HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-02-01 - Orange Coast PilotI
!.
I '
11,
I 1
1\11 "'I " " ~ I ~-I. (I • • • ,. . .
Icy cold strikes again
Sev~ die, motorists strandetl, power knocked· out in East
By Tiie Auoda&ed Presa
A surprise storm that
stranded thousands of motorists
In the Midwest ln up to 22 inches
of snow. and sent Ooodwaters
pourln1 throu1h three states
punished• New England today
with freezing rain. sleet and
snow.
Ice jams caused extensive
flooding and forced some
evacuations in parts or Ohio,
West Virginia and
Pennsylvania.
Sunday's snowstorm in the
Midwest gave students and
1ovemment workers a holiday
today while residents waited for
snowplows and the National
Guard to tackle six-foot drifts.
At least seven people died in
the storm, officials reported.
Rain and freezing rain
sweeping through
Massachusetts knocked out the
power to about 9,000 homes in
Musachusetts and caused a
crash irwolving 30 rAr11 and a
bus oil Route 2 at Westminster. "'
"The main Intersection in
town is flooded , . . Water
surrounds some homes six feet
deep," said Frank Stacy of radio
station WOYI. "The water ls
moviftg fast. It's got a lot of
icebergs in It."
Dauberger said the homes
might get washed away and
police abandoned their station
when It was flooded with 1 'h feet
or water.
In Marlinton, a city of 1,300 In
a vaUey between ridges of the
Alle1heny mountains, an ice
jam on Knapp Creek gave way,
sending 3'h feel ol water
through parts of the town. Police
and fire officials said four
families were evacuated.
• • * * ••
Moat schools were closed in
Vermont with more than a foot
of mow on the 1round.
In the winter-weary Midwest,
the deepest snow was reported
at Greenville, in south-central
Illinois. where 22 inches fell.
C huc k Jones of the Illinois
Emergency Services and
Disaster agency said 2,000
mot()rists. were. stranded in
temporary shelters Sunday
night.
"I've never seen the snow so
deep," said David Denbow.
driver of a snowplow stuck for
more than an. bour Sunday on
Intent.ate 4' ln St. LoWs. "We'll
get 'this cleared out eventually
bul I don't know wheq ...
LOST IN FOG Lady. a 36-root sailboat. lies
on its side at Treas ure Cove south or Newport
Dlllfr .......... ..,~
Beach . Craft came agrou!ld Sunda~
afternoon when fog suddenly set m.
More than. 1,~ cars and
trucks were abandoned on
bipwaya ill a lOO·mlle racllua or
Detroit. sebools were cloHd in
Detroit and Ann Arbor.
lndJana Gov. Robert D. Orr
acbed\Lled a helicopter tour of
his snow-buried at.ate today.
-SKI MISSION Tedford
Lewis skied 4 1 2 miles
S u n d a y to s h o v e I l h~
s idewalks at the apartment
complex he manages in St
Louis after 18 inches·or s now
covered the city
The surp~ storm developed
when warm, mo~t air from the
Gulf or Mexico suddenly moved
Fog due back tonight-
About as people were
evacuMed ln OU City, Pa., a cily
of 1',000 about 80 miles north of
Pitubutp~~hen an ice jam
brolle on vu Creek, and sent
water •ix feet deep tbroul,h the
streets.
• up and collided with cold air
from Canada, which kept
temperatures in the northern
Midwest u low as 36 degrees
below zero In Detroit Lakes,
Minn.
Three sailboats grounded during poor visibility
• i As the temperatures <Upped
· into tM 3>s today in Oil City, the
flood water began to freeze and
one resident said, "It could turn
the whole downtown Into a giant
_ice_sube." (See SNOW, Page AZ>
Three sailboats ..IaQ,..Aground
Sunday afternoon lir"'1:1lkk fog
that's expected to return to the
OranJle Coast agaUl tontRhl.
F o-g als o delayed early
with the help of her friends rounded uf> Sl.500 worth of
aluminum, This collection awaits a pick up by the Coors Co. . . .
i4ngkrs. find ha'f?en in ·Coast trash bins
GFoup hooks profits in fishi~g for alu~inum t~ benefit charities
But, ahe add.a, elub members
did help her round up Sl,500
worth ol aluminum laat year for
the charlUes.
morning flights by pne hour out
of John Wayne Airport, but by 8
a .m . takeoff schedules were
back to normal as fog lightened,
None of the 14 passen1ers
abo~ the three groun'Ued
sailbQits was injured. but this
morning one 36·foot craft still
was stuck offshore in sand and
rocks at Treasure Cove. just
south of Newport Beach.
At 9 a.m., a commercial boat
was trying to dislodge the
"Lady" owned by James
Jordan. of Villa Park. It 'ran
aground 40 yards offshore at
3:50 p.m . ·after the -dense fog
rolled in and cut visibility to s
reet, said coastal otriclals.
The other two sail~ta. the
39·foot Sagittarius, out of
Newport Harbor, and the 28-foot
Gammon, from Dana Point
Harbor, were pulled free of
destructive tides Sunday ,
coastal officials said.
The 'Siiittarlus ran alJ'OUDd at
11th Street on Balboa PeninsuJa
and was pulled out to sea by
Harbor Patrol boat.
The Gammon went aground
Cyprus Shores Beach about 2
miles south of the San Cle:n"~~
municipal pier and was tow
onto the sand. ~
Weather officials ~ay the fJ>J
was limited to Oran1e Count¥,.
stretching inland to Garde
Grove.
t
Tuesday's te mperature ii
expected to be In the low M
with nighttime lows ii\ the 40s.
Tonight's fog is expected to •
by mid-morning.
Arson blamed
PASADENA <~» -Anoo1'
believed to be the cause of tflt;
fire that raced through .a
nightclub, causing uoo.ciel
damage, officials say. The ftril
at the Players Cafe Sunda~
burned for nearly two ho$
Ex-madam, mayo ~~. . I .. ~ally Starif ord die~;: .__. . . ... ... ~ .. . GBEENB&AE <AP1 -Sally • •
Stanford, the former t San
Francisco madam and Sausalito
mayor whose life bec.tme a
television movie, died to4ay in a
Greenbrae hospital at a1e 78.
Ms. Stanford, whose real.
name was Mabel Janice Busby,
served two terms as a city
councilwoman and served both
u mayor and vice mayor before
her retirement from politics.
Sbe died ln Marin General
Hospital of apparent heart
failure, said Lois BevanaJ
nuraln1 1uper\ti1or. Sbe baa
• been admitted· to the bolpltal
over the ~kend bee!ause ol ber
weakentn1 heart, Ma. Bevam
Hid. '
Ma. Stanford, ralHd in Baker,
Ore., bad a reputation as a
colorf14I and fun -lovlnt
madam·lurned-maror whoa•
•• f
actlona Wt• tldat._.bl would tttn bt falltq OD YMmUI. ''
Antl·nucJear orsulaera trom
the Livermore Act.loll Group bad
announced plana to form a
buman blockade of the facWty.
Th• bloqlrade wu 1uccet1"41 for
• 1hort time , but mo•t
employees 1atned aeceaa to the
laboratory after only a abort
delay.
After 58 arrests at the south
1ate, U\e main 1roup movtd to
the oat sate, where there were
addltlonal arres\a aa the pack
chiered and howled. Offtclala at
the 1cen, Hld 54 aduJtl and live .
juvenU• were arroi.d at -Ole aouth sate. No t11ur11 were
avallable on other arr ta.
Sixteen people were arretted
Just before dawn as they aat'ln a
circle ln front of the facWty'a
,aouth file, wavtn1 1i1ns and
chantlnl "All we are sayinc ls
atop the bomb where lt atarta."
Many of those arrested were
draued away with their feet
•craping the 1round.
After the initial arrests. about
200 othor proteattrt muleid ' block awey rrom the facility,
then moved forward, led by a
braaa band and tM eteedy beat
of drum1. A l•r•• red banner
with bleck !«~rt proclaimed.
"Llvermore·N'evermore. •·
The demonstratlon was the
lateat event In a feud belween
antl·nuclear activists. some
state poliUciana and the UC
Board of Reaents over the
unlveraity'a participation ln
nuclear we,pons research. Gov.
Edmund G. Brown Jr .• himself a
"ll:ducatJon. Not AAnlhllatlon."
Ttie 1rreat1 were moatly
o rderly and there were no
lnJutles.
One man wu oo bls face and r~fused to be manacled.
Riot.ready police finally bodUy
for ced him otf, alon1 with
several others who collapsed.
Arnie Heller. the lab press
Information officer, aald arrests
were being made only at the
south entrance. . ~
Clash on eco'!omy seen
President, F~d chairman appear on collision course
~ .. ~HAT A MESS -Firefighters battle flames ~t train derailment in Lockbourne. Ohio.
·iout h of Columbus. Residents of the village.
home of Rickenbacker Air Force Base. we're
asked to evacuate until officials ~etermined
that no toxic g~lies had escapC'd
.,?tf
~oland prices up 400 percent
~~Gdansk guarded after 14injured in violent attack
!.
I. WARSAW, Polan~ (AP) -f! Warsaw streets were calm ~ay &,-m~e tb~ martial law regime
;~posed the largest price b.lk~
reduce production subsidies and
decrease demand. especially
among those who have been
hoarding !cod en.d other
CQm modities .
Warsaw today, but there were
no outward signs of
preparations.
WASHINGTON (AP ) -The
well·known Ronald Reagan 'and
the relatively little·known Paul
Volcker appear to be on a
colllslon course over how to
str;4lghten out the American
economy. and it's not al all clear
the belter·known player would
win.
Volc.ker. chairman of the
Federal Reserve Board, says
the economy will be gradually
s t tangled by ever higher
interest rates unless Reagan
reduces gigantic federal budget
deficits.
Reagan , president of the
United States, says his economic
recovery program, deficits and
all, will be thwarted by rising
interest rates unless the nation's
central bank does a better job of
managing the amount of money
it allows to circulate In the
economy.
Private econo m ists .
m eanwhile , say the nation may
be 1)ieaded for far worse times
unless Volcker eases the Fed's
tight·credit stance or Reagan
finds a way to cut those deficits.
Without a policy change by
one or both sides. "the U.S.
economy runs the risk of a
majpr collapse. unprecedented
in t he postwar period ,"
economist Allen Sinai of the
forecasting firm Data Resources
Inc., warned In an interview.
Senate Majority Leader
Howard Baker. R·Tenn., urged
Reagan and Volcker to ''sit
down and get away from this
business of acting like they are
s o i ndepende nl they nev~r
communicate .
.. we· ve got to get this
economy going again, we've got
to synchronize," Baker said.'L
But ao far, Volcker find
Reagan are refusing to budge.
Some veteran Fed watchers
say the independent bank Is
merely pursuing the tigbt·credit
policy the president has been
advocating to fight infiation.
·'The Fed is always the
scapegoat, the easy out,"
observed one banking official,
who did not want his name used.
1111 llllYlll
"But there seems to be more
pressure being put on the Fed
today then ever before."
Reagan and bis economic
adviser! deny they are in any
fundamental conflict with the
F ed's ti~ht-money policy or
looking ror someone to blame for
an economy far worse off than
the president bad predicted
Treasury Secretary Donald T
Regan said Sunday on CBS's
··Face the Nation" that the
admin~lrJtion is not trying to
make the Fed a scapegoat and
"will take the blame or the
•:redit" for what happens to the
' !conomy.
And budget director David A.
5tockroan, interviewed on ABC's
·'T his Week With David
Brinkley," said that "despite
some recent administration
discomfort•• over Fed poli cies
t-bat "No one in t h e
administration believes the
course is wrong ...
• 5'"..)n Poland's post·war blitory.
~Authorities tightened their· grip
'P.!tt1n Gdansk, where 14 people were
~~jured and 205 arrested in the
~'11firsl major outbreak of violen~
reported in Poland in six weeks.
~, Prices for food an41 other
~~oods Jumped u much as 400
Poles also began lining up al
filling stations as the
government reopened the pumps
to private motorists for the first
lime since martial law was
declared. Tbe lines move d
quickly, with sales limited from
two to six gallons per car.
British news papers quoted'
Solidarity source:. as saying a
smugglerl message lrom union
chief Lec h Wales a urged
colleagues to encourage protests
against the price increases but
to take care that they did not
l~ad to the total destruction of
the union. Walesa has t)(:en
.detained since martial law was
imposed.
Attack of FromPageA1
the wate~bed . <. SAl,LY ... • ercent as the government
i ought to bring consume!r prices
~Jorf to line with production costa.
;p;&;>· At one Warsaw·marltet, mold
yJWOman stood grumbling beside
.J1 "11 display case full of containers
· ~f sour cream. whose price bad
'-'t1Jumped from 6.50 zloties, or
{P.IJlbout 8 cents, to 29 zloties, or 36
~ents. There are 80 z~ to,the•
dollar on the offi~jAI l"!Jllaa lge
1&hTate. '-,.. :~:f· "Six·fifty to 29 zl~ she
,_watd. "Who wlll buy it?"
,.l!h "I will," said a younger
.ht'jwoman, shopping on her way to
.~6"'ork. :~. Despite the higher price, she ~~pparenUy took heart in seetne .Wood on shelves that have had
• jUJitlle to offer for months. v'\?i' Officials claim the higher
.,,ax1rices allo'+' the government to
_.'4f rom Page A 1
~b :l~NOW •••
•"111' An accident on Interstate 55
~ear Pontiac in central lllinols ~volved 17 to 20 vehicles. Four
~~people were taken to a nearby
hospital with minor injuries.
--Ground lrlll\Sportation was at
etandsWl in central nu.nots.
ltb the Chicago-to·New Orleans
Inter s tate 55 and
Philadelphia ·tO ·Denver
Interstate 70 both closed.
Indiana was also bard bit with
Interstate 65 nearly shut down
bet ween Indianapolis and
:Louisville and Interstate 69
clo~ed between lndianapolis and
Fort Wayne. That city bu 29.7
inches of snow in January,
breaking the 1918 record of 25.4
inches. Kokomo received 20
inches of snow Sunday.
The· National Guard started
shuttuns n~ and .-OC&ors to
hospitals, and 300 &*>Pl• \Mre
strandect at 13 ar•orle•· In
central and nortbem lacftana.
Ne•rlY 75,000 lnd.lua students
sot t.be day ot1 wdn Purdue,
Ball Stile, Ind.lane Sta~. 8uUer
and Indiana Central untvenltiea
canceled' clUHS fot today.
The government, which has
seen rioting erupt the ~ast three
times It tried to raise prices,
look extra precautions today
agairust demonstrations.
Witnesses reported groups of
s p ec ial police move d inld
seve ral Warsaw hote ls .
TJave lers said the main
nl>rth·south highway between
War saw and Katowice was
closed to civilian traffic ,
possibly to clear the way for
troop movements.
But observers sa id the
martlal·law crackdown Dec. 13
would likely let the regime
impose the price bikes without
major immediate prot4!sta.
Rumors drculated that
workers would try to stage some
sort of "non·political" protest in
lt.'8 war again
at gas pumps .
MOI)FSI'O (AP> -Much to
the delight of motorists, Modesto
independent gasoline station
operators revived a form of
warfare that many people
thoowht was all but extinct. .
Gas wars! USA, Gasco and lfegal
stations dropped their prices ·
almost hourly to altf"act
customers llhtng up wherever
the--1>est pump price w as
·displayed.
Prices for a gallon of reeular
gasoline plummeted 18 cents
below the average for major
brands before bottomlrlg out at
$1.079 by the end dl the business
day .
U.S. to pay
NEW YORK <AP> -The
Reagan administration baa
decided to repay '71 mllll~ tJ:lat
Poland owes to American ~·
but will not require the b&DU to
formally declare Poland in
default, 1be New York Tim~
reported today.
OftANOl COAST
DlllyPilll
CIHllftecl ......... 114,IMJ>Mn
Aff off* d1p11'tmenta M2'-4J2'!
The demonstration lhat police
broke up Saturday in Gdansk,
the Baltic coast birthplace of
Solidarity , apparently was
unrelitted to the sweepjng price
hikt;s for food and other goods,
the sharpest increases in 37
years of Communist rule in
Poland. Tht! government blamed
the Reagan administration's
Solidarity lJ)ay Pr opaganda
campaign fAUte clash between
young demon~trators and police.
PAP, the official news agency,
said it was "no coincidence"
that the demonstration occurred
on lt\e same day as U.S.·inspired
pro·Solidarity d'emonstrations in
America and Western Europe .
FEDERAL WAY. Wash. <AJ»
A woman who forgot to tum
off the water while filling her
waterbed called for help from
f1ref1ghters a fter the b ed
expanded into a giant balloon authorities said. ~ '
The waterbed "seems to have
gotten three times the size they
normally are," said Joe Suyer,
dispatc her for the fir e
department in Federal Way.
south of Seattle.
"When she discovered it, it
had pretty much taken up the
full room. She decided to run to
· the phone to call us. She wasn't
too thrilled about the wtiole •
thing ..
.........
...WARD INLL80ARD -A billboard alona F!actno Coast
Hhthwal In Malibu olfers S20.000 reward for information on The hi ·•i1d·run driver who killed Sutt Latham Nov t . ise1 . Mtu Lat.ham's parents and rrtends ortered the money
ln hol)ft that1: Wltne s would step forward. a ,
there's,s0me dough in it."
Ms Stanford ran for council
five limes under t he name
Marsha Owen before winning
election under her best·known
name in April 1972.
The day after her election to a
second four·year term m March
1976, she announced she would
not seek a third term.
"I don't want any more," she
s aid. "I think I've done a goo_d
job."
As top vote-getter with l ,rol
votes in the 1976 city election.
Ms. Stanford -as custom
dictated -was elected lllayot
by the other council members
that year. Sbe served as vice
mayor in 1978.
In a 1970 interview, Ms
Stanford reminisced about the
days of 'oper1ting a house or
prostitution.
"I was arrested 17 times,'' she
said, "but I only had to pay a
couple of $250 fines."
Three years later. she told a
reporter that she came to San~
Francisco in the 1920J with an
at.torney she met and married In
Ventura.
·'I wa~ doing a little
bootlegging down there
(Southern California>." she
said. "I didn't teU him that."
About six years before her
firs t election. Ms. Stanford
authored a book, "Lady of the
House.~· ln wblch she described
her exploits as the "empress" of
1144 Pine St .. San Francisco.
"I didn't set out to be a
madam, .. she'wrole, "any more
than Arthur Michael Ramsey
... figured som ed ay on
becoming Archbishop o f
Canterbury.
·'Things just sort of developed
for both or us, I guess ...
Of her childhood, Ms. Stanford
wrote that her family wu "so
poor. we • envied everyone we
ever heard of.•·
Notinl in the prologue to her
book that she had lost bel' first
two campaigns for a Sausalito
council seat, she vowed to run
"again and •l•ln untU I make lt
. . . if only to tlear m1aelf
addressed a a 'Madam
Councilman.' "
In 1973, sbe waa na~ed • • o u utandin t No rthtrn
c a I trornla CltlUn " and
recocnized tot her c:ontnbuUon
, to Sausalito and her work wtth
the American Cancer Society.
"RespectabUit,y bu come to • me now." ahe wrote. "But u for my llfe, I wouldn't elian,. a dAlY
ot lt.". Sb• delcrlbed her "promotion
of man'• re~ hldoior lpaft u
thoroulbb' lelitlma~ IMlltn• and ....,, • 11'lm,W ......,,
even a toelal Ml'vic•."
Morality, IM ~l~:la JUI& a
wetd tbal deaaibll UM ftrna&
fa1bkift Of coDduct. .. ,
Nonetheless, there has been
an increas ing pattern of c~itic.ism from the president and
liis aides in recent weeks about
t'be way the bank has been
managing the nation's money
supply. Instead of pursuing a
slow and steady course, the Fed
has swung wildly over the past
year be twe e n e xt r eme
clampdowns on credit and
enormous incre a s e s the
administration argues. '
Volcker, who may have more
say about the course of the U.S.
economy than a n y ot her
individual , ha s stated
repeatedly that, he has no
intention of backing off the
Fed 's ant1-inflat1on course
d~spite the economic pain it is
causing the nation and the
political discomfort 1t may
cause Reagan
Volcker also contends the Fe~
is doing its best lo regulate the
money supply but that the
economy is too complex to
ac hi eve the we ek·lo-wee k
precision the administration
see ms lo be demanding
If that doesn't satisfy Reagan,
there's not much he can do until
the Fed chairman 's t e rm
expires in August 1983
By des ign , the Fe d was
established by Congress in 1913
to be' relatively free of political
pressures from the Wtrite House ~
Thus. while the president ' appoints members to the bank,
he cannot f ir e them And
Volcker has given no indication
he would consider resigning
before his 4.year term ends
Voleker was appointed by
former President Carter
DIES AT 78 Sally
Stanford. former madam
a nd mayor. has ~uccumbed
of heart f ailurc at th..e age of 78
Stoc~ price
decline
halts rally
NEW YORK <AP) -StOck
prices declined sharply today.
bringing ·an abrupt halt to last
week's raUy.
Trading slowed from 'the
active pace set Thursday and
Friday.
The Dow Jon~ averaee of 30
industrials. up JS.07 pointa last
week, fell t.# to lel.11 in t1Je
first hour today·
Losers took a ~2 lead over
1alners amoni ReW YOik at.an Exchance·listed ,.._,
The upswlnl ln MR .....
last week wJS attn-..t putty
to hopes for a decllM la laterest
rates. • But that optlmllm autteNd a
setback Friday when the
Federll! Reserve luued weelt1y
statl1ttc1 1bowln1 a 'ID•ch
smaller decline In the --.,.
supply than analyttl e:a~
Jnteresl rata ln the bon4 and
short·term moner marketa n>ee
sharply after the Nl>C)rt. Al'4
there was.speculation that bMb
might soon ratM \Mlr prime
lending rat.ea, wbk!lt DOW It.and
at ts~ percent.
' Faat brOltenf
MOSCOW {AP> -So•tet
autborltlea ••1 a ••'9•• PenteeoataU.t wa.G •~el a
buta .. ltrikt...~. luppoft.
............ to the Uldted ..... b•• brok• her fut. llut ._
NlaUYel HY'tt'I ••a••·"'
J
'
,
RUPTURE -This disc on a pressurized relief
tank broke las t Mondav at the Ginna nuclear
power plant in Ontario. N Y The disc
released 1,680 gallons of radioactive watet·
onto the floor of the reactor containment
building
Scary, hut not TMI
Lessons from '79. accident -paid off in Ginna emergency
ONTARIO, N.Y. <AP > -Roy
Zimmerman, a federal inspector
at the R.E. Ginna nuclear plant,
was in t)is office when flashing
lights on his phone showed a
"hotline" call was being made
from the plant to the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission.
He picked up the phone,
learned the plant had an
emergency, and rushed upstairs
to the control room. His dash of
35 or so seconds meant
Zimmerman arrived at the
control room about 71.i"J minutes
after a tube in the plant's steam
geneP.a\or began leaking
tadioactite water.
· Three years earlier, it took 7'h
b.ours for the first NRC official
fo reach the control room at
Three Mi I e ·l s I and in
Pennsylvania as the worst
accident in the hi s tory of
commercial nt!!!lear power was
unfolding. ·
The difference between 7'h
minutes and 7 ~ hours is one
gauge of why. the emergency
last Monday at the Ginna plant
near Rocheste!', N . Y ., was
nothing like TMI.
That the emergency did not
escalate -in reality and in the
minds of the public -may be
partly because of scores or
chan1es in NRC rules as a result
of the March 29, 1979, a(!cident
at TMl.
"Unfortunately, TMI was our
training ground," said Richard
Sullivan, a spokesman for
Rochester Gas & Electric Co.,
which operates the Ginna plant.
The accidents were alike
superfiCially but had different
causes. At each, puffs of
radioactive steam were released
Into the air, and a p0tenUally
dangeroas steam bubble formed
in the reactor vessel.
However. at TMI it took days
to figure out what was wrong. At
Ginna, operators knew almost
instantly. TMl's radioactive
core was damaged. Ginna's was
not.
At Ginna, measurements
showed little radiation escaped
outside the plant. and NRC
officials said the operators
resJ)onded i>roperly.
And at TMI -unlike at Ginna
the hot bubble of radioactive
vapor threatened to lead to the
worst Possible nuclear accident
-a meltdo,wn.
That is not to say everythink
went right -or is right -at
Ginna. Some workers were
slightly contaminated with
radioactivity. Some gauges -
not important ones -gave
wrong inlormatiob. fhere were
minor glitches in disaster plans.
There was confusion in getting
information about the accident
to an anxious public.
Glnna, too, dramatized a
problem at TMI and dozens of
other nuclear plants nationwide
-the potential for breaks in
steam generator tubes -that
th e NRC and the nuclear
industry has not solved.
NRC Chairman Nunzio J .
Palladino has said more tube
ruptures can be expected, and
Harold Denton. a key NRC
official, has said there have
b een three other steam
generator ruptures as serious or
more serious than Ginna.
The accident at the Ginna
plant was a "site emergency,"
the first use of that second-most
serious nuclear alert since TMI.
but was never upgraded to the
"general emergency" that TMI
became.
That was partly because the
accident was different in nature.
It could also involve up~raded
requirements and, possit>Jy .
luck.
The accident happened at
midmorning, not at 4 a.m. as
TM I had. If the accident had
escalated, the wind was not
blowing toward Rochester 16
miles away.
I
More fog expected
California .......... FORECAST
Coastal
F•lr lhrou9h T11eMf•Y ••<•Pt
Wkhy i.te nloM -.. ,,, m«ntnv
f09M«COMI
COHlel hl9" 5', low U , Water,.
lnl•nd """ 7J, loW 0 .
SANTA MONICA llAY AlllEA
LONG BEACH ANO O ltANGE COUNTY METROPOLITAN AREAS
-F•lr 111rou911 TuHd•Y nupt
Wl<lly l•te n19ftt •nc:I Hrly m«nln9
f<l9 nur co-st Owrni911t IOwt • to .e. H19M •Ml91"9 lrom near 60 et
bucllff to neer 70 lnl-l!ltewhen. 119111 verl•llle wind• _________ _
tlwOQ911 .....,. eac• -I to wHt wlndl t-IS '"'°b elte...-1
_,,.,, ----Uft ....... l
......., v.ntiw• -s-t. -k• ~ le~ wlftdt t0.20 'noh
Wffttrty -• 1-2 ... t. Petclly 109
over 10utller11 ••l•rs lllrouoll
T.,.Ml•Y moml119. 01"erwlte, felr
lftrllll9ft tor1'9111.
T emperaturea ........ ,
NATION "'Le ~. • ,. 17 .17
" 17 SS 1'
2• 1' ,. "' '3 st SI
SJ .a
SI • O'
'3 "' .. II ·II ·.01
Je JI
4.J »
10 .. ,. II to
7t t7 n '° ,. .. 11
20 17 10 u ,.
,, 26 .t7
J7 ,. uo
•• la .22
.. 21
Ciliil ···" ~
Nalflvllte
NewOrle-
New Von.
Om all• Orlendo Plllllo ...... e ,._,.
PllttllurVfl
Piiand, Mil
Pll•"4. Ore
Rapid City Reno
"k ""'OllCI
Sall L•'•
Sen Ole90
St D IAO
60 50 .OS
.. " .11 10 ~ .. .
4S M u 41 o XI ..
M 11 so •2 ... ,, 12
., •. 01
.. JO .. "' • ·1
21 \I
1 ~
,. 21
1' Sell Fr..,
SHttle
., 0
.. J7 IJ u 11 1.a ., ., ·• ·1• .. ,. .. ,.
1• ••
S7 .. JI 21 I ff .. ,.
-• t1 1• 21 10
6S lS ,.2'2l0
7J ..
St 11 1.01
.. JJl lJ 17 71
1' 10 II
• ·12
SI LOUlt
SI P·T•mc>e St Ste II.Urie
S90!<-Tuc-Tutu
W•ll>lft9tn
Wk hlW
CALIPOllNIA
APl)M Valley
81Unfl•ld .. ,,._
llHumonl 819 B•er ll~-1"'1tM
1 -10 ,. JO
60 J:I
27. 24 07 60 4 01
21 1t
., 11
60 •
.. «I ., ,.
•• 1 .. 11
12 •
Sllf RIPOii •'.·• ..
lliiilll•,....iililifiii.•n.._ ........................ ....
cei.lln• St ..
Eum• S2 • ,.,.._ S4 •
Lek "'""""'"" •I t• LeftC•ltM .. • LOft99Hdl ., ,,
LOSA--n • aMrt'"" .. ti • -ovi. 74 IS Mofttt_.IO 70 .,
Moni.rey ti C2
Mt.Wiiton ,. ,.
NffdlM '7 •1
NewPort 9-11 " • OMletld ti ..
Oftterlo .. If PeWdlfte 71 ..
P-R*" .. f7
111 ..... klt 41 • Red lluff .. II ,..._.City 62 • Se<••""'* S7 II
Sllllltff ., *2 SefllerNnlN 70 u
SeftGHrttl 1• • ~~-l2 4S
SeflJ-., u
Selll•AN •• • Sant• BMllW• •• ,.
Sentelo\er141 11 *2 Sani. Moftlc• 10 .. Stockton .. • TeNeVeltn 47 • Tllermel ,. .. Ttwr811« .. ..
YIHfte u 4
Tide a
TODAY
SKOftd loW t :ISp.m It
TUUOAY
...,. ..,... .... "'"'""" 1:1s J111. i.t A.. Mil• Dlt l'lnt '°"' 1'1 .. a"". • ..
I I I 2
0..U..wT-,,. Lltt1e c11.,,...
2
2 2 J
10
IO
IO IO
We~re Listening.•·
W le<Ofld llllft •:20.1t1. . I. I S.<ondtow t :So11111.1t1. t ,I
: Sun rl-•·• a.111. Tueedey, wt•
W S·24p.m.
MOen "'1 1 • 11 1 "" TU!flM'f, rl .. u ·U1111.m.
C 11What do you like about the Dally Piiot" What don't you like?
t a lhe number below and your me11aae wUI bt rtcordtd,
ranacrtbed and dellnred t.o lbe appropriate editor. • •
The same 24·hour answenn1 Hrvice rn•Y IHt used t.o rtCord let·
ters to the editor on. any topic. M1Uboit contribu&ors mu1t lnelu4e
the111r name and teltp~e numbtr ror vettnuuon. !Ito clrrulat._ ca •.pleue.
Ttll us what's on your mind.
' .
-------------~-----------------._......~
0,.r)ge Coat DAILY PfLOT/Monday, February 1, 1982
Gas
crwich
plans hit
SANTA MONICA (AP> -The
United States -and California
-are woefully unprepared for
another oll 1horta1e, a state
ener1y official said al the
conclusion of a three-day
exercise at the Rand Corp.
"The country ls very
lll·prepared, and it's almost
criminal seelnc that we've 1one
throu1h this ln 1973 and aaain in
1979 ," California Energy
Commissioner Emilio E .
Varanini told reporters at a
news conference following the
three-day simulation al the thl.nJc
tank last week.
Varaninl said ·another
international oil shorta1e would
produce Immediate jumps in
gas-tine prices and what he
termed "gre at· disaffection
among the people."
The simulation was funded by
th~ Energy Commission to study
what would happen In the event
of another oil crisis. In the
study, &el amid 1982, oil imports
are cut by four million barrels a
day because of an "event'" in
the Middle East.
"We believe there Is a high
probability of having an event in
the next 10 years," Varanini
said. "You could see motor
gasoline prices go up by a
dollar. There could be hysteria
in the spot markets.''
Varanlnl noted that the
Reagatr administration's
reliance on the free market
sys tem and the prepared
dismantling of the Department
of Energy would mean ditrerent
resultS In another oil shortage.
"ltather than having lines.
you would begin to have prices
going out or sight and huge
amounts of money going to the
oil c;pmpanies," he said. "This
would have to be recaptured by
a windfall profits tax or there
would be great disaffection
among the people."
Varanini s aid the study
showed that governments on all
levels are not ready for another
oil shortage: He said stockpiling
of. oil would be helpful but
expensive.
''Stockpiling is everybody's
sweetheart, until it comes time
to pay," he said.
Thirty-three government and
corporate officials participated
in the s tudy, with the
participants divided into teams
simulating natiqnal, state and
local authorities .
Recommendations developed in
the simulation will be presented
b y Rand to the Energy
Commission.
Varanini noted that
international agreements calling
for oil sharing among count.ries
could accentuate the problems
of a shortage in the United
States. He said this might also
hurt the nation's trade deficit.
Population
in China up
PEKING <AP> -The num-
ber of births in China last
year exceeded birth-control
targets and if the trend Is not'
stopp~d the population of 1
billion will incre~e by mbre
than 200 million by the end of the
century, a Chinese magazine
aaid.
The official magazine Outlook
aald the birth rate was rising
a1aln because of lax
famlly-plannin1 work in some
reslons and a 100 percent
increase In the number of
marriages of younger couples.
1
....., .............
BAB~ ,TEA~ -Ors. Howard and Georgeanna Jones ate w~r~mg witn test-tu~ baby technique a~ Noliolk Clinic ljl
V1rgmfa. They were m Newport Beach Fndav for·a mediclil
conference. r ,.
' ..
Test-tube method ~
I def ended by doctor-
By JOEL C. DON
Of ... D .. ty,....S-
A co-director of the nation's
Cirst test-tube baby clinic has
lashed out at anti-a bortlonist
opposition to the new· medical
technique.
Dr. Georgeanna Jones, of the
Eastern Virginia Medical School
in Norfolk, told a Newport
Beach press conference that in
vitro fertilization offers hope t<>
infertile c-o!.lplt:s who have
exhausted other avenues or
medical science. She challenged
claims of some groups that
doctors would practice a form of
selective abortion using the new
procedure.
The in vitro technique allows
"life to go on because (with>
these patients there is really no
chance for the sperm and e11 to
come toaet.ber In the fertilization
process," she said. "They
(opponents) equate that to
something that is evil. It is not
evil; it has a potential for being
good."
In vitro fertilization is a
process in which sperm and egg
are combined in a la&>oratory
dish and then transfer~d to the
woman's uterus. Dr. Jones said
the technique is especially
promising for women who have
blocked or missing Fallopian
tubes, the channel for the egg to
pass from the ovary to the
uterus.
The first American test-tube
baby wu born Dec. 28, 1981 at
Norfolk General Hospital. The
baby, Elizabeth Jordan Carr.
was delivered by Caesarean
section' and was declared a
healthy infant of 5, pounds, 12
ounces. Her mother's Fallopian
lubes had been sur1ically
removed as a result of problems
with three earlier umuceeuful
pregnancies.
Th·e pioneering work of British
Ors. Patric!k Steptoe and Robert
Edwards led to the world'• first
test-tube baby. Louise Brown,
'born in 1978.
Since .then , in vitro
fertilization clinics have opeDed
in Australia as well as Texu,
and Los Angeles. A test-tUbe
baby is expected at County-USC
Medical Cent.er in May or June.
Dr. Jones said.
The No.rfolk clinic was
established by Dr. Jones and ber
physician-husband, Howard, iP
January 1980 at Norfolk Geoett!
Hospital.
· 'l"he husband-and-wife team
have received more than 6,000
applic..a tions from infertile
couples, though Dr. Jones said
the clinic can handle only abwt
55 cases per year. They were in
Newport Beaeh Friday to attend
a two-day medica! conference
s ponsored by the Santa
Ana-based Southern California
Infertility Institute.
Dr. Jones said the Norfof\
clinic has achieved a 20 percent
s uccess rate with its palietlta.
She noted that under ideal
conditions , a normal couple
would have about a 25 percent
chance of achieving pregnancy.
· S h e e xpects l n vi t.ro
fertilization to exceed t~
.success ra~ for norr;nal coupl~.
since fertilization i~ carefully
monitored through the in vtUo
process.
But she said doctors are not
, destroying eggs they may feft
are inferior. Rather, ,physicimls
are giving women hormone
supplements to boost e;1
production so that more tbAD
one rertilized egg can be
implanted in the womb. Thal
procedure increase. the au~
rate, Dr. Jones said, explaiJilbc
that the chances for a pregnancy
are slim ~when only one e1i Is
used.
She said some critics beli~
scientists are ustn1 cenetJc
engineering techniques threacb this process.
''This 4.s an entirely diffef'd
field," she said, empbasiJ1*
that doctors are not tampettfts
with the 1enetic makeup of tie
fertlllsed egg.
our Polo intizrJock, ...
thi ec:ft<z;sterxi, Jl"Xl?>t, cxm2rlob1a.·
lmit ehirt bill tJ.Nr/'I'~.
~ to\le mld: bimmai-~ fbretdiw. oretnaztVR.m".
~1abla. in 25 gr<ldt a:b:s.
if' be hoe a-.e, hz, ~ juet
went ihcnaU.. -
exico in hal-d times
:~nflation, oil boom decline spell economic woe ~
·• MEXICO CITV (AP> -beef has doubled to the TheHuertaaliveaqueesedlna
.llnico'1 oil boom btou1ht a equivalent of $1.54 a pc)und ror tiny, two-bedroom walkup
touch of prosper ity to th• ordin_ary cuts and $3.47 for apartment that their eldest son
worklnc·clafa life of Carmen prime!. Chicken has gone up 20 bouaht for them as a gift In 1974
Zaquero de Huerta and be·r percent ln most markets to $1.15 for $8,000. It is ln a workers'
family of seven. But now Mexico a pound. Red snapper sells ror h o u s i n g p r o j e c t , · tt facln1 a new oconomlc $4.84 a pound, more than. twice I z tac a I co . Info n av it , a
· crunch, and bard Umea are upon th~ price orthe fish a year aco. cover nm en t ·bu l lt bJ o ck of
the Huertas ••aln. Milk went up to 57 centa a concrete slums.
Prlcea for basic foods and quart rrom 30 cents, egga to-73 "Thank God we don't pay
Hrvlces are sbooUn• up fut.er cents a pound from 39 centa, rent," Mrs. Huerta aald. "I
tban salaries, and economlsts onions to $1.55 from 48 centa, don't know how mudi we would
predict unemployment, which limes to $1.04 from 23 centa and have to pay. Who knows?"
had fallen sharply, may now fiery serrano chiles, a Mexican Rents have almost doubled
worsen. throughout the capital, and an
"lly children were used to apartment llke the Huerta.a'
••ttne meat almost every day. , 'Thank God we 1eaaes for between $211 and $228 Now, we rarely eat it. T~ a month. ·
' expensive. Pretty soon we wont don In Mexico, price increases be 't pay rent.'' even able to afford clothes," usually come at the end or the TRICKLE-DOWN THEORY Plants in a n
experimental ve1-t.i cal garden at Sonrise
Ranch in Scottsdale. Ariz .. are watered b~·
Pat Pe arson ih a trickle·down method. The
.............
Food for the Hungry operation tests
economical ideas for Third World use where
environments may be s1m1lar to that of the
Arizona desert.
• ..
Hid Mn. Huerta, 4.9. year, when most workers are
Tb' Huertas' story illustrates paid their year-end bonuses,
the problems of ordinary staple, to $1.73 a pound from 68 which range from a week's pay
Mexicans as this populous and cents. . to more than a month 's.
lmpoverisbed land, lryin1 to ·'Of course, m y grown Merchants boost prices lo reap
move into the ranks of the more children help us," said Mrs . the extra supply of mone;, to
developecS countries, is battered Huerta. Her eldest daughter is a prepare for a pending round of
by 1lobaleconomtc forces. secretary and earn s $532 pay increases for their own
Carmen Huerta's husband, monthly. employees and to build up cash
Enrique, an unskilled worker at She said her husband spends to pay their annual taxes.
a steel mill , makes the $41.50 a month getting to and Butbuslnessmensaysalesare
m inimum, wa1e, which the from work. He takes two down. Falling prices of oil and
government raised by one·thlrd "peseros" -the city's fast, such other· basic M~k:an
Jan. 1. It went up from 210 pesos privately owned, collective taxis exports as silver, coffee, copper
a day, or $8.94 a day when the -for a 90·minute trip each way. and cotton are cutting deeper
peso wu worth 4.25 U.S. cents a Otherwise. she added, "it would into national revenues, forcing
year aeo, to 280 pesos, or $10.65 take him forever" on the slower the government to reduce public
al the current exchange rate of city buses. s pending. including subsidies
3.8centstolhepeso. "Pesero" fares, which had that have helped hold down
The 8,400 pesos ($319.50) that been 24 U.S. cents,. went up in prices on basic goods.
Enrique makes each month the past four months to 38 and 46 must buy food, clothing and ce nts, <Jepend_ing o n the Tourism,anothermajordollar
other necessities for the couple distance. . earner, is down because of tl\e
and their five school-age Regular taxi drivers U.S. r ecession and because
children. Four older children disconnected their meters and prices of hotels and meals in
live on their own. have begun charging as much as Mexican resorts are higher than
Reagan plan $10 billi<>n short
WASHINGTON <APl -Aproposedfederalfund
that would finance dozens of programs President
Reagan wants to shift to the states is almost $10
billion short of what those programs now cost,
according to estimates by state otricials.
But a rederal budget official said Reagan
intends to further trim the programs before
turning them over to the states and the federal
government would eventually increase the fund to
cover gaps.
The apparent shortfall suggests. however, that
despite Reagan's promise of "no net financial gain
or loss to the states," tbey will be forced to choose
between accepting more cuts or spending more to
maintain current services.
Reagan has asked Congress to "turn back"
responsibility to the states for education,
transportation, welfare, health, job training and
other programs along with "the revenue sources
needed to fund them."
Those sources include a $28 billion-a.year
"federalism trust fund." Separate estimates by
officials from New York state andr another eastern
state, both of whom declined to be identified, said
the federal programs involved now cost about $37.5
billion a year. -·
State officials, who have seen their grants
trimmed by $15 billion since Reagan took office.
are wary of further cuts.
Like most housewives, both they can since the government in the United States, Europe or
poor and affluent, interviewed in raised the price of regular the Caribbean. ------=c-:o....--• fl b . k d • d ::s~~~~J~acse:13f:~!s~:~:t~r :;f~~~i~oer!1;uc~~~~icl~f~~~~di~~ toT~~s:r!!~~rstha:ed~~rc~f~~ a•or u out rea pre icte
living went up much more than of fuel prices and to discourage Mexico's balance of payments -'J
the government figures of 29.8 co n s umption . The city the amount it spends abroad ATLANTA (AP) -There's a significant Butdespitetherelatlvelylownumberofcases
percent in 1980 and 28.7 percent government has refused to allow against what it brings in -by a chance there will be a major outbreak of influenza 'reported to the CDC. "based on past seasons, there
last year. inc reases in taxi rares for projected $5 billion this year, lo in the United States during the next two months, still is a significant chance we may yet see major
"I don't know about politics or almost ~wo years. a total of abo\lt $16 billion. · according to a national Centers for Disease outbreaks in February and March ," CDC
what's-behind the infiatlon. All I Exporters and the tourist Control official. epidemiologist Karl Kappus said
k.now Is that .1 used to spend UIO Detectors given ind us tr Y w a nt a sh a r P lnfiuenza bas been relatively scarce ln the
pesos a day shopping a year ago devaluation or the peso to make United States this blustery winter. Before the first There have been serious outbreaks of nu in the
and It included a little piece of BALTIMORE <AP) -To Mexican goods and services of the year, only scattered cases of nu were United States during 16 of the la.st 24 years, he
meat," she said. "Now J try to combat the rising number of fire m o r e c o m p e t i t i v e reported in the country, mostly in the Southwest. said, and in eight of those 16 years, the outbreaks
spend less than 400 pesos -deaths, the city fire department internationally. But that would And since Jan. 1, the number of reported cases of didn't start until January Jn about five of those
without meat." di s t rib u't e d fr ee s moke raise the price of imports still the--disease has increased but still remains far years, the disease delayed its appearance until
In the past year, the price of detectors. further. below normaf levels. February or March. · -~--'--~-~--'----------------~---------------------~----~------~
At the Pilot, people qiake the difference .
• • . people like these in the pressroom. .
"/ think the work is
zntertsting and there 1s a
lot to team You're ktpt
busy. and I like that. And
the people are nice to
work with.'"
Scott Douthett,
Costa M~a
Scott is responsible for
·keeping paper supplied to
the Pilot's eight press units.
. ,
The press is probably the single most important piece of machinery at •
any newspaper. But any printed piece is only as good as the people who
print it. That's why we're so prpud of these seven guys. Working under
constant deadline pressure, they perform the final step in the
manufacturing process, producing a folded newspaper from ink, plates
and paper. And our press crew takes pride in what they do. They know
their work is reflected by the paper's final appearance. That's 'A'hy we
have the cleanest, brightest color photos of any newspaper around.
Getting eood people who enjoy their work environment may take longer
and cost more, but at the Daily Pilot we know it's worth it because
people do make a difference.
· · / think the Pilot 1s an
·en1011able place to work .
They treat you nght here
I wouldn't Leave Why
leave when you're happy
where you are?"
J err y 1611,
Costa Mesa
Jerry ls the press crew
leader and operates the
maip control panel on the
press.
··Even though this paptr
has been around for a long
time. the new
management makes It a
young paper I l1kt!
working in the ·go gtt It'
atmosphere thi! paper
ha.,··
Robert Cantrell,
Santa Fe Sprtngs
As prem; machinist.
Robert keeps the presses
runnin&. and protect !" a I'
million investment.
"Where ~ make the difference."
330 W. Bay St., Costa .Ml!sa 642-4321
NEWPORT BEACH• COSTA MESA• IRVINE • HUNTJNG1'0N BEAtH •
. , ... ... ..
. ...
!
r
• -.,
..
• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/M'onday. February 1. 1982
~UfilIT~
State prepares for med.fly again
Time; temperature to deterr.nine when SJ)Taying ends, quarantine to be lifted
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -
Tattered fiaas stlll flutter beside
the bridces over San Franciscn
Bay and along the freeways of
Loa Ancelea County. wamine
motorists they are enterina a
Mediterranean rrult fly
quarantine zone.
Although it's winter, and most
.files are dormant, helicopters
sometimes buz\i overhead
spraying a pesticide mist, as
California presses its $80 million
battle against the medfly.
Workers at the converted
elementary school in Los Gatos
that r serves as the command
headquarters for medfly
eradication are optimistic that
the war i5 being won .
"Certainly things are
encouraging this year as
compared to last year," said
Jerry Scribner , project
manager, in charge or the 375
workers who remain from a
summer peak of 4 ,000.
''In November (1980) we had
777 traps out and we caught 44
flies ... This year we have
caught one fly since the end of
October in California," Scribner said.
avocados, cherries, dates,
arapes, olives. peaches, pearl.
and some types of tomatoes.
ThousandJ of homeowners in
San Jose, Palo Alto, MountJ.in
View and nearby communities
stripped their gardens of fNlt.
Helicopters sprayed hundreds of
square mile~ weekly and
hundreds fled their homes on
spritying nights, fearlnc the
chemical would affeC14 their
health.
Still the insect spread, south
toward Santa Cruz, north toward
San Francisco and east beyond
San Mateo, Atameda, Santa
Clara, Santa Crua, $an Benito,
Stanislaus an<i LoY Aneeles -
remain under. a medfly
quarantine: a total of 3,935
square miles, said project
spokesman Ro1er Blake.
Time and temperature, which
afled the medfly'a lifespan, will
determine when malathion
spraying ends and when the
quaratnt1ne will be lifted.
''Baaed on temperature
projections, we expect to
complete the two llfecycles and
end spraylna by the end of .. . "The . areas we stopped spraying
-in November have remained cleati."
Oakland to Livermore -and March in Los Angeles County
even to an apricot grove in the and complete three lifecycles
San Joaquin Valley, the state's and declare an end to
riches t farm area , and to eradication efforts in May,''
backyards in the San ..Gabriel Scribner said.
ValleyeastofLosAnge•. The biggest difference·
The area sprayed weekly from between this year and last is the
the air cUmbed to 1,300 square presen~e of traps -about
miles. Several states -Florida, 130,000 of them statewide and
Texas and Geotgia -and Japan 30,000 in the core medfly area -
imposed quarantines on designed to let medfly fighters
California crops to halt the fly's know immediately when flies
spread. emerge.
agriculture was in one apricot
orchard in Stanislaus County,"
said California Farm Bureau
spokesman Clark Biggs.
However, Fresno County .
which lead5 the nation In farm
production, "documented a loss
of $19 million,'' said county
,\gri,oollure Com missioner
Cosmo Insalaco
To wipe out the pest, Scribner
said, the stale and federal
overnments have spent about
$80 million. Before the bug 1s
eradicated, the figure "could go ·
up to $100 million."
With the medfly dormant and
th4: state's eradication program
running smoothly. outside
·pressure on the state's farm
industry has eased.
Texas, which fought for and
lost -the right to ban
unfumigated California produce.
never found a single medfly
during intensive searches of
irucks entering its bord~rs.
Japan recently .agreed to drop
fumigation requirements for
produce from unquarantined
California areas.
The medical furor over
malathion bait als o has
subsided.
Scribner thought the little
blue-eyed insect was wiped out
last winter, too. But in June an
infestation erupted In Sa0nta
Clara County and Gov. Edmund
G .. Brown Jr reluctantly
ordered pesticide spraying over
the populous area.
By fall, the aerial spray zone Despite controversy wbicb "There may have been a few
The medfly primarily attacks
fresh fruit, with the female
burrowing beneath the skins and
laying eggs. The pesky insect
-favors citrus fruits. apples,
diminished and by mid-January, may have hurt Brown's chances cases of eye irritation and skin
only 216 square miles were being in an upcoming U.S. Senate problems but when one talks
sprayed with a mixture of the race, and warnings or danger to about sign If i cant a c ute
pesticide malathion, and then the ,,at-ate's farmers, the medfly short-term effects, there really
only every three weeks. . did' almost no damage to the weren't any," said Dr. David P.
·'The areas we stopped stale farm industry. It was Disher, a Palo Alto toxicologist
s praying in November have largely a phenomenon of and epidemiologist who headed
remained clean," Scribner said. suburban gardens.. ___ the medfly project's rpedical
All or part of seven counties -"The only place it was ever in advisory committee.
The Clumge Starts When You Do ...
The Time To Start I• Now ...
The Place Is "Powers"! Chanoe It Al/! O<ama1c:ally 1mp<ove lne way you
IOoll IHl and aiipeal IO Oll>ers We tt .malce lhe
cnal'ge Easy and Flil'I even prep.ire you 101
OPP011u,..1v
All Classes ta•IO<ad 10 your age ano needs
lN ORANGE COUNTY
3 TOWN & COUNTRY, ORANGE
John RabertPowers
CAl.L OJ! C<WE iN TOO,& v
SENIOR ClTIZENS
$1.00 Hearing Tests Set
For Newport Beach
ELECTRONIC HEARI NG TESTS will be given at
Newport Beach Hearing Aid Center
Mon., Feb. t, Tues., Feb. 2, Wed., Feb. 3
9 .\ . .l1. to ii P .'.'1 .
Heanne tests will be conducted by a Hearing Aid Specialist.
who is licensed by·the California Stale Board o( Medical Quality
Assurance as a Hearing Aid Dispenser.
Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding is welcome
to a test emploiying Che latest electronic equiement which will
determine his or her particular loss. You will see a modern
hearing aid so tiny it fits tofally within the ear,
NEWPORT BEACH HEARING AID CENTER
1600 West Coast llighwa)' Newport Beac~ 646-8266
CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT TO AVOID WAITING
One of the b~
on-time records 901t\Q
That's stvle Apprec1·
ating you and showing
we ~prec1ate vou Thats stvte Fares that ~ save vou money everv
day on every flight
That's stv1e. too A1rCal
We do more than get
you there We get vou
there in stvfe' '
..
...
'!B!'~!D
5102 5122
.,. .........
BELOVED AUTHOR Actress De bra Winger hugs statue of
author John Steinbeck in Salinas Miss Winger s tars with
Nick Nolte in the movie vers ion or Steinbeck's "Cannerv
Row ... which premiered in Salinas Friday Proceeds from
the premiere went to the J ohn Steinbeck Library (here
• 1M
ot
l W as
1al
,,,
1tU
. .,,.
.rtt
iq' •ti •
IW
13
rn
Ito
18
1h
Ill
lw
.. 111!
IT" .,,
I N I
"' . '·
..
Orange Coat DAIL v PILOT/Monday, Ftbruary 1, 1982
Regional plan could
boost bus pai"ron41Je
Obviously. the main
deterrent to bua uae today ls the
lack of adequate route coverage.
Many who uae thslr cars on the
freeways probably would be glad
to rlde the bus -if they could
just aet where they want to go.
Now Orange County has been
asked to cooperate in a plan that,
proponents claim, could link five
counties in an express bu&
system using-72D miles oftxisting
freeways within two years .•
As proposed, the Freeway
Express Transit system could
provide 24 -hour express
passenger service through a
network of 160 local transfer
stations and 32 major transfer
·stations ln Orange, Los Angeles.
Riverside, San Bernardino and
Ventura counties.
Part of the system. members
of the Qrange County
Transportat~on Commission were
told, already ls in place with
Orange . County Transit District
and Southern California Rapid
Transit Dt1trict buses extending
their service ac"°" county llnes.
Sponsors of the new plan, the
Southern California
Transportation Action CC>m·
JTiittee. say that with the ad·
Uition of 200 new buses, existing
service could be .expanded to a
seven-day, 24-hour system. with
no more than a t~minute wait
between bu.ses.
The existing freeway grid
holds the potential for excellent
~onnecting services -if enough
liuses were available. Cert~inly
the enormous volume of traffic
between Los Angeles aod Orange
counties would justify something
like the proposed express system.
And the energy saving would be
impressive.
Transit officials would be
well advised to examine this
regional plan carefully. It could
be a much more practical
solution than some or the
pie-in-the-sky mass transit ideas
that have surfac~ so far.
Remember lww it was
It must be difficult for most
Americans to realize that when
Franklin Delano Roosevelt ·
became president just 50 years
ago, there was no Social
Security, no unemployment
compensation. no minimum
wage, no federally insured bank
deposits and no such re~ulatory
agencies as the Securities and
Exchange Commission.
Nor was there government
help for the sick or the hungry
except from the private sector.
These were instituted by his
success0rs in Medicare and food
stamps.
There has to be a grim irony
in the fact that the Reagan
administration is launching the
dismantling or modification of so
many or· the social programs
initiated in the past half century
on the lOOth anniversary of
FDR's birth.
Even our present recession
can hardly be compared with the
days when Roosevelt's famed
.. one-third of a nation .. was
ill-fed. ill-clothed and ill-housed.
There is no doubt that many
of •the programs have
proliferated beyond reason; that
there is a horrendous
overlapping in some areas; that
there is cheating on health care
by both the medical profession
and the beneficiaries: that many
of the undeserving have found
ways to receive government aid:
and that loo many tax dollars go
toward administration of the
programs ratht!r than directly to
the needy. ·
President Reagan wants to
solve this ttrrough his .. new
federaH~m " which would shift
much of the burden of caring for
the jobless, the homeless and the
hungry from the fed e ral
government to the states. .
For years state and local
governments have bee.n
demanding more .. local control ..
of social programs .. complaining
about the burden of complying
with federal 'regulations and
lnsistlng they have a better
understandipg o! the needs of
theit people.
1his has sQ>me validity,
especially in the more
progressive states. B\lt people
with pre-Roosevelt memories
may have some qualms. The
federal prosrama were put into
effect for the very reuan that
local aoveroment• an"' t,he
private sector were not auumin1
the respomlblllty of Carini for
their own .
Rea1an in1i1t1 tbat leas
money, apent more wtaely. will
be of greater benefit to the
needy. This aounds rational.
Perhaps Congress, ln its wisdom.
can find a reasonable balance.
But a drastic dismantling of
the federal programs is not the
answer. The risk could be a
pendulum swing that could. in
the long run, make the cure
worse-than the disease.
Wise immigration plan
The Reagan administration's
endorsement of doubling quotas
for immigration from Canada
and Mexico makes a great deal
of sense. Ptesent law limits im-
migration from any .country to
20.-000 persons a year. The
proposal now being heard by the
Senate Judiciary Committee
would malce an exception for
Mexico and Canada, permitting
40 ,000 persons from each country
to enter the United States each
year.
Spokesmen for the State and
Justice departments have
recommended the change.
pointing out to Ure committee
·•oltl' special relationship and
common borders with our closest
neig!tbo~."
'The new figure would not
include, persons who f!OW are
entitled to apply for admission as
relatives of U.S. citizens; nor
would it affect special provisions
for polltical refugees.
The proposal. would permit
visas unused by Canadians to tse
transferred to Mexican
applicants. Since immigration
from Canada is unlikely to reach
the . newly proposed limit, this
could lead to more legal·
immigration from Mexico.
While this undoubtedly would
not slow the tide of illegal
immigration, it would make the
move easier for many Mexicans
who would like to enter the
United States under legally
approved circumstances.
And, immigrants entering
the country under official visas
undergo close scrutiny by the
Immigration and Naturalization
Service to auure that they will
be responsible, self-supporting
residents once they arrive.
The-move, if approved by
Congreu, could be a re'BJ atep in
the direction of solldif ytng our.
close relationships wltb our
neighbors on the North American
continent.
LM.·Boyd/Dubbina' law
Q. Wbat'• "Dubblm' Law1" And
wbo '1 J)utibmt?
A. Thi l••~ "Just because11ou'n
paranoid doelll'l mean tMJ n not
out to 1et you." That mucb ta IA the
record 9t bud. But t1M ldtintk1 ot
Dubb6miln't.
The llote* Ml~of Burma several 1eneriltk1al aso produced nearly all
the world'• nabl ... ud It wu tbe
rule tbere at Ule time Ulat eac:b
miner had to wear• padJoetreil mnb
case aromd hla bad oo tM Job to
prevent blm from awabOwlnc any OI
the 1t.ooe1.
Thoma• P. H•l•Y
Publllhir
-----------------. ·------•
Unlocking Ailtarctic secr~ts
WASHINGTON -Tbe future of
mankind may depend more on the
world's cltnuttic r.han1es than on all the
nuclear missiles the superpowers build
in the next 100 yean.
That's one reason why the U.S.
government spends about f10 million a
year bn scientific exploration in
Anta·rctica. The frozen continent is the
coldest. windiest .._ mogt hostil e
environment on earth. But its unique
conditions may give our scientists the
key to unlock vital mysteries or the
world's past -and clues to its futur~.
I sent my associate Dale Van Alla to
the South Pole -.. on the ice," as they
put it to report just what the National
Science Foundation is doing doWltthere.
He flew in planes and helicopters,
mushed by dog sled over the frozen
wastes and clambered !ntG k \: caves tu
talk wil.h lhe top people at the bottom or
lhe world.
THERE ARE l ,Oto Ame rican
scientists and support personnel
stationed in Antarctica during the
so-called summer from November to
January. It's a summer that most of us
simply wouldn't believe. Temperatures
of 40 and 50 degrees below zero at the
Pole are considered downript balmy.
Each person is iaauecl 35 pounds of
clothln& to offset the numbing cold, and
there are strict safety rules that must
be obeyed to prevent frostbite and
alckness. ·
Here are some or the things our
scienU.ta have learned or concluded
from their icy sojourns at the South
Pole:
-It is theoretically possible for man
to manlpuJate the weather for military
advantage -like causing a localized
ice age or other devastating climatic
cha~ges on an enemy country. But for
those who might like to blame the
Russians for the worst winter weather
in recent U.S. history, the scientists
assured m y associare that the
technology "is a long way away ...
-Drive n by necessity , the
Americans in Antarcticl\ invented a
Jl~I 11111111
promising preventive for the spread or
inOuenza and the common cold. They
call it "killer Kleenex" -a racial tissue
impregnated with iodine. It was
credited with CUttinK ir\tO ii nu epidemic
that threatened the personnel at one or
the four U.S. -bases. The only drawback
was a cosmetic one: The tissue left a
telltale stain on the nose or the user.
-Arthur L. De Vries. who has been to
-Antarctica so many times he has a
glacier named after him. succeeded in
isolatin& a W\ique glycoprotein found in
the region's fish -a built-in antifreeze
that allows them to survive in the icy
Antarctica waters. It could be
invAluable if it can be reproduced and
somehow assimilated by humans. The
substance might also be used against
cancer.
-Ma n 's .. improvements" are
remorselessly s wallo wed up by
Antarctica's ice. wind and snow. A
landing field at McMurdo Station lasts
only a couple or months. before it
breaks up and floats out to sea. A more
stable facility. Williams Field, is built
on the permanent ice shelf nearby. It
never breaks up, but it has to be rebuil
every four years anyway. as the ice
engulfs it.
At the South Pole station.
plumber Rick Healy explained a unique
problem: The base was sinking on its
own warm sewage, which had been
pumped far below in the permanent ice:
-Dr. Geor.,ge Denton, a top glacial
geologist known from his years in the
Antarctic as "the ice man," drew the
big picture literally. Kneeling on the
frozen ground, he took an icepick and
sketched a chart of the earth's glacial
periods.
THE WORW IS now in a fairly warm
period between glaciers. be explained.
·'There have been predictions by some
scientists that our present interglacial
has passed its period or warmth," he
sald. "We are trying to use clues rrom
Antarctica to solv~ this fundament'al
problem of wh, there were ice ages in
the past, witp the hope that we can
understand theln and predict them in
the future."
