J Vp 11.t Up 17 .. Up 16.I Ufl IS.S Up IS.J Up .... Up lt.4 Up IU Up 1U Up tU Up IJ . .O U1 IU U1 IU UI 12.4 ~· !~ NEW YO"I( C4ftl -tt.lc1H lalo Tllllf'Mey fl .... ~olll&, COMjlotrM Witt\ W.-O•<r'I 11tk •. ......,.... 1 troy or., Ml.Ml,"" \l,00. .......... 1 troyot., ..a.•. 11111.00. ---so .... t.t .,.., ......... .JD .... •. Jt. ....,.. tttc,_, ·• "°' 01., taus. .. , .. .: IOt T_._y, J.,, 21 JTOCICS 0..-Niii! "-C-Oii ! • tno 141.JJ •7.20 ao.n .... u+n.Jt , ~ Trn 141.M UI 7J M0.72 l90.1S+ t.• t U Ull IOUJ 101.19 IOS.lt IOI, .. + 1.a 1 U Slk Jtt 06 I». '1 J1UI J:H4> + 111 l 1nous . . . . . s.mo.-Tr•n J ..... 000 Ullh , t»• _•_s_s_, ____________ •,_m...-, WHAT STOCKS DID I . ' ' HEW YOlllK (AP) Jan 11 AdYancoo Oocllnod Ull<M"9911 Tole!,,_, ..... lllQN 11 .: r t H-''""' WKA 1 AMH OIO • NEW YOltK tAPI Jan 21 Toe:h I .. * ,... l l ~I ~I • .. ~-------------~' l METALS C•••tt ""''° unh • pound, US. Clfsllnallon• Le .. JO cenu • DOU'>d llllC '2~contt• -""• 0et1- TI• '7 n l4 •tel' WWII c-1• Ill Alllllll-76-77 <"'1'e """"· H.V • MotcWY Ut0 00 per llas•. f'lltl-s.»1.001,...yor., H.Y I ~~~~~~~~~ 1 SILVER Handy ~ H~. it.1'0119r troy_.. I ~~~~~~~~-· l L.etltM: ~ll••"Oam.u.w .... 15 f L.etltM: a4tot,_ ltMlfll ... I.•, .. ta.-. lertt:~l2,1111U•. .. , ...... : '*·°'· .. II.JI. , • %ertcll: _,. ..... ___ • "....,. • "-Cen1., .. 11 • ...-. ... 1 ........ 90 .......... : lMly ... .., .-1 NPM -.,,. . ·- .......... , f..iy ... 1, _.., telltlt ... .... ,., .. .,.11. --..... ( J I i ' ~ I I . I Dall' ..... ~ .. CllertetStMr ONE-ON-ONE UCl 's Randy Whieldon (121 drives for la~·up during Thurs day's PCA A clash with host Long AC'ach St. De fending for the 49ers is Kevin T~·(' The~· pla~· a gain Saturday ni.g ht at lht• Anaheim Conve ntion Center following ln ·inc•s 78·68 triumph From Page C1 UCITOPSWNGBEACH. • • that's spectacular," praised 49er Coach Tex Winter, whose team had beaten the Anteaters in its last 14 meetings, s panning 15 years. "I'm pleased that we got back in the game, but we had poor judgment and played in a frenzy when we did get back ipto it. We made the easy plays tough. I Uiought we could have won it... - Of course a lot of conference\ opponents have felt that way after playing the Anteaters this year. "Whatever it takes to win, that's what we're goi ng to do," said Magee, who finished with a game-high 31 points Che hit 17 of 18 charity tosses and grabbed 15 rebounds). "I fig'ured they'd be pumped up and ready to play. And I thought they did pretty • good without Dino <Gregory), we just played better." or course the 49ers get a quick opportunity to avenge the loss as they'll play UCI again Saturday-night at the Anaheim Convention Center. l Fountain Valley : kickers stay l atop Sunset ... -i The Fountain Valley High men's 1 soccer team re mained above tM , pack in the Sunset League, while : Ocean View easily dls.J!osed of : winless Huntington Beach Thursday ~ night. . ~ ....... !:~---o-911 UC lr¥1ne Frttne>Sult SaftJOMSlatt C4M S~• FUllertort Pa<lfk UC S•nlll Blwller• L-8ffdl Slalt Ul•l>S!Me W L W L s • " ' s • " ' J 2 ' 7 J J ' " J J • " I • 6 11 I • I 11 ' • J 14 "I was telling <Rainer> Wulf that I'm sure they're saying they can beat us with Dino," said McDonald. "I'm happy, but I'll be even happier if we get one more. Beating them once doesn 't mean too much." And. what's Gregory's prognosis? "I don't know yet,", said the 6-9 center. "I'm going to try lo play but it will depend on how I feel " "Dino should be able to play some Saturday," added Winter, "but I don't know bow much. We will play with what we have available." Certainly Gregory's presence would boost the 49ers, but the UC I players contend they'll be ready. "I don't think Dino makes that much of a difference," said UC I guard Kevin Fuller or the senior with an 18.7 average. "They have good talent whether he's in the lineup or not." "Wej played good at times and bad at times, but we should have blown them out," added Whieldon. Blowouts or not, UCJ is winning .... and that's what's important. 1 The Barons, 3-0·2, stayed on top : after posting a 3-1 victory over -: Edison. Jim Jensen scored twice for : the winners with Todd Andrews Tennis classes set in Newport Beach " t C. I . E :sotCER ! . -~ .-- : addini ~ tally. Sandy Strachen netted : the Chargers' lone goal. ; Ocean View enjoyed a lopsided 8·1 ·, vietory over the Olien, giving the Seahawka she po4nts ln the Sunset I standlnp. I John Frouaiakis kicked in three goals, with teammates Ron Durbin I and Robbie Sherry adding two l apiece. 1 In Sunset League women 's acUvlty, Edllon ii atop the heap at 4.0 after blanldnc Marina, 3-0. Three different Char1ers -Chanel Chaves, Wendy Winkler and Kelli ffartlin1 - l shared ln the 1corln1. The City or Newport Beach is offering it..s second four-week session of t.ennis lessons, beginnlng Monday, Feb. 8 at Mariners Park. Classes geared towards both beginning and advanced playen will meet every Monday and Wednesday ·for four weeks. There wlll be different sessions for adults, youths (ages 9·12) and pee wees <a1es M). Re1i1tration will be accepted through the mall or in peraon at the Parks, Beaches and Recreauo-. Department, tJ.O. Box lTA, 3300 Newport ·Blvd., Newport Beach, 92663. Feet are $23 for adult and youth classes and $10.50 for pee wee claases. , Huntlntton Beach kept cloee wtth a : J·l recont after nlppln1 Fountain • va11e1, i.o. Youth baseball cl&M t aolia Stulta bad the lone pal of I tile COllUlt in the lut 30 teconds A class for ffUlh baseball coaches • from 10 yardl away. GetUftl credit will bf CCIDduct.ed at or-. Cout , ...................... ~ CoUep ........... TuMd•J. • .... · Tbe clasa b open to 111yone. ~u I la tbe 1ou111 Coat Le ..... Dana l)baaet of tbe 1am• wUl be coftred . ... ...... a 2.0 ~ fbe .....,.,., for .... count• ooc c.e•-v-.,. Laun · .... ooeeta Mitt •ce-. . _. larlt w.,.. tM ne"dul will meet 1adl 'nlllday f;-.+-Dllflilm-.-,&.o..l. • ...... UM1 IO I 1-f re"' '...,.._ · .... · o"rall. lnlormaUoo. phone 55&-5717. I .. Orange Coast DAILY P1LOT/Frlday, January 29. 1982 Ham·s still shake 'elll up It ma'J! be the off-season, but everything's still a mess The Rams are simply relentless. Even during their s upposed "otr·season," the Rams are doing their best to erab a share or the headlines. Of course, as has been the Rams· practice ot late, everyone and everything is in a state of chaos and contusion. Hopefully. I 'II be able to sort out some of this mess for you ... but we're going to have to take thlhgs one sfep al a lime. FIRST, LET'S deal with Don Klosterman. Some time next week the organization should announce that the general manager has received a "promotion" to executive assistant to thf president (Georgia Frontiere). Klosterman, according to a reliable source, will become Georgia's right hand man. What his duties will be, however, are still queslipnable_ Klosterman contends be will have more power under the new reshufned alignment. Others insist, though, that the move is nothing more th.an a gentle w ay to strip Klosterman of his authority. N aturaJly, with Klosterman getting a boost, that leaves the GM seat unoccupied. The candidates? Well, there are two. A·ss istant general manager Jack Faulkner could get bumped up a notch -but don't bet on it. A more likely candidate would seem to be Ray Malavasi, who would assume the dual role of both coach and general manager. FOR A LONG TIME now Malavasi bas yearnecL.Joi: ih same double responsibility that San Francisco's Bill Wals h, Green Bay's Bart Starr and Buffalo's Chuck Knox possess. Malavasi believes -ancj rightfully so -that with such a power no one has to share the blame, or the credit, for a team's season. Thus, only one person is accountable for whether a team is good . . . or terrible. If Klosterman and Malavasi were honest, they'd admit there was a lot of finger pointing going on this past season. l>t!spite their statements to the contrary, neither side saw eye·to-eye very much with the other. Anyway, Klost~rman is expected to move his main office back to W~st Los Ange les. He will retain bis space at Rams Park, too, but the word is he wo.n't be around very much. Of course, everyone is very hush-hush about what's IQ.in& on, althou_gh Malavasi tlppe(t hlsbat a bit when he said: "We're in .the process of adjusting resPODaibHities. ID the next week there JOHN SEYANO should be an announcement where the new responsibillty will fall." - Geez, don't the Rams ever give anyone a break'! * • * Next, 1 guess 1 s hould bring you up to date on the Great Assistant Coach Search. If you haven't heard by now, the Rams announced Fritz Shurmur as thei r new defensive coordinator. Shurmur, 49, has held the same post with the New England Patriots since 1978. I reported in this column a week ago that the Rams would probably switch from a 4·3 defensive alignment (four linemen, three linebackers> to a 3·4 (just the opposite). Malavasi, as of Thursday afternoon, continues to claim such a switch will not take place. Isn't it ironic, though, that Shurmur just happens to be a 3.4 coach? And that the Patriots played a 3-4 last year? Oh yes, as for Ron Erhardt. He s hould be announced as the team's new offensive coordinator today. At least he's scheduled to be ... although with the Rams nothing is certain * * * Just a quick thought: Why Is Malavasi replacing coaches with othe rs coaches from a 2·14 program (that was New England's record last season). I guess Malavasi will have to answer that o·ne himself. * * * Finally, what's going on with Vince Ferragamo? We ll, as far as the Rams are concerned, they have assumed the position that Ferragamo will have to get out of his agreement with Montreal first, and then the Rams wUI approach him. Obviously, the Rams don't want anything to' do with Ferragamo,s $450 ,000 contract with the Alouettes which. when you think about it, makes sense. "I c an see their point," said Ferragamo, wbo just returned from a two-week vacation in Hawaii with his wife Jodi <they're expecting their first child in March i. "Actually, right now it's a wait and see game. My mind is programed to the fact I've signed a guaranteed contract. I don't really know whether Montreal wants me or not." FERRAGAMO SAID he has talked to Montreal owner Nelson Skalbania twice during the off-season , but· nothing has been mentioned one way or the other. "If I end up reporting to camp, then I assume I'm going to be playing up there," added Ferragamo. "Hopefully, I'll know something before I leave, lhOUJ!h. '' Ferragamo is scheduled to leave for Canada in late May ... if nothing is worked out. M alavasi has insisted, however , if· he does nothing else this off-season, he will have Ferragamo back with the Rams by the time Rams s ummer training- opens in July. * * * Here's a pe rsonal note to Georgia Frontiere: Aren't you embarl'assed by the fact the media knows as much as you do . . . if not more ... concerning what's going on within your organization? Barons pin Edison in wrestling The Fountain Valley High wrestling team virtually wrapped up the Sunset League championship Thursday with a come -from-behind 30-i4 victory over Edison. The Barons needed triumphs from their four heaviest weight classes to turn the trick. after Edison had gone in front with s uccesses in five straight matchuPS in the intermediate weights. UJldereated i11 Suns~t .League_dua.Js Fountain Valley will wrap up the campaign against winless Ocean View Tuesday. Some of the top matchups of the evening included Bill Alton's decision over Mike Mino a t 114 a nd Jeff Uyekawa of Fountain Valley returning to action after spending almost a month on the sidelines with pneumonia. In his match. Uyekawa scored the first eight points against Steve Currey, before Currey was able to retaliate and earn a tie. Erih Riley was a winner overt'aul Whitley in their hotly·contested dual at 157. Orr-lac Spray Paints Primer #940, Ml, r.i 943, 944, 945, 946 :~::~~ .. =~-~?t.H H • • ~ 1 : ~·[2]1 Electric ,...,. FUEL PUMP #JJOOI, 33008, 1Jpot, #1JJ39 '2'! s12: Valvoline Fram Air Filter #CAJB91'L .S~ #CA J.U, Jan, Jl#l, Jl#l, #CA JU, .JOJ, JOI, UM, Jll . 1311 #CA JIJ, ,,_. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... ==.u~.~~ .... ~.4~ j --• -----~ -------------~~-,--..._..,,.~~-~-----.----~ ---------"'T ----------. . C4 H /fl Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982· I• OTanges• tennis ' The California Oran1•• of Team TeMiJ acheduled aeven match•• at Anaheim. Convention Center thlt awnmer. " t Team Tennl• expanded from ,our o el.,_t teams with new entries ln Chlca10. Hou•ton, Dallu and Phoenix. Call m -'11l0 for ticket lnformaUon. Or ..... ' IMZ Hoae kllecWe . 1 18 Qµca10 · July 19 -Houston, J ~u ~1 _D allas: July zs -Los Angeles:, J~l~ 24 -Oakland; July 28 -Phoenix, July 29 -San Dleao, Lakers' basketball Feb ~·-:-• ffoae Selledtde Antonio· Feb el~ Yoffrk; Feb. 12 -Sao F • · .. -ouston 12 45 eb. 16 -Seattle· F b , : p.m.: State; Feb. 23 _ ' e · ~9 -Golden Pbiladelpbja; Feb. 28 Deng;~. Feb. 26 - March 9---Kll c· l.aod,2 p.m. Chicago· March n::s 1~: March 12 - March aO -San Diego~ alias. 7 p.m.: April 2 -Phoenix· A ·1 12:30 p.m.; April 9 · rfer1 4 -Portland, Seattle 7 p . A -:--nver; April 11 - -Gol~ &:~. pnl 14 -Utah; April 16 All games played fames at 1·30 at the Forum. AJI · p.m. unless noted T' k '11cltet laformattoo · $7.do~ ~~rare Pri~ed at S~.so. SB.so and 1i74-6000. more mformation, call (213 > ' ' RunnitJg •nnual world SUNDAY -Te~~lnt at Ch1pm•n Maiten Marat.hon Race beains at '1:30 Colleae ln Oran1e. a. IX). _,.. run at tame iile be&ins A .10-kllou~! 29.mue marathon course at. ., . 4$ a. m. f th raste1t. Oates\. courses \t rated one o e ln \he U.S. led up until., a.m. day of Enlrie5 acceCP 11 632-0380 for more the race. • lnformatlon. h T"Uers five and PEL I -TromP for t e ~ll be held at I meter runs Races W• 1 lO·k lo C · 5 Helicopter Stat on. U.S. Marine orpn t course offering a Tuatin. Fast atd baase Course wind• view of Mar ne bl: hangers. through World War ll 'cteckin at 6:30 Race tlme-is 8 a.meet l ribbonS and a.m . AwarOooda incl%~s"'incl:de tickets to plaques. .r P and Rams games. Lakers. Kings, Berr Farm. Disneyland. ~ot~ (wit~ T·sh.irt) or $4 Entry fff IS l forms available at i without. Registral on rtln good stores in running shops and ~ce :enefils Tustin Orange County. ~1g1fr:1~r::rP:O~~~~iormauon. Fifth annual Lealhe~eck MAY 8 -M . e Corps Air Stauon in Marathon at aru\ 385.yard marac~n El Toro. The 26-m~~rse is level, scenic begins al 7 a.~· The Athletic Congress. loop approved Y d aid stations set up Refreshments an along course. . ed before April 9 are S8 Entries submi~ 'thoul Entries after with T-shirt an $ ~1 w 1 l h T . s h i rt . April 9 u e $5 without. · formation Call SS-3~15 for more m . rBobby Sor registration 8 Re-'l•trallon for North H e!icn Bob«>y So unt1n1t ~rtna View Sc:• to be held Satl.lrdAI on i':~l~fton Beac~1r:;W:~.,!~to! J'n:~ ,ens net(f Proof f . 'P•hl. accompanied by ~ od 'fe and lhc>Yld be .._.Jon, •Rea 12-JS 1.." ul . Dfvlaions •re Minni~. aae• 7·8 ' lnors, a1ee e.u and AddJtlona l re1i1tr U Call Barbara Poll ~ On date fa Feb 8 wuuanu •t 884,67.:~ at 846-• or kay or more inlormauon, Kings' remai~ing schedule J an. 30 St Lou18 2 · New York l•lander11 7' p.m.: Jan. 31 Feb. 2 -Hartford l-:· Vancou\'tr, 7 p.m . Feb 7P.m.: Feb. e - p.m.: Feb. u _ Q~et>ee' 7.; Montreal, 1 13 •t Pfttabur&tt 5 • · p.m.; Feb. Pblliedelphla 4 p.m.; f'tb, 14 -at Washln1ton ;.,,0 P·fl>.; P'eb. 17 -Calt~ry, 1 p.'rn.; · Feb~2': '.:_ Feb. io -p.m .. Feb, 27 -Chlcaio 7 Detroit, 1:30 March 1 -at Q be • p.m. -at Toronto, •6 u: c: 6J>-m.: March a Boston 10 a m . M .mh, iaarch 6 -at ,ll a.m'.; M~rch arc 7 -at Hartford p .rn.; March 10 9 v-d at Colorado, 8:aO Mar h 3 r ... monton 1·30 , M c l -New York Isl d .. . p.m. • arch 15 _ at an ers, 7 p.m . March 17 _ Calga~d~~ton, 6::.> p.m:; -Pittsburgh, 7 P ~ : J>-m.; Ma rch 20 M lnnesota 6 · . · • ... arch 22 -at Winnipeu 6, m~·Mm . · March 24 -at ... p. · • arch 27 c 1 P.m.; March 28 _ Ed -. oorado, 7 March 30 _at CaJ a monton, 7 p.m .. 3J -at Edmonton ~.~· G:JQ p .m.; March AprU 3 -v ' · p.m.; · at V ancouver 2 .. m . A .1 ancouver 7 P m · .,. ·. :pr1 4 - All times PST. · · 'Tennis tournament The Con goleu m Classic tennis tournament at La Quinta Hotel Club near Palm Springs from Feb. 15. 'tickets are priced at 17. $8, SlO and S12 with discounts available for students , senior citizens and members of armed services. Series tickets available for~. For more information. call 345-2858. Will Oilers' bubble finally b11rst? , Huntington takes on Fountain Valley tonight; Marina tries to upset No. 2 Edison • TWO BIG KEYS -Corona del Mar High's Kurt Petersen (left ) and Huntington Beach's Billy Thompson lead their respective teams tonight in pr:ep basketball action. By ROGER CARLSON °' .. .,....~ .... Huntington Beach was picked to fmish fifth and the Marina High Vikings were tabbed for fourth in the Sunset League, but as the second half of league play unfolds tonight, that's not quite· the case. Tbe Oilers of Huntington Beach Coach Roy Mill er share first place in the league standings with Orange County's No. I-ranked team, Edison, while the Vikings of Coach Steve Popovich are just one game out of first in what has become a total mess for anyone who has to consider rankings. Ocean View. for instance, ranked No. 2 in Orange County, and No. 4 Fountain Valley, share fourth place in the league race -each on the verge of elimination from the championship picture and fading fast in terms of CIF 4·A playoff consideration. CORONA DEL MAR'S invasion of Costa Mesa is the iop attraction in the Sea View League. CdM was a bucket better than Cost.a Mesa in the first round (thanks to Mike Hess with four seconds left) THE BUZZ SAW continues tonight: It's Edison and it's becoming a do-or-die situation for Cost.a (4·1) at Marina C3·2); Ocean View (2·3) at Mesa if the Mustangs are to realize their first CIF Huntington Beach (4·1); and Westminster (0-5> at playoff berth in 16 years. Ocean View (2·3). They're billed to begin a~ 7:30. Corona del Mar's tough man-to-man defense is 'Tm down to 216 pounds. says Marina Coach a big item, led by Chris Lynch, Hess and Kurt Steve Popovich. "It's the lowest I've weighed in 10 Petersen, but the Sea Kings figure to be forced to ye ar~." says the 6-6 former UniversHy c.f the perimeter again by Mesa'·s zone defense. Wyoming player. Costa Mesa's offensive threat is Ken Bardsley,' "It's this season, everything is so intense. a 6-4 UC Irvine-bound senior with a1119.1 scoring When we were at Ocean View last week it was so average in league. CdM is working ·on a 13-game loud, I was yelling al my players, trying to get winning streak. their attention, and I didn't realize it but I hafl ,.--__ __.:.: _______________ _ gone all the way down the sidelines, in front of the Ocean View bench." Sea Kings -win-it a( the line In other 7:30 games tonight, au starting at 7': 30,-tbe_Sea View League..race-includes Corona del Mar (S-0) at Costa Mesa (4·•>; Saddleback (0-8) at Estancia (7·1); Newport Harbor (8-2) at El Toro (2-6); and Irvine (1 -7) at University (4-4 ). 26th ANNUAL Oden scores 27, blocks 12 in Irvine's triumph Laguna Beach (1-5 ) tries to stop a five-game South Coast League losing streak against visiting Laguna Hills (2-4) and in a non-league game. Woodbridge High opens its home season Jl-iain.st Vincent Memorial of Calexico after 17 straight road games, starting at 7. Corona del Mar High usec;t some clutch free throw shooting to stay atop th~ Sea View League women's basketball standings Thursday night while Iry;ine squeaked out a win over cross-town rival Univer&ity and Estancia routed Saddleback. Edison gained another overtime win in Sunset League action while Ocean View downed Westminster and Fountain Valley edged Huntington Beach. Here's)l~ it went: Corona del Mar 5~, Costa Meaa 42 "The game was evenly played and oddly called," said Mustang Coach Paul Kahn. Mesa actually outshot the Sea Kings from the floor by three field goals but CdM was the recipient of 31 more free throws. "It was fairly close for three quarters," Sea King Coach Karen Gearhardt said. "We came through with some big free throws and strong bo~rd work near the end." . "I don't see us out-fouling them by that mucb," added Kahn, "but I guess that's called tbe breaks of the game.'· ,. The Mustangs, 5-4, were Jed by Shelly Neal's 12 points. CdM's Lisa Greenberg led all scorers with 15 points while Heather Estey added 13. Irvine 51, University 54 ·WOMEN ·m Fountain Valley 62, Hunt. Beach 56 The Barons got balanced scoring from Therese AT MARINA IT'LL BE University of Puchalski (16)', Deanne Davis ( 16>, Sam Arledge California-bound Richard Chang and his Edison <15) and Lisa Ginsburg <13> to improve their teammates, taking their fast break and Sunset mark to 5-1. man-to-man defense against the Vikings, who have -Huntington~ Beach-, 4-3, trailed, 46-31·,· ·geing-been . ..getting . ..the. .. job...done.-~-balaoce --four into the fourth quarter but rallied to close the gap. players average from 10-14 points a game. Fountain Valley connected on 10 or 11 free throws Huntington Beach, which hasn't lost since in tbe final period to hold off the Oilers. opening league play at Fountain Valley in the first "We just waited too long to play catch-up," round, tries to rever~e an 81-72 d~ci.sion to the Oiler Coach Joanne Kellogg said. "We were down Barons, who rely heavily on the out.side sbootin1 of by 18 at one point in the fourth quarter." . 6-3 gu~d Jeff Hughes. . . Kerri Ca~r led Huntington Beach with 13 Bally Thompson , a 6·1 Junior. bas been points while Tammy Buckets and Cathy Townsend aver.aging 14.7 points per game in h;is last' four contributed 12 apiece. starts, but was held to only three pomts aea1nst Fountain Valley the first·time around. Ocean View 45, Westminster ~ Jim Lane, a 6-6 senior, is averaging 20.6 per . The Seahawks captured ~ear second..,league Sunset League sta.rt for the Oilers and one o! lbe· victory of the season. breaking away from a key mat~hups tonight will be Lane and 6-4 Ken one-point advantage after one qua~ to lead by 12 Harter of Fountain Valley. at halftime. Tammy Webb led all scorers with 17, while Pa m White (12) and ~a(en Chase (10) also Rustlers, Coug' ars ....... le r.ecorded double-digit performances. wume- Westminster is 0-6 in the Sunset League this year . Mater Del 58, Bishop Amat 43 LOS ANGELES -Golden West College can move in~ a lie for third place in the Southern Cal Conference basketball starrdings tontght if the Rustlers can knock off host LA Southwest (7:30). OVER 600 BOATS 300 ACCESSORY DISPLAYS Kim Oden had a season-high Z1 points, pulled down-18 r•bounds and blocked 12 shots to lead the Vaqueros to the come-from-behind win. · Un1versity got out to a 32-22 halftime lead -----befor~e. paced-by-Oden and-Lis-a--Stess-man. rebounded to turn the game around in tbe final two perioa: Senior forward Kathy Dorman and junior guard Alonda Varisco combined for 34 points as the Monarchs upped their Angelus League record to-4-~. ---- Dorman had 19 points, while Varisco dished off seven assists to go with ber 15 markers. GWC, 3-4, will t>e out for a little revenge -against-the Cougars. It_was_LA Southwest-_Jhtch -"·11fl'U• s tarted the Rustlers off on a three·game conference losing streak at the beginning of league play. The Cougars (4-3) handed the host Rustlers a "We were down by 14 <early in the third periOd> before we woke up and started playing ball," Vaquero Coach Glenn Patchell said. "They came to play. They pressed the whole game and really took it to us." Slessman had picked up ber fourth personal foul in the first quarter and played the entire second ball without fouling oul She finished with 14 points and 11 assists. Dominic Trammell had eight points for Irvine while Elaina Oden, Kim's younpr sister, had four points and 14 rebounds. Monica Contrera led Uni~ersity scorers with 14 points before foullnj out while Brenda Zimmerman added 12. . 5·•· The win improves lryine's Sea View record to E•tancl9 83, laddleback 18 Tbe &agles upped their Sea View League record to 8-3 behind the double-digit scoring or sophomore Amy Hathcock, Debble Hushes and Sherri Carpenter. · ' Hathcock scored 17, Hughes 16 and Carpenter 12, wbde Hughes ,and Carpenter added 1' and 8 rebounds, respectiYely. Edl90n 51 , ......... .. I Tbe Cbaraen went into overtime for the second conaecutJve r•me and •lain came out OD I top, u Shelly Trep •nd lla17 ~ruplta each bJt1 free tbron in the utra period to provide thei marlin of victory. rupka led Edilon lcoret'IJ wtth 18 points while Tina o.Heyer bad 11polnttand14 rebounds for ~h• Cbarsen. s.1 .. Laguna Beach 53, Laguna Hiiia 47 Maryele Leeds poured in 29 points to lead the Artists to their second South Coast League win against four defeats. The loss kept Laguna Hills winless in South Coast play, Mlaalon V1e}o 59, San Clemente 41 Cindy Rohrig had a game-high 20 points and Darcy Smith added 14 in leading the Diablos to their sbrtbatraight South Coast win. Rhonda Radin led San Clemente scorers with 16 points. This ·week's Special i• CADILLAC SEVILLE Two tol)e paint, leather covered seating area. C.dlllac wire wheel covers & full power. (872YMY> ·~14,995· Cadillac V.al~ Prot«lbt Semct Agrctmfftl A uoiloblc AIO..• ...... r•,,_lllir,M,,,_,.., .. ...._ Martu'a Mara& Loma wu tbe 1ame'1 l••dlnl ._.. wWa pobata but lt wua't eaoyp __ to -. thltvn•111 ..,... '° .l.:iiL..._ ... iiiili 91-88 setback on Jan. 5. IN CALIFORNIA'S PALM SPRINGS AREA! A Great New Golf Course Resort Home <:ommunity Invites You! The Southern California desert's newest, most exciting resort home community is now underway on the Jack Ivey Ranch just S minutes from Eisenhower Hospital and Bob Hope Drive! Choice golf course , • locations now available ... wi~-a selection of over 20 different manufactured homes. ~MT~ Pools. tennis, reaeation... ~ desert vistas and sunshine. ~ ~~ ( GAa Off lntentate 10 at kublc Ro.id WrlteTodly I J.,;;,-;;----------OCOP I Jack Ivey Rainch Country Club Freel .. ~dolfwpa,ss •1 P.O. Box8652,PailmSprings,Cai92263 Inc uuc · r te ,.._ ,.1'4..,. .,-boochur• •nd ..-rvMIO!I tor color : 1n1,,. .... ,1on. brochure, map 1 Nam~--------- 1nd rese_rvatlon I lnfotmatlon. I Address--------=- A~·" I Citv·--------:-----: ·~ ..\.-.... Ztp ~, . , . n l • . :...~ • ) / · l 1 i 1 i 1 ) fl 1 v A I' " . , 'v ( l r I< '. ·-, r 1 1 < , , t t · ,~ f 11 • r l '-.. 1 '. 1 • · 11 J f 1 1 ' • • 400,000 SQ. FEET OF EVERYTHING THAT FLOATS FROM DINGHIES TO OCEAN-GOING YACHTS \ \1' ) l ~ 4 :: I j l( I ~ -I I ~., t l t ! • • '. I j ' 1 ~ I I ' ~ • ~ "\ r ' 0 Fllhlng World" with saltwater and freshwater fishing semtqars •. · •• water Siding I Lea~to-Sall Schools· • ~ OF HUNTINGTON Bl!ACH New '82 ·Mazda Dleeel . Pickup • 82200 All NEW Fii 1982 ------------------·-----------------IEW '12 llZDI B-2111 Long bed Pickup Standard features include: ./ 4-spd. Transmission ./ 6 ft. Long Bed ./ Tinted Glass ./ Heater + Def roster ./ Much More (Ser #2707) (Stk. #4882) $ lllll•OIAJW a.LIV.RY NO.WAm Features: v AlrCond. v 5 Spd. ·-Features: liU Pllll llLY ""AM/FM MPX Stereo . . ...... AM I FM Stereo v Radlal Tires · v Bucket Seats vMuch More '7175 (ler.5321) (Stlt.4703) ~r;~~= 15711 "'Much More .. Orange Coest OAILX PILOT/Friday, January 29, 1982 · Loadedl .Not StrlpPedl is.,oa11~ Mfg. List Price 110,666.10 •1 • Includes all power options, Incl. tempomatlc AIR CONO., pwr. seats, AM I FM ster. CUMtte, wtre wheels, , automatic w/fuel saver OVERDRIVE! ··184.9 ( 10.1704 ).(Stk.7356) ~~~-~~~-~~.---~~~~~ ---~~-~~"~~-~~~~~~~-,---~~~\ NEW '82 MAZDA R-X•7 OllLY . ~ $ 03 features: vrsspeedvrAMIFMstereovr -Cap Reduction -NONBI .,,, Buckets vr Alloy Wheels -PER MO; +TAX V'Wldestee1Rad1a1s Security Deposit -N. ONBI .,,, All the Goodies • .. ~of $224.03. , .. ,,3 ...... OMV., ... Tot• .clvence pmi. 1435.47. D p t · N 0 NII' •••'rlt•• ~r 1trz111r1 "' r,,::.~~·::.=:.1t.~3e~o::~~2J~~:(~-~·i own aymen -• •~ 5J 1111~ s~ r~J •• ( ltll.4M7 I . NO MIDDLBMAN -D•AL Diii-CTi -W• 8•RVIC• WHAT W• S•LLI ~~~ 191~'91oritf u~"if vs enqine. pwr. windows. spht pwr seat. cruise control, tilt wheel, ~r5f~5~ l978 DATSUN 510 SEDAN 4 cyt. engine. 4 speed trans.. air cond ... AM/FM radio. (831ZSL) $339·5 11MlllZll m ............. ...,.~ .... --sa795 CH 11TIWllY ...... ,_,, ..... AMll'M --... ..., ........ ,.,_ ..... , ...... , $2495 . ' 1 .• 1111 lllYllLET 111111111 ••••• ..... •• 111 ••• T599i : .T6395 ·1111 ... LR • ••• w_ ..... ....._,_.~AMll'M .......... .,. c11UOTr $ . . 1111111111 ·21111 I ,, n ---·HI P Or1nge Cout DAIL v PILOT/Friday, J1nuary 29. 1982 "'"',,.,.Mitt••• ...... ITA'f9Ml•T l'ICTITIGUI IWUNe .. ...,.IT4H•MT l'ICTITIOU1 eu11•1u l'ICTITiout e 1n1Me M ....... ITAHMCMT MMlle t'TATIJllllMT Tiit loll ... I ... M'M<lt .,. Hlllt , ......... "" ---· .,.. 4tl"t .......... MAN·T&C COHSULTAHU, »ti MOflte .. 0.1.,., H11ntlflllt11 hecll, Cottlltnllo tlWt Tiie laUewl11t """' h •01111 lllMI-•· I . t . 0 .. YWAl.1.. UIS 1 6-, CMto TM ...... lttt --ere dOln9 ..,.,,.. .... . -....-.. 1 THI OAIUAllNT O"TllllCT AT TlllUSTll u :11v1c1s. 40ot NEWl.ANO C:l•Hllll, , .. 1 •.. ecll Moeltorl-l lvd., Sulle aoGO. Wol t tve , ~flltfOj\ .. ecll, Colli.t'llle Meto,CA...U ,.,..., "l<llare "-i.ue•. »ft MOfl•ao Oth•o, H11nll"-llll hO<ll, (elltorftle ..... Wl116-A. C-.1\ !SU I~, Calo MeM1,CA"6», Tiii• ...,.._. ,, ~.., llY ... lfllllvl..,.. T-r • .......,, te•ll, CA H..o n..e Ho•ffrl 1111er11et1011a1 Service VefftOfl w -·oe, S!Ot Sea-. (or-atleol, a c;..lltot"'a <W .. ratlOll, Orlvo. New"" teaC'll. Collforftle .._ MO<Atl-l lvd., ~llO HOO -nta> l'olrl<le A lltterl111u, •ttl MOfltolO Drive, H11nll111I011 lto(ll, Celltemla ..... WlttlamA.C-11 , .. , ..... _, wos "*' """" Ille c-•Y ci-"Or-'-"" M JM , '· ,.., Wttt Tower, NewPOrt Bu ell, C:A llltlllll Ill lle yort, llUI ttt60. t rootr.llurt l, H11nt1n111on teecll, Tlllt ...... U It C""411CIH fly on lllflvltl.lttL .. , ... Tiii• ~ I• HMwcted by o C:alllt<*a *41 cor-ot""'' Tlllt IM/tlllOH It COllOlltlff llY o ~I tnl.,,..11_1 .. Mfal ... llletVll .. " "· ....... 1'111111-Or~ Coall CMllY l'llOI. Tllla .....,_. Wot lllW wllll 11\o C.-ty Cleftr. al o. ..... GOlll'lty Oii J-rvlO.lta. Jen. u. n. ,., ..... s. 1"2 111-lt .....,,I<• Cor••tlon 11.,_ w, MoMM Oovtcl P MoecllOI Tlllt , .. ....,...,, w• llled wllll ""' l'r9'lclenl (Oullly CIOl1l of Ofof\99 CAMllllY Oj\ '"'"' PultlltNt Or-.. Coo•I Dolly Piiot. Tiii• ti-wM llltd wltll IM J.,.ueryW, '* CtllfttY C:IOrll Ol Oftl\99 Cou111y on JMI. U , tt, l"MI. S, It, 1"1 '4142 l'IC'TITIOUI 8UllNlll MAHI ITAHMllNT OK. IS, 1'91 ltMCllot ..... ............ 1.a. Tiie tollowl,,. nnori tt ctolnt tillMec..,..IMltllor4 llutlMUM: 1411to t•, w..t T-01110 FILI• CO., HI SIUf .. Oj\ , .. ow .... te.dl,U, ..... Or .. Coolo Mno, CA mi.. (1141 ea.... Cl'l't-Grev Fell•, ,.. $1.ur-Or., C.. .. ' "" .... NOTICe OI' TllUITI I 'S IALI MeMI, CA '2'21. , l'ubllSMd OraftQe coast Dally Piiot. T .s No. 007 Tiii' ~. ,, COnclUCttG by •II I J e11 .