One method of tracing the glacial
periods is to drill for ice cores. Layers
of ice are like tree rings, allowing
scientists to compute the frequency and
duration oi.the various ice ages.
'There have been studies recently
suggesting that an asteroid hit the earth
65 million years ago, forming a dust
cloud that enveloped the earth and
brought on a sudden ice age. One result
was that the plants dinosaurs fed on
were killed. and the great beasts
perished.
Other scientific Henny Pennies have
detected a flickering in the sun's energy
lately. and warn of a possible new ice
age. To rewrite T.S. Eliot, this may be
the way t..he world ends, not with a bang
but a shiver.
If only li.f e ·could be a S9}>er Bowl
Wouldn't it be n~e if we could decide
all the questions in our lives as simply
as we decide the professional football
championship with the Super Bowl? I
think the Super Bowl is one of the best
ideas to come along in this century. Our lives are filled with uncertainty because
we're faced with so many choices and
we don't know wh.ich ls best.
A confusion of examples come to my
mind:
-la Coca -Cola better than
Pepsi-Cola? I'd like to see a clear
winner. I used to llke Co1'e best but now
lt comes In such bit bottles, l don't
drink It much anymore.
....:... WHAT ABOUT a final playoff
between Call.fomia and Florida for·the
championship of the play 1tates. I like
them both, but California ts alwaya
havln& too much rain or drouebt. and in
Florida the oran1ea keep freelln& to
death.
I -There are so many issues that need
to be decided with a Super Bowl every
year. Who'd win this year between Ford
and Chevrolet?
-Which is best, hot or cold? Let's not
I~'' -110-111-10--~.
have an)' shiUy:shallyin& with answers
like "It all depends."
-American Express versus Visa -
or vice versa! -What about a world 's
cbamptonsbip between chocolate and
vanilla? Let's fight this one out. No
1ln1le issue more clearly dlvtdea the
American public than the \Choice
between .. chocol-{e and vanilla ice
The dile~ of politi~
Thoi&ght .. at Large:
-The core of the human dilemma la
that without pol1Ut1 there can. be .no
cl\tll 1overnment, yet lt la pc;;liUca that
makes 1overnawace unc:lv11,
•hort-al1hted and HU·defuttq.
-All acwn add • couple of lneMI lo thtlr beiaht In thelr official blosrapblea.,.
-even tf ~Y an ac:\ually IUt feet tall
or over.
-Man ii the only. anlmaJ wbo fttll It
oeceuary to kUl ln order lo auure
domlnan~; all other 1'pedel •Imply
demonatrate their auperlor forH
without aertoua lrijury or death.to tbt
antaton11t.
-A. "malnalffam'' rell,._. Met '8
1.tm.ply a "cult" that h• aelde"41
1afflcient membtn lo bHOml IOd&ab'
retpedable. <A centuey •JO, 18 tMI
eountr1, Qua ken,. .lf~rmona and
Ctu1ltlan Scllat.lltl were n1ardlcl u
'1ftlta1U.'1)
. .
cream c0nes. Something has to be No. 2
in flavor.
-What about Greyhound versus
Trail ways?
-Golf or tennis? It wouldn't mean
the end or either one or them, but it
ought to be established that one is a
better game than the other.
-We need a tforld's championship
contest between capitali sm and
communism. Th~ game's being played
now but it's into overtime and we nffd
a clear winner. ·
-· Do15 or ca~?
-Gloves or mittens!
-Sklrts or pants for women?
-Which is absolutely and finally the
best thing to eat at a rut-roOa place. •
bot dog or a hamburaer?
-What Jboul • winner between
Catholic and Protestant? Maybe we.
could get God to referee.
-LETS Dl'l'ERMINE once and'for
all whlch ~Dary ii be!~1 Webster's or Funk and Wa1nall1. we wouldD't
take the pictures into consideration.
juat thedeflnlUons.
-catd.i&an or l*lJC>ver? -Republic .. ot Democr~?
-Black or whJM~ ., 1 know .tt's fooll1h to consider,
because these \sMMa wW ...... M
resolved the way th• ~ _. IM&a.
the root.,_ll chanipiODlitp. Tlli ll..-
ls everytbln110 our ""' .. INJ. 1 am only tr)'inc to point out te tlloM ol you
who don't like football, wtiJ tbolie Of ua
who do flnd it so satitf Ylns· I\ t'OIDll to
a concluakJn. A winl\er ta ct.Clared 8IMI
that's It. It'• all over. Not man1 tblntl
ln our Uv• are so almply rtlO&ved.
•
·'
\111\.11\,
.-EVENNJ~
..... Nlwt ~
CHAN..11'1 ANGELI
I Tt4I WHfn IHADOW
?He~
0.0,ge comM down with
"\he rldl -·· d'-. • HAWAII '1Va~ ··cllalf\ Of E'*lll" l!S-11ME W/llOll('t WON.a
Of JONATHAN WWTEM au.t Joi NMWh
• MO¥tl
• •I\ "Agllh•" ( 1979)
O\dllrl Holfl'l'lan. Va,,_..
Redgt.... In London In
1920 . .,.. Amerlc.lfl --
~ repotllf mee11 and
become• lnvolyed wlll!
lemed myllery wt\llf Aga·
the Chrlllle. who haa .. 11
her unl•llhlul husband
'PG'
l:aC> tD WE.COME BACK,
KOTTP
• KCeT HeWSMAT:
CALl'OANA CONGAEUtdNAL
ll!IEPORT 8 -IHESS AEPOAT
(J)QINEWI I ::::" MILLEA
* • "The Incredible
Stvfr*mg Women' ~ 1980)
Liiy Torni.n. Cher ... Gro-
din A hou..-..lle 1111<11 II
herd lo CQ9e when sh•
suddenly begins lo ahrlnk
In Ille 'PG'
(I) ~Y~l"AANK
Clofll leechman .. , ...
tut9d .. Bfoedwey pays
t~e 10 Frri !-.
the aongwtlter wnoee com
l)Oall~ -· rftponaible fOf the llUQCI-ol MJCh
levorU11 M "Guys And
Dolt." '1ld "How To Sue·
cMd In BualMM W1lhoul
Rfflly Trying."'
1:11 CZ> MOvtE
LET US_,,,.Y -Ned Beatty <left> plays
a c harismatic television evangelist
whose ministry serves as an example for
a young seminary graduate portrayed
by John Ritter in .. Pray TV... at 9
tonight on KABC <71.
londtlf\ cNlectM slowly
edQft fllmMll 1-d a . ,._,. breMdOwn 'A'
• 1:30 II 2 OH THI! TOWN
.A FMturad· lhe woman who
l)H:k• GUI the namaa for
at,...11 In lot Angeles.
actor John Houseman: a
IOOIC 11 lhc>rl Sl<lt11, Ille
health aspec11 of lligll
hM4• o a FAMIL v FEUO 0 LAV£ANE & SHIRLEY
&COMPANY
ANer loslng th4M1 1ob1, Ille
glfll decide to move 10
Calllornla
Q EYEOHLA.
A '"P lo Ille prarniate of
"Sophnnlcated Y<llea"; a
profile of Illa new .-eve
bend ··Tne Blasters ..
U CEl.E8AfTY
BUUSEYE tD M•A08°H
Wiien Ha.,..eye la denied
11t1RandRp ... t1aleel1
ha ~ •• he "'°'-• Wll<I
case history fOf an Almy
pa)'Chi.lnsl 10 study
ti) TIC TAC DOUGH
fli) MACNEH.. / l.SiRE.A
AEPOAT
Q'D OAEAT
PEAFOAMAHCES
· Brldeahaad Revisited.
rne Bleak Light Of Day"
S1baa11an r•turn1 ..&o
SCllOOI _,,.ngly bani on
1111 own destruction aNer
h•a molhet (Clalre Bloom)
ask• an Odord don to
witch over her son (Par1
p~ who llrucl. ojj In
thllt l>IM*yercta: 1911'1
Groundfloil Dey pt9dtctlon
it r....-.d. ~ H9rrl9
hula danc.e 1n ~. em
Harrie with a con1111 lat
Iha WOf 11 rncwt. of Ille
year
• MOVll • * "Killdozar·· ( 11174)
Clint Walker Jam .. Waln·
wright A giant unman~
eatlll·movlng ntaChlne
goes on lhe rampage al •
ramola con11ruc11on sight
tJl) OMAT
P£AFOMIAHCU
··erldaallaad R•vlallad
Tiie Bleak Llglll Of O.y"
Sabaallan returns lo
school a.mlt1gly bent on
II•• own dMtructlon altar
his motP,., (Clalt• 81oom)
ISie• an Oxford don to
walell over hat aon (Part
3)0
()) PU9lJC AffAIM
(H)MOW
••• "MoOern Romance··
( tlll 1) Albert Brooke,
Kathryn Hatrold A him
editor .,_ rapaetldly 10
Win b8C1t 1111 llMtt ol Iha
women Ila~ 'R'
(tJ WHATI uP AMERICA 0MOYIE * * "Thia It EMt' (1118 I) ~tery Film IOOllgt
'1ld dramatic racrNllOnl
are uMIO lo leU Illa •lory Of
EM• PtHlay01 Illa .,,d
cat-'PG'
8:06 IZ)MOVIE
• .
lonette ~A-.,. ltat~t1'11 p1c11., ..
~· In. comlC Cla.ftr• ~ hie IHlloll Md Ille Mot. and • llypootltletll
=~~ .. !*'-"""'.
(Q)MCMI
.... ~ .. (1M0)
Wther ti.tettlleu, Glenda
J-*eon. A IOffl* lntetll·
qenot a(ient II aided by an
~ tlame II\ • dodglna Iha
l<GI Ind Iha CIA, wflO are
trying to .,,_, him lrom
publllnlng l"8 IMITIOlts. 'R'
(l)MOVll
**** "Al1.,_, 8111 .. ·•
(1180) Wiiiem Hwt. Slaff
8town A HW'111td, aclen•
tlat'• oenetlO .VUGture II .,..,eel When lie OOl\dUC!i
rn111d .. ~p~d1no ·~· "*''' with llolallon tenk• end powwM lllllluetno-
'A' e..aou H<X*CAU.a
Dr 8obnon facet • mal·
practice eull .,,., • per-
111 put on • dlel beColnM
Mttou.I)'•.
• Al)AM.1J
D IHOCIHll" THI NEW
.. T rout>le In IJlopla •• Art
et1t1C Robaf1 Hughn IOOll1
I I modern llfCNtectute In
tndla, Brull, the United
StalM at>d......,..,. (R)
(li)MOYW
* * *loot "Tiie Elephanl
Man" (1990) John Hurt,
Anthony H~lna A dedl·
catad pllyelclan tekal
under 1111 wing 1 hc>frlbty
deformed man whoM Illa
unhl than had ~ spent
In cheap l1eak exhlbll•ona
'PG'
@MOVIE
* * * "EMI" ( 19791 Kurt
RullMll. Season Hubley
EM1 PrMley n-from
pove<1y and ot>ac:u<lty 10
achieve lame and fOflune
u • aupetll•• musical per.
fOfmer
10:00 8 ()) LOU GMNT
An olllclet comptalnt
agelnlt lhe T rib ClOl'MS
before a wetehOog c:om-
m.11 .. on Iha.,,_ lleed·
ed &y an W'lnenctfy Cllaif· _,
l ......
"'°'11.ESIN
AMENCAHNrr
"Wnon Huftey" Piiot. I-·
Yll end lllndacac>e •rtiln
Wilson H~ lhanta his
peraonal tll<>ughta on art
Q <ZJMOVIE
* * 'h ''Beck Roads" e
(1981) S.ity Field. Tc>fnmy
3)Q
(I} P.M. MAGAZINE
People who struck oll In
**'It ''Carny" (19110)
JOdle Fatter, Gary 9uMy
An adven1urou1 young
women join• a cernlllal
troupe and 1e11n1 about
Iha hidden -Ilona end
truslratlona balllnd Illa
-'-~ ot 1he
~Ofmera 'R'
• * "The tncr•dlbta
Shrinking Woman" ( 11180)
Lily Tomlin, Chan.a Gro-
din A nouMWlfe finds 11
lllrd lo cope wllef1 She
wddanly begins to shrink
In 11:ra. ·po·
10:30 g) INDEPENDENT
NElWON< NEW& fD TOM8TOP9AAD
LM Joon. A hooker and a
down-on-hie-luck bo•e•
meet '1ld l!Md -t In
~cf S new llf• IA'
7:00 I CM NEWI .CNEW8 .,,.,.,., DAVI AGAIN
8MCNRWI I YOU AIN<EO FOR rT M•A•e•H
e _J , ~ • visit ltom
1111 OMS OOleee f~ who
PfOCeedl lo 1l4eY Pf~Ucal
)OkM on the M•A•S•H
m9mbtlra
I ~·Wll.D OVEAEASY
<>-st COf'lllOjan Mor9.,
Amat«csam (R) o
6i) DCK CAVETT
a-1 At1hur Mllcl*t
()) TIC TAC 0000..
9 Bfl"ErrAJHMEHT
TONIGHT
Per1 1 ol an lflll<Vlew with
Rlc:Nfd BY<lon
Qt THE MUPNTI
Guett· Judy Colhna
(C)MOVIE
* • "Supll(dome" ( 1978)
David J•na11n. Donna
Mlbt A lenatle win atop al
no111rng 10 kMP a football
team lrom winning Jiii
Suc>er Bowl
<O)MOVIE
* * * "Tha Oll•nca·
(1973) Sean Connery. Tra-
W1' Howatd wnlle lradllng
1fown a child mc>Meler, a
'"-" bacllyarda. 1118 l '1
GroundhOg Oay prediction
•• <eview.d (.1]! YOU ASKED FOR rT
8.-00 I) Mil MEAUH
When l.ac llanda up two
girts on the ... ma day,
Merlin Mnd1 Alex lnlQ. the
high ICllOol lo glll8 Iha boy
a IMla ol hll own rnedi-
~ D QI UTTl..E HOU8& ON
THl!MAIAIE
An llOar'ly rela!M -10
gaf custody ol ,,_ f//ftd
~rac:;>
" MOVtE * * * • ·Nbtorlou•"
( 1946) Cery Gt ant, Ingrid
B«gman An AtMricaA
undercover agent pet·
IUad.. the daughter of 8
trait<>< to tnflltratl a ll9llO
of N&tl6 NYlng In South
America
G ltl 1*T'I
INCAEOl8lE
Featured. 1 bllnd lypitJI
SOl\lft Ille Rubik 'a cube
puuJe in under live min-
ute•, two 111m1 ol all!·
lain, each carrying a
thtaa·badroom l!ouae,
compete 1n a 50-yerd-
dalt! U COU . .f.OE
BAIN<ETBAll
. Pee I 0 An~on• Ill Stan-
ford
• P.M. MAGAZJNE
·CHANNEL LISTINGS
9 KNXT (CBS)
9 KNBC (NISC) e KTLA (lncl.J e KA8C(A8Cl
e KFMB ICBS)
IJ Kt4J·TV (Ind.I
e KCST IABC)
·e KTTV (Ind ) e KCOP·TV (Incl ) e KCET IPBS)
e KOCEl~l
CUl On-TV
J l Z·TV
It HBO
C°J ( C i Mf'IWI II )
Cl) IWORI NY., NY
fZl (WT8S)
lf l (ESPN) () ( 5howt,,,.,.)
• SpotHQht
• (Cable News Network)
1LI'NX
llX M\,4 \\11"11 11 llS .\I>
•&,895
.1011\,0\· ·' ,o,·
' '
' j f I '11 , \I t
l:aO 9 ()) PNVATI ..........
The troape .. "°" 8'9dley
ere ordliNd 10 -~ • rapOJI., Clleclllnt Olll ,_.. ol poli*d ..__, ..... •AU.•1Ml~Y
OIOria ......,ecta IN _..
.,.., ..... OllOI • ....
job of IWlr'"8. _. ~ .. °* .......... .
, ....... job ... ..
~ ... ·-ZLIW/ WIHOV9t
~ ....... 911d ... vw.. ,,,,..., __ .,.,.
form l••tlloven'1
"Cotlolan a-Me."~
82 and 8~ No. 2 In
0 Major. ()put 38.
e:oo•(J) M•A•l•H
The unit la -joyed &y a
9UfPflM lhiptMnl of lrllll
iroJMOVIE
"World War Ill" (Part 2)
(Premiere) Rock Hudaon,
David Soul. Tile American
and Soviet head• of state
"-1 In ICeland In a 1111·
d1tct1 attempt 10 atop .,.,
trom bt...,lng OU!
8 9 P'MYTV
John Roner ttera u a
young mlntller wflo It
forced 10 er-.,.._
Illa C<>nvMllOnll churc:ll
end • rnlnls1ry of the
alnltavee
I MEflV GM'AN
WrEIN/
l&THOVIN
l,IC>nerd -&emateln and the
Vienna Pnlll\ermonlc per·
to rm Ba•tlloven'•
"Corlolan 0-tuta," ()put
62 and Symphony No. 2 In
0 Major, Opul 31
(C)MOYll
• e * "Whieh Way la
Up7" ( 1977) Rlcllatd Pryo.,
An lnllNlew with Ille Tony
AW•fd·Wf-r.n!ng flr,;;9;;
pla~lgflt. whlcti 1nclu0et
• aegment from one of hia
moat recant work•.
"Macltoon'a Hamt•I.
c.hoot'a Mecbelh." per-
'°""9d under • ditec11on • a.n °'9go State LJnMr.
llty.
-~ .. 'JAi iMNrr
''Wlaon Hl.wtey" Piiot, ....
~ end ~ at1llt
Wlilofl Hurter .... hit
penonat lflougf1ta on ltt
uaiteeC1>1t1QIJ ...
• Ml\MDAY NGHT
Holl: George Carlin
au.t: INiy '"'-ton.
• KQ.IM
I lME-'&~il"IL-dKOft&
IAHPON> NfO ION
• DO<CAVITT
Ouaet: Barbara Cook.
(Perl 1) ID 8IOIN WITH
G0008YE
"Exit• And Entrancaa··
Famlty partl"llS can be u
shocking 11 a divorce
involving a 3-montll-olcl
baby or u lull ol mixed
emotions aa • native
Ame<lcan woman leaving
Ille ree«vallon for nur-·
training
'C)MOYll * "KloncMla F-" ( lSllO)
Jeff Eut, Rod Ste1D9r. Tiie
young Jedi London ....
out 10 ... his lortufle dur·
~:::'Aull!. 'PO'
• • • "Mqtel t;W" ( 1980)
Aoty Celhoun, Paul Untie
Farmer Smith -hla t>aduoedl mocel to pro-
cwe and fettan the chM9
bu\ high quelty !Met he
ne81da for his MUMge
~·R'
(J)MOYll
• • • "Caddythack"
(19801 8111 Murray. Rodney
COnstrudlon
-~
.available at
Heritage ~k.
·~lal
. c.ommerdal Bulldln&s;
'l'8lleOuf commttmrJ• required alon& with leases.
. .
Orange Cout DAILY PtLOT/Mondey, February l · 1 $82
TUBE TOPPERS
•
KTLA 0 s·uo
Top-notch espionaJ(e
Alfred Hitchcock.
··Notorious
tale dirt'cted h~
KNXT fJ 9:00
unit is overjo~·ed
fresh eggs.
"M•A•S•H " Ttw
with a i;hipml'nt or
KABC 1J 9:00 "Pra~·. TV .. John
Ritter plays a young minister forced to
choose between a conventional chur ch
and a ministry of the airwaves, See
photo at left,
KNXT 8 H>·()()
official complaint is
Trib.
o.ng.,fleld The demenl·
ed gtouncie.-«...-of •
1wanky country olub
Wlgll •at IQllNI Ille
gooller"l lnflabltlng Illa turl
'R'
"LQu Grant. .. An
made against the
., INOUIHOUfT
HETWOAK NEWI OMOVIE
11:*19 ()) QUINCY
* * Mehl1n And H-erd'
( tlllO) Paul LaMa1. Juon
Rot>atdl An olh-IH
unknown gaa station
attendant Claim• 10 be Illa
rlghtlut heir lo Howatd'•
Hug11· b1111on doll••
...... 'A:
Quincy trlet lo prove that
Ille lku" of an apperant
llomlc:lde befOOgl IO I
lebor lllder wl'IO dltap·
~lted •-year• bef0t•
(R)
D 8THEBUTOF
CAMON
Gue111· Mariella Hartley,
Rooney Dangertleld. Rob
ert Goulet. Dr Lendon
Smith (RI 'G O A8CNEW8
NIOHTUNE GJ THI 000 COUPLE
In ordlf to win Iha 11\!0f of
hit new girlfriend. Otcar
~ on a neelneae klcil
W L..OVI. AMEIUCAN ITYll
"love And Tiie Nelgllbo<''
A young couple 1NMt an
apartrMnt to get away
lrom a mother-ln-l.tw 8D t<cn NEWUEAT:
CAl.FOfMA
~
MPOffT 811 CAPTIONED A8C
NIW8
(%)MOW
* • • ··T11a Boy Friend"
( 1117 t) Twiggy. C11<1a1opher
Gable Wiien an 11111111111
11ag1 manager rlj)lecee
Ille tamale leed In a lllOW
Siie bec:otTlel a •t•• ano
llnda romance u -I
tt:40 • (I) &ANA.CS<
eanac.k la hired 10 inve•ll·
gat• wnari a mllllon dollars
In c..n dl1appeat1 from •
Lu Vegas caatno (RI
12:.a lS) MOVIE
* * "SwMI Sugar" A
YOU"ll glrl. for~ to•work
on 1 jungle p1anta11on.
mak•• ptena 10 -k her
revenge agalnll the man In
Charge 'R'
1:00 D MOVIE
'Sioux City Sue" ( 11146)
G-Aulry
tD 8PEAKOUT
g) MOVIE
* • '"t "The Viall" ( 1964)
l<lQnd Batgman. Anthony
Quinn A -lllly woman
otters a 08f*OUS endow·
-man• 10 hat home town 11
Illa rllldenta agt.. to
muroar hat former IOver
CIMOVIE
• • "Perlormanca ( 1970)
J-Fo•. Mick Jagger A
'100d on the run from Ille
mob 11nc11 unc:tuary in the
home of a burned-out for·
mer rock llat 'R'
1 :OI 00 MOVIE
11:S6 \1:0 MOYIE
* '."t "Tiie Jazz Singer"
( 1980) Nall Diamond. L•u-
•aoc:. OlillMlf A New Yotk
canlOt br .. ks with tamlly
trlldlllOn In his d-• to be
~ tm1elc allr 'PG'
• • ··The 1ncrad1ble
Shrinking woman·· (11180)
Liiy Tomlin, Cllarlee Gro-
din A hou-lf• find• II
hard to 0099 wflerl Ille
iwddenly beQlna to thrlnk
In ai.te 'PG'
1:t0 U IENTERTAINMENT
TOHIOHT
Patt I of an 1nterv1-with
Richard Sulton
-Ml>NIGHT-Qt NEWI
CZ' MOVIE
12:00 8 SHA "-' NA • * • ""' "The Howling··
pgs11 Dee W:Hcca.
Pattlcil Mecnaa A woman
raoorter la menaced by e
k'rll4w whO -• to be a
-awo11 'R'
Gu.I Adtlenne Batbaeu D O MOVll
* * "'Rebel Of The Road"
( 1979) Gregg H41nry, Grant
Gooelaw A fr-."""8aling
young man talll• 10 ltw
open roed lat a 0811·
llrtfldlnQ run ageln9t "-'Y
OdOt (R) 8 MOVIE
• • "M\#0. In Peyton
~" {11177) Ed Helson
Dorothy Mlllona Tiie mur-
~ of two Peyton Pl-
rllidenta trigger• wave ol
lnlrlgue and 1u1plc1on
..tMch a.eepa Ille lawn
• "'*£ OOl IOlAS
~ta. Ben VatMn, Pia
Zadora. Bob Andatson,
Tad Ch-•
• L..OVI. AMEAICAH STYLE
"lova And Tiie Doorknob"
Errlelt T rlmble 1na111a that
he"s not •• perlect ... his
bride say1 lie 11. and ull!>M
hat 10 llnO one lault
2:000 HEWS
2:168 NEWI
tt )WHAT'I UP AME.RICA 2:201 NEW8 l:aQ WOVll
, **~ ''The Hatd Way ·
(INCi) Patric;ll Mc0ooNn
l.. V1111 Cleel A hired
8UaaMI hu lo make one
more '111 before he can
r1111a 'R' 2:169 MOVIE
* * • ·~ ''The Scarlel f>llTI·
pernel" { 11135) Laslie HOW·
llfd, Merle Ot>«on In dls-
gulM M • gentleman of
Illa Enot1111 Court. an
uncMrground hero rescues
nobleman from 1111 gulllo-
tlne during the French
Revolution.
3:00{C)MOVIE
11:*> 0 Qt LATI NIGHT WrT"H
DAVID LETTEMMN
~··em Murray, muai-
clan Werran Zavon, tlle
PNCocll Glrtt
* * *'It "Tiie Cal And The
Canary" ( 1939) Bob Hope.
Paulene Goddard In order
to COlllCI their in11et1tance.
• lam•ly mu&l spend Illa
nlghl 1n a haunted hOUse
S:06 CH) MOVIE
'
&J GENE AUTRY • • ·~ ''Sidney Sheldon's
JOHN DARLING
If ~~ott don't \\·ant
to drink
That's ottr
bttsiness
.Alcoholism Recovery Services
301 Victoria Street
Cost• MeN, CA 92627 Approv~ for Medlcer•
•
lioodlnf" ( ttn) Audfay
~"-Ben O&aer1
Attw llw llltllet Cllee. a
i.oman inllttlll one ol Ille
WOtlcr• wttl1~ t«po.
'*'ION ano .,__ 1111
1erge1 Of lier IClhemlng rel-
au..... 11 ....,, one ot
whom la a qM"datar 'R'
CZJMOVll * 19 "\.lpallcti" (11178) Mer
QIU• Hemingway, Anne
Banctoh A lac> IMl!lon
model ... 11uM111a1t1e1 ano
lruatraled by hat untuc·
ceutul allampll 10 Mn·
lance the -man wt>o raped
hit lo ptlton 'R' a:ao ()) MOVIE
* • • "Cactdyahack ..
( tlllO) BNI Murtay. Rodney
Dangerfleld Tiie Clement·
ed grounda·llMptl( ol •
swanky country club
•egaa war agein11 Illa
gopl\erl inhabl""'3 hla IU<f 'R"
4.-000MOVIE
• • '" ·sack Roads'
(1111 t) Selly Field. Tommy
l .. ~ A tloc*er and a
down-on-his-luck bOxlf
meal and lllad -I In
-ell or a,_ Mia A
4:80 IC) MOVIE
* * * "Which W•y II
Up?'' ( 11177) AIChatd Pryor
Lanelle McKM A ....
ttarvad fruit picket 11
caught In a comic crotahtt
bahween 1111 union and the
Mot>. and a hypocfllk:el
l>f'•IChet t1nd1 heaven 1n a
ladiet' choir 'R
4:35 C21 MOVIE * 1' * "Tiie 8tg Red One"'
( 1980) L.. Marvin. Merk
Hem111 A tough Armv eer
geant leads lour young,
Inexperienced recrulta Into
Iha lllolance-lllM!O fray of
WOfld War II combat PG'
Tue•dar1'•
Dar1tl•e no.,le•
t:00 ($) * * * Klclg Solo-
mon·a MlnH 1111501
Deborah Ke", Stewart
Grangat A wl'llla hunter
goldn • perty through
datkast Alrica 1n -Ch of
•woman'• husband
9-.30 g) • • "J iii Bu11er1
( 11155) Leo GOfcey Huntz
Hall
1~ <Cl • * •. Shoot The
Piano Player·· ( 11182)
Charles AznaVOUI', M11tle
Dut>oll A woman con-
vinces hat once-lamoua
tnu11cl an boyfriend t o
attempt a comebACk
10-..al> ti) *.,., "Sagabrlnll Trait"
( 1933) Jann Wayne. Nancy
Shubert A cowboy unjust·
ly lmpt1aoned IOf murdtW
nc:apea 10 hunt down the
real klllef and prove h11
ownJnnocenca
11:00 CH) * * "LoophOle ( 198 t)
Albert Finney Ma11tn
Shean A 1..t1m1n11 malllH·
mind and • rMpec1able
architect plan to axecut•
en elat>otlla bank robbery
lrom Illa -• be4ow Ille
streets ol London 'PG
CS)•••"~ OnTlla
Town (1950) 0-Kelty.
Fr-Sinatra A lrlO ot
...ic>ra team up With a thl
dr1ver and an antllropol()·
goll to hnd a 1>eaut1M ll"''
..nose pac:lura ,. d•apla>-ad
1n Ille subway
0 * * * Agatha 111179)
Dustin Hottman Vanwu
Redgrave In London 1n
11126. an Amertean ,,_..
pepet reporter "'811• and
become• Involved w1111
lamed mystery writer Ag•·
Illa Cllrlatle. wllo llaa 1811
her unfallhful huaoand
PG'
12l00 U * * ··Funny Cat Sum·
mer" ( 1973) Jllfl Dunn A
hreman and h1a !amity
compete in atock ca• r&ees
acrosa the weslatn U S
GJ • * • 'Tiie Har~
Girls · ( 19~6) Juo; G•r·
land. John Hodiak
ti) * * *' • "Y~ Only Live
Once" ( 1937). Henry Fon-
da SyMa Sidney
Ing ~ """° •landa In Illa way
<C) • •*'It "lollrlace"
( 1J32J ,...,. ~. o.ottl
A.alt A .,,..,._""'9 flOOd.
lum rl-10 the top of lhe
heep dUllng Proflil>llion
( l) * a "Uncle VlftYa"
t!OG CH> • • "lll'IQfOCler eun.
nell ' (1H1) Alan Min,
Mltietla Herlley A Nti.t
or mlt11nder111ndlnO•
cau-a eoclel wcwker t•
IUlj)KI lhe 5·Yl8f•Old
daughter 01 • aeparalad
couple 11 the victim of cl\lld
abuM 'PO'
Ct ).•* "Tiie lncredlble
Sh~lnlil"ll Woman" ( 1990)
Liiy Tomlin, Cllll'lel Gro-
din A hou-11• find• 11
h111d to CQ9e .nan the
audoenly begin• 10 lftllnll
1n llza 'PO'
t:ao <CI • •i.t '"Tiie HouM Of
Tiie Saven Hawtca" ( 111511)
Rob••t Taylor, Linda
Cllr111lan Wiien • ~
gar la found deed on I*
alllp. a charter boat
•kipper dl1cov••• •
•Ir ange mac> 111111 leacla lo
a II~ NUI fortune
2:00 CZl * •• ·~ .. Tiii Howling"
( 19811 Dae Wallace,
PatrlCk Mecnaa A woman
rl90fler II men.oed by a
killer who ~ 10 be a -awo1f·R' .
2:SO IH e **'-•"My Body·
gue•d' ( 19711) Chri•
Makepeace. Ad em
Baldwin Tiie new kid al a
Chicago high ac11001
makes friends with 111a
school outcast and t09elll·
er lll•Y stand up to Illa cru-
01 gang wllk:h llad per-
secuted lllam l>Olh 'PG' 0 a * "Thia la Elvia"
( t981) Oocurrwtnla•y Fiim
footage and dramatic
rectHllont ate used to tell
the story ot El••• PrHley"a
1111 and car-'PG
1:0011J * • "De\111'1 E1g111 ·
( 111691 Chtlatopher
Geatge. Ralph M .... er A
lecteral agent ooae under·
cover u a meml>ar ot a
road gang 10 affect ll>e
escape ol ... convtc:11 whO
.,. neeoad to btaali up a
g1n11 Of t>oollegw• deal-
•ng 1n moonllllM
C **'~"Duncan's
World 1111711) Larry Tobi-
as Don Morrill A yGUng
l>Oy who lo'in •'*"-'9
1ncoun11r1 obatact••
when dealtng With 11umao1
u ha lnv .. tigalM lhe
cauM of an allploslon near
I nalura mu_,m 'G'
3:30 Is I * *. • • Journey 8acit
To 01·· 11972) Animated
VOIGll ol Uza Mlnnelll,
Paul Lynda Dorothy
1eturns to !he Lind ol Oz
and encountera the alatlf
ol Illa Wicked Witch of Illa
WHI
3:36 , z, **'•"Back Roeda··
11fiBT) Sahy P'414d. Tommy
LM Jonas A hooker and a
down-on-h11-tuci. boxat
meat and '-0 weet in
-ch of a,_ lfle 'R'
4:00 0 * •• ··p.,.·. Oregon ..
(11177) H ...... Reddy, Shel-
ley w ... ,.,. Witt\ the help
Of e Chubby gt-dragon
named Eljloll an orpf\8fl
escapes from II•• nuty
lotllt famlly and IOgelhat
Illa two ol ,.,.,., head for
M-'G
5:00 IC,** "Daya Of Fury··
Merralee! t>y V-t Proc.
An 1nvea11g111on of Iha
e1>1111ng aven11 of dellh
and detlrvctlon are ltud•
*' 5:15 ( l ) * * "Tiie Incredible
Sllnnklng Woman" ( 11180)
Liiy Tomlin, Ch., ... Gro-
din A lloua.wtla find• 11
hwd to cope wnari Ille
suddenly begin• 10 1hrlnk
1n atze ·po·
5:30 ( H • * * ,.., "Plnchclifl
Gtand • Prl•" Animated
Alli!< b11 car deelgn 11
lloten by an ••-colleeoue.
a brllllent mechanic
Oecidaa to build an even
baller racing machine and
compete With Illa natnelll. ·o·
by Armstrong & Batiuk
roes I HE •ERM 'NO WAY
.JOSE I MEAN ANYTHING-I
10 'iOU~
1"I AlllY SCHOOL
A c:.hollc Boerdlnt High Schoot
torboya.
CAt• HOLY CIOSS
A au.m. 0.. fot boya 8 to 14
YMr'I otd. . .
Conductec:t by th• Benedictine Monka of Oo6orldo In Southern Rockie•. Country En-
vironment neer aid ar•i!!· .
t
1
I· '
1
l
i L
1. .
•
--··---....... .-.
Orange Coat CAIL Y PILOT/Monday, F•bru•ry 1, 1982
reosta Mesa artiSt 's show .
han'ging at Saddleback
·By SANDIE JOY Of .............
UUUllna tele~lllon and popular ma111lnes as
bla maln resources, Costa Mell art.lat Frank
Dlxon baa created 15 works, buna In a one-man
exhlblt 1hnply called "Palntln11 and Mono(ypel."
• The 1how la on dlaplay from 10 a.m. throu1h 3
p. m. weekday! tbrouth Feb. S in the Fine Arts
Gallery at Saddleback Colle1e ln Mla1lon Viejo.
Notlnt that his 1oal la to have his work
become "a major vehicle or communication,"
Dixon said he uses popular media sources ror a lot
bf his subject matter.
"I feel a lot of times that what ma1aalnes,
movlea and television are dolng ls manipulative,''
Dixon aatd.
''I like lo take those characters out or context
and place them ln my own world," he explained,
''thereby developin1 new character types. but wilh
something of the old remainin1 so there's an
interestin1 tenslon between what it was and what
it has become."
All of the works on display at Saddleback
include a colle1e element which the artist said is
both pbotographlc combined with other p11per
materials with which he's buUt up teitures. The
exhibit Includes both mixed media on canvas and
monotypes.
Dixon, who studied at the San Francisco Art
lnstitute•'and earned a master or fin~ arts degree
at UC Irvine. has shown hls works in every major
museum in Orange County ·including Bowers
Museum in Santa Ana and the Museum of Nort.h
Orange County. He's also exhibited at the Los
Angeles Coun'y Museum, the Los 'Angeles County
Folk Art Museum and Newspace Gallery in Los
Angeles.
. . Not1n1 that he workl a lot wlth the human
fl1ure ln hlJ art, Dixon aald he tries to dev~lop
aspects of penonaUty in hi• characten.
Thoae cbaractera are buUt up out or
photosraphJc fra1ment1, he e.xplalned, "and In the
process of the palntln1. a personality seems to
emer1e. ' /
"Then, J play on the atrona polnt.s," he said,
"and deve1op a vl1ual tension between the.
character and Ila environment."
Dixon, who ia on the arts faculties of Oran1e ·
Coast Community Collete. the La1un.a Buch
School of Fine Arts end ScripPf Colleae of lbe
Claremont Colleua In Pomona, builds hi•
paintlnea from layers of palnt and matazlne
clippings. lt's In the layerin1 process that the
major characters emerae.
The print.a In the Saddleback show represent
two thematic series -murder my1terie1 and
dreams. ;:-) . "The cn~rder mystery print.a and paintings
evolved from my impression of murder occurrin&
from the violent use of weapons to the concept of
death as transformation from one state to
another," Dixon explained.
"The dreams are slmultaneou.s vlews or both sleeping and waking states."
Noting that we've Just been through a lone
period where the human figure played no role in
American or European art, Dixon said he feels a
growing Interest In the arts ln Orange County.
particularly an interest in the human figure.
·'I thlllk people are interested In looking at
psychological artwork,'' he $alsf, "and they're also
interested in the narrative quaWty of art."
Dixon's work is represented by the Kogan
Turnbull and Lutjean Gallery In Orange County.
'R~iders' leads sci-ft no~inees
LOS ANGELES CAP> -"Raiders or the V>st Metal " "Outland" and "Superman JI."
Ark," an old·fashioned fantasy adventure film .B~ides "Raiders," other best fantasy film
filled with modem·day special effects, topped the nominees were "Clash of the T.itans ,"
list of nomine~ for the 9th annual Academy or "Dragonslayer," "Excalibur" and "Fox and the
Science Ficti<)n , Fantasy and Horror Films' Hound." Golden Scroll Awards. ·Best horror film nominees were .. An
"Raiders" received nine nomin;ttions, American Werewolf In London," "Dead and
including best fantasy film . best direction -by Buried." "Ghost Story," ··Halloween 11" and
Steven Spielberg -and best actor and actress for "Wolfen." Best director nominees. besides
Harrison Ford and Karen Allen. Spielberg, were John Boorman, "Excalibur·;·"
Dr. Donald Reed, presfdenf of thel\ca~___.lOOn Ca~nter ... ".Escape Fro~ New York ;"
said last weekend ballots were being distributed to Terry Gilham. Time Bandits, and Michael
the group's-2,000 members and that the Academy's Wadleigh, "Wolfen. ". . . . .
board of directors would set a dat~ for the 1981 Best actor nominations m additt9n to .Ford
awards presentation in March. were Sean Connery for "Outland," Albert Finney . · for "Wollen ," Donald Pleasance for ''Halloween
Reed said the Academy comprises abou.t equal 11" and Christopher Reev.e for "Superman 11 ...
numbers of film industry worken1 , academics a~d Nominated as best actress, along with Miss
fans who have "a ,dev~lion an~ ~erious interest m Allen, were ·Jenny Agutter in ''An Americ~n·
the three genres: science f1cllon , fantasy and Werewolf in London," Margot Kidder an
horror films ... "Superman II," Angela Lansbury in "The Mi~ror
Nominatee for best science fiction film were: Crack'd" and Lily Tomlin in "The lncred1ble
;·Esca~ From New York," "Hear'tbeeps;" "Heavy 'Shrinking Woman."
• SM UP -llSl 111N. & I LIS.
Unlimited Visits
Cl Mo.I {
• FREE AEROBICS
(Designed for the
Mat•Jre Woman)
• Criovascular
fitness
• Nutritional
Glidance
• Finn & Tone
• Fabulous Exercise
E!Plllllnt
• Free·
. Aerobics
Open To Public
1.0 Classes s 25°0
Guest Pa$$
71~964.5242
•I
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR MRENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE n.. ...... .i,,.,.... • .,....., ,.,_ ,._,......,,_ .... _ ... ......,.,,_.,_,
lg] ~~:::mo ~'-°"' __ .., __
'®NO°"'~ t7 AOMITTIO 149911...,._,...., ... __ ......
AU. a ID NfO Ill 'll.MI "•c•tvi
™I HAL M TMI MOTION l'ICTUlll
COOl M SfV "f:OUV. TION
If It's got wheels
l ou'H move It
asterfna
Dally Piiot
clallffled
ad.Otll
642·5'71 and
a-friendly
acl-vlsor.wtll
help you turn
r.ourwhMls
ntocnh.
lt@I"
·~15 ~111;
i I I I I ' r ) I ~ I I I i f ..... r f I f
EV!RY MONDAY AL.L SEA TS 12.00
UGOTOOHUD
~ .. ~C..,.Awalliollioo ) ,,.
ORANGE COUNTY
PREMIERE
plu1
''Cou1ln~
Cou1lne" tPG>
• • • t • 1,·, 1 •t t -1 ( c t'"'.nn•~A :,r l ~A ~'
*BARGAIN MATINEES•
Mond•y thru S•lurday
All Performanct1 1t9tore 5:00 PM I~ S,.a.t fllfl .. "*"• 11141 Hllicl1Y•I
-C-·---"T~"-·--... ------..---... ._nM.fM"9 •I -NA• ------··----__ .._ ""tot" tt'.11. .... -
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALIC ·IN
""--·-~ ''ON OOLNN POND" -,_ .,.. -,,.., ,., .. -C.-·---"TAPI"-·--..... -·-
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WAlM IN
--·--··~·Of' THE LOST AlllC" ----·---...... ---·-c.......,. ''WHC>ta UR II IT ANYWAY?~ ......... __ _ ..,
focully ot Conotewooo
213/531·9510
I
___ :T.:;_.., ... _
=·.::: -· ......... "'='::::.
I -""IOI" -• I •1:a.-.••
I --· "IHAlllCY'l lllACHINI"' 1111
I ·--------·--·-.. __ __
.... ~::..".
--·--1 '"llAIOIMOf'lltl LOST MtC" -----...,_..__ • ..,. ''CMARM>Ta z. ........ .. . ""'::4 -""'
-
t $Ovtll C:ooll Hlway
ot14~oy ~ 494-1514 ----· ''TMR~ .. ~-""'·--------·--"'°"" ,.._ ... ---..... -----
.... , ......... , •...-8:16 \I/A \·•6:00 ,..,,,.,,. •• :46
IMPORTHT NOTICE! Cll.'I nREM U.OIR 12 fMI!
"""' 1ot w ..... •• '"• '" .,;30. 111 S.• '"'' 4:30N Clllf.fl IOUNO • l'Ollll Ml ~~ 11MG • JOIJI lllfAMll
11f ltO &II CAii ~ 1111111 Oil OI MXUDl IQlllDI
-WC Ml lalTlllU 1•*-l Clll'I --.. Oii Ml -
ANA.M• ~
ANAHEIM DlllVE IN
_______ .. __ ,. __
"WNOM"• -''MIGHT tcHCIOl." •
~ . •t .. ' ... t ---.--.. BUENA PARK (1ll1VI IH "THI 900GIHI" .. -llftcolft ,.,._ w ... ot IMll "T'HRY CAllllR '1'0tl WITMIM" 1111
12M070
• • ...... i..
LINCOLN DRIVE IN
,.. '·' '1 ~
HI WA 'I 39 11111v1 '" . . '
..
01.lAN~C ; 1. .1 ,,..
---·--· _Ill._,. ___
"V11MOM"!lll -''NIGHT latOCM.'' "'
Clllf 11 SOUHO ... ft.,... .so ol °"'_°'_,._
191·3693
,..
MONDAY, FEB. 1, f982
CAVALCADE COMICS
I
82
83
..
,
San Diego players
aid AFC victory in
annual P,ro Bowl. 85.
_i ...----------
H11ml>le . slosHing leads to ·g~u~inet's delicacy
WADE AND SEE
Most of th<.• harch
so u I s . <.i b o ' <.' • h a cl
f! a l·~H· i: l'd i.o u l-h w ~ t
of the lluntin ~ton
Be<.ich pi <.•r. on a
Saturda\ a ft e rnoon
to dig ri>r d a ms al
lo\\ tid<.• Prei.umabh
l' v t• n o n l' h a cl l h l'
rcqu.1r<.•d li s hin J.!
I i c· t• n s t• . h 11 t t h t•
cl i g g in g '' as -.1 o \\ .J t' r r ,. .J t' r m a n o f
Long· Jk:.ich·. right
signals that ht• has
found onh onl' ('Jam
.-\net .Jart;od lr<.'land .
to . who wa s just
pokin~ around in tht•
sur:f lookin~ for
shells. round u clam
that meaiJurcd out on
the metul d<'\'ir<.' to
be the le~al siw.
Smaller one~ ha\'e to
be tossed back into
the ocean instead or
th(' st('w pot . Tt•n
clams is th<.•
indi\'idual limit for
s l a I k er s w h'o
consider Huntinf?ton
Bearh ~erond onl\ to
Pismo Beurh m ·sa11
Luis Obbpo Count~
a s t ht· s t<ilt··.., ht•:-.t
hunt tnJ.! ground ... ...
·There's more to thi,s Deal than dough
Cos.ta Mesa baker turned off drugs, then turned fnto millionaire
By JODI CAl>ENHEAD
Of II• Dally ...._ IUlf
Eleven years ago Bob DeaJ was a
40·y ear·old reformed drug addict
without a job and his future seemed
bleak.
Toclay he and his wife Nikki are
millionaires, having sold a profitable
bakery lo Globe A·l Macaroni Co. seven
years ago and opened another in Costa
Mesa last year.
But of ~ourse there's a lot more to
their Horatio Alger tale than just a lot
of sweet dough. It's a story Deal likes to
tell and one people enjoy hearing.
He got hooked on Benzedrine in the
Navy. And by the lime he was
swallowing 100 pil\s a day in 1958 he
didn't really care when the rflilitary
booted him out ror &oin& AWOL just
before he was to graduate rrom pbarmecy 1cbool.
-.. ,hit the r_oad aa a 1.iesman
eDded up mtking about $t0,000 a
. Not beef,' but he also bad by hls col.ant a list ot 17 doctors who were
fillinr his prescriptions~
Finally the hard drugs and the fast
timea caught up with him. His lite hit a
dead end one night on an Ohio turnpike
'when he reallied he was on the wrong
elde oftbe road.
"My last friend in the world said '&b
you're bad news'," he said. "I realized I
bad to change my llfe."
Jn 186S be joined Synanon. He stayed
five years and married Nikki who
worked in the community helping former drug addicU.
They were botll '° when tl'ley left and
ttarted over. With hardly a cent
betweert. them that first Chriatmaa in
1170 they decided to bake bread for their friendl.
De.alJ who1d never baked before
deeJaea Jt would be euler to put th~
dou1h lD q>ffee cans. Besides, their
oven wu tOo small for convenUon&l pans.
Soon Deal, .who. was aellln1
computers, wu beln1 told by cuatomera
not to show up wttbout a loar or two or bread.
• He ,..._ he bad -1ood thlq toin~
• SWEET SUCCESS Bob Deal, former drug addict turned baker. holds mile
high cake, one of 78 'pastries prep.ared daily at his Big Deal B ery .
and ypefled the GOod Stuff Bakery in
Venice in 1971. He fl\ade S22 the first
month. Nikki designed the packa1es
and the pair delivered their bread from
a station wa1on.
By-Ure time he soltf moat lhterest in
the bakery tn 1975 sales were $2 million.
In 1978 he ata.rted the Bit Deal
Bakery and moved the operaUon to
Costa Mesa last year after 1oln1 into
partner1hip "with Abe J(aplan.
Laat QIOtlt.b Deal o~ned a surplus
bakery at 2915 Briltol Sti 1n otdef. to aell
some or the 78 dltrerent klnC11 or
pastrjes lh•t art baked on the premlHt
daily. · . .
. '
Cypress to honor
OCC's president
Dr. Robert Moore, president
or Orange Coast College. has
been named winner or the
President's Award at Cypress
College.
Moore will join other
community leaders honored durin~ the college's 'seventh
annual Community and
Americana Awards Night Feb.
20 at 8p.m.
Sinee taking over as president
of the Costa Mesa college in 1964
enrollment has increased from
3,200 to 35,000 students.
Cypress president Jack Scott
said he was pleased to announce
the award, noting that Moore
plans to retire in June.
''It was my privilege to work
with Bob from 1973 to 1978 when
I served as dean of instruction at
Orange . Coast College," Scott
said. "He is a man of integrity .
compassion and charm."
Others honored include
physician .and former 013'.mpic
di vlng champibn Dr. .Sammy
Lee, president of Carl Kare.her
Enterpti.ses, Carl Karcher, and
Los Angeles Times columnist
Jack Smith.
Tickets for the awards night
are $5. For more information
call 828·2220.
HONORED -Orange Coast
College pres ident Dr. Robert.
Moore 1s the winner o~
C~·prcss Coll<.•gc Pres-ident's 1
Aw~1rd
•ANN LANDERS
•ERMA BOMBECK • • J
•HOROSCOPE
hnprovement cm-tailed by husband's attitude
DEAR ANN LANDERS:, I Just cau1ht
"-P with the letter from "One Who Has
Been Acting for Years." Your standard
advice. "Frank#discussion and guidln1
your partner:· ls fine -if you can HAVE a"'
frank discussion with your· bedmate •and
he's wiUing to be 1Uided. .
I'm married to a man who takes great
pride in his prowess as a lover. Any
suggestion that his lovemaking ts less tt)an
exquisite is an insult that turns him off to
the extent that no sex ls pos.sible.
He maintains that he is not the ··ktssy.
cuddly type'· and foreplay is out of the
question. It '.s true that he wants sex with
me often. and many women will say f
should be grateful. but it i.s always sex on
his terms, when and where and how he
wants it. For me it is the loneliest act in
the world.
I have given him articles to read and
tried to express my needs as best I know
how. but to no avail. The agonizine part is
that we are both deeply attracted to each
ottier. and I know he could do for me what
no man ever has, if only he would allow me
to guide him . What now ? -
FRUSTRATED IN VAN NUYS
DEAR VAN NU'YS: 'Your bustiaad's ·
enormous ego . and stubborn refusal to
accept guidance knocks out all C)ptlons for
a better sex life for you. I am 10rry for you
botJ) -eepeclally him. He doesn't know
wtaat be'• mlJ1ln1. The Jacka11.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have been
reading your column for many years and
am aware of your stron1 feelings that
children don't belon1 everyplace.
I thousht about that when I read; to my
h <> r rot • th a l a n A me r i can Nobe l
Pr1ze.winner had invited his daughter and
INF ANT grand.son t9 attend the awards
cel'emony in StockhOlm. Aa one might
expect. the baby became restless and
interrupted the proceedings. This caused a
good deal of embarrassment to those
present. .
I can imagine the whispers . . • .. It
WOULD be an American." Sign me
A~O FROM YALE BUT THIS JS NO
JE>KE
DEAR NO JOKE: I can readily
understand a Nobel laureate's dfflre &o
have his relatlvn on hand &o wl&nns tbe
bestowtag Of thh ,dl1tlnl\dshed &onor, but
very young children do not belong
everyplace. I 1bare your discomfort.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm originally
fro·m Salt Lake City and have bee n
attending UCLA since September. I started -
to date a nice sophomore in October. His
former girlfriend lives in m y dorm.
-Savings too costly
There's a special place in heaven for
women who clip coupons where there is no expir~tlon date on their premium. the •
redemption store is next door to wherever
they are and there is no one in line behind·
them parked in a fire lane.
llMA IOMllCI
ATWIT'S END
For years. the ¥(Oman who has cliiJPed
coupons has J>een much·maligned. Lord
knows, I've faad a few impure thoughts
~about them as I've stood bdlind them
while they bring forth clippings from the
linings of their handbags and suffer
anxiety attacks whire the cashier checks
publisher's price just by placing a special
stamp over my oi:der.
their eligibility. .
I pocketed $48 on a set of
llama-farming encyclopedias at the
supermarket by presenting an ad each
week. By sawing through coffee eans.
puncturing cereal boxes and·soaking labels
off various cans, I was able to save S150
from the ofiginal price of the product by
sending in my proof of purchase.
I've seen them all. The woman who
took so long to find the coupon that saved
her 10 ced,ts on a No. 2 can of whole
tomatoes that the toddler in her basket ate
S3 worth or candy,..a.nd breath mints.
THE WOMAN WHO PVT her groceries
aside and drove three miles home and
back to get the coupon that saved &2 cents.
on her next bottle of aspirin.
I SAVED SS ON A haircut. $1.50 on a
car wash, S60 0n a health·spa membership
and got a discount from a travel bureau or
$200 by vacationing in Montana in the
winter.
And the woman who bought three cans
of cat food at a savings of 45 cents . ~ . and
dtdn 't own a cat.
Now, I'm one of those women. ~nd I'm
hEife to tell you saving mone~ through
coupons and limited offers is not exactly a
day at the beach. You have to work for it.
I was so filtt\y rich from coupons, I
opened an accoant at the bank which gave
me a free calculator for giving them my.
money for a year.
· But the money I saved is worth it.
My husband figured out my assets and
subtracted the cost of postage. gas and my
analyst. He . said I ' II have to win the
Reader's Digest Sweepstakes to break
even. In one month alone. I saved $200 by
c lipping a rebate coupon for a used car
from a dealer who was red.raced because
he was overstocked.
Then I squirreled away $125 by buying
six national magazines for five years at the
It mak es you wobder wh~·
manufacturers don't just lower the price of
the item in the first place. If I send a
coupon. I'm sure they'll send back an
answer.
. .
GOlfN Oii llfDGI
BY CHARL£S H. GC?REN ANO .OMAR SHARIF
Q.l-Neither vulnerable, aa
South you hold:
•S l\1 ilt4 OATW •J97
The bidding bu proceeded:
N~ E.ut &..a.
I• I• 1
What action do you take?
·A.-You could eaally have a
game. However, you might
alto have a dreadful mi1fit.
What you do know ii that
_you are looking at three 1ure
defen1ive t.riclu and a
1in1Jeton In partner'• 1uit. A
peaalty double might yield a
bonanza· If partner hat the
... rt1ht. hand, and won't coat
much U, b7 apme chance. the
opponent.a make their con·
trad. Betida, partne'r can
alway• pull Ute double lf hia
ha'ftd I• unauited to defeftM.
1 c::i 4 O T
What do you bid now?
A. -Ea1t'1 preempt baa
achieved it.a purpoae -you do
not now have the roo.n to ex·
plore adentifieall:Y the poten·
tial of the hand. We favor a
jUmp to atx be...U, but .,
would not fault you If you
BladtwCIOded atld bid seven
hearta If you found an ade·
• qvate number of ace• and
king• in partner'• hand.
How•vef'I a rrand alam couJd
be a rally ventdre becaUM
Eut ftu warned you t.hat the
suit• won't be brea&ing well.
Q.4-Botb vuJnerable, aa
South 1ou hold:
• illNI <:?Ml 0 " •QT• The bicldiq bu proceeded:
~ We.t N~ IMt
P-.. I 0 I 0 I 0
1
What do 7ou bid now?
A. -Partotr hu made the
atron,..t takeout poulble.
While 1our und mltht not
rate a frM bW after a takeoJt
double, J011 11Nuld act afttr a
cu•bkt-Dll'tMr will know
that 7oa eu'Aavt much and
&1a&t tlw oppoaflta lN ttJlq
to kffR 7pu out of the aue-
tloe. You mua& Wei tbree
.p&dt1. Indeed.. we could
make a coaviltdq arp .. ot
=-'" 11¥0r of • j118p .. low
..... '"" k DOt -, ...
...... Mllt7&W'/fllfll~ .._ ... ".~~t ... ......
Your right-hand opponent
open• the bidding with one
diamond. What action do you
take?
A.-Double. We would Uke
your hand better If your
mlnor·1Ult boldlnga were
reveraed, but your hand ia
almply too gobd for a mere
ov~rcalJ. If partner re1pond1
in cluba, you have the ,a1ue1
t~ correct. to 1pade1 at t.he
aame level, and the double
. reducn the ehanee that. your
aide might loee the heut
1uit.
Q.6-Aa South, vulnerable,
7ou bold:
•Jlot751 ~&t71 OU +5
The blddJas bu proeeeded
N~ llut .._..
1 0 .,....,
What ad.ton do you take?
A.-We IHI t~t tbtrt la no
need to let the doutple ln·
terfere with your normal •uc·
Uon on tllJ• holding. We
would almply bid one apade '
and let nature take it•
c:eune. If you don't ad now,
you woo't ,be ablt to do ao
with an7 dt,.,... of 11fety
later.
•
Last night Jerry came by after supper
and asked me to go for a ride ln hi s new
car. I said I had some studying to do. but I
would like to go tor an hour. About five
minutes from the beach I heard a s mall
couah in the back seat. We were shocked to
discover that Jerry's fofmer girlfriend was
lying on the floor . covered with a blanket.
She got up. laughed and said it was a
joke -that she had planned to say "boo ..
and scare us. ·
What do you think of a "joke" like
this? Am I a stick·in·the·mud with no sense
of humor. as s he claims'? -STILL
SCALDED
DEAR S.S.: The old name was boplng
to hear or 1ee something that might
embarrass you and Jerry. She sounds like
a moron to me. Cross her off your list.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: You were.
very unfair lo Cassandra in a rece,nt
column when you referred to her as a
.. crepe-hanger." <A common mistake.>
Here is the accurate s tory: Apollo
made a pass at Cassandra and she rejected
him. Apollo retaliated by curs,l!lg her with
the rate that no one would believe her
PRESSING FLESH -Vice President George
Bush shakes hands with a group or eager
·children following his meeting with joint
Fear erased
~yCancer
Tuesday, February 2
A.JUES <March 21·Aprft 19)~ Highlight
versatility. get rid of superfluous materi,l.
streamline procedures. make. contract with
salespeople who are active. alert and
willing to travel. Pisces. Virgo natives
figure prominently.
TAURUS <April 20-May 20>: Focus on
money. income potential. obtaining
.necessary1 material. 'accepting added
responsibility and utilizing lessons learned
in . recent past.· Cancer. Capricorn and
~nother Taurus figure prominently.
GEMINI ,<May 21.Juhe 20): Personal
horizons grow wide -you'll come in
contact with people of all political shades.
.
-· ..
You can strike chord of universal appeal.
Cycle hi&h and Umin& is on target. You'll
finish project arld receive commendation
from one you admire. \
CANCE• <June 21-July 22l: Secret
f eara, doubts can be era~. Light will be
1 shed on area previously shrouded. ln
mystery. Focus on need for discretion,
privacy and solttude. PerlOd of temporan
confinement could prove beneficial.
Lm <July 23·Au1. 22> ~Sc>me of your
fondest desires can be fulfilled. Cancer Capricorn. Aquarius pereons wUI play ke)
rolea. First lmpresaioaa-,..,...~rect anc.
-you learn bi teacblna. A very active
auoclate aids In makln1 important
contacta. . ,,_;.
VlaGO <Aq. 23-Sept, DH Room ll
made It top, WI.)' .. CMared lir ~·· Key la divenlfl,aUOft. verUtlllty_J,1nd
ablllty to l1u1h at your own foibles.
Gemini, Sa&lllar1u1 and anOther Vtr10
ft&ure proml'bef>tly. . I I
prophecies. though all her predictions were.
invariably correct.
So you see. C(lssandra is not the
prophet of gloom and doom you made her
out to be. She is a symbol for someone
whose prophecies we ighore at our peril.
SYDNEY J . HARRIS
DEAR SYDNEY·: Tbank you for
\ adding a touch of class &o my column
today. I read every word you write and am
pleased &o liee that. you read me, too.
A re you. Or 80meone you care about
meuitlg with drugs -or coruidering it? Are all
drug8 bad? What about tpot -in moderation?
Ann Lande~;· new booklet ... The Lowdown on
Dope:· separatea the fact8 from the fiction. For
each booklet orcUred. send 12 00. plu8 a umg.
8elf-addreued. 8tamped envelope 137 cents
po8tage 1 to Ann Landers. P.O Box 11995
Chicago. Ill 60611 .
AP ........
session of Utah Legislature . in Salt Lake Cit v
Frida~·. ·
P01 SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
IT'S SOME:"TIMES EASIER
TO DO THE:' IMPOSSIBLE
THAN
TO DO
THE
EMBARRASSING.
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 221: It may be
necessary to dismantle, to tear down for
ultimate purpose of rebuilding on a more
suitable structure. Lunar emphasis on
commu.nication. tr.avel. spiritual values.
publhthing and a review of legal principles.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21 1: You're
-able to cut through red tape. to arrive. at
·.
' I
r •
• heart of matters and to perceiye truth
where basic issues are concerned. 'J Dialogue with member of opposite sex aids
· in boosting morale and gaining proper -
perspective of current situation.
SAGlnAalUS (Nov. 2a-Dec, 2~}~
Diplomacy ts De\'es&ary if you an to aVOkl
delay and ultimate defeat. a..e1s 'ffal
documents, verlfy sourcea .•ad make
amends to famlly member for rectnt
m isunderstandln•.
.\
r
t
I r
I
•
1
l
.
"When I get old enough to get married how will
I know which gir1 to vote for?" •
by Brad Anderson
BIG GEORGE
...
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
... ,
Hank Ketchum
"I don't want to wake him, elther ... but
~HAVE to answer that robbery-In-progress."