•• IS, ti. 2t, 1* \ 1-1 MOHAMMED S DAUOO, AS lncllvklUOI. TllUSTOll Gf90 Fell• On""·'· 1tl2, •It ; IS A.M., flTLE Tiii• .......... -· "'" wllll IN I PIU ma TRUST DEED SERI/ICE COMPANY, COlllltyCler'lr.olOr-CovntvonJen ,,------------•• ltvly _.in1ee1 Tn•'10t uncltt -1'12 l'U IC MOT .... r1vonl lo OM!! Of T"'tl r•Ulf-•• ' . ,,_ A lkot..!'i.. ·~~ II T AIH'll 11, Itel, ., Intl No ttnl. 111 PllOI"'*" Or-Coe.st Dally Piiot, 'I 11 ,~P,. ?,!-IN~ J ~ book 14025, P•to •O, ol Olllcle l n,.... ,.......,y, ~-...._., "°""" R.(~-I , ... ollk ol , ... ,._~ Jall .•• u, tt, "· 1"1 lu.l ,orivo. P.O. a.. I, N..._, 8eecll, CA -v• n • -.-nY -t16U, for a Zone Cllo1111• from Recorder o1 Or0fl90 C.O<ll\ty, Slate ol _.,. -lllllllutlonal to ~H1911 OoMhy Celllornla WILL $ELL AT PU8LIC: ~ -·-lltnldellllat 11ndtr , ... Horlh•eod AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIDDER PlennaCI Comnivlllly ReQYlellont FOR CASH INV-el II_ of .. ,, In "CTITIOUlaUllMtSS I Zone Cllan9e ll•ZC·OOUI Tftlt lewful -Vol IN U"'IH Slototl AT MAMt ITATEMtMT O#lkelion I' lo permit e rotklenllal THE FRONT ENTAANCE TO THE Tiie lollowln9 person It Cloln11 develOPtnellt of a <Mllslty of 10.17 O L D 0 RAN G E CO u N T Y bllslnon•· dwelllne unit• per aero lo<etH al tlle COU ATHOU$E, LOCATED ON GOLOENAAAOW GASEHERGY IOlllllMSl<omerotTr.eiu<oA-- SANTA ANA BLVD., BETWEEN co .. -· ROCI Hltl Avtilue, Siil .. tOj, ful\lro y ... A-on 4',t1 ecr•• In SYCAMORE ST. ANO BROAOWAY Bvlldl1194,C.laMota.CAtt611t. ... ., .. Put>lltllH Oronve Coest Dally Piiot. J en. ft, 'It, Foll. S. It , 1"2 J,...J l'ICTITtOU& eUllMllS NAMI ITATtMIMT Th• 1011owl1111 "''°"' .,. dolne bv•lneUIJ' HI Afl'OLLO ENTEllPlllSES (2) THE GLASS MENDERS, ms 0111. Sal\la AN, COlllornla '170' Jecquo1y11 A1111 BHn, na1 s. Svcemor•. o. Santo Ano, ColllOr'"'a '2101 Da te Pllllllp le•11, ltOI S. Svcomoro, O, S..lot Ano, C•lllorllla '1107 Thi• buJl"Ou h c-cttd by a llOflOr•t _,,,.rsl\laf, Jocct11t4ynA11n 8Hn Tiiis 1to...._1 ••• Ille<! w•tn 1llt (OUllly Cler., ol OrellOt County on Jonuary lO, 1"'2. ,.,,,.,. Publl'1wel Or ..... Coafl Oelty P lkM, Jan n , 2', Fat>. s. 11. 1"2 ,.._., SANTA ANA ell t11111. lllte alld J AMES H. KITCHENS, UJl s. Ille VIiiot• Of NorlllwooCI An 1111erut conwYH 10 one now 11110 by 11 Tlllrd A-. ArcMlo, CA tl006. ~~~:~="~!:c~~-~~'.!;P~~' ~:; i----PIU---l9ll(------~O:~,;a~1~...°.!:~n °:..1~r~!:,,,~; !: 1n::ii:1.:;1neu ts condu<IH by on ·~;!f:!~r::' ~~:~~~ ~~r ,:i"'~ 1------------- Stol• clOs<rlbecl ., J-H. l(ltchen• "TY 01' ll'OUNTAIM VAL•.l[Y, Lot ~Of Traci, Ho 9441, 9' sllOwn This , .. lement wo• "'" with Ille OocembH 14, Itel Tiie C.lly C-11 CA l'CMIMtA on a map recor-In Book 411, Pe11n County Clff11 ol Or.net County on Jon. m11sl co11slder a nd ce rtlly Ille MOTICI ~~VITtMG 8105 • 0 'II r OU 9 h " In< I u i Iv. 0 I •• ,.,,, l•nvlronrnental Impact report prior' 10 •••D AUT.,l"INT Hit mi5ce11aneou, maP\, recoras ol the 1'111111 acllon on 2-O..nve ll·ZC-00.t A l'lllOJl!CT MOS. 4a7, ._a..,. county rocorllt<Ol salacounly, Publl\Md Oronve Coes1 Oafty Pilot, Publk Heorlnv wlll bl lleld °" lllh NOTICE IS HEREBY GtVEfol llWll Tiie street aadreu ind Ot ll•r Jan I, IS,'l2,2', 1"2 150-tl -llcallon by the City ol trvln• Chy tlleCllyC.ouncllOllheCllvot FOUf\teln common dosl11nellon, II eny, ol Ille Council on TllHdey, February t, 1"2 I/alley, Catllorn~. wllf reccelve Haled real property descnbed •bO•• ft _.,, .IM't al 7:30 p.ni. In 111• City Cowncll pr090sal5 untll lhe hour of 10:00 •.m. pyrported to .,., ~ carver StrHI ~ '""-Cllembers, trvlne lnlerlni Cl•I< on Tuew:ley, F~u•rv t , l'llt, tor the Irvine, CA '2714 Center' 17100 Jembor0t Boultvord, removal OI Ruula11 Tlll•ll•. POl$0R Ivy Tht undtrslQMCI Tru1t0t alstlelm' ••CTITIOUS 8USINESS lrvl11t, COllfonlla. •no nul~• wH!h aNI "'bbl~ll In Ill• any llobllfly tor any lncorrectneu ol MAMl ITATEMENT For POrllculors Coll 7s.t.US3 °' call City ol F-t•ln Valley 111 ecco.denu Ille •lroel -•H -oilier common Tiie lollowln9 person Is doln9 at ,.,. Office 01 Ille Clly ot trvlno with thew soecillcaliOR$. desl11110ll011, II Any, sllOwn llerefn butltlfls H : C o m m "n I t Y 0 • v •I o P m •., I l'roPOIOI• Sllall bl l>"ttellled Yndor Said sale will be mta. bllt wll!IOYt (I) A M. R AD II E R T t SI NG Oepartmtnl, lr•lne Interim Civic tu led cover -tl\all be m•rtr.ed or covenenl or warranty, ••preu or MARKETING RESEARCH; Cl> Center .._ •• 2IOI M<Gow. lrvlM, cletlvertdtoaslobt ln tllel\~olllle lmotltd,reC)llrdll\vlllfe,pouanlon,Of A.M.R. MAILIHC:.. Ill A M .N Calllornla. City Clertr. •I..., olllce In, ... City tncumbr.n<H, to oev Ille remalnl119 p R I N T I N G : ( 4 I .... M . R ' CITY OF IRVINE Hall, 10200 SIOler Avtilue, al or Delore principal """ OI Ille noteh) tocurtd p u • LI s HI H G ; I 5 J A M R By; N....:y c ROW1oncl Ille llOur llOlld, at wl>fc,11 time •II bids llV Mid OMo OI Tru5I, wllll lnle,.,1 INVESTMENT, 1"22 El Cobollo, El' CltyCltrtr. recel•td wlll be publlctv openea, lhereon, es P'O•lded In said notel\I, Toro, CAmJO Pubtls""" 0r..,.. co .. 1 Oally Piiot, namlned and declared by 11\e Cl1Y .. i.anc~. II OllY. llllCMr Ille term' ol Allen Ca rrold Hl911ins, ,,.,, El Janue ry 2'. ltl2 4~' Clerk Bidders ano Ille p11bllc ere Mid OHd Of Tru.I, IMS, <l\O•OK •n<I CobollO El Toro CA n.JO Invitee to bl ~wnt al Ille de<l,rellon ••PlllMS ol .... Trli\lff •nd ol Ill• Rlcll.ra Brf1n Amena•. 'O•• PIU mm 011old pr_.IS trusts ere.Med by wild Oeocl 01 TrU\I Lucinda, Minion Vle10. CA .,.,1 All blO. so re<•l•tO, eumlned - Tiie total amount ot Ille 11nP•ld "Mar~ L.ewh Gordon, liSlt Lucinda, de<l.,ed Wiii be re'9rred by Ille City balMKe of Ille obllvailon socu<ed by MIHlon V1411o. CA'"" MOTICI 01' Cltrl. lo -City E119lneer and Ille City Ille Pr-1v to bl M>td •NI ree\Olltlllt Tllh bus'""' '' conauCled "' a l'lltlll'AllATION o• AllOfney lor cllK~l"ll •"" rf$0rl to 1111 ts II m a ted cosu. e •Penns and oenerel ~nenlllp. MIGATIVI DICLAllATIOMI Clly Councll at 11.1 newt re9utarty advances al Ille time of Ille '"'"•' AttenC Hi191M T.,. ,,,.... R°"'a. W•r Olstrkt '' sclleduled mHllnll on February 1•, 11ttllllcallon OI 11\e Holl<• ot Sale IS Thi• sfa~t wu 111eo with ,,.. 1prtp.erlftt N90ellw Ooc!Arellons It< lttl • ., SJ•.•.M. County Cler·tr. ol 0r-. County on Jan, Ille projects ,,.,crlbed befO* A The Contra< tor to whom awa<d ol Tl\o -lklary unotr talO DMo Of •, ,.., ,"Ortft" ,_...,,.. Oocloretlon t.s on 11\t Con1reC1 I• m•cM s.hell, ue><>n Truu lleretolore ... cuted ena 1'111111 Ille -.1 Ille Ohlrlcl olll<• a no ts n ecullon of -Contract and ol Ills cletlvered 10 Ille -"91\tcl> written PubllSlltd 0r._ Coa•I O•llv Piiot, av•ll•M• for Pllbll< hupectlort. A own ••-· lurnl'11 lo Ille City lht OeclarOllon Of Default and 0.m8ftd J an.I, u ,n ,2', 1"2 17'-G INeeall•• 'OeclarallOl'I wlll II• lolfowlnv -wttleh ~II i.. IUUOO tor Sate, end • wrllltn Notice ot -con•lclerocl for -oval or dl_.,vel Oy •n admllled w .. ly com!HtllY wltll • Oefoull and etecllon lo Stll Tl\e _.,. -by Ille Boord ot Olr~<lon ol 11\e POllCVllOlder'l rell119 Of AO< Dettor ancl undersl9ned <•used H id Nollet 01 ~ ••-IDhtrl<t ol ill ..-111111 lo oe 11110 tlnan<l•I rOll119 of AAAA Of Deller as Default and Eleclloro to Sell to be Febr11orv t. ltl2 •' 6:00 p,m . In Ille shown by II• ~ c.,..rent edition OI. recorded In '"" county where Ill• roal suN•toa COUlltT 01' TME 01,trlcl Oflk•. I-••-Awn .. , 8ttl's Insur once Guloe • pf-rlY b locattd. ITATll 01' CAl.ll'OllMIA lr•lno, ~lfomla. l•I A bond In Ille prlnclpat wm of Oele: Januery S, ,.., 1'0111 THt COUNTY Ol'OlltANGE Tho proje<llCOMl'10f Ille lollowl119: not IHS ltlOn 11\e lofal conlrect prlce 10 TITLE TRUST OEE~ In Ille .....-rOl Ille I . lrvlrte ~or Drive -Veltft<la Insure lllt taltllluf perlorm8ft<e ol 11\e SERVICE COMPANY Appllcolionby, Aw--~k Walor Mein. Contract H MldTr11slH JOHN GORDAN SCHELL locetlon: Tl\e pro)ect wlll be lbl A bond In IN prlncloal "'"' ol 162501/enfureBlvd , Sit •SOA c e,onstrYCltd •l<lnl trw ooee -within ,,01ttu11\an ttw totAI contra< I prl~e lo Encino, CAt14l6 lor "°~:'s.He;:.·, Allll14 lrvln• c enter Drive encl llalencl• '"'"' payment ol a ll unsallslltd ftl: n:i.-..... OllMll TOIMOW CAUSE Aven11e Constr11cllon wlll bt9 ln claim' of laborers aNI materlalmen 8y ErrOI S. Stlllm8ft l'Otl CMAMOI 01' MAME -rnl-IV 3.700 loet _., of 11\e 11nd0r Ille contract. P11blished Oranve Coo" Dally Pllol w H E R E As J 0 H N G 0 R 0 AN lnteno<llon Of lr•lne (Aftlor Drive, A II ,.,,.,y bona• SMll be jolnlly J en. 1S. ll. "· t"2 lt'"'2 SCHELL, Petit-. a person over 11 '°""""° lo ,,,., Intersection, lllen u ecuted by Ille Contractor •nd Ille yeors of -· ..., lfl9cl • potttloft with --w"""' 'lal~I• A-•NI l"'urtr •ncl •hall be SUb)ect to Ille Ille Clertr. Of 11111 Court tor Ml orcltt 'torm!Mte ol a point tto '"' oHI of prior •PPf'..,al Ol"llle City All.,moy u cllan111n11 petitioner'' name trom that tn~lon lo form -""lllclonc:y In lltu of Ille JOHN GOROOH SCHELL to JACKIE Tllo project conshh ol Ille wrefV bonctJ rtQUlrMI llHeln, a casll T7Jt4 LEE SUTHERLAND. constr11tllon ol ).700 l•t of ,,·111<11 bOnd In en -~I lo Ille lolol r11e'1ol-"'11 CoPV Ol "Notice.",... IT ISSOOROEREOlhel•llllff-ACP-OIP-melft.•""*'•t <Oftlr•CI price moy be acct!91eG -orli inAI Of """ell wos llled tor record ltl .. rotltcl In lfte-.....t111ao matter of 1·111<11 ACP weter main. TllO uec111ton bv the COfttraclor Ol an °" oece~ JI. Itel In Ille office of ....-ar t.fwe tllk Cow'1 ol '°' • o.m., llU,_ f//l lfte -Itel It to -Ide aorHmtnl in Ille lorm -m..,...r tlle CounlyRecor0trot .. ld C01111ly,l1 on J.J·U , In Ille courtroom 0 1 -•tk w--llreprootoctlonlt< prescrl-bYllleClly ••nl 10 you lne ,m11 c11 ., en Department >. ol Oren ... County Mverol ,......,._<lol facllll~ In 1111 Prior to commencing wortr., 11\t u emlnaUon ol IN 1111• lo wild trll\t ~lor c-1. TOO Civic Center Orlw eru '°"''"' 0r..,.. C...,.1\1 rHiMfllS contractor -all suocontrac:ton 511all pr0e>orly ....,.., you 11avt l\a•• an Well, S-. Ano, Calllor'"'a '1101, -Tiie -..,~ .,,. llltWO -•~ 04tlel11 • °""'"*U Ike.,. from -City lnt ert\I 111 Ille TrYSlte's Sele -we,-.llOlly,wttytllepetltlonlor cll\lomon. 01FounlalnVetley lnac;c.ordenc:ewltll Proceecllftvs. <ll0"9'ol--nutbt9r-..s. Contocl person Tnomas II Foun1alnValteyMunlclpatCOC1e,Tlllt .. OT.CE 01' Oll'AULT IT IS FURTHER OROEREO , ... , e Holllm8ft; 11141 m.1m. s. Cllaol•r s.o.. <OC>Y of !Ills or-10 -ceuw be Mltl9et1on meos11ru to a•old 111 ucorclance wllll tlle pro¥1sl0ft' ol AMDELllCTIONTO putili'1wel In ttw Or-Coast Dally ,pote11tlol ,19 nlllca nt elle<IS Ne Socllon' 1'70 lo 1n1, ln<lushe, ol Ille SELL UNOlllt Piiot, e new spaper ol 11ener e t 'Sltnllkent lrnp«ts 8ftlkl1119ted Labor Codo ot !tie Stele 01 Callloml•, DEED Of' TlltUIT cfrculetlon pr-In Or-C:-y, J S-Ca11yon A.,._ A911lonol Ille City C-11 of Ille City of Fountet" '--IM.ZEN09Y Ca lllornle once• wee., lor 1011r wat e r Tr en1m1,slon Me in Valley"°' by rtlOlllllon adopted Ille ... ~~:: .. ~~ICE" SllCCotSIW -4l$ prior to -do1• Mt Modlflullom. pr•v.i111111 llourly rate Of ..... , '°' IF YO--Ull PROPERTY IS IN lorllt•rlneol""'pellllon Locollon: ~ projoel will O<<ur In UCI\ c.r•ll or type 11• WO(IUYlon or FORECLOSURE BECAUSE YOU OATEO· JOll. lO, 1"2 •-lo<•tlon\• met l\a nlc llHd•d lo eu c11I• Ill• • RE B E HIN "" I w y 0 u R R-ICIH. Pr-11 SonclC...yonA-lntMCltyol COfttract wttl<ll wllf be owaroeo 10 .... ~ " " )..,... Of Ille lrvlllO -/Of ,,. c-IY Of Or-s11cceulul bt-r. es determl,..d bY PAYMENTS, IT MAY ll E SOLO ~lorCOur1 'frOf'ITr.-.COllt-IOUllwrlytolrvlrte tllP Stele Director of tnd11strlel WITHOUT ANY COURT ACTION, -l'MILl.ll'MYtllt Center Ori.,., tP9'0•lma tetv 1.000 RetatlM~ you mey ....,. Ille •-• rfllllt lo brtnv 'ACOIY a MllYllll• LAW Ol'l'ICE 11-r Not. fl\t contractor sl\all provide tu<I\ yo11r account In gooa "andl119 t>y ,... M. 111-..,,., JI S.ncl c....,.,,. A-In Ille Clly ol compen .. llon Insurance u required peylne all o1 your Ptsl duo peyr110nts llt-N4,CAttm Irvine ..-Jor 11\e Coun1y ot Or..,ve by tllt Labor c-ol Ille State ot pl111 permllled <o•h end u penus UUI t•7'M from ~I'" Cetllor Drive sOUlllerly to C11ttornl•, 1110 shall ... ,ute • wllt1ln lllrt• months from Ille dAI• !Ills Pullll-Or-c.,.11 Dally Piiot, Sunnylllll, In Ille Vlflaoe Of T11r,1e conirect.or' certlliute revardlno uld nollce of default was recoroea. Jan n 1t Fell j 11 1912 :ia.t1 I Roell, e_..xlnvtely 101000 llne•r IHI, compenHtlon <equlremenl• The This amount '' 141' 00 •s of January · · · ·~ · ·-· T.,. pro)o<t wlll consist Of two perh: cont rector sh•ll further r.caulre all 1, , .. ,, -wlll lncrtoH untll vour _.,, ~ II Enlaroe.....,t of the proPO,•d subconlrecton to 1lmllarly pro•lde •ccouftl becomes current Vou ni•y ~ ••""-s e11d C•nvon Avenue Re11lonat ,ucl\ compensation lns..rence for atl ol not ha .. to POV Ille enllr• unpeld1-------------OomnUc Wetor Tr<111ttnl1sl0ft Moln Ille ,ulleonlrAclon' emploYH• Tl\e POrtlori Of your account, ••en lll011911 T.S. Mo.199 ISCAROWTM) from U '' lo O " contractors Incl wocon1ractor1 Shell peymenl WH demol'ded. bUI YOU MUii NOTICll o• TlltUSTlll'I SALll dl•m•ltr In lllt Trel>ll<o Rood 10 furnish, ... City. certlflcei. ot wel ... r pai,~: =-...::.~: .~:.~ ... ,,. .. Of M I 0 c I Ty I N v Es TM E H T lr•IM c...ier Drive-"·..... of \U_l>r091llon -, ... term• ol .... r~o•det•-of 1,.1, ~u~t (wlllcll COMPANY, a Caflfwnl• c..._.llon, t i OotormlnOll-•I 11111 llrllO lo worhr'sc-nu tlon IMurtnce ~ • -~ ··-· 0 I ~llttcl TruslOt -Ille CIHlef\ -C-n.<1 .... SCAROWTM Spoclllcallons ttld ofllclal pr_ .. , dot• Of rtcorclatlon •Pl)ff" lloroon). Hit "•' dot<rlbecl Otod Oft II WILL from tn11N c.nter Ori.,. to • POll'll form' lo be uwc:I lo. bidding con .,. u111eu tllt obllvetlon 11el119 lorecloltd 10 ow 1111 ryTO T E _. • ._Y ,...., 1i--'°"'" obtained onty et lhe olll<• 01 "'• City ·--rmlt• a l-r -rfod, wou NIW SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION H It _ .. ~· -~ -• e HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH of 1llt * 0ttvo Fr-ay W II -En9ln"r, P\Alllc Wortr.s Oeparlmonl, ~onlyct'o"• ••tb•I pra111111111 10111'.'0.P11,'i"re lpayeble at time Ol •Of• In 1aw1111 dlorllOtor ,,...., •ncl from thel p0lnl to Cllv Hall. C°'t Of said -111ce11ons ts re sure Y Y t .,, ,. u lied SI 1 1 11 111111 'S..-yllllt with U'' 01-picle. u oo tnctudlne tu amount"'"*'°" by your creditor money 1 " • " a r • I The IMfltflci.tlff Of lllls 1>roJ0<1 wlll No bid will bf! comlaereo unless II IS To find out "" amou111 yo11 "'"'' lllle •NI tnto<etl conwyed to and now be tllt H lllfne -future domosllc madt on tl\e olllclel lll•nk form AAW, or to .. r-lor P0~-..1 to,,_ held by II -sold o..d of Tr111l '" I 01 I I I c· ~ -· -..... 11 ' rt 'I; 1llt ,,._,.., r.relnolter cletcrlbtd. water customers or Ill• ' r < l11rl\lsllocl by the 1ty and l:s m..,. In 1 111 ... 1~~1~·1.,°' -!ouo~°'::~, T RU$TOR ROBERT DUL TZ OllO bt<ollM II wlll ..,,._. 1111 rellablllly accordon<t willl llW provl,loM ol lllls -~ ~· _., 'of tllt -I< wator •yllem Nollet a "" Pr-..1 AequlremHll\ con locl SKIP RUEGEA -DEANNA HELENE. OULTZ COft\o<1 __,. s-Malloy, ITl•I •no ConClilloM WI lorth uoder S«cllon RUEGER, ltl Franklin Orlve BENEFICIARY ROBERT SHAW, W -IJ:U. 1 ol the "General Pro•l1ton1 Placentle , Ca lllornta •1•10: BARBAlltA SHAW, STEPHEN E Mlt19ellon meuwru to avoid Colllrut " Each Bidder mutt lie 714fm.tl60 I( NOW LES...,, BETH W ICNOWLES POien ti at sl911lllcen1 el lee IS None llctll\ed In accorclenct with aPC>lkellle ti yo11 l\ave a ny quosllOfts, ~O\I 111 •< orded Apr II "· 1910 es Ooyond tllou CIO<umenltd In tlle Slale L•~ s11011td contect a l•wyer or the Instrument No. ttt~l In boo!. USH "Revlonal Oorrwllk We1., Fe<llllles Tllo City r.