"FEE-Fl ·FO·FUM, 1 ~\ELL TME
BLOOD OF AN EN6USH MUFFIN ! 7
.lt!K:E PJ\RKt:R
W I'VE HAO 1;r WITH HEit.
• • HEN THE DIRECTOR AANDAl..l' I PHONED THE OF AVALANCHE &TUOtO AND TOL.0 THEM THAT oe~oei THAT EtTHEk !>HE c;oE!J OU 001 UN°" MAY'eE .
DROPPED FROM
THE PICTU~E.
RANDALL FOft&E5
A5K& THAT HE l'E
PATIENT WITH THE
YOUN(; ..Clltf!l6'
!pf,~~~-
MIKE, I KNOW &HE!> ~EfN
OlfFICl.)1.:T FOR YOU, OUT LINDA
MAY HA& ENOR~ TAUNT
•.. AND 5HE'6 HAVIN(;i.
PR06LEM!>' UT°~ Tin
TO HELP HEit.
•• 'i .,
('
PMNIJTS u
LIFE, AS '™EY SAV, IS
FUIJ. OF ~f'RISES
Tl:MBtE•EiDI by Tom K. Ryan
HI, eCHO. HOW'S THf: ~~
t..AZIE=Si ro&? .. a=xcuse Me,
WE:ReSAR.eAON
.--..... ~HIS MCK ..
t ·I
SHOE
PAJAMAS IS NO'f LA~! Ht?sJtJSI..
··------·-
-~~
by Jeff MacNelly
1\l.\T'~ A lO/aX Kl~T YOO'~ WEAA~,M~Y!
GORDO
OH, NANCY---
LOOK AT
THESE
PITI:HERS
SUCH
ENGLISH---
YOU MEAN
PICTURES
by Gus Amela
SOCJOl..O(,<; -( ~R£00151TE -H16H MARX)
SXJOL{)61J DEAt5 wmt .soc.H 10PIC.5 A5 ~s,
500AL. CLA5~ I ~Al CAAN<7£ AND HOW 10 IN.STAU.
DEAD-eOL..I LDCKS IN <XXJR HOME. •
i
r
l..XJ.JU.. LEARN WH£.,> OUR ti:XJEW 15 Q'.X>MED A~ ~ ...J. Wl1H 50/V\E 5MARf INVE511N& I~ CAN
REAU.lJ 1111<£ ADVANIAGE Of rr !
l
l .
'fOO'U 1'4E. ~E.A1£.~f !
~0 ~ L\1(£ ME.10
MAICf 'fO\J ._ SAMQ\i)\("?
i
i
°" 1A~ M"~"" ~ l«DM~~~? o«.
~\Mr r.tt ~~I~
.a> AAlO 'iOO l.l)OU,~O
t'M ~\..WA'f~ "LAO i> 00
AM'41\l\HI. ~T ...
by Kevin Fagan
:t ..
. '
-
i
I • . .
j
L I i }
i _.. ·1
.
I '
•
How's this for a good answer: money. Read our newspaper, and·
cash in on advertised values, discount coupons. food news and
consumer reports that can save you m6 ney every single week. . .
?-we also save you time: Y"hich is important for busy women
--' . managing a home, children and many .other resp9nsibilities.
· In the market for-tun? We cover weekend enter-
tainment and special events arqund town. TV i:lnd
•
movies. Recreation, sports, hobbies, a whole package of
interesting news and features to give you a lift! Whenever
you have the time. So if you've been feeling a little
shopworn lately, get some help. Get th~ paper.
What'• In It tor you? The answer
appear• on every page of
642-4321 ~
' .
..
..
. '
I
L
1111 ..... '
tal~g · about athletics ••.
. ~nd "John .Spangle·r will cover 45 years of fond memories .
Oran,., OMlnty fa .,. ... wttb•m
that area .. only bad a 1tudeat body
of about 500 kid.I," Spin1ltr Hid.
ttt lft bat be-tufmea a;-tnJltff-S==t*-d
COACH SPANGLER John Spangler jumpe(I
at the chance to coach both footba'U and track
· at Franklin High. He quickly worked his way
up to head coach in both sports.
AFC drives
SPANGLE& aETl&ED from
active athletics in 1980, tollowlns 38
years of coachlns football and track
at Franklin Hi1h ln Loe An1eJea. But
he still keeps In touch with old
· friends and former pyplla to
' exchanae stories and remin!Jlce.
'there wu a lot of reminiacln& at
the Inn at the Park in Anaheim,
where tbe ~th annual California
Coaches Auoclatlon convention
awards banquet waa held.
That was the night Span&ler was
inducted Into that or1anlzaUon's Hall
of Fame
Spangler'a athletic career be&an 67
years ago with his freshman year at
Santa Ana High. He competed in both
football and track for four years,
gradu•tlng tn 1920.
"lo·tbdle days, we played schools
llke Lpng Beac:.h . San Dle10,
Pasadena and Fullerton. They called
it the Paci!ic Coast League.
''We <Santa Ar\a) drew from
Garden Grove, Newport Beach, San
Juan Capistrano, Tustin and all the
•
rao• bNTA ANA, Spao11er. went on to Occldental eou.,. .after
JIHll"I up an opportulllty to atttnd
USC on an athletic 1chol1rahlp. n.at
in lttelf LI one or many tuelnaUnt a tort.ea.
"l WU 1uppoeed to •o t4t USC," he
said. "Gu. Henderson (then the USC
football.coach> had oftered me a full .
1cHolanhip.
''One clay when I wat at the beach,
he came clown with the USC atltleUc
When I was coachin/
football. I never had
more than one assistant
coach. Today's coaches
rely heavily on . ' assistants.
director and talked to my mother for
about two hours. Gus told my mortf
not to worry about my ttnances while
l was in school. He had a job lined up
tor me.
"My mother thought that was
great and she asked what kind of job
It was. Gus told her, 'We have him working in a ~hall..!-_
"Back then, pool hall was a dirty
word and my mother aalc1, 'I assure
you my son wiU not go to USC.·
"I turned around and went to
Occidental a'nd I'm el ad I did,"
Spaneler said.
So were the members of Lhe Oxy
athletic stati. . ' . . .
MEMORIES -Huntington
Beach's John ~pangler recalls
some great mGJients in athletics
during his long career.
·'Tony's forte is spearing forward
passes out of the atmosphere," read
a newspaper clipping from the 1920s.
lN-11Z3, 8UNG~LEJLwaA An
All-America end at Oxy, but his
ta-lentl were hardly restrict~ to the
football field.
In track, he was part of a mile
relay team that set a world record in
the Penn Relays in 1924. The national
recognition earned him a chance at
lrylng oll! for the 1924 U.S. Olympic
-to Wiil
·Charger ]Xlir helps position Lowery for winning klek
Dallas) a lot and l walled for
him lo clear out and then I
rushed."
bam1trin1 muscle durin1 au. flnt
week of t.rainin& and w11 forc.d to
drop out.
Spantler admtta that be w111t't
1urt which direction he wu beaded
once bla cotleae career wu over.
"I tried rat.her haU·heart.edJy to 1« a job.'' be 1ald. l had appUtd at tbe
phone compan1141d at an ad aiency.
·• • Fran.kJr, It dever •Stt•red my mind to 10 lnto coachine."
BUT WHEN HE wu offerred the
opportunity to 10 to Franklin Hilb u
a coach for track and football,
Span1ler Jumped at lt. He obla1nld
hla teachina credential and quickly
eatablishedhlmaelf, wprklftl bla wa1
up to bead coach for both ape>rtl.
Spaneler HY• that football bu
been bla llrtt love, but he's watched
the eame 10 tbroueh some dramatic
chan1es over the years.
"We. didn't play the 11me type-ot
football you see now," be said.
"When I was coacbin1 football, I
never had more than one auiltant
coach. Today's coaches rely heavlly
on aasistants and they try to eet the
very beat. · :n ·s an entirely ditterent 1ame."
Among the stories shared Saturday
night were Span1ler'a experiences
coaching lennia areal Bobby Risp al
Franklin, the time hl$-footbaJl team
rallieo from a 12-0 deficR in 1he last -
18 seconds to win, 13·12', and his days
or spearing paaaes out or the at-
mosphere at Occidental.
.Yes, Tony Spangler baa lots of
stories to tell. As well he should.
"Athletics ," he said wilb a smile
"it's been my whole life " '
Rangers
thinki -ng • • positive
I
I
HONOLULU <AP) -Miami
Dolphins.Coach Don Shula may
have ~ringed the last time he
saw Dan Fouts and Ke llen
Winslow in action, but this time
he was theering them.
of 18 puaes for 143 yards on the
day. ''.Tbe pus to Wlnalow down
the ml4dle < puttin1 the ball at
the NFC 5-yard line) broke their
back." or1i~:'t'":i~~~~~-y~=~ ~~~ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, February 1. 1982 BS INGLEWOOD <APJ -The
red -hol New York Rancers , r
When the American Football·
Conference All-stars. coached· bY:~hula, needed a late score to
...lake a 16·13 victory In Sunday's
Pro Bowl. the San Dleeo
Chargers' Fouls-to-Winslow
com blnatton helped get It.
Fouts took the AFC 69 yards,
with the bi& &ainer a 23-yard
pass to Winslow, to at:l up tbe
deciding 23-yard field 1oal by
Kansas City's Nick Lowery with
three seconds remainine.
"It wu anything but a dull
game." said Shula. who recently
had watched Fouts and Winslow
help the Chargers knock the
Dolphtns out or the NFL
playoffs.
"On the final drive, our
offensive line dominated play,"
said Fouts, who completed eieht
Win1low, the NFL 'a top
receiver for ,the past two
seasons, had six catches for 86
yards and shared Pro Bowl MOit
Valuable Playez: honors, with
NFC defensive end Lee Roy
Selmon of T.amp•"Bay.
"It's a Teal honor to be named
co·MVP and an honor to be on
the field with· the finest playen
ln the ;:=me." said WJnslow.
''There was more lntenalty
this ye.,-," added the two-time
Pro Bowler. "Pride w11 a
tecfot,"
Selmon, tn blJ third Pro Bowl,
recorded fOUJ' quarterback ueb
for loues totalin1 as yardl, and
was In oo el&bt tackles. .
''I WU just runnbll aJ'CMmd
tryine to do what we pr8d.lced
all week," be Aid. ''They were
pickin1 up Randy Wblte cof
Miller's little talk
is inspirational
Nicldaus finishes second in San Diego
SAN DIEGO CA P ) -Johnny
Mill er had a little talk· with
himself an.er playing poorly in
the Phoenix Open a week aeo.
"Boy, don't tell me," Miller
said, recalling the one·way
conversation, "I'm 1oin1 to
have a bed year after a $500,000
start.''
He put thole doubts to rest
Sunday with a one-stroke victory
..-over 01HU1hln1 Jaclt Nicklaus
,,.·-the San Dieeo Open 1otr
tournament. , •:tt wu Important to turn it
around," Miller ••id. ''I'm
bappf to set that off my back. There WU a lot or pressure on
me. Jack really put it to me."
But it wasn't quite enouen.
"I'd flcured, the nl&ht before,
thiat a 6' ou«iht to be enouih to
win the 10U tour1\ament w
Nicklaus 11id. "But it ..,••n't. .:
HE Gar THAT tareet lelore
8-under-par and a record °" ~
710Ga-¥ard South courae at the :ar ..... 0011 cJub. Tht luded eatlt·3f on the
" 11th. It put Miller's -ltack to lbe
wall. But he nursed home the
dlmlnl1hlng lead with a
2-under·par 70 and a 270 total. 18
shot.a under par.
Nicklaus was one back at 271.
The victory was the 21at on the
American tour for MlUer, tyinl
hlm with South Atrtc.n Gary
Plar•r ror 16th place on the
American winn1nt Hat. ft a11o
put htnJ lh the fltld fot th•
Tournament ot Champion• In
A.prll. "I really wanted that. I
Jaat love .,bat tourhament " Miiier aald. '
His front·running effort wu
just good enough. He was never
caught, but Tom Kite and
Nicklaus each iot to within one.
K it e -. t h e 19 8 1 ·1 e a d i n I
money-winner who lost a playoff
at the Bob Hope only two weeu
ago, rolled in a 12-foot birdie
putt on the 15th bole to pull to
within one shot. But Miller
dtopped a 10-footer on top of it,
and bad bis margain aealn.
NICKLAUS, PLAYING in
front or Miller, hit a 3-wood to
within five feet or the cup on the
par-5 finlahlng bole. And be, too.
eot to within one when he made
the eaele putt.
Kite's challenge dlaap~ared
when he dunked his second shot
in the lake in front of lbe 18th
green, and Miller needed only
the routine par to win It. He eot
it, 2-putUng from 20 feet.
. Kite finished wlUI a 70 and
was Ued for third at 273 with
Tom Weiskopf. Weiskopf ~d a
clo1int 89 in the mlld, sunny
weather. Curtis Stranae w11 out. at.. 68-274 and ..Andy Bean
followed at 68-275. M11ter1
champ Tom Watson wasn't able
to aenerate a challen1e and shot
71-276. ..
down by eight NFL teams before
catching on with the Chiefs, said
he wasn't nervous before his
game-wlnnlne kick.
"I thoueht before the kick,
'I've done it before and here it ls ·
again,'" he said.
He haC:t mtased a PAT attempt
on the AFC'• first touchdQwn
when the anap from center wu
off, and a.Lio mi.ued wide on a
52·)'ard fi•ld 1oal attempt
earlier ln the contest.
''I fl1ured it would be a
tow•l(Ol1a,t same," Hid NFC
Coacb JGbn llcKay of Tampa
Bay. ''111ere wu just too mueb
defeme. It takes 1on1er t.ban a we•li to 1et an offense
coord•Nted."
The NFC, tralllq tu late in
the final quarter, tied the 1ame
on a 4-yard touchdown run by
Dallaa' Tony Dorsett with 2:43
left.
THE AllEalCAN Conference
took a 6-0 halftime lead on a
4-yard acortne pass from San
Francisco quarterback Joe
Montana to Tampa Bay li&ht
end J~mmle Giles just before the
Intermission. The score came
after Dallas rookie Everson
Walla made the first of his two
Interceptions of Fouts, returning
the ball 12 yards to the AFC
4-yard line.
The PAT kick by Dallas'
Rafael Sepllen was blocked by
Kanau City's Gary Green.
Tbe APC bounced back with·
two thlrd·per1od touchdowns, the
flr1t a 2-yard d11b by San
Die10·1 Chuck Muncie and the
other a l ·yatd spurt by
HOuston'• Earl Campbell. The
second score wu set up when
the New York Jets ' Mark
Gaatlneau plucked a Montana
rumble out of the air and
returned it 21 yards to the NFC
1-yard line.
PltUburp'a Donnie Shell and
Jack Lambert, and Denver'•
Randy .Drad1ahar turned in fine
defensive pertocmances for t.be
AFC, which allowed the NFC
Juat 158 total yards. .
CAMPBELL WAS the 1ame's:
leadlnl rusher with 11 carrtes-
for 52 yards. Doraett led the
NFC with 39 yarda on 13 carries.
Cinclnnat1'1 Ken Anderson
coml>leted elebt of 14 paases for
106 yarcb for the AFC. Morttana
-tour of 14 tor 23 -and
Atlanta's Steve Bartlcowaki -
three of 15 for 49 -had t.belr
problem.a for \he NFC.
-~ .......... AMONG THI GIANTS Eastern Conferenre All-star Isiah
Thomas ieeDle.J'I passes o!f to a teummatc beneath the.
basket as Kureem Abdul ·J abba1· tleft 1 und Lonnie
Shelton of the West apply pressure East came aWH\' with
u 120-118 \'lctor~· In EaKt Rutherfbrd. ~.J . Sunda> ·
ended January on a fO~itive
note. Now, Coach Herb Srooka 1
:has to ponder what he wants bia
club to accomplish In February.
Don Maloney scored two goals
and assisted on another Sunday
night as the Rangers rai~ed ·
their record to 8·2:'2 in their last
12 games with a.6·3 triumph
over the Los Arfgeles Kings.
New York has a 24,·20·7 overall
mark. -
"We've had some objectives
during January. one or them
was to get over .500. which we
accompfished ," s aid Brooks.
"We'll have to set new eoalS for
February. We always make the
goals somewhat out of reach but
reasonable.
"Out.side or the power plays,
which Los Angeles is very adept
at, we .were In control' of the
game. The moat important
thing, thou1h, was that it was
our third straight win on a very
tough road trip."
The Rangers have five more
games remalnin1 on the
eight-game trip, longest for the
National Hockey League club in
26 years.
The setba c k snapped a
seven-game1 unbeaten streak for
the Kings, 14-26-11 , ·but that's a
bit mis leading. Los Aneeles
whipped SL. Louis 7·4 on
Saturday after tying six stra1Cht
games. Over the last 18 games,
the Kinp ar~l-8·9.
··When you play a team
having M hard Ume, you know it
will be a ditflcult 1ame," said
Brooks. "You know that they'll
<the Kings> be hard to deal wtth,
especlaJl)l..at home. Los Angeles
·has played well over the last six
games and their home record is
very Jlood."
KINCS JJ' AIJ/E
PA.UL MULYEY
INGLEWOOD (AP> -Left
wine Paul Mulvey, who an1ered
Los Angeles Coach Don Perry
when he refused to leave the
Kings' bench to ensue in a fi&ht
last weekend, has been placed
on waivers, the National Hockey
League team announced Sunda7
night.
tr n o NHL team claims
Mulvey after 72 houra. he may
be sent to ,the Kins•' American
Hockey Lea1u• farm club at
New Haven, •aid a club
spokeaman. It's alao pojalblt
Mulvey mieht be releaaed.
I L
..
··Lambert doesn't
·answer subpoena
From AP dispatches •
PITTSBURGH -flttsbur1h Ill
Steelers· mlddl~ line backer Jack • •
Lambert responded in an1er after. a
proaecutor claimed Lambert ducked -'
a aubpoena tn order to play in Suhday's
National Football League Pro Bo .. I in Hawaii.
· James. Lees Jr .. · an assl$tant district
attorney fer Allegheny Couhty, last week asked
Judge Patrick Tam ilia to issue a bench warrant
for Lambert's arrest.
Tam ilia denied the request.
Lees wanted him in court
to testify at the murder trial
o f W1ll lam .. Egghead"
Prosdoclmo, 29, of Squirrel
Hill, Pa.
"Mr Lees will find out
that Jack is as much of a
battler off the football field
as. he is on tl\.e field ,"
attorney Greg Lustig said
Saturday.
Lambert, in a phone call to the Pittsburgh
Press Saturday, said he was pot In Pittsburgh at
the time Lees says a s ubpoena was being served
and that he is bound by a contract to play in the
Pro Bowl.
Quote of the day
Free agen~ slugger .Reggie Jackson,
·who ended five tumultuous years with the
New York Yankees when he signed with
the Angels : "I hope '!lie win enough 10-9
games that we could be in the World
Ser ies by next October."
Wake. Forest surpr!ses Arkansas
Led by senior guard Mike Helms' m
14 points. the 18th-ranked Wake
Forest Deacons defeated No. 12
Arkansas 49-48 Sunday in .a non-conference.
college basketball game in Little Rock. Wake
Forest tr.ailed most of the way until sophomore
guard Danny Young tied the game at 36 with
14: 52 left in the game Helms hit a 17-foot
)1.1mper a.in-Oment later and the D~ac?ns didn't
trail after that . . Elsewhere. Junior guard
Gre( Jones poured in 15 points and ted a
!\econd-half surge that lifted West Virl(inia to its
16th straigM victory 65·59 over South Alabama
in a nationally-te l ev ised ga me.
•
Stacy works overtime t~in
Hollla Stacy, battling strong ~
winds, sank a 7-foot bitdie pull on
the fifth playoff hole Sunday lo
defeat JoA.nne Carner and ~n the wee end's
LPGA tournament In Deerfield Beach. Fla.
Stacy who opened the day with a two-stroke
lead. ~hot a 1-0ver-par 73 on the rinal .18 holes or
regulation. She won $18 ,750 for her ninth L.PGA
tour victory in eight seasons The tno of
Germany's Rolf Stomm elen. John Paul and
John Paal Jr. rolled to a big victory an the
Daytona 24-Hour Challenge Sunday, conti~ui~g
the domination or Amencan sports citr racing in
recent years by the powerful Porsche Turbo
9355 . The older Paul was at the wheel when the •
record-setting winning car took the checker1.d
flag just seconds after 3 30 .P · m EST.
completing 719 laps 2.760 96 mile~ at an
average speed or 114 .794 miles per
hour ... Mark Evans belted a three·run
homer Sunday, leading the Milwaukee Brew.Jlrs
to a 7·6 victory over Cal State Northridge lri'lhe
fourth annual Lyman Bos tock Memorial
baseball game . . . World Boxing Association
lightweight champion Arturo Frias, "'ho . kept
his crown by virtue or a pair of unintentional
head butts by Ernesto Espana. doesn't know
when he'll be able to defend his title. A slash
above Frias· left cheek could bnng .about a
postponement or his next scheduled bout against
Ray "Boom Boom" Mancini.
Televisio~. radio
Following are the too soorts events on T;t
tonight Ratings are • • . . excellPnt worth watching· .. fair . forqet 1t
8 p.m .. Channel 9 "' "
COLLEGE BASKErBALL : Stanford at
Arizona Announcers: Mike Waldpn and Pete Newell
The two bottom teamc; 1n the Pacific.10 clash
tonight in Tucson when the Cardinals C 1-71 SQua re
off against the Wiidcat<; }0·81 Stanford is 6·11 overall; Arizona, 5-12 1.,
RADIO Bas ketball Long Beach State at
Nevada-Las Vegas. 8 15 om . KLON <88 l=Ml
Ex-Angel exec
Milkes dies
J,.OS ANGEtES l AP > -
Marvin Milkes, a former major
league · baseball and soccer
executive. died ·over the
weekend or an apparent heart
attack·, his s ister, Ann.;tte
Milkes Heselov. said Sunday
night. He was 58.
Mol-tday night play
returns in Sea View
Mrs. Heselov $aid Milkes was
found ln his bed Sunc1.ay morning
at the Los 'Angeles Athletic Club
'by a maid. Milkes often worked
out. at the club, his s ister said,
and went there Saturday
morning to spend the weekend. . '
Most recently , Milkes was
general manager of the Los
Angel~s Aztecs of the North
American Soccer League. He
assumed the postlion one month
into the 1980 season but resigned
shortly· before th~ Aztecs folded
their franchise last fall.
Saddl~b~ck's test
tops area slate
Saddlebac-k Co llege's
showdown with Southern
Califdrnia 's top-ranked team.
Riversi<te CC. heads this week's
area co mrt)unit y col l ege
basl<etball aoU vity.
It ·s a two-fa ced band of
Sailors at Newport Harbor High
tonight that will greet Costa
· Mesa's Mustangs -they have
one hand for s haking Costa
Kirkpatrick
still m coma'
By The Associated Presa
.. " Former major league catcher
Ed Kirkpltrick ha$ been in a
coma for two months, but he has
s hown signs of improvement
recently, ttis wife. Judy. said
Sunday.
Kirkpatrick, 37. has been In a
co matose state s ince late
November. but his wife said that
within the last four or five days,
he has responded tQ commands
from .his Immediate family.
Kirkpatrick, who began his
professional baseball career by
signing a contract with the
Angels upon graduation from
high school, also played with the
Kansas City Royals. Pittsburgh
Pirates. Texas Rangers and
Milwcwkee Brewers before
retiring in 1978.
Mesa's aner its 4d·41 upset over
Corona del Mar Friday. and
another ready to try to slap the
Mus tangs down as they try to
maintain pace with Sea View
League leaders Corona del Mar
1md Estancia.
Costa Mesa ( 5-4) e nteu
tanight's game <7 :301 against
the 7·2 Sailors. trying to find a
se~()nd stason and get back into
t he Cl F 3-A playoff picture.
while the Sailors. a game off the
pace of the 8-1 leaders. will be
trying lo duplicate an earlier
v1ctorv over Mesa
Other games tonight <it's the
second Mooday or basketball for
the leaiue in order to squeeze 14
kames into six .weeksJ finds
Saddleback t0-9) at Corona del
Mar 1a ·1>: Estancia 18·1> at
Irvine < 1·81. and University
1~·4) at EIToro <2-71.
LeadJng the way in Newport's
earlier conquest at Mesa was 6-7
Byron Ball, with 25 points. while
three others <Brian Folk, Srotl
Litler and Steve Pelletier I were
in double figures
This time the Sailors have the
home-court edRe. too. although
it didn't do Costa Mesa much
&ood against Newport and it
didn't do Newport· Harbor mu~h
1ood aralnst Estancia recenUy
In a S&-46 setback. ,
Costa Mesa attacks with Its
JE,, STEPHl!NS · · BYRON BA\.L CHRtSLYNCH
Riddell assumes scOring lead
Chang close behind with next three spots unchanged
Laguna Beach High's Nell Riddell, a 6·1 senior
guard, has taken over the Orange Coast area
leadership in scoring. skipplDc past Edison Higb's
Richard Chang with a 22.8 avera1e.
Riddell plunked in totals of 20, 26 and 30 in his
lasl three games to overtake the 6-6 Edison
standout.
Chang, who is headed for the University of
California in the fall, is second at 22.3.
The next three spots remain unchanged with
ARIAICO•INO
llllreutlllS ...... 11
• Rlddell, ~Beech
Clle119, Edl10n Hu9hH, Founteln Volley
Uwvltch, O<een View Beeuwwer1, Meler 0.1 Gueu. un1-.rslly Bordtley, C•I• Me ..
LoM, H11r11Jnoton Beot< n OIBernerdO, Edl\Ofl
LytW:ll. Corone Cle! Mor Ben. Newpon Horbor Stepl\ens. Edl1«1 FMl119er, W-k19e
F lllpek, Metln• Smith. Merino
Gou<l9e. Eeliwin TllomPIOfl, Hin Beoc:n
0 •venpor1 s.ddlet••O Aaer\. lrvhw
Gerdner. £1,..,.io Berry. Menn• H•rler. Founl••n Volley Moydole Esten<••
Tor bell. -0.1 Cew Secldlebeck
Sho01e1Md,-t11n BN<h Rouw. UNYtttilY RltMbor~r. (Gilli Mew Oownt. WH!fTvn•ler
Eu11n, ~m'"''" Rodovcl<ll. W-IOQor
klu,\man ~tin•
Mv•rs, Unev~'•tv
Pelleher. N-1 H•rllOr
Pelmbl-. CO\I• MeMI • O.Brou-, O<een View
Trickett, El Toro T 111. E tlen<le
Ml 0 lend, &len<•o PellCtlowSlll, COil• MeU Je<Uon, Miit.,. Del
~. NfWPOrt H•rt>or Arneld, El Two
Ovorek, L.ne e .. cll AyrH, Huntl"91on !Mech
l1t9lellert, El 'fore
Werner, O<een View
Krtln, Esttn<le
w1 ... w-109e Bro1ovkll, Irvine
Vlll•nwev•. Fin V•ll•Y HHS, Corone Gel Mer
Liner, N-1 Hort>or t..t;~nn. Laviur .. &uc"
Pet ... Wfl.COM SMM.L ...... 8Hch l'olll. ,.....,_.. M•rbof'
Lewis, lllt-J~.<>c.-vP:9ufl. ,,,_
'#111.-..ir, ""' v.11.., •••l•r. INlfw Goeoel. c-oet Mer
RkhC.r. El TMO
.......
• '-0 1.
10 '" 11 I II .01 11 l 13 ltS 20.1
10 m ,., ,. 345 ,. ,
" 2S3 11 6 II m II J
1 I 200 II 1 10).41 171 ,. 2.. ,.,,
II"' 166 20Ul 16S It 1'1 II l lt17t .. , ,. 141 1J I
202 .. Ill
" 20 It. 11no n• 14 11• 111
•• 136 u . ,.m 111 10 ,,, 11 •
"11t llS
It 111 II ll
11 It) II •
II 100 11 1
" 10!1 10 I 11 1~ 10 I 11 ,., 10 1
'" IS• 10. "m •o•
" ... 10. .. I~ 101
11 114 10,
,. 14) 10 2
1• Itel 100 • 116 ..
" "' '3 " 116 ' l 11 ,.. 'l ,.,,. ,,
11 ,,. • I um 11
10 113 I. " I.. • .•
" 111 •• 1• ,., I s
U Ito' I•
It Ut I• u 116 I. 10 .. , • l
•• U3 I l I/ IJ9 I 1
1• 121 I 0 14 .,, 10
JO ISi I I
11 140 1.
" ,. 7.1 20142 ,,
It IS 7 1
20 140 •o ,. 104 •• ,. '°' •• 16 IOJ 6 4
..... .......
I 1l0 l~
6 •. I "r • n.1 M
• 16 l JO s 1'2 •
' '" 21 ' II, ts
• JOO 11 • us 2'
• 171 ,,
• 14 0 11
·' • 1 :
• i..t to • us 2•
6 140 11
• tU 11 t IO.J 21
I 1J.S " "' t IJ.2 27
• 11.1 It
• ti.I 11
' 10• " s 71 u
• • • Jl • 10, ,,
t IO i.
• 12 6 11 • 10.1 JO
• 100 ,,
21 . " ,, • 100 21
... JO s to 11
6 '°' 11 • 6 4 It
t t I °" • I' ,. . . , " s ti u .... u . ., ..
' 10.6 16 6 IO.O II• I •'4-11 S 7,t II
• " to ,,
' IO.l 20 • 4 1 21 ' •.. ,. • ~ 11
I t I 1'
t t,O If 7 1.A 1J
t 11 O II s 71 16
• IA IS • ..1 ,.
• l.S ta
' 71 u
• 7.J " • • J u
I " tl
Fountam Valley's Jeff Hughes (20 81. Ocean
View's Jim Usevtlch I 19 61 and Mater Dei's·Matt
Beeuwsaert < 19 2 l holding to their positions.
Moving up two notches to No 7 1s Co15ta •
Mesa's K~n Bardsley, who 1s now at the 18.3
plateau. JUSt behind University's Brad Guess ( 18.6).
Bardsley. bound for UC Irvine, has s'cored
. l ,077, potnts in his three years as a starter for the Mustangs
H•rrlQ•n. H1n Bt:«.I\ ~•Ion, Mtn be.ell Petk•, w .. tmln\ler Otwn, c;.,.,,... dol Mor
Mill• Munllnoton 8t'<0<n
NHI, lrvlne
Mutll'IMn.1!1 loro
Johnt, trvlne
Coiner O<HnVlew
Gr•m•. Wetlmln\I., M09ln, letl"NI Bte<: I\ AnlonopcMllo\. O<un Vie• McAllhter. Soodlet>oo
Jee99r Mote< 0.1
U1wry lrwlftt Flelder. Moler 0.1
Ondl<1, Wtttm1n\1<'1 Sf\yoer, El Toro
J.COIH Fount•1n V•llty
T-r. L-8eecn F"Mlre. Min Btocn Brown. F"ount•in V•H•v Burl, Founto1n venev C_.,,lk. ,,...,....,
Nkol••. w.wmin•ttt
Robin-. ~lel»o
Ko\ty "ount•11'1 V•H~y
S..ll>'f N-Por1 Morbo1 Welm•n ~boo
8r•ndl HeWPofl H•rOO•
Wtll1•m\ Oc•ain \/.~w
Auoo. O<t•n Vtf'w
Ptrllln1, Malet O.•-
T •ndy, Mer.no Btllffkl Edi_.
Aovlh. W-I09t
M<Cehlll, £"-'• c-.c1111.eAMw V•nSteenhuyw CdM
Moore, Edi'°" Duke. E~IM><j• Buck. Ou-. Ille• O'L•v9fllln, S-leb•O JOl\11Uon. EJ1en<1• Her'tler, Hunttnq1on ftf'M"
~Hr, O<Nn View
Kubo. Foun141n V•ilt'f
Mourel, Founl••n V•lfo BWU, W-109t Newton. Founl••n V•llty Morel•""· WOOOl>o'I~ S<1dmort, Newporl Pe•••. We-st,,,1n,ltr
Burh~ Corono Otl M1tr MH9lltr, Mel*' 0•• Gu.to, SeoClteb•O (llOI, Unlwr•jly
Mello• Mun111191on b-.t<n
Berry. Ocon View
C•r 0•, H ""Ctnqton St'•' ti Rodr'9.-1 E ll•n< ut
Jlm (tkWtt•l•r Ftn \1-t•I,.,. ~e .... ey, Edi...., Gu.ii Oce.,,v,.,. NeWIOl'l.~t. Moncrl<!I ~WO
Jo Ecll..,..l•r Fin V•ll-. HUM\ Wntm.,nt .. ,
Edwn '"''• Mltw
s ,.
" "" 17 " IS as
It " H .,
13 ,, ,. ll • II
12 ~ 20 " 70 .. .. ,,
11 I.I
IS ..
17 II 11 \1
I lO 20 ..
I• .. ,. SS ,, ., • 1J .. .. ,, .0
l II II O<
II •7 I\ S1 .. ...
I ..
I I d ~ IS \I
" •2 •• SJ 11 40
II )/ • JO
I 1J • , .
' 19 I •• I) '° I) )t
1 • IS ..
I• '° 11 l<
' II
" ..
I\ '° II '° • •• •• 0 II JOI •• )I
'J '" • 11
& •• I I]
I IJ
12 JO • ,.
II 2• 12 " 11 11
II I•
II )•
, I s 1
s ' s • s.
S I \ s
S1 s,
••
• I • I
4 I . ' •• •• • • . ]
•2
• 2 , .
] .
ll l I
J' l 1
ll
l.
l s
J I
l " JS
) .
l .
J )
J l l)
) J
] )
l l J1
)1
J7
) ' ] 0
) 0 2 . ,.
18 ,.
1 I
1 I 11 -11~ '. 2• 2 6
I • 2 •
1.
7• 1• 1 s
2 s 1 .
2 )
1 l
1 J 22
I 0,0 IO
• I> IS
• S 1 II • • s 12 • , s u
' •• 11
' 2 1 11
I 3' 10
1 •,O t s u fl
I J,J n • • s 10 • s. 11
• IO 11 • • , 12
S 10 I I)
2 2 0 ..
l , 3 11
• • 0 11
• • ' 10 2 I 0 10
0 0 0 11
I • 0 t
S • 0 II
• l2 I
) l ' • s JI • 9 ) 0 •
' , • 10 I 1 l I)
I 10 I
0 00 • • 10
• 2 2 • , I
& I 1 • I JI I s . 10
• 0 • H f
t 0 IT
• 0 •
1 s •
l • IS 0 D 10
).0
I J • ls 10 • 1 I 10
' , . I I 2. .
• 1 11
0 . ti
1 0 •
1' ' l 1 • 1 0
0 00 ' , s • I • 0 ••
11 I
• 0 •
ll I I • s • 2. • ... 1 I 0 ll • • s •• s , I 1 · Lorwn. Unlver"\llY Bou'*.~~ Hommel. El Tqro
C•rver. Irv me
Let>wck.~k
Stroer. CCIII• Mew
C•rroll. Ooen v .... SIOltoll, Unlveoily
Molllnqswortll. CdM
" '° 6. II II) • )
,. • 6 3
IS '1 •I ,. as •1
11 un •O
.. 111 s.
" I SJ II TWO Cost.i Ml_ .......... ZumbO O<rM> Vlf!w Coot. Molt< 0.1 • • I\ JI
1 2 1 I
, 2 0 • s 2 . 1 . -, ) . • s' ll • s. • Kc n Bard ~IP' I ... G F ••Id (CJ\lo Mltw 11 n 1 I
EnQlond H4'Wporl MorlJO• I 11 2 1
11 104 SI
II ... SI
• s. ,.
• • 2 II I • 0 u
ll ) 2 IS
se\'l'nth in <1 r l' <1
~<'m·ing
Sm1lh E01"°" I• n 10
Mol••n<M El Toro I I• 20
Not• WOOdbttOQ!f> ff ff '•Mr
Cd.M juIDps • Ill r~tings despite loss
How can you absorb an upset loss at Costa
Mesa and move from No. 3 to No. 2 in the Orange
County prep basketball rankings"
It's easy Just be a part of Orange County
ci rcles where the competitiveness of the top
15-20 teams m akes it seemingly impossible to
chalk up much of a record.
Corona del Mar saw its 13-game winning
streak snapped by Costa Mesa (49-41 ), but the Sea
Kings get rich in the rankings berause or too many
tangles.
For instance only Edison I 18·21 and
Estancia 116-3) escaped defeat last week, the
second wacky week in a row.
Dally Pilot's Top 10
Orangt' County Prep Bas ketball
Pos. 1'eam
1. Edison
2. Corona d<'I Mar
3. Estancia
4. Fountain Valley
5. Marina
6 Ocean View
7. Servile
8. Huntington Beach
9 San Clemente
10-<tie> Capistrano Vall<'}
Brea-Olinda
• l' • 2 s
I J S •
Record
18·2
13·3
16·3
13·7
11 ·8
12·8
13·8
10·9
16·6
13·7
19-3
W. Sii RIP~RT ·~ NEW ltlZVW
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Snow depth/lnchea Conditions
18-27 pow /pp
18-27 pow /pp And . in the Southern
CalifoimJa Conference, Golden
West has a pair of importa11t
home.games. •
-Here~s haw the week shapes up: .
He attended Glendora High•
School. near Pasadena.
Kirkpatrick's problem~ began
when be was involved In a minor
traffic accident last November
close to his home In Laguna
Niguel.
a 11 -6-4 look . led by Ken •
Bardsley, .who averages 18.3
points a game.
Elsewhere. Corona deJ: Mar is
heavily favored to snap back
after seeing its 13.game winning
streak bro\Ce n : Estancia takes a
16·3 overall record to Irvine
(Irvine fell the first time by 41
points> and University tries to
keep pace with Costa Mesa in its
quest for a portion of third Rlace
or a wi\d card entry in the C.IF
3·A playoffs .
Mountain High
Holiday Hill
Ski Sunrise
Mr. Baldy
Kratka Ridge
Mt. Waterman
Snow Slftnmit
Snow Valley
Gold min'
Green Valley
8-28 pow/pp
12·24 pow/pp
48 pow/pp
24-48 pow -pp
Llfts/cbalrs
SC
2C
FO
4L
FO
FO
FO
FO
FO
FO
• RAllrT "L .. SEDAM
a.ioer economy with 1hi1 one! Fully
eQlipped lncluchng • 4 speed trensmisslon,
tinted glass. radial
tires and morel (Stk. 30Tn (01813). SAUNJCI s
Til•IOAY ..,...,,. c.t c:.....--e
S.llte MGN<e et c;Oldeft Wffl, 7 JO.
WIDl ... IOAY .... c .. ttc..-...C•
Fvl..,_ •I Or-. Coaa, 1.JO ,.. .. ...,c....._e
Rlwr'* et ~cc., 7 JO f'1UDAY '·~cat~·
Eest "'* •111111••' Goldeft W••I, 1 JO IATU•OAY
s.-c..c~· or.., c..-• SMt• AN, 1:•.
. ---~· SaA9-dll•• ~ ... 7 JO
He suffered a bruise on hi&
neck and was hospttaltzed
overnight for observation, but
the following morning, before he
was to be released, be suffered a
stroke, with a blood clot moving
from bis neck to..hiLbrail'l, his
wife said.
This· Week's Special
•
Zillgitt and Wright
I
in11ur.1n11· J11rn1:i1 .ind hrolt1•rs
Aetallera':
lnsuruice eotl9 rlain&"
.contact us for a competitive quote
. tor a Bualntas Ownera Pavakge Polley
, . w~lch Inell.Id• most·coverages needed
to ')>r~ yOtk bu1inea1. We also write
GrOtlp Medical and Ute Cor lp'lall ltolJPS aa well u larae.
1980 CilDILLAC SEVILL£ ·
1 Two toqe pain\. leathe1' cove1•ed sealing
area. CMdillac wi1·e whct'I covers & full
power. f812YMY 1
•14,995
<;;ii1la4 Volite-Protectlon scrvicr Agrttmtnl AllOllablt . fJIC.. ,.,,_...,. All"°""r,...,ru•~
lllD 111AT •MAT UI nnnt•; • ..,.. .......... Man.
1
2600 Harbor Blvd.
Costo Mesa
(714) 540·1860.
30-54 pow/pp
48·66 pow I pp
36-48 pow /pp
28-36 pow/pp
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
June Mountain 72-88 pow /pp
Mammoth Mountain 115 PP
China Peak 78 pow/pp
Dodge Ridge 84-1.26 pow/pp
-.-NORTHERN ~RNb\--
FO
FO FO
FO
Mt. Reba 96·156 pow/pp 9C
Kirkwood 1~·264 pow/pp FO
Sierra Ski Ranch 117 pow/pp FO
Heavenly Valley 100 pow/pp FO
Northsl-ar 52·130 po~/pp FO
Squay.t Valley 66-132 pow/pp 24L •
Donner Ski Ranch 168-192 pow /pp .. 3C
Alpine Meadows \80•218 pow /pp llL
Sucar Bowl 192·276 pow/pp SC
Boreal \ US8·192 pow/pp 8C
Homewood Ski Area 84·1M pow/pp 3C
Conditions: hp -hardpack; pp -packed powder; pow -
powder. ·
LUb/chalr•: t..-llfta; C -chairs; FO -tUll operaUOf\ .
VAHA "'L" I' u 11y equipped with
te•tnettne ..-. tinted glass del'"'9 J>Kkage & morel (Stk 3028)
(107288). . tht~-SI 1,590
Dllcoimt -SI HI
tillW;JNl vw
Loaded! EquipJ*S Wlttt 5 •l>ffd trantmi.lon. air
oond .. ater.o & pr~. (Stk.3055~(474712~
I
YACHTING ACTION San Diego held the spotlight in
yachting over tl'ie weekend with action for big and littlt•
boats. Thirty 17-foot Thistles mixed it up on Mission
Bay in the Midwinter West regatta ct op 1. Across thl'
peninsula ofC....l?oint.-l..oma_.35 cJ·ack vcean racl'rs ·-
started the San.' Diego to Manzanillo ract.>. PoppinJ?
chutes after the start were Steven Soares· Dust 'Em.
S~n Diego YC 1No. 23542• and John Arens' Tomahawk.
Balboa Yacht Club. · .
Orange Coat DAILY Ptl.OT/Mo'lday, February 1, 1982
' ... Huntington Harbour's
No~ng wins 'Manlling
Fourteen-year-old outscores 25 rivals
LONO BEACH -Paul Norin1, 1',
from HYDtlnlton Harbour Yacht Club
beat out 25 rivall ln the Naples Sabot
Cla11 Sunday to wlrf the E. E.
M anntn1 Trophy, the oldest
perpetual trophy for dlnlhY aallora In
Southern CallfomJa.
The Mannin1 Trophy 1oea to the wlnnln1 skipper ln the clau with the
lar1est number of entries. Norine
beat clubmate J .J . Gobbel by SIA
points In the final 1cortn1.
Winner of the Skl~mer Trophy In I . .
BOating class
• • registration set
Dana Point Power Squadron has
started a new course In basic boatin1
aaf ety and wlll continue tq, accept
re1l1tration TlJui;-sd•y at 7 p.m . The
claaa started last week.
The clua ls ~I conducted at
Brentwood Savtn1s & Loan, 31872 Del
Obispo, San Juan Capistrano.
The course Is free to the general
public and includes such subjects as
handling under normal and adverse
conditions. seamanship and commQn
emergencies, rules of the road, aids
to navigation. use oMhe compass and
nautical charts, lights and equipment
requtr.ed by law. boat trailering and
river boating.
The course is for both power and
sailboaters.
the claH Wllb the second lar1e1t r
number of entriea wu Jim Kirk of
the Lons Beach Navy Yacbt club ID
the 18-boat Luer clua. j
Third Jar1e1t class was the Snipe
with 15 entries, won by RoblJl Galea f
of Miuion Bay Yacht Club.
The Hoet Club perpetual trophy ror ~
YACHT/NC .'GJ,i
the skipper 18 or under went to •
Br)'son 'ntf, HHYC. The trophy ls ~
awareled for apo.Umanahip and the
beat· malntalned boat. Tiff sailed ln
the Naples Sabot Class.
The re1atta, sponsored b)'
Southern California Yachtln1
AsaoclaUon, drew 96 boats in el1ht
classes of dln1hies 16 feet and under.
The E.E. Manning Trophy dates
back to 1935 when it was sailed in
open dinghies. Manning won the
trophy three straight times and
deeded it to SCY A.
The regatta is sailed each year ln
the waters of the derending club
which this year was Alamitos Bay ,
Yacht Club.
Winners in other clasae·s :
Coronado-ls, Ted Stoker, ABYC;
Lido-14, David Pritchard, BYC:
Flying Junior. Walter Johnson.
ABYC; Cyclone, Tim Broberc.·Seal-'
Beach Yacht Club: Westward Sabot, I
Neal Garland. Kine Harbor 'Yacht
Club.
Godfrey takes Thistle race
MISSION BAY -Dick Godfrey,
Palo Alto. was the winner or the
Thistle Midwinter West Regatta at
Mission Bay Yacht Club with ei1ht
points iri the seven.race aeries.
Fresno skippers dominated both
the charqpionahip' and commodore's
m1hts. placing two skippers among
the rirat five ln the championship
night and rour in the commodore's night. .
Winner in the Commodore's fiight · .
was Bruce Bricker. or Fresno.
The only Southlandera among the
30 entries to place were Skip Kemprt,
Coronado Yacht Club, and JeH
Lenhart. Mission Bay Yacht Club in
the Cham.Rionahip Fli1bt: and
72·yei1J'-0ld 1·dite Rubel, MBYC, in lhe
Commodore's FU1ht.
Cius offered
A 13-week course in boating skills
and seamanship is belnc ofrered U.S.
Coast Guard Auxlllary Flotilla 15-04
starting Thursday at Marina High,
15871 Springdale St., Huntington
Beach. Classes start at 7 p.m.
For further Information on the
upco~g class telephone 549·9582.
Trophy winners in each flight:
CHAMPIONSHIP -1. Dic k .
Godfrey, Palo Alto; 2. Dave Kerin.,
Fresno: 3. Skip Kempff. Coronado; 4.
Jeff Lenhart, M BYC: S. Mike
Gillum, Fresno.
eOMMODORE'S FLIGHT -1.
Bruce Bricker. Fresno; 2. Dan lrwin ..
Fresno; 3. Tom Goodwin. Fresno: 4.
Scott Montgomery, Fresno: s. Nate
Q.ubel. MBYC. .
PHRF boats turn out 1
Twenty·three Performance
Handicap Racing Fleet boats in three ,-J
classa turned nut Sund-ny for Dana :.1 f
Point Yacht Club's Midwinter
Tuneup-Regatta. 1Jl'
Trophy wlnners: .f i ff
CLASS A ( 7) -1. California Gold, 'l
Fred O'Connor , DPYC : 2 .
Desperado, Greg Sands. DPYC. ·If
CLASS B ( 13! -1. Funny Feelin', . I -'· Pete Mead, Capo BYC; 2. Daybreak, , ,
Bob Gates, Capo BVC ; 3. Serena. , /1 ~
John White, DPYC: 4. Claire de '" /1 Lune, Paul Frazier. DPYC. , M ii
NON SPINNAKER <7J -1. Hot , , (,
Chocolate, Steve Shupak. DPYC; 2. n
. The Boat, Lloyd Forsyth, Capo BYC. ,----------·.,--------------........ -------......... -'.':'"""-----·''}
' •I td l.
lull" d
1 Merllii. maintains lead in Manzanillo· race •
Bask in the lavish
hospitality of the
fabulous Orient!
Massages given by
StHJSUOCJ s beautiful
fl ' '(;
') 111 (,
n
f
Pushed by 2S·knot winds Saturday
n ight, the 67-foot yacht Merlin,
skipperedl>y Mike Satterlee, logged 91
miles during the first 20 hours of sailing
in the San Diego to Manzanillo race.
M erlln 1 s Sunday position report
placed. her off San Quintin. five rn.Uea
ahead of Fred Preiss' 84-foot sloop
Christine In their battle for line honors.
The winds went lighter Sunday
morning and the 3S·boal fleet was.
ma k io.g slower proe ress in the
1,110-mile race. Most of'the fleet were
bunched between Ensenada al'\d San
Quintin.
The Santa Cruz.so Night Train, sailed
by Mike Abraham, Newport Yacht Club,
had logged 166. miles to lead her stater
ships Hano Ho, Oaxaca and Secret Love
in their boat for boat race ~wn the 25th year
· Baja California cout. AnnlverHry
Rana Ho was skippered by Morrie Q._., in the Harbor.Area
Kirk, BYC, reported 162 miles from the ,-r-r.•
start, and Brad Herman's Secret Love, · . '· f-.S ..._
lSi miles. Oaxaca's position was not .. •
reported. 4t I ow....,_. •4.
Handicap leader was the Class D ....,_..._.,CA
sloop Renegade skippered by Sandy 1----•->-..1·-..n._40 ___ .,.
'Purdon, San Dieao Yacht Club.
Brent Ragon
'sal'ed a life with RedCrossCPR. -Could}OO? •• . .
girl.... .
Cot.1t! ir., TODA YI
$ First Time Skiers *
New Ski School · •.••
..
.
Fifteen·year-oid brent RaQon had no idea hQw soon
he'd be umo CPR to save someone's life whenne eom·
pleted his Red Cross training at a Youth Safery Semtnar. ' But wtule Brent was ndino the train home {fom that le~ a man collapsed two JOWi behind rutn. • "He wasn't bteatluno. and I couldn't find a pulse,"
Brent recalls. '1 wasn't scared t cbdn't have tune IO be
scared. £knew what to do and I did 1t" It ypu were in Brent's place, would you know what totlo? ·
We'll teach you.
Jomus.
. \0
'"eof'f-~\ ·~ .~o ~~\
..
~C!' ... ,G~1 S'°l s,Q ,,,.s,
ll19,,;{'C!'t1, •.
• I
:f nl. " ...,
Pr. A
,; .A
fll t.. •.rl ! JI
J 111 i
I;
~ ~
>I ...
I
11 • '· ) ~
. ~l ')
I ~ fl
·lJ "' d
L J
H '..)
I{ .,,
IJ
IJ
t ; .
I
I
.
I
I 1·
1j
...
c
r
11
II
11
• -• 4
4(_ > .
NBA
WHT•llN C.QfO'•ll•Nce ~alfkDMt ... w L f'ct. t..ellen 31 12 111 Se•tt•• , ,, I> "° "'-"'• 24 11 SIS
Goldell!iale 2) It 561
Portl•lld 2J ti 561
$en 0'99D IJ '° Mw-tDlwllletl
JOt
Sen Antonto 21 14 .. 1
Denver 23 20 m
H01.1'10ll 21 11 ..
KenwsClty 14 2' 32'
Delles I) 2' JlO
Uteh ll 2' JIO
1.ASTellN COllll'ElllNCI
A•MtkDMtlM
8oston 32 " 1U
Phlledelpllle 30 14 ·"' WHl\lngton ,, 20 '24
New York 20 2• 4U
NewJeney .. 24 ...,
C .... ral DlwhlM
Mllw•u .... ,, 14 .,.
Allente .. 22 ..,
Inell•,.. .. 24 "' Chk990 ti ts 41'
Detroit ti 24 .40'!
Clewel•nd • )4 1'0
s...,..~sc .... N•AAll-ro-uu finl ._,...,.., N.J .I
Eut 120, WKI Ill
T.......-•o-
NO O•mei Ktw$11ed T_.'('tG-
Lall.en el Volden Stele
Detroit•• Allent.1 Boston et 1nc1i.,..
ci.vetenCI et Wesnl11Q1on Oallnet S.11 AntO<llO
l'lew Jeno et Chic-
S.n 0le9o •I HouSIO<I
New York et e>enwr K enws city at Portl-
ALL.STAR GAME ..
oa
'"' • 1
7
11
,..,
'"' ,.,,,
u u
211> '"' 12 ....
13
• 10
11
1111>
2011>
East 120 WHl 111
W•IT -Oa nl1ey 12, Shelton I,
AbOul·Jel!Oer 2, G Wllli.r•n 22. Gerwin
12, Klno 6. Nh•on 14. E J-., 16,
Melone U. Slk,,... 10, Enollsh •. 0
Jof\nson I Toe.It '° , .. ,. I"
IAST Erw1119 16. Bird It, Giimore 7,
Arcl\llNlld •. T11omes 11, Moncrief 6, Lenler I, Rk lle-10, JOllff s. B Wllllems 4, Perhll 21. Trlpuclla •
Totall: SI 11-31120 sc: .... by Olil.ar1An
WHt 3' 22 21 2' 111
Eu• 34 2' 11 » nc
Fouled out None Totel loul\
Wut?7. Ea.11' A -10,1 ..
Collea• •cores
SUNOAi'"S llESULTS
~ Wtt: Fe>rr.t C?, ArltaM..~4 s... Vlrolnle Tacll 76, Clnclnl\tltf M Va Com,,,__eltll 80, N.C ·CllerlOtte »· TennH1ff Tecll IS Middle T ..... " l•lt
Geof'9elown tl, St Jolln's '6 Hlao•r•,. ..... H .... PSN,.,. West Vtrpi. u . s A1ai..me s• St. J ..... 's'4, Vlll-ve64
Col941te "·Vermont 7' ,
How top 20 fered
Ho" tll• Top 20 teams In Tht
Assocleled Pt'Hs's collf9t bu-•tlNlll
poll fered lllls.....,
1 Ml-I llM) but 1-a State e.-n. llNI ICAIM.H Stait S .. S..
2 N-C-lna Cl._1) beat Cle..,_,
n-n; lleel Horlr. c ... 011ne s1.11e ,,._..
J. Vlrolnla 120-11 beat Wall• Foresl .,_..; i..et Oul<e 77 .. S.
4, O.Poul 111-!l beet St. LOUIS ft.tO;
11ea1 Syrecute '247
s. TH• fl'-21 mt to Beytor 6,..5';
lc>1t to Tua UM 71_.., loo
•· low. 11~21 e.a1 Mlchloen Slate n ·S6; -0!.io Si.ta,....._ 1. Kentuclly (IM ) beet LoultlMe
State 7HS; ""' lo Mlnlnl"91 Stele St-SI, -~•'1·7l I. Oregon State ll~ll lost to UCLA
74..,; \Mal Southem Cellfornl• 12·SS
t . Sen Fr•n<lsco I '"21 but Sen OleOO '2-Sl, Dfft '!>I Me'Y ....... (2 oil
10. M lnne•ol• l .. ·l l D••t Nortllw~em61·Sl beat lndlel\tl .... 2
II •-C 17 21 IO\t to ltotre Oame S0-41. loo, e.a1 8ooM State tl·St
12 A,,._ CIS-)) beet THH A&M
M•3; beet Rlct 60-S., IOSI to Walt9
l'orttt....._
13. Alebeme 11._21 beet Auburn '7•S: bt,I T--77-7t, IOI). 4. IC'enses Stele (14-0 l•tt t•
Otil•!loma.SUt• 56-53; lost to Mis-·· St-SI.
IS T.__ llMI tleet 0-tla "'64; lolttoAl ...... n-71. loO. It. Tulw ll~JI bNt West TtXH 5'alt .... ,; -H-NW•k•State , .. n. 17. Notti> C.oHl\tl State 11._.I bHI
Georgia Tech 4t-•O. lost to Horii!
Carolln•-
11. Welle Forest (14-0 ~I to Vlrolni.
.,_..; -tArlUlllW$~.
It. F ""'1o !late I 11-l I Deal Sen JOM
Si.tt u.45; 111Mt S.. J-SUie 47·».
20 VII'-• 11'-Sl lost lo Georvelowft n -56, bHI Le S.llt 117..,; IOP to St
Jowpl\'11444
COLLEGE WOMEN
How top 20 fered
H-ttw TOii 20 w-'s tMmt fared tr••··-: 1. l,.CIVISlena TCl<fl lft · 11 lltal
Clltfn-• ...._,rbfft °""91•. U..O. ""' to Ol4I Dornlltlen ..... 2. Sowlfltf'fl C .. lfornla l~MI ... , Or..,n ....... ; llHt Cat State FulltMeft, ~SS. J. R11t{l9fl t IJ.J) beet Vlllenove, .,_S7; lost to MA'Yl•nd, 6 .....
4 Clleyrwy State I 14·21 btet l!Ht
StrouchburO, ~~~_i llHI SelD<I Htll, e.-n: i..et 1>111.......,.•~" S. North C.ollne State fl•21 llHI
Vlr9lnle Tecll, 41-47 but Georol• Tecll,
7MI.
•· _.,,_ 11.,2) but MO<ltcltlr
Stetf_, H ·»; bttt R ......... , .... 1. Old Dominion (IWI bfft Norfolk Sta:~· :'"...W~~'i~:;':':.":t T~!;,';:it.
17-7•; IOll to T-..-. lf-7'; lost to *"""•Ste•. 10..•
'· orevon l1M I ..... P0#11•nd Stele, 101-U ; lost to S.0..thern Ctlllornla, ....... kKI to UCLA, •7•. • 10 T .... 13041 lltet ••rtor1. 7Mt; Net SOl.ltWft Metllodf11, 74-SJ; .... ,
Houston. n .jO; Met ArllMlut, •Sl
11 Lont ... ell Stele Cl4·41 llHI UCLA, 1'-12, Mel Ste....,, , Austin, .. ,,
12. Soulll Cerolln• C U -61 1011 lo Tenno-. 11 .. 1; llHt FIOrloa Stele,
12 .. 1 ! Iott to Ge«wle 12·75, letl 11. viii-• 11'41 lost to Ru ... ,.,
U-51: 11M1 Temilll, 1411.
"· Memllflf• Ste• 11 .. ,, ..... ''°'Ide Ste•. IOMO; bNt l(tntuclly, ,._.. IS. P...,, Stell Cll-21 llHI 5'(tec-. tH2. llMI T.....-. '2-St, 1:.al Seton He11.e.-n u . G••rol• c t2·SI Iott to
Loultlen11 Tec.~1 13-H . but Soulll C11rolln•, 12-7S Cou. 17. Aullum llJ.l l bt•l Al•bema, 72-S.; lost to Mlv.fulcilll. ,.._,
11. Ari-5t.1te 11._.1 beet Art-.
1...e; 11M1 S... Ole90 Stale, ,.SI
tt Ofllo St.-c lt-41 loSl to llllftOI•. U40, lol4 lo llllnolt Slate, 67411.
20 St ....... F. Allltln !UHi btat Cel Poly ~. 1' ... ; lost.to L .... llH<ll
Steee,-.11
coi:ltv college at1111 •AWHT0._11 0 ...... A ... Hetton 23 "3 IU
Bowen 23 4" 11.2 ~~~s ~ ~ !U
J acobs n 16.S 7 1 E,,.rhert 9 '6 S.1
Oumem 17 11 S.1 Myles It '2 4.1 MartiftO 2 I 4.0
Rewl• S 1• 3 2 Bradley • I 2.0
M<Gff • l 4 1.l
O•AMGI COAST 11•111
0 ~ e .. '1• Y 21 .,,
G l(rotwlfeldl 11 111
Bal-In U 14
Thomu ?2 121
T. Krohnfelilt n 10.
Callloun 22 71 NtnlOll 14 27
Mallli•u 13 21
Hatten U 22 Olma lanle 1 •
SA DOLE SACK C IJ· 111
Turner
Ooods WlsnlewP<I
Ooy i. Hiii
Miter.ell Reid
Fuse ....
8<Yel\t Ground Qviolty
RHd
G ~.
23 427
6 IS 23 ,,.
23 2.0 17 ue •• lot
IS 6t
11 12
12 •
11 4t
s 10 .. ,.
Senta Anita
SUNDAYll ••SULTI
Awt 21 7 10 7
6S s.s •• ).1
It
I I
I S u
Aww.
IJ.6 •••• IU
11.l
• 2 ,.
46 ,.
l2
2 7
20
I 7
nn1 .. ....., """ 11 .,,.._,,..,
eJ: ':.~1!."cf :.:.:!i'~ 10 , ... '40 :=';.,~= :=~... 10.00 :.:
AIM r-: -0 AU, I regtc !Mlle, Remember My Ortam. Tr11a1on'1•
Ooublt, War House, Bertoll"I.
How-n. Tom Meck, N•YflO B•y. Time 1;0U/S
S•COlllO llACI!. I 111' mlltt Turbuletlon l°""fr•I 21.00 II 40 6 tO Atll ~ ISfloemeMrl I tO I 20
KtMHlll (Cat-1 620
Also r.ceO H-N-Dow, Agltato,
Aftsome Knlglll, Llndl'I Brother, Red Curren1, ()(Jftgo Jim, Fenuet
Time: l :Of/S. n DAILY DOU•LE (11" peld
Utt.Ill
TH 1.-0 itAC•. • fw IOflgs s-1M.,-.,l~yl UO •H 120
Celinda COllv-1 • 20 4.IO Hawaiian Stielle COlarl S.tO
Al$9 recect Belly Knockan, Real
HotlCMI, S.lule to LOYe, Caro's Tu ....