-,,.. Ille rlllflt to re)..:1 90vernmerit ... ll<Y lllllkll mav l\Ove P-1'01 ol Ollkl•I RocorcH of tlle Flllol EIR" anvor •If blcto lnsureo.,_1..., olllce 01 1111 Recorder ot Oranve Na me 01 e9ency unde rte-ln9 EvelynH McCl•naon Remember, YOU MAY LOSE COlll\ly, Wiie dOtCI of 1""1 Ootcrlbeo projoc:lt lrvlne lltan<:ll Weter Olllrl<I CllyCler~otllle LEGAL RIGHTS IF YOU 00 HOT Ille lollowl1>9 IH'-1y. located 1" ,... Dated.)_.,,., 1"2 City ot Fountain ....... ., TAt<E PROMPT •CTION. County Of ()range, Stele ol Calllomia. Betty J. Whttler. Cetilom1a In acldltlor1 to Ille emo11nt tt•ttd Lot 21 Of Troe! No. mT. In Ille City sevotery OAfEDJtn.,.ry 1912 ebovo, "'°"'°any prior t .. H. lltfl•. or 01 Newport llHdl, eountv 01 Ortn... Publl.-Oronee C.oell Delly PllOC, Publl"'9cl 0r..,.. C.O.st 0•11~ Piiot, encumbrances be dellnq11enl or Stalt Of Galllomle, 91-..., °"•map J MI. "· 1'1t 4toHJ. Jan n. t"'2 Ut·lt become Ottl~I, -1,,. ...,. ,.., tllerffl roconted In bool( 101. P8119• 1 to be relnsloted, tole Ottlnquenclot "'''" '. lncluslve. Mlsollan•ous M•P•. llo c11red o s • condition of record,ofsald~County I rtlnstel-ElCHl81T t NOTICE 1$ HEREBY GIVEN; Thet T Olltlhu """" nOl\·e•CIU,lvt I ept1Urtenant HWmonls onr Lois A ANNA M.. ROH ESCROWS. INC. s ond Lois Ul to ISt ln<lutlve ol tel" d11ty •PPOlnltG Tr11s1 .. unoer th• Trecl 33S7 for "" purpows and os IOll-1119 Cln<rlbtd cltod of I rust: 1 1 TRUSTOR: ROBE RT JOSEPH descrlbtd ln Ar1 cle Xlll,S.<llon 4 o ZENOBY end BARBARA RUT" tlle Oe<lorotlon ol Coonanu, ZENOBY,llUttlenclenowlle Cond1tlo11' end Re,trlcllon' BENEFICIARY SKIP RUEGER horefnaller aotcrlbed In SUBJECT •""DEANNA RUEGER, h11sbend encl TO, S.cllon ?, as pr°"'IOtd In clHa recorded J-U . ttT•. wife Tiit '!reel address and oilier RecorOtd November U , , .. , as common deslgnellon, I('"'· 01 Ille Instr. No. UMtln-t42't, oave UGI real preperly described ebOn I Of Ollklol lltocorch !ti -Office Of Ille --ltd lobe: Recorcltt ol Orel\lt County, said cleot 4'1' "oabur\I R-. eor-del Mar of tr111t ducrlbo5 Ille 1ot1owln9 COlllM'lllO PfoPOr1y: T ... No-Nf-kM ..... ..,.., -Mid' -of Lot 141 of \rod 2163 • per ~ Tr11st llertttfort .. ec11led •110 recor...., In ....,. " "99• 2' lo U 4ollwer .. It the TrvttOt o wrlttOll l11Cl11sl"' Of mltc•ll-.....,.., "' oectarotlon of Oola1111. A wrlnen IM tHl<e If IM <-1y rec:or .. r Of NOii<! ti OefMI OM EIO<tloll to Sell M id <.OWlt\I. ~deed (If trutl •CIKH wet ~ ol ... ,._.. of lfte cert•ltl ... ._...., lflc""""9 -,,.. lloMlk lOrr. olllfClllH eNI recordOCI In .., , ... _,,of U ... 00. Ille c ... l'lty ..... e -... , pr_.-ty Is NO.Att•t NOTICll 01' IALI 01' •I AL l'ltOt'tlltT"\' AT l'lllVATt IALI s..rtor e.n ........... CollltltnU "'_ ....... C....-,tfOr .... ........ JOllll ..... ~ Doc>eoeM NOTICE 1$ HElltEBY GIVEN lllOt Ille ........ ...,,.., •Ill Mii ol Pfl•ote MIO, to Ille bt•t -"'91\nt .,._,, tuOIKI lo "'° conflrmotlon by tllt •~""" Svper lor C-1, all tlle r'911t, llllO. lnte,...., ...,, "'°" ot ttw CIK-of lllo limo ol Ills dt•., -en ltW r'9fll, tllle, -11\tornt --•Mto ~ ocqutrecl by_."''°" or 1-. or o4herwl•. otlltr -or In.,.,'°" to, llWI" ttw llK-.it • .c IN time of ..-. In -lo all -certain rotl _.,Y '"YN 111 .,. c:-.tv of Or-. Slo .. ot C.allfoonlio, 4"Crtmd M ........ • •": SEC 2.• T 1 "t E •FT W W .1 FT N 1 ~y II.-M 1" .............. Orlvo, LAeUM teocll. CA fttSI I Solt .... -occw ... FWNory 11, I .... •:• A.M. WI °""'-, .. 1119 ~c-1. . TlllMS Of' $ALE: All111 It C"'9mPll11. Jr,,•·--of t11t Es-.. J- I'. ~ °""" to Mii ""' roel ,.,_,y et M ~ 0r1 ... , L....-. IMC.II, C.ilfwlllo H ....... : I . fi'llr< .... l'l'tco Of. .. • • • • .. .. .... · • • .. ,, ...... 2.~._ ___ _ • Nyl of OCC°"'9Me T"9t "'9 lil9Mfl<i.t ll\tofttl -loUIH. sue.II ....... '""" ......... ••19atlollf ,. ...... Wiii be ..... llut •lttlevt ,, ...... --........ , t«:WH..., or• l'f-lly lleld"' c...-or _.......,, •--" or Mwll ....,._. .. .,_, •. 00 IM"'*,......) TM• llr't«ll tf,...,, lmplleel, ot t• tllte, l'MtH"MOll, or 4. Soller tecorrv Flrt4 Trull '•••<i...o.-111 ofll--•> del .... t If!. "'9 ...... ...., tor wtlkh OllCV"lk911Cft, to .. ., !fW l"Ol'll .... 1119 OM4 ...._ ot "" 1-1 •well ~ flf In.ti Is H CYrlly .... IH'lltCIHI -' .,, ... "°" M<urff w . .., flrtl '.,..,.....,, ,,,~ OC<UrrM le ....... .,_"°' --H id 0004 .. Trull •1111 '"'•'"' _, ... 'JM"-.. , ,.,.. 91; 111ere111, •• 111"0111-In eolo -e, ..,. •114 ,... .... wltttlll' Tiie IMl•llNflt ot lntornt Wlllcll iv•ll<ot ""'" lllteroll ,_..,. ot _,, .,_...,.,.,...., llK-M~rU,ttll,-•11 I --ottlltfMi,.l-1141.......,._.. '"'lo""-'• 9f lnt.rott. ew14" Ill .... OoH Of Tr\IM, I ony, ·-& .... llMnllt411twlllllft ......, _., Ille*"" ol Mlf OoH of Trvst ---O e II 11, 11011 <I at 011 • prier , .. ,, cllOr .. t -.. ....,_ 91 Ille 1 ~1""'c ... tfoter-•• -••• .:.4;=~MIM OllClolmW~. If llll'f. OellllftWftt , .. , ,,,.,., .. -..... ,,,,.b ,,....._ by ·-........ _ •• .,..,. tolfC>oMOIT,.t. ' ..................... <............_llY~ Tllot •r r ooH ll tlloroof, tlle loldteleWlltllolleldOll Fewu.tyt 1.to11Hle<'-tteir9WAl!llll1tec..,,.....,; wftftrtllMf. ,rtt•"t Mft•fl<l•ry 1'IJ. et n t• A,M, Jn tM rtt_,e._.; t .flW•Tn.tt0.. .. CMM6ft a ~....,,,_...,_ .. fM (S) .... ttf ...... Yftdff tuc'll ..... .,.,. Ila HO{lltef ,_ .... tltl<,e ..... ON City .._ .............. ,,...,.., 111 IM""""'; ...... , .............. ,., .......... •. lllftr .............. ''""""'Y (IMt) .......,,. , ___ --T•Htff, • •rltt111 Oecltr .. le11 ti lt111ewor4, Witt, tuft• •. 0.0l'I.. , '°"'· Olf .... -~ftr•leoll4110t C ... llmlo. , Tlle~ltMltlet1 a11"ASll" ..... • .. ••tttte. ..,.. .. _. Wlltl MN wty • ....,.... At1M llnw., • 11111191 ~"•11111 I AU ...,. w '""" -• • HI "'""" • wtll • ~e!llM ot M ...,... T ...... , tell ..... '"* _. all of tlllt l\ltlU, W , ... , _..,.. of Ille ·-· UWte le«ll. CA .. ,., w "" wttll ~lfl!t Ill. ~lft, ¥ .. tM111t1eM• owltlMlflt Mtl .. tl•111 ••111•11111 M<11n4ll lty tllo ••••• ._ _ _., ..,,.....,. ot .. ...,..,..,,,,..,. oflklt, • _, • ,.... ... .. .. .-.......... 1111........... .. .......... trwt ..... .,.,_. .... , Ci.ft. ef ....... OMlt ... C-1 .. Olly llftlt...., tM ltnt ,..._ ...... ... ... --........ ----'""· • ...-•• •11411 ..... 11cet , --... ...., ...... ell ~. "· "9. T9fl ~ ..... , .. .. ......,, ... , • .., .. ~ tt...-.SJ, .... ., .. ,.. .. oc""'""ytMlfllH'••--••MN~ _. ....... _ ~ DMM:,_,,1s.1• ......... wC" .. ••""*"' .... .., ... c.-., .. c-. ...... ~.. ..... *°"' ,_....... -........ _._. _ ...... ,....,. .. _., .. I I -.. ,.,.... ""···-··-·-..,_ • ..., ... ,,, .... ''""" .... ,.411 iltMt'~0r. • .... _.. .............. -== ._.,1 .. OATIO'-YB,tt& .._...,)It. ttlt , IN_. IW&. 11 AU.Ill ll. CMAM"'-tN, '" .. ....., L. fll&CI i=. 1-lllilr ,......... ~ c.::c"-=: ......... Owlet c.... Otjty Pille. ::!~:=-c:= .. ,_..I, U. .. "·!WI I~ JM. U, It. II, NI tuG ........ OraitetC .. Del" l'tleC, JM. II, ....... S. "9 .. 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4. 2 • 5 6 7 8 "-"'-Wt •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ...................... e ..................... . ~.... . ..... ,........ "" .............................................. ... ,.,. .... '°'' ....... / 1 •••••• • ••••••• • • • • • • • • • 111111 S. I IOI ,. Let Eutblutt. 120.000. ra•ll.UFF ,., A Lltlt 4bdrm, %t.,ba, Ir& 1rd. UU ·-······················ H.8 .4·PLEX Near btath. By owntr. Principal• only. Cuh, 1owtr'I price. Comp. u lt• p 10D6. 142-5183 Gree . , 1 acre + blcls altt, sent ••• lll~mablt lJ~ Primt cul<d•u c. S Br, ly alopina parcel ahort lit. 60·5141, 6*1l0'7 ram rm. dn. pool. Can d"411K't rrom tennis ' JIARBOR VIEW HOMES t.'Oftvtrt dtn to 4th br btat h. Ownr hu in· Modlfled Carmel& BR. 3 ~-houat Sat H . 906 eluded plana tor ruatom BA jacuui. prin only Ell:~rtukovi<'h Rlty villa $175,000, SpM· ukDOOK8"·5MS 730-0332 LAliUMA UACH 10 tlftill on Olenneyre Ocean view, 2 bib to oc:ean. ZOned tor com· m'I: 3 comm 'I, 7 apls. •.ooo w/:ttJ% dn. Xlnt usum. nnanclna. owe Call M1rta1 49'7·5132. tatlllar VltWI ! MISSION REAl.TY Mcel ... 94 BAYFRONT 4t4·0'731 $21 oot L~EHOLO U"''"'r Bae' Bav im Exqui<t 4 BR. 5 BA. SAU IY OWMll ,.."" # • • near Unda Isle, intludes I mac. 3 bdrm. 2 ba. MOO mmuulale S Br 2ba Sq ft Cat home. Quiet private dock. 60' on thf ocean vie w h ome c ul ·da·aat . Now malnbay.$.W,000 down. ftatllrtS: Larae deck, $164,500, Yours ror ' UIUIM 17$0,000 al oak paneled den. AS· Sl0.000 OP. moo mo 121.142--91231 --,,.,.rty 2000 • •••••••••••••••••••••• aumable loan and seller Owner ftnand na s.'!19,000 Call 615·3772 '-• INCOME PIOPllTY SPECIALIST evesorwknds49'7·2766 --~,;,;;;.;;.,;..=___ c.,...._ 1071 11111 ................. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• L*fwttt IOSS UDOIAYfll()MT 4ID.·21A. ..... •••••••••••••••••• You will love this new Uperaded, A/C, Country Select rrom multiple un· 11.S Terms available to s11l your needs Pnvate 4 bedroom. 2 balh home that shows like a model Over 1000 $(\Uare reet or derkinl with spa overlookine $erhad ed rreek and woods. Formal dining room . 2 r u stom rireplan~s. plush carpel· mg, wood plank rlooring 1n k1trhen and nook Mt'a. and atrium oH the family room make this home a trut delight $314,000 with assumable first loan or 1159.453 at 121:', Submit terms to owner 7n..4SH Owner agent ~~.!~ ..... !~.·-~, I FOUC&.OSUH I SS.OOOdown ! 2bdrm. 2ba ptnt.houst' right on the l wattr 2 r vrs old l2600 mo Conta<"t I Cathy Ma thews at llJ0.9237 ; 778-1980, Ive '!lt" Landma~As!O<' Mii wport leectl I 069 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MUST SEE! Prot dttor. ocean vu. 4 8r W/pool/&pil + C'tly hies Assumt' 11 711'. True valut' 5429.900 Won 't last ! PalriL·k exclusive listing. 4 Court home in Villaiie bedrooms. 3 baths. ex· S.J. Sllt.000 etllent terms. Owner AA llACH ILTIS. . • 000. 7 4 4t I 0 POSS. NO DOWN. SELLorTRA0£ Penthouse Bachelor 20', down. approx 968.ooo ist 11;\ ... , owe 2nd. 12', 3 yrs Gym, P1Spa, <'lubhse. &!curl t y 5 l 3 5 . 0 0 0 Owner A enl631·8169 CLUMIAllY! s.t.AH IOIO ....................... ~Y ~ down Share tbe apprerial1on . •1mo. payments 3br pool home Agt . Elsa 63l.Q297 3bdrm. 2ba. 198 .000, SIS.GOO down Call Christina: 557-2783. OwtB WIU SILL with only .'5000 down. rharming 3 bdrm. I ba Sl.5.900 lo the loan or owe s1os,ooo Call agent Margot or Patty. 70'l ·S&3-1128 l /707 ·642 .844 3 mfSSER mm1 ~ml' roc m 641 071i3 •2!12H'ollegl' A\l• ('o~ta Mesa . l'Ad APPLIYAUEY Ta SIMtttr Near new 4·plex ?. bdrm. 2 balh eal'h u:111 with rireplace. enclosed patio. garage 9"•'; 'lst Pos cash rtow No•• 5159,500 Bill Grundy. RJtr, 675·6161. 3 bdrm with separate ramily room and bath 1399.500 with grut fillllllC'in ! 631 ·0680 , t J ,.., t ot11-·c·-... ,·.-.· ... •• ... -··•··••••·············· ..... ------• •·plex Xlntfinanct :Ja)l( 675--0073 II ·345·4123 HAR.OR Q•1 ~.tGoodte! ''""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 3 bd rm home. 2 t·ar I""' RIDGE garage, sep rumpus GllATDUPW!! Ow.tr Mut Stl! room, n•<'e yilrd w lots S340.000 1809 W Balboa Eslat" home apnrox of fruit trees & rose I Blvd Open Daily. 2·4 ' " bushes Much. much Ted Hubert Realtor. JSOOsq rt Ownt'r has , k 193 soo Putth11st'd new homl' more As tng · 7!12 0777 Good terms 8 -,----1-Must Sell! Custom11ed LOOK PROPERTIES ) uwner 1xer cnp ex 1 n t ,. e r y w a ) Walt S46 1136 Sl46,000sm Isl at ?34'. ParlOfamtt· cx· .. an \l\'W ------• -~~~sh 645·J34!_ 29•, down will handle -----, ________ _ owe rem<1indt'r at 13' • ••EAi EYlth tong term 7ti0 11430 b)' OIMr IHI Est.tt ST AITEI !! '!W!°'~r-. ••••••••••••••••••••••• five stor r shopp1n~ UDO .ATERFIONT MIMlltt-s I IOO nmlt'r Garden Gron· '-S. Seller financt'd Askin~ 3 UNITS on sandy ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1299.000 t8 Bx":. gross! beat•h Sl,300.000 with!lll-~~~ ... ~--·I Submit lht' terms yuu -.OOOassumablt' l ~t •EXCITING* need Agt 838 7733, lite Writer,~~ .__._ !174·~ 1.:011l;1t·t u~ for .7-".•_f.7.IJ &t.e. -addillon;if low dn pro ~~ With or withouc rum. pertit'S I '12 IUS to ICH 34x64 Greenbner llm In i•lll!l!!l!!!!!!!ll!illlll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ JUSTIEDUCEO Laguna Hills nit·e~t ~ -Two itor~ous units a111l star pk lmUCED S 1401 onlv 2 yrs old lkL•an WHllll .. Pertt 7.1 XGIOSS! II UNITS in htJlh dt'ma nd rental art'J .\i.suml' ex !Sling ftnilnt'ln~ O( $150,000 JI 10' • Jnd 11W1"1er will 1·arn. tull prtC't' 1240.000 l'Jll !179~0 ,;t>W W bt.-droom un Bnu1.JJul 24xti0 Keywelll MEWL y usnD IL~ 3 bdrm unit ·~ l(Mll I Hm 28r. 28a Thti. ,, Whit'*ater vitw or Lit for own\>r lll'l'upann I tht'best 1n town tie Corona beal'h. show:. I ...._ rt le ... t>wnt-r finanemi: ava1 a ,....,,.. •• like• model. sleJlli rrom ~ ONl.V 12*>.000 rall I ~au11rul &-lair M ti 0::: SC~l~i~:~:!: !J79.5370tudav w1rm1 kit. 1Zx l9 II\ rm 63 l2lli' A · l2x10 fllstr Rdrm ~:nl•I ALLSTATE LL$TATE ::~.~ Nr Hoa1< 111"1' REALTORS MO~t:~ME REALTORS TAUOYEI SALIS HARBOR II'•" loan al S7111i pN 27~ Harbor. Slt• 20h A ln.Oranj(t• $29!1.000 Isl r mn or S2~.oou down. S40-Stl7 Tl> SlliJ.000 Jl 12 i 4-PLEX RIDG1: OW(.;balilnt'l' ~ lltl:l Ila, fowd OWt' 2nd 11nn1· C ustom Pr ent·h1 lovely2 sty. 124~.ooo Newport Bearb Dt' Anta onh Ownt•r Rkr NOnTlilndy. ap~r~1x 7200 ~i-5880 or fi:Jl 721~ l'' ~ bayrronl Pa rk Mint 1i44 i<lli sq rt Amenities too Y•~e t•ond '78 doubll.' w1dt• LohforSdt 2200 numerous to list. Rulldl.'r ? LIASIJOPT or SALE Flreplat·e. bnl'k palm ••••••••••••••••••••••• h as built th11< ror l 'I ff $60,000. Riil Grund v R Id Inv t r h1msetr. but prl.':.l.'nt . 4 br. 3 tia t'Xl.'t' w,·~tl'l1 b1S.6161 . w l.'rs t·~ u:. "<'Onomy for"t'" ". ,.1M home. All.nt•w 111 & out ---. l'nrr.:· dl'I M:ir 20K s11 ft ~ ' ~ ~M ' '"'" d t V M b l •I · • • RJ nh•." 1·11ndo s ilt• Under 2 m1lhon Se nous ..,..d, r~1 , sin'\' a o I e om l'. ·• ,, . • I · 1 , 11;o 8430 l'ilnl 1mmL·d 111•1• Maynowt'r, llXJO, in fair l'\I bl.'•Hh a•·•·t·s~ nq11nes on Y · Own/ii"' 7~·2.\.'iO t'Ond Ciill ti4S 7150 Musi &mou!i pnnl' onl~' ll.1 bvowner ---~ -· '-~h led 1 «9 921·• :;__ Newport Heiithl~ :urn . ~-!!L ou owner"" "' WATllFIOMT HOMI PllYAnllACH Sensalionill 4 Br homt' smack on tht willer!!. Featuring Frtnch doors. 1 (rplr. professionally de· corated " pn vate SAN· DY BEACH Only S26S.OOO " seller will carry ID', loan al 13'. ' ' ~·lSOI or752-7373 Walker & lee R11al f state J ~ q \ ( I ~W/S-11-5 New 3 sly burhhouse l911 C.ourt Sll:eet Walk in or rail. 675-2291or 848·3133 Comer Lot. Low Down HAUT. 'It HllNTl'LllR LOT 51tBSOO.Ownl!r Ai:t UftDU• .... HOM"' I Arre l(Uardl!d l(alt• 771-4390 _, .-r; n1mm 5250 ,000 lo "' -··--· · · Hui(d pool• Jiil' dwn ~93 ·3l!l!'i h m FOIECLOSUIE 1:ERMS! Great.'ivmit m bl:! Oltil oH ill Mt.,.rt Hts C.M. 500._§4§·Bt33 Corner Lot Nt·wp11rl 2 Br I ba R2 Tl,l' ......,.,...,.,ty 1400 He11thb Will Jt \'enlure needed. Low dn. Takl.'••H•••u••H••••••••••• w resp bwlder Ownl!r over p•yments Print· 1 PU-SCHOOL 1\j!l only Ask roe Carey Motivated Sellers Heal 771·4390 631 -2242 Ellllle in~luded Ext·el Ith& t• Dflff'f. ~ "11111>( )\\ l~:alt' I C.M loratton 1ftOrt 2 400 ~ttOOL ••••••••••••••••••••••• i ( Pn City Utlll Great C M oullon or eHtr1enn condo ••1th l>«"•dlOOI Room for ex kllchenr ttl! $65.000 $1t5,to0 IH I i;:: Artukovich Rlt y SIO.OOOdn 13" int on bal ASSUM.AILI LOAMS I 720-0332 or will take partner '°'this 4 bdrm 31 ; b1tlh -~·0671 beautirul Portofino Ct trcW o.tofComty model in Harbor View ,_..,...., I 600 ,_. m Separare molher·in·lilw ........................,., qr t rs ' a l m 0 st n l' w ··.···.···s··o·1··,· ";f:•"t •••• carpeting, close to pool HIWPOIT llACH u 11 S319s..,500~~. .......... High visibilit y c .3 DO ... PAYMENT ~' ..... , O:ean view. 120 rt rron· nn ~5'05 '31·6194 taae. Useexlsting bwld· 7Xgross! 15 houses. all ln1ol4000sq. n. or build run as apt <'om1>1ex 10.000 sq. n. Owner will P0<lve cash flow Call 2550 SHOWPLACE OF THE YEAR carry. $715.000. 631·7300. (Ofdetails. • Rultor. [i"'"'41brldte .......... Dec. ttll -- of "MIH11ll C1G9 4Wc" Elegant in design & craftm anship, on Promontory Bay. Beautiful custom home: 4 bdrms, 41h baths. Interior designed & decorated by Darlene Ferrari Lohr. Slip for your yacht. For private showing, contact agent Patricia Perfetle or Mugot MacKerrow. 17tTI HJ.IHI w 17071641-1443 HAllOI llD•I Be autiful "Kemintton" with panoramic view ' 8R + fam rm. Great finlllcln&. Enjoy the private • aecurlty of New~t '• most dellnble 1ddr91. ,000 Jerry TbomlJIOll 551-8100 (511) C11 .. 1•l•l•1/Tow1· Ruh' .......... 1700 551·3000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• I Leisure World Condo .. Fo t'11l'larr uu ""'" • 1" ... Salt By Owner 2BR. F... 28A. Upartded carpel ._.., ' 2700 Great View. SIS.000 .. ••••••••••••••••••••• 714·~·7101, Mon-Fri. ..5. 714-Tf0.1331. 3·5PM . NORTH LONG BEACH Vl1'1ini1 Country Club F..lates New 3 br. 3 ba Condo Luxury Decorator !atru From sns.ooo (714) lf7·70M .. E. ...... 25,000 2 bdnn, 2 a home with barn/stable and extra Uvln1 quarters on 2.3 acrts In Exclusive Equestrian C.ommunity s urrounded by Clevel1nd Nat ion a I Forest. :ttJ min rrom SJ Cap. Panoramir ' View! Alent 131-1123 S.C. Pltia, IBR 28A, H · 111m 11.l~. MOK tat W/'111 ctn, owe 211d, -rc!l=· .... Pl=·--~*---·l .... •....__ "==· Ziff Mere ramllltt ire •etting ...................... . the campina "bu&" this W• a tlX t lltlter! Sell year, If you have a fl\1 l/12 yt1r new triplex camper that'• noc aet· or exdlanae equity for tiftf !<d, tell It now t'Olldo or! Owner. A fl tr 7 wt~ 1 Cl•lll!d Ad. Uf.1!HJJ4 ~ lttO r •I .. llllll llAl:H/IDITI ClllT llllJPlllt ftRIOAV, JAN. 2', 1"2 CAVALCADE BUSINESS B2·3 BS-6 Merrill Lynch is · Orange County to test equity . access lines of credit. See P.age 85. Laguna to star in promo mo.vie production to portray South County Beach Area.as 'Riviera of the West Coast' They're making a full·color action film and the producers are callinc it "Riviera of the WeatCout." The star? Laguna Beach. Also receiving t-0p billing are the communities of South La1una, San Juan Capistrano, Dalla Point and Capistrano Beach. It's a promotional fiJm that Its makers hope will reach 50 piillion viewers throughout the world. persuading them they should pack. up their bags and visit "where the sun spends the winter." T h e principal s in the esti mated $100,000 venture include Larry Campbell, a veteran pilot and La1una Beach merchandiser: film producer and director Maury Monroe; Jerry Ledbetter of the LagWla and San Juan Capistrano Chambers of Commerce; and businesswoman Joanne P . Schaus. The purpose of the half·hour film, complete with mus ic and narration is to draw visitors to the south Orange Coast during the winter months. "We don't need them in the summer," said Campbell. a former newspaper publisher lh • Whale watching cruise planned · Saddleback College's Community Services office is sponsoring a whale watch cruise Feb. 27 and 28 from Dana Poi nt Harbor t o Oceanside. Saillne and whale watching are combined on the cruise aboard the 40.foot ketch "Sea Mentor." Participants na vtgate and sail the vessel to Oceanside Harbor while observing the migrating California grey whale. A pre·trip orientation is scheduled for Feb. 12 at 7 · p.m. at the Orange County Marine Institute in the west basin of Dana Point Harbor. The "Sea Mentor" will depart Dana Point at 8 a.m. Feb. 21 and return at about 6 p. m. the following day. The fee is $130. For information and to register. -<?all 831-4646 or 559-1313. •Seniors to visit Getty Museum A day.tong trip to the Getty Museuin in Santa Monica is planned for Laguna Beach senior citizens Feb. 24. And the Senior Citizen Club of Laguna Beach is also planning a trip to San Francisco and Hearst Castle March 15 through 18. Cost of the museum trip is $7 .50 and reservations for both trips may be made by calling the club al 49'7·2441. • SadJleback offer• SAT worlc•laop High school s tudents wishing to prepare for the Sctiolastic Aptitude Test <SAT> may enroll in a free test prepara~ion workshop offe r ed by Saddleback College in Missi9n Viejo. Sopbod'lores. juniors and seniors are ·eligible for the program. Students may sign up for a three-hour workshop in either math o_r verbal skills. Work s hop officials recommend that --students review the SAT mformatioe book available in thelr tebool counselor's office, p.att..._ an SAT practice work._. from a bookstore and m• use of their school's relldial lab. Students enrollln1 in lite workshops will be informed of their dates and times. For more information and to register, call the colle1e's Learning A ss istance Program office at 831-4519. Newport fugitive slain in holdup A man who has been identified as convicted Newport Beach robber and rapist Tommy Knox has died from gunshot weu.nds he suffered during an alleged holdup attempt in Rancho Cucamonga. Knox. a prison escapee, was blasted four times in the chest last week by a liquor store clerk, investigators for the San Bernardino Sheriff's office said. The JS.year-old Knox, officers said, was allegedly holding up the liquor store when the clerk wheeled around and started firing. Knox remained in a coma until his death, officials said. But investigators said it wasn't until Wednesday -the Stay Knox died -that they learned his identity. i Officers said Knox , who tscap ed from a Pomona ~ourtroom laat July, assumed I llus victim listed 'fair' J_ ~ Lal\Ma Hllls woman ll in air condition today after an ran1e County Transit Diatrict us collided wltb her car edneaday in Costa Mesa lice aald. Vivian Marie Se1ovia, "· emalns at Fountain Valier otpltal today followtn1 the 12:11 p.m. accident on BriltOI ....,. tbe offramp of the .,. ...... a,. Police Hid the bus driver. DaY ld Failbe , 54, was ....... Oil 8riltol WMn he atte--..S to etop ror a red Ulbt ud 1blded 1nto Mn. s..ma·s ar-. the identity of Mark Scott Bradley and had dyed his hair art.er the escape. Investigators said they do not know who or where the real Bradley is and how Knox obtained documents bearing his name. Knox was convicted in 1979 of 23 counts of rape. robbery. kidnap and assault with a deadly weapon. Officials s aid h e was sentenced to 20 years in San Que ntin State Pris on but escaped las t July. Until the episode in Rancho Cucamonga, a town near Ontario. police said Knox's whereabouts were a mystery. Newport Beach Police aaid that Knox was responsible for five robbery·rapes in Newport Including one incident where he molested a l4·year·old girl. They s-a1<t-he usually would force victims to submit lo sex acts befo~emandinl money. He also was convicted of robbery -rape crimes i• Fullerton, Brea, Upland and Colton. Officers in Newpart believe that since his escape, Knox may have returned to the beach city lo pull off another robbery. At the Ume of hi• ~•th this week, San Berna.r~Uno authorities uld Knox wu wanted on nearly sno.ooo wol"\h of arrest warranll and betn1 sovfht by seven dfff•rent law enforcement aaesacies. Jnve1ti1ator• · alto .. td that Knox waa ridln1 a stolen moton:1cle the day be WN that in the liquor store. \' Laguna Beach. ··w e've got a full house during those months." It's the empty hotel rooN and half.full restaurant dining rooms in winter that annually ptaiue Laguna Beach and its neighbors to the south. And Chamber of Commerce officials say it's getting worse every year. ··w e want to show people h'om Idaho who have never heard of Laguna Beach that this is the place to spend a portion of the winter ," said Monroe, a Los Angeles film producer whose credits range from Marlboro Country to Kellogg's cereal television ads. The group s ays it needs $100,000 to produce, distribute and promote the film. along with · an ac c ompanying color · brochure. ··The script is about Laguna Beach and the other cities," Monroe .said. "I don't want to call it a travelogue. it's more ol an invitaU9nal film." He said the film will feature fishing boats, Laguna's winter festival, complete with parades, pie·eating contests and art displays. Viewers will see the mission at San Ju an Capistrano. bikini-clad beach goers, golf co urses and t h e many restaurants and hotels that line the coast from Laguna to Capo Beach. In addition to the 30·minute film, the group intends to make a 12-minute film . and a 60 ·second a nd a 30-second commercial for televis ion spots. The finished products will be featu re d as ln ·fl l1bt entertainment on airlines, on cable television, and for vlewlne by tourist aroups. s\lch u the American Society of Travel Agents. So who'a picking up the tab for t he commercial enterprile? ''The chambers of commerce a nd the cities don't have the bucka," said Campbell. "The privat~ sector is going to have lo pick up the slack for promoting the area " He sald local hotel and mot.el operators, restaurateurs and merchants will be -aslted to contribute, and the group is also talking to civic organizations and clubs for support. The project already has the blessing of the Laguna chamber and the city's historical society. Monroe hopes to begin filmin1 during the winter festival in mid·February and to have the film edit ed and ready for distribution by late April. "We want to start promoting the film in the early fall ." he said. "It's too bad we didn't have this thing ready for this winter," he said. "Can you imagine seeing a film of Laguna Beach while sitting in the Mid west in minus·80 degree weather?'' ln addition to being able to d e d uct contributio n s as advertising expenses. Campbell s aid merchants who participate will also be listed in the credits. Under the stars · names. of course. -811 S.TEVE MITCHELL ...., ...... ~,.{ PIGGIE TRIBUTE Laguna ~ach Marnr Sallv .Belterue-: · ..i nct reti ring Policl' Chief .Jon Sparks hold rotund p• •ta nwll'r mai<l costuml' IH'l'Sl·nted to the departin~ poticemJHt at a ··Jon S pa rks Oa~ · t><Jrl~ Thursda~· night More than :!00'. 3• friends and f('l1 1l\\ offiC'l·rs attended the part~· at tlw. VN<>rans ~emoria l Commumt~· Cente r , parks. who was c·h1 t.>f for s ix yea rs in Laguna Bearh. is rec·ei ving d isability : rl·tircm~L due to c:ontinuin~ lroublc wilh _a back injttr)• be_ susttiinc.ri in 1978 ~· Expanded program eyed; funds limite<t . ., ~ r School district trustees proJXJse goals, priOrities for 1982-83 ---. - By .IOllN NEEDHAM ... 0-. ........ Memben of the Laruna Beach Unified School District board want to offer more art and mathematics, but they'll have to dD it wtlb the mcmey they've tot. llfftlnc in a study sessioa Tbunday nllht with teachen, prtnctpall and admlnlstraton. trustees pro.posed their 1oals and priorities for the 1m.a flacal year. Board members proposed ret~tM"'Trt proiram at Thurston tnlermediate Schoo!, cut last year because of budget constraints. They also expressed copcern that district math and wrifing courses were not offer ed in s ufficient number s to accommodate all college·bound s tudents. However. trustee s s aid discussion of changes must be confined to what can be done without spending more money. As bu b;een the case for the past three years. Laguna· schools will not have the luxury of a bountiful budget. But school officials say the financial picture isn't as b<td as it could be. _·District Busines.s M a naeer Clyde Lovelady said Laguaa s chool• would probably be working with a $6 . 7 million budget for the 1982·83 academic year. Howev er . h e said n o cost-of-li ving salary increases had been included in his fi~ures other than regularly scheduled pay raises. Beginnin g nex t month , teachers and the dis trict administration _will be s itting -down to h ammer out a new wage and benefit contract. The current two-year contract will expire in July. Neith e r teachers n or administrators have gone on r ecord say ing what th eir ~roposals., will be in percentage figures. - - Teachers have asked for a rais e based on the mean average or all salary schedules for unified school districts in Oranae County. At Thurs da y 's m eeting, trustee Carl Schwarz s aid district officials would be . tabulating the median lpnlfor ~· unified district salaries, wlkll would proba bly be lower. · ill I A mean average would iad6de all salaries, both high and tow. Howe ve r, a m~lan fi1ur6 ~. _ 1 . be a n average number _.. from the closest 1rou......,. of ~'-,. salaries. and would cont..m:p• • ,. high or low ngures that 1 I radically s hlft·lbe avera1e. . · --Lovettrdy-n1d for each Ml~>. ' I increase of 1 percent for· ' district employees, it cotb district $52.000. He tai• tbe " average annual cost le 0.-.l.:" dis trict per employee i• 19 .... ' ~" which includes both salary ~ . friRge benefits. f -. .'-........ , ;, ., ~\ ~\t Ah Laguna, no body escapes " -. ' A~ ... . LAGUNATICKS DEPT. When things get a touch on the routine s ide in our region, you ca n almost a lways count on our Art Colony of Laguna Beach to come up with s ome kind of hassle that will hold the e ntire Orange Coast '. ~· • 111111-,~.~ proposed as waterf aUs. in rapt fascination . In the past. w e 've all witnessed Laguna battles over whales painted on walls. steelwork sculptures on the Main Beach or sewer vent pipes Today. •Laguna Beach is in the middle or another one It's a question of whether or ]lot an Art Colony m ortuary s hould be a llowed to operate a crematorium. • THIS HEATED ISSUE, if you·11 pardon the expression, surface d before the Laguna City Council upon application or the McCormick Mortuary . located out on Laguna Canyon Road. Principal opponent of the crem atorium is one Larry Hunt. whose business is right next door. Mr. Hunt operates a body shop. Don't get the two places of business confused. now. Hunt dispatches automobiles with dented fenders. McCormick does another kind of dispatching. Faced with tht1 controversy, the Laguna City council tried to strike a compromise in an earlier vote. ln their Infinite wisdom. cO\Wlcil members ruled that McCormick could open. the-C1'ematorium and~dispatcb three bodies per d~y . It was ruled, however. that Laguna doesn 't want loved ones h•Oled In fmm elsewhere to be dispatched in the Art Colony. • To limit this practic.. the council ruled that only one of tbe three bocUet cremat.ed each day could be a non-Lagunan. BODY SHOP OPERATOR HUNT, himself. had provided aome fuel for lM fire . tr you'll pardon the expression. on tbat ar(\lment. Hunt quoted Oran~ County Health Department . figures to the couneU which he said indicated If cremations were ttm1ted 1o La"unans only. there woutd ·. '· be an ave rage or only 1.01 such ceremonies per R10nth. ~ -t' You s uppose it's left to your imagination to ff~ J, Ii how you hold a .01 cremation. 1 chose to forcetit. · , .~ Obviously. the LagWta council's earlier ponderinW al ~ ~ the jssue concluded that it's less. objecUonable to cremate -' : c a Lagunan than it Is a non·Lagunan. ~ '" ·, < Well. it's always been tough to find a parking ptace ii\ · the town anyway. • 1 ~ YOU START JUST lettiJl& any body come around '4t ~· •. aet cremated in the Art CQlony and the next thin& yfil-' :\.'