Fency o.ncy, wntt Mlntle, !'ureneH,
H~'j,:_~a~.i::~~~y, Ma Soeur f
POUllTN•ACl.1 l/1'mfltt Sir Oan<ef' CPIN:ayl ) 40 2 eo 1 40
Eoo Toss ,,,_...,....,, loo 2 60
Youno Dr1¥W IM<Har-I l 20 AllCI rec.cl: 5-d Bus, Jimmy the Olp, Ctorky.
t ime: l:CI.
fltPT .. aAC•. I~ mites Oft turf. WAftt (C.-1 16.IO •AO 7 00
L .......... (°"9rT•I JO 20 11 eo
•Mr. Mloll I Upflaml 4 40 Alto ••Ced· Pierre La Mont,
•-Sffttede. Fr•on, Ptrtout, Full Payment, Jw!Konwtte. a -CouplfJCI Time. 1 : .. l/S. $S IXACTA l>~J palCI "·lH.00
SIXTM llACe. I 1/16 mlltt Looi Ad"Oeete (Plnceyl 3 tO 2 90 240 .......,_ fOelaflouheye) s 20 4.00
Cheree a..-.. IA-Miii • 10
AllCI rec.cl: llewlllOll, F-y Gum,
lire•" And Try, ~merald l'o•, Klnos Dawn, Kint Darius, l'or-•r. ldeflo. OldenA9t. Tl~:hM,
,:~,,~::..~·. '"''°""'·
(Va...,1.-1 UO UI IEmpe,..,.t ICey CSlbllttl 10.IO ...
Ml f•W Fly"'9Cfttellll.,._.YI Al .. , • .,, AMw.r te MIKI<, II•• 8ffrl119, S....ln<llw. Time: l:Ol4/S. IS •XACTA l._SI paid $UC 00. n flfCIC SIX 16•1+9-IO·•> paid
... o:t •. 20 ""'111 17 ""lflnlllO tklleU C.I• llortnl 12 PIO Shi C:ClftSOletlOll p.ict
lS1 00 ..... 1,JOO wlnnfn9 llclull• Cllw llorwtl
a.JOH TH •AC.L I~ miles.
SAie P19y ( &rumfi.tdl 1 20 4 40 ) 40
RelnllOw c -11.., CSMefn ... erl S 00 4 20
Nell Ye Plllndw I Plll<•Y I • .00
Also racMI: Colec:U, H_,-Brtooo,
BM A kout, NorUlem l'elllt, I! .... -,,:;.1:rr.Jlr-· Syrlt
SCOREBOARD
NINTH llAC•. I I/It milts
TtlfM Sitt IOelallOUtYyel • 20 2 eo 7.20
Perry C.tlllln t Llplwlml • 40 120
Offlles (Pince-ti 1 40 Al .. rk*i Mattel's T aw•n 0090 LOm~.~~.J ~n-y RICl99
U eXACTA C._11 pejcl '-''SO AltencMn<e 42,Sll.
Holllwood Perk IUNO Y'S llaSULTI
ltltll .......... "9,..umwU"91
l'I •IT •AC a . One ml le "" EH y 0 II ll'oleYI II.to 1 IO S,20
F n11..-ICrDfllllnl 6 40 S.AO
K nlttltl Honour N 1$1Mt11) s.JQ
Alto reced-"""'l.tler, Glamour Le9s,
COUllM'• 1,,...., Roman c ........ Gleft Inn, Star Rl<ky, 01XIHt40Pt
Time: 1:01 1/S.
t•CONO llAC•. One mlle pace. Cllerllllftl JCoe»fendl 1' 20 S 60 s . ..O S.." 0111 IN!dw_..I J 80 > 00 Wl"dY 11.,. H CToddl 6.60 Aho raced: S.mlnote C"lef, El
Terento, GYPtY SAm, BkMOum SurprlM
S11n '• llftl, Smlllno Po9. Yl•ld TM
w;rme: 1:ooits. . U DAILY oouaLa C• .. I paid U».40
TJ:\1,~,:~,. Ont mU• pace.
IAdem1) U.IO • 00 ,,20 1 OentetE,,.._C~I J40 2.tO
~rqu1s 1-1 J40 Also reced· A ..... n r. San Anclt'"HS,
Howdy Mofl. C-lty, Ketty KCl'ntr. Tlmt : 2.002/S.
U •XACTA 14-21 paid $19.40.
,OU llTM II AC a. One mile Pace.
Cool Gay IAUC)fnl >.eo , 00 2 '°
Lord Neutrino Cl..Clft9lll S 80 4.tO
Wlnterte ISleetlll 4 10
Also raced Cllertef'll Pl•Y. Mac: Adiol
A, Tiie -·o N, Scotcll °""""· Ktwl 8er'Y Time· 2'01
"l'TM llACI!. Ont mile pace ,ADie Bo-r · TOdd) J7.40 20.00 7.00 CIHr NIOllt lttssler) 6 tO 3.60
Gribbin (LIQhlhlll) 3 00
Also recllCI Handover, Royal EOWttd
N, Neverolnup, SI•" And St•IPU. POS)ltr OrNm N
Time 2 Ot l/S
U IXACTA IS-31 paid '~I )0
SIXTH llACI. One mile pace
Llka e Sl\ol I-lier) tO 00 4 10 S,20 Almttos IStemermenl '20 6 20
Cool It Man !Grundy! 1 oo
Also raced Oon Ce•s Star. Snack
Peck, Sne>w Oance A Loyal Lad, Che/llPA9M Prince, G1try Ayr, Andy•
F oroe tellle
Time 2 00
HI JIACTA 11-101 paid $19' to
SI VINTH llACI. OM mlle pace
8enrOdClen 11..onool '20 s 40 S.40
Sea Rover N IT-I I 40 1 60
Scorlno 0r1.,. ILlol\thllll 1 '°
Aho raced Ph•ro. Te r w•ttr
F•lll,.,.,.10, W•lltre. Burke's Br•o-: Ranee>Ciold,Oeen>Stone Time 2 002/S
U EXACTA 1~21 pe>d U2l 00
l!IOMTM llACE. o.,. mite pace
~~~b~ Rflll 1 .00 3 60 3.40
Full Pocket llSel<erl ~ 00 l 40
ee1c rwimo 1Gouc1re ... 1 • 10
Also r e<ed Bye 8Y• ll tclor,
C•ftltrllury Lane. Frotty Hu,.ter. Oe""-· Howdy St.Ir Tlmt I SI 1/S NINTH llACll. One milt pau Meltstlc Aure 18elt.,.I 7 80 l 40 J,40 :rs~\~~~~.~~::>' , 20 t:
AllCI r~ Beauteout Bet", Wi""le One Time, Ma: NWadOw, Ando Liiy. Ce!Oonla, Grat .. II•. Hot N
8oUMr9d, lAd\< Llrftte, NlllV Gr Illy Tllne 7 02
U llXACTA 14-SI NldU. 90.
'1 PICK SIX C»l·~I peld '1.•U 00 wltll nine w""1"'9 Uclt9ts Clive horwsl. U PIO Slk ~tlon paid MUO w;111
ISi •lnnlno ll<Ull lfcKlr llortosl.
T•NTH llAC•. Ont mli. Pkt. • Re1o1elleft IG.ludrHul I eo > 40 J eo
Anl"tlltO-'-I Parker I S 40 4 80
Kone C••l IHeriierl 7 20 Also raed 0,,.,dale UHi. Ru ch Foo
The S•Y. Sllewld JunlOf, F lulon N, Cl\of'lain Hawk Sltd99hemmer. Ten Percenter Time 2 01 '1S
U I! XACTA 11·ll pe1d U3 40
A11t-e 6,62'
PRO BOW\. GAME
AFC 11, NFC 13 k.,..,, O!Nnen
NFC 0 • 0 7-U AFC 0 0 13 3-16
NFC Giies • PAH lrom Montal\tl (kick blOCIUld) '
AFC Muncie 2 rUI\ lkl<ll felled I
AFC CMncibell 1 run ILo-rv kkkl
NFC Oarwtt 4 run IS.pti.n kl<lll AFC -,G~2>
A -SO,Allt THm S\etl1tk1 N,C
FI rtt Clew!ls 12 1 •u-.y«dt 21-116
P8111119\'«Cb 42
llflllm rtreb " ~-· 1-2'-2 lec:U by ,7.74 ::::t........ ~ Penaltl ... y-•·JS
Tim• of PoMeUlon 16 SS IM!v .... S\etl.ik t
A'C 2S
•S-1Sol tts
S7
... 30-3 ).'° 5-4S ...
i.s l>:OS
RUSHING -NFC, Oortetl 11-H , Sim.a
•·U , Montana 2·1', Andrew• •·12 Roo••• 2-11, 8artko•1lll 1-11 AFC •
CemPNll II-st, '°"'"on •·22, Oelarwy I 1·1', Munc:le 1·21, Anderson 3·U , uroent 1.0. 'outs 1.0. L-la 1· m1...,...,. PASSING -NFC, Montel'I 4·U·1-2J 8ertkowslll S.1S-1·4t AFC. Anoer....:
l-14·"10., l'-•1 .. 2-143 RECEIVING -NFC, Jenkins J.»
Gllu 2·20, Clerk 1·23.: Andrews 1.4: R09trs I· mlnut-t. AF<., Winslow .... Wetsoll I-SI, N-10me 2-21, Jolln..,; ~;.::,;,;.:.;:t;i.t 1·35, Ltwl1 1-1',
Ban Dleao Ooen Jollnny Mlller, U(6 6u1.-10-210 Jae• Nie•'-U2,GI .,..._,....._,71 Tom Kl1e, t17AO 72-6W.PO-m Tom Wellllelllf, 117,400 .._..,.....,_,,,
Cut11t fir..,.., 112,ooe ... 1-11'*-21• Andy a-, 110,000 70....71-61-27S
tom WellOft, 11.no .,...,..,.71-276 1'11uy Zoeller, 11,'10 1S·70.1'0-71-17' 011~oreen.11,no .._71,.,..10-17'
Gery Hallmro. M,1JO 70-47-7.....S-27• Al Gal!M<Qer, SU)JS 72**6t-271
OeortCI llurn• .... on 11.1~10-11-111
Hat Sultofl, 16A7S 70.1'2•7'*-171 811111~ 16,07} 71.........._277
John Ll.ier. M.SOO 7M7 11•7-179 Morrla HNltlly, M.SOO '7_..7......_111
V8"Ct H ....... , '-'.JOO ... 71-1'11*-27' Jeff Mltc11e11, M,SCiO ...... n...._m J.C. S,,_,M,SOO ,,.._,..._211
Tom Purt1 ... u.-12...._11-2n
Jim Oent, U ,160 70-71·1'11*-27'
Forrelt '•V.r, u.lta ... ,,.11..,-m Hl<ll '•ldo. $U14 ,......_,,__,
lley 'foof4. $2,314 10-10-41-n-•
Br.u<t Flelsller, U.lU •1·70-75-61-• Jofln A-..S. '2,J74 1~1 .... 1--c:.:; P.ie, '2.)74 14 .. 1-12•1-•' Howir~=lm!• n:-.:~==
Peter Ja-., 11.s.. 6 .. 7~10-ttt
OOfl J•nwrt. "·* .a-70-7J.71-211 Phll Htncoelt, $1,S.. 7 .. 70-7).70--211
Mark Pfell, II,,,. 7'•7·70-71-211
Jofln C-. IU.. 72 ... 70-71-211
8oll aymen, "·* 1w1.n...._211 Oa11 HattOanon, ti,,.. ...... 71-12-112
CrelQ Sladltr, II~ tl-70-74*-211
Oen J>ot11, ''·"' 12..,75-tl-211 Mark Lye, ti~ "-I0-12·7l-211 Miki su111ven. 11,1«1 1-.1J..11-m
Mark O'Meara, Jl,140 71 ... 12-71-212 Oeve EkMlberor, $1,140 71-67-72-72-212
Scon Hoell 51,1«1 10-12-12..e-212
Ron Streck. •'30 71-67·13-U-m
Peter Oosllt""'l>. 5'30 7o.t7-12·1+-m
O•nny E0weros. tflO 70-70-73-70-XI
Jet OHkl, $7'3 7M1-1'0-7+-2M R .. c e-11, '7tl ... n.11-n-,.,. One Barr, '7'3 ... 71..._7i-214 Fred C-..ittt. '7"3 12·70.71·71-294 Chi c111 Rodrlouer. '7'3 ,,..,_,,.11-a.
Jay Haa. wet 10-12-12-11-m 0 A w tilltll\o. ... 6 .. 72-10-7 .... 215 Buddy Gerdner, wet 72-67-~1)-215
Joe Inman. Mii 1-.1 .. n-m Calw ln P-.... '7·71·11·7-215 Rod CU'I, Mii 11.n11-n -21S
ervc:•~.'651 7"71·12-n -• ~·Se ...... ..,, 10-11·1'-12-• ,.II McGowan,"'' ,,_..,._70-,..
Allen Miiier, 1651 7 HHJ.11-2111 Biii C•ll ... 16$1 6 .. 72·71-7._2111 0ouo Tew.II, 5651 6f.70.7S-72-216 Jtlt Kern. "-2• 6 .. 7J.71·7l-211
lou Gr-.n. Ml• .a-1•·1'-11-2*1 Oave Stocl<t0f1. 1624 6 .. 1J .. 7J.7t-2*7
OOfl R-MG> 6 .. 70-7 .. 73-• Gene Llllle•. MG> ... 70-72-IT--
Lanct Tt118rot<ti. MG> 11*1).1S-,.
H SnMCI. MG> 7t·71-72-7._,2a
Jim Ba~. s.5'1 74*12·7t-2'0
Bolt l!el!WOOCl.151'1 11·11-11-14-"4
Al M0#10f!. .S7' 6HJ-1Hl--2"'
Jim Thorpe ,...._n-01><1.
LPGA toumament , .. .,..,.... ... ,, ....
•Hollis Stac:w. 111,750 '7·70-12-n-m
JoAnne·c.,....., "7.2'° 7J.11•7-71-m
Nancr LoP••Mltn, "·''° ... 71-10-67-Ja. Lynn A~ 16.lSO 6._.._,._,,_,..,
Cindy Hiii, U.000 6 .. 7•·72·1l-2tl
Betsy Kint, $3,561 71·72-74-11-M BD<lnle Brvent, u .s.i 72-75-70-n-m
M J SITIHh. U,5'2 7._70-11-72-M
Beth 0 ..... 1, U,562 7i-Jl-12-.. Judy Cla r1<. 13.567 11.1 .. 11.1>-.. Lynn SI,_.,, IU•2 71·1S.72-7J-..
Oot Germetn.12.llS 10.1•1~n-no J-a 1a1oo., 12..Ju n ·7S.12·73-2'0
Gall Hlr .. 1, U.lU 12·11-12·14-2'0 Jef'llyn BrttJ. '2.ltS 6t-7J.70-7t-2'0 Ketll~ Whll-'fl. 51.nJ 11·1"1~1+-2'1
Pat BrMlley, ti.Sn 12.1a.12.1s-m oa1e Ee.11""' 11.sn 11-1._n.1s-m
Patl'I s~." sn 1• 11:">2-1s-m Mary 0 -r. $1,S71 ll..,_1 .. 16-m
wnCI•• Sc>urKh, •un 11-t ..... n -m JoA"" w • .......,.11 ns ,.., •. ,. .. 11 -m
Pallw Rluo, ll.12S '4·7•·7>-12 -m B•v•nr Huke, 51)2S 14-IS-4 .. IS-m Ho11, Han1ey, ".ns ,,..._,._,.,_ m
Joy<• Kazmltnkl, ll.77S 11-13 10-1'-2'3 BarlNI•• Moknel\. n s1 ,,_,,_. .. " ~
Sllvla Bertolacctnl, U S> 11 IS 11-71 "4 S•ndra Heyn ... •tt2 1).1l 17.7.-294
~ra Pal,,,.,, ltt2 71.7._74.7:1-,...
Wndra Post. StS2 •• 71-74·1,.:_2'4 Aluln«a ReMrdt n s2 n 13 11 n -no SAii~ Llltle, 51'2 I 7•11 7~7l-1'S SMiiy H..,11n. ,,., 12 n n .74_ 2'S
Vk-1 Fervon. '767 7• 7J.71·7S-2'' OOflne White. S.519 72·1~1~73-2'6 VIOi T allor. S.519 13 13·1 .. 74-2'6
l •Ann Ces"9dey 151' I0-7• IS-7S-"' Susi. MCAll lSI••. 551' IS 7•-72·75-2'6
Pam Glellieft, $Sit 73-72 7~7'-"'
Donna C-.1, U.. 7J.IJ.7~16-2'6
Pet Meyer .. \51' 73-7 .. 71-76-2'6
C•tlly S_,., UM 1414-71-71-"'
CO<lni. c1111i.m1, '4l1 l•ll·n.I0-2'7 Klllr FulU, ~ , .. ,._,._,._"1
Mero• ShlC>lllefteld. \432 7J.7.,73·7S-2'7
Vullo Morloucht, '-''2 IJ.12-1'-11--2'1 AIWll.O Hll<egt, Wl2 74-7J.7'l-7t-7'7.
X WCWI pleyOff Oii llftll tatre llole .
U.S . Pro Indoor 18' .............. , ,........ .. .....
JOlln M<Enrae dllf. Jimmy Con_.s,
.. J. 6·l • ._, IM<l11roa wins M0,000;
C0<1norsw1ns .. .-1.
~ ..... ,
Mc Enr••·~ettr Ftemtno def. sMrwoocl ""'-"'" ..... r..,..,., , ... 6·4 IMcE,,,....l'l-1119 lfll'C 111.000;
Stewef1.. Tc1111 111111 ltt•t.
Camel.Where a man l>~loDgs.
' 8 mg. "18(': 0.8 mg. nicotine av.
per c1gareue by FTC method.
.. • •
I .J>••---
•
~, ... I
Elltt TelUClltr·M•I Purcell clef.
••tt1 Tarouy·Tema• Snlld, 6-4, 7-4 ITelt1<...,·Purcell 5'>!lt t U,0001
W~:unen'• tournament
""' CetClllc ... I ............ Mertine Nevretllove def. We11dy Tur"llull, ._,, 6-1 INevratltove wlnt P0,0001.
COLLEGE MEN
Artmne t , UC lrvtne 0
Gordo<! IAI Oe~clltt, S.., ._,, ~. c11em...,.11n 1A1 def~ • ._,_o...,••. Mon CAI clef M<Pllerson, l·J, •'4, Merc111 tAI def. Nelton, •-1, 7-•. McCllntlc 01 dtl. llemot, •·2, •·>: Lulen IAI def. SM-••, 6·J, •·l . ~ Gordon-Cllambtrlln I A I def.
Ouede·Sflvdllr • ._2, ._2, Marcin-Luter•
CAI dtl. Nelton·llamos, 1-S, •·•. Mo• .. M-IAI def M<Ptwnon-zoti.r.
M ... J
NHL
CAMPa•U.CO..,allaNc• lnwt!M OMalM W LT 0, O• ..... JJ 12 10 2'7 214 ,.
ttnn•m '° 17 U II llO 190 41
14 27 II 207 2.. ,.
11 l4 I ISi 740 JO IMmeO..lllelt Ml,,_.
St. Louis
Wln11lpeo
Toronto
Chkego
Delrott
21 16 IS 210 llS S7 24 2) 4 2IW 210 S2
19 22 11 "' 222 .. 16 24 U 2U 2l6 4S 11 u 10 n> 2A0 .. .. 21 10 117 J20 •
WAIASCO..l'••l!NCI PMrkJIDlwW.
NY tlf~ :to U 6 116 15' ..
Pflll-0.IP'lle 21 It • 201 1.. tO NY Renoen 14 20 1 ,. 1'7 SS
Pltbbur91' ti 23 I 1'4 216 '° WHl'llngtcwl 14 2' 8 190 211 M
MllnwOh ... Buffalo
:::~· Ouellec Hartford
l9 I• t 205 IU '1
21 II 12 m 141 ..
,. " 7 211 •• u
2s 20 1m1n • 14 24 12 ... 214 40
.... Y'•SC-NYR-.n6,IC ..... ,
8011on 4, Coloredo 2 Ouellec 4, Hertford 4
We"'I~ I, Pllt"""Vfl 3 Tor-S, Chi< ... 2 Ed-7, Pfllledltllltlle4
T ....... •O-No 941,,_ ldlecll#IM T.....,-10-~ H~atlCliiltif COfOr-et~
W•"'lncl'Dn•t NY lllenden Wlnnl1199 et $4. Louk ""°"1r .... , CcteerY N-Yor1t R.....,,e1 Vencouwr
,..,.,. • .. !!2· 3 secr..,,
..
NY R angitn 2 • 0--4 L01 Anoete1 0 t 2-J fllrst~ I Hew York Jo11n11one 16 IOOn MolOllCIYl, 1''40. 1 New York, Hickey U lh<ll, ROUCHlelnenl, tt 11. Peneni.a -Hardy. LA, 4 m . l'Ollu, HY, 6•43, ICelly, LA, 11·la, Veclnels. NY, 17 16
Sc<.-......... l N .. w York, Oon Maten•r 11
IJOftftst-Ftorelll, f :Jt. 4. Hew York
'1a<•ll 3 CklCI, tt.4't s. Los A11991es:
•
Teytdr. JS tJ-. OlonM), 11;$7. 6.
'""" Yorll, ll.091n 10 IPewll<lt). Jt14. 1 . Ntw Yorll, Don M•lon•t' U
IRuotMle-), 11:• Penaltle• -Oon '
Me-Y. NY,:•; Kelly, t.A. 11:22 ~P'eftN
t LOI ""°"'"· Clltrtr-I, 4 JI 9 LO\ A"991H. Taylor H ITurnbull. L Murpfly), I •S PeneHlet -'Dore. NV, ~·~ G.....:-. NY, • Jt. Oore, NY,
Sllots °" -I New Yor11 1-IS.S·H Los Anoe~ 1.1,..._..,
Go•ll•• -N-Yor•. w .. -. LO• Anoeles, I(_,, A 11,1 ...
SunkJ1t ••11•• (et ..... Yedlt C ... ,
TllOl"NY WINNlltS PH R F·A -1 Jedi Mester, Bnl<•
HanHo (VYC ). 2 5"olob, Jim 0.Woll• 18CYCI. l Flylno Circus. Nick Telman
IBYCI PHRF-8 I Pe,.plcaclous, Jim Sk•no (VYCI 2 Ftre<tH1. Pat Glari.r
IVYCI 3. Allne. GMICMI Ortlr IBYCI PHRF-C t Vortea Brvct Twkllell
IVYCI, 2. 1-11'1. G-~ce.Cell\y Murphy (VYCI 3 Ou•ll. Roger
GoodlflO (VYCI Wl~r.:n!. ISS~Cls 1100 .... e . J ot
SANTANA·20 I S.IM, Merk Jtftl«I
IBCYCI
\
LUOl•t·1' LOiiipop, aud
M<Ntlr 1avc1
11'CHaLl,I 21 •n• CM,,.,.CIYC)
J -14 -I "*" *"'• 1avc1 HOLD•ll 11 1 OaYclUtm Steve lloat IBYCI c TCAt., PrHton Zt1l9t11
llYCI.
LIOO·l4A I a1alne Tllornt lllCYCI, 2. 11-i.1111 t.ClfW!\an C9YCI. J CllM Twlcllell l•YCI
LI00-141 1 0on wets• cavci 2
Dorla Kint faYCI. l Gii Smith ISSYCI SABOT A I HIO k-IBYC I S.480T a & C 1 Oarle ,,,.,
IBCYCI
LASER JO Plus I G•e.,.m G11>110na
IBYCI THISTLE 1 Bot>BalllBYCI
SNIPE I Jim Enoll'h IC-ave I AOULT SABOT I (ollnt GlllllOll\ IBYCI. 2 l!le....,, For~ytll IBYCI l
8.J. Wllllts 18YCI LASE A A I Jy 8N<h 18YCI
Oevtona Challenge (et h"9N llMCll, ,r;a.,
I
The loP 2S llnlW-s In the w"ktnCI'•
Daytona 1'-~ Chell•-· wit/I tr.,. 01
car. l•P• completed a"d winner • .... ,_ s_.i In mph
t. J-Peul, JOl>ll Paul Jr. Roll
Slommeten, Germany, ~ .... Tt•rtio
ns. '"· 2. Boll Allin, o.ro a.11, Enol•nCI.
Cr•to SlellHI, Pon<r. Turbo ns. IOI
3. ~11rklo OeNevaer, Colomb••
BoD Ga,,t1M>n, Jell Wooo PorH M
TurDoflli,.-:1 4 Yoslllml l(etayama, J a patt
Teketlll Ycw1no, J -. YOjiro h••da
JA9an, M9Jdll RX-7, ....
s. Tiu Almeida, Rent ROdrlouei,
Er nu to Soto. Veneruel•. Por\C lie
Carrere, .a.
•· L .. Mueller, Kathy R.-. All•n
Moffet, Auttrelle , Melda RX 7. MO 7 Welt lldlrtn. Jim Mullen RO<I Gr9111e, Made RX-7, 632
I Tom Nell!, N•I~ Slkoa, Tommy Rlooln•. c,....rolt1 c ..... ro. ,,.
• Jecll R-.nlno. Ren Tiiton Rutt• Bond."°"' ... .,.. 611
10. ROQet "'--villt, Amos Jot>n1'0ft
Jett K41nt, Mazo. RX-7. '1S
II Peul Mlli.r. Pat Beelar, Juroen
ll•rth, Germany, PorKht' '2• Carrtr• ""' . 12 Dick Netend, Ed Kullel Non
Northem, Ctwvro1t1 Catn•ro. 607 t> Hurley Heywooo. Al Holbert.
Brue• Le-. Pon<r.e TurbO tu )"
u Jim Oowntno. J°"" Me•fucc• Tom
wa!'O". ~-"'ll·l, no
0 1\ 0-CM-. Ed Plmm Jot>n 'Stffll, Mezdt RX-7. S12
16. M l . 5-r. Terry Wont,., Rav
Ratclltl, Ponclle Carrtr•. st3 17 John _,.,,., Tom K"us1n "or•
MuttelO(l,5"
II Jak ~. Scoll !>"'"" Scott Smith Jr . Melde R X-7, .)91 It Doc Bundy Jtm Bu\llv _,,..,
Scllurtl, LlecMensteln, Poncr.e Car••••
'24. SSI.
70 c;_,,. Stone. Jack Lewi\ Bob
8eHlty. Pon<lle Carrer•, HI 21 BOii Tulllut, 8111 Adam. Can-. Gordon Smli.y, JaQuer XJ-S. 533 22 JHn Klolltr. 8oll Nl-•I G••Ov ciav. Ponc11ec ..... , •• SJ• U Edger Ooeren. Gt•ma fty Bot>
Wollell, '•en<• Rend"( Leni.r. Ferrar1 snBa, sn 24. a-., Rai..1. Jim Trueman. B•uu
c-tta, Mor<hll-G. SU
U . Kl-81ttwaul, Vicki Smllh, Scott "•ftdtrs. l"c<'1che •11. S11
Weekend tren1•ctlon1 aAUSAt.L
Anwiu11t.....,.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX AN\ounceO
Ille! Britt Burns. pitcher. fled aoreed lo
terms on• tllrff<.,.ar cont•ac 1
aASKl!TaALL
NatleMI laM*.aNH AstMletloll
NEW YORK KNICKS !>uW>t,_
Sly Wllll-. l°"'ard· ,,..,.11n1tt lv lor
repe•-YlolailoM of Club rule•
COLLEGE CITAOl!L N•f'Nd Elll• Jonn-
defentlwllM <OKPL
PllfNC£TON Nemec! I' red S.•m.,t
,,,.,, •• fllkl ._..,. toecll
}
SP
I
. ,
Monday, f ebruary 1, 1982
M 0 A C E
I I~ I I I CllMM _ I I I r
·--... t
· Furniture is bought and sold
1 every day with a classification
8050 ad.·
tt44
• 714 641 01fi3
2925 Colle11r A' ,.
CO!lla M~a. l'A1
1.1 x•aosst 8 UNITS In hl&h demand
rental atta. Aasume tx· l1llo1 flnand n« or
SlS0.000 at 10', an ct
O'#ntf wit tarry Fun prire $240,000 Call
m5310
ALLSTATE
"IA&.TOAI ' . ---~ ..
T
NeWspaper
logs easy
D EAR PAT DUNN: Would you please
r e p e at the Ins truc tion• for rollln1
newspa pers for fire place use.
-B.B., Newport Beach •
New.spaper logs can be made by folding
old papers into foot long and half-inch thick
sections. Soak overnight 10 a solution or
water and detergent. Roll each s ection
around a one-inch rod,. s queeze out excess
water a nd smooth the sides. Then slide the
paper logs off the rods and stand up to dry
thorough ly before burning
Another method produces green flames
Dissolve one cup of borax in one gallon or
warm water. Soak newspapers (unrolled> in
this solution and drain off excess. Roll wet
papers, one or two sheets at a time, around a
metal or wooden rod Tie rolls with wire and
rem ove rod Stand up to dr y for about three
weeks
Special shoes wanted .,
DEl\R PAT DUNN: For years I've worn
the same style or shoes manufactured by
Regal. When I disco vered my slle was no
longef-1frrled locally, I contacted the
comp.toy n. St. Louis. I received a letter In
June . saying that a special order would be
place d for m e and It would take about elgl\.t
weeks for dell ver y. I still haven't r~ecl
the shoes and would like to know what bas
happened.
J .M., Ir vine
Regal's spokeswoman said that this style
of ~hoe is no longer being manufactured in
the width you need. Apparently, there's not
much demand ror this style in the narrow B
width and the machine used to make ll 1s no
longer operable Regal d ad call many of its
shoe stores throughout the country to s~ if'
any s till had this s hoe an s tock, but none did
Perhaps o.ur readers can come up with
another source where you could sttll
purchase the $45 black s hoes you want in size
9'128 . T he old style number as 815Gl5 and the
current style is 835Y R 15
Paid too much FICA?
DEAR PAT DUNN: I changed jobs three
times In 118 1, and I think I paid more Social
Security lax (FICA) than I bad to last year .•
·How can I find out If I paid too much? Also, ls
It necessary to use the peel-off label that
comes with the for m s booklet?
J .E .. Costa Mesa
If you worked /or two or more employers
last year and together they paid you m ore
th an $29,700 in wages. you probably did have
too much Social Security withheld. If the
total amount withheld was mor e than
Sl ,97S OS for the year , you are entitfed to
claim the excess on your Form l040 or 1040A.
U.S. Individual Incom e Tax Return.
The Inte rnal Revenue Service claims
th at use or the peel-off label saves processing
lim e and speeds refunds Be sure that t he
information on the label is correct. If it isn't ,
m ake a line through it a nd put the correct
information directly on the label. Be sure to
s how an apartment number if you have one
<:111 a problem·' Then wnte In Par
l)unn Pal will cul red lapt>. getting
the an·s~r~ and actum you need lo
!folve mequ1t1es m government and
l>wmeu Mall your QW?SIJOns to Pat
Dunn. At Your SenJ1ce. Orange Cocut
Daily ?dot. P () Bor 1560. Co.~ta Mesa . CA 92626 As
many letttrs as pou1ble will be answered. lrul phoned
anquines or letters not mclud1ng the reader's full
name. addre~s and business hours· phone numbe;
cannot be coriMerf'd This column appears dat111 er
cepl Sbnday\ ·
r·,;--------,
Measles
goal
nears IALT7 IHGlaOH
SMITH & TUTHIU
WHTCLlff CHA,k
4"l7( 171h SI
Co~ta M<•.,,1
1'4f-.Q:l 7 I
f'lllCI llOTHHS
SMITHS' MOUUAaY
627 Mam SI
Hun1tna1on S.-111 ''
S36·653'l ·
'AClftC YllW
....,..,RIAL'All•
~f'l'W!lerv Mortuat\I
Chai>el·Crematof"i
J500 Pac1l1c V1ew Dr1vr·
Newoorr Bf>acn
~'700
1 McCOIMlCIC MOUUA•IU
laauna Beach
494.9415
i 1
Laouna Hill<,
768-0933
San Juan Cao111rano
495 1776
i. HAatol L•W,..._MT. OUYI
~ Monv.rv • Cemetef\I
1 Crem110f\I
I
II
16~01• .. , Ave
Cost• Meaa ~5SS4
I
ATLANTA <AP J -
The United States is
c l osi n g in on t he
elimination of measles
as a d isease in this
co untry , s ays t h e
dire c tor o f
i mmunization at th e
national Centers for
Disease Control here.
"The measles
situation in the country
at t h is t ime is very
favorable and gives us
optim ism that we will
reac h our goa l o f
elimination of measles
as a n ative disease in
this country by October
of this year," Dr . Alan
Hinman said during the
a nnual m eeting or the
Imm unizatio n Practices
Advisory Committee at
tht CDC hea dquarters.
Hinma n t o ld t he
com mltlee there were
only 3,032 reported cuea
of meatlea ln the United
Sta te1 In 1981, a 17
percent decline from the
previous rtt0rd low in
1980. He Hid 0Dl¥ 10
percent ol the n aUon'a
counU• T'ePOf'ted casea laat year and uld that t i perce nt of tb e
aludenll enterin1 school
for lhe fl l"lt Ume ln.t.be
fa 11 of 1990 had been
vacct.nated for mu11u:
lhe blP.l!lt lem ever. •
llMtllt •ot1QI Ott 'f'•WTII I I UU revamp due IUl"l•ICNt t.ou•Y OP Tiii .-r•n f.a. -., ....
01" CA'-lf'OltlOA °" "'~ " •••• It •t'ueo ~-... (....," ONmilll • "' •• "",,_ tl!lr~• 9' &A,.CO
LONDON <AP1 -A = .. ~.:..,....••• 1~;.'t:i:.E~'::.
Brllllh "rtpo1drt Mon t1hhe ~~::':::..~==~.·~.· ~~lco°'.#jTL 1 '"~~·~~~~
1,000 yt1r o oor 1 """'x """''HO ~ aHOu•••••Ho, COMl"•Hv, .. ,.,,...tfltfl, •• '""'" ,. a 5 t I• pr I• ·0 n I n INC . .,, .,,,."' c•r11.,••••11, ~, 111e ~ ~ """"• i...n11 ~ "' " •Ol,ltT J INVOI•. THI OHIO Gtftttt<t, tlltC.,._,. It\' OCll lllfC14 Gibraltar hall uraed that CAIUAa.TY INIUltAHCI COMl"ANV, ,,.. llVi•LV •lfck, llvtMl'f •flf It be rebuilt because of .,, Ot11e c.,_e11en. ooaa 1 tM11411 •11• .. .....,. '-t•. rt<~ ,,,,.. U . l11Cll1tl¥t H ~~ Ill *' Ill _... tUtt. Its "barrock like und croH·Co"'111e1111111 1 o Mro "" 1w .. Oftkl•• .. , .... ,"' ,,.. r u d I me n t a r y • • ca1UALTv1H1U1tAHCICOMl"ANv, ••llu •• "'' "'"' .. ' ,, o, • ., .. • Ctr-•tlotl ... c' ... °'""°""'' Ctwllly, C••ll•'"''· lllY rtHOft ., conditions. .. ... )I l'AlllNO • INOIHll•INO, lltf~ll 111 tllt Hymtftl"' ,..,,otm•rw.• T h e r i n d I n " 8 • I NC •• ,, Arlrtn• U•POrttl•"· ol oltllttll•n• H C1Htd U\tr..,, .com~iled {or th .. Ltia"'Ue "01t!•T J IHVOllt. IMludllll t"' t>rtech •• 11tlevll, 111Clc• "' • ltlMMONIOIUICOttD •I •hi<" ••t rttorckd 10/tlll ••
(Ot ena) Reform, found AMINHD C-.COMf'LAINT focwmtllt nt. 4411 In llMll lf1U, •-
the nrl"One"". "apathe ta' C CAM MUM•l ltt l'9IQ 1'4' ol .. !cl Offleltl "etOIClt, wlll Mii v " •" NOYICl l YM lleW...e: ..,.._ TM el p,illll( ouclloft to ,,.. h...,._t , .... ,
a n d z o m b I e . 11 k e • • c111'1 -• -.c• '" .-.. '"' u •11 t111ew1111 ,.._Y ot 111e v"""
b th ti 1.Y yewr ...... ....,... ........ ,.. ,...... Stein, •11111111 eny etnftt nl or ecause ey rou ne . •'"''••MY'-......... ..,.,....... •• ,,.,.,y, •• ,.._.., 1mou.a •• 10 rec el ve v a 11 um and """'· • 11110, ~ ... •r1tum11<•"'"· ,.,
Sleeping pills • 11 you "''"''° -k 11w ec:1v1ce ot •n 1110 '"'"'° •• o•''"• e11111.11on• t llMlltY Ill ltlk ""41tt. yow "-le ,,. Mturod bl' ..id Le-,.,,,. lt<wtlly
1l r it a I n ca pt u red '° '"omouy •• '"•' '°'" "''"''" L•ftd con1rec1, "" 1n111 .. 1 '°"ny.ct
G .b It ·n 1704 and r••oon ... 11 ."'·"'••11e11i.. ... 11-io ttld Tl'\IMto r>v Ml•""""°'"' 1 ra ar I AVllOI u"",.. '* ..... ,,. .. II s.<ur11, ....,,. '°"''"'' In or_,, ha s h e Id the rocky ,,_., ,_.. _..., -· u11. • 11111e1.c1 '"1111 Cout\ly ot °'-· s1010
0 u t c r 0 p 0 ( s p u i n . s .wleM lt • - -Uf. ,.._... ., C•lllClr'llie --•lbed ..
Southern Coast ever ..,.,. ... ...._LM .. ......,._ .... Lot•,810ckAofTrec:IHoQtet
-t it•. "'°"'" on • "'19 roe..-In -11, since. despite Spanish s1 Uilffdetff IOlklltt•• conwJo• .,... u., Mite'"-~. 1n , ..
ObJ·ectaons The •olony un ·~ "' n•• ,...,, ... , deblrl• o1110 of .,,. c-1v reconter OI ttlO " lltc•rlo lm,.,..,lalOmtftlo. CM etta ~ounly has its QWn COnStitUtion mo11tro. "' "-'"' etcrll.o, fl hoy Tiie ..._kl btl~o end ••llm•I• of
d H r A bl alguna,...-Mrr ... 11rec1.oe1i....oo totlf ... ....,... -..,.._.," ot an ouse 0 ssem y ' TO THE OEFl!NOANT A <lvll Febn•arv 1' "" It .,. "°'.. tald tomolelnl llu bffn llled llY Ille .,.. ... nl wlN 1:.CreaM untll.Nl• 0j ule pla1n1111 • .,, .. JOU 11 JOU wbh lo Tiie ureet eddr eu and 011111 dtfel\d 11111 ••-"· Y01i tnust. wlll>ln commOft dftlQfttllOft. II •ny, OI Ille • d•Y• -r llllt ,_..._ b Mrwd real pr-rly cletcrlbed •lie~• ll °" you ..... "'''" ""' COUr1 • •rltlen IKlf'llOtted to bl; UMKN()WN T.~ NOflCIE 0, TllUITllE'i SAL• TS Ne.11• On Fellnlaty 7• 1"2, al 10 00 • m • ALLSTATE TRUST OEEO SEAlltCES. INC •• Cluly •-lnled
T rullff undPr end pu,.uent lo Offd ol Trust recorCltCI S.i>l•nlber >O 1'911 •S
Inst No 4401'. In bOO• 13'•1. CHoe , ... Of Olllelal Re<o•O• In I~ oH•ce ot 1"9 CountY Recorcter ol Ora1>99 County . St•I• ol C•Hlornl• eoculod by OONA TO GAllRIELE Will SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIOOEll FOR CASH CNOlll41 •I llme ot UI• In lawful mono or 100 unltOCI Slates) al I"-front en1rence lo Ille 0rA"90 County Courlllouw, 100 Ci.le Cenur Ori .. Wut, San la Ano , Calllorn•• ell t19'1I 1111• .ona 1n1erel1
conv•ved to M'CI now held by '' uooer said 0"'4 ol Trusl '" thf pr-r1y
\-ttu•l•O •n \•1d Cot.mly •nd St•t•
CIH<rll>«I .. LOI IJ 1n BIO<• C. ol Tr.Kl No S'4 1n Ir.. Clly ot CO\t• ~••. County 0 1 Or•nv• Sl•I• of C•hloml• •S per
map rteO<'o.cl In ~ "· -· n end Jo ot Ml\ulle'WOV• MAC>\. on '"" omce
of Utf' county re-c.or0tr Of s••O covnh
Th• \ttt•t •ddtf\\ and otl'••r
common O.\•qn•tlon •t any of thf
r••• oro~rh Cltur•~d •bovf" I \
PUtPQrtf'd to bf; 1S\ F-IOwtr (o,.t• -.ww. C•lftorrha
Thf' UndHitqn.cl T tU\tf't d i\( l••M \
•nv tt•twht't tor •nv lncoHf'c "wu of
tM )tr.-.t .ao'""" •1'14 °''-' conimon de110n•I'°" 1t •"Y' \hown hert11n
S•10 wf• wtll bf' m~ but w1t"OUI
cov~n•nt or w•rr•nlv ••P'''' or
lmpht-O r~aro1nq lttlf' 00\~o•on. or
encumbr.tntt\ 1nclod1nq lei.\ ch•tOf'\ end upen~ of Ille I tU\lff •nCI OI 1"-trullH rUl.00y 'Wld Offdol Tru•I to
P•Y lnltrt\1 ,,....,_, from AuQu\I I
Ult at 11 ~r(f'nt Ct'' •nnum •\
provl..cMd 1n '°"'d note ph,1\ tO\t\ •nd tny •d••n<•• of ll,OS..,. wllh lnlere•I
Tnt" Olfntfu;i•'Y unctitr \4'1<1 0..d ot
T ru~t htirttotort ·~•(.Ylfd •no
OeltY•red to 'hf Yndenioned • wn1-.n
0.<IA•allonOI 0.l•ulf •nCI OemAno '°'
~I•, •nd I wrlt11Pn Nolle. ot O•l•ull •nd E le<llon to ~II T"• Un<Mr\lq ... a
c •ui~O \••d Nohcf' ~ O•taull •no Elt<llon 10 s.ll too. le<o-00<1 1n Ille
counh wf\ert II)• rf'•I prootrtv '" IOUl.0 Oalta January " 1<117 •
AllMaC. T""' 0..0 ~··o· I Ill< • .._ wld Tru\lff
fr.en(f\ ANW H•rr I\ " Pubhll>ecl °'-Coe\! O•llY Phol Fob • ll ,.., 'tS.J
NOTICll 01' T•UITI 1 'S SALi TS No ttOIP-1 T 0 u :lt\llCE COMPANY .. duly ._intod Trvslee ...-the lo0owl"9
detcrl-daecl of ''"'' WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE 141GHESf 8100ER FOR CASH Cpau111e al llme ol .. 1. In tt•l\lt money of Ille United Slalft) ell r19'11,
Ullo anO ,,.... ... , <-yod IO -ftOW held llY II.....,.. Mid Oeed Of Tru.C In Ille orooorty ...._1netl9r dftcrit.o· TRUSTOR R08ERTH RAU 8ENEFI CI ARV 4RTHUR E MERT lEL end MERLE J ME RT lEL. hv>mnO end wire A\ folnl 1..,anh RecorcteO O«emoer n. 191'
at IMlr No JS4'l In -tlfJ'I ol Ot!lclal Recont• In ,,,. ofllce ol It. Retorder of 0r"'9f County \aid CletCI ol lru•I ducrlb .. lh• following pr-rly The tand ,.1erred to in 1111• OU'''"'" It .itueled In lhe !,fllt OI California, Counly ol Or-""" h detcrl-ttlOll-• PARCEL I
Unit Ho U , In IM Clly of N-porl Beach, Counly ot Orenoe Slal• of
Ctlllornlt, • --Cletcrl-In Ille Co"4omlnlum Pton r0<0<deCI on
/)(lobe< 2', 1'7t In -llt:IJ, -l U, Otfklal Rec0<dl of Wld County flARCELJ An undivided one ol9"1Y thtnl Clll:ll l11l•rt1I ., • ,_, In com..-In Ille fff 1n1 .... 1 In -lo ttw C°"""°" Area of Loi I of Troc:I au..'' oor mw llted In --l,., pagu )t lo 0 1nc1u1I••. Mhcett.-~. '" llw offke of .,,. c-.ty Reco,,.., of Wld County. " tuell ,.,,,. I• defined In llw
Arllcte -·-"()eflnlllOftl" ol IM Oe<l•rallOrt nf C_..,,,, C_ll..,,.• uod RHlrkllom roc:oroeo °" O<t-r 1•. ""· 1n bool< 11t:11. i>eoe .a. Of omc1a1 Rec.,,.,. of Hid County IT"9
"Oe<leretlOrt"I, -.,., •mendmenh or en11 .. e11oM 111tre10 EltCl!fl'T THl!Rl!l"ROM oll oil. g ... mtnerah end olller hydrocarbon•, bel-e ~h OI !JOO 1 .. 1, wllhoul Illa rl9"1 of turloc:• .,,,ry, " ,...,...., In
l~lrumenb ti r.c;-PARCl!L > EeMmenlC•> • •U<ll Htomenlttl l•l •rt parlltutarly Mt tort!! In ,,.. Article entlllod "E-lt" of Iha Ol<ltrallon under Ill• !h cllon M•odl"9(\) '" IUCll Artlct. •nlllled .. loll owl "Vlltlll"". "Seltltm.,11 onO EIK•ot<-1" -"Common A,.. E ... ,,..,.., ..
U ••• ltlef'd Orlvt, N••l'••I 8011<h. CA "c If • tlrMI AOdreu or common designation I• •llo•n obove . n< werrenty I• given at to 11 1 complelefltH or cerroctMHI " Ille -tic....., ........ ttld o.d ot Trwtl •
lly ,..._ ... ~ .... , ... " 1 .. , ... 011lloe11on1 u cur ul lll oreby 11ero1oloro ouc:wteo 1'141 .,..,,...,. I<
Ille ......,.,...... • •rlltoft Otclarel""'
ti Oefeull -o.m-IM Seit, -•rllt.., ...cl<• of -t<ll •l'f of eloc:t..,. lo c~ .. tilt ~ lo WO NICI l'f-rly It ttllaty WICI ... ,..!MM. .... ~ ...... IM _,........,_,_
N ICI ftOll<'t .. "'-" .... et el«lloft '°
lie Ae<erdld Ot~ U, ttlt •• lfttlr ... ,,.. Ill ...... 142U ...........
N ici Offltltl lt«~ft
$tl141 .... win bl -· llul wllllellt , • .,,.,..,., "' •• ,,.,..y, ........ ..
"""'"· ,....,.,.,,. tlllo, ....... tiff> ••• -""'~-... lo ,..Y tflt rell\tlfllllt twlfltlHI tiil'll et Ille 1114•1•1 t""'90 .,., .... Deed ...... , ........... 111 Yid,....~. N¥--.., .,.,,
1#1419r !tit !..-"'• OI .. 141 OM tf Tr111t,
ffft , Chttett Mid Hllltfl ... t ti lite
,, .......... " Ille ·~· (,.., ... .., ttlf OM of '""'· ltld .... "'411 .. helf 9't T-Y. ,wuwy 16, 1-el
f :IO ''"'" .. tM C""""911 Av.,.ue tfltlaMt, .. lfte Clvle Ct<\ ... l lllllllflt, •lttl~A-,lall!ll Clb .. o,.,.... Al Ille tllfl!'t o1 W. lttlll_. ,.._kallell
.. 1111• .... ie.. Ult titUI efMYM ti lllt •llll•ff MltllCt •I lflt tMl .. tlo•
M<•l'Mlll\'llW ...... , ..........
ruoonM lo ll1t <GmOIOlnL Unleu YOU T ... -.ltll'\eCI Trv.I .. dltclelml
c10 '°• youf ""'"'" •111 lie ""'•rod "' any llablllly tor eny 1ncorroc1noa 01 aPl)llC•lk>n of Ille plolnllff, •nd llllt 1110 '''"' -"' end other tom"'°" court may .mer 1 fudgrnanl '9tlntl de\1Qnell411\, 11 eny, ~ herelll you tor ,,.. rellef dernencted '" ttw oetod· J--v a 1'112 complalnl. wlll<h could roull In Vt!HDo": ROIEIU c. AEMICK garnhllment or wegu, hklng ol ,,,., MVU T. REMICK llU .. , .. wi anO money or prOf)erly or 0111 .. rellel wlle •
req11u1ed'ln tlle comlllolnt AOORl!SS 201' Or-A•• .. Coll•
OAT!OJune "· '"' Meu, CA t JU' Teleohone "'" l EE A, BRANCH, M2·lS.7 •
Clerll SAF!CO TITLE INSURANCE By SHARON KUPKA, COMPANY, a Corporation Tru•IH l)efluly AOORESS· lOl W !th Sl,...t, Sen AND I!,. so ... M< .. " A It LI.. A B .. nerdlno, CA '2403 Tel""'°"" ,,,,, CONNl!"S Ut.JSlt S111te l1lt C-"~ ·-l'lata IY Kay H-rl<h
'11 WHISI .. Street AulSl.nt Sou .... ~
LM ........ CA •11 PubllSlltd Orenoe Cot•I Oally Pllol
fe4. UIJI t&-M21 Jan 11 u Feb t ,.., n•.; PutolltNcl °'-COHI Oally Piiot. . . . Feb I.e. IS. 21, ,.., Stt-12
l'UIUC MOTIE
Co,.solidated Report of Condition of "Citizens Bank
of Costa Mesa", County of Oran<Je, a nd Domestic
Subsidiaries at the close of business on December 31,
1981 .
State Ba nk No. 1060
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks .
Thousands of
Dolla rs
3.391
I n11Pstment sec.urities,
I Market value SS.1801 ..
a Loans, Total Cexcluding
unearned income) ....
b. Less: Reserve for possible
... 7 153
43,493
loan losses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . 200
c. Loans, net ............................ 43,293
Bank premises, F.F. & E .. etc . . .. 3,497
Other assets ........................ , , 1.437
TOT AL ASSETS ................ 58.771
-LIABILITIES
A. TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC
OFFICES .............. • .. . .. 51.577
Total demand deposits . . . . . . . . . . . . 15.913
Total time and savings deposit-s .... · 35.664
l OTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC
AND FOREIGN OFFICES ....
Federal funds purchased and securities
~under agreements to repyrchase
in domestic offices . .
Other liabilities for borrowed money,
including note balances of U S Treasury
::>ther liabilities . . . . . . . . .
TOTAL LIABILITIES ....
SHAREHOLDERS EOUITY
Common stock
a No sharesauthonzed.. . 1.500.000
b. No shares outstanding ...... 931 .214 3.578
TOTAL CONTRIBUTED CAPITAL .. .
Retained earnings ............... .
TOTAL SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND
51 577
500
153
822
53.052
3,578
2, 141
5,719
SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY .............. 58,771
The undersigned, P.aige V. Simpson, President
:ind John W. Walsh, Sr. Vice P resident of the
~bo11e-named bank, eactt.dec1a·res. for himself alone
and not for the other : I have personal knowledQe ot
the matters contained in this report (including
reverse side hereof). and I believe that each
c;t;itrment in said r eport is t rue Each of the
undersigned, for himself alone and not for t he other
certifies under penalty of perjury that the foregoing
is true and correct.
Executed on January 27 198i. at Costa Mesa .
California
Paige V Simpson
John W Walsh Publlllle<l Or-Cotll O••ly Piiot, ,._,I, IW
CONSOLIDATED
REPORT OF CONDITION
Consolidated Report of Condition of "International
Central Bank & Trust Corp." of El Toro. Orange
County, and Domestic Subsidiaries at the close of
business on December 31 , 1981.
Sta te Bank No. 12J7
Dotta>r Amounts
In Thouu nds
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,.-76
Investment securit ies
<Market Value S65,855) ................... 66,720 Federal funds sold and securities
purchased under agreements to
resell in domestic offices ...........•..... 20,950
Bank premises, F.F.&E .. etc .................... 20
Other assets .. .. .. .. . . . . .. . . .. • .. . .. • . t.603
TOT AL ASSETS ............................ 92,769
LIABILITIES
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN
DOMESTIC OFFICES .......... 83,330
Total demand depasits .......... 1S,2S8
Total time and savings dePOSlts 68,072
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC
AND FORE IGN OFFICES .............. .
Other liabilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13.330
1, 113
..... S..,443 TOTAL LIABILITIES ................ ..
SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY
:ommon stock
a. No. shares authorized 10.000
b. No. shares outstanding 10,000 1.000
Surplus ..................... ,...... 6.260
TOTAL CONTRIBUTE D CAPITAL. .......... , 7,260
"Retained eal;l!ings .................... , ....... 1.066
TO:TAL SHA"EHOLOERS EOUITY ......... 8,326
TOTAL L.IA81LITIES ANO '
SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY .••...•........••• 92.769
The uncferslgne<t, Jack L. Teufer, Prtsldtnt a nd
Oanlel J . Fedrick, E.V .P, of tt~ abovt ·n•med t>41nk,
each declares, for hlmself atotw 1nd not for the
othe r : I ha ve persona l knowledOt of tht matters
containtd In this rePOrt (11"1udlng tht re,.rve side
hereof)( and I believe thet each st1temet1t In Hid
report s true. Each of ,,,. undertfQn.c:I. for hlmw lf
atone a nd not tor the other t ctrtlflH l.lnder penelty of
perJury that the forevolng is true 1nd 'orrect.
Executed on J anuuy 22, 19t2 It El Toro,
Califor nia.
1s/1J6Ck l... T auter
Isl O.nl I J. Fedrick 11'1;11111..,.or ... c; ... o.ttr ••~,.. '·,. '"'* eN -~ _.._ ·~· a11f afvellCU I• U t ,10.U Tl _..,fl'llMIM..,,... .... __
t 111 en•>•.... 1-.._:.;.. ______ ~...;.....;,;.._;_~~..;;...~~----::---r
o.•1 J_., ... , ... ., 0 11•v1c1 COMll'ANV •tlllfT~ ..., ............ ....... ,...,., °"' (ll'f ....-.....
0r .... CA .... 11Ml 9419 ,......._ o-.. c..e Dettr....., J•U,,..1.1,ttm ....
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L I
0
T
.. c
L
A
s
s
I
F
I
E
D
•
•
................. ......Uc .. 't ... ••·a··················· ............................................. .
.._,,.,..., 2000 c..NMeM UH ...... •llecll l240 .....................................................................
.,,,.YA.WY MOMIOf lBR Condo l')BA ~
Ta SMltw THI LUCKY RW IJI) lit. l.ut ' D(ll No
Nur new •·plu. 2 Rt nt In Cotta Meu'a P«a.1U.7W bdnn, 2 bath each unit NoWEST d with nrepla(t. enrloud r. t•te 20 4Br Twnhu, 111 8 1 , pat.lo, aaraae. 9~_,; lit Townbome ILLAGE rl.'llOrt. encl patio, $690
Pot (Uh Uow Now COMMUNITY. 2 • 3 Br. mo lit + dep Call 21.)Bi IGOCMI001q.ft or Kat~~~
SlSi,500. Bill Grundy , purt luxury C1re1r1. ,.~Br 2 Ba house, 2 car
Rllr. 61~·6181. bydro·tubl In muter urace new paint "
aultticl!nln& rooma. l'u~e'ta S69S mo C u Ta lllL.....la~ wood oumln1 nreplaces. '"" 00 I -_..... ml(rO·w1ve oven,, """ -4·plex. Xlnt rlnanct private Pillot • yard.t C\M bt'h home, IBR w
!KISK. 81S0073/l·W ·Cl23 Gardener pro\'lded 1ar.k1dok,no111 S31S
GUATDU,LD!I
134(),000 1809 W Balboa
Blvd Open Daily. 2·4
Ted Hubert Rullor.
1$l.ITT11
Ele1ant ~vin1 only l~ _oc RENT A~SO 3311
mlnutet from F11h1on lrtlilt l"44 lalllld. 1 mUlutes to S <.: 6
P1111 or 0 C Airport ••••••••••••••••••••• • •
J t r N ~.new3br.3ba, utt tu o t'wporl pallo, ear Park. pool
Blvd • 10 of San Dtt&o JIC 117~ f!lO 833-9057 ~ Startin& al S900 a LohforS. JJOG month 63l ·5439. 2473 u.IYTowwCeltftr
••••••••••••••••••••••• Or101e Ave . Costa New2 bdrm+ den. 3 bia
&alder1 Invest.ors Mete Plantauon shultt>rs. at
C«ona del Mar 20K sq fl 2 Br enrlsd aaragl' tarhed gar A\ .iii 1m
R3 twnhse 1condo srte Adults, no pets S.S25 mo nrdlately Ka) 644 9060. Pvt beach H<'US 773W Wilson 6314889 PM6738S85 Senous pnnr only By -------owner 558-9265 E Side 2bdrm. new thru Btau11ful Condo 3BR
HUNT CLUBLOT out . formal din . 2B\ ToSubit>tB> Feh
I Arre guarded gait' breakfast noolt. 2 ~ar Isl Woodbridge Call
romm 1250,000 low 1ar. yrd. grdnr Sti75 AfterJ ~7 4367
dwn 493 3395 h m ~ 633-0161otr Lrg 48R Ext>c Style Orangetrt.>e Patm Homl'
Home In Prl'fl'rrl'tl 2 Br or I Br +den, &pJ Mo.t•. De1erl, Res1dentlai Area. CM tenn1~. pool S610 mo lftCri 2400 Brand N11w, Ca rpl'l~. S8l 311i.'i
•••••••••••••••••••0 •• Drape~. &c Paint TURTLu.OCIC P.t!CityUtah Throughout EVl'q """ erfkienry condo with Room & Window 3 Cur 5pti('lac·u1Jr unobstruct
k h G r ed B. y d ed '''"°"'or Sand Can) on 1tc enelle S65.000 ar en<· ark ar I llt>st>n oir c 1 • I ht SlO.OOOdn 1.'I', mt on bat Garden1 n g St' rv ll'l' · 1 ) •g ' or wrll take pHlnl'r Orange Trt'e. Water ~id 2ro~ming rattll' ~
SU·Ofill Pt' ts Su bJl'l'l to \ µ · ba J M PETERS
1 1 d 0 Dl's1gned home Jen Q11t of~ prova m me r <' I n.urt' Tra~h rompac·tor Property 2550 ll250 Mo 957 11974 Sterw inlerrnm µoul
••••••••••••••••••••••• 511 PAll( DllVE ll'IVll!>. 'Pa l \ r lt'a''
* *6011 TOTAL 38r. !Ba. \Jrant. nt'l4 $1200 mu \\.;11 tm ft rpt5 & drp;.. lg , d. S7SQ mt' d 1 J 1 l' I ~ M r
DOWN PAYMENT '!I' O..ner 5-19 2042 H.inm.rn \gt 634 0328 ti ..
I03 3122 t'\" & 14 kend'
7Xgross' IS houst's. ail I ~ ~wlltltOttst • R \ -.;r HO s \N JO \Ql I\ run as .ipt <'omplt•x 3 bdrm 2 ' b.i \ll'14 \II L \S 2br 2 b.;
Pos1U\'t' 1·c1sh flow l°Jll ~ <213 1 ~2 4111-1 d1·n pool & ia1 Jdull
rordeta1ls Sh .i rp 3 b r 2 h J 1omm S825 mo March
\\\~\db Id , pool spJ. bbq .. i:.ir ht Kl'l 91"51i r CJC n irpel tlr.;p"' nl'14 2 ,,Of\ ~HR JIU lam Reel Ilg k' t l' hen $11 9 5 m" rm I,: kth ht•n. SS.SO mu
• Isl l.i:>I $500 dt•IJ :'l.ur,..1, .. !>.'>!l 8.'i23 :.5 I :Ultlll ~ 76.'iO r-
~9:.-_!h rn n• • 1'"""1"1111• J bdrm. 2 b ... f.tmih rm NORTHWOOD
led Estate Melia Verdt' N11·1• fJ m1 .1 lodrm, 2 ha firl'1Jld1T &~ 2100 ly home w fpk ttl11n 17~h'I rt \\all 1mm1•1t
••••••••••••••••••••••• stp\111, OW GD lmrn.11 llfiOMo ~9 ti20'i Want a tax shehl'r? S<·ll No yng slngh·~ •. Si7~• L~~acll 3248
my I l2yl'arnewlnµl1·>. w 11ardenl'r 551 toK53. •••••••••••••••••••••••
or l'X(•hangl' l'iJWlY for ~ Z330., 8.ll 3155 OCEANFRONT
<'Orldoor' Owo1•r Mt1•r 7 F: side 1·utl' I llr rnU.1"1'. '-' .. " i1 Hr .x-1·anly. 1: n1111fl 7J~ lti(_>-0734 yard Jrea $415 • "'' IJ\I hi·h. fl~h1nJ: l'h'I
Red &tote Sgl or ma rr11·1I c• 1.t 2Hr . .idlh uni). no d1tl!'