. know. every body will be wanting to do it. ..,:.~ Just look at how many people come to Lal\Ul.8 tter)r ~ year jusJ tQ visit the art shows. And they d<>ft.'l even waftP' ... to stay long enough to avail themselves or McCormkt'I'\ ". services. Today. it appears that the La.JM& counti1 •• havins ·, · 'secoftd th9ughts . Council mestabeft have •now Y°!'~ a'ainst allowing any non-1'41unans to let J~,.m•, w1: ~in the city limits . " THAT ACTION •PP•f'enth shotked Roberti McCormick Jr .• the mortuary owner, who wu quoted as reacttnc. ·•rm n~ 11.wart of all)' eommunity tha\ ttnlt.I Uae mtnlbet or cUoot.s a tMJ•inas un ,.ave.·· ) ':f: 1 'Y~l\f!ess maybe he 1s now.· · Ah, Laguna. "'· '* . t > ~ ~ t. ~l ~I ,. ( i~. ~1 l : - 111111 p = 4¥;if# ,, Dally Plllt FRIDAY, JAN. 29, 19112 CAVALCADE BUSINESS . 82-3 BS-6 Merrill Lynch is using Orange County to test equity .access lines of credit. See Page B5. Lea·se issue suit flayed lrf?ine Co. predicts defeat of latest homeowners' effort lb STEVE llA&llLE ................ A class-action suit filed asainat the Irvine Company over a land lease dispute, was branded today by the dev~lopment firm's president as beln1 UWe more than a public relations ploy. Peter Krefl\er. president of the Irvine Company. predicted the suit -challenging skyrocketing property values in Newport Beach and-Irvine - will be tossed out of court. Four Newport families filed the suit in Orange County Superior Court Thursday. Ray lkola , the attorney retained by the families, said the suit was filed on behalf of nearly •.ooo residents in the two cities who face huge Increases in annual land lease fees they must pay the Irvine Company. Others, lkola said during a news conference Thursday. will join the suit once it has been formerly certified in court. He predicted the legal action could take three years. The families are associated with the Committee of 4,000, a group claiming to represent disgruntled residents who own their homes but lease the land from the Irvine Company. The committee, which had predicted the class-action suit for weeks, has waged a batUe against the development firm through newspaper ads, press releases and protest rallies . •Irvine to televise city plan Irvine's local cable channel, Channel 3 , will present a program from 7 p.m . to 8 p.m. on Feb. 3 on the city's General Plan. The program, hosted by city Com munit y Development Director Larry Hogle, will be the first in a series of ·c ity -sponsored programs 'to be presented four limes a year on city issue. Viewers will be given an opportunity to phone in and ask questions. • Irvine Camera Club to meet The Irvine 5'!nior Citizen Camera Club will meet at 2 p .m . Feb. 4 to see a travelogue on Holland and Bavaria. For further information on the meeting in the Irvine · Senior Center, 3 Sandburg Way, call 754-3889. • lJCI professor gets lJCR poat Dr. S&epaa llaramantJu, a mathematics professor at UC Irvine for 15 years, has been named dean of the UC. Riverside Graduate School of Administration. Karamardian earned bis bacbelor ·s degree in mathematics and physics from Syrian University in Damascus, Syria. bis master 's dearee in matbematics from tbe University of Illinois and bis doctorate in enai•••rinc science from UC Berkeley. •Appalachian folk mwic 1lated lob .-ceu&cllleoa and Rick aad Lorraiae Lee will present a program of AppaJachian folk music at 8 p. m. Feb. 3 in the UC Irvine Fine Arts Concert HaJI. Tickets for the concert are $5 for general admission, $3 for UCI students, $4 for other students, senior citizens, UCI staff. faculty and Alumni Association members. For m ore information call 833-6379. It was unclear whether the committee or the four families is financing the legal effort. The suit, which seeks no monetary damages, was filed by Lou.is and Phyllls Scott, John and Lillian Fabregas, Robert and Barbara Amstatder -and Robert and Mary Longpre. Longpre, a Westminster car dealer and Bayshore resident , said his property has increased in value from $143,000 to $1.46 million in seven years. Longpre said he felt like be was being ··stampeded" and forced to buy his land at an inflated v'1ue. Attorney lkola said the suit challenges the Irvine Company's manner of appraising leased land and that each family named in the suit represents a type of rental contract. I kola said there are four types of rental contracts. The s uit says the Irvine Company has adopted a "take it or leave it" posture while hitting land renter s with ··unconscionable" lease fee hikes. The Irvine Company, the suit a lleges, has unfairly considered the question of "contributed value·· that homeowners have made to their leased land. The suit asks that residents be given financial credit not only for physical improvements to their leased land but also to •·collective tangible and in tangible" contributions res idents have made to the community such as hospitals, schools and cultural pro,rams. The families are asking that the leased property be appraised a s "raw land" and that residents be e ntitled lo an "improvement" credit of no less than SO percent of the land value. Irvine Company President Kremer said bis firm is simply followin« the letter of the conll'acta, many or wbJcb were drawn up in the 19509. Kremer said the Increases abould have come u no surprise toruidmta. "Tbe company bu honored its obH1atton under the leases durtn1 the vast 25 years," Kre.mer said . "Many leaseholders now must honor . thein." He repe.ated his firm's offer to reduce land lease fees. Kremer, acknowledging his firm's lawyers have not yet studied the suit, said "we don't believe this dispute belongs in court.·· He reiterated his firm 's position that it will not negotiate with anyone named in the suit. SLIM PICKINGS Searching for fond in ~ewpo11·s Cpper Ra~·. this muddy mud hen o.ily --"a-...-. leuves its footprints in the knee-deep muck at lo\\ tide Big Irvine could get bigger City to move toward annexation of coastal area.? lly RICHARD GREEN Of• o.tl7' -,.... Irvine, the largest city geographically in Orange County. may be getting bigger. · The Irvine City Council is expected to request from the Local Agency Formation Commission a sphere of inlluence status for coaslland between Newport Beach and Laguna Beach. The request is expected to touch off a controversy because those cities now share the · coastal sphere. a designation given to areas earmarked for future annexation. Earlier this week. the city staff said it would be in the financiaJ best interest of the city to annex the coastal area, in order to lake advantage of future sales laxes. The report, was ordered by the City Council last year aft.er the city Planning Commission recommended that the council seek a coastal sphere from the Local Agency Formation Co mmission. which decides city boundaries rn the county. Irvine city officials s ay Irvine has a right to annex the coast since the city will incur traffic and pollution costs associated with planned co a s tal development. Newport Beach officials. meanwhile, contend that the coastal area south of their city should remain in Newport"s s ph e r e of influence and eventually be annexed by that city . Th e land is now incorporated county territory. Al so in unincorporated county territory is the land between Irvine's present northern boundaries and the foolhilll, an area in Irvine's sphere of innuence and being cooaidered for possible annexation, said Assistant City Mana1er Paul Brady Jr. He said that annexation of the northern sphere would ensure that El ·Toro Marine Corps Air Station wouldn 't be turned into a commercfal airport as some airport planners have suggested. Annexation of the northern sphere would rgean the air station would be an enclave completely surrounded by Irvine boundaries. Irvine city planner Paul Ireland said the planning stalra first priority is to look into the possibility of Irvine geltinl a coas tal sphere. · J! , I ' I i j I New_p~rt fugitive slain in holdup ~' ),\~~ Ah Laguna, no body escapes I I A man who has been identified as convicted Newport Beach robber and rapist Tommy Knox has died from gunshot wounds he suffered during an alleged holdup attempt in Rancho Cucamonga. ·Knox, a prison escapee, was blasted four times in the chest last week by a liquor store clerk. i nvestigator s for the San Bernardino Sheriffs office said. The as.year-old Knox, officers said , was aJlegedly holding up the liquor store when the clerk wheeled around and started firing. . Knox remained in a coma until his death. officials said. • ~ t Bteem set Jormodel kgislature 'A team of eicht teen-ace Oran1e Coast YllCA members left this week for Sacramento "here the high school student.a wlll take part in the 34th annual dalifornla 'YMCA Model Uestalature. Tbe mock Ie1lslative session is llltended by nearly 800 .YMCA emben throushout the atate. The student fl'OU,p ii beaded 16-year-old Bale Netser, a lor at Univenlty .Hi&h School Irvine. Other junjon from U.Uvenlty l1b in tbe 1roup are AmJ Qertin, Nancy Kiana and Denise• q· ............. Pov Corona del Mar BlSb bool aeniora also wlll be ten~ Guatavo Burllll, IUa , JtM Philippe and ~-llurcbllon. Tb• Oran1e (foa1t YllCA • Newport, Costa M ...... ne. But investigators said it wasn't until Wednesday -the day Knox died -that they learned his identity. Officers said Knox. who escaped from a P o mona Courtroom las t July. assumed the identity of Mark Scott Bradley and had dyed his hair after the escape. Investigators said they do not know who or where the real Bradley is and how Knox obtained documents bearing his name. Knox was convicted in 1979 of 23 counts of rape, robbery, kidnap and assault with a deadly weaoon. Officials s aid he was sentenced to 20 years in San Quentin Stale Prison but escaped last July. Until the episode in Ranch~ Cucamonga, a town near Ontario, police said Knox's whereabouts were a mystery. Newport Beach Police said that Knox was responsible for five robbery-rapes in Newport including one incident where he molested a 14-year-old girl. They s~ he usually would force victims to submit lo sex acts before demandinl money. He also was convicted of robbe r y -rape crimes in FYllertoo.. -Brea. Upland and Colton. Officers In Newport believe that since his escape. Knox may have returned lo the beach city to pull Off another robbeTY. Al the time of ht1 death this week , San Bernardino authorities said Knox was wanted on nearly $750,000 worth of airest warranta and MiQa 1ou1bt by seven different law enforcement agencies. Jnveau1ator1 1110 said that Knox wai rldins a atolen motorcycle the day be wu abot In the liquor atore. LAGUNATICKS DEPT. When things get a touch on the routine side in our region. you can almost always count on our Art Colony of La~una Beach to coml' up with some kind of hassle that will hold t he entire Orange Coast '. ~ I"-\ I Tll lllPllll~ proposed as waterfalls. in rapt fascination. In the past. we ·ve all witnessed Laguna b att l es over whales painted on walls . s teelwork sculptures on the Main Beach or sewer vent pipes Today. Laguna Beach is in the middle of another onC' ll"s a question of whether or not an Art Colony mortuar~ should be allowed to operate a crematorium THIS HEATED ISSUE, if you'll pardon t he expression. surfaced before the Laguna Cit y Council upon a pplication of the McCormick Mortuary. located out on Laguna Canyon Road. Principal opponent or the crematorium is one Larn Hunt. whose business is right next door. · Mr. Hunt operates a body shop. Oon "t get the two places of business confused. now. Hunt dispatches automobiles with dented rende rs. McCormick does another kind of dispatching. Faced with this controversy. the Laguna City council tried to strike a compromise In an earlier vote. In their infinite wisdom, council members ruled that ·• McCormick could ·open the crematorium and dispatc h three bodies per day. It was ruled. however. that Laguna doesn "t want loved ones hauled in rrom elsewhere to be dispatched in the Art Colony. To limit this practice. the council ruled that only one of the three bodies cremated each day could be a non-Lagunan. BODY SHOP OPERATOR HUNT, himself. had provided some fael for the fire. if you'll pardon the expression, on that argument. Hunt quoted Orange County Health Department figures to the council which he s aid indicated lr cremations were limited to La"unans only. there would Two LagunaM invol~ in another calm civic debate be an average of only 1.01 such ceremonies per month. You suppose it's left to your imagination to figure · how you hold a .01 cremation. I chose to forget it. Obviously, the Laguna council's earlier pondering o( the issue concluded that it's less objectionable to cremate a Lagunan than it is a non-Lagunan. Well. ifs always been tough to find a parking place in the to'M"I anyway. .. YOU START JUST letting any body come around to get cremated in the Art Colony and the next thing you know. every body will be wanting to do it. Just look at how many people come to Laguna every year just to visit the art shows. And they clon'.t-even w_ant to st_a~ long enough to avail themselves of McCormick's serv1ces. Today. it appears that the Laguna council is havin1 'second thoughts. Council members have now voted against allowing any non-Lagunans to ·get cremated wi: :iin the city limits . · • THAT ACTION apparently s hocked Robert Mc Cormick Jr., the mortuary owner. who was quoted as reacting. "l"m not aware of any community that llmks the number of clients a business can have." You guess maybe he is now. Ah. Laguna. \ I 1, 1111111:1111 FR I DAY, JAN. 29, 1982 CAVALCADE BUSINESS B2-3 BS-6 Merrill cynch is using Orange County to test equity . access lines of credit . See Page BS . Lease issue suit flayed-Fugitive dies in lwldup 1rmne Co. predicts defeat of latest homeowners' efiort By STEVE MARBLE o1 .. ...., ......... A claaa·a ction suit filed against the Irvine Company over a land lease dispute, was branded t o day by th e development firm's president as being lltUe more than a public rel•tions ploy. Peter Kremer. president of the Irvine Company, predicted the suit -c hallengi ng skyrocketing property values in Newport Beach and Irvine - wiU be tossed out of court. Four Newport famiUes fiJed the suit in Orange County Superior ~urt Thursday. Ray lkola, the attorney retained by the families, said the suit was filed on behalf of nearly 4,000 residents in the two cities who face huge increases ln annual land lease r~s tbey must pay the Irvine Company. Others, Ikola said during a news conference Thursday, will join .the suit once it has been formerly certified in court. He predicted the legal action could take three years. The famiUes are associated with the Committee or 4,000, a group claiming to r epresent disgruntled residents who own their homes but lease the land from the Irvine Company. The committee, which had predicted the class.action suit ror weeks, has waged a . battle against the development firm through news paper ads , press releases and protest rallies. • Mesa artist's works shown A show of new works by Costa Mesa artist Frank Pillon, tit.led ··Paintings and Monotypes," is now open for a three-week exhibition at the Fine Arts Gall e ry at Saddl e bac k College in Mission Viejo. Dixon 's work has been shown al the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Ne wspace Gallery in Los Angeles, the Newport Harbor Art Museum and Bowers .Museum in Santa Ana. Dixon is on the a rt raculties of Orange Coast College Laguna Beach School or Art and Scripps College. The SaddJeback Fine Arts Gallery is located at 28000 Ma rguerite Parkway. off .the Avery Parkway exit from the San Diego Freeway. Hours a r e l 0 a . m . t o. 3 p . m weekdays. • Me1an named to dean's list Lisa Dahill, d aughter of atcbard and Susaanah Dahill of Costa Mesa , h as been• named to the Dean's List at Gustavus Adolphus College in St. Peter, Minn., for the fall semester. ' Ms. Dahill is a freshman m ajoring in chemistry and biology. The Dean's List at the college is comprised only or those students who have ach ieved a grade-point average of at least 3.5 out of a possible 4.0. Gustavus Adolpbus College is a four-year, pri.ate liberal arts college affiUated with the Lutheran Church in America , o ne of several branches of the church in this country.· • Jazz concerts scMduled The Newport-Mesa Schools Foundation will s ponsor a ser ies of jazz con certs beginning Feb. 5 to raise money for the school district. A series of five Friday night concerts are planned between February and June 4 at 7:30 in the Costa Mesa Neighborhood Community Cen ter , 1845 Park Ave ., Costa Mesa. Cos t ror th e compl e t e series is U'I To order tickets call 646· 1701 It was unclear whether the committee or the four families ia financing the legal effort. The s uit. which seeks no monetary damages, was filed by Louis and Phyllis Scott, John a nd Lillian Fabregas, Robert a nd Barbara Amstatder and Robert and Mary Longpre. Longpre, a Westminster car dealer and Bayshore resident, said his property has increased in value from $143,000 to $1.46 million in seven years. Longpre said be felt like he was being "staplpeded" and forced to buy his land at an inflated value. Attorney lkola said the suit challenges the Irvine Company's manne r of appraising leased land a nd that each f a mily named in the suit represents a type or rental contract. I kola said there are four types or rental contracts. The s uit s a ys the Irvin e Company has adopted a "take~l or leave it" posture while hitting land rent e r s with "unconsciona ble " lease fee hikes. The Irvine Company. the suit alleges, has unfairly considered the question of "contributed value " that homeowners have made to their leased land. The suit asks that residents be given financial credit not onJy for physical improvements to their leased land but also to ··coll ective tangible and intangible " contributions res idents have made to the community such as hospitals, schools and cultural programs. The families are asking that the leased property be appraised as ''ra w land " and that residents be entitled to an "improvement" credit or no less than 50 percent of the land value. Irvine Company President Kremer said his firm is simply followin«i the lette r or the contracta, many of which were drawn up in the 1950s. Krepier said the lncreuea should have come a.a no surprise to residents. "The company bas honored its obligation under the leases during the past 25 years,·' Kremer sai d . "M a n y leaseholders now must honor theirs." He repeated bis firm 's offer to reduce land lease fees. Kremer, acknowledging his firm's lawyers have not yet studied the suit. said "we don't believe this dispute belongs in court." He r eiterated hi s firm 's position that it will not negotiate with anyone named in the suit. Detty ...... _.., ...... "' 0'0-11 KNEE~OEEP IN HUBCAPS Newport Beach Detective Hoh Hardy checks over nearly 500 ~tolcn wire-wheel hubct1ps officers seized Thursday during <1n arrest in lluntington Beach. Police arrested 48 -year·old Robert Forester. a HuntinJ...'lOn Harbour resident. at an industria l complex. lie was released on $2.500 bail. Police claim the stolen hubc<1p~. a ll from Americ<i n-madC' cars. <.1rc worth a bout S.50.000 Those who c<.1n identif~ hubc aps un.> urj!erl to l'<>nt act Il a rd~· at 644 -3782 Man facing trial in Newport death A 20-year -o ld resident of Or a nge h as been o rdered to sta nd tri a l o n f e l on y m aaalaugh t e r a nd fe looy hit -a nd -run c h a r ge s in co nn ec t io n w i th las t September's death of Newport Beach re.sident' Donald Barry Warner. James Samuel Gibbs must a ppear in Oran ge County Superior Court on Feb. 11 for arraignment, according to the order issued T hurs da y by Harbor Munici pal Court Judge Donald Dungan. Gibbs, it has been alleged , was driving a black BMW with its lights out when 26-year-old Wa rne r was s truck wh il e walkio~ a c ro s s Balboa Boulevard near 32nd Street. Warner , thrown onto the hood or the car, died severa l hours l aler et F ountai n V aJ ley Community Hosl>it a l trauma center. Witnesses-testified that the dark car slowed for a second after the accident and then took off A p ass e n g e r i n rh e c a r testified earlier this month that he and Gibbs were scared and abandoned the car in a Whittier shopping center where police later located it. The passenger denied that either he or Gibbs had been drinking or driving recklessly. Gibbs, who did not testify during the preliminary hearing, is free on bail. A man who has been ldentifted as convicted Newport Beach robber and rapist Tommy Knox has died from gunshot wounds he s uffered during an alleted holdup attempt in Rancho Cucamonga. Knox, a prison escapee, was blasted four times in the cbest last week by a liquor store clerk, in ves tigators for the San Bernardino Sheriff's office said, The JS.year-old Knox, officers said. was allegedly hold.inl up the liquor store when the clerk· wheeled a round and s tarted firing. Knox remained in a coma until his death , offi cials said. But in vestigat or s said it wasn't until Wednesday -the day Knox died -that they lea med his identity. Offi cer s s aid Knox , who esca ped from a Pomona Courtroom last July, assumed ·the identity of Mark Scott Bradley and had dyed his hair a fter the escape. Investigators said they do not know who or where the real Bradley is and how Knox obtained documents ·bearinc bia name ' Knox was convicted in 1979 of 23 counts or rape, robbery, kidnap and assault with a deadly weapon. "'> Off ic ials s aid h e w.as sentenced to 20 years in San Que ntin S ta te Pris on but escaped last July. Ulltil the episode in Rancho Cucamonga, a town near Ontario, police said Knox's whereabouts were a 1 mystery. Newport Beach Police said that Knox was responsible for five robbery-rapes in Newport including one incident where be I molested a 14 -year-old girl. t They s aid he usually would rorce victims to submit to sex a cts before demanding money. · H e also was convicted of robbe r y -rape cri m es in Fullerton. Brea, Upla nd and Colton. Officers in Newport believe that since his escape, Knox may have returned to the beach c.ity to pull off another robbery. At the time of his death this wee k , Sa n Bernar dino a uthorities said Knox was wanted on nearly $750,000 worth or arrest war rants and being sought by seven different law enforcement agencies. Investigators also said that Knox was ridin g a stolen motorcycle the day he was shot in the liquor store. ~ '-""Free-parking-ov.....--- f .. \ at coast colleges By PHIL SNEID~RMAN Of ... Deity ...... ,..., Beginning Monday, students at Golden West and Orange Coast colleges. who traditionally have parked for free on campus. will have to display a SS parking fee sticker or face the prospect or a more costly traffic ticket. The new parking stickers aJso will be required of Loastlim: College students who park at the five former elementary schools le~sed as Coastline's learning ce.-ters. The stickers will be valid for the s pring semester. Coast Community College Di,trict trustees approved the parking fee in December, hoping to make up for diminishing state ruods. By law, this revenue mus t be used solely for maintenance and· construction ol parklng lots. Rushing to implement the parking fees for t he s pring semester , which begins Monday, college officials have had to plan for enforcement a nd make pr!ovislons for non -s tudent vialton on campus. Officials at Golden West and o•ange Coast colleges. said wtrning notices will be placed 011 the cars of s ticlterless 1$Ctents dutrnf the ftrit weetor erif orcernent. • er t.taat, violators at Orance. ast and Golden West will eive official traffic lick~ t W'Ul be processed throulh t Oran1e County Municipal C urt system. tudenta who ignore the ti keta may have dlfficulty r ewlns their state vehicle r 1i•tratlon, campus officials rned. Golden West Colle1e in tlncton Beach baa about P&rtdDI spaces. Motortltl Park there ln un......-..d cu-~ a paltiftt 1Ucker or a short-term ticket will be cited by campus security. with a fine of Sl2. Terry Shoaff . associate dean for college services, s aid Golden W est is ins talli ng three s h or t -term pa rk ing ca rd dispensers for visitors. They will be located near entrances on Gothard Street . Edinger Avenue a1\d Golden West Street. The 25-cent time-dated cards will be good for one hour. A vis itor planning on a two hour visit can purchase two cards and dis play the m in the front windshield. In addition. 33 spaces will be set as ide ror 45-m inute free parking for those makinl? brief inquiries or deli veries. - At Orange Coast , which has abo ut 5,000 parking s paces, visitors without a sticker can purchase a 50-cenl day permit in the Cos t a Mesa sc h ool 's community services or carripus operations office, both located In lhe Administration Building. Nine 45-minute free park.ing spaces have been set aside. at Orange °'9st for brief inquJries or deliveries. Elsewhere, vehicles with no sticker or day permit can be 1iven ! $7 ~ark lng ticket by campus secunty or Costa Mesa police, accordJng to Dave HJll , Orange Coast's director of maintenance and operations. Hill said there would be no enforcement at Orange Cout for vebkles coming on carnpua at n ight to attend concerts or com munily serv~e pro1rams. Nl1btly enforcement ls planned Mon day through Thursday, however, at Golden West. Saddleback Colle•e. which hu campu.es ln Irvine and Mluk>n Viejo, initiated a parkin1 f" for 1 tudents in Aua . UIO . Saddleback currently char1• s10 per Hmestrr. LAGUNATICKS DEPT. When t hings get a touch on the routine s ide in our region. you can almost always count on our Art Colony of Laguna Beach to come up with some kind of hassle that will hold the entire Orange Coast ' .. ~ .... Ii.~ /"oo\ Ill IUIPllll ~- proposed as waterfalls . in rapt fascination . In t he past . w e'v e a l l wiincssed Laguna battle s ove r whales painted on wa lls. s teelwork sculptures on the M ain Be a c h or se we r vent pipes Today. Laguna Beach is in the middle of another one lt's a question of whether or not an Art Colony mortuarl' should be a llowed to operate a cr ematorium. THIS HEATED I SSUE. if you'll pardon the expression. surfaced before the Laguna Cit ~· Council upon application of the McCormick Mortuar y. located out on Laguna Canyon RQad. Principal opponent of the crematorium is one I.arr~ Hunt. whose business is right next door. Mr. Hunt operates a body s hop. Don't get the two places or business confused . now. Hunt dispatches a utomobiles with dented rende rs McCormick does a nother kind of dispatching. Faced with this controversy. the Laguna City council tded,JQ stdke a compr.omise in an ~artier v-0te. In their l nflnite wisdom. council mem bers ruled that McCormick could open the c rematorium and· dis patch three bodies per day. It was ruled. however. that Laguna doesn •t want loved ones ha uled in from elsewhere to be .dis patched in the Art Colony. To limit this practice. the council ruled that only one of the three bodies cremated each day could be a non· La gun an. BODY SHOP OPERATOR RUNT, nimself. had provided some fuel for the fire . if you'll pardon the expression, on that arsument. Hunt quoted Oranae County Health De partment fie ures t o the council which he seid indicated if crematiotas we re limited to La~unans only. there would l t• . .... no body e$capes Two l.agunans involved in another calm civic debate be a n average-of only 1.01 such cere monies per month. You suppose it's left to your imagination to figure how you hold a .01 cremation. I chose to forget it. Obviously, the La guna couneirs earlier pondering of t he issue conclude d that it's less objectionable to crema te a Lagunan than it is a non-Lagunan. Well, it·s always been tough to find a parking place in the town anyway. YOU START JUST letting any body come around to get cremated in the Art Colony and the next thing you know_.. every body will be wantin£_to do it. Just Jook at h ow many people come to La1una every year just to vis it the art shows. And they don't even want to stay long enough to avail themselves of McCormick's ser vices. Today. it appears that the Laguna councll is having 'second thoughts . Council members have now voted ags.inst allowing a ny non-Lagunans to get cremated wil nin the city limits. TllAT ACTION apparently s hocked Ro be rt McCormick Jr .. the mortuary owner. who was qtloted u reacting, ''I'm not aware or any community that Umtts the number of cUents a business can have ... You 1Uess maybe he ls now. Ah, Laguna. -···---- • Ort'!• Cou1 DAILY Pll.OT/Ftk\IY, January 29, 1812 J:fiet memllriq.l design revised '• .. .. ., I It ., ?, ....... c • 0c- ______________________________________ ..._ __________ __. ~,. ......... NEW CONGRESS -This will be the makeup or Orange t• County's congressional districts under reapportionment. r• increasing California's s eats fr9.mAJ. to 45. b 1 From Page A 1 II ~: REMAP RAPPED. • • !, sure the Republicans would 1 appeal the ruling to the federal 11 courts. Of slgnificance in that Kepublicans have maintained that the reapP'onionment plans are designed to ensure that Democrats retain control of the state Legislature for the next 10 years. appeal, she sitid, was the split 1. vote of the court's ruling. 