W..e.d 290 ~7 20$0 Si~mo 111H499:llllti
••••••••••• ••. •• ••••• •• f. sick l'M 3 Rr 2 tt.i SKOIJ Privall' Part~ l.ookin1: f,N' nv1 l'-'H Rht M1lhk1•n for Homt.' to Hu\ 1111 ~I l2li4i ~
Lt'llSl' Opt100 HJ1·ktta~
1'!24-700-09!;2
t 1L\RM JHr 211 \. \arc! \l<Jlk lo lit·h & iwol
SllOO lw I lwnl'r 499 31.311
LCllJllllCI NiCJlff 1252 •................•••.•.
Ext't' lhr. JbJ. fJm rm :1
1·Jr )!Jr. \lt'l4 nr '" t'an s l<R'I 97~ 3420
L*eFornt 3255
···•••···•··••••···•··· l.\Kt-: FOR~:sThton 1
&. dt'n J bdth On 14 att·r llt'l4 ho.ti dodl I \\ Jll
F1-h 13 S925 i ,;4 i900
Misstc. Yieio 326 7 . ..•••..•••..•.....•...
3 llR 1 ... ba. 1 .. m rm.
'lud). fpk. \lt'W, Sf;!5
)J I' r m 0 5 K I Ii 0 ~ :i
1·\~ wknd~
tte #pOl"f ~odt 3269 .......................
R11: l'anyon 2 Rr 2 B;i $875 mo Patn1·k. aia
759 1221
associa ted
II Q "' I JI•, rt f t, '" O C,.
• " • l ~ • • •
..
' It
If (
-__ -~-_ _ _ -·~-----------=---=---= -t·U
' Orange Coat DAILY PtLOf /~t'day, Ftbru1fY 1, l 982
---,~Al•t-••• I j •'" c-t ""'1ct C.ieNtt.. h .... , H.ti1-H1•1de•Aa f p~ ....... /l.,.r ? ... !~'!!~ ........ . •unu•••'••••••••l••• ...... ;; ..... , •• , •• ,,,, ...... ~••••n•••••••••••• .. ••••••••••••••••• •••• ....... ••••••••••••••• ........... •• • .. •••••• •oo~l••••H••••••••• .. ••••••••••••••••••••• BtJDOET RATEi Ll ' For all you n~ to llftow WeCareCrplCleantr• COIPOliTIOMS TlllS MllClru')'·()tt>entry-TUe c:.t.P..._ PL.ASrER PATCHI NG I c
NO. 114/~ 11• Truck mount uolt _ ... b Att Top~d/removed, ex· St .... co-n....wan 536-1700 Cl ... ~-le 9unded 1111 Refs Color yrs Neat Paul~ 2917 Ft_eent Jnt. 141 7 mcllA about bankruptcy, call Stumdunlnlp.bols AllARTNERSJUPS Phunb1\0olln& Rtmod IMMACDLATI ~ yn flP Uc.. •o!l941 Rntuccos lnt/exl 30 l..owmin SmljobJOK
lJ 1 , D · w....,. u .., ,..,. •....-v Y omtya pert c~an upa, l1w111 re-~ ~ -·• II~... •• '""' · ....a1 er IY .. M---H•ct/ ~r. ...,5 ... .1! Reu r•t• 55T·STOO novated. 151-Sf7S •••oo4Roon Homtae7U75S Offices n rt .w-0811 D1clt_ Neat palchd' textum S.W9t,1Alteros•• ;t'a ALLyouply~ .__._ Shampoo& steam elfin I'm Small My prices ~~. ltl-14lt ••••••••••••••••0 •••••
fora •• ::':.:':".~••••• .. •••••• Color br1&htenen. wht c:.e.Wt04lhr..... WHYNOT,ONEOF 'HAitow•OODPLOORS .. HOUS!WORK DON£ ere small! Cd M. NB ED'SPLASTERINC INDOSTRIALSEWING
30 day ad m AM IOAT SHY, rrt>U 10 mln blucb c·;;;•:•~·;~·jdj':~•.• ~-=j ~=· Buutlfully cleaned By J A p A N E S E F.xp'd. floa8'73 tw17 All Typn Int or Ext ~ CU1JIN? ol l~~~· 1ntb1 INT/EXTCLl:ANINO »all. Uv/dln rma SIS, mantles, wall unlud ' llldwued 832-4881 Prolessiooal <.:allYocbl 0.1 .. M~•n unPaantln& ~8258 l'rttrlt eta ma e1 _ 0 "'ILY ft 1v1 room S7 50, couch .. bl H d K6D Landlc1pe Maint. ..-.,_ · "'-• . , • ...,, ... 7• in..,..._ ~ IU.5/ t:.xp'd' depcn 110, chr ~ Guar dim .. a nets. er woo Reald /Comm.Clean·up. ....... -~ .,... ... c ...,... o PWTER &~'TU<.:CO -..~r;~~ PILOT dable Also ttak. T~ ur pnodor.Crpt re{>alr IOlut10QJ to wood pro LtHauJina. 548.2489 ....................... ~Ta Ins. Fteeeat 731 qtn Repair Nojobtooaml ................... .
OIUCSMYTtcOllY Brianm:_~ 15 yrs t'.<p Do work bltms.631-W:S formin& Own Buslneu· DUMPJOBS ....................... ~~:,.lfl~~rzE ~4293/64Hl99 ,,. A~tr.,~~~~~:1:d .. ldan l!lYltlf. Ref a. ~1·0101 Dtlilltltlc 4 Yrt Exp, Landacapltlg'. fr Small MovlnJ Jobs &XPER. PREP AR ER w ~ /
Atlrhrs.dro ....... ••••••••••••••••,.__,,/C __.._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Grdn&' Br1clt Patios. CallMJKE646·1391 Enrolled to practice LOWRATES .. ••••••••••••••••••••• Grel!lPrlces 63l·tZSS
Your Dally Pilot GllWICI & SOM _.__ MC........ UVE-IN h.sltprs, com pa Ontd Prof Service at HAUIJNG Ir DUMP before the IRS Qu ality N\J.BROOK 54S.ll75 Dralns cleared from SIO ti. Servi~ Directory Bui Iden Slhce 1947 •••••moMPSO·N~S'·••• n Io n• . s it t e r 1 • Pr1ct. Sur~ to Please .•
1
JOBS. u lt for Randy. at reu. COit. 549-ZU8 NEl.SONS PAINTING Plumbln& Repa~rs ••••••••••••••••••••••
Representatl\le Addltions ttlrnodehn. CONCRt'TE CONSTR &ardeners Brought lo •211~ b(7-t l W tE. 841·842'1 FEDERATED Int/Ext Ruld/Comm Free est MlcM 642 9033 TILE INSTALL.ED
!!!!!6!!!!4!!Z.!!!!5!!6!!7•t!!,!!t!!d!!l!!!!2!!!!1!!!!l Doon, wln®wa. pa tao l~c 1393383 642 8482 r::f home for mtei:vlew Gar den 1 0 a -Com PI. CLlAH UP YOUR ACT" Income Tu Suvlce l\coualir cealin1s Ref~. A~ PLUM BING & """'ll Kindt Guaranteed ~en Ftee eat Reas c.r..lc Tiit guar. (213!941 2828 clean up 'lttt hauling TODAY! Vard/1ara1e 631-4871 for appt bc'd Free est 837-2637 HEATING REPAIR Rds John MO·l21
Acct•llat ••••••••••••••••••••••• PIR QtrUes, W21. Fan
Stmts Complete Set·u 'Serv Reas. 540-5834
Lie 13l<XM2 549 2170 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Drywtl I lor~1ble.1tems. rln·up, etc 1 ton truck .... c.y v!oA.frER NEED~ REPLACE __ 645 1688 =;:::~~!~t. FINE HOME Hansen's Ceramic Tile ....................... Michael ~734 . 6311993 24 bra ....................... 30 yn exp nl r...,..ty M•OCJ••ltt Chuck 67S.1408
IMPROVEMENTS f1oors -Showers . Tu~ DRYWALL/ACOU~TIC G~n& Wanted Haulin1tclean up, dirt, BRICKWORK S!11a II Dext Apoosur ce1hn1lS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----'-'""~--...
AddttlOnl & Remodelln& Call anytime 972-4639 14 yrs exp. Fully lie d & Mowin&. edgin&. raking, shrub/trefl tram. etc jobs. Newport, Costa ara ainung 847 51116 PIOrEITY TNt Senlct
Aftll.c• • .,., ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prompt, prot. service on
major apples. Steve's
Apple. Setv. 548·8514 ....... ••••••••••••••••••••••• AL.l.Sl'ATE PA \llNG
Sealroahng Stnping
Repairs. Comm /Resid
Uc 13!n362 645·8181
•
lllSW't!d. 532»49 s wrepan& Fr ee Jwiktrash84S·49M Mesa. ln'lne Re(s Pa.inting's theGame, ~H ... "'GlME ... T •••••••••••••••••••••• M a.•gStnlc" DRYWALLTAPING estunates 645·4372 or ' · 67S.3175 Pedersen'stheName• """~ "" •ExpertTreePrunmg • ..,..,., ....................... All textures & acoustic &4.S-5137 HAULING-Student has Custom Brick M1111on"" I.Jc. 239534 642·0862 Orange Co area 15 yrs Commercial Landsca ~ PEP GIRLS c lea ning Fr t K 1 675 9088 · lge truck Loweat rate ·J expenence Cull for info .,,. ..... 7 •-•LCOM'lllA~ service Homes-Offices· eees · ev n · CUSTOM ~ARDE~ING PrompL Call 759.1976 CompL y11rd construe Hse paintlnic·coll. grad and rates ...,.,l'Vlces .,,., ·
Uc. 1349892 770·6554 Apts.548-0663 &drical Resld I/Comm I • Thank you, John. lion, pool detks & 7 yrs exp, iuallty work t6l-llU JAYE TREE CA RE --........................ an.ups 893-3577,XO TREES/SHR UB TR IM enclosures. Loeal refs 1,Dwrates ana646·1869 Complete service an
MocHAU COHSTR. c:o.trston, G ..... al ELECTRICIAN -priced nu: GRASSHOPPER Gauge& Vd Clean ups 00-8512 -L J B. PAINTING RtfWtlli119 stump grindin& 10 yr ~ustom homes, fram-••••••••••••••••••••••• nght. free estimate on Complete lawn ma int Free est. 557 8271 Hart Masonry Brick. QUALITY REAS ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• ~Uc Ins 640-9308
lllll. remodel. French Ho.a a.,air large or small jobs Lndoor plant specialist d" Block, Concrete Ref Larry 645-9383 art 6 J D Horn :lefanishini: Trtt Trim1n1, clean UP'
doors. skybghts & patao All phases. be. bonded. I.Jr. •396621 673·0359 Domlnic642·4851 Dtrnolihon·Gra mg I.Jc 368294 646 159? Quallty Painting al reas Anoques, kll cabinets MonLhy service free est
rovers84836S2 exper Free est &advlee RESIOICOMM 'L Landscapin&·Yd Clnups Tretao.s~ Asphalt.con, MasonryourSpecaalty' rates. ant. ext, res. F\nepaintmg64S-0664 6467556 Tony 's Tre Allen Const tM1ke> 20 rs exp Do er e • tree remova Cl L d d f •t k •-..a...1 g/Rep...:r Servtce CabiMtMalilltc) 497 $32214994863 Y · my own Trtttnm-Expertmaint Soil prep & planting I ean. qwc ... ~pen ba comm. res "1 t', -=II ... _
Driveways, Parking Lot ••••••••••••••••••••••• · · work uc'd_ Al 646 8126 Jam 851.0129 Operated eqwp Comm .1 ble. We do any size JO 497 ~--••••••••••••••••••••••• TMtoring
Repairs, Sealc:oating CUsrOM CA BINETS ADD'NS REMODELING UC'D ELECTRICIAN r---....1 ir-lc & Resld'I 642 7638 *fill·ZOIM!. IW EXT PAINTING COMMEtlCIAL •••••••n•••••••••••••
SAI SAsphalt Klt..bars.llar units Plans Lac'd George Qual.work ·Reas rates =::=.: .. ~•••••• wi;Labor St5S20 EXPERTBRICKl\ND Qualitywork Roas /IHDUSTRIAL VOYAAGEenFRANCE~
Uc 631-4199 Refs 645-6521 549 1685 Palmer & Sons, ~32 Fr~est 631·5072 Tom TreeTnm & Remo\lal M 0 vi n a Hau la n g Masbnry. Small Jobs & Free ~t Steve 547.4~1 UMoDEUNG• Expert pvt tutoring. af
AltorMys earp..tft' Additions, remodels, TOPQUALJTV Home Repairs Dumping repairs. Frplr raring~ TIIE PAPER HANGER Turn lost or un~sed levels, flex. lime. Cal
.............................................. home improvement, Electrical work at 760-INl>5or673-9043 7S4·~/llS5--009S Mark Refs.551·4555,760 7074 Prof .qualitywork spare into a workable j!/J7255afl~f!l w
AGG RESSIVE LEGAL FINE FINISH WORK windows. doors, patios. Reas. rates. 531·5055 ---..... LAN~PtMASONRY Free est. Stevt!S4]:4281 area rooms divided . Window Cl~
Representation. Law or-Remodeling/Doors huno d r i v e w a Y s · re El · s · I .....,..... ~ Concrete. Lil', ms drywall. drop ceilings & .................... .. .. plumbing el · L t ectnrour pecaa ty! ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 20 Fr 1 •36 0914 BOGDANOV PAINTING fices, 34 hrs. 545·8422 Randy 720-1260 Cd.M__ • c 1 ' Clean. quick. depend a· Carpentry . Masonry Wll.llta REALLY CLEAN yrs ee es " 16 yrs o.c Top quality tnm carpentry-to <·om '"Let the Sunshine In"
Aallhlll!DffYt CHAR RENOVAT ING 378711· Ph960-063S ble We do any size Job Roofing . Plumbing HOUSE? Call Gingham Mcmi.g Neal St lie J:W950 pleuon Call Tom or Jeff Call Sunshine Window
••••••••••••••••••••••• Int ext cabinets , boat JM~ SystftM •631-2004• Drywall · StU<'ro -Tile Girl. Ji'ree esl 645 5123 ... •••••••••••••••••••• 645--03891839 1886 at661 2913 or~93·38116 Cleamn Ud 548·
TIR.OH YOUR CAI docks. 2S yrs. 645 3749 Free desagnlrree est Roor Co•triac) Rerrodel J B. 646-9990 ROBIN'S CLEANING *A· I MOVING* QUALITY INT EXT Rooft.g •RESIDENTIAL• _j
Instead ol wax. 40 mo CUSTOM ADDITIONS Room additions. tenant •••••••••••••••••••••••HOME IMPROVEMENT Service-a thoroughly Top Quality SpH 1al Llr'd. Rers. Freerst •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• A\g I sty S30. ng 2 slyl wny 75i·S0071752·0892 Ki tchen r e mo d improvement . in Carpet& Llnoleum For REPAIR-PLl.>MBING cluohou.ae 540-0857 rareinhandhng 25yrs u 646J067 u REPAIRSFORLESS S4.SChris957 8388 j
PROF POLISHING Skylates Reis 8111 surance work. der ks. Home. Van & Motor Heat1n1. carpentry, Expert11e Houukeepi;;g exp. Competallve rates Jl'..,.n.g Shingles. flat 30 yrs liearVaewW1ndows i
Service at your home or 646-00!2 pall;'().~ Llr 313174 Home 847-4595 Dave _ elec:, llle Free . est. No Supplies ru mashed I No overtime 730 1353 ••••••••••••••••••••••• exp ~~est 770.2725 Xlnt service. free est ~
business.Rick 675·0344 ••••• ,.,. ... Doors ,JOb~smallM~·28~1 Trustworthy 957-11003 .STARVlNGC'OLLF:C~ HANGINGSlO ROLL BALBOAROOFINGCO ~ 673·90l_
•.....a.. IMI... dJ hin d Lo ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 r ' a 10 · "' ' nppmg· isr on paper c·onstru<•. t1on rebates TlredofPla1nWalls1 ln· Bar k.h oe Se r v1c t' Repa s P t 1og SI'UDENTSM"'VINC' I St . d. Theonlyrooftng co with _,lhswwwj crease the Value & le g, gra ing w •FRENCH DOORS• I ('ru,>entry. Christian. re SCRUB A·DUB CO Ur •Tl24 436 Visa /MC 645·9325 ·····~················· Beauty or Your Home I rat~s Const~U('lion 10 panes Installed, 6' I liable897·9262 Prof Houserleanmg Insured 64 18427 UC-PAPERHANGF:R bi3-6743.ibl3 ~-Babr.•l, our ~M home s. I With The Rirhness or ad~ ns. alterallons, re shder<>i>t:ning. 1750 com· 1 JACK OF ALL TRAl,)ES Xlnt work Jean631-~~ WATCH 1,JS GROW• Bonded & guar No Job lluber Roofing.all types for Ad Action
yr up, anytune Solid Wood 496·6961 pairs, ma mt . Design & pl. (unpamled) 640-1065 Call day or night. Home cleaning depend a· srARVING ACTORS too small or too large New recover·decks Call
M 642"8482•646"5759 Custom Carpentrv By ~~ing. 7301611 • evs ....... .,., •• CJ I •Jark67S·3014• ble. honest Cleaned to MOVING COMPANY f.:l"eees~J!Y898 2728 u r ll41tll02 548·97l.!._ a
ature Babys1lte r 1 "Jay" \Formica & ••••••••••••••••••••••• REASONABLE yo ur s ati s ru·t1on 1 Past & Careful Lowest WALLPAPER Mr#Dortloofina =Pi••t needed, M F , 4·9P M,'T1le1 6428809 or Ca ll REMODEL 'ADD·ONS *41!~1"'l* , PROMPT FREEEST ~·4'54 Rates l..awAllowi. M C Allkmds Freeesl "QuialJty RoofingfOr HI
N.B.areaaf\5759·6466 Answer Ad •620 at &Carpentry Lic:d ~"""" ~ ALMOST EVERY LORRAINE"S HOME Visa Uc/Ins 6730853 ""ne Homes."645-0104 ISOI Ba bysitta'ng Mon. "'ri 642-4300, 24 hrs. Z'iyrs !rwi..!!..548 2719 Any chair hand·stnpped -----Sil roll Lar 330986 n r . or reglued, Sl9 75 A REPAIR NEEDED SERVICE REFS Jl'c9RfiRg Norm 645-0880 •John Henry 's Roof mg • ~bomto 2 yrs 6 t0 c.petSerYlc• Hrlpyour..elrloJ Touch Or Class In DAVE645·47~7 Owntr~ 96Z05lOe\s •••••••••••••••••••••••Jl'-RftftD"fd L1r d & ans $15 for
S.JO. CM. 642-2995 .••••••••••••••••••••••• HeapmJ.! !>ell'lllun ul teners 711 w 17th St Small Jobs. Handy Man. Professional Houseclean Flne paintmg by Richard .~···•••••••••••••••• esl11TU1le & inspection TenderLovingCare I NoSteam NoShampoo QuahraedHopl'fuh l!t\2,C.'M 642-7712 Carpentry. Plumb. mg by a family who Si.nor Uc.ans 13)ri.or •BRYANT'S• Callalt 5,631~5038 Babysitung,anytime I SUJ.nSpecaabst Fast mlheD,\IL\' PILOT Have something to sell• Elec Reasonable cares Please <·all happyloralrustomers WallrovenngRcmoval
Refs.C.M. 979-6646 j dry. Free e.st 839·~ HELP WANTED \I>S C..1assiliedadsdoil well 546-8437 17141536 6290 'llwlkyou 631 4410 All Types. 642 13_43 Want Ad Help' 642·5678
642-5618
Estatth-the Complete Orange Coast Market Place ...
I
I
l
!
I
I
!
I ._.. u.tw · t &t ..._.. U•••••d · :_llh·-,.-.-,.--~---.-f--,_-,-L-,,-......,----~--, .. -.... --twwa.----.,_--,.-... -UllfwotL----.,_--,-.. -.-.-.-u.tw..----,.,_---, .. -... -u.t.-WL----l-aoc.a----......:;-4-o-oo-... -.-to-Slii-.... -.. --.... 30d
•••••••••••.••••••••••• , •••••••••••••••••••••. ~ ............................................................................................................................................................ ······················i
Me.,t•otJt l26t Mewpcwtltoch l16t .._...._. l706 .... ,11.l .. I ll07 CotfeMeM 3124 CodoMno 3124 tt.tt.j011ltoda 314C t6exp04'f•Kll 3Hfl8.ilboa . Inn 590 & up I•------..
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........ ••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• weekly Ku ch~nnt!'lle. ! Newport Hts .. fresh & 4~~r.28a P'am1tyrm., ~alarYrt. ·._, . NEWPORT HEIG HTS Large 3 !>Orm. 2 balh. Spaci o u s 1 BR 10 ~eanfronl~58740 _ :
clean 3 BR. lplc. lge Dining rm .• 1 blOC,k from ~1325 mo.·um pafd, no OCWlllM>MT ~ 2J!r·~-L~· lge I bdrm. I b11 37012 frpk , pat.to, gara).!l' F.astbluff Pool. Quiet. f\am, NB Apt S300 lndd~ 1~·.-..+~l•t••\.! yard. S850. 646-1220, N.H. Hag_h School peta,Nr.CorooadoAve. 2 ~rm, 2 batb. new dry;1 .,pooi 9556 -. LaPerleLnS395.nodogs Xlnt.~ 6759132 Pleasant area' Single Uhl M Prof.Congt'nial. •nt:' "V'" ss:!~s house with U1~' mo Agen t ~.::-.'111111 J724 e:,r:p·~!"~ N;;iyac~~:~arge 21~= $450 l 1·hild OK 12 +~tde~;;,l bG,asS~~s ~~l~sfo Pets. SS001mo ~,f:ri;t ~4 2·8363~ ~fl' iltflcri .. tJ
swimming pool. 3 Br. 2 f'lwpt Hits. 2br. very pvt, ....................... 1 _. Br with patio. pool, No, pets 2563 C Elden Nr Bea<·h Bl & Mr Fad I -. f\am BR, Ba & Ln Rm" ·~ ·----!
Ba. Fa~\ly rm. f~I". + gar Nr beach & Hoag 1 bdrm, rum. or wdum, C.-...... JIJ2 gara~ kids OK . no Ave 6758074,527140ll J den Ad Its no pet\. Soar l or 2 br apts. I ma Patio. Pvt Ent. L'til 10 2 add1t1onal Ultlaly ~· Nopets 645-909S ms Fu b b I I pda.~/mo.841-0763 ---1!13-11194 from beach No pell.. rid CM Mesa \"erde b d r m s N a r e I Y ,.,.,.et lBR 2' BA Co do . rn. It t or, _ ................ I E-side d I 2 BR 2BR LBA. Old but Cle Jn : adults only 642-2357 R·.1 .. ., .,,...., • Oldest & largest agency~
1 d d l """ 2 n · $345. SZOO He. dep. + !IT7 TO OCEAN Moat I* u uxe ·up· 2248 canyon Dr N 0 1C1ean. xtra lge 2 br. I'' -----a ,...,.,.,,...,., _ All rhent.s screened wit s a ~1e~ ~lzs01 r!u in~ Pool, Spa, Gar Smart lsL move-In. 541-tlJO cbannlq ID oAd Q,rooa, Pf!·balcony. newly der.. Pets S400 Sierra M ngt ba lwnhse ' , m1 Ol'e.in Lrg 2 Br 2 Ba upper unit. Laguna Niguel Shores p photos & reh:,renres '
P .. _ d. & I Decor 1750 mo 759-9100, -• ..__.... J7 .. 0 2 Br. 2 Ba. frpk O<"tan q11ft adu.lla. 120 E 20th Co 641 IJ2A /\dulls only. no Pl.'l!> I deck, f11>k. ~re<1l lora non srmker. gate guard Credits Cosmopolitan.' clw fir ener poo 492-0SeOAnn -~ 1 f d' t ~646--0100 -----l.'\.2S ~2392 lion No children pets S b h Good M I ser vice 640·1327. -....... ··-••••••••••••• v ew rom er . S360 lBR pool l.idlt no ----1725 y t 1 C 11 area teps to ear. orhmgAmenra.1 558-61.88 Office759-6597 Loaded 3br. frpk, gar. a· A~$f, 910lmo. Call Anthony IBuut 2bdrm condo. pets 32S. J 1ith Pl~re 4:e 1 BR. deluxe decor. u d ~} ~aseR rl Lennis. pool . J3CUZU , TIM!TornorrowShow pool,+V1EW,nowS695 II"" daya "2-5757, eves 6 pnme S.C. Plaza loc all bltns relrag gar oy · aro 5 ea \ small k1t c henttle. • ' Eutblufls 4 Br. family OC RENTALS 750-~14 . F.atate Uv nJ! wtndsS31.fe30. Waterf all1. streams. -~5137 afl lli\M $365 114.gi;o 5742 . . 675~70 -~ washer dryer 5250 1st Newpon Beach,.641-1899
rm, lge yard 642·5161 or ir.._ ..... •-ta llll Be.alti~ul parlt-lllte 1ur-l .... 2 .._......._ spa. pool S800 t mo E Side roiy barhelor SS50 2BR -28 , M 13 Br i Ba, frplc. garage. &sec~nty dep_493}~90 ~sun _.. -oc roundangs Terra red -illll§!J-90191 875·~0 apt w pat10 SJ75 lltal ~ · 1 • 1 •nl patio no kids or 1,e1~ Garden Grove, 895·3482 ••• Heights 3 bdrm 2 •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• ~. Sunken gas bbq. Old COii, View. 2 sun· and 2 bd .1 n.1 631.4320 A.,. C ond Nr Reh Rest 1 5600 00 4387 · Room w pvt bath. kit & · · Deluxe Rustic Beach kl' r l · deck! ~ t S915 1 rm tra1 ers r--~· --Area No Pets 833 3307 --:.._ --lndry pnv Prer fem ~..!_rpk&J1~10mo. 25l House JBR 2BA. ~ilh sp:: c i1~~ 5 o:~ 0a~n; Avail' Fet~: ~~chard Sl65 to S26<lh.ld+ SISO Lrg I Br Adult .Nea r ~ Nr Lido nu dlx 2br I' iba CIO!ie to bus & shoppm11 ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!t ,.....,,.St. · sunken tub. 3 stones. Se a ate di ·n area 64G-l850da secunly.noc 1 ren,no shops, pool. all ulll pd ·~"~°" Uprf pdk rplonlv l'M S225 548·2114 Share 4 bdrm home be( Bluffs. Besl gr1eenbell spiral. stalrcase, hot tub. Wpa Irk .. 10 "c'I 0g5 e 1 s 640-7072 eves ~ 642-9193133 E 16th. 1~ Monrovia. 548 0336 ~ 3842 N~~02~75 OO'J7 R S2 -5 -5 H ~ Bay and Ocean Avai{
tor & Decor 3 BR 3 I 2 garages all '• l:a!ta Mesa k •••••••••••••••• ••• • • • • oom. 1 mo ouses F b I 67• 2637 ft 6 PM • · · pa 105· · homelike kitchen & ~Br2Bacondo,encl gar. --Lg I BR w 2 wl '" Guarded gate. tt•nn•~ ~el br, steps to bJy & fromSand NB e ,,. 8 • 2\~BA, Fam Rm, 11100 carpet ed & drapes cabinets Wulk lo Hunt adults $775 1530 mo 2Br. 1•,Ba closets . anrl pal10. courts. sw1mm1ng pool bch Adlts. no pets $43S _215·~ M 29 hardworking seek!I
760-8384 675·5930 ~r Sharp Call 1213 > ingtonCeoter · 760-~ lwnhse. adu.lts only. dshwshr. rarprt. pool. Lile roof. cobble stone l:_rly_673-0072, 673 5706 p..1 ent no smokin~ or house apt to share w 1P.I
Bluff Condo 4 bdrm. 3 ~1312 I Bdrm-fum.1485 3 br, 2'2 ba. frp lc, l bi" carpon. balcony •patio. $400 +_sec_ 645 0362 -street. on channel 3dJa 3 bdrm. 2 bath modern I dnnkmg, prof M O\'er 2132 Call842·4«4 ba~ ·~=th w..-.m 3291 Adults. no pets bch, Sll9$1mo inclds uhl ~';.d~~· :..~ d~~1·1 ~~: O..Poiltt 31l• rent to manna Unique S700 mo No children or 40 S295 mo556·0637 F le_"1" !
---::.=;-=:;.;......---100000•0 •n°00•uu t.:llhties Free! days 759-1301 . eves ....................... 2BRS850 mo ~ 752·2841 , 673 1650 CdM S 11 b h 1 ema ~oommate tq
Bl uf Is mag n af ice n l Htwfv l""°ct.Md 644 ~78/~175 a'fgL MGMT 642.1603 · DUPL.EX Large 3 bdrm. __ 738 5022 2 Br. 2 ba yrly apt -Enrl 1 w (sep ~~ranc:.\>~li~ ~~;:le S225a~ w+ otu~f1~
harbor ocean vu, 3br. Slngle family house. 2 LA QUINTA HERMOSA Cute 2BR IBA Frplr. ---28xl8 li\lang rm Some 2 BR. 212 BA CONDO I garage. frplc. dshwhr I apt relng & hotplate. 64S 2398 !
newly redec Kids/pets. bdrm, I '1 ba Living 16211 Parkside Ln. I blk good are a . s 6 o o UST SIDE ocean view Recently de S850tmo 1 SM.'i mo 675 1642 1 1225 Refs 673 6223 ---•
tl.tt;S.675-2967. room. formal dining W.ofBeach.3blks S oC mo /yearly B r kr ~75 mo l 2Br. l'2Ba corated 2 car gar 7311 5022 ,ir_,.,...:._~ 3176'1 · · FShrJBRApt Avail Pett
311 r/loat 511 room. Gar. New cpts. & Edinger S75-49l2. lwnhse. )'d/balcony, tfi.50/mo. 4~ 1490 --.-mt Hottft, Motels 4100 :nh. CM Area No Lasf ti P drps, lg back yd. S600 8 7.§C4 I small pet OK. all bltns. 1 Br. rw:ar ocean, garage, Lag.ta •och 3141 .............................................. or 0ep 646·5413 I lbr. ba.Sl900. mo. 213-512·4731 da, 4 • CostoMfto 1114 lndry rm.Thlsone won't clean 24682 "A " ........... ••••••••••••1!Brl't 8a,garage,laun· 51.ua•l(MO..,. 3 d R W d f BruceJohnson675-0941 714""'"7380 • ----•--.. 17.o19 1 1 Bdrm loft apt f'rplc . dry. blk to beach. I --i1;1.. Ir .mmt ante of Newport Crest townbse, .....,. .___-_ ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ast. Cordova Dr 661·1537, stove. refrig, d/w, 2 blk s S395lmo.9'74.7225
1
Wkly rentals now ava•! ~pacaous JBR Con doj
newly rede.c. 3br 21;b.a. C.t1 •el•s :~.~~·~t:St~~~~·a~·;.v.· ..,_.~I BrdTownbouse d TSLMGMT642·1603 1213)402·2657 <collect) oc:ean I.st/last+ ,, util SIOS & up Color n IM1 SC Plaza S2SO Inc
Wallt to ~ach, teMis, u.fwwl~ 3425 ~ad service. phones. ,..,..w Y ecor. gu P ·• 2 BR, 1'2 BA Studio. Pool Large Studio Apt with '6!!0frm 494.7222 NICE 2 BED R 0 0 M Phones in room. 2274 utal Eve557 7758 encl gar., pool, dswhr. 0 -•--'d water taa · ... .,,,., --apanment with ''1ew or . Newport Blvd ,... F--:,1 h -1------1--pool, s~a Mina oceanvu ................ •••••••• -.l5wk 499.2227 Adults ..... .....,.. ""'• ,..,. · ocean\11ew . ..,.,., mo '-"' wu s are ux poo 1sp !.! · ._....,,... h eating pa Id y 6611192 OCEAN FIONT the fOlr course. hills,' ~7445 a Avall eb 1• S900tmo. 1 S.C.Jl'LAU Areo SZ20 Furn, Sm, cozy, 2Br.18a Apt landlord Co 'd k. · Molt eleeant apartment publ.1c tennis courts j ~ nr SC Plua w yr lse Children ok. 38r 2Ba a/c,pool,ser barb. Nr. Bch Utls pd Newly decor. Gas pd Walk to :h oi::;i~":· H ...... eda 1140 b ild' I L behind property 2 HHDJ.Jl'LACU mature M SJSO mo ~ &ates, no pets P 5\. S630 No pets I Resp emplyd, encl 1ar., pool. dsbwr $46S-S47e. Olive Tree. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~oes~ 1or!1f:0n,~ enclosed carports. ·all Reas Weekly Rate:. 5:'9 97~
IMMACULATE 9fl8.36S2 ad1L49H200. __ Adults M2·S073. 2190CollegeAve MAIUHllS WA.LI town Breathtaking bultms. laundry faralaty Kitchenelles·Phones Fem to shr 3Br 2ba B,1
BLUFFS 3 br, 2 bacon· Beaut 2bdrm condo, ... mart leach 1769 548·7367 2aiaer Townhouae Apt. views. All bit-ins. healed in 4 unit modem Spanish "Z" Channel Movies Isle baylront apt w/l~ do. ffl)lc'. 2 pvt patios, prime SC Plaza loc ... -;r;; ................ THE VICTORIAN: New. 2 er tl pool Yard. alnale 41 double pool. subt llatage, style building. 2 adults Sandpaper,1967Newpor1 &lf,~+util 673·138rf
... o1 2 pools. adults waterfalls. streams. !OCEANFRO NT 2 & 4 Br ly decor. 2 Br wtgar., 719 ·~~ wlt!:'.1~6.1.251: car 1ara1e. near Hunt. elevator. Lease only only No children or pets Bl.Costa Mesa 645 9137 1
ml/mo64HSS9 spa, pool. $800/mo . Avail. Winter. Weekly/ !le'# crpta' cfrapes, bit-S43S/ Harbour. Children OK. IB50 •up. 330 Clill Dr pleas. S450 per month a..tu-.,.175 Young Mother w 312 ol • .,.~ 1 1 '"a H bo !714!673·9019· 67S·OS40. M-thl 673 7..,3 ins, patio. Adult&. Call mo. MIMil>'l. GUOLt. Available Februaru •••• .--nrl , son, seeks rompatlblt .,...c us ve ar.. • ar r I -y. . 01 • between l·SPM 636-4120 CHOIClt It .. IDE c , ••••••••••••••••••• r f I xl View Hill s SOlllh. Upper 2 Bdrm I 'I Bath oclta ... -0 ...... 1 667"G"Vlctoria 1470 5S.• 1',1Brtr1·plex frontun· ... rtltoch l16t all owner (7 14 ) I • G H person to Ive ree rte charmln~ 3bdrm. 1''2ba So. Coast Plaza area. lg r;A"""' ""'. -lBr, lBa, frplc. bltn it new caTstatdrapes s:po. 642-0138. rown s ~I "' change for babys1ttint
W-''"to .. •b.ionlsland' deck patio. pool, rec .. 3 bdrm. 2 ba mo to mo Fire place, pool. pvt range/oven, BBQ. pool. ·1 i bli SI '•••••• .. •••••••••••••••Adult Stud' S Sr C1tzens M5·6221 Karen5J6·3288 ..,. -'til S750 . di h h I II k m n n s ater/ NO FEE' Apt & Condo io· love. rng, ----------• ~---~ b c b G r cht-r In c 1 Securtty &&le. ~ZS. summer. patio, s was er, on ln smal we epl com· Beach. S37S. Water & rentals VIiia Rental~ u ti I s , S 2 6 o ' mo S....r ll'fttals 4200 Resp M rf' shr lg nu 3 b\ $1250lmo nl-2?81 J D •siso 646·4844 67S·2010 Etside. ail in x·lrg 2 Br plex $420 mo., ad Its, no gas pd 991.7490 art 6:30 61s:...s12 Broker · $495/move In. 492.0180 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ir\ me hse 1325 no ~y Mgmt MUDELUXElBR OCEANFRONT 1 brtlll gardenapts FromSS60 peu3111Hamllton. PM ... I OCEAN VIE~ ~m kr 552 403 ~~Crest 2 Br, 2'\ T"-". spa, new. full 6-15. rurn-1550 • un· ~~7-2841 One ~droom. rtfrla. UDO VIEW G9r1 2 BR . ...,. wlh ~ eves wknds
I securit .. bit ~ rurn S500 wkd ys 2Br Adult.bea ..... d ceal· Costa Mesa. 1350 Deluxe poolside xtr a fp.llCls, oru..twwtsMcl 3900 ,.----L ,frplc,poo.spa. M2!,' ·In case, "'"' laree 2br. 2 ba. bllna, $1000/mo 67~6359 ....................... Ima tobeach Wk vor l\OOmmate needett uoaa Ocun view. SA ''1191S7·29 ' 833-3743. eves wknds mgs. serve bar, refrige, 646-0341after1.30 PM. dswhr p, 11 be h -rmnthly 3 br. 21; ba w1refrtg, to shr home at.
• ''7~St11 ' 7»W1 lots ol wood. No pets AduttS m ea •c . Large lBR. Util pd Spot S E A W I .._.. D ~ .. -'2131592-' 184 CdM S200 mo. lsl & last ~' WI 2256 Maple St. l4201mo. 'no pets 14SOmo. less. Q\iet. 1450. 2421 F. "" ~..,....., ' ~ 76N620 y m .. PenUiouse SltUff BEACON BAY 541-7356,673.a803. ~H SS8362. lsthSt.00-4718 VILLAGE y ........... 41 50 __________ ..._ on d 0 · 2 b d" m. Exceptionally '*ll fOll· -~le., 3 Br 21 .. ba, 2 car, llC 1 & M1FshrS A .. _me nr'17A II 1 I d G 3b 2b 4-"I S u" • a.-to '--h 1 3 B New 1&2 bdrm lux ry ••••••••••••••••••••••• · '"' U1 repare, n ee oruo o .. round loel., I Bdrm. month t o r. a upper ..,.ex . 2 bllts from beach -.,.,ac · · r. u 0CEANf'RONT 2 &4 Br SlOwnBr/bath,lurn~r view Gated community, SParaous two bedrooms month. utilities paid adults, no riets. ~2S. Beautlrul sarden apts. f7S0/mo. 9611-BllO · l-2Br, both frpks $775 & adult apts in 14 plans I Avlll. Winter. Weekly 1 unfurn Prof person
closetoshopl and water. ·'fwo balha. Private S1 000 mo Call Dean, 1040CValeoc a. 54$-7983 Pat.IOl/d~ks. Spa, heat. 1 .... lbd . d 1 S6SO per mo . I m . pctrm from 1490. 2 bdrm _Mon_thly 67J.7873. ~ rs. 9$3·~1_52 •. .e..v!~. 1750 + utll. 754.4114 ext patio. Lov~li 11rounds le .ii 67~ AUSIDI ,.OM • .....i.., ~d..AdY111..Jl!tJttlt,__ ... rm con o, pat o, maClll!le. 673·2507 aih_ rom SS70. Townhouse _ .,u.,. BR ~CartaCrum ()0411. Adul complex. .., l'Vth 28J\:2BA. SS2S -..Shtdry, frplc, pool l 2 8t 2 Ba Condo pool trom S640 +pools. ten· Palm Springs 11re11 IMon >¥11 4 Kie <.:M sJdt! •-~~-... --•I Euy walk lo ahopi and Wat 1 BR downstairs 398 W. Wilson 631·5583 Jae, sec. gate, close to r.,,k:, 2 p·rivate p' auos: ois. waterfalls, ponds! lerey CCI condo 3 BR 2 Bacltbay S2SG + '• Utll
banks. 1670 month 5•C.-• 1776 w Ind. patio. rp. dlw. PINEBLUFF APTS. beach. Simo. new, $550. ground level. S6SO +de-Gas for cooking & heat· Ba. furn wt atrium !11~-
•CAMYOM Yearly leue Broll"'r ••••n•••••••••••••••" pool, spa, car port, no B 2 B N" l 968-5632. -111w.1713 u1 ... H In& paid. from San Golf. tennis D1ilv. Rmmt W•nted M to 11br Lux II r i o u a l hr e e cn.7JOO. " · ~ Br l '' ba. walk to pets! adults only 1465. 2 r. 8 u pe 5· • r= ._. , ..., ..... ..., Diego Fr*¥ drivt North 2RR apt l200 Mn Plc••c bedrooma. Two baths. ..___ .. -La Paloma. ~HarlaS49·ZU1 Patio, view , rrp lc , ~•Unfum 1·2·3 .__....._,,__.... on n....,.b to McFadd•n YMklr &t monthly nt~i; ralll'~.·1e,•••.r.·.-I formaJ dint ~ _, JICUlll tncl aar gas Bdrm. Apts Gym, .._. _.. ..,.."'" " ava1 . 714 ~ss 8001 ' ~ '"'..,.. D'-1.a~ ... -~.room .. 6 AJ!!B.ti'i0.637·71118 •2 BR Mesa Verde. up .. -e,.W..a:n·st07' Jacuul. Sauna. pool. ZBR. 2BA Yrly _Rental then Weston Mcfadden ~PMJ.!.SJlfor M~rlt. Malt 20-31> Homt' Nur 'll'~1YV«Vl'Atcu1nmut· ''" •Tiii "' : = per New decor Adlts ..... ~ -~ tennla volleyball Avai l Now ·uoo to Seawlnd Vllla1e Ot"C. Sl70 Mo mw.11 ed tones 3000 sq rt .... ..cl11hd lUS .-~-...... $!~ nopets 933,8974 ' Bta~ul 1 Br. Apt. Q&aet basket.bi.it aame room' 51892,ArttrSPM. {7!4)-.51911 _ NominTathoOfN~bdo.•ta· r4 ":.00
5 _u .... .... Jatuul OH master ....................... U.v~;u -· bid& near shops l • · u" " .. "'...., ... ..., bedroom. 3 rar garage DEUIXE tlld unit. lite .. •••••••••••••••••••••,. 3 Bt. Condo nr S.C. t>usei. %13/498·6786 or lllnl.Bch."6-0619. ~ oew,ddelufxe lbrl WlffWr"Alth ~..J'<!RIMT·lr.Gll lor2 M '11,lo11b1m·h.1au~ '20$0 month. Ytarly new. 2 BR. 2 Ba. frpt , .... ,....., ll06 Plaza. S.A. Pool, spa, 2D/St7-<168 l Br wtfrpk .. pool, encl L'UllUU, t1>t f"PI, P. enc furn l unlum f bdrm 2800 ~<I rt 3RR c M
luu. Call 01·7300 JWd • .-.. many xtra ......... ••••••••••••••• 1arqe.f7SO. -&at, nr 1hoppln1. 1395". 1ar w!elec opener. apt. AIL uill pd. All ...... S... OdO home Nr S.C l'liu11 Raltor · 'J\aistiri-S,A. llnt. -No UlUe Island. apaciout l S4&-3232or64H460 E/slde.· l br, D!Otmo. 2 §47.al&e atonae, pool ' tac. amenities. 844·08!9. • ... ,.................. w•uwiwr. i.bllent ~ d~~ lll!!!!!!l!!l••••••l.Jml!!!:'·..!m~.'58()~.17~~1~-07!!;96~. brSS601yrly 28r.A4ulls.nopett,oew· br, S.10/mo . A~ults. Unfurn ZBr J\ tACiiiiii" 1650t rno . ft13 -Sll2, ------. ,_.. Maturt r upon111blc '""wit u~o mQ
-.--=mli! .. llJllll ... lllll-•I'~-•LL-l600 675-.3412 ly dee. stove/r"'frif encl Olitt., Walking dist. lo -1 .. · P ~. ---4000 Fe1T11lc, non 11mokt•r. Mo'\ 1'790
..,.....,..VWIWll Ill..&.....-I ~ ....4' ' aliooomf.IWil.5..W "''Y•nopet.a. ''DO 81ATERP.llONT ••••0 ••••••••••••••••• Newport O" ·11 fr • ~ . ·~..,. ·-.................. ~,••-ll07 IJ!!0,~·!.!.!:441 '&-1D llC>-~5 ,... " '141pvt Bdrm ~OI un c 0 00•· Udo Wit~ t.unn
1'-o bidrvom, two bath Beautiful Ntw Custom "'"••••••••••• .. ••••• PALM MESA APTS 3BR ~BA·~~v~ll Feb t2br.1•; ba, 1ar11e. Good =!~~~A-~· Rita leek, Ki l 'pnv. 'Apa . P £rro $411 l!Wi7 Uindo Shp amul 2Rk
rondo Ground floor. Dcluu Duplu 3lJR. USO U\11 Pd. t8R, JJllMesaDr. : 15t11.''51S incldsOas• loc.lbUttoatom•bus. • · a to __ marmln•. spacious, z, Bd\tllfully Dt~.lBR. 3hA ~normo1u1 rm!\. ~d. td4akt'Omplt'J. No Z8A l'l"plt, Central Air, = 417 £Bay Ave 2 Br. unfuro. SUS., Water No Ptts 133-1319 2 mi. to beach. 14ec1 i br Qtict? Br. t 811 11ra11t. tory h.oun nr Hul• !IA Hae Nr OCC.: IPI 1 •'6rt1 P + '•iTHl40
llfll. Wa• to i.boppinf. Did Ot;e Gar•&tt sao 547·115S.SU.Oll0_ Adulta cnl,y. Call btwn : · · w/carport,9440. llOOI. adults, 110 peta. _lnaClfl Bdl, avail ftb 13_ n.A1UorJ J Ill Niii mkr. ZHR , IHA,
.,. mD. Vurf7 ltut Mo.1.tt. Last•'5000tp. O:~. tmaU b1tfl1 M .W.90. 1 •lwfil*/~ Mtr:mU!ll .. ,Apt D \901 ISth. St. Apt O; arliUr,1anfurn $360/mo PNI llu-2Rll. 28" CdM •· -,. 1'4 6 t._t,
Gl·'l9•r. Located u I U E Im ~ utll Od 201 2 HUGI Btdroomt • Child welcome, 2 BB, Owntr:m .ms BD/n .MJ.TMO. ~ ~ ittdud ulll. C.11 •Rat Hit I llUr Bril t' Prof-.-._ A-ilW '"'-tit
••••--·--· ~17t_~•btr &~Blvd. '1S-tM2 Ground Ploor, '"llY (JIU, d~1 pvt patio. La• Bachelor w /n p 9tud6o apt. i'tfna, 1ed •a..w 643-2132 t:30pm &5il1& .. m'!Stt>:vt11 ·~'" na_,,1 •CANT °' CarptJtd. Bullt·hu 81.ovt puuw, lndry. No bdnn lbe.llll)Ml,cloH Plltln& oe Ptnt.aula. lol:311Dm)I0!!.:..'1l.!r.! Ff.MAI..& to ahar«' ~..... •
0 a-M l. 1°'tLSS l Bdr, •Hflertdfttr, NuU?..1!R.2BA.,-earty. IUPD LocaUolll 0¥1r .. ~tdoCI ... watet 6 to bell. taU/mo . l!t(l}OStUftJ P.'ft Entr. Hunt111itot1 ...-1 bedroom, 1 ..... n .......... ~
8 .. ,.e_.:~u&!n;· flrd.11ofth 1L11•icv.a1•1• 1~.bJt.lna,aa.r,perk· 11Mlb1!fo.Pttt.~ .. r~-.... Or • ua .ou. uk for 2Bll,1BA.AtBud1 utll Harbour, Lua, 01m, .~~1PA1t1•ntt•HuJ1t 111nWta&c-M,,.a.w ... (·fD.nn.;.-..., L•c. u · • • na. Clott to hr• llo. App~ •t". Ml~=.·..-.:._.:••· ·a .... .,, o . or NSIOO Twm. M kl1. •· •ldl atO m~. faUriat tMt ,.., catlft..:lnrns..tu •!Utonm:tm _..,..at !191 -~ ....,a • '__, . ~ ,.. -~ ".-.l!!:OW._MNltlt .--. ·-. ' c. I •
. . •
"' • '·""
_i
• && 4 s , "
~ Coaat OAllV PILOT/Mondty. february i , 1982
.... 41H lrtutlwll L ... ,,... IJOO MllpW.W 71H ...-w.... JIM . "o"r·a·~····R ... V. • •• ·1·· •• ···°"····· ..... tir It I I ........... ..... ••••••• • ...................... ~~;r ••••••••••••••••••• --------...., w.w 7 I 00 • w..... 71 H ••• r11 er •· ...... ••••••••• • ....... •••••••••••••••• ••tl•••••••••••••••••n
boel. M S.Utmo Kirk HWwl.... Counttt Kitchen, PtT, ._.,Offkt MADAIUCI
" F\nlft(r1fP1rtnt'rW1ot· FOUND ADS ATTIMT'IOM: Ruby '• hod w I c h Tt ptn I . Ii 11111 -·-!f!ll fd, suo.ooo Nttdtd 1.. Ambltlou1 boy1 and Saloon.AJU,84.5 llOO h I ••-•
Vlllmenl wtll S.ru~ lD[ FREE 11.rb 10.13 yura old, to IEDIT te 'l' one, mall P'ul Tht Loi An1 Time• by fll1t Tna.at deed on M ~ one or two rven Cl lime Mon P'rl Salary It looklo1 for well
4400 OMc.t.hlt 4400 -Appr1laed Proper t C II In&• • wrek lt'ltln& Good phOnc manoen to and bentfit• Loral 1roomed, enthualHtlr
................................................. W..tM 4600 714 120-1!30 ) a : newapaper IUbHrlP .i.ullt tredlt man111er ~tilt office OOc>d people to earn up to _ DICUTfYI ~Ile Avail NB Addrtu •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• '42-SOI l•ona Tran1POrt1t1on w11h collect 1ooa Ar 1111 condition• l'all •950 per day for 1 few SUITIS 3RoomalndConftrtntt' I or 2 BR. Etslde C M MmilyW.ted SOJO und tonstant 1du1ttrunte typlns. aeneral 9112-.m4_ houn wort 11 p/Umt
·J -r~ or Tralnlnl Room Wet Mar \JI. Xlnt care of ••••••••••••••••••••••• aupt n 111on provtdrd offke duties Exrelltnt GENERAL OPt'll' E nl• rep Ho11u art •
.. If
"'•I Bir ' Walnut Ctblneta P.tem1se1 <forr11e r on E0.000 at 2$1 • • secure I(..._ r.py C:11ll 3Lo $ 30PM. uk tor l'Ofllpany btncflla Ex BootllHplnl up. Ille from 4pm·lpm fl train .-~ TeltohOne Syatem lille mana1er> 631-3123 lxly, well l'ltabh1hed , loll vir 20th '· p111m Andrea. &42 4321. ext perlence prffcrrtd ll 1 Jnot' FREE typina. p l flu Call 10& wilJ be PTO\#lded f\AIA Oood V~w Word Wfct·eocb 6310811 930 .!ten~lla~M5207r> HunUneton Beath, Sat 3(1 Good 1t1rtln11 ulary ftLL ~ UpmMl-0763 Ye>ur n rnln&• u •
New luxury office spare Prote11 or Av a I I to6wkdys_ ~ y,..tt Jan 23rd arern collar PubUabln11 firm near TOOYOUM4 flOI Timu nlea rep will be
In lrvlne'• butleat PU11ally Furn. MO aq ft Dttdi 5035 REWARD 536 3286. Al!TO John Wayn e Airport ACCOUMTIMG ....., ~on a 1u1ranteed
ler! Easy fTWY I (' Call for Apnt 546_·4418 ...... , ••• ut/ ....................... 536-4758 wr MAN Call~ Evl.'1, 9.41134 ~ THI AllUMIS7 ehourn"rlouy ,wl}o'm°'m1~ •. ~.·on•+ . Av1H. nnw! Call 11; FIR.c E ri ed f ) lm~dJate openin&• for .. ~ o d~ai'· (Jrire Space for Leaae t S.ttltr M ... Co. U.t · My "Sam" 7 yr old for leadin~ imPor1t:d u r C.t .. r Serflct xpe enc non or 10 sha .... Girls It GU"ll Since thil la " new pro·
"" 111 ,..A~ d •••••••••••••••••-••••• • .,. s· I b de"le h M 1 b ..... p I a mall a crounlin.. '" ~ "' . n I U0.4210 ..... VI.a el Mar a..-L.-. All types of real t:lltll le 1amese ma e, WI lue ... rs p, U6 I.' me 0 0 Store al s c d h .. whO are 17' over' Free cram opportunititl for -67S·9510 -anvt>Stmentssln ce l9411 collar, vie. Adams & mutur e a nd ii x · Plrua re qu1rl.'s 11 epartment to andle to Travel Houston, adv1nrtment. are U ·
_..,..>MAIOHICIS• Opportwity 5005 ~ ........ ht Newland HB. 7S2·4l38 , perlenred Excellent cuat ome r Hrv 1re accounts payable, Miami, New York & cellent Call now for
om l room to
1400
sq rartive & Cheap OC ••••••••••••••••••••••• °"""° -., ~ 2658 tws. Rew11rd !
1
working t'Ondltaona Call pto r aon E x µe r In llccowita receivable & Throu&hout the USA. NO mo re inf or ma tin on
I\ From SI lh sq ft No i\.lrport 760·1694 tivci. LOSING Ll!:AS ~:. q ult 2Ad T01 Lost Springer-S ·I Wolf&ana at Saddleback general offlcl.' work re Iii ht payroll. Some EXP REC' With 2 week about thb areat op l~aae rt,ui red Adj .§._~days _ ting business. aelhn& out 642·21_7 I 545·0611 Puppy 1 • Mo) i.r,~e~1~ B M W / S U 8 A R U Ql.Dred Please send re· E P 1 big plus Salary expenae paid tralnln& portunlty Call Mon· Fri.
A1rporter nn. 2172 Ou Airport area, Avail 185 to ALL su~phes and fix WIDOW HAS US fo r W ht R E w /\ R o • • · 1131·~0 --sume to: Mn Monroe, to
116
K. p r o & r a m A I I 967-2381, ext. l~.
pont CallAM .833·3223 1000 sq rt wiw1thout tures int uding TO's. RE Loans lOlt I m.a.iao . . AUTOM-H ... a..alC Th e Polo Store. 3333 lffo~ transportation guaran· .......... .....,r.y
amenities 1Sz.2:Sl8 Display cas~. waiting Up No Credit C:het:k No ---. """ "" Bristol. {' M 92626 w~ 752..0JOI I d M t b N '"""'""'., ;. I 7TH SHIET room chairs. e~ auly Pen11lty Oenn1oon •A, Loiil Reward for bllt Expr d Must hjl\ e own Wiii call you for a ron\l~ ~:gJe, ,u!ble ~o 1:aavt~ Food aervir e, retail
COSTA MESA MEWPO\TIUCH Salon hairdryers and sor 6137311 female Doxie So hand too ls Ap ply ruent inlerview immediately or Do Not take out. Cont act
2 3
off AJRPORT Custom of hydrauhr chairs mir ----1,.ywia area 499 1669 Newport Tire Center. -WOltD h Mana&er o< Operatloni Arc~=or~:k~UJLet~I fices, GOO to 1800 sq fl rors.shelvesandplants ARRW.,,.•h/ Lost blk M~-;hj mlE.CoastHw1SdM Delmry per~dn.u~own NOCHSOI l'ftlo ~=ar~r c :1~ 9337 Laurel Canyon
&Dcl.Av .. 1 now Call ftom!IOtperslf Also, make-up, shampoo ~&~ markings under~ealh, . 1 l:·~~l~ au.sal + TIAIM& Award makes this an Blvd .. Pacoima . C/' ReaJonomlas 675-6700 Mullan Rlty ~()..2960 and ha1r products The Bhlfs N 8 644 1082 IAIYSITTP ft..•:v .. ..., -,S,,-le• Ideal Opportunity for 91331213-9=83·..:1996=----Call631975-lor , ...... ••••••••••••••••• F-d-""11-b-- - -...,.,.. ~·~ .. ~ I year general office .BAYFRO.,..T after6898-6809 ~twith 5100 wn sma rownpup Per son needed t o Cal1 Betweenll2PM experience and fair Youn & People For MANAGll .... e I ----· !······················· P> w red bandanna. babysit 6 yr old girl 1 hr S45 1157 typin& Wiii land you Personal Interview Call TWMH Primeolfice.760-9440 xecup an osu Mesa Laun •REG.._. ......... 7 PCH~ Beach 81\d e"eryday. Mon Ft1 Will -variety position with Mus Sames at SS7·3008 .., .... _ _,.._.: Costa Mesa, 2:50 sq rt dry-SUK grO!>s per mo ,.. ""'"' ~ 0713· have to meet child after Delhl'r)' & Stock Peri;on 1 n t er es II n & 1rv1 n e or apply tn Person at ~.....,..--
S\lle 1175/mo Utils in wA Mew CCMK-t" _li41·01~~nt I Preananry test in a.:. 2 Found -s ma ttblack M school at t SSpm & keep ~s JO r.ton-Fr1 Must be publishing company Holiday Inn Bnstol ' l..ookuig for an u rning
Id 77
9
w f\JIJ service/c";t . ..-om High ht E 1.... nun sbdt or early deter (.' k 1 unlll approx 2 45pm neat, l'lean. Peraonable G SD freeway CM career 11t the r ela1l c 19th St .... ·no qua Y mera"" al uon Allmethod~ofb1rth oc apoo-l)pe. nJ ured MUST BE DE P EN with &ood dn vrn11 re real o~rtun1ty to Girl ftaday fot Develop· rlothang fi eld ~ This
&'>l-8928. office&desk space w lesall' pnrl.'!> Im ronlrol Abon ion 24hr ngbtfrontle{_S360713 DA BLE MUST live t'Ord Appl> lOAM lo l2 leamwo processing II raptdlyexpandmgret<1il • NEWPORT Nr OC Airpon f7~~:;~-4~ppt onl) hel p bne <:onf1denllal Found M1xedAu~lralian withinwalltmgdistance or 2PM to 4 Lo ri·:. Sala~~-~~\~r·r~ M&~~r!~1~ ~chainaslooking
berutive Suites has or "See to Appreciate!.. -Women·s center. 112S E Shprd v IC. 17t h & to Stonecreek Elemen Kitchen 3077 s Harbor """' -for bnghl. motivated ~available nr O.C 759·8978 Wehaveaprodur11hal7s 17thSt ,lllOF.ast ~Im CM 646·8181 tary St·hool, Wood Cllarbor al Cu m agel 752.0301 ~~~hi~~~Y E~pl~[4 retiable people tofill the ~rt. from S365 w/full to milk what margann~ ~7,.949$ ~...-. 5150 bndg" '"'" PJ•m SA ...,.... "''" "'3 Hont ~'"•"' ol "'"''" tervire available. Call ....._, 1.tal 4450 IS Lo .huller People are -SC ·LETS '••••••••••••••••••••••• 5r.~m5S2 0461 a fl er DF.NTALASST/RD/\ DATA NOCESSlttG lngton Bea~ofl IWltt &. Salespeople
low fOl' 1 month free ••••••••••••••••••••••• ma kin g SI 0.000 PH Atlantis Mass,e ....,, exper. progressive pre lnlernatfonal Irvine Xlnt employee benefits ~a83J.9!f76. NEW PO RT BE Ai.; H. rronth . N~ this is not a • ANSWERS n.ien24 hrs a da vent ati ve pr 1H't ice based company seeks HOUSIKEEPEI mrludm& merchand1~e
I MO. FllE .., Cst Hwy Ideal for rela1I ~or more info t all U l'llpt' Caml.'o tl9 Gorgeoui. gi rls to Banking Dental <:ollect1on ~"y experiuce reviewing fesslonal In Newpo rt Miler's Otftpost
Prime loc on busy Pac misprint. No darert "17daysaweek I NB1lrvlnearea 7521320 indiv i du a l w i th needed for busy pro dilil·ounts Apply at·
M.wport C•ftter and/ or office use 1,000 ---11 am to} ~m Mllntl' llourly amper you Jatuzzi, JEl.LER Exper req P/time. hrs. output. magnetic tape Be a c h Mu s t b e H.rftara-f'(oio Flrslclass ·fullservice to3,000sq rtava1I MCllWfoctwing MV <.'ASH ~Wla 1.ocalsas wellas nex,NB arl.'u 64211880 co nt r o I u n d responsible w /own 14280 Cu1verDr
EXEC otfices, includes __ 1714 ) 64S-7100 Co needs assoc iatl' with . Ov~rheard 111 I Jiil' 111 1 0 u r i 5 L s 8 a n k FULL TIM E Dental co-ordanallon of reports transp. 5/hrs a da~, S Irvine, CA
all amenities From Costa Mesa. busy Nwpt $25.<KX> to join e~t or bank "Thank:. to l'rl'U JI Amednird. M astl.'r Position available in our Rovmg Assistant. front etr Thu po1ulion offers days a week, AM or M Will start accepting ap-
fmlmo,644·7189 Blvd 8400 fl free stand· Firm in fast expanding t•ards, l.havc a rt.>al pro t'h.arge. A~ncan Ex Downey orfH·e F:x oHH·e & l'hairsidl.'. an excellent salary, 6 Salary open Ref's req phcations Feb. 1st ,
NE ED A
8
US A
0
mg bldg, fully improved rhem1cal field No exp blem, I m. loo rir h fur pres~. o 1 n en a 11 penence reqwrt.'d Con pleasant )N 8 office. month reviews and has call (714)640 §962 d_!Ys 9-Spm ORES.S~ Answering & incl rrpt Ideal retail or necessary will t rc1in MVCi\Sll wdtome 714 tl4S 3433 la1"l non smkr. ex~r & x a 3 day week, 7.JO lo INSURANCE
mail service, conference office Rent 9~ sq fl By Must have management Lost & Found 5300 2112 llJrbor Bl l'llt Jody l..0\1.' Ray IH· req Sal an· Spm. 'eno.al U.H
room Adj OC Airport ~631 5!!40 afl 4 ability and slarl im ••••••••••••••••••••••• f'; total rclaxat10~ w11h 213 773 JOtil OJX"ll 646 2481 lffo Johitson u.derwrfter
.J!OOiim 714·833·0002 Beach Store Ne'4po;l mediately S2.000 mo l.o s t 7 M u 0 Id J profl'S31onal mas:.ai:c l>t'fltul l)ff1re M anai:~r. 752-0301 Newport Beach Agency ~ &
572
sq fl SI
00
per Walk traffic 'pnme loca ~r ~k~dS4~g5:f ll't Ko:i~h oun~ f'l\t··~ ~ l Sll'H~ 10-ti. ~ 2817 CALIFORNIA NB. rl'3toratJH pral' 1 Salary open Pension n
3975 8
h N Uon! 800 SQ ft 67S 418S 1 e ' <" 0 04 ear~ 11 ""c1 l' l.unl·h Toru~hl • ~t·l'tl f[O lll'l'. ~l't'k' teJm om·n SICIETARY and group benefits ~ . ire . B 673 1401 . , Dally Pilot. PO Box 1560 &lNrr, llR !16.19317 ,. ~ r II \1 ERAL lill·-· 111dl\ look111u for .. , L1ghl ba~kg-·nd f1nQ Phooe9:57 ll22 ~Slln
>\geotS41·S032. -Costa Mesa CA 92626 Loi.t l\et'~hound I.a•' ,ompan\ a onH a h ""h " u f ood ' ,.,..., ~
MARKETING
SURVEY
~SISTANTS
15
OPENINGS
HO EXPEL NEC.
DANA POINT:s best loc ~d letttal 4500 G1\lng Name. phone and I N1gut'I Golf iour~t· ,.. 9SJ um Scr'flitgs & LoClft 1 11( h rl'~µo11~1hk poi.1 ' g typllll as there is
21X>' to500' at 70' incl all ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~l ume to contact I 195 ~17 COEDS Would Lo\ l' l'u 10000 Lakewood Rh d t1oo rt'lurn1n1: ii h 1i:h a lot of d1ctaphooe Insurance ~\Jtil. &janitor 9'75·1120 ,NB . 397S Birch 8860 !>Q t"lnd "Ahal \'OU '4;Jnl Ill • • PJrt\ '4 llh You I ~ all l>ownt'\. (.' \ !102-10 '''\l'I or l.'~lt'l'm Xlnl fr Company has beaullful ~UNCE -1 ft or less MIA zone. S&' l>ai!l' Pilot ClJ;.:.ifie<h Fow1d 'fan Doi( W Whl I. I' !>·111, 0 r S, 1 \ 1 ,1 fo;qual ()ppc>rtunll~ initl' bt-nd1l'> Sl600 + off ices 1 n Fash ion SOI
Newport Beach, pri me per s q ft Ag en I Chest Cl2 1 Hrookhu"I \mllmt' 7111 !lO:lt. I Emplo>~r 1nn •nl1H' 1f ciuahf1ed Is land and has an Peninsula locatton. 300 5415032 Lost&Fo.d 5300 & Ball \nJhl•1m • 11312490 excellent benefit P b e . self $1000
• .sq ft.2olfireswtes.S300 ~ -,, h f --f •••••••••••••••••••••••I 64.S!'>l!li2 Strong prof man des1re5 loF.NT ·\I. package. Salar) from start.mg ind1v . lo pro per mo Mark
673
.
6606
_,.., SQ wit ront o ~sensual lady 18 3!'> -$900 up ~ insurance annw flce.large reardoor.set da\<;.mle~720029fi Banking OrthofroolOffut' FT. ly appllcat1ons for 'erMOllHI
Downtown Laguna Brh · up for machine shop. LARGE. REWARD! • -CONSTRUCTION I l(d typ1lol, h\) phonl·~. Rita JoMsoll Fashion lls investment 1714.,6._3555
10' s .r. 500 s.f S3S01mo I 32' 2' a sq ft or ssso mo LOAH pic.t Ortho e~p helpful. 752·0301 firm Sta11sllr:.i I ap •!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'
All util incl. 333 3rd st 1.240 Logan Ave uni1 a I Linda & Vicki's P'llOCESSOR gd t>t-n.~ 1>12 5997 NH ixitooe. typing. 10 key 213/393·2347 I Cnsla Mesa Day:. MISSING o--£~0fcM~r TRAIN& reqLDred Computer exp
Medical/ Back offi ce
I ~93S2. Evei.646-0681. c-.t.u c-A•&ft •ESCORTS• cmm preferred Call.640·0123
PRIME BAyfRO
---""""'911 ~ 111\l'K & HETIER Poslllnn requires loan F.nthus1aslH'. ef 1t·1ent Company near South NT lndustfia\ bldg, 6oob sq . GflMAM Sl•HHD I 11L\N EVER' 24 llRS doru me nl allon ex and IX"gawed w bk1>1l Coas t Plata seeks
Next to new proposed ft W1bpnnklers. lrg rear (Male) 669-0207 penen1·e, !>OITlt' l'i.rruw & exp 4 day wek Pd var Span ish s pe akrng N.B. restaurant. 646-4419 ovt'J'head door & fen ced l1tlt· btll'kl(round llt•s1rn and hohd ay~ Co sta trainee They have lnsuranre adJ01mng paved park He is big. His name is "Kahuna" 1 Out c.all l ble Mt'lta 54ti 3000 ext'ellent benefits and f G S
Mt. tW. IHclt toe. ang. Comer of Redhill & and looks like a Polar Bear with will start at ssso. Good • • • Luxury offlre s uites P aul ari no, C M black nose. Any help in locating Forwomenonlylotal Offire locatedint•leg~int o..td~o..tOfc. o pportun it y fo r Has open i n gs f o r
P T. u p'd 1n EKG
INJS Ven1·Punct ur~
644-008..._l -----
Mtckd lock Ofc
With some front ofc ex·
penenee Mm 2 Yrs
exp H B family prar,
lice 842·3622 tlvaiJ. Im med. just south 549 9671 h. l . d d body massage by Oiune N t• wpo r t F 1nanl'Ia1 Net'<! alert person for advancement. automobile uleb rnps m of~Frwyonhi,hu ~JOOO sq rt by Npl lffi Wil be appreciate an By apj>l 10-6 548 0407 Center Xlnl ~alan ~1ll<lllw1lh cstabhshed IUtcr,,.._ Huntington BeHh
posure Hearh Blvu Full fwy & '~ Cwy From R,EWARDED! PENTHOUSE Outslandanl! benefits ·& pleasant group prat·t1re 75z.o301 branch Inside s:.iles, no MBHCAL ASST
service. Call agent $504 Mr O 'Kee!e ftlASICAU.4ff•illl profit bhanng Por m M 111 I y r expe r • prospecting, altratll\'t' Pt1me,exp'dfronl ofr. 1142·6636. 8Sl·lm8 ESCOITS len iew phont• Ne wport Cc n t er I compensation pa<·kage Some ins , It bikpg & M f'Couples Jat'kie F.k. VP 640 11.22 ADMIM. ASSISTANT includanit full c·ompen~;i 1yp111g Fashion Island.
•• • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • S39 5030 AMEllCA~ ~ ~l ASSIST AMT ~~rt ~-gr~ ~ne ~:~~a~ j ~~:n~"~~~~!'"l,~~ef.~~ ~ R
644
·
638
I __ _ ~C ~ VISA STATEIAHK t:iper.d RDA. f t1m~ I Communications etc & 111cluding t'ompany p.ud MB>ICALOFffCE • 8-DAY WEEK SPECIAL • frtt.lance wnter look ml: !"lOONewpon Cenl~r Dr Nr S( Plaza S4S 45.'iJ gd typing. spelling & tk>nlal Rapid ad\an1·~ Exp'd rro ll l Offlt't' -• • , for person inll'resled m NBMO-~tOO EO t: M t' I DOMESTICS grammar could land menl polenllal Some person for busy urolo&Y i~ room. board. and 'alJr) 1 F'ull Trnw p0,1uon m this 111teresting \anely auln expl'r1enre & olfice Some bark offi ce
O:· • 8 Days • 3 Lines • • Ootl•re • '"nt'hange for mutual I KOUKKl''f''PF.R H:oehld M Jnageme nt f:''IOl'I Offering izreal rasualt) ht'l'~e dr,ira exp Need good refs ·~ • • I t:::"'Of!sb1p .ind light t'arnihar ... iih 1~~allon NB \rea Out1e' Ind neCati.. /\dqu1cemenl ble. but would consider 2T benefits F'ulltime .
. ~· It s easy to plac e your 8-0 ay Week Class1f1ed by mail a nd 11 I eepmg Ideal for & Sl'<'retan al 'f'r\Jl't' HH .kpng. Ori '.'"IZ· & st a rla n ~ )alary nonexper1en1 ed In --area 847 6004
•
t 8 • I rollegeorself-emplo)ed l'niqU(' bosine:.s op I s.rhtduh~I! & Somr Sll~llJOO dl\1dual If other-..1~e Models & Escorts Fem
cos s JUSt s ~t hat s only a dollar a day' To Qualify tor this I career worn.an Phont' portunity 645 3683 I l len<•JI Sala!') lnrltl\ Cal~ tjwthf1ed ()tly Top SS
•
special offer you must be a non --commerc1al user offering e Edmund •n LagunJ -ltt-nl'f'11s t:i111h,hSp<'Jk 75Z"l01 'f"nr appointment. t'all 64248S2Af1 12 Beach at 494 0429 IOOKKEEPEI 1ng & Reb rh·quir~d I . -v t 'harhe at S49 8909 ~""----
.. :. \ 8 mercha ndise for sa le up to $800 per ad. and the pnc e mus t e 1T;.;,ei 5450 The Polo stort m s c ~1 2!112 I F Gs also has MOdeta u.liNt.ct :! • be In your ad' T he COSt stays the s ame whether your ad • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Plan requires a F C Donut ~hop. p lime AM. TBJ.B/ openings in L A Count~ Needs tall atlrat'ti ve
• need s e1ghl d a ys selling time o r JUSI one 2 fly for l! PA Coupons Bookk eeper lo l.ike ncH,per neressury ,,, HEW ACCOUNTS men women for agency • • IJCountnes • S40 ch:irite of a1·1•oun1.; µIv 1n l>t.'r~on 01pp1t~· • S&L0 seelong ('Ulltomer assi.&nments Mll·
7762
•
631 3tia1 payable PleJst• send n· nonuls. 11154 t'Wport I oru:nt:ed 1nd1v1dual with INTERIOR OF.SIGN MUISES AIDES
• Use one. w ord 1n each box About 4 words make one sumt: to Mr Patm·k 81\CI l' M I yr + exper to JOJO SALES Nl't.'d all shahs. Can earn
•
l f d I f t M • &wpoynwnt & r.~ d he~ n n . I' h 1 t'f
1
• their grow 1ng staff Opponun11y for c·n•allve S61 oo per 8 hrs Musi
c ass1 1e 1ne 0 ype 1ntmurn ad IS 3 lines Pleas e print Pr:tporotion I ~mant•1al ()(f1n•r. Thl' I .m•lroNntntol &19 D al a & s A/\ LI self mOll\'aled 1ndl\ ha\'(' ex per & refs
•
plainly • ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'oluSton• :n.1.1 l\r1;tol ~.xpt•r Air (l u,Jl1l\ I backgrou nd a • wgood senseof rolnr & Lt'Sl'Ou li e Nur ses
I
Sc.hook & l' M !i'.!li21i Wt• wtll 1·1111 S111.·1·1,1h't lmml•d1all' Company offers xlnl dl!l1gn Flo hr,, xlnl Rel(ISlry 351 Hospital
• r
----------• tMhwctiOft 7005 \OU for ,1 rnnvc•1111•11t 111 npt'lllOJl S2~ lo 5:101\. beneC1ts. ad\•anN•ment (~m114m96 .. 69':,,ain a\Jll . ltd . Ste 119, Newport
--------------------, •••••••••••••••••••••••' tl'nll''4 lcl't!I Ml'~a hw .\em & starting salarv lo a '"' Beach 042·995.'i • I • ' $31.90/WK I IOOICKHPER '~·omp lm·;14 9~7 f\.~9ti SIOOO . lrorunJZ person lo do m\ I -;; _____ -
• • I 1k11 lunl'h t M Chri~ I" l' Rooltkeept•r lll'l'dt•CI fJ>t•row lloml' loun t'~ Cdl Ca-ry 1ronm~ in \our homl' ~ursmg ! : I • 1 11an Pre~chool ~ti S-123 l 2 <irin 1>er '4('f'k s.m;ill l)('nl.'nl'l' Part llml' tu 752.0301 I Exper'd Wll h rl"'' I HUISES AIDE
•
I 1 ."'1 f 'tart $.'> hr~ 1201 67H72S Exper'd all shifts Conv • .VORN1NG ~~t R t omr1.1n\ RB.D AUDITOR l -d Hosp Nwpt Bch Bring • I • • AffERNOOfl --Ge.teral Office 4 y r d e R r e e 'n ' .an scape, up main vour smile & Joan us '
•
I • • fVENll·ir Cabmel Worker WJnll'd I at'cou nting & 1·2 yrs I ~pre personnel want 'Free mjr med dentai I "'-' c lo 'shr FUiiy F:11u1µ1)t'tl fitll 11mt'. permanent ex per wilh pu bht' 1 ease call. 493 0935 &bfeins Call. &42·8044
•
• • WHKt~~D Sh.<!!> 645 f~21 5-19 11i8.'1 ~mplo) ment for Jm accounting fa rm or I for~l -------
1 Caf~lena Work Perma bilious person. 40 hr bank S&L aud1t1 ng I LP:GA LSECRY.Tl\RY t , ... TTIME ,... • I • Tra1111n1ttlasses fnr ~l '4celt,M>mem11hts &Sat background MaJor Laguna Hills Recent I -: I • Part Time f No llookkttp1n1t exp pre holding company offers Calif p robate ~" S.9pm Expanding youth ~-•• Dr'i AssJstClftf Weekends llonlt' l'htlll\'. (erred Appl) m per~nn I t d e m e n d <' u s II ~tt~~e 1%\~s;a~ SE~ I =~~1 nr~r f~~tsh~~
... • • C«f P'Mtbotomtst b']H403 Eves •--'-ILJ-s~-a \' a n c e m e n t k II 'd I oulgOO\Q ma lure I Meclcd Lab Asst "'"'CH ..... opponumty potential. :. 1 s req Call M r~ 'P ~op e
• • I CASHIER I SOl:rH C01STP.L1ZA xlntbeneflts &startini: I Winslow for a p pt to motiva te amb1llous
•
F t ime. good pa ). l'OST/\MF.S\ I salarylo S26K 18371000 · t~l3yr olds Call2 Spm
•• CAU559·6638 i;:rowth compam !'>IO<il -C•C 1·1.t.:GAL-SECRETARY ~:~·exl 343 Ask for
I •
lions 0\-er 20 We lt•ach ~ Offlct 752 Sf'Yl Trainee P T 8 45 10
• Calif Paraml.'d1t•al & Metro Ca r Wa~h. 29~0 t/\CCURATF.TYPIST I .() 01 2 30 daily Mesa Verde
•
I Publish.my ad for 8 days starting • Tech. College, 374S Long Harbor Blvd r M Taki.' phon~ orders. hi area S5 00 per ho14r , _______ _ I Beach Blvd Lon.&Bearh --' 'Ing. no bookk ecpln~ RETAIL MA.HAGEi Good skills. accurat'). '.....U.'~
• I
Classification e ~W.ttd -7-0-0 catering Worker · 8 30 5 $4 h r Har l Rapidly expand in~ knowledge of general of Nttded.parltime.Work •-r I Exri;nenced Preforrcd Warner-Harbor /\rt•o. ch•m seeks ind1v1dual fice pr""-'urQs & busi 1S to 25 hours rwor we"k
I N • ••••••••••••••••••••••• a.. I P Tl "' I f I N ... ""~ ,.. ,....... " ' • ame ACCOUNTING Cl.ERK ru. or art me .. 1on ~ e or ema e l'Cu with r etail mg mt ness letter format re evenings and possibly
,· I Add • nbeedehd for lg m ult.I· ~M ~f't:~~sMKl~~h~2n immed 545 Ol.17 ~!t~~;oh:U~e1~0 h1.i0~~ 1 quired Call Man lyn Saturdari ExpeneDce In • I ress • ranc travel agency IO at 30T7 s Harbor Blvd GtMrGI Office Dunger 957 1414 for ad bu1 dtng or page
• Irvine. 1 Yr. atrounting <Harbor at Carriue> Part time general office ~~1; hgr~~J~~ 5s~n:fe l!J.>pl malceupdesirablt Ablli·
•
I City Zip Phone • or bookkeepmg expdrer SA F dutie~. and libnman. environment r""uirinR ufe Guards, Wat er Sllfc· ~tot wlork dful and ac-1 8 must. Travel agency -·-----mature ind ividual ap ~.. ty Instructors wanted ra e >' un er pressure
• C
heck or M 0 enclosed 0 • knowledge a plus 40 Hr ~25 hrs ptr wk ~!ifc!~i~l~Y :.,po.~1Sobl)' for lhe City o( Hunt· '.!!('n~S5Slol')n. n~·p~rr1.~n~ee· I . . • wk . Xlnt company coriPA~Y. n0ffire67_5·6110 hi 1n 11ton B h c II .. ~ ~ .. " ' '. IC d benefits S900 mo to f'lll Cal if Offers xln1 e ar .a The Dailv Pilot Is an ~· I harge my a to: • start Call To mmie EXP NSION IFYOU benefits & s lart1n£ ~rorinfo~hon eq ual op,or tunlty '.!.. ~2917forinterview . y-..ut.--•I! ha\ea &en1t·i•looff1•r 111 salary loSlSK MAIL I employer omen and I 0 ,.... # E • AmblU PT vv~ ... .....,....... •ood.s t II I I c.I Ccny NOCHSOI m1norlt1 e~ ll re en • I L • ._ xp. OK. J~:JOP~tud<eann~ Cle.JJI ~n th ~s~l~~1~''''1~~l~1\ t7Z.030f Pub.llshln• flrtn nur(,C"~fteda~pjf/.1{.0ns
• -.. • daU Outdr assi~tant for :s=: C'h1ss1f1t.'d ~tllln J W A1rpor1 has an 1m fronl~ounter •I
1.:
1
1 D # Exp • ca e 1V rt4 Salary + •SECRET .. RY Phone642~11 SICUTAl'Y mbne!.•tt11optnln1 for :=Co•t
JG • • I comm Call Anthor;J " G 1 1 b k .. .," 5e st•rter es " · ~t • ('"") .... ,,.,.,.., bf 9A •MERCHA"'DISINO UlUe Miu MuJfet sat on row n an )ee . ..a mail proreuorl h.i n 1.• =
L I ~ ...... .....,, • r " ....... f Ion mdavldual with note or
,. e r:::-.::::-.-WE~LL-PA-Y-THE -POSTAG-E-:.:.:.:::-.:.::::.: e atUPM -G~~f"J:~a :Jcs:r ~ re!dc~~h: operauons badcground. ~~u~1 ;t.'::,iJ1«!'.::.t c ... MM.:fi: ,,. • I • Ans Suvlte. plant oU~ ANDO'llfliRUEAS 0.lly Pilot Claaaihed Some 1tt:ount i,n1 to wortwellwiUlpcoplt l~!!!!!!!!!!!!!f!!!!.
I r I N.B. Elper. pref. but MO ..... MIC. M<tlon about Mass Muf ltnowledae & typ1n1 'have a w1llln11neu to 1:
• I 111 ·111 NO POSTAGE I wlll train 3·11 ahlft IM~AllA,S ftt'11\lffttand bouibt it 50+ To wortl with lt'l.m Sonw expen~ce ' • I NECESSARY 1 • 548-ll'l38 n-smo..as ' for S .95. You can sell I cashier & assistant In mall pr0l'euln1 ot forPauifkid Ad
• 1 I EO : • Appli&Me • TV servlte '"" " )'OW' l-'f~ and lots or r 1 1 h I er · Be a u l handyman work ii de AC110N
", • 1 If MAIL 1 counter, parts ulea, POI ..... tlaJMS other thlnu throuith surroundlnp & xlnt 11 r ab Ir . but not Call 1 i IN THE Q • &ood houn. beneflta. l714"64-21ff Dal~ Pilot Clauafaed ~nell~ ~ nttesury r.ood tKneht D1ily Ptlnt
.111 • UNITED STATES ~ •
1
Dam-Brown Co. 411 E. Adt.Call&u.56Ja picllage • pleaaant AO.VlSOR ·V., 9 17\h St CM &46-1684 -t7Z..Ol0 worit1n• cond1tl~•· Con· 642·5111 , • ! BUSINESS REPLY LABEL : e .,fMAMA•H 11.i.h Pllilf ....................... ~_MpJ.ye:;, 94834 1-~~......_...._
• f lJllST Cl.AU PUMIT HO u cosu MESA CALJFORHIA :: • i Nttdtd for a Vfr)' oice. •• ., ••••••••••••••••
• a i( I aJI ldUlt 12 Unit ('Ornp)elt ; '
'lr !! 6 • I In H B 2 br, l\2 ba apt = a~erfi•INr ~~$ • •
'·\"'"'. ;; • available for manager , "'
1 'Nll'I _,_
•
~ g' with a Jarce rent reduc-: Exper. newspaper dltplay aal•pertOft lo • • .. i • I Uon.1•1142 • handle key ~('OUnll ror Or•nc• Cout Dally Motor roOte In Prime NNport •
• o. 6 • Apattrntn.t Manaaer, tx Piiot. SalarJ, comm1aa1on and H(tlltnt • Beach ur4tu. I.ow mil~• ap-O i e '. ptrienttd couplt . Beaut btntf'lt.t. Oro.th opportvniU• ror penon e ~mdmaatcly 35tl ('UHtc1mcr1<. •
I
1 • •1 malntalntct 44 unite, • with career ambitions Send complete kd '"'>Ur.. 2 l!W• a ~m •
1
1 Colla Mt.1a Adulta, no rttvate to Marji hndtl, ~ t5CIO, COit• • ce UY '"' ·~ ""' ":"""' • t I • l p e t 1 A p t • M..-CA. _. No phont ~ilia, Plt1H M • Sul & Sun. 5um·1a&m, Minimum' • I • • ......,,_ "'"°' ·--""•1o,.,.. •m..,.1 nr ro11e<111M1. , .... ct.· : e .w""1t " . e tall~ c&!!u!!r~":a~~y o e : • ~~!i:b~~~,·:·:~~ ~NGECOAITDAILYN.OT • FOiler
1 • •
Madine« \'ad'ts: l'3l no"· UY IT '.l.: COITA~~·... • ••••••
• • ,.,.., 11 • M IOUM. -'°4tTUllll n I It • • ""9'a 81 • ' . ~ ................................ ·········'-
,,
If
I
. '
EXECUTIVE
SECRETARY
LOC.A TED IM FASNON ISLAND
Big 8 CPA firm located in
Fashion Island is seeking
a professional secretary.
Typin,g 75 wpm,
shorthand 100 wpm,
capable of working
independently,, well
organii.ed and versatile.
Competitive starting
salary and excellent
benefits.
C.AU. .al APPOIMTtien'
( l
1714~ 640-9200
EXT.247
EOOAL OPPORTUNITY EMPlOYER
New.spO~r
carriers for l'outes
in Huntingtgti Beach,
Fountain ValltJ & NeWport Beach
---
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Mond1y, February 1, 1982 ··'
WllUY
USEDCARS•TRUCKS COME IN OR CALL FOR
At& ArrlAISAL
Cormler·DeUllo "•
CHEYIOLfT J
t82ll 8EACH BLVD
HUNrlNGTON BEA<;H,
147°6017 or '
54f.JUI ~~·
PORSCHES · · WAMTED :
CARS!
C~H!!!
673-1705
. .
,
..
t
,,
------
Orange Coatt OAJL V PILOT/Monday, February 1, 1982
, .. 11911 .. b1rW .... , ... ..w ............... f .......... ,... .......... ,.... ...... ..,.rled ........ rt.cf Allot.UHd ..... UtH ...... ....... ~--;{............. •..•...•.•............. . ..... ~~.............. •...••..•••.•.......... •.............•••••..•. ....................... .•..••..•.............. .....•................. ....................... .. ................... .
_:... .......... !?.~ ~ ....... : ... !?.J.~ ~!!~.~~ .... !?.~~ ~ .............. !?!~ ~ ............. !?~.~ !~::.1 ...... h.!?!.! !=,!~ ....... !?!.! ~ .......... !!!.~ ~ ........ !!~! !': ............. !!!! fl&MlllJ$UM 119J~XKlt42rpe. •Ml......... it MK OLE 3$K 5Dr ·eo~ VW left., naht ·ee suo 1wm>0r rtbll C~PLATIN• ·u N N d UTA1llAU
.,.., " dnt~.~.;rona mi. ..-·Mtrc... A1TINTION Aiao •nrf. ~int' l6200 =· ~:~ ~r'[" ~ rmtor. i14'010BO Dy• CADIWC1 Bodyw!rt a '400 ao1ao' 1ma1lae a 1111 rord . CWIAllESALE --...... ... 64222118 nma r~ Sui>t/Bt-etl• M).rrt3,tva'466"3 __ We 1pedaU1t In ltUfl Call Tarry, 541.12u. Granada "IOO 0111 AMtw~ _....,,.7 OWMllS WNn '762 szou 541·'7'4 "'73 .VW Bua 1 Ownu ror thf bu1ine.11 u )»"827• M!Ornllel.Topcood
•• ~XICI Q>mpatt ffollat or lm TONNEAUl'OVf;R ' •••••••••••1••••••••••• -· -tie111 mCIO etUllve6profe .. 1on1I •76 CheveUe Dix. ale, m-4554
U fYI w hardtop p0rts Dlret'\ ltalf ind 60 Flt• M0'1, 'll '•t 01AN91 COUNTY'S '7' IUS .fil-~ I· 7 L-.. s.tectl.. sttteo, lua rack front ......., HIO
CGupe mlleaa• 1 moa. sensible pymlai Neverl!Md.1175 .. WIST Muat IC'\l lO appr~dat" Swill .. v w Cimpu. OfMew 1912 disc brltl, wht/blk, llJnt ...................... . dmeownn 114.000 D I• I 2 I 3 or Mana83H7r7 vem•ll Auth0ri1ctl Must Mii moo or beat M111yx.tr11.1yronl'n1. C•••• cood, must lfll 11"5 '7ZCOLONYP~RK
714-844 .. 13 714/MERCEDES l• 213 SUBARU DY.i\1.1-:R <lftt Mltrb 8rffr ~~4342 Mowa. stodl II& VI • PIH waaoa. •Int
..._ 97U or7l4/Q1·2333 '54 TP. l\lltv l"t'Sl. w' &00 ---5418001 '!.,~ Mi on New N~JfiR~ '79 Malibu Claule. 4· !hape.&4§=7303 1145 Harbor Blvd.
ColtaMHa ••••••••••••u••••••••• mi, 1p1re t!nl ., part' 1~ L+t '11 Sclrorro. bl~u ilttr. 11 u• ....,., door. Silver .arey. cloth ..._ ttlZ
''11 Jwen OT. Wmlted lt74MllCIDIS .l!JMOOJ..213lS351732 ...,._, ~~ loy whh1. r'b!b. very ~or640"92 (~1\ ) I l 1\ mt ,newtlretl3000. • •• :".":? .............. . -.;.,.J...&::1~::1.K::,11;:L.LJL-I PfOdutUon mdl w/Lotus 11Nl4IOSI&. '711 MG M1d1tt!I , Xlnt + , l'lean! ~· ·8~1 Y•o 9771 ' J J ' 538-32Morl31·3087 :78 Mu1tu1. T·Top. Ork
Sapd,lmmac.cond.Air, Diamond rondltlon! CMd.lowmlle111Cl'.12500 l._,MOOL,•1" imvw111.1.11.7p110 Xlnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• l••kltt·~••I"-" '80 Cltallon.l.1950.Sllver Bh.11. Xlnt Cond.13700 etc. •.ooo ml $88001 Bamboo le11thu " F irm . 50 1202 ._ u.o t'OOd moo. or b~•t of. '·""·''h• • .. 1;1"11-1 Red Int t17K Ml Call Or But. Call Eves.
080. "2·0310. stereo. 181428). E\111/~!nd•. HERE Now:! I • • r!~ ~!13541..i ~1_mt1 l#NIO~~~~ ~~~~~ ! Owoer. 67·2477 642-1483 . ..... 97l" •1 J 995 ,.... 9750 Sal.-. &-rvll•t).l,~ullini: VW i l KtGhl• xlnt. nu "' '78 ~ille, all extras' Lo ---v ....... •••••••••••••••~ " ' •••h•••••••••••••••••• SADQLHACIC wia. l'luh•h, Shk1, brb . nu, xlnt 19450 631·3114 c.r..... 9932 '8& Muatani. .a. auto.
198"19412 JIM S&.IMOHS '64 Porst·h" 354iSC. Jllnl MAIU
1
New puint No ru11t IA.US. SllYICI! am812 Mon Fri 673·4220 ....................... Pift:· _:~cond.
MADA Jo~:: l'Ond. no ru•t. 111100 'Jl-Z040 .,,_4949 14200 firm Pvt 1>lY OV!';t!f~rv,Rv aft 12/wknds - -Vf+J~;~ACK EX C..'f:Jl, 74' Mus~. 41p. vs. 21 Dlscouai.Jf NEWPORTBEACH Q~f!\.19'1'19t "17 ToyotorCurulla l.irt Ill!·~ EXPF.RTS GRliTIUY! •AU.OPTIONS• MPG.dean,needuome
" l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!ll!!l!!!!l!!•m!!B!ll978 lnlt'r Mvrb11nin ff11t•k i\utu. pb, i\ir ·73 VW C11mpt'r Hu11 'T3Coul>f, red/whitflop. WHTW TAN INT worlt(100&4l·MIOdlY• HEADftUAITEIS ~ra o( ·57 rurnhl• l'lllld am radio. hl·;ill'r. Many Xtru.,, l.1000 tk·~t IAILI llCE lollded, ~·~l. _ pp 714.551.0731 ._ .... -an1 -...1. Auto.
"I" •toMl6.9 Speedsttt whlh•w•new radial tirc."ll. 45.000 mi. Offer 964·51211 Mh·r "Ol."O ----..... ""T '7J240Z L£ASEORBUY Silver/blk ltbr. 1111 op unv11 top lnw ml 12900 642-431ll 6.P.M. " " '7tReetwood C-.-99Jl Xlnt Cond Smo&
Auto, A/C, AM /FM . tionsaMl'l'ttdtt{1nor XJntrond l850C)ur l>l·~t · Rlh R ~ i;oo 19ti6Hubor81vd Broueham Extr.i ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cutlfled. 831 ·9774 . ,sharp! Runs Stroni t!'f'_ _A _ rtt Lowmiltlllf This I orrtr (.'1111 11 !I . T.,... 9765 114 11 ~l:~ Tru~i. COSTA MESi\ sharp! Must nrnf1ce &aXRlGSerifl Sperial _541-_Z'it_l _____ _
' . or bst oh u.......... _.1114 n#4, owner rar ls I of lhl' last 714 ·533 710 I. u rt ~. ....................... ~1 1i'1:u.v If" $2400 Hf-JJO~ 540.9467 Beat otrtr over S9.000 FAilion modtl. rhroroe '70 Mustana Grandt 302 _.,......, """6."'s bit 1n • ..,, PP .,,..,,,,..,6 ••2•11""1 'SO Toyoll.i tl•lil'a <:T 714+.0·--artertinm mg1, wart whuls. new "" lSK .. 1.117.,.. '76 2IOZ AM FM m•---· -• "" ._._..,!.or ..... ,.,.,., uRb114.'l1. um rm ~kf\'11, Q~ IWI tm '74VOLVO Wi\GON ,,_, -~ adiaJ El rl •v • .-.ale, a~to, ~11· !~· ..........._ M9,SOO: 1213 1456-$2119 -"fBlllT, xlnt rtlt!t·h 1•11nd, IJll . snrr. new 1n11 nt 1SSUPt'r IWl'lll'. ful•l inJ. Air ronch11on1n11. 't11·k. 76'8.D()COHY On llrts f<' sun pl-9761
l!!lll0.631·17'3 2031 [ lstSt '48·211. dr·Stk shirt Im ad body, Pl> Sll,!100 ~ tl31137t9 fully fCl'Ond. )'l!I blk. 12'!5041M 9302 l.oadaUfiKPP640 ~ &rood. SllOO 751~5 '66 Mustin&. DfW trans. Santa Ana 714/953-4414 marulatf 1 ownu. ITlt'l'h lj!:~ an S' wknd• '70 CORO Ni\ Run11 wl'll ~ 96!213911 l'\IK 'Iii Vdvo 144 40r St-dun ·16 SeY.tllf. x Int l'Ond. Dodp tfl5 auto, conaole, 1ood tn&.
711!} .. ~/$01100 dnt. SS200 PP Phont loltlorc• 9756 S750orbt>litofr 'bi BllJ11 rl'bwlt 1KJ.SCl". Run11 Good ! Grl'4 t 62.000 m1 . rull elel· FORS .. LE•••••••0•oc1•••• $29001145-S81i7 ,,_d17 642-11678aft6pm ......... bi53204A.:cnl KYB i.hot·b. 11t•w tm••. Tra1111portalton Need) w snrr. RR rront A · l9ll ~e '71 Mu1t1n1. ntw top,
'71DATSUN510 1 .,_,.I~ 4.5C&£. il.27.000m1.1m ··~·;;;;~~;;NU.S.A. "Ill ToyOlu t'l•l1t·a ST l'X "bi Sq b11t·k. n•Jrt•ntl. ~Slfbod) work , S9SO ~!:JS.4lor~94 146 ~~~K'~1~115~~~ ntwpaint job.xlntcond.
LOWMl,$860or .N~if ·-·' mar .. whtut .blutlthr. t•t>llent 1•ond. I ow11t·r t·ustom int Jm rm .....__._. 9920 pogsibltutra Vuynire Utl-9M3
bf.Itel/er. 640-2327 WE'VE ' s 2 6 . s 0 0 D y ) ru~ S7SOO ~I 1464 ster\!U, t'hl't'll lran.110 '--"'.,_.., M r I -.....,.. 9957" -. &old, -•r. • spd. (714 >993 4500 . evei. . ··-Must sl'll S3500 OHO {'.ill ... ....__. Ustcl ••••••••••••••••••••••• t'lij:. ove orres sa e ,.,...,
...,_ aJ .. CIW..J. y...-... 9767 ,._..., ._ .... M •• f 731·1677 ••••••••••••••••••••••• new -61-l. new dutch. MAYED ... <714>644--,._.,,... t13J.llOt7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• * -"" --· ---V6 P\nto Hatchbark Was .,_. ...,, I '76 MBZ 3000 d II "d ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 9f0 t c...y Clae•tff• ·111 Dod1e Dart Nl'w Bat ~15Financln1 avail. -it & _ -.. lt)'dlow, im~~ Sil.~ ~=~!.."~~:;'0:~'" '77 TR·7 11ir. new 1-rukcs '69 C-•ertlblt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ZDr. ftatcM.ocld ter)'. Slartfr, $400 Auto. }~a!:d~~!:d111 :~:
.,,_. .. _, 080 546-4253 ClOSfOSuHOAYS & tlMi, llt~rl!Oll'Ulli.. lo ~/~ ti4S 4007 Air rond pwr steering Cau & Spkrs. S40 OK VII 141.oOoorigmil. t7Z54MIUIYI . mi,fS.._300 848, 237 1 ·71 BlHJ. 1101111 ml'l'h WllltradeMGfor? &brakes.'tiltwhet'l.el<' OOl·Z:l7l new trans & radiator . .... •••••••••••••••••• ..--~If i4 :MOD. auto. 111r. 11ux i 4 TRti Cc II 1 l' d r ""ff ""7"'"' I ...._... 99""0 80 Brava 2 litre ruel inj us tank. Blaupunkt. lookb Soal> 9760 · > t'l ori; ar <'Oil • 5l'm1·aut11 tr11n11. ... .... aa •ts (3149/6879), runi ... pump. very good whls .,
• . • fOI ntw S8900 O BO ••••••••••••••••••••••• XlntCond.$.1800 $1 795 t:v~ wk nd K . Nowo.lyS5591 ••••••••••••••••••••••• tires. no broken glass wutyLll,000 m1. Xlnt -TOUI 966 liOB d 4981376 THE 1982• _tl42·7ti14 ti:42:1814;wkd,v~ll.'13Y4110 a...t-L 9910 HOWAIDChetroltt ·77 RANCHl:RO . new Interior good.. Rrds cant. 9111.200 dys 752·2769. n MAIDA · ys · • ........ _ 9770 .63 VW o .. J f' --1 S tires. shocln . l2000 OBQ a viii A grflt dul ror ev545-46l2 • • ·r ~---ARE HERE! .. _.... .... II .ui: ........................ OovetQuai ts. as is'~211l88 mrchanit' or parts sales -,.....___ -•· '80 MB 450SL l'ham 900 suies 3 doors. 4 ....................... Rurus Good $1200 OHO '70 RIVIERA NEWPORTBEACH M II II ...._ f717~A •lll!iil · ~· lfllhu rass. al ..... vw B 499 3154 Am trm rull pwr nt•t-ds Ill "555 Oei>tn bit' trans . '69 uat Sf a togtthtr ••••••• , _ r..--~CltOll: doors ' Turbos 11va1la "" Ul l'om11 rl'· · ·--· · · ""' F~;rl•ft·.·~r.20MPG.2 $700, makt orr Call ••no•o••· """ Mus·t Sfll make or r b. h d · t •c• VW ,. work u~ 55611170 ........ " a Civic '73 $1700 MlS-U.Ctst&•suumc r~~~ltlll51Z7 . blr'NOW! t'onw in & ur is e ·new pain '" .. am1>l'r. run~ :.i "l""" c.a:USFIRST' llfW Ora. ituto. S62S B*4an730pm Muat Dri vf ! G rut '79 Muda RX 1 l3 000 "'' · ~ --drive Road & Tnu·k tires·interior Reblt ~nl( very ad. good rnnd. ·79 Riviera. loadl'd. lo ~ • OB064S-ll7
C d C II 661 7908 · · MfMH•ft•'s .. ho1t•l'orthl' clut1·h. rront ~nd Must ~-·5'!9 i\Mt Ew,t'46071i2 mile.igl'. new brakl'i-Wehavugoodselect1on 6 ,.,...... 9960
}'
on · a · ml . S8500 540 3903 or u .... ·-111979 JOO SD and ...,,,. ' ._ --or NEW & USED "68 T · _ An.Ytime 5M-782'1 mu.><l-~GD e sports bedlln or "" seen to appr~l'lall' '70 vw. 1 owol'r, mu~t andllrts 17500 onno wgn . runs ~··•••••••••••••••••••• _,..,., lhf"90&1 ~ 5tt SuJ)t'r !'ll';in 12500 833-0!53. 9titi !303 L°he)'rolas ' good . good t 1 r es . 74 Plymouth Station
... 'IO Prt!lude, 12,600 mi, --760-6285 1£ ... C. H IMPORTS I _ -~·81!~ _ ~l-6567_ .119 Elertrd. good rond, or~.{_~t_olr640 5729 art 6 Wbodqon, 1ood997~~119ne and ~ am/fm cass, a/c, S spd, MlrcecMtlea '740 ·111 ~L. mint ron~ '""" '78 vw D h .. ..,..,.,. "" bl'onie, SI000/080 ••••••••••••••••••••••• · S3'7 500 or makt or 848DoveSlrel't.N B as er. J l'. '73 Bug, reblt. new 11;un1. one owner. not1l'<·1dents
COHHEU
CHEVROLET
: (213)443:9!0!afl. &pm i1 MB 200D DitSl'I. xlnt ~~ Finanr ing avail 752·0900 I am~~ <'llll~7 ~ ~ int 'radials tiawll's" ~~II r;ut S795 'X}itl1rt11.'f' •
S;:j rond. snrl. pp 963·0926· 164S-271S 19111 Harbor Blvd . C M ~ fr u kr 12,450. 001·3982 _ Coclloc 9915 11(-.l\\H \
'II ...... Accord ?52·0li01 ·1s 300 CD c ;upe 631·7170 161>!!1 ---54~1200
4dr, bei1e. Must Sff to 1975 ZIOS Sunrool. Wire .Whetls. SELL tdlt' Item" w11h .1 St:IJ. ullt• •lt·m~ ~ tlh J
. 541.71191, w/450SEbody, Loaded! I Extra Tank. Sl7,150 D111I\ Pilot l'la"'1fl\•1I DJ1h Pilot l"IJ,.,•lhl•1I
N Pty833-0037 497-64!H \ct I \ti li!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll
MATCH THE NUMBERS OH THE
MAP WITH. THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES
• • 0 • • AnAS CHRYSLEM'l.YMOUTH
2929 HarbM Blvd . Costa Mesa. Tel !>46-1934. 3 blocks
IOuth of San Diego Freeway off Hllrbo< Blvd. Complete
,body shop. Sales Service Parts. Setvlce Dept. open
Monday thru Friday 7 30 A.M. to 5;30 P M. and 8 A.M. to
5 P.M. on Saturday • IEAC IMPOllTS '1
&48 Dove Street. Newport Beec:h. Tel. 752-0900. Call us.
we ·re the specialists IOf Alla Romeo. Peugeot. Saab &
MaMrat l.
THEODORE ROllMS FOllD
M9defn sales, Mrvice. parta. body. paint & tire depta.
COmpetltlve rates on lease & dalty r«1tal1. 2060 Hltbot
BNd .. Cot\& M ... 8"2-0010 0< 540-8211
MEWrOIT DA TSUM
888 Dove Street. Newport Beach. Tel. 833-1300. At the
triangle of Jamboree. MacArthur & Bristol behind Vrc·
tori• Station. Sales, Service, Leuing & Parta. Fleet dis-
dllunta to the public:.
• MAllllS CADILLAC
2600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. T.i. 5-40-9100. Orange
County's Largest Cadillac deal8f. Sein. Service. Leu·
Ing.
• DAVID J. rHl&.LlrS IUICIC.flOMT'IAc.MAIDA
837-2400
Sales • Service • Leasing
241838 Allele P~
Lagun1 Hiiis
• 'JOHMSOM & SOM UMCOLH MBCUltY 1 • CHICK IVHSOM, PORSC...AUDl-YW
2926-Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel. 54()-5630. 57 Yeafl 415 E. Coast Hwy .• Newpor1 BNchr 873-0900. The onty
d lr,.ndly lam1ty Hrvlce -Orange County"• old .. t Lin• dMlership 1n Orange County with these three great
coin-Mercury dealership makes under one ~oofl
SOUTH COAST DOOGI
2888 Harbor Blvd .. Costa M .... Tel.~. RV Mrvioe
epeclall1t1, ·custom van c:onverWiona.
NIWPORT IMPOIH
3100 w. Cout. lilghway. Newport Beach.
642·~0·178" Th• Ferran HMCIQUefttra.
• ALAM MAGMOM ftOMTIAC-SUIAIU •
2480 Harbor 8 1Vd .• Cotta Mela. Tel. S49-43QO. S.ln,.
Setvlce, Le11lng. "Mr. Go~ ...
IOI LONGPRE rOMT1AC
13600 Beach Blvd .. Westminster Tel 892-M51 Orange
County's oldest and largest Pontiac dealership Safes,
Service. Parts
• SAIL CHIVROlET
900 South Coast Highway
Laguna Beach
"Qny'a ... I ..... tw ,..1 ..
SALES HOURS: Mon.·Frl. 9-7, Sat. 9-5. Sun 10-4
494-1131 546·9967 • SANTA AMA DATSUN
2001 E. 17th Str .. t. Santa Ana. Tel. 558-7811 Your
Original Dedicated i;>ataun ON!«
• MIUCUMAJDA
We'119 movedl Our new I~ .. 14125 ~ SlrHt. Co1ta Mtaa. Tel. 54W3:M Stop by & visit our t>rand new
lhowroom and ... Why we're the 11 Mazda dealer In
Souttwn callfotnla Sain, 8trvloe, Parta and Leasing .
AMAH9M~IDA ·~O.C:. ........... ...
PNe '-"'-L-. Ctri'' 001 S. Anahefm Blvd .. Anaheim 958-1820. Just north of
8anta Ana Frwy. on ~nlhelm Blvd. 0.11 ut flrat!
"WE ARE tiA~D TO '1ND-eUT WORTH m• •
• IADOI ~Cl IMW · 2M02 Matg'*I' .. A'*Y,PkW)'. eiut
We offer wh•t no '"" compeny or bank can. t , Ullra-fttoelern MNIOI ~. fOf '" CIQI alter .. re .vtoe:-I. ,ICtOry •utn fetlllt• & body shop. 3.
Bmlnattort of the mlddtenlln -.._,"' dMttr dl...ct lat4040 495-4
FO.R FURJMER INFORMATION, OR TO BE PLACED
ON tHIS AD, CONTACT YOUR "DAILY P LOT. REP.
-
COST A MESA DA TSUM
2845 Hart>or Blvd . Costa Mesa Tel ~10. Serving
Orange County for 16 years 1 Mile So 405
• SUNSET FOllD, IMC.
(Home of Willie the Whale~ S«O Garden Grov4' 81Vd.,
Westminster Tel. 636-41010.
• FRANK rROTO UMC~CURY Service and Parts Department atw• apen 7 days a
week 7 30 AM 10 6 30 PM 848-77~
0
l I
I
I ~
·, .
I
---· ---. -~.-...---... -----·· .. ------------. -- ----
Will · piillout
,. .. '
3 •• -· I
~
) • *o. • •
-lllilllll llllY NIB
·or.Hay·akawa
·'
aid · Democrats?
Republican S~n . S .I.
Hayakawa 's surprise
announcement that be ia not
seeking re-election this year·
may have prevented a GOP
"bloodbath" in the June
primary but could ultimately
benefit Democrats in November,
Orange County Pollllclana said
today. <Related story, Pate AS>.
However, two members of the
county's congressional
delegation in Washlntton D.C.
said It is still har4 to predict the
USC urged
~o drop
CdM plaru
By STEVE MAltBLE of_Dllltr,.. .....
Administrators from the
University of Southern
CalifomJa have been asked to
think about dropping plans to
move into a vacant Corona del
Mar school. They are being
urged to sublease it to a
Christian orianization instead.
The suggestion comes from
residents who have s ued USC to
block the school from opening a
business administration
graduate school at the
abandoned elementary ctinpus.
long-range effect of Hayakawa's
decision.
"I don 't think (the
announcement) wUl help sort It
out or uncompllcate it,". Rep.
Robert Badham, R-Newport
Beach, said of the GOP race in
,June, when up to seven
announced candidates vie for
the Republican nomination.
· · (Hayakawa 's) support was
thin, or shallow, but it was
broadly dtversified." Badham
said by telephone from his
Washington office this morning.
For this reason, he s~id, it was
hard to say which carididate in
June would benefit most from
the former San Francisco State
University president's
unexpected announcement.
Hayakawa told delegates to
the state's GOP convention in
Monterey Saturday that he
would not run for a second term.
In making his announcement,
the U.S. senator said that
legislative considerations were
more important thkn pursuing
re-election at this point.
According to one Democratic
observer, Rep. Jerry Patterson,
D-Santa Ana, Hayakawa 's
departure from the election has
opened• up the race
considerably.
Without a Republican
incumbent, Patterson said,
Democrats could ultimately
benefit in the November general election.
LOST IN FOG -Lady. a 36-foot sailboat. lies on i~s side at
Treasure Cove south of Newport Beach Craft came
• Delly ...... "-'-., o.ry ~
aground Sunday afternoon when fog suddenly set in . More
heavy fog was predicted for this <?veninJ;t .
..J. Residents have urged USC to
sublease the vacant school to
Carden Christian School as a.n
elementary school.
Carden bid on the elementary
school before the Newport-Mesa
Unified ficboQl Diltri1:t awarded
a five-year lease to USC.
Most observers. however ,
believet:I Hayakawa stood little
chance of winning either his
party's nomination or of
defeating a Democrati c
candidate in November.
The Democrats likely will be
pinning their hopes of winning
CaUfornia's second U.S. Senate
seal on Gov. Edmund G. Brown
Jr.~ observers say.
3 sailboats run aground , in fog
More 'pea soup, '.poor visibility due on Coast during night
Resident said the Christian
school would bring fewer cars
~nd no evening classes such as
USC wants.
"It's only a notion so far,"
commented Will\am Mann. a
USC program coordinator.
"We do not have any plans
right "now to sublease and we're
not so aure It would work
anyway," Mann said.
A spokesman for the / (See tJSC, Page AZ>
GOP ca11didates are Rep.
Barry Gold w-a t er Jr ..
R-Woodland Hills, San Diego
Mayor Pete Wilson and Rep.
Paul N. Mccloskey of San Mateo
County.
Others are Rep.· Bob Doman,
President Reagan's daughter
Maureen, State Sen. John
Schmitz and former Loyola Law
School dean Ted Bruinsma.
By PATRICK KENNEDY
Of .. Detty"'-' ....
Three sailboats ran agrotmd
Sunday afternoon in thick fog
that's expected t'o return to the
Orange Coast agam tonight.
Fog tlso delayed early
morning flights by one hour out
of John Wayne Airport, but by 8
a. m . takeoff schedule$ were
back to normal as fog lightened.
Ratlboat.s was injured,· but this
morning one 36·foot craft still
was stuck offshore In sand and
rocks at fflasure Cove, just
south or Newport Beach.
Al 9 a.m .. a commercial bo't
was trying to dislodge the
"Lad y" o wned by James
Jordan, Qf Villa Park. It ran
aground 40 yards offshoi:e at
3,: SO p. m. after the dense fog
rolled in and cut visibility to S
feet , said coastal officials.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
None of the 14 passengers
aboard the tt)ree. gounded
'f'OM TRAIH BINS TO BAGS -Lucia Nosenzo rummages in
trasti bins Cor beer and soft drink cans which she bags and
sells to raise money for charity. Last year the Costa Mesan
with the help of her friends rounded up St.500 worth of
aluminum. This collection awaits a pick up by the Coors Co.
~
. Angkrs find haven in coast trash bins
The other two sailboats, the
39-fool Sagittariu.s, out of
Newport Harbor, and the 28-foot
Gammon, from Dana Point
Harbor, were pulled free of
destructi~ tides Sunday,
coastal officials said.
The Sagittarius ran aground at
l tth Street on Balboa Peninsula
and was pulled out to sea by ~
Harbor Patrol boat.
The Gammon went aground at
Cyprus Shores Beach about 2"?
miles south of the San Clemente
municipal pier and was towed
onto the sand. .
Weather officials say the fog
was limited to Orange County,
stretching inland to Garden
Grove.
Tuesday's temperature is
expect~ to be in the low 70s
with nighttime lows in the 40s.
Tonight's fog is expected to li~
by mid·moming. .
Sculptor gets new
hearing on charge
·.
~·
• . . "·· -·' ... ,
By DAVID IWTZMANN
Ofta.~"91 .....
Rebel Costa Mesa sculptor Ali
Roushan once again bu been
spared from goinc to Orance County Jail and paym, a $50()
fine.
What's more, Rousban. trill
have bis day in court -coce
again.
A spokesman for the
California Supreme Court said
today that the panel has aranted
Rousban's petitiQn for a hearing
before the State Fourth Dlat.rict
Court of Appeals in San Bernardino ..
Al issue is whether Roushan
has the constitutional right to
•put up towering red metal
sculptures without getting Costa
Mesa City Hall's stamp of approval first.
In granUng the new hearirtgs,
Pair rob
Mesa man -
of $7,000
the state high court -in ~
order signed by five of its seo· justices -further extended
delay of all proceedings ap'
Roushan at the Orange Couotr,
Superior court level. '
Th'e fiery Iranian immigr~
who has been l~ked in a le~
battle with · city officials ~
nearly two years, is seeking.
overturn contempt of co
convictions against him f
erecting red steel artwor~ defiance of city obtained ~
Mden. •
erange County Superior .
judge Robert R. Fitzgera
imposed the $500 fine a
five-day jail sentence l
December.
In all, Roushan has er
four colorful sculptures, three
them without proper cl
approval and safety checks. ·
The state Supreme Cou
spokesman said Justice
transferred Jurisdiction for
case from the superior
level to the appeals court level. •
Either side could then a
afain to the state hip
<See SCULPTOa, Pa1e AJ> • •
today while relid•U
1no¥tplow1 •-.d the eUOaal
Guard to tackle alx·foOt *1fta,
At letat n peopJe died ln tbe
storm, otOcla.la report*!.
Rain and freHl•I rain
1weeptnc ·throu1.h
MauaehUMUa boell9d out tM
power to about t,000 hom• In
M auachu1ett1 and cauata a
trash lnvolvin1 ao can and a
bu1 on Route2 at Weatmlnster.
Most acbooll were closed In
Vermont wtth more than a foot
of a now on the f"round. . .
More than l ,000 cara and
truck• were abandoned on
AP...,.._
LEGEND DIES Sally Stanford. the former San Francisco
call house madam who became a two·term mavor or .,~Sausalito. is dead or heart failure at 78 .
~x-madam, mayor
~Sally Stan/ ord dies
t\•
1~·; GREENBKAE <AP> -Sally
:"':f.Stanford, the former San ·~rancisco madam.and Sausalito
ayor whose life became a
levision movie, died today in a
reenbrae hospital at age 78.
Ms. Stanford, whose real
ame was Mabel Jinice Busby,
-2>'erved two terms as a city
i q fnuocilwoman and sened bo1.b f';as mayor and vice mayor before
. , 'lier retirement'from polllics.
..,. · She died in Marin Geqeral
ef4lo9pital of ·apparent heart
ilure. said Lois Bevans,
Y. uraint 1upervisor. She bad
r en admitted to the hospital
er the weekend because of her l~'~eakening heart. Ms. Bevans
~,~aid.
ji1' Ms. Stanford, raised in Baker,
. {?re .. had a reputation as a ,.~
o"rf :;f$3.43 theft
;~ails youth
~Ff' A 19-year;<>ld lrvlne resident,
..,~ho police allege stole 4 March
f)of Dimes coll ection can ~•· ontaining $3.43 in pennies.
1ckels and dimes. was arrested ~ nday night on sus picion of
'U.ossessing ~tolen property,
~.pricers said. ~~".Robert Albert Ling of 5112 ~ighgate Terrace was arrested
' at 10 p.m. on a street near
alphs Supermarket, 14400
" ulver Drive , after a ~ permarket employee reported
1 e theft.
Police assert that Line told
;J.lthem he took the can on the
' "spur of the moment" because ~e needed money ror gasoline.
,;w•
From Page A1
CULPTOR ..
depending on the outcome of the
lower court hearings in San
Bernardino.
No dates for the hearings were
set. Roushan put up his high rise
structures on his industrial
property at 1550 Superior Ave.
He said this morning "This
lime (Costa Mesa city officials>
are deaUn1 with a chess pll!yer.
They thought they were ~eating
with a poker player."
. The city bas ar1ued that
.Rou1han's sculptures. wbJcb
1taod up to 60 feet l'Ugb, require
the proper clty bulldlnc permits
an4 safety checka Uke any other
struct~.
Representatives In the city
attorney 's office were
unavailable for comment this
morflinl.
colorful and fun -loving
madam-turned·mayor whose
first official act was to break
open a case of champagne.
She purchased the Valhalla
Restaurant in Sausalito in about
1948.
• · 1 s hould have run for
president of the United Stat.a,"
sh~ said during the March tm
champ•gue uaib. "Al least
there's some doucb in it."
Ms. Stanford ran for couneU
five times under tbe Dame
Marsba Owen before wianiDC
electloa undll" her ._. .......
name in April Im.
The dA)' after ber electkla to a
second '°'8'-year term ID Mm"dl
1976, abe ..,.,,..... ... waald
not seek a tblrd term.
"I c1on•t want aay mare:••
said. "I .think I've clcJDe a llal
iob." ,
. As top wte-aetMr wttb 1.aD
votes In tbe tm dty elediaa,
Ms . Stanford -aa custom
dictated -wu elected mayor
by the other councU membtn
that year. She served u vice
mayor in 1978.
In a 1970 interview, Ms.
Stanford reminisced about the
days of operating a house of
prostitution.
"I was arrested 17 times:· she
said, "but I only had to pay a
couple of $250 fines.''
Three years later, she told a
reporter that she came to San
Francisco in the 1920s with an
attorney she met and married in Ventura.
·'I was doing a little
bootlegging down there
<Southern California> " she
said. "I d.idn'ttell him th~t."
A bout six years before her
firs t election, Ms. Stanlord
authored a book, "!.ady of the
House," in wbtch she desert bed
her exploits as the "empress" of
1144 Pine St .• San Franclsco.
"I didn't set out to be. a
madam," she. wrote, "any more
than Art.bur Michael Ramsey
.. figured someday on
becoming Archbishop of
Canterbury.
·'Things just sort of developed for both of us, I guess."
Other childhood, Ma. Stanford
wrote that her family ,.., "l.O
poor, we envied everyone we
ever heard of."
She changed her name to Sally
Stanford in 1933 whlle attendlna
a football same between
Stanford University and the
University of CalUomta.
"Stanford won, and I had
already picked the name Sally,
so I said , that's it," she rec.UH.
O"AMGa COAST 1llyPUat CtaHtflM ectwertl91ftt 1141142-1171
All otMr dep8ft1Mfttt M2..U21
bJ•bways t.n a 100-mUe ra Ull of
Detroit. ~hOoll were eloHd ln
Detroit ud Ann Arbor.
· Itidlana Gov. Robe.rt D. Orr
1cbech.iled a helicopter tour of
hit IDOW·buried atate today.
A bout 35 people were
evacuated ~OU Clty, Pa., a city
oC 1'1000 abOut 80 miles north of
Pltt1bur1h. when an lee Jam
broke OI\ OU Creek, and sent
water 1ix feet deep throueb the
1treeu.
A1 the temperatures dipped
lnto tt)e 20s today bi OU City, the
flood water began tq freeze and
one resident said, "It could tum
lbe whole downtown Into a S{an&
lee cube."
·'Tho main lnteraectlon In
town I• flooded . . . Water
au.rroWld.a aome homea &ix feet
deep," aald Frank Stacy e>f radlo
1tatlon WOYI. "1'he water la
movlnl fut. ll'I Cot a lot Of
lceberp in it."
Dauber1er said the homes
mlaht 1et washed away and
police abandoned theJr station
when it was noocted with 1 ~ feet
of water.
In Marlinton. a city or 1,300 in
a valley betweeQ rid1e1 of the
Alle1beny mountains. an Ice
Jam on Knapp Creek save w~.
Hndln1 s~ feet of water
throufh parU of the tOw•. PoUee
aod Ire 0Cficlat1 aald rour
families were evacuated.
In the winter-weary Midwest
the deepest snow waa reported
at Gree.nvUJe, ln aoutb-central
Illlnou, where 22 lnchea felL
Chuck Jonu of the llllnoia
Emercency Services and
Disaster agency said 2,000
motorists were stranded in
temporary shelters Sunday
nlabt.
· T ve never seen the snow so
dee p," said David Denbow,
Trio take cash, diamonds
Police are searchint for three
armed men who robbed a Seal
Beach Je~eler of $75,000 ln, cash
and diamonds.
Seal Beach police said the
holdup occurred at 10:10 a.m.
Sunday at Hatchet Enterprises,
2904 Westminster Ave.
Police said one of the su.speds
entered and attempted to, sell a
gold ring to jeweler Mark A.
Jones .. A second man then drew
an automatic pistol from his
R.D. Howell
dead at 67;
services due
Me morial se rvices are
pending for Newport Beach
resident and buslnessman
Richard D. Howell, who died
J a n. 28 in La Jolla after a battle
with cancer.
He was 67 .
Mr. Howell , a n ative of
Australia w.ho came to the
United States with his family ln
the 1920s, founded an optical
supply firm, Lido International,
in Newport Beach in the early
1950s .
He was a member of the
Palisades Tennis Club in Santa
Ana and a former member of
the Balboa Bay Club and the El
Niguel Country Club.
He is survived by a daughter,
Virginia Howe ll o f Solana
Beach; a son, Richard Howell of
Sebastopol and .a sister. ¥rs.
Jlobert Hill of La Jolla.
He was a U.S. Navy pilot in
World War II.
There were no funeral
aervlces.
Mesa weighs
parking ban
Tbe oa.ta Mesa City Council
II expec:ted to consider a Traffic
Commllaion recommendation to
ban perti.na Monday mornings
In north Costa Mesa for street
1weeplnc. ·
If adopted, the ban will affect
all 1treeta between Fairview
Road, South Coast Drive, Bear
Street and Sunflower A.venue .