1 In the' meantime, she said, •, voters were faced with a "lack r of continuity" between the 1982 and 1984 elections due to the ruling's effects. The party's executive committee ls scheduled to meet tonight in Monterey to decide whether a n appeal will be , pursued, a party spokesman said. Party executives are meeting In Monterey this And. they view the plans as ensuring that Democrats will pick up new seats in Coniress. Under the congressional plan, California gains two congressional seats, increasing the size of its Washincton D.C. delegation from 43 to 45. Legislators and congressioanl district lines are redrawn every 10 years to equalize voter population to comply with one • weekend to discuss 1982 election str_ategy. man. one vote requirements. · . Windy, warmer weekend f orecBst , . . A windy we~tlnd with traveler's adftsory would be in warmer days and cool nights effect through Saturday, with was forecast for Orange Coast winds gusting up to 40 mph. residents tod~ by the National . Light intermittent showers Weather Service.. were reported Thursday ~ weather ~ervtce spok~sman afternoon in sevenl Oran1e 1 said gusty winds measunng 15 c t iti 'i to 20 mph would continue • oas c es. . throut,b the weekend. In Huntinlton Beacb vewru Clear weather With no rain in weather watcher J . Sherman sight is forecast. Temperatures Denny said bis rain 1au1e will rise to the hi&h 60s or low recorded .08 inch of rain on 70s during the weekend. Thursday. Nightly temperatures will He laid tbia moisture bnluCbt drop into the low 40s . t he hb rainfall total for tbe rear weather service said. be&lnninf July 1, 1•1, to t,• For residents planning a trip inches, about two lnebel ahead. to the mountains this weekend. of the rainfall total for Ulla date the weather service said a last year. I ~-Brutus beats rap ;Judge drops charges against dog 11 WASHINGTON <AP) - SponlOrl of 1 memorial to·bonor A merlcan1 who tou1ht In Vietnam wlll add a patriotlct, laeroic touch to tbe pro)ect'• stark desi1n, which 1ome veterans denounce as a "black sash of shame and sorrow." The compromise aareement was reached in an emotional meetinl Wednesday 9i1ht in which, accordl1,1g to some participants, nearly all the 50 or 60 people in the room were moved to tears when some veterans who had spent years as prisoners of war told why they From PageA1 SCHMITZ • • • that was not laudatory. He added, referrjng to abortions, "The biggest flolocaust going on right now is nine million peqple being killed for the simple crime that they have not been bom yet." Roberti and fellow Democrats on the Senate Rules Committee last month, after the attacJc, removed Schmitz as chairman of 't h e Constitutiona l Amendments Committee and from two other Senate posta. Roberli's resolution, SR29, supported the Rules Committee action and deplored Schmitz's comments. It stopped short of a formal censure, but had the same effect. ·'The aforementioned conduct of Senator J ohn G. Schmitz brings the Senate of the State of California into dishonor and disrepute and, If passed over would tend to implicate members of the Senate as condoning that conduct,·· the resolution said. Sen . parry Keene , D·Mendocino, another Rules Committee member. said Schmitz's press release "appears to be the first truly wicked act committed by a member of the Legislature." Several other senators were as critical of the remarks as Roberti. Sen. Ed Davis , R·Chat1wortb, said the way to avold another holocaust was to denounce "the first Jew·baiter who makes statements such as were made by Senator Schmits." Senate Republican leader William Campbell of Hacienda Heisbta aaid be supported tbe Rules Committee action, but contended that further action should be left to the voters. Here'• how the votin1 went iri the state Senate for the reaolutloa reprimanding Sen. John Scbmlta: HMOCllATI "'9: AllYW A..,..., S.. "-; ..... A"'9. La """9 ... ; 0..191 ........ c:-.r.I; ,,.,. carw-. C~; 11.-Diits, GerMA•I J.-A ~•reA, Oely City; Jefl1t coer--... Mic...,; Alft G..c ... La """91ft; elll G,_, LM A .... IH; Jefl1t Hel-1, He.,.eN; llerry 1(-, $M llefwl; J- Mllts. C-V .... ;.,....,,. -··· II--; NlcllelH ~flt, O•ltl•M; lloWrt ~I .. , llMle .... ; C>mW llelM, S...la ••llera; Ai... 11. ......... y., HuY1; Oilvlcl 11.-rtl, Lot"-'"; Al•1t Sleroly, Los A1ttefff) Waller Stiern, 8ak•r1llelcl; Rote AM Vulcll, FreMIO; Ol.- Wal101t,,_.A,,.,.les, OEMOCllATS AGAINST: N-. ..... UILICANS "°"' 11-rl 8ewr1y, Lot : LAURENS, N.Y. <AP) - · Brutus, the loudmouthed dog ruled Thursday. brin"in" down Anoe•••: Ed o.v11. ,_ Per11; "'"'°" M¥1ls. e e Salt Fr...clKO; J im Hlelten, S...la Rose, 0... the gavel on the case. 0·1t .. 1e,c-11 .... "-Ruuen. G-ie. obJMted to tbe on,taal deeip. Accordlnt to aome wbo wtre then, Sen. Jeremiah Denton Jr .. R·Ala .• waa• amon1 tboH ·ln1l1tU., on a dealcn cbanae. Denton apent 7~ years a1 a prisoner of North Vietnam. •'It was a fierce, emotional even~." aald one participant, who aaked that he not be identified.' "It wa1 a nasty five hours." The original deaian called fo~ a monument of pollahed black granite. It was to talte the form of two walls, descendinc 10 feet into the ground, and meetlnc in ' 1 wide "V'' with tht na-of 57,m war dead and 2,509 MW liated u ml11tn1 c:hlaeled •io th• walla. A• a eompromiH, aovcn said, tbe 1ponsort aareed to add an American n., and-a statue of an infantryman in the heroic "follow me" 1e1ture similar to a well-known statue at Fort Bennina, Ga. But, even with those changes, three of the chief objections of critics would remain: 'The memorial will be below ground . will be black, and will be in t.he shape or a "V." .,, ....... WITNESS -San Francisco police escort Christina Torno from the scene of a shooting in San Francisco that left three people dead and nine others wounded. The gunman was the estranged husband of a woman who worked in the office. (See sfury 1 Page AS) . Fire rages through vacant county store . Firefishters from Anaheim, Garden Grove and Oran1e were baWLnc a three-alarm fir• at an abandooed department store in Anaheim late thiJ mornine. Tbe ftre erupted at the rear of the old Wbi~ Front ~partment store, abandoned a decade a10 . at Harbor Boulevard and Chapman Avenue. A fire spokesman said t.be large building was fully involved when ftre units a.rrived al' the scene at about 10:30 a.m. By 11 a.m. the fire had spread to the roof. running the full length of the several thousand square foot building. "We've eot at least a dozen fire unita at the scene," said Assistant Fire Chief Martel Tbompeon . He said the fire was still out of controlat 1 a .m . - A ftre inspector was on the scene to determine the cause of the blazt;-whictt Thompson said he suspects might have resulted from a trash buildup at the rear of the facility. Some critics think the 1'V" stands for the peace alp that waa f111bed by antl·war protaten durloa the war. Tb•· National Jlevl•w. a conservttive ma1aaine, called the deslsn an "outra1e" and 27 Republican concreumea, la a letter to Prealdent Reacan, denounced the deat1n H "a political atatement of shame and diahonor" and asked that anottier be selected. A mona the crlUc1 at tbe meetin1 w19 Texas computer millionaire H. ROii Perot, who has caUed the ori1inal deaip a "tombltone," a "trench" and "a slap in the face.·• The design, by Maya Yin1 Lin, an architecture student at Yale University, has won praise from some quarters. J . Carter Brown, director of the National Gallery of Art and chairman of the government's Fine Arts Commission, said the de s ign conv e ys "•n extraordinary sense of dip.ity" and needs no "corny specific references" lo the war and no "bits of whipped cream on pedestals." Brown made those pointa last October after Tom Carhart, a West YOmt graduate who led ari infantry platoon in Vietnam and was twice wounded, a.sked'.1he com mi ssion to revoke its approval or the design. ·'One hundred years from now, long aft.er we're all dead and gone, visitors to the Mall will see onJy one thjng -a black wall in a trench with a random• scattering of pa mes on it,•· Carhart said. · To end such dis s e nsion, leaders of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund agreed to the design changes. sources said, and the critics were somewhat mollified . From PageA1 FDR •.• its people lo victory m World War II. The highlight of that ceremony. featuring songs and speeches o f praise , were scratchy, recorded excerpts from memorable Roosevelt speeches, introduced by his son, former Rep. James Roosevelt of Newport Beach. Only once did the audience interrupt with applause, when Roosevelt was beard saying, "Better the occasional faults of a government that lives in a s pirit of charity than the cons istept omiss ions of a government frozen in the ice of its own indifference ... In a voice s trikingly rem in is cent of his father's, James R006evell read part of a speech that FDR wrote for a Democratic Party d inner scheduled for the day after he died April 12, 1945, in Warm Sprtngs, Ga.: "The only limit to our realization of tomorrow will be our doubts of today." io-~~w~~~ tiekets---and a trip &o cou something to howl about today after a judge threw out the charges ag.ainst him. u us c~me a ce ebrft-y~..-ar __ __,,.~uiY-aucAM *fNST: w1111.mc-.,,...--11._,.__ • Wlll" .. r; Wll!lenl CraW!'. "•Im Ofter'!; Jot>n beyond this iny central New 0oot1me. s.c:r-to; Jim 1!1111. u caJon; 1111en OBIE_sPORTS LTD "I cannot senously entertain the thought that the outcome of this matter would have a continuing impact on the history or development of mankind," Town Justice Charles Mann Six injured in accident LOS ANGELES CAP) -Six construction workers were injured today when a second-floor scaffold collapsed and fell 17 feet as a crew poured concrete flooring for a bigb·rile condominium, fire officials said. Flre department spokesman Ray Walker said one man suffered aerioua lnJuriel to the back and bead, -while five otben received baa i.Qjuries from the fall on WUabire Boulevard, jmt a few bloc:ka from where a Turkish Jiiplomat was a11 .. lnated 1bunday. The project is a 16-atory condominium bein1 built by C.D. Investment of Los Anceles. • York village as the public G•rcle, 1M1t1o PMll; 11., J-..... 1Mry1"'11•; fl k d t th d f r th K.., ,..,,..,, ~; H.L RI<--.~: • oc e o e e ense o e J-a. se1wn1u ... _,.,., ... ~,.; ome s.--. mongrel. A lawyer was even LOfte IMCI\. hired for the dog, and a defense HHNT: -Y Mello, o-s.n Lul•Obl-. fund raised. But Mann played down the case, at first· putting It off as" reporters turned up in his tiny courtroom, then reserving decision after a new court date Jan. 17. ·'The possibility exists that Brutus might not have been the cause of the disturbance," Mann said. "There ls a dog owned by a neighbor who bas since departed, and the barking has decreased." Brutus, a Sain t Bernard-golden retriever, received his fll'st barktna ticket in June. After t-is· s~ventb in July, bis ownen, Judy Gunther and Gary Sprague, took Brutus to a veterinarian who sureically 'removed a portion or the doc's vocal chords, reducin1 his bark to that of a tiny Petinsneae. But Brutus' vocal chords erew back, and when he received bis eighth ticket in November the couple hired lawyer i::harlea Bosco to defend him. On Dec. 17, a plea ~t wu entered for Brutus. , From PageA1 TURKISH • • • I Turkish government issued a statement deploring the slaying of Arikan, the third killing of a {(o,5_ .~ngeles Turkish consular official in nine years. Premier Bulend Ulusu called for united efforts by the ''entire human kind" to bring an end to the assassination of diplomats. Police Chief Daryl Gates said the bloody ambush killing of the 54-year-old diplomat came only a week after Arikan had been· warned that his life was in danger but turned down an offer of police protection. "We have no idea why he chose to do what he decided lo do, but he did refuse our offers," Gates said. · A friend of Arikan's, A~if Keskin, said the consul general seemed to have a premonition of his assasslnatiort, but stopped usln1 bodyguards anyway because he felt they could not save him. CleMMect-. ....... 11~ Al ....... ,. ..... Mloal1 "He told me, •If somepne wanta to kill me, he will whether I am parde8 of' nor. Why sbould I aet a youn1 bod11uard killed too'? .. Kealdn laid. .. Tbua, Artkan wu alone wben be pulled hi.I white Ford out of tb• .aara1• of the bi1h·rlae apart.meat he abared with bll wUe, Nunn, It wu 9:18 a.m., a chilly day wllh a 1'0t rain bestnntns to fall u Arikan turned tbe corner and beaded up Comstock A •enue tO' bu11 Wllabtre BouleYanl and hta .offtee •the Turld•h consulate two mllu awa7 ln leftl'lt HUii. n He .,,_ aTi red uOt. ancl within rJt1111tMM,1'9 wa• dead. ' --... COMP810FO MAHERM-30 W/BRADS COMP&IOFO. CLEARANCE REGULARLY $388.00 INCLUDES MOUNTING •WAXING ~ .. l Orange Co .. t DAIL V PIL°'"T/Frlda~. January 29, 1982 UP 6.84 .. Borr~wing Woes on 6-month CDs f11U ii tM wt of a 10.porl Mtie• on M.o to ~ °" JIOtolr 11181 income tu••·) If you're among the mUllons who in 1981 took advantage of the offer by various banks to help you raise the minimum $10,000 necessary to invest in their high-interest-Tate six-month certificates of deposit by lending you enou1b to make up the full $10,000, you have ~ tricky tax problem in reeordinc. the ta.x consequences oo your 1981 return. Under these. arrangements, the • fl• bank loaned you money at. rates . ~,. generaJly 1 percent ------ more than the CD IJ[lll PllJl~-!'1~,,~ paid you. This meant , th at you actually ... ·------~-.... --received only the I interest on the amount of cash that you were able to pay, less 1 percent of the amount you borrowed from the bank to make up the required $10,000 minimum. While It appears that all you would have to do is report the net amount you actually received as Interest income, the ln\emaJ Revenue Service sees this differently. It says that you received the full interest paid on the entire $10,000, and you also had an interest deduction equal to tbe JotaJ interest paid on the loan. Here is what this means· to you. Suppose you were able to pay ·is.ooo toward a $10,000 six-month bank certificate with a 15 percent interest rate and · , the tiank loaned you the other $5,000 at 16 percent. You actually wound up with $375 interest on your $5,000 for the six-month CD, less $25, or $350. But the bank notice will show your interest income on the CD as $750. And you must report the $750 on your Form 1040. · . , You can take an interest deduction for the $400 difference between the $350 you actually were left with and the $750 you must report aa interest income, but only if you itemize your deductions. Otherwise, you may end up paying incoll\e tax on $750 of reported interest when-you only earned $350. NOTE: The 1981 special combined interest and · dividend exclusion of $tOO on joint returns and S200 on single returns· may help reduce your tax. This is a TRICKY tax problem, demandini careful handling. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS ll'llllSWll Ille 11"' P\;t' PIMllCl'l'-1 =~· llM IUell I ....... t:.~ ..._ .. AUlllcllfld MGIC l11v LTV Corp T•...,' UPS AND DOWNS u" ...... Lftt °" '~~T'r • + 1 t ~ .. ·~ + 'I Ji " lt\11 + 1"* ; ="= J'h + .. 1111 + ~ • l'lntllllll "' 11 ·~ 1 T"tldl 11111 ,... + -'C:-'9yc I 22 ... 2\lt '"'""'-1-. • Iii 10 "'""'flll ...... , .. n bftt'• 22 . '"' ""' . , r!--~· ""' + , 4 lilllC) lllC *"" + Iii ' ... ',,.,. s + .. 16 IM 4.tCIPf 27 + 2 11 Sci.Ml 21 ..... 2 DOMfl ....,. l.AflJ'I -°ii. I v.-c.o I .. .,. /ltlfl 2f't-.... !~ .. J -.... ·~ -"' :=.~· , -.... 14~-, ... '~CpCorp 7111 -Ill Sl'I --. ' t.50Pf 12~ -~ tO "'''" 1111 114 -.... u i:.':3 '"" ... -14 , __ .... ,, =. ........ 2111 -.... H . o 1...., *'--,_ s=eci s -\It 16 _.. .... n"' -'"' OT_.... .. ..-. _ , ... GOLD COINS Pct . Up U .) Up 12A Up 12.2 Up 11.0 Up 11.S Up 11.J tl: 10.1 10.S Up 10.5 Up 10.J VP t .J t:: ... ... Up u tl: ••• l.C Up e.c Pa. Oft a.: Oft I,( g:: 1.1 1.1 Oft 7 I Oft 1.C °" u Ott 6( Ott s •• Off u g: s.1 !j ~ u Oft ... Oft ... Ott .. ~ HEW YC>ftK (AP) -"1~.s let• T1'\l,_y .. ecllf cetnr., ~,.... wttfl w.._,...,., llN'IH . . •""""'9MI., ,,.., ............ , .. . .....,...,,,,,..,N.,Mll.JO.ws1.oo. ....... -· I.I,,..., ............ .., 11.u. ~tit <,_ •. -.,.., ........ u . ... ., ... ... u . O..·"-"'• METALS NEW YO~K (APl -SC>OI metel price• tc•O•Y • c.,,., 11'-·IO c•nh • •ound. OHi ln•tlolls. WM JO <enh • pound. 11M 0-«J '41f!fo • _..i, 0.11-ed Tie '1 nt• Mtt•ll w-c-11• * A-'-1 ... 11 <..,U • llOU'ICI, N 'f Mffc..., U"OJIO-fl•O. ~Plol ootnivoi,. N.Y SILVER GOLD QUOTATIONS I Yl'•AllK.._,,,_. $ele< .... -1d 90l4 P'k H -y ~: l'NnllflO llxlflO .-.n. ""tUI. ~: ..,.,_ flxl119 Ul1.00,.,. P-•· .. wit: tm.G, 1111U.4I.. • .......... , '"°.01, ""II.SI. brtctl: i.te fill ................... . M_, & MM-: (Clftly delly .,.._) .. , ...... ~.. . ......... , ,.,.,.,deity .-1 .., ..... suo. ......... , '°"'' .. 11, .-. ~ ... ~» .... P.11. SYMBOLS