A $10 fine would be imposed
for violators.
City council members will
meet at 6:30 p.m . at council
chambers, 77 Fair Drive.
U.S. to pay
NEW YORK <AP> The
Reagan adminis tration has
decided to repay $71 million that
Poland owes to American banks,
but will not require the banks to
formally declare Poland in
default, The New York Times
reported today.
waistband and ordered Jones to
slt down, police said.
Tbe intruder then opened a
back door to admit a third man
armed with a double·barreled
shot1un. officers said.
Jew~ler Jones was taken to a
back room, stripped or hi• gold
rlne and told to remain on the
floor until the trio left, police
said.
Officers said the jeweler saw a
dark blue mini-pickup truck
lea vine the scene of the robbery.
$30,000 RB fire
blamed on grease
An wiwatched skillet erupted
into a grease fire early today in
a Huntington Beach apartment
causing $30,000 damage.
R esident Mark Lehtloa
complained of smoke inhalation
and was given oxygen at the
scene and released following the
3: 17 a.m . bla:ie at 8081 Holland
Drive , said Fire Captain Roger
Hosmer.
Hosmer said another dwelling
rire on Saturday also caused
$30,000 damage, but was the
r~ult of arson.
He said a two·story home at
9371 Cape Cod Drive caught fire
at 10: 10 a.m. and was reported
by neighbors.
The fire was started in several
places in the home. including the
den and upstairs bedroom
Hosmer said. No one was horn~
at the lime. The house is owned
by Lee Niederinghaus, Hosmer
said
Careless cooking and arson
have been the leading causes or
structure fires in Huntington
Beach for the past two years.
Hosmer said.
Slnoke screen hits
Orange County Jail
There was more smoke than
fire Sunday night on the second
ffoor of the Orange Count y
Men's Jail after an inmate or
inmates set fire to an
3CCUmulation of dust in a
venttlation duct.
Orange County Sheriff's
Department Lt. Wyatt Hart said
smoke forced iail personnel to
move 85 inmates to other areas
of the second floor where tbe air
r e mained breathable Ottier
floors of the jail we re not
affected, Hart said.
-From· Page A 1
The inc1dent occurred about
7 15 p.m . Santa Ana F i r e
Department firefighters were
dispatched to assist jailers in
c learing the s moke from the
floor .
Hart said the fire was
deliberately set. There was no
known underlying disturbance.
he said.
The fire broke out in a ward
reserved for inmates with minor
medical proble ms About 35
inmates were in the war<l at the
time the fire occurred, Hart
said.
USC SCHOOL PLANS • • •
Christian school could not be
reached for comment.
Mann said USC still hopes to
resolve its dispute with Corona
del Mar residents and move into
the school. USC already has paid
$69,000 to use the school.
.So far, the closest USC bas
gotten to the school ls Corona del
Mar High School where several
of USC's grl!auate courses· are
being held .
Officials from the school
district said they are unaware of
any plans USC might have for
subleasing the campus.
They also said USC will not be
reimbursed even though the
private university, so far. has
been unable to move onto the
campus.
A court hearin g on the
residents' lawsuit is scheduled
for Feb. 9. ·
"We still want to resolve this
in a friendly way," said Mann.
"W e w a nt to avoid the
antagonism a cour t fi g ht
brings."
Reside nts s aid they are
worried about traffic. street
parking and noise the USC
graduate school migbt bring.
The ho m eo wn e r s have
stressed that they have nothing
against USC and be lieve the
graduate school is a good idea -
as long as it's not located in
Co rona del Mar.
driver of a snowplow •l'lck for
more than an hour Sunday on
Intent.w " In St. LoulJ. "We'll
1et lhl• cleared out eventual!~
but I don't know when."
The •urpriff 1torm developed
when warm, moist air from the
Oulf of Mexico suddenly movoct
up and colllded with cold air
fro m Canitda. which kept
temperatures in the northern
Midwest as low as 36 deereo
below zero in Detroit Lakes Minn. ·
An accident on Interstate 55
near Pontiac in central Illinois
involved 17 to 20 vehicles. -
o ... ,~ ... s-~
SUCCUMBS Cost <l Mt'sa
ha rd wart' store O\\ nl'I' Kt"rm
Rima is dead at tht• .ige of
fi!}
Costa Mesan
Kerm Rima
succumbs
Kermit "Kerm" Rima. who
operated a hardware store in
Costa Mesa for more than three
decades. 1s dead al the age of 69.
Mr Rima, a longltme ·Costa
Mesa resident. died Sunday
morning at Fountain Valley
Co mmunity Hospital after being ..
adQ'l illed five weeks ago for an
illness
The white·haired salesman
opened his first shop in Costa
Mesa about 30 years ago at the
corner of Newport Boulevard
and Rroadway
He moved the family business
lo 2666 Harbor Blvd 16 years
ago
Before opening his Costa Mesa
shop. Mr Rima operated a bait
and tackle s hop o n Coast
Hi g hwa y nea r the U pper
Newport Bay bridge.
lie is survived by Betty, his
wife of 31 years; and sons Keith
and Kermit, both of Costa-Mesa.
A family spokesman s aid
there wll I be no memorial
service He said Mr Rima was a
member of the Neptune Society.
Dozier rescue
'great joy'
VATICAN CITY IAPI -Pope
John Paul IL told NATO military
officers today that the rescue of
U.S. Brig. Gen. James L. Dozier
was a "moment of great joy"
and evidence that terrorism can
t5e defeated.
Dozier told a congregation at
church services Sunday he was
never really worried during the
six weeks he was a captive of
the Red Brigades because he
believed "the good Lord knows
what he's doing."
Reagan, Volcker cla$h expected
WASIUNGTON (AP> -The
well-known Ronald Reagan and
the relatively llttle·known Paul
Volcker appear to be on a
colllslon course over how to
1tra.iahten out the American
economy, and it'a not at all clear
the better-know.n player would
win.
Volcker, chairman of the
Federal Reser've Board, s.ays
the economy will be gradually
strangled by ever btiber
interest rates unless Reaaan
reduces 1i1anUc federal budcet
deficits.
Reagan, president of the
United S,_.., says hls economic
recovery ""Jrogram, deficits and
all, will be thwarted by rtatn1
Interest rat.el UAle11 the 1taUOG'1
central bank does a better job of
managing the amount of money
It allows to drculate tn the
eco1;1omy.
Private economlaU ,
meanwhile, say the nation may
be headed for far worae Umea
unle11 Volcker eua the Fed'•
t11bt·credit stance or Rearan
flnda a way t4 cut thole dendll.
Without a pollcy chan•• ~
one or both atdea. ''tbe U.S.
economy tuna the r11k of a
major eollapte, unprecedented
ln tbt po1twar perlod "
economlat Allen Sinai of lb.
foree..unt ftrm Data Reeourcee
Inc .• warned iii Ill lnt.trview.
Staal• llajQttt1 Leader
Howard B9k• R-'JWm , wpd
Re11-.. IH Vole•tr tO "•lt
dOwa Mid let aw~ from UU
business of acting like they are
so independent they never
comm~icate.
"We· ve ·got to get this
economy going acain, we've Cot
to sync.brpnUe," Baker nid.
But so far , Volcker and
Reagan are refuain1 to budee.
Some veteran Fed watchers
say the independent bank i1
merely punuinc the Ucht-credit
looking for someone to blame for
an economy far worse off than
the president had predicted.
Treasury Secretary Donald T.
Regan said Sunday on CBS's
"Face the Nation" t hat the
administration ls not trying to
make t.iu:: Fed a scape1oat and
"will take the blame or the
•::redil" for what h.appens to the
•!conomy.
· ''There seems to be more pressure
. on the Fed than ever before.''
policy the president haa been
advocalln.g to fi1ht innauon.
"Tta,e Fed ·11 always the
acapeaoat, the euy out,"
observed one banklnt offtclal,
who did hot want hit name used ..
"Bu& there seems to be more
presaure btlnc put on the Fed
today then ever before."
Rea1an and bla economic
advlaera ~eny lh•Y are In any Cundam~taJ tonntc\ wtth. tb4I
Fed's ttiht·mon•1 ~licy or
And budlet director David A.
Stockman, interviewed on ABC's
•'This Week With David
Brinkley," laid tbal "deaplte
1oroe recent adminiatraUon
discomfort" over Fed policies
that "No one in the
a1imlnlstraUon beUeves the
course J.s wronc." Nooethele11, then ba~ been
an lncreutni pat.tern of
crlticlsm from tM pretldent and
bl• aJdea ln recent Wffkl about
Israeli brilie tries told
the way the bank ttas been
managing the nation's money
supply. Instead of pursuln.e a
slow and steady course. the Fed
has swung wildly over the put
y ea r between extreme
clampdowns oo credit and
enormous Increases, the
admlnistratton argues. Volcker, who may have more
11iy about the course of the U.S.
economy than any other
Jndtvldual ha s stated
repeatedly lbat he baa DO
intention of backing off tbe
Fed's ~nll·lnflallon course
despite the ecooomlc pain it la
causing the nation aod the
.political discomfort lt may
cauae Reacan.
Volck4"; alto contjnidl the Fed
'is dotnc lta belt to reculate tbe
money supply but that the
economy Is too\ complex t6
achieve th• week-to-week
prect1lon the admlnl•tr•Uon
seems to be demandlnl. ,
If that dqesn't aallafy a..,.~?
thert:a not m\IC!b be cu do '8Kl.I
lht Fed c~alr1Dan•1 term
expl,... ln Aqult 1111.
er d"'S· tb• ·••d ... estabUMed eoa ...... lri ltl.J'
to be Na&i J fr9' Of PlbtiCal I
p ....... fliolll U.. .-.. .....
Thua, while , ... prtl\ieai
appotatl memben to tM ..._
be onnot f&rt tlla•. "A•4
VoleMl'llMlt.._ ... .. ...... \~ ......... -..:,....,.
leilY.:!:ker waa ~ 1tt
......... t~. '
AP .......
HONORED -Singer Marian Anderson hoJ~s bouquet
presented to her at New York's Carnegie Hall in honor of
her Mth birthday. Miss Anderson was the ·first black
singer with the Metropolitan Opera.
Hutoric auction on the level?
It sounded like a collector's
dream come true: Ulysses S.
Graat'• ciear butts. Ben
Fraaltlla'a bridgework and
Martha Washington's green
glasses, all on the auction
block.
The new owners of the-
memorabilia may still have
to dream, however, as even
the organizers of Sunday's
An 18th century home and
landmark in Pawling, N.Y ..
is becoming a museum and
exhibit hall for memorabilia
from the late globet.rottlng
newsman Lowell Thomas.
Mae Greene of the Pawling
Historical Society said that
Oakdale High School senior
Coleen Hawks is California's
new J''1nior Miss.
Miss Hawks took first In
poise and appearan~e .
physical fitness and creative
and performing arts to win
auction at the Pony Express
Museum in Reno wouldn't
vouch for the collecion's
authenticity ; the..y just
wanted it to be fun.
Other items included a
barber chair allegedly used
by both Grant and explorer
John C. Fremont and an old
Wells Fargo stage coach.
complete with wooden horse.
the society purchased the
John Kane homestead for
$150,000 from the house 's
current occupant, Marita
Rack.
Thomas, a CBS reporter
for many decades, was a
longtime Pawling resident.
the competition in Santa
Rosa.
Miss Hawks WOD $10,900 in
scholarships and a chance t.o
compete for the national
Junior Miss title at Mobile,
Ala., in Au~t.
• J
Two ~ women -both expertenced poker deelers -
battled to tb• notn tn • ue.ooo "Ladlfa Ont "
aeven -card stud po'tr
tournament.
When the amok• cleared,
E.J. Freema•, •, WH lbt
wlnntr, taklq In te,840 h'om
the ~per-participant pot.
Forty-one entrants were
dealt into t.he 11me when It
be11n. Ma. Freeman. formerly of
Chico, beat LaNeHe
aoclaeleau, who received
$4 ,920 for her second-place
flnleh.
Lomta WIU Hid •he had
her doubts when a telephone
caller said he waa stn1er
Bobby Vlaton. aeeldna to
claim the ~.000 bracelet he
loat while performln& at
·Green Bl.Y. Wia. · Mrs. 'Witt received a
number of prank calls at
Coleman. Wis.. after news
stories disclosed how ahe
wanted to retuni the jeweled
bracelet to Vinton.
She said she told the caller,
"I 'll believe you If you sln1 a
little song."
Vinton san1 the Polish
version of "My Melody of
Love," Miss Witt aaid. "Nol
too many of my friends
speak Polish. My husband
was listening on the phone
upstairs and he told me that
has to be him."
British Prime Minister
Margaret Thateher,
appropriately dressed in an
Oriental-cut velvet suit,
toured th.e Great Japan
Exhibition at LondOn's Royal
Academy of Arts.
The prime mlniJler was
shown through the galleries
by academy President Sir
Hush Ca110• and was
accompanied by her husband
Denis and daugbter t:arol.
Comedienne Loahe
Lasser, who starred in the
title role of the TV soap
comedy "Mary Hartman.
Mary Hartman," has been
forced to drop a stage
appearance because of a
throat infection.
Spanish Kini Jau Cart.
paid a surprise vi.alt to Saudi
Arabia. The Saudi press_ agency
said he met with Klag
Kbated, but did n<>t give·
details on their discussion.
Tbe Spanish monarch,
accompanied by bis wife,
arrived Sunday
·MoTe fog expected
wlll ranve fr-om .S lo S5 lollowifl9 o,,.rn1eh4 lows ot JO.JS.
In ""' ._r -rt• hfOM wlll ra~ fr-om 51 to •s ano In IN lower
-rt16S.IS.
CCM11tel -lnter..-lata vall•y• · Fair through Tuuoay .. cept SN>ulO be fair 11\rouofl Tuesday with
patchy lete ntoltt and early momlno nortl>erly wind& oustlno ""n. JS rnf)tl
IOQ ,...r CMS!. bel-,.,,.,...,, -_, -hlglt
CCMlltal hfol\ S., k>w U , Water S6 temper at""" rangtno from 63 to 73
Inland hlglt 73.1-O
E IHwNre, lloltt variable winds
lhrouofl lon'9M u c• '°"' ..... , '° Tem'.neratures west wlrwft t-u knoh •lternoon• r
NATI<* -ver, below-and <any°"' Mtweeft Ventura and s.nt. Monk •
nortll to ~ wlncll 10.20 knoll
Wulerty -i1 1·2 ... , Patchy lot
over IOUthern wate'l ll1rou11t1
Tuelday rnomlno OtharwlM, fair
HI Le Pre. I •
throw9'I tonJoM.
AllNny
··~ Amarlltq
: :~ 17 @ill •• ~: !: ~ ~ .::::..
S4 4' \" •• • \•o• .. ,.1111 • ._ 0&.'lw4t 4
U SJ ..St o:mmJ -•• :::
n •
. ... ,_...,
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, February 1, 1882
crunch
·plans hit
SANTA MONICA <AP> -The
United Stat.es -and C•llfornia
-are woefUlly unprepared for
another oU 1horta1e. • itate
eneray official aald at tM
cotlcloaton or ·a three-day
exerclle at the Rand Corp.
• 'Tbe country ls very
lll·prepared. and It'• almost
crhmnal aeelna that we've tone
tbrouit> thla in 1W73 and a11in ln
1979," California Energy
Commias~ner Emillo E .
Varanlnl told rePorters at a
newa conference rollowln1 the
three-day simulation at the think
tank lut week. ,.. Varanlni said another
international oil short.ee wo"ld
produce immediate juml>s in
gas-line prices and what he
termed "areal dlstffecllon
among the people."
The slmulatlon was funded by
the Ener1y Commission to study
what would happen in the event
of another oil crisis. In the
study, set amid 1982, oil Imports
a,re cut by four mllllon barrels a
day because or an "event"' in
the Middle East.
"We belleve there is a high
probability of having an event in
the next 10 years," Varanini
said. "You could see motor
gasoline prices go up by a
dollar. There could be hysteria
in the spot markets."
Varanlni noted that the
Reagan administration 's
reliance on the free market
system and the prepared
dismantling of the Department
of Energy would mean different
results in another oil shortage.
"Rather than having lines,
you would bqin to have prices
eolne out of sight and huge ·
amounts of money going to the
'oil companies," he said. "Th.is
would have to be recaptured by
a windfall 'profits tax or there
would-be 1reat disaffection
among the people."
Varanlni said th~ study
showed that governments on all
levels are not ready for another
oil shortage. 'He said stocltpiling
of oil would be helpful but
expensive.
•'Stockpiling is everybody's
sweetheart, until it comes time
to pay," .he said. •
Tbuty·Uu'ee 1ovemment and
corporate official& particlpated
In the study, with the
participants divided into teams
1imulatin1 national, state and
ll>cal authorities .
Ret\ommendalions developed in
the simulation will be presented
by Rand to the Energy
Commission.
Varanini noted that
international agreements calling
ror oU sharing among countries
' could accentuate the problems
· or a shortaee in the United
States. He said this might also
hurt the nation's trade deficit.
Showgoe1 on
for $419 fare
• SPRINGFIELD, Mass. <AP>
-It cost $419 in cab fare, but
Romanian violinist Serstu Luca
made lt to a concert on Ume.
....,,... .... ,....
BABY TEAM -Ors. Howard and Georgeanna Jones are
working with test-tube baby technique a~ Norfolk Clini~ iri
Virginia. They were in Newport Beach Friday ~or a medical
conference. ·
Test-tube method
def ended by doctor ·
By JOEL C. DON
Of-~""' ..... A co-director of the nation's
first t.esl·lube baby clinic has
lashed out at anti-abortionist
opposition td the new medical
technique. .
Dr. Georgeanna Jones, of the
Eastern Virginia Medical School
In Norfolk, told a Newport
Beach press conference that ln
vitro fertilization offers hope t.o
infertile couples who have
exhausted other avenues of
medical science. She challenged
claims of some groups that
doctors would practice a form of
selective abortion using the new
procedure
The in vitro technique allows
"Ufe to go on because <with>
these patients there is really no
chance fOl'. the sperm and e11fto
come together in the fertilization
process," she said. "They
(opponents) equate that to
something that is evil. It is not
evil; it has a potential for being
good."
In vitro fertilization is a
process in which sperm and egg
are combined in a laboratory
dish ana then transf~r d to the
woman's uterus. Dr. nes said
th,e technique is specially
promising for women who have
blocked or missing Fallopian
tubes, the channel for the egg to
pass from the ovary to the
uterus.
fertilization cllnics have opened
In Aust.ralla as weU as Texae,
and Los Angeles. A test-tube
baby is expected at County-USC
Medical Center In May or June,
Dr. Jones said.
The Norfolk clinic was
establlshed by Dr. Jones and her
physician-husband, Howard, in
January 1980 at Norfolk General
Hospital.
The husband-and-wife team
have received more than 6,000
applications from Infertile
couples, t.ho\.lgh Dr. Jones said
the clinic can handle only about
55 cases per year. They were in
Newport Beach Friday to attend
a twe>-day ~di"I conference
s ponsored by the Santa
Ana-based Southern California
Infertility Institute. .
Dr. Jones said the No~olk
clinic has achieved a 20 percent
success rate with its patients.
She noted that under ideal
conditions, a normal couple
would have about a 2S percent
chance of achieving pregnancy,
She expects in vitro
fertilization to exceed the
success rate for normal couples,
s ince fertilization ls careruJly
monitored through the in vitro
·process. .
But she said doctors are rtit
destroying eggs they may feel
are inferior. Rather, physiciarts
are giving women hormonl!
supplements to boost e.1'
production so that more thin
one fertilized egg can 6e1 Implanted in the womb. Th'8h
procedure increases the success
rate, Dr. Jones said, ~xplainiftc
that the chances for a pregnancy
are slim when only one egg ts•
used. U.S. summary
Haevy-141fWadfrom_.
AncNltaoe
A-Ille
Atlanta
Atlante Cty
&altlrnore
11m11nonrn
lltmarO u ..
llol-lrowntvlla
lllff•k>
CIMlr11111 SC CllarUtnWV
CIWya-
Ctll<-
Clncln-1 Ctev.,and
Colurnbvs
Oaf.FtWllh
Oefl11ar
O.tMolMs
O.trolt
0..luth
Ell'HO
FelrlNllU
HartfO<'d ........
H-lulu
Housto11 Jacklftvlle
J-•u It-City
L.atVeoas
Utt!• llO<k
letA"9'11H
leoolevllle
Me"'Clhk
Sl a .G2 -.:..:.=---------------..... r---a u ......
Luca was scheduled to
perform Vivaldi's "Four
Sea~" Sunday before 1,350
musk lovers at Symphony Hall.
The first American lest-tube
baby was born Dec. 28, 1981 at
Norfolk Generai Hospital. The
baby, Elizabeth fordan Carr,
was delivered by Caesarean
section and was declared a
healthy infant of 5 pounds, 12
ounces. Her mother's FaUoplan
tubes bad bf¥ sureically
removed as a rM'Ult oi problems
with three earlier unsuccessful
pregnancies.
She aaid some critics belirie
scientists are using 1enedc engineering techniques throuCh
thia process.
Ml1MWI 110 ...,...__Ohio toNy,
""Sftln9 ~l -llH"Y ralnH_........,of-<otclt,...l
Snow al• .. II In Ar11MMK -_.,. .. ~!lain COl'ltfllued "'pans of u. ..,,_.,, l'aclfk c .. 11, wlttl-ln-~ Rock'"-
SMw w• torec.eilt "° ClOfttl,... from
Ar11-'° llllllol1, 19r9acll"11 to IN
_. .... Of'NI ~lln reooion -'"" norlMrn OtllO Vallay to Interior
MCtlOl'lt of !tie ,...,...,.,,, Atlantlc .......... ---.. ........... ebect4"1 elMwllera Hit of the
Nl!Nlw..1111-'. Tllere w• • <!Mnca of ..,._,
...... , ... ..,, ... ,., Pacllk CoHI wKh ,_ 111 .,. _...... .. llocklH and
Hlth Plalnt. The IO,..CHt Mid It would be mo,tly tunny In the
Solrthwett. Thi lo•ett 1ernp1re111re tl\h
mor11lng WH U llelow lero, In
ln .. rnatlONll Fellt, Minn S..-y•t f\loll wa1G, In Fort Myen, l'le,
Ext.ended
/orecaat
SOIJT~UUt CALl l'OllNIA COASTAL ANO MOVNTAIN AR&AS _,. ......... ...n.. .... -
"'clly ,.. -.,,. ,_, ~ ... 1,~"°"" c.-..-.
11'9f\• u 1o n -'°"" • •• ... Meowlleln,,.... JO 10 .. -tows H to 4S.
California
Strono 1U1tY ...... ,.,.,, ,_. -hauro to ...-nsts "'tM -.UIM
.,,, d•Mrtt, '"' tM Hetlontt
Weehr SINlca ~ .. tnMtlt l•lr WHtllar 111 tlle mt of s.vtllOt'n
c.lflontla tlnttefl T""41ey.
Ii tr ..... ......,., ... luuet In ....
_..Int .......... ts .. u ~
w1t11 toc:elly ttr1N191r tttM• • .,.,.
meu111a1111 '*111 ~ oa1t of Loi
linfelel, ............. ,.....,"""
e-r!!. ...... ..., •••-•tu• .
11 '.11 .01 Miami a )1 Mllw..,.._
-., JZ Nestlvllle
70.. NewOr-
16 11 ·'° .._v_ 11 ., Omaha
11 90 .J4 Or1and0
... 21 Ptllladpftl• 20 11 .20 ""°4inl•
SJ Ii PllUllurVh
,, 26 .•7 ptland, ,,_
JI l l 1.40 ptland, Ore
44 Jl .22 Rac>ld City .a 21 Reno
I '2 Rk hf'nelftd
21 II .7' Salt Laka
1 ·» San01a9o
S4 21 San Fr.,,
·4 ·16 SHttla
40 J4 St LOUii
40 M St p. Tel'n!MI 1• SI St Ste Marie S1 44 Sc>ohne
IM " T11<1on 12 27 .1' Tul1a
22 10 we.,.lnqtn
U U Wk tllte J4 2' 2.JO •
7l • Catoary 56 V 1.01 Edmonton
40 13 l.U -treat
n n
" IO .1! st Jl 1• .... ti
40 as .n
10 .a .. . •S M u 41 ,, JI ..
IA 12
50 42
40 ' It 22
67 •• 01
40 •
M 44 ., .,
.. J1 .u ,. .. ''°' II '1
1 ·10
3' IO 60'» 11 ,, .., '° a .01
21 1•
21 , ,, .
H 1
• ·-.s~f RIPOii
•
Tide•
l4 1 '·11 ... ,.
0 ·IS Hia flight from Florida was
grounded by fog in Baltimore.
But be hopped a cab, and 400
m{Jes and seven hours later
walkect lnto the hall 15 minutes beforle-~ was to walk on ataee~
The pioneering work or Brltlsb
Drs. Patric,k Steptoe and Robert
Edwards led to the world's fint
test-tube baby, l.ouise Brown,
born in um.
Since then , in vitro
''This is an enUrely different
field," she said, empbawizfftr
that doctors are DOl tamperilis
with the genetic makeup ol the
rertill1ed e11.
our Polo int4r1ock, ...
•
..
•
I
. .. . . •
"'' Or9n~ Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, F1bru1ry 1, 1982
rnmu~rn~
·Austria avalanche
yields last body ·
SALZBURG, Auatrl~ (AP> -
Rescuers fanntna out acroa1 a
snow-covered mountalnalde
today found the body of the lut
1tudent mtulna ln an avalanche
that killed 13 Weal Germans on a
1cbool aid tour.
They bad suspended the hunt
for Oliver Jensen, 17, Sunday
niaht when It appeared more
anow w~uld roar down the
mountainside.
Ten students and three
teachers, all from a private
school In Bercbtesgaden, West
Germany, were killed in the
d isaster Sunday at Mount
ElmuaJam, 3S miles south of Salzburg.
Syria executes
plotters of coup
By Tiie Associated Preas
Western and Arab sources say
Syrian fresident Hafez AS$ad
has exeeuted 30 to SO military
offi cers and jailed more than 300
military personnel after
uncovering what may have been
the most serious challenge yet to
his 12-year-0ld government.
The Assad government has
issued a flurry of statements
denying· reports of a military
plot against his regime, which is
embroiled in a two-year-0ld fight
with Islamic fundamentalists of
the outlawed M os l e m
Brotherhood.
fovernora "are pleased that ne' presaaent nas maae the
.augeesUon. Now we have to see
If we can work oul the details so
that it can be as good in fact as
it is In proposal."
Syrian peace plan
nixed by Israel
TEL AVIV, Israel CAP) -
Israel rejected a 2.ublisbed
Syrian three-point -plan for
peace with Israel today , a
F~reign Ministry spokesman
saad.
··The plan does not talk about
peaceful relations with Israel or
r ecognition or I s rae l or
negotiations with Israel and
should be seen as nothing more
than a propaganda exercise,"
spokesman Yossi Amihud said.
Radio annourreer
stricke"' dies
WATERBURY, Vt. CAP> -A
radio. announcer who suffered a
heart attack on the air, and was
aided by a doctor driving by ~e
station, has died after anottle't
attack, says a spokeswoman at
the Central Vermont Hospital in
Berlin.
Rus ty Parker, SS, died at
a bout 3: 30 Sunday morning.
officials said, j4st days arter Dr.
John Valentine had rushed into
the Waterbury radio station
when he heard a call for help.
Media rtips TV show · on Polllnd
Promi'nent Aineri<!ans' in pro-Solidarity program beamed '1orldwide
s he ulct, and 'two French
stations each carried M-mlnute
se1ments.
. South Africa and Greece were
among countrlet tbat dld not
broadcast the pro1ram.
Thailand turned down m offer
from the U.S. Emba11y to
provide satellite tranamlaalon
because "the subject la too
pollUcaJJy sensitive," one source
aald.
In Entland, the BBC screened
a bout one minute of the
program. s howing several
scenes of Poland and fadlna to
about lO·seconds of remarks by
President Reagan.
An edited version of the
pro1ram waa scheduled for
broadcut today on Fuji TV, one
of Japan's four major private
networks. Yo1hio Sakuma, a
network official , said the
pro1ram was beln1 broadcast at
mldnlaht because n e ws
programs generally eel low
ratinga and ''Japanese Interest
in the Polish affair is low."
·~-....... CAN'T THEY READ? The spray-painted
s ign gives warning but these crows
apparently need glasses The wall borders
Northeast Mann£> Drive in Portland. Ore
where Sunday was a cool but pleasant 50
degrees for residents to eni6.~ tfie outdoors
Plane raised from harbor
At the Pilot, people mak~ th.e difference. . . ..
. . . people like th~_se in the pressroom:
\
The press is probably the single most important piece of machinery at
any newspaper. But aay printed piece is only as good as the people who
print it. That's why we're so proud of these seven guys Working under
constant deadline pressure, they perform the final step in the
manufacturing process, producing a folded newspaper from ink. plates
and paper. And our press crew takes pride in what they do. They know
their work is reflected by the paper's final appearance. That's why we
have the cleanest, brightest color photos of any newspaper around.
Getting good people who enjoy their work environment, may take longer
and cost more, bu~ at the Daily Pilot we know it's worth it because
people do make a diUerence .
•
..
:·
•• J thank the work is
interesting and th1re 1s a
lot to learn. You 're kept
busy. and I like that And
the people are nice to
work With ··
Scott Douthett,
Costa Mesa
Scott is•responsible for
keeping papet' supplied to
the Pilot's eight press lUlits . ..____..,..
· · t think the Ptlot 1$ an
enjoyable place to work.
They treat you right here.
I wouldn·t leave. Why
leave ldien you·re happy
w here you are?··
Jerry mu.
Costa Mesa
Jerry is the preas crew
leader and operates the
maln cOritrol panel on the
press.
.. Even though this paper
has been around /or a long
time. the new
management makes it a
young paper. I like
working m the ·go get if
aJmosphere this por>fr
has." ·
Robert Cantre ll,
. Santa Fe.Springs ~
As preg machinist, '
R~bert keesn the presses
running, and. protect!' a $4
million Investment.
"Where P~Rle make the difference."
330 W. Bay St., Costa 1M esa 642-4321
~ HUNTINGTON B~CH 11! FOUNTAIN VALLEY.* LAGUNA BEACH
•
,.
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday. February 1, 1982 H /F I
Hopeful . I
eye Ha}raka~a votes
Senator's surprise withdrawal from politics triggers scramble in GOP
MONTEREY <AP) -U.S.
Sen. S.I. Hayakawa'a surprise
withdrawal from politics has
triggered a frenetic scramble
among seve n remaining
RepubUcan candidates for the
Senate to court Hayakawa's
political supporters.
But the biggest unanswered
ques tion as nearly 2,000
Republicans concluded their
state convention here Sunday
was who would 6e helped most
by Hayakawa 's decision to
withdraw from the June 8
Senate pr;,nary and retire from
politics at the end or hiB term
next January.
Remaining In the race for the
GOP nomination are U.S. Reps.
Barry Goldwater Jr .. Pete
McCloskey and Bob Dornan:
San Dle10 Mayor Pete Wllsqn,
President Reagan's dau1hter
Maureen , state Sen. John
Schmitz of Newport Beach, and
former Lear Corp. prtisident Ted
Bruinsma. Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr., is expected to be the
Democratic nominee.
Wilson was the firs t to
announce e ndorsements of 15
prominent Hayakawa
supporters, with former state
GOP chai rm an Mik e
Montgomery topping his list.
"We expect to pick up a great
many o f the Senator 's
suru>orters. It will help us a
great deal." Wilson said.
But most o r the o ther
contenders were more cautious
"No one has the momentum to
take advantage or this. It's a
wide open race," Dtirnan said.
Dornan , a flamboyant
conservative from Los Angeles
who calls himself "B·l Bob" 1o
desc ribe' his support of the
military. also was the surprise
winner in an unofficial straw
poll of convention delegates
conducted by the California
Republican League.
In that survey. Dornan was
Ca vored for the Senate by 95
delegates. followed by Wilson,
with 94 . Mcclos k ey, 90 ,
Goldwater, 59 ; Ms. Reagan, 24,
Gruinsma, 19, and Schmitz, 11.
Those rankings, which have no
effect o n o ffi c ial party
activities, a r e substantially
different from results of these
independent polls or the general
public
Goldwater led all three polla,
followed In order by Wilson,~
McCloskey and Hayakawa, with
Dornan firth choice of GOP
voters ln two polls and sixth ·
choice In the other. •
The delegates also favored
state Attorney General George A
Deukmejlan over Lt. Gov. Mike ,.
C urb for th e Republlcan ,1 nomination for governor by a ·i:
146·95 margin Deukmejian also 11
leads Curb in statewide voter,.,,
surveys
For months. the 75-year-old ·l
Hayawaka has said repealedJy, n
both in public and private, that, e
he was in the Senate race to n
stay, denouncing what he called
a group or GOP ''kingmakers" .;
who tried to persuade him to it
s tep aside f or a younger.u
stron~er candidate. b
J
SF club blaze causes $2 million damage I .
Antiques, paintings of Concordia-Argonaut saved; faulty wiring blamedl
Al'W ........
HART'S HEART \<·tor RolX'rt Wag ner "i.llchcs .\mt•n t•un
Heart A'>soriat1on <.'l'lchnl~ ..,oflhall gamt• with cluughtl'rs
Natasha .JI 1 left and ('ow1ne~. 7. in Be\·crh llills It \\i.ts
Wa gnC't"s st'<'Ond µuhli<· .ippeurann• sine<.· lht• death of his
wife. Nalalll' Wood, lht• fi rst being at Salurda\ ... Coldt•n
Globe la wards .
SAN FRANCISCO <AP > -His
grandfathers once ran the place
and he played and ate meals
there when he was a boy, so
while flames ravaged one of San
Francisco's oldest clubs. Walter
Newman felt like home was
burning. The fire caused $2
million damage.
··There's a lot of wonderful
memoMes going up in flames,"·
the 61 -year-old Newman said
Sunday as he watched firemen pour water into the 74-year-old
Concordia-Argonaut Club.
Firemen saved the antiques
and paintings.
$300,000 fire
guts restaurant
SAN DIEGO CAP > --Pat
Curran's Training Tatle, a
The Change Starts When You Do ...
The nme To Start Is Now ...
The Place Is MPowers''! Chllnoe It All!
0.amancaHy """'°"e !he way you
IOOk 1ee1 ano appeal 10 others We 11 make ,,,.
cnange Easy and Fun 8'1en prepare you lor _,.,...IV
All ctasse$ 1a110red IO your age and neecll
IN ORANGE COUNTY
3 TOWN & COUNTRY, ORANGE
J.714J S..7-8~28 John KODel1 Po"9S
CALL OR COME IN TOOAV
SENIOR CITIZENS
$1.00 Hearing Tests Set "'
For Newport Beach
ELECTRONIC HEARING TESTS will be given at
Newport Beach Hearing Aid Center
Mon., Feb. 1, Tues., Feb. 2, Wed., Feb. 3
9 .\.~1. to 5 P.)f.
Hearin~ tests will be conducted by a Hearing Aid Specialist,
who is licensed by the California State Board of Medical Quality
Assurance as a Hearing Aid Dispenser.
Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding is welcome
to a test emploiying the latest electronic equi~menl which will
determine his or her particular loss. You will see a modern
hearing aid so tiny it fits tofaUy within the ear.
NEW~ORT BEACH HEAIUNG AID GENTER
1600 West Coast Highway Newport Beach 646-8266
CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT TO A VOID WAITING
One of the best
on t1tne records going
That's style Apprec1
at1ng you and showing
we appreciate vou
That's stvle fares that
save you monev everv
day on everv flight.
That's stvle, too A1rCa1 we do more than get
vou there we get you
there in stvle1
PORTlftND
res taura nt popular with pro
football players and fans, was
gutted by a $300,000 lire early loday.
No injuries were reported.
Larry Stewart, lire department
spokesman., s aid the origin of
spokesman, said the cause of the
blaze was arson.
Reagan lwuse
sale called off
LOS ANGELES <AP >
President Reagan's attorney
says the discovery o f an
··altered" photocopy of papers
he signed two weeks ago m the
sale of the Reagan home in
Pacific Palisades caused the
deal with a Nevada corporation
to be called orf.
The home has been sold to
a no ther buye r att orney
Steven J . Halpe rn and two
Halpern family trustees fpr
an undisclosed price.
"There was an irregularity
a bout the first deal, there is no
question about It," Roy D.
Miller said when asked about
Boy, 12, guilty
in stabbing
POMONA. Calif' <AP>
Even though 12-year-old Leo
Anguiano "as convicted for
sta bbmg a neighbor in the heart,
the tough little kid won't spend a
day in 1ail.
A Juvenile court JUdge has
ruled that the La Puente youth
stabbed James Diaz, 13. last
Oct 9 The ruling was said to be 1
. 'tanta mount to being round,
guilty of second-degree murder" j
fo r an adult. Bu{ because
Anguiano 1s. no~ an adult, he will:
be placed in Juvenile facilities 1 until he is 21 1
GM plant closes
for2weeks
'
LOS ANGELES <AP ) -•
Sagging car sales and large
inventories forced Gene ral I.
Motors lo close its South Gate I
plant for two weeks, idling 2,200
workers. )
For one week , GM also is
closing 10 car plants and one\
truck plant out of its 29 plants in
the country . ,
·I
I . .,
I ,
.# ~
:I
JI
'1
·'
-l ;l
I·
f
.
Orange Coaat OAJLY PILOT/Monday, February 1. 1982 . .
Who's making
your spaghetti?
The National Macaroni Manuhclurers
Aaaociation, ~HtJn1 l11t July. at the Southern
California, Kaflo9o.llnlted reeort community of La
Costa, chanted It.I name to the National Paata
AsaoclatJon. the name cha.nae mact. a lot of aenae.
Macaroni W81 clearly too rettricttve. After au.
the same companies whJch make macaroni also
make 1palhettl, laaa1oa, ooodln and other forms of
the nour-and·water pa1te that the ltallana call
'''pasta." So why not adopt the orlalnal name, wbJch
coven everything? The macaroni makers did.
It W81 a cban1e that occurred u Americana were
on their way to another record puta-eaUn1 year. It
seems that we spent more than $1 bUUon lut year on
pasta products. In tonnace. it wu more than 2 billlon
pounds. That's plenty of puta maklnc tu way down
our gullets. The hl1b prtee of beef ls a bl1 motivator.
Ironically, ttiou1h. ju.t aa the U.S. makers were
taking the Italian tum aa the name of their
asso~iation, they were headlna for a big street fifht
with the Italian pasta makers across the Atlantic
Ocean .. American companies that make pasta sprane
up dunng World War II when JtalJan lmportJI were
cut off. Now the Italians, watching American
consumption grow, want to reclaim this market.
The only trouble ~ with that, accordinl
t o L e s t e r R . \j' 0 Thurston Jr .. ~ ,
chairman or C.F. ..,.., /.)J' Mueller, the rvttion's .i11•-.~ ...... ~..._ _____ _
:~rgt~~ r~~e~a~~r~ lllTll lalRiR
ma king their bid
here with the help of healthy subsidies' from the
Italian government. Some It.alian·made pasta has
always been imported lnto the United States. But it
was never an important factor ln the market because
of a wide price differential. Now that's suddenly changed.
Thurston, who's currenUy aervln1 as president of
the National Pasta Assoclatioo, says that imports of
Italian pasta have been lncreasin& at the incredible
rate of 30 percent a year, to the point where they are
now approaching 10 percent ol the U.S. market. And
behind that surge is a narrowln1 of the price
diflerence. Italian pasta is landlnl on the Eastern
Seaboard and moving into stores to sell at only·
10-cent.s·a·pound more than the domestic product.
One of the major brands you can find now ln the New
York market is Spiga d'Oro, which comes from
Perugia and ranks ninth ln the Italian market. The
leading brand in Italy, world's largest pasta market,
is Barilla.
Thurston claims there's no way Italian pasta
could be packed and shipped across the oce1111 and
sell for so little withQut a helping hand from the
government. As a result, the National Pasta
Association has filed a protest with the United States
trade representative . who's Investigating the
complaint.
So it's the U.S. pasta makers squaring off against
the Italian pasta benders, making the same charges
that have been leveled by other industries <TV, steel,
car> against the Japanese. Not only are there more
Toyotas and Datsuns running on our roads, when the
drivers get home, they're eating Italian spaghetti.
Thurston bas a keen app~iation of bow shipping
costs can inflate the price of your product. While the
pasta market has been growing, we really have no
truly national brands in this business because it
doesn't pay· to ship packages of macaroni and
spaghetti across the country. Mueller Is based in
Jersey City, N.J., and even though it's .owned by p
San Francisco conglomerate, Foremost-McKesson, it
doesn'l distribute west of the Mississippi. It makes
'pasta in Jersey City and Chicago, and it achieves its
No. 1 national ranking by virtue of taking down
something like 25 percent of the market in the 24
states where Mueller products are sold.
This is a market where local brands are strong.
Prince ls a big brand in the Boston area. Golden
Grain is powerful ln Northern California. The No. 2
brand, nationaJly, is probably American Beauty.
which di.stributes west of the Mississippi ; it belongs
to Pillsbury. Hershey, the chocolate co111pany, bas
established a presence in this market by buying four
different local pasta benders <Skinner. Macaroni,
Demon.Leo, Procino).
Seeing how fragmented the market is. the
Italians have rfloved in. They have already knocked
the French wine makers for a loop. Not.-they're
·, going after the American pasta makers.
Gol~ metals quotations
GoM
4 By Tlte Alaoclated Presa
Selected World gold prices tQday ·
IAaclom: morning fixinl $381.25, off $5.75.
Los .. •: altemoon fhdn1 $379.50, off $7.SO. Puta: $373.22, off $10.60.
Frukfut: $382.96, otf$7.05.
Zartdl: Late fixing $379.00, off $7.00 bid ; $382.00 asked.
Rudy Ii Barmaa: only daily quote $379.50, off $7.50.
Ea1ellaa.rd: only daily quote $379.50. off $'7.50. bielbrd: only dally quote fabricatect $388.48, oft $7.87.
Met®
I ' Nl:W YORK <AP> -Spot nonferrous metal prtce.
today;
Cepper 7'7,.-IO cenc,. a pound, U.S. destJnatlons.
LeM 30 «nLI a pound.
&lae 424 cenLI • pound, delivered.
ftl.'7.71$& Met.ala WHk compoltte lb.
Ahmln• 7f.n eeata•a poond, N.V.
lletary S3IO.OO per flaak,
........ '384.00 troy OJ., N.Y.
Sil~r
• Hand1 tr Hlm>ao, Sl.OS5 per troy ocmce.
. . .
'
talking about athletics •••
. Ancl John Spangler will cover 45 years of fond memories • .
COACH SPANGLER John Spangler jumped.-
at the chance .to coach both football and track
at Franklin High. He quickly worked his way
up to head coach in both sports.
8y llM MeCUaDIE • ·---~ .......... John "Toqy" Span1ler leantd back
in bll euy ohalr In the Uvln1 room of
hla ~01y Huntlncton Beach home and
politely apolo1l&ed for 1pendln1 ao much tlme dlacll11in1 the past,
fearln1 that be had bored hll cuest. '•on~ )'OU 1et me 1\artecl talklnc
about athleOcs, 1 kind of ramble," he
aald.
That's understandable, conaldertn1
the 81-year-old Span1ler bu more
than 45 years of tond memories of hla
· Involvement iii aports that be'a easer
to share. Apolo1lea were hardly
necessary.
SPANGLER aETlaED from
ac:tlve-athleUcs ill 1960, followtn1 as
yean of coaching football and track
at Franklin H11h lo Los An1eles. But
he stlll keeps In touch with old
friends and former -pupils to
exebange stories and reminisce.
There wu a lot or reminlacln1 at
the Inn at Ute Park in Anaheim,
where the 25th annual Callfomia
Coaches Aasoclation convention
awards banquet was held.
That was the night Spangler was
inducted into that organlzaUonra Hall
of Fame
Spangler's athletic career began frl
years ago with his freshman year at '
Saota Ana High. He competed in both
football and track for four years,
graduating in l920.
"In those days, we played schools
like Long Beach, San Die10.
Pasadena and Fullerton. They called
it the Pacifi<: Coast League.
"We <Santa Ana> drew from
Garden Grove, Newport Beach, San
Juan Capistrano, Tustin and all the
Oran1e County far01 areaa. Wltb aU
that area we onlY had a atudeot body
of about 500 kids," Span1ler 11ld.
F&OM SANTA AN.\, Spanater
went on to Occidental C0Ue1e after
pAssln1 up an opport~nlty to attend use on an athletic scholarahlp. That
In Itself la one of many fuclnat1n1
stories. •
"J was auppoeed to 10 to USC," he
aald.,"Gua Henderson (t"en the USC
football coach) had offered me a full
acholarshi(>.
'"One day when I was at the beach,
he came down wlth the USC athletic
· Wl}en I was coaching
football. I never had
more than one assistant
coach. Today's coaches
rely heavily on
assistants.'
director and talked to my mother for
about two hours. Gus told my mom
not to worry about my finances while
I was 1n school. He had a job lined up tor me.
'·My mother thou'ght that was
great and she a,sked what kind of job
It was. Gus told her, 'We hav~ him
working in a pool hall.'
"Back then, pool hall was a dirty
word and my mother said, 'I assure
you my son will not go to use ..
··I turned around a nd went to
Occidental a'nd I'm glad 1 did,"
Spangler said. ·
So were the members of the Oxy
athletic staff.
Shul8 cheers Chargers
San Diego pair helps position Lt>wery for winning kick
Dallas) a lot and I waited for
him lo clear out and then I
rushed."
MEMORIES -Huntington
Beach's John Spangler recalls
some great moments in athletics
during his long career.
·'Tony's forte is spearing forward
passes out of the atmosphere," read
a newspaper clipping from the 1920s.
IN 1923, SPANGLER was an
All-America end at Oxy, but his
talents were hardly restricted to the
football field.
In track, he was part of a mile
relay tl!lm that set a world record in
the Penn Relays in 1924. The national
recognition earned him a chance at
trying out for the 1924 U.S. Olympic
team bu\ he auf(ered 11 pulled
ham1trtn1 muacl• durinl bl.a ftnt
week of trainln1 and w~a fore.cl to
drop out.
Span1ler admit.a that he waan•t
sure which dlrecUQJJ be wu headed
once hll colle1e career wu over.
"l tried rather half-heartedly to 1et
a Job," he said. J bad a~pUed at the
phone company and at an ad a.cency. ,.,
•·Frankly, it never entered my "'
mind to go into coachln1.'' ..
lo
BUT WHEN HE waa offerred the ,
opportunity to ao to Franklln Hllb aa !
a coach for track and football,!
Spaneler Jumped at It. He obtained •
hJa teaching credential and quickly ~
~tabllshed blmaelf, workln1 hiJ way
up to head coach for both sporta, !
Span1ler says that footbafl baa *
been his first love, but bp's watched "'
the 1ame go throu1h some dramatic !
changes over the years. !
"We didn't play the same t.¥J>e of •
football you see now,·• he said. !
"When I WU coaching football, I !
never had more than one assistant ~
coach. Today's coaches rely heavily '
on assistants and they try to get Ule !
very l'.>est. ~
"It's an entirely different game." "
Among the stories shared Saturday :
night were Spangler's experiences ~
coaching tennis great Bobby Riggs at ~
Franklin, the lime his football team "
rallied from a 12-0 deficit in the lut ~
18 seconds to win , 13·12, and h1a days ·:
of spearing passes out of the at-~
mosphere at Occidental.
Yes, Tony Spangler has lou of :
stories to tell. As well he shouJd. '
" "Athletics," he said with a smile, ~
"it's been my whole life.'' l
' ·' ..
• A,
Rangers
,. .. ,
~ ,
... thinking
; • • pos1t1ve ~ HONOLULU CAP> -Miami
Dolphins Coach Don Shula may
have-cringed the last time he
saw Dan Fouls and Kellen
Winslow in action, but this lime
of 16 passes for 143 yards on the
day. "The pass to Winslow down
the middle (putting· the ball at
the NFC 5-yard line> broke their
back.''
Lowery, a second-year pro out
of Dartmouth who was turned
down by eight NFL teams before
catching on with the Chiefs, said
he wasn't nervous before his
game-winning kick.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. February 1, 1982 H /F BS INGLEWOOD <AP> -The
red-hot New York Rangers
ended January on a positive :
note. Now, Coach Herb Brooks :
has to ponder what he wants his "
club to accomplish in February. ·
he was cheering them.
When the American Football
Conference All-stars, coached
by SrfluJa, needed a late score to
\ake a 16-13 victory in Sunday's
Pro Bowl , the San Diego
Chargers' Fouts ·l o·Winslow
combihation helped get it.
Fouts took the AFC 69 yards,
with the big gainer a 23-yard
pass to Winslow, to set up the
deciding 23-yard field goal by
'Kansas City's Nick Lowery with
three seconds remaining.
"It was anythlne but a dull
game," said Shula, who recently
had watched Fouls and Winslow
he lp the Chargers knock the
Dolphins o ut or the NFL
playoffs.
''On the final drive, our
offensive line dominated play,"
said Fouls, who completed eight
Winslow, the NFL's top
receiver for the past two
seasons, had six catches for 86
yards an4 shared Pro Bowl Most
Valuable Player honors with
NFC defensive end Lee Roy
Selmon of Tampa Bay.
"It's a real honor lo be named
co-MVP 'and an honor to be on
the field with the fanesl players
in the game," said Winslow.
··There -was more illtemrty
this year," added Ule two-time
Pro Bowler. "Pride was a
factor."
Selmon, in his Ulird Pro Bowl,
recorded four quarterback aacb
for losses totaUnLa5 yards, and
was in on eighlla-c:in!r.-
. 'I was just rwminl aJ"OWMI
trying to do what we practiced
.all week," he said. "They were
p~cking up Randy White <of
Miller's little talk
is in.spi·rational
Nicklaus second in San Diego
SAN DIEGO CAPJ -Johnny
Miller had a little talk with
himself after playing poorly in
the Phoenix Open a week ago.
"Boy, don't tell me," Miller
said, recalling the one-way
conversation, "I 'm going to
have a bad year after a $500,000
start."
He put those doubts to rest
Sunday with 1l one-stroke victory ov~r on-rushing Jack Jl.licklaus
10 the San Diego Open golf
tournament.
''lt was important to turn it
around," Miller said. "I'm
happy to get that. orr my back.
Thete was a lot of pressure on
me. Jack really put It to me.''
But It wasn't quite enougn.
"I'd figured, the night before,
that a 64 ou"ht to be enoul(h to
win the golf tour.nament,"
Nicklaus said. ''But It wasn't."
BE GOT THAT tar1et score,
8-under-par and a rec~rd on the
7 ,002-yard South course at the
Torrey Pines Golf Club. The
_effort. included ea1le·3' on the
ninth and 18th.
It put MUler's back to the
wall. But be nursed home the
diminisblnc lead with a
2-under-par 10 and a 270 total, lB
shots under par.
His front-running effort was
just good enough. He was never
caught, but Tom Kite and
Nicklaus each ~ol to within one.
Kite , the 1981 leading
money-winner who lost a playoff
at the Bob Hope only two weeks
ago, rolled in a 12-fool birdie
putt ori t)le 15th hole to puJI lo
within one shot. Bqt Miller
dropped a IO-footer on top of it.
and had his margain again.
NICKLAUS, PLAYING in
front of Miller. hit a 3-wood to
within five feel of the cup on the
par·S finishing hole. And he, too.
got to within one when he made
the eagle pytt.
Kite's challen,._ disapptiared
when be dunked his second shot
in the lake in front or the 18th
green, and Miller needed only
the routine par to win it. He got
It, 2-puttlng from 20 feel.
Kite finished wit~ a 70 and
was tied for third at 273 with
To'm Weiskopf. Weiskopf had a
closing 69 in the mild, sunny
we•ther. Curtis Stran1e was
next at 68-274 and Andy Bean
followed at 68 -275 . .Masters
champ Torn Watson wasn't able
to cenerate a challenge and shot
71-276.
"'
"I thought before the kick,
'I've done it before and here it is
again.' " he said.
He had missed a PAT attempt
on the AFC's first touchdown
when the snap from center was
off, and also missed wide on a
~2 -yard field goa! attempt
earller ln the contest.
"I· fi1ured it would be a
low-scorin1 game." said NFC
Coach John McKay of Tampa
Bay. "'Ibere was just too much
defense. It takes· longer than a
week to get an offense
coordinated." ·
The NFC, trailinl IHI late in
the final quarter. tied the game
on a 4-yard touchdown run by
Dallas' Tony Dorsett with 2:43
left.
THE AMERICAN cOnference
took a 6-0 halftime lead on a
4-yard scori"g pass from San
Francisco quarterback Joe
Montana to {fampa Bay light
end Jimmie Giles just before the
intermission. The score came
after Dallas rookie Everson
Walls made the first of his two
interceptions of Fouts, retuming-
the ball 12 yards to the AFC
4-yard line.
The PAT kick by DaJlas'
Rafael Septien was blocked by
Kansas City's Gary Green.
The AFC bounced back with'
two third-period touchdowns, the
first a 2·yard dash by San
Diego's Chuck Muncie and the
other a 1-yard spurt by
Houston's Earl Campbell. The
second score was set up when
the New York Jets· Mark
Gastineau plucked a Montana
fumble out of the air and
relurne<t It 21 yards to the NFC
1-yard.Une.
Pittsburgh's Donnie 'Shell and
Jack Lambert, and Denver's
Randy Gradishar turned in fine
defensive performances for the
AFC, which allowed the NFC
just 158 total yards.
CAMPBELL WAS the game's
leading rusher with 11 carries
for 52 yards. Dorsett led the
NFC with 39 yards on 13 carries.
Cincinnati's Ken Anderson
completed eight of 14 passes for
106 yards for the AFC. Montana
-four of 14 for 23 -and
Atlanta's Steve Bartkowski -
three of 15 for 49 -had their
problems for the NFC.
.~ .........
AMONG THE GIANTS E.cislem Conference All-star Isiah
Thomas <cente r 1 passes off to a teammate· beneath the
basket as Kareem Abdul-J a bbar 1left 1 ~nd Lonnie
Sheltqn of the West appl~· pressure. East came uwa\' with
a 120· 118 victor~ in East Rutherford. ~ .. J. Sunda~
Don Maloney scored two goals
and assisted on another Sunday •
night as tne Rangers raised .
their record to 8-2-2 in their last ·
12 games with a 6-3 triumph •
over the Los Angeles Kings. j
New York has a 24·20·7 pverall • !
mark. •
"We've had some objectives .• 1
during J anuary, one of them : II
was lo get over .500, which we _
accomplished," said Brooks. •
"We'll have to set new goals for
February We always make the
goals somewhat out of reach but I
reasonable.
"Outside of the power flays, I
which Los Angeles is very· adept I
at. we were in control of the 'I
game. The most important
thing, though, was that it was I
our third straight win on a very l tough road trip.'· • . • ,
The Rangers ha v.e fl ve more I
games remaining on the :
eight-game trip, longest for the
National Hockey League club in · II 26 years. .
The setback s napped a
seven-game unbeaten streak for I
the Kings, 14·26·11 , but that's a · I
bit misleading. Los Angeles I
whipped St. Louis 7 .4 on
Saturday after tying six straight 11 games. Over the last 18 games, , 1 the Kings are 1-8·9. ~ I
··Whe n you play a team •
having a hard time, you know it· I ·
will be a difficult game," said ·J l
Brooks. "You know that they'll \
(the Kings) be hard to deal with, P
especially at hom~. Los Angeles"'
has played well over the last six ..
games and their home record is ~
very ~ood.'' ~
!l ~~~~~~~~~~~---a
KINGS WAIVE
PAUL· MULVEY
e " 6 i l ,.
INGLEWOOD <AP> -.Left,
wing Paul Mulvey, who an1ered ~
Los Angeles Coach Don Perry J
when he refu.sed to leave the j
Kines' bench to engage in a ftgbt ~
last weekend, has been placed •
on waivers, the National K'ockey?
Lea1ue team announced Swtday~
nietu.. •
1r:no NHL team claim•'
Mulvey ~er 72 hours, be inay =
be sent to tbe Kln11 • Americu g
Hockey League farm club at a
New Haven, sa.ld • el.ab:
spokeaman. lt'• alao PG£1il*:
M1,1lvey might be releued. •
Nicklaus was one back at 271.
The victory wa3 tbe 21st oa the
American tour lor Miller. tylne
him with South African Gary
~layer for 16th ptace on the
Amertcan winninl fiat. It also
put him In the field tor the
Tournament ot Champlona 1n
Apri}. "I reall,y w•nted that. t
juat love •.hat tournament," ·
J ahhar shr.µgs off· suhnar .-AJl~star perf orinance
Miller aaid. ,,.,,
The 7·2 Lakera' center, who l~ the
second leading scorer ln NBA hlatory.
also committed three fouls and one
turnover In 22 lnlnDtea on court.
"You don't want to disappoint your
fans, but I'd rather ll,ave a bad 1ame ln
\be All·atar Game than 'have lt durin1 the relUlar aeUC>n," Abdul·Jabbar 11ld.
Blrcf, wbo waa named ll01t Valuable
Player afttr 1corln1 lt poiota and
pulllftl down 1Z rebouadl, cbaractertud
lit• All·st.ar 1ame u faat, fun and
plly1icaJ. •
.. That waa detleltely the klnd of
All·atar Game 10• enjoy paa,1111
_,.eaun •••r1one wanted to _plar
.... tMr." laAd Blnl, a N forward\for
. • tlM a-. c.eua. ., )
..
•
Newspaper
logs easy
DEAR PAT D\JNN : Would you pleaae
repeat the lnstructloas for rollla«
newspapers for fireplace use.
-B.B., Newport Beacb
Newspaper logs can be made by folding
old papers into foot long and half·incb thick
sectjons. Soak overnight ln a solution of
water and detergent. Roll each section
a round a one-lnch rod, squeeze out excess
water and smooth t he sides. Then slide the
paper logs off the rods and stand up to dry
thoroughly before burning. .
Another method ptoduces f{reen n~.
Dissolve one cup of borax in one gaJI of
warm water. Soak newspapers <unrolle
this solution and drain off excess. Roll et
papers, one or two sheets at a time, around a
metal or wooden rod. Tie rolls with wire and
remove rod. Stand up to dry for about three
we~ks. •
Special shoes "?anted
DEAR PAT DUNN: For years I've worn
the same style of shoes manufactured by
Regal. When I discovered my ahre was no
longer carried locally, I contacted the
compuy ln St. Louis. I received a letter ln
June saying that a s~clal order would be
placed for me and It wbuld take about eight
weeks for delivery. I stlll havee't received
the shoes and would like to know what bas
happened.
J.M., Irvine
Regal's spokeswoman said that this ~style
of shoe is no longer being manufactured in
the width you need . Apparently, there's not
much demand for this s tyle in the narrow B
width and the mac hine used to make 1t 1s no
longer operable . .Regal did call m any of its
shoe stores throughout the country to see lf
any still had this s hoe in stock, but none did.
Perhaps our readers can come up with
another source where you could still
purchase the $45 black shoes you want an size
91'2 8 The old style number is 815GlS and the
current s tyle is 835YR15.
• ·Got a problem·> Then wntl' to Pat \. i Dunn Pot W111 cut red tape. getting
• the ans~rs and actwn you need lo
•
solve 1nequ1t1e11 1n government and
~ business Mail yo-..ir questions to Pat
1 I Dunn. Al Your Servtce. Orange Coast
Dally Ptlot. P 0 Bo:r l.'i60. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. As
many letters as pou1ble will be ans!Df!rl!d. but phon"ed
inqu1nes or letters not including the reoder·s full
name. address and business hours· phone num~t
cannot be conmdered Thl.'l column appears datly e:r·
cept S)lhdays. ··
DEATH NDTICIS
WIGHTMAN mother Stelltt Miller and
DEATHS
RSEWHERE
HOUSTON 11\P1 tiam
"Ll&blalft'' llopldu, 60. 1
11u n11wrlter, slnaer .and
auit11rhsl CIJlll'Cl the l11&t of
thtt old·llme country blue•
mu11lclanb, died -Saturd11y.
lie m•dt rnor1.1 than 100
records on about 1 dottn
dlrrerent labels, lncludin&
Roclcy Mountain," .. Mr
C:hurlie :· "Corree Blues:·
.. Short lfoltt'd Woman" 11nd · AMII.> Mill' '.
C:OINBlJRGJI Scothind
1AP 1 Lord Peter
Rilchle·Calder, 7 ~. a
)Ourn11IU>t . scientist and
I e r t u re r u t 1111 m e r o u !j
universities. died Sunday
BUENOS /\I RE S ,
Argentina 1AP1 Flurlndo
Sassone, 69, 11 composer
"'ho gained popularity
during Argenlanu's ··golcten
age .. of tango m the late
1940s and eurh ·sos . died
Sunday
T·1'N
.. OTICI 01' TltUSTll'S SALi
T.$, .... 71M
On FebrUMy 14. 1"2, •I 10 00 • m ,
A LLSTATE TllUS T O EEO
SERVICES IMC •• duly •PPGlnl ..
Tru>tff uno.r -P••Ouenl lo o...i of
Trutl recor-s.totemo.r lO t-, H
Intl. Ho 4C)Jt. In -ll1'7, ~ , ...
of OllklaJ }lKotds In tlW office 9f II,. County Ao<oraer al o .. ~ County,
Stale of C•llfornl• uecuteo Dy
OOHA1'0GA8AIELE Will SELL AT
PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST
BIOOEA FOR CASH (1>9yable al lllN
ol w .. In lawful ..-y of the United
Stai..> at Vie trCll'tl entrancoe IO o ... Or•-CouMv C-t'-"'· 100 Civtc Ctnltr Orlve Wut. Santa Ana,
Cellfornla all rlQlll, llU• end tnttrHI
<OftVtyecl IO -now l\tld oy II under Hid 0-.cl ol Trufl In 11\t ,,.._r1y
tlh••l•O In Mid County and Stal•
d .. c:rltleda
LOI IJ In 8100 G of Trac1 l\lo ~.In
11\t Clly ol CO.~ -.-. County ol
Oren99, Sia'* ol Cellfwnl•. •• ,..,
mep rtcor-)11 8-19, ~· U •NI 1' Of MISCtltantol.K MaPS, In tl\t offlu
ol l!>t county rec:order ol said counh.
Th,. •I•••• aodrou ano oll•••
common Ottlen•llon, 11 •nv. ot tM
rt•I property dHCrtb«O tl>Ove I\
puroortetl lo be >SI Flower CO>lt
Mua.CallforN•.
Th• ...,.,,,~ Tr1.-tff dt>elatm>
env llaOllll't for any 111eorrec1,...u or
IM '''"' _,.., end ot""r common clnlgrwllon, ti any, .,.._n 11ere1n
Solo \ale w•ll ~ m-. but wttl\Oul
covtne f't or w•rr•nty. eapreS$ or
Implied. f'eOMd•no 1111•. -vulOn, or
encumllrM<H in<l..Olno 1.-. cMroe•
encl UPtf\W\ al lht Tru•IM -Of Ille tru>O crHWdl>y wod owoot Tr~1.10
P•¥ l111ttesl llWrton from Augu\I I.
1•11 •t 11 ~r-cent per •nnum ., pro•IOtO 1n ... a note plu\ co\I\ •nd
eny ed••nU•of ll O.W. 4' with lnttrell.
The -l1C1ary unotr \aid o.d of
l r u ii herttofort t uc: utro •no
Otrtvereo to Ille -rt~ a wrlti.n Otctarationof Oetaull •nd 0.mand for
Sate, tnO a ...,., ..... NOh<t of Oeftvll
•nd EIKtlo> to SPll The under\'9M<1
t •uHd MIO Noltc:e ot Otl•ull and
EIKllOn to Seit to be recor-on Ille
tounty w~rf' th• '"•' property ''·
•oc:•led Oat.O J.,,uary u . 1981
All1Ul9 T"''' Oee<I Scrvlct\ t Inc nwldTrvA ..
Franc" A~ Harr•• Publl•lleel Or-Coa11 0 .. 1¥ Polol,
Feb 6, 13, 1'111 ~
NOTICE 01' TltUSTEl'S s.AU:
f ~ 1110 • .-1
T 0 SERVICE COMPANY es duly
._inted T--llle tof-lftt
_,._ -al lnnt WILL SELL
AT P UBLIC AUCTION TO THE
HIGHEST BIOOEA FOR CASH 1,,.yel>le •I 11ni-of sale 111 1-f(ll money ol IN United Stalal ell ,..,.,,
1111• end ._.... conveY9<1 llo --... Id Dy II -Yid OMd ol Tr...t Ill
llte p,_-ty lwf'elMn .. o.tcri-.
T"USTO" ROBERT H RAU
IENEFIC IA"Y ARTHUR E M EAlZEL ano MER LE J
LOUISA H WIGHTMAN. Warren Miller or La~una
resident of Balboa . Cu Beach. <.:a . falhC'r Harold
Passed away on J<1nuary 30, lkrnth of Gurden Grove.
1982. She is survived b} hcrl'tt .. brothers J <1mes and
daughter June L Wood . her Uouglas and Sll>ll'r!; Con and
daughter in Iii\\ LOI!. M Crystal Fun<'ral '>ernce'
Wightman. grandr hildrrn.,,.. 111 be held on \\'edne.,da)
Wendy L Freeman, Oou~h1s Februa~ 3, 1!182 <il Pac1f1t•
~ M. Wood Jr . <1nd John and \'te\\ Mortuar) l'haµel ;it
Lisa Wightman Gravesld!.'11 OOA M l ntl·rml'nl at
services will he hl'ld on Pacifi c Vil'\\ Ml'mor1al
Tuesda}. F't•bruar) 2 19R2 JI Park 'lie\\ port lk;ich CJ
2 OO PM at llarbor l.a\\nPac1f1c \'ti.'\\ Mortuar\
Memorial Park Sen 1t·(·.,d1reclors
ME Al ZEl --wH• n joint
lenenl\_ Recor-O.Cemtoer "· 1~• H ln>lr. lllo, 71473 In -1,0. of Offl<l•I AetO<'"dl In ,,,. olfl<• of I ...
Rtcordlr ol Or-c-ty; •<Oki -o f tru\I doc:rlDet lhe lollowlne
""-''" T 111 ta11d referred lo In tllh
.,_,.., ... IS lllueled In IN 5telt of
Cellloml•. County of Or--Is
-·•-n tou-.
under the d 1 re c t ion of DaROS
Harbor Lawn·Mounl Ohvt• JOSEPll P DaROS .
Mortuary or Costa Mesa, rei1idenl of Cosla Me$a. Cu
:>40·5554. Passed away on January 30.
BERNTH l982. Born August 21. 1891 tn
CYNTHIA ANN BERNTfl. Villori8' Vrnelo. It aly
res ident of I~aguna Beach, Sornvecl by his wife Mary.
Ca P assed away onson Charles OaRos of
January 30 . 1982 Bo rnNewport B each . C a .
September 7. 1962 m Long daughter Frances Stoeher of
Beach. Ca Survived by her Long Island. New York. 7 grandchildren and 4
------------i:reat·1raodch1ldren. Mass r Christian Bunal will be on
uesday, February 2. 1982 at
10 OOAM at St Joachim's
Catholic Church. Costa
Mesa. Ca . Inte rment al
Ul'f1 lt•GHO..
SMITH' & TUTHILL
WHTCUff CHA.rll
427 E 171h <;1
Co<;t,1 M!''a
f;4 f>·Cl'.l 7 1
"HCI llOTHHS
SMITHS' MOUUA.U
627 Maon 51
Hun1tnoton &at 11
536 6539
Pa cific View Memorial
Park In lteu of flowers
memonal c<>ntnbul1ons ma)
be made to St Jouch1m·s
athohc Cburcn or the
H arbor Senior Citizens
Pa c ific View Mortuary
1rectors
DOUGLAS
LO I S CA RROLL
I•
11
rAClftC VIEW
......OllAL rAlec
Cetrete"I' Mollua~ Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pac1f1c View Om1p
Newoo11 Beach
6'4·?700
OOL'GLAS . age 81 . a
resident or Westminster, Ca
Passed away on Sunda~.
Januar y 3 1. 1982 ~t
Huntington lntercommun1ly
Hospital. Mr Douglas was a.
veteran of World War I and
a retir ed machinist for
McDonnell Douglas Aircraft
Corpor4llon Beloved
husband of Angie L
Douglas, beloved rather of
C harles P Douglas of
Westminster. Ca and Mary
A. BuUer oC Hesperia. Ca
also surviving are 6
grandchildre n and 9·
11
II .. WeCOIMIQl MOITIIA8fH
LIQ"na Beach
494 9415
Laouna Htll!i
768·0933
Sall-Juan Cap1strl!nO
495·1776
re at-grandc hildren
Funeral ser vices and
nterment are private
Pierce ·Brothers Smiths
Mortuary directors. 53S-6M9
N£L80N
IVEK EDW.Al\O
NELSON. ~Iden\ ot Santa
Ana, Ca. Piassed away on
January 30, 1982. He Is
urv l~ed by bl• wtr~
Pauline, brotber Vlrtor or
M lnneaota. sbtcn1 Vlctort•
hompeon of Iowa •nd IND•
Dennlaon al so of lowa, s~cral f\feffS and ne.pheWJ
ervlces will be held on
ednesday. February a.
H2 al \O:OOAM at the
arbor Lawn Memortal
Chapel wtth Interment 1trvtce lmmedlately
lollowtna. aervJcu vnder
th• dlrtC!lllto of Harbbr
I.awn.Mount Olive M.onual")' Qiililleii ......
l'AACELI Unit No. ~. In Ille City of N __ ,
Beach, c-1¥ of Oron99. SI• .. of
Catlfornla, a --d1t1crl-In Ille G~nlum Pion f'KO<'"-on
Octoht-2'. t'7•, In -llfS7. -
'"· Otfka.. Aecordl ol uld c-oty. PAllCEL2
All undfllldld -etQMY.tfllrd 11'*'1
l11tef'ffl es a -tn <--In ti,.
IH Intern! In --9le G-Aree of Ull I of Trect 16U, H Pff mW
llttd '" tioo41 J74. ,. ... , H lo 4J
IMIOdlve, MIKt!I-~ lfl tN
offkt of ... c-ty It«-ol Mid c-tv. • -" t«m '' .._.,_ lft.,,. Altlctt tntllled "o.llnllloM" el ""'
Oe<le r8tlon fl/I ~. C-t-
end lletarkti.. recorded°" Oct-•
, •• ""· ... -119),, --ol Offl<l•I Aecordll ol wkl c-tv CThe
"Oe<1eretlorl"I, -ony eme110rntll'lt1
or enMutleM u..ffio.
EXCEPT THElt51'AOMellOll, .-.
")In••••• anc:t oh,., .,ydroc•rtleft•,
11e1-• ._ fl/I 500 1 .. 1, wltt.11 !tie f19'\I ol wrf __ ,.,, as,._,..., In
lfttlrvmenb ol rec-
PAltCEL 3·
E eM..-tlt l a tUClll --l(tl
ltl•r• -11Culerly Ml torlll In IN Artklt nilled "E-ls" of IN
0•< terellon 1111dtr lllt S•c llo•
-11\tltl In -II Artk lt tntltled M
1o11-1: ··u1111tlft", "'9111-1 •""
EftCrM<_ .. -··c-.....
EeMm.otl" Cl U S•• lslend Ori••· Newport
BeoKll,CA "(II • tcrwt eddreu or commot1
dHlfflellon It tl\own •l>ovt, flt ••Hanly ,, ,,., ..... 10 Ill
complt-• or c.etrett-1." Tiit
-fl<IMT -u ld Oee4ll o4 T""''· .., ,. • ..., ol. llr'MC"., ......... ... .............. , ......... , . .,,,
Mf'elof-........ -41111--·~
IN "'*' llOI• • wnl'9n Ot<leraO• .. Default .... ~ ,., s.tt • .,,.
•rltttll llOlk• of brttcll end of tltctlen
It c-utt IN ..,..r-tllNd 10 Mii Mlt ~--l•fY .......... ....... ... ....,...,_ ........... CWMllll NlfMtleettl.,_ll_fil~• w llt<.,. Ot-n. "'1 .. ltlMf
.... ,,.. Ill ... '® ..... ltf', ..
..141 Offlelel ,_..,..., ~ .... wtll • lftMt, ..,, wllllelll
ctYtfttllt H WtfrtfllY, ... ,. ... et 1""'4t.f,,....,... Uta., .... ..,._, M "'"'"'"ll'ICAM, .. ,., .. l'MIMll4111 ,,11oc1H1 -tt1 t11t .,...l•l .._... W .... DIM ttl Trllll, will\ 1.....-M ...................... ...__...,.,,.
llMlff ......... ttl ..W ,,_.of T""'-
f .. t , dlerWH ......... of ..
Trwt ..... ttl -. trwb <INtlll "9 .... ~f!IYf\111 ........... .. llofd ... ,...,,, "*-Y , ... , ... .,.,.f'UI, ...... ~._ .... --. it .. c;Nk c..-...........
-IMtO.--A-, 111 ltlt en.. "'°' ....... At ...... ttl .. llllllel .. kMIM ..... ~ ................. ...
llltMld •tM<t tf 11\e .. 11 .. tltfl ... .,, ........ ,.. ..... ............... , ..... , ......... u• •f9•11tu 11 ase.tu.et; T• ~---... -. ......
!NICI COM~MIY a.-.T,,,_.
==~·-==-.. ar .......... ..._CA_. ..,... __
........ 0-.. .... ..,: ...... ., .. ,...,,,..:... . _..
'
----
Consolidated Report of Condition of "Citizens Bank of Costa Mesa", C•unty of Orange, and Domestic
Subsidiaries at the clos. of business on December 31,
1911.
State Bank No. 1060
ASSETS
Thousands of
Dollars
Ca s h and due from banks
Investment securities,
. . . . . . • . . . . . 3.391
(Market value SS.180) ..................... 7, 153
a. Loans, Total (excluding
unearned Income) .... 43.~93
b. Less: Reserve for possible
loan losses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 200 c. Loans, net........... . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .. ~3.293
Bank premises. F.F. & E .. etc ................. 3.497
Other assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .......•......... 1,437
TOTAL ASSETS ........................ . ... 58,771
LIABILITIES
A. TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC
OFFICES .......................... 51.577
Total demand deposits ............. 15,913
Total time and savings deposits .... 35,664
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC
AND 1;..QREIGN OFFICES.......... • .. 51,577
Federal funds Purcna~d and securities
sold under agreements to rePUrchase in domestic ottaces ....................... 500
Other liabilities for bOrrowed money,
includ ing note balances of U.S. Treasury ..... 153
Other liabilltles ... : .............................. 822
TOTAL LIABILITIES ........................ S3.052
SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY
Common stock
a. No. shares authorized .......•.... 1,500,000
b. No. s hares outstanding ...... 931 ,214 3,578
TOTAL CONTRIBUTED CAPITAL ........... 3,578
Retained earnings ............................ 2. u1
fOTAL SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY ..•.•..... 5,719
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND
SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY ................ S8,771
The undersigned,· Paige V. Simpson, President
3nd John W. Walsh. Sr Vice President of the
3bove-named bank, each declares, for himself alont>
and not for the other: I have personal know ledge ot
the matte rs contained in this report (including
reverse side he reof>, and I believe that e ac h
statPment in said report is true. Each of the
unde rsigned, for himself alone and not tor the other,
certifies under penalty of perjury that the foregoing
is true and correct. Executed on January 27. 198i. a1 Costa Mesa.
California.
Paige V . Simpson
John W. Walsh PubllilWd~-c-Dally Piiot, I'~ t, tm
CONSOLIDATED
REPORT OF CONDITION
c onsolidated Report of Condition of "International
Central Bank & Trust Corp." of-El Toro, Orange
County, and Domestic Subsidiaries at the cloSe of
business on December ~1 . 191'1.
State Bank"No. 12t7 Dollar Amounts
In Thousands
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks . . . . . . . . . . . . . • •
Investment securities
3.~76
(Market Value S65,855l .................... 66.720
Federal funds SOid and securities
purchased under agreements to
resell In domestic offices ................. 20,950
13ank premises, F .F.&E., etc ................... 20
Other a ssets . . . . . . . . . . . ...........•..•...... 1,603
TOTAL ASSETS ......... . . . . . . . . . • .. .. ... 92,769
LIABILITIES
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN
ooMeSTIC OFFICES .......... 83,330
Total demand deposits 1 ••••••••• 15,258
Total time and savings deposits 68.072
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC
ANO FOREIGN OFFICES .................. 83,330
Other llabllitles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . ........ 1, 113
TOTAL LIABILITIES ........................ 8',443
S~AREHOLDERSEQUITY
~ommon stock
a . No. shares authorized 10,000
b. No. shares outstandlno 10,000 1,000
Surplus....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • • . • • . 6.260
TOT Al CONTRI BUTEO CAPITAL ...........• 7.260
Retained earnlnos ...••..•..................•. 1,0661
TOT AL SHAREHOLDERS EOUITY ..••••.••. 8,326
TOT AL LIABILITIES ANO ' SRAREHO~OERS EQUITY .••••.•........... 92.769
The undersigned, Jack L. T1ufer. President and
Daniel J. Fedrick, E.V.P . of tht above-nam.d .,.nk,
each declares, for himself alone and not for lht
other: I have perwnal l(nowledge of the matters
contained In thl~ report (lncludtng the reserv• sl"
hereon, and I believe that Heh stet.ment In said
f'tport Is true. Eetf1 of the undtrs~ntd; for himself
elone and not for the othtri certifies under penalty of
perjury that the fQrt00lng s tf'Uf end correct. execut.d on J1nu1rv 22, 1"2 at Et Toro,
Callfornla. Isl Jeck L. Tauter Is/ Dani" J . Fedrick j~.._.Of""9C...0elfy l"tlet. ,._I, ...
•
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
•
-
llOMIOJ tBR Condo l"'BA. ~
M LUCIT NW rn> lll. Lut " Otp. No flem In Colt• Men'• Pt\! 7 .. 7m
NEWEST l•l•d 20 48r Twnhu, 1'181 ,
Townbo!M VILLAGE carport, tnd paUo, l690
COllU&UNITY. Ut 3 Br. mo. lat + 4ep. C1ll z~., Bl. 1eoo.11001q. rt. or Kath 148 P'll't lu.aury. Oaraces. 4..:.::Br~2-=Ba=-ic;b::;::ou.a~e-. _2_c_1_r
hydro-t11bt In muter 1ar11e. new paint ' t-••--•--•I 1u.lt•i~l!>~in1 rooms. cupeu SUS mo c.M. Ta SIMhr wooduununl flrepl1m. 640-2'700 ~ XI rln mlcro·wavt o•ena . ..=..;:;0..::.:.::.:.-.-----x nt a.nee orivlle patloc ' y1rda C'IU bdl home, tBR w1
'•••8'1•5•-007•3/•1•3'5•.4•1!!!!23!1 I tar du er Prov 'de d . gar. kid oil, now S3'7S
1• Deaanl Uvln& onb' is 0C RENTA~ 750·3314
GIUTDUPUXll mln11tn from Fu}ilon lnW lJ44
CMO 000. l80t W Balboa blaod. 7 rnlD11tff to S C ••••••••••••••••••••••• Blvd Open Dilly, 2·4 Plua « 0 C Airport Twnhomr. new 3 br. 3 ba.
Ted Hubert Rultor. Juat eut of NewporJ pallO .. ear Park, pool. 1S2-om Blvd. 'eo. of San Dlt&o ~ 191s1mo. 133-~7 Frwy. Slartinf at S900 a LotsforS. JJOC month. 831·5439, 2473 UiivTonCHhr
••••••••••••••••••••••• Oran1e Ave , Cost a New 2 bdrm + den, 3 ba, &ilders/lnveaton Mesa. Plantahon shutters. at·
Coton1del M1r20K sq rt 2 Br enclsd gar ace llrhed· car Av1n Im·
R3 twnhsetcondo slle. Adults, no peu ~1 mo mediately K1y 644·9060. Pvt beach i ctus mw Wilson.!131-4889 PM673-IS&S Senous princ only By -=-=~==----B-owner. ~·9265 E Side 2bdrm. new thru Beautiful Condo. 3 R,
HUNTCLUBLOT out formal din 2BA.ToSUbletByFeb b iJtf , k z . lst Woodbrid11e. Call ' 1 Acre guarded gate re ast noo · car Alter3·30 comm. S2SO.OOO low gar. yrd. grdnr S675 857-..367
dwn 493.3395 h m ~
63J.-0161 off Lrg 4 8 R F:JCee Sty I e Home In Preferred Ma.t•. Desert, Residential Area CM
llftOl't 2400 Brand Ntw. Carpets,
••••••••••••••••••••••• Drapes , & Pa1nt P-11CltyUtalt Throughout Every
t!ffic1ency rondo with Room & Window J Car lutrbenettt S6S .000 Gar Fenred Bat'k Yard
Sl0.000 dn 13'. int on bal Ga rden 1 n g .Servi re,
Ot will take piitlnt>r Orangt Tree. Waler
642-0671 Pets SubJerl lo Ap ·
o.tof~ proval. lmmed Oe«
rt.,.rty 2S SO l12SC! Mo 957-119'7 4
••••••••••••••••••••••• 511 PARK DRIVE 3Br. IBa, \&t'anl. ne""
Cpl.S & dll>S. lg yd. S1~
rm _9wner ~9-~2 **601 TOTAL
OOWN PAYMENT 7Xgross' IS houses. <111 ~Twwhotiu run as apl l·omplt'x 3 bdrm. 2•, ba. \tt'W.
Po111ttve cash flow Call fl9.'> t21'11S924184
for detaib Sh Jt p 3 b r 2 b .i
\\\l\\dhrldQl' ~~~~e~padr~::~·. ~~.~
lkllltg k111h1:n 5895 mo ;;~1 :14MIO ~l7~~st S!'>OO deµ
lr.ll K~~nu 1·~,.'·1"111'' 3 bdrm. 2 ba. family rm.
a..t&tah Me-..i \'t'rdt' Ntt'l' fam1
bdt19MJ' 2IOO h h<>llll' w lpk Blltn
••••••••••••••••••••••• sto,~. DW <;D lmm41t'. Want a tax sht'ltl'r' St'll No 'ng \Ingle:. S775 mvl l2vt>.irncw1r1pll'X w l(Jrdt'nt'r 557 tillSJ.
M0 t'nhanjll' l .. IUll)' fnr 494 2330, llJI JtS!'>
l'OndoOr? Ownl•r Aflt'r 7 I:: MdP 1·u11• I Hr <'lltl.!l(l'
714 7ti0-C17l4 \'Jrd Jrl.'J S.115 t •l'l' ~ktate Sgl or mHrit'd 1·µ1
W..twd 2900 857 2040
•••••••••••••. ••• •• •• •• E stdl' CM 3 Hr 2 H.1 SllOO Pnvate Part\ l.ooktnl( pr rm l'Jll Rbt M1llthn
For Homt' lo Huv 1111 ~I I~ \
U!ast' Optton 8J1•kHay
~'.1~12 . .... •••••••••••••••••••••••1 E ~1de CM 1·ondo. 3 Hli 2' ~ ~ Ba, gdr. lri: lldllo. 'II.I
••••••••••••••••••••••• S725 mo Jn,• tt W J1l 1t· c:or.a .. Mar 3122 a.glb.11 I~
••••••••••••••••••••••• CH-cur. L SIDE UPCraded 2Br 2ba. yard. -m;
1· a rpo r t . n 0 d 0 11,, 211r. 1~.R.i. frpli« hltn ~_l!lO,.l\j,'I bi3 tttll ranJ:l' 0\1.'11. cbhw,hr pdllO Pool S4i00 mu Muportled 3169 ddlh. 011 111·i-:i111
••••••••••••••••••••••• Hamilton
C..Mery Vtllati:e Mob1l1· Walk to Oft'. 3 HR. 2 11 \. Hom! Park ~rn1Shl·d 2 Br 2b I flonn-d yJr11. µuul. 111. , a. poo . adlt,, no sns rooti75 li736 Pt'ls. dost> lo shuµ,. &
reslaurllJlb S1SO mo 'r 4 ..... 2•12 la
Ly 111d uttl li73 Jti3.S or r Jnlll> rm f p1·. r.·111 ,•d
1 I ~-t648, I n2 lllOI v.ird Sli2:S per mo
IUOO ISLF: <hrmi: 4Hr b460!Btbt'fort'9PM
. 212~. lg •Unnv 1ia1tu. 2BR l'Jl1>l"l & l)r Jill'' I
upgraded SIJOO mo Hill t«tr gar No Pct~ $4~
Grur_id.L6lS liltH Mo t~t & 1.Jst SIOO Dl'li
OCEANFRONT 2 Hr. t 646 5637
ba SBOO mo RtlJ
Wri~{\jl m mo Houff Vt'tlh oc t'Jn \ tl''"
2br 2ba 2283 PJl'tlll
~ dbl ~ra.&l' ti73 4928 ....... ......... ed .......................
....... 3102
MESAVEIDE
Lease 4Br. 3Ba. PcK1I.
Sc>a. Lr11 f;am rm. Avail ••••••••••••••••••••••• March t }950. 979 5814 RENTALS 13 -BR 2 &. lge-famth
Yearly-Weekl)"-Wmtt>r., room. gardener 1n
2.3,4 Bdrms. Newport , eluded S795mo 640tiltil
Orangetrtt Pillo Home,
2 Br or I Br + den. spa,
tennis. pool S610/mo ~1·3UlS
TURTLllOCtc Spectacular unobttruct
ed \'tev. of Sand Canyon
Reservott, City lights
ind roammc rattle 2
BR. 2 ba J M PETERS Designed homt'. Jen·
na.ire. Trash compactor.
Stert'O 1nterrom. pool,
ll'NltS, spa I yr lease
Sl 200 mo Avail 1m
me d 1atel) Mr
Hartman ;\gt 634 0328 da
llJ3.31?l~V!_" WkUI~
RANCHO SAN JOAQUI N
VILLAS . 2br. 21,ba. dt>n. pool & Jar . adult
l-omm S82S mo M.u rh
1st p.1~
Zl.lon . ·~BR 3RA fam
rm. ig. k1trhen. S8$0 mo
NoJM!t!!L~ 8523
MORTHWOOD
3 bdrm. 2 ba. ftteplan•
1750 sq rt i\\'atl tmnwd
l950 )t_o_ ~.Q.07
l~•.:Ja 3241 .......................
OCUMFIOMT
2'I Hr Seruritv. '·mt off
µvi brh. ftsi11n1i: llll'f
2Rr . .idlli. only. no doi:;,
S750 rm t114 )499 :Ill I h
t 1L\Rft1 JRr 2R \ '.ml W.!lk to bl'h & pool
~ lse_ Owner 499 JliJll
LmJ-a Hicjllel l z 5 2 •..••••••........••....
Exrt· 4br, Jba. f.im rm. 3
{.If j(d(. \11!111'. nr IK'l'JO
SU85 914 3420
Lc*tf.onst 3255 .....•••....••..•......
l ~\KE FOREST 2•torv. :1
& dt<n. 3 bath On w..itt•r
lll'W boJl doi·k' \\dti
~'t·b _ 13 ~ 1~ i\IOO
Missiolt Vifjo 3267 ..........•...••.......
3 HR 1·<. bJ. r.im rm.
\IUdy, fpk. llt'W. $12.~
11 l' r mo ~ H I ti 0 4 3
t'\~ wknd~
Mrwport leach 32 69 •...•........••••••••..
RIJ? t'an)OO 2 Br 2 Ao.
$lliS 100 Palnt•k .t~
i59 1221
2B R l'ondo Adult
l'omµll'll 28 .·\ Nr Hoa1t
9i2!> Mo 1~1. U.i.t & Ot>µ
No Dogs_ iti8 7t>33
St-.i\tew lrJ? 4 Br. ex ean
\u. Slti001 mo Piitnl·k.
dj\ ;59.~i_ ~
Harbor View 'llomi:s 2
Br Den. frpll'. lar1te
\Wlmmmg J>OOI. jut•un1.
2 rar garage. pnv.iti>
lo r at1on . inc-Id ~
1t.irdeoer. pool serYH'l'
1\\ail .-eb. I sl
$1.2SO/mo. TI0.~7. Beach~ Balboa 1-0C RENTl\Ls JACOIS REALTY l·Sbr·s12ootoszooo PROPEln 7so.33H o en 7 days 1--,•A•Y.,FIO_MT __
' MGRS. 1..oYely 3+ br. eim-:4 2 stOf}', 4 + bdrms. 2 675-6173 foot.yd .Pur opt.SSSO baths, flrep£ace.
14 3 Br. l'-iba frpk. 2 OCRENTALS 750-3314 gorgeous view Pier and
car gar, p1llo 12671 Al· .,_,.. 3226 slip pro per mo Avail
lard, GG. $6110. 536·1453 •n•••u•u•••••••••u• Feb. l. ..... ,...., 3206 3bdrm. pool, spa,
........ ••••v••••••••• skyli1bu. spec. oce1n Bl)'front'. beacb, 2 Br. 2 vv, SUOO/mo 754..os20.
associated
: ... '.. ... . -', . . . Ba. 123 E Ba yfronl. 1...:;;83MS3~""t.t_. -----
Balboa Island. Sl200 Quaint 2Br, 2Ba . stt:dlo. '"!!!!!!!111!!!!!1•••~ winter. 11400 a.nnUll Uv rm, frplr . lg kitchen. I" Herb, days 213/418·3577 ref rig. wshrtdry r, dbl llOOL HOMK
c:or.acW M• 3222 ~'r'c'~: rti~4 r.~3 ~. 3BR Fm home Bit Bay •••••••••uu • • •• ,..... 6JHll66. Sl21X>/mo Ca II Suzanne
l.eaK. Nrty new 3 br. 3 -i-'-''-==-------67S-~ 1&nt
ba, 2 frplc, balcony. ~•leedt 3240 Beaul exec home ! s br. 4
mkrowan. bar. 2 car •••••••••••n•••••••••• ba. Westclirr 1re1. In or
8 a r · G • r d t n e r ~elusive 2 B 211 Ba pl. lseopt.J1700.146-53SS
SUSO/mo. spa. tennis. sec g1te Bhlfs. 4 br. rno to mo 5.51-@!3 aft, 8pm Cloee be1cb. ~. Aft S lease. ahoc1 term, red
~br, 2 ba 2 blks to 1162-13118 rent,ooeeu. 494-6163 •10..;.0~~~0'3~r·>'~r:: 4 Br. 21' Ba. Bonwftrm. Spac. 4 BR. 2•., BA, Fam _ .r;;., -. ,._, Fam nn, 2.100 sq · nr rvocn. pool, frpl, &»-Oll09
t::"~,..._~~·D·~~"""::-:---I Gftlr I.Alie. llotS evn ~
VJEW·Pvt bch. OfW .... '"1"""a"""·,'""'tlt_l_u_(f_s_. -.-,-.. -0-.
decor. 2 CV car. 2Br. FANTMTIC RENTAL! LEAH W/OPTION TO
28a. $1050 mo 160-8382 Soac. exec. 4 Br. 3 Ba l BUY, 4 BR ~1 BA 1J1 3bdrm1 2Vtba, ram blO<'k to buch. uoo view, JieUii, a tnl
den, ain rm. frplc. 7st-929.1. price...!!.."· .;:.;.!Ollr • 2 blU from ocean. Price Aiv.OIO . .-Imo
t t /luse. 11400. letUI .......
.. .................... .
DUPLEX FO I FtllllHI~ 1 E•. ...,... •Ira yard. New elr1Mt 4 paint tbna~t. lmmed. po1111ttn. H I o. Call Tom --
1
•
.. •
1\11 11•11·1\t 11 fll'IJl\l•'r ' :·1H.' 1 111 AN1,f • CJ\.IN!' Al 11 l1l•N1A .''• l f NI ',
. .
Will pullout
' ·of Hayakawa
aid Democrats?
R e p u b 1 i c a n S• n . S . I .
Hayakawa 's surprise
announcement that he is not
seeking re-election this year
may have prevented a GOP
·•bloodbath'• In t he June
primary but could ultimately
benefit Democrats in November,
Orange County Politicians said
today. (Related story, Page A5).
However, tWC} mem~rs or the
c o u n t y ' s. c o n g r e s s I o n a 1
delegatldb in Washington D.C.
said it Is still hard to predict the
USC urged
to ·drop
CdM plans
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. Mly ,..._. Mltff
Administrators from the
University of Southern
California have been asked to
think about dropping plans to
move into a vacant Corona del
Mar school. They are being
urged -to sublease it to a
Christian organization instead.
The suggestion comes trom
residents who have sued USC lo
block lhe school from opening a
business adminis tration
graduate s c hool at the
abandoned elementary campus.
Residents have urged USC to
subtease the vacant school to
Carden Christian School as an
eleme'htary school. ~
long-range effect of Hayakawa's
decision.
"I don 't think (the
announcement) will help sort it
out or uncomplicate it," Rep.
Robert Badtiam. R -Newport
Beach, said of the GOP race in
,June , whe n up to seven
announced candidates vie for
the Republican nomioation.
"<Hayakawa's ) support was
thin, or shallow, but it was
broadly diversified," Badham
said by telephone frOJll his
Washington office this morning.
For this reason, he said, it was
hard to say which candidate In
June would benefit most from
the former San Francisco State
University presid~nt 's
unexpected announcement.'
Hayakawa told delegates to
the state's GOP convention in
Monterey Saturday that he
would not run for a second tetm.
In making his announcement,
the U.S. senator said that
legislative considerations were
more important than pursuing
re-election at this point
According to one Democratic
observer, Rep. Jerry Patterson.
D-Santa Ana , Hayakawa 's
departure from the election has
opened up the rac e
considerably.
Without a Republican
incumbent, Patterson said,
Democrats could ultimately
benefit in the November general election.
Most observers. however.
believea Hayakawa stood little
chance or winning either his
party 's nomination or of
defeating a Democrati c
candidate in November.
LOST IN FOG Ladv. a 36-foot sailboat. lies on its side at
Tre as ure Cove sou.th of Ne wport Be a ch. Cra(l came
3 sailboats run
o.lly "91 ...... .., Gery......_
aground Sunday afternoon when fog sudden!~· set in . More
heav~· fog was predicted for this ('\'C'nini.!-.
aground • in
.. ~ fog Carden bid on the elementary
school before the Newport-Mesa
Unifled;School District awarded
a five-year lease to USC.
The Democrats likely will be
pinning their hopes of winning
California's second U.S. Senate
seat on Gov. Edmund G Brown
Jr., observers say.
More 'pea soup,' poor visibility due on Coast during night ,
' ....
Resident said the Christian
school would bring fewer cars
and no evening classes such as
USC wants.
"ll 's only a notion so rar ...
commented William Mfnn, a
USC program coordinator.
"We do not have any plans
right now to sublease and we're
not so sure it would work
anyway," Mann said.
"r A spokesman for the
(See USC, Page AZ)
GOP candidates are Re p
Barry Goldwater Jr ..
R· Woodland Hills. San Diego
Mayor Pete Wilson and Rep.
Paul N. McCloskey of San Mateo
County.
' . Othe'rS are Rep.· Bob Doman,
President Reagan's daughter
Maureen, State Sen. John
Schmitz and for.mer Loyola Law
School dean Ted Bruinsma.
By PATRICK KENNEDY Of._ Delly,..,, ....
Three sailboats ran aground
Sunday afternoon in tliick fog
that's expected 'to return to the
Oran1ote Coast agatn tonight.
F o g also delayed early
morning flights by one hour out
of John Wayne Airport, but by 8
a . m . takeoff schedules were
back to normal as fog Tigbtened.
None of the 14 passengers
aboard the three grounded
!\atlboats was Injured, but this
morning one 36-fool craft still
was stuck ofrshore in sand and
rocks at Treas'ftre Cove, just
south of Newport Beach.
At 9 a.m . a commercial boat
was trying to dislodge the
"Lady " owned by James
Jordan, of Villa Park. It ran
aground 40 yards offshore at
3:50 p.m . after th'e dense fog
rolled in and cut visibility to S
feet, said coastal officials.
FROM TRASH BINS TO BAGS -Lucia Nosenzo rummages in
trash bins for beer and soft drink cans which she bags and
selht-tto raise money for charity. Last year the Costa Mesan
with the help of her friends rounded up Sl.500 worth of
aluminum. This collection awaits a pick up b~· the Coors Co
Aligkrs find haven in .coast trash · bins
Group hooks profits· in fishing for aluminum to· benefit charities ' ' .
By8TEVEllAaBLE or four pounds·• monitn1", she hard togetout," sheadvi5es.
... .._""...., says, poinUne out that there are She isn't alone in rounding up
Lucia Noeenzo la proud o1 her about 20 cans per pound. cans ror her favorite charities -
abUlty -not to mention her She st.ore. the empties In hel' the Guide Do1 Boosters, the
But, she adds, club memben
did helf her round up Sl,500
worth o aluminum last year for
the charttles. reput.allol' -for rumma1in1 earage and backyard and -Shrine Hospital for Crippled
tbroup truh cana. every three weeks or so -sells Children, the City of Hope and "l love it because tt'• for such Nobocl)r doet tt bet~r than them. She then divides the Toya for Tota. a 1ood cause. I don't mind
Lucia. ber friends and feUow earnings among four canaries. Her fellow members in the dilling around ln the cans.'' ·
t.raab can dlS1ers •cree. "I get 25 centa a pound," she An1let1 Friday Luncheon Club And •he'a come away from l:ve~ mornln1, the Costa aaya , "and the Coors Co. won't ln Ne-• Beach alao round up her dally routine wttb a few u .-.. out. on her .. ...,.. • obaervatJona • • -•sa woman lvw come pick them up unJeu I have discarded soft drlnk and beer NUii~: P1uddn1 alumlnum caq1 at least 200 pounds. That'• a lot cans. "Take tbe.._bers.'' abi says.
trOID 1ne truh blnl behind the of cans.'' "We m~ every Frlday and "Toward the eftd or the month
beer bars, taverna and She says ex_J>erlence hH every1'rldaytbeybrin1lnt.belr thln11atartcett1nc1Uttlelean. re.taurmm. tau1bt her to avoltl the bic aacka of cana and we stuff them But the It.art Gf·UM mciltb -
Ille HJ• ibe lan't picky. dUGlpeten and to atf'clc to the into my c~." ahe 1ay1. boy. you jut can't plek up
Coiorl, Bud, 01Yl'DPl•, Brew ioa trubcana. The Analera club1 she enou"'cif-~m .. ,~~~ .. a~ -It doeilli't matttr, u &one u .. J leave' the bll d\flQPttn tg ~fl#,,.~J. g -•:.~KA' M' .~ • • ~ ft' ~ I .,.~'-...... It.' ......... ~!'"7vtl Id ifl OG"l M'\.hOM croup that doeln't do 10 ·mucli mucb PIOPle are drln...... -...a aven1• abOut tbrie and Al'• meaay a.D4 aometlmea rl1hln1r anymore. .. 1u11nt1.
• + • .. ..
The other two sailboats, the
39-foot S~ittarius , put of
Newport Harbor, and the 28-foot
Gammon, from Dana Point
Harbor. were pulled free or
destructive tides Sunday.
coastal officials said. ·
The Sagittarius ran aground at
11th Street on Balboa Peninsula
and was pulled out lo sea by a
Harbor Patrol boat.
The Gammon went aground at
Cyprus Shores Beach about 2'h
miles south of the San Clemente
muntcipal pier and was towed
onto the sand.
Weather officials say the foi
was limited lQ Orange CO\lnty,
stretching inland to Gardeft
Grove.
Tuesday's temperature i~
expected to be in the low 70s
with nighttime lows in the 40s.
Tonight's fog is expeeted to Jilt
by mid-morning.
Sculptor get.s neiv
hearing on charge
. t
By DAVID IUJTlMANN °'Hie Dll6ly "91 M9fl
Rebel Costa Mesa sculptor Ali
Rousban once again has been
spared from going to Oran1e
County Jail and payine a $500
fine.
What's more, Roushan will
have his day in court -once again.
A spokesman for the
California Supreme Court said
today that the panel has granted
Roushan's petition for -.hearing
before the State Fourth Diatrict
Court of Appeals In. San
Bernardino.
At issue is whether Roushan
bas Uie constitutional ri1ht to
put up towering red metal
sculptures without getting Costa
Mesa City Hall's stamp of
approval first.
In granting the new hearings,
Dow rocked
as 2 hanks
hike prime
NEW YORK (AP) -The
stock market lapsed into a steep
decline today, brln1ln1 an
abrupt halt to Jut week's rally.
Part of the drop was
attributed to fears that the
prime interest rate. would rile,
and late in the momin1 Crocker
and at least one otber bank did
go from IS~ percent to lfl,4,.
• The Dow Jonea avera1e ol 30
Industrials, up 2tU7 laat week,
fell 19.,1~to151.et.
Losers held a 2.-l lead over
1atnen amon1 New York 8'ock
E:icchenge-Usted luuee.
the s tate high court -in _...
order signed by five of its seven
justices -further extended a
delay of all proceedings against
Roushan at the Orange COunt;
Superior court level.
The fiery Iranian immigra1l4,
who has been locked in a leC'l
battle with city officials ~nearly two years, is seeking.
overturn contempt of coutt
convictions against him ~ t
erecting red steel artworks '
defiance or city obtained couit
orders. '•
Oranee County Superior Coult •
judge Robert R. Fitzgerald
Imposed the $500 fine artfl
five -day jail sentence l•tl December. :
In all, ~ushan has erec~ four colorful sculptures, three
them without proper ·cit
approval and safety cheeks.
The state Supreme Court
spokesman said justice
transferred jurisdiction for
case from the superior co
level to the appeals court level.
Either side could then a
again to the state hhrh
<See SCULP'l'Oa, Pace Al) • •
Fair tbroutb TueaclaJ
except patcla1 late llilbt
and early morntna roi
near coaat. Hlchl 59 to 73
C?vernlaht Iowa 35 to u . : .
·11111•1 '
A COlta Af•ta bcaAwf' #Ollltd
•weet ~ bit ~ otl Of d"'QI cMd ~ Mio Q
mflliotlan. Sn Pof1ff 8J.
11111 .
. ·~ Orange Co~ OAIUV PILOT/Monday, February 1. 1982
. in.ter:'s wrath covers East Coast, Middle West
., , ... A.lloda&ed ...... •
A 1ur.prt.ae a t or m that
anded thQuaandl ot mOtortata
lh• Midwest lo up lo U \ncbet
anow and aenl fioodwatens urin1 th rouah thr ee 1tatH
niabed New Enrland today
tth frce&lnc rain, slHt aftd
'fl. lee jama cau11d extensive
lbodlna 1&nd forced aome
va,cualiona In parts of Ohio,
e._st Virginia and
epnaylvanla.
Sunday's snowstorm In the
ldwest rave •ludents and
ovemment workers a-boUda
today while restden&a waited for
aoowplowa ud the Natloalll
Guud lo t.aclllt 1lx·foot drUla,
At least 21 people died In the
atorm. officlab reported.
Rain and fnulnl rain
1weepln1 throu1h
Maauchusett.a knocked out the
power to about 9,000 homes In
Ma aachuntts and caused a
crash Involving 30 cart and a
bus on Route 2 at Westmln11ter.
Most schools were closed in
Vermont with more than a fOot
of snow on the eround
M<>re than 1,000 cars and
truck1~werc abandooed on
I LEO!NO DIES -Sally Stanford. the former San
call house madam 'who becaml' u two-tl'rm
Sausalito. is dead of heart faalun· al 78
.... ...__
Francisco
ma~·or or
·i·
,.,Ex-madam, mayor
!Sally Stan/ ord dies
~~ GREENBKAE (AP) -Sally
•1 Stanford , the former San •t~ 'Francisco madam and Sausalito :r. mayor whose life became a
., television movie, died today in a
·~ .Greenbrae hospital at age 78.
'<1 Ms. Stanford, whose real
-f .oame was Mabel Janice Busby, ~·~,served two terms as a city
.·it cou~dJwoman and served both :it as mayor and vice mayor before !•7 her r etirement from politics.
,,.,,. She died in Marin General ··~l165plt1il or apparent heort
•· railure. said Lois Bevans.
nursing supervisor. She had
J~)>een admitted t.o the hospital
,:i~over the weekend because or her
J weakening heart, Ms . Bevans
. ·'said. ' ··~ M s: Stanford, raised in Baker,
;•:Ore., had a reputation as a
...
".~$3.43 theft
. '~jails youth
;·~1. A 19-year-old Irvine resident.
. :who police allege stole a March
.. :~ Dimes col lec tion can
.ittco nlaining $3.43 in pennies,
,.nickels and dimes, was ~estf)tl "·~unday night on suspiHOil'of
',possessing stolen property.
. .,.officers said.
"·· Robert Albert Ling of 5112 ;~ighgate Terrace was arrested <!i '.8l 10 p. m . on a street near
Ralphs Supermarket, 14400
C ul ver Drive , after a
r, ~~upermarket employee reported
19J.he theft. 1·\\ Police assert t hat Ling told
them he took the can on the
"''"spur of the moment" because ":t he needed money for gasoline ·1,.
'" ... rt .. From Page A 1
SCULPTOR ..
depending on the outcome of the
lower court hearings in San
Bernardino.
No dates for the hearings were
set.
Roushan put up his high rise
structures on his industrial
property at 1550 Superior Ave.
He said this morning "This
Ume (C.0Sta Mesa city officials>
are dealina with a chess player.
They thought they were dealing
wU.b a poker player.'· ......._,
T he city bas argued that
Rouataan's sculptures, which
stand up to 60 feet high, require
the pn>per city building permits
and safety checks like any other
alructures.
Representatives in the city
attor n ey's office were
unavailable for comment this
morning.
colorful and run -loving
madam-turned-mayoT whose
first official act was to break
open a case of champagne.
She purchased the Valhalla
Restaurant in Sausalito in about
1948 .
"I should have run for
·president of the United States,"
she said during the March 1976
champagne bash. "At least
there's some dough in it."
Ms . St.anlord ran for council
five times under the name
Marsha Owen before winning
election under her best-known
name io April 1972.
The day after ber election to a
second four-year term bl March
1976, she announced she would
not seek a third term.
"I don't want any more," she
said "I Utlnk I've done a good
iob."
· As top vote-eetter with 1,203
votes in the 1976 city election,
Ms . Stanford -as. custom
dictated -was ~l ed mayor by the other coun 11 members
that year. She s ved as vice
mayor ID 1978 .
In a 1970 ihterview, Ms .
Slanford reminisced about the
days of operating a house of
prostitution.
"I was arrested 17 limes," she
said. "but I only had to pay a
couple of $250 fines ...
Three years later. she told a
reporter that she came to San
Francisco in the 1920s with an
attorney she met and married in
Ventura.
··I was doing a Ii tt.1 e
bootlegging down tbe..re
(Southern California>." s he
said. "I didn't tell him that."
About six years t>erore her
first election , Ms. Stanford
authored a book, "Lady of the
House," in which she described
her exploits as the "empress" of
11 44 Pine St., San Francisro.
"I didn't set out to be. a
madam," she wrote, "any more
than Arthur Michael Ramsey
. . figured someday on
becoming Ar ch bis hop of
Canterbury
''Things just sort of developed
for both of us, I guess.'.
Of her childhood, Ms. Stanford
wrote that her family was "so
poor. we envied everyone we
ever heard or ...
She changed her name to Sally
Stanford in 1933 while attendin&
a footba ll game between
Stanford University and the
University of California.
"Stanford won, and I had
already picked the name Sally.
so I sal~. that's it," she recalled.
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Cl111ttled edvertl1lng 71 41e42·M11
Ali other depertment1 6'2 ... 321
bl1hw&y1 in a 100-mUo radius of
Detroll. Schoolt were closed in
Detroit and AM Arbor
Indiana Gov. Robert O. Orr
scheduled a httltcopter tour of
his snow·burled..state today.
About 35 peop l e wer e
evacuated In Oil City. PM .. " city
of 14 ,000 about 80 milei. north or
Pittsburah. when an 1ct Jam
broke on Oil Creek, and sent
water six feet deep through the
streets.
As the temperatures dipped
Into the 20s today in Oil Caty. the
Oood water began lo freeze and
one rt!Sidenl said, "It could turn
the whole downtown into 1 •l•nt
lee cube.''
·'The main lnteuectlon ln
town 1s flooded . . Water
surround.5 some horMJI ah' feet
deep," said Fnnk Stacy of radio
station WOYl. "The water la
movmg fast. It's got a lot or
icebergs in it "
Oauberger said the homes
miaht get washed away and
pollce abandoned their station
when It was flooded with 1 ~ feet
ol water.
In Marlinton, a city of 1.300 In
a valley between ridges or the
Allegheny mountains, an ice
jam on Knalli> Cr k five way,
• aendtn1 3~ feet of water
throulh part.a of the town. Police
a nd tlre otrlclala aald four
fa millet wer.e evacuated.
ln the winter·wHry Midwest,
the deepest snow was reported
at Greenville. in south-central
Jllinols, where 22 lnchcis fell.
Chuck Jones of the Illinois
Emergency Services an6
0 Is aster agency said 2 .000
motorists were stranded in
temporary shelters Sunday
night.
• • J • ve neveP'\ieen the anow so
deep ," 'laid David Denbow ,
Trio take cash, diamonds
Police are searching for three
armed men who robbed a Seal
Beach jeweler of $75,000 in cash
and diamonds.
Seal Beach police said the
holdup occurred al t0· 10 a.m.
Sunday at Hatchel Enterprises,
2904 Westminster Av e.
Police said one of the suspects
entered and attempted to sell a
gold ring to jeweler Mark A.
Jones, A second man then Jrew
an automatic pistol from his
R.D. Howell
dead at 67;
services due
Memorial services are
pending for Newport Beach
resident and businessman
Richard D Howell. who died
Jan. 28 in La Jolla after a battle
wiih cancer
He was 67.
Mr . Howell , a native of
Australia who came tQ.. the
United States with his family in
the 1920s, founded an optical
supply firm, Lido International,
In Newport Beach in the early
1950s.
He was a member of the
Palisades Tennis Club ID Santa
Ana and a former member of
the Balboa Bay Club and the El
Niguel Country Club .
He is survived by a daughter,
Virginia Howell of Solana
Beach ~ a son. Richard Howell of
Sebastopol and a s ister, Mrs.
Robert Hill of La Jolla.
He was' U.S. Na'ty pilot m.
World War 11.
There were no funer al
services.
Mesa weighs
parking ban
the Costa Mesa City Council
is expected lo consider a Traffic
Commission recommendation to
ban parkin& Monday mornings
in oorth C'.osta Mesa for street
sweeping.
If adopted, the ban will affect
all streets between Fairview
Road, South Coast Drive, Bear
Street and Sunflower A venue.
A $10 fine would be imposed
for violators .
City council m embers will
. meet at 6·30 p.m . at council
chambers. 77 Fair Drive
U.S. to pay
NEW YORK CAP> The
Reagan administration has
decided to repay $71 million that
Poland owes to American banks,
but will not require the banks to
for mally declare Poland in·
defa~lt, The New York Times
reported today.
waistband and ordered Jones to
sit down. police said.
The intruder then opened a
back door to admit a third man
armed with a double-barreled
shotgun, officers said
Jeweler Jones was taken Lo a
back room, stripped of his gold
ring and told to remain on the
floor unlit the trio left, police
said. '
Officers sajd the jewelel" saw a
dark blue mini pickup truck
leaving the scene of the robbery
$30,000 HB fire
blamed oil grease
An unwatched skillet erupted
mto a grease fire early today in
a Huntington Beach apartment
causing $30,000 damage.
Re s ident Mark Lehtloa
complained of smoke inhalation
and was /given oxygen at the (
scene and released following the
J · 11 am. blaze at 8081 Holland
Drive. said Fire Captain Roger
Hosmer.
Hos mer said another dwelling
fire on Saturday also caused
$30 ,000 damage. but was the
result of arson
He sutd a two-story home at
9371 Cape Cod Drive caught fire
at 10 10 a m. and was reported
by neighbor~
The fire was started in several
places in the home, including the
den a nd upstai rs bedroom,
Hosmer said. No one was home
at the time. The house is owned
b.> Lee N1ederinghaus . Hosmer
said
Careless cookiog and arson
have been the leading causes of
structure fires in Huntington
Beach for Lhe past lwo years,
Hosmer said.
Smoke screen hits
Orange County Jail
There was more smoke than
fire Sunday night on the second
fl oor of the Orange County
Men's Jail after an 1Dm ate or
inmates se t fire lo an
accumulation of--dust 1n a
ventilation duct
Orange Count_y Shertff's
Department Lt Wyatt Hart said
smoke forced Jail personnel to
move 85 inmates to other areas
of the second floor where the air
remained breathable. Other
fl oors of the jail were not
affected, Hart said
From Page A1
The incident occurred about
7 15 pm. Santa Ana Fire
Department hrefighters were
dispatched to assist Jailers in
clearing the smoke frum the
floor
H art said the fire was
deliberately sel. There was no
known underlying disturhanrt>
t>e said
The lire broke out in a ward
reserved for inmates with minor
medical problems About 35
inmates were in the ward al the
lime the fire occurred. Hart
said
USC SCHOOL PLANS • • •
Christian school could not be
reached for comment
Mann said USC still hopes to
resolve its dispute with Corona
del Mar residents and move into
the school. use already has paid
$69,000 to use the school
So far. the closest USC has
gotten to the school is Corona del
Mar High School where several
of USC's graduate courses are
being held.
Officials from the school
d1str1ct said they are unaware of
any plans USC might have for
s ubleasing the campus.
They also said USC will not be
reimbursed even though the
private university, so far, has
been unable to move onto the
campus.
A court hearing on the,.
residents' lawsuit 1s scheduled
for Feb. 9.
"We still want to r~solve this
in a friendly way," said Mann.
"We want to avoid th e
antagonism a cou rt fight
brings."
Residcn'ts said they are
worried about traffic, street
p arkin g and noise the USC
graduate school might bring.
The homeowners have
stressed that they have nothing
against USC and believe the
graduate school is a good idea -
as long as it's not located in
Corona del Mar .
drlver of • snowplow stuck for
more than an h ur Sunday on
lnlcratMte '4 ln St. I.outs "We'll
i~l this cleared out eventu•ll>
but 1 don'i know when."
The aurprls 1t.orm developed
when wiarm , moist air from the
Cfull of Mexico suddenly moved
up. and collided with cold air
from Canada . which kept
tt:m peratures m the northern
Midwest as low as 36 deareea
below zero In Detroit Lakes, Minn
An accident on Interstate SS
near Ponti11c in central Illinois
involved 17 lo 20 vehicles. -
D'°'IY P'llel Staff -
SUCCUMBS <'o!-tt:.t Mt•!-ta
hard\\Ul'l' ..,tolt' ov.nl'I Kt•rm
H1ma 1s dt•ad ul lht· a~c of
fi~
Cos ta M esan
Ke rm Rima
succ umbs
Kermit "Kl'rm" Rima, who
operated •hardware store in
Costa Mesa for more than three
decades. is dead at the age or 6'9.
Mr Rima, a longtime Cqsta
Mesa resident . died Sunday
morning at Fountain Valley
Community Hospital after berng
adm1lled five weeks ago for an
illness. ,
The white haired salesman
opened his first shop in Costa
M l'Sa about 30 years ago at the
l'Orner of Newport Boulevard
and Broadway
lie moved lhe family bus1Dess
to 2666 llarbor Blvd 16 years
ago
Before opening his Costa Mesa
shop. Mr Rima operated a bait
and tack le shop o n Coast
Hi ghway near the Upper
Nl•wport Bay bridge .
He is survived by Betty, his
wife of 31 years. and sons Keith
;ind Kermit, both of Costa Mesa.
A family spokesman said
there will be no memor ial
service lie s aid Mr. Rima wa,s a
rnem ber of the Neptune Society.
D ozier r escu e
'gre at joy' ...
VATICAN CITY (AP > -Pope
John Paul II told NATO military
officers today that the rescue of
U S Brig Gen. James L. Dozier
was a "moment or great joy"
and evidence th~ terrorism can
be defeated
Dozier told a congregation at
church services Sunday be was
never really worried during the
six weeks he was a captive or
the Red Brigades because he
believed "the good Lord knows
what he's doing."
Reagan, Volcker clash expected
WASHINGTON CAP> The business of acting like they are lookmg for someone to blame for the way the bank has been
well-known Ronald Reagan and so rndependent they never an economy far worse off than managing the nation's money
the relatively little-known Paul communicate. the president had predicted. supply. Instead of pursuing a
Volcker appear to ~e on a '·We 've go t to get this Treasury Secretary Donald T. slow and steady course, the Fed
collision course over how to economy going again. we've got Regan said Sunday on CBS's has swung wildly over the past
straighten out the American tosynchronize,"Bakersaid "Face the Nation" that the year between extreme
economy,andit'snotatallclear But so far , Volcker and administption is not trying .to cla mpdowns on credit and
the better-known player would Reaganarerefusingtobudge. make tiu: Fed a scapegoat and e normous increases, the
win. Some veteran Fed •watchers "will take the blame or the administration argues.
Volcker. chairman of the say the inde pendent bank is 1::redit" for what happens to the Volcker, who may have more
Federal Reserve Board, says merely pursuing the tight-credit , ?conomy. say about lhe course or the· U.S.
the economy wilJ be gradually ·economy than any other
st rangl ed by ever higher "The t b ,individual. has stated interest rates unless Reagan re seems 0 e more pressur e 'repeatedly that h e h as DO
reduces gigantic federRI budget . on the F ed than ever. bef or e." intention of backing off the deficits. . _ Fed's anti-inflation course
Reagan, president of the despite the economic pain it is
Un ited States, says his economic policy the presldern has been And budget director David A. causing the natioo a nd the
recovery program, deficits and advocating to fight inflation. ~tockman. interviewed on ABC's .political discomfort it may
all, will be thwarted by rising "The Fed is always .t<e "Thi s Week With David cause Reagan.
interest rates unless the nation's scapegoat. the easy out," 8rinkle¥," said that "despite volcker atso contends lbe Fed
central bank does a better job of observed-one banking orricial, !lome recent administration 'Is doing its beat to regulate the
managin1 the amount of money who did not want his name used. discomfort" over Fed policies money supply but that t he
It allows to circulate in tht! "But there seems to be mote that '·No one In t h e economy Is too complex to
economy. pressure being put on the Fed administration believes the achieve the week-t o-week
private eco n omists. today then ever before." course is wron1." precision the adminlatration
meanwhile, say t he nation may Reagan and his economic .._ Nonetheless, there has been seems to be demandlna.
be hea~ed for far worse times advisers deny they are in any an i ncreaslng pattern or If that doesn't satilfy Reaaan,
unless Volcker eases the Fed's fundamental conflict with t he criticism from the preaident and there 's not much he can do until
tlght-credll stance or Reagan Fed's ti.Cht·moncy policy or hls aides' in recent weeks about the t•ea c ha i rman'• term
finds a way to cut those deficits. Israeli br1·L .:.... t-"AQ told . expires in Ausust 1.113. Without a 'policy change by UC • A'-'Q B1 dulan . tbt Fed WH
one or both sides, "the U.S. stablilhed by Coqriss in ltU
economy runs the risk or a WASHINGTON <AP> -Tbe report waa baaed on to be relatively free of J)oliticall
rriajor collapse, unprecedented Janell intelllatnce aaenclea clas.slfied American document.a pruspt?!n>~.t'v\ ptti7t'IW.( ;.~µ
in the postwar period ," have tr,ed to b ribe and cwtvn;c;i . .Jt'l>~s::t~i....,r'f'1.r-'-"'*«c~K"ne prH ldeat
economist Allen Sinai' of the blac;k;tT\•~', !!th~-...11.;&,x t ~t'"'melJ.s. Emba.ay in appoints member& to lM balak,
rorec&atiJlf.fl.rm t>,1ti1ttrfr ~, • ~Uifi"tliUOO-ecfln llriel in an Teh ran and 1ubuquenlly h e cannC>t ftre tll•• AQd ~v..rn::.""~ ifilnt~rvlew. ttemp t to 1et senslUvt published Ln Iran. ~ Volcker bal Jiva ~ :~-111111...-7
Senate Majority Leider ln f orm alton from •h m.. ~he Poat sald ll obtained be would .coaaldt r: ..........
How•.rd Baker, fl-Tenn , uried accord lnt to a n accou nt · copies ()f the paper~cks from berorebll 4·,....tenB.-.
Reagan and Volcke r to "all publlahtd tn today's Waablnstoo frff·lance JOum allall wbn they VolcW.itd:t appolDtei down and gel awa.y from thJJ Poat. retu rMd rrom Iran. lormeJt Cuter. -. .. '
,.
•
N
'
CLOSING 851 .89
Who's making
your spaghetti?
The Na lion al Macaroni Manufacturers./
Association, meeting last July at the Southe.tb
California, Mafioso-linked resort community of La
Costa, changed its name to the National Pasta
Association. The name chanie made a lot or sense.
Macaroni was clearly too restrictive. After all,
the same companies which make macaroni also
mal\e spaghetti, lasagna, noodles and other forms or
the flour-and-water paste that the Italians call
"pasta." So why not adopt the original name, which
covers everything? The macaroni makers did.
It was a change that occurred as Americans were
on their way to another record pasta-e"Bling year. It
~eems that we spent more than $1 billion last year on
pasta products. ln tonnage, It was more than 2 billion
pounds. That's plenty or pasta making its way down
our gullets. The high price of beef is a big motivator.
Ironically, though, just as the U.S. makers were
taking the Italian term as the name of their
association, they were heading for a big street fight
with the Italian pasta makers across the Atlantic
Ocean. American companies that make pasta sprang
up during World War II when Jlalian imports were
cut off. Now the Italians, watching American
consumption grow. want to reclaim this market.
. The only trouble ~
with that. according
to Lester R 1';0 Thurston Jr . ~· , ~bu~i1fer;:i,at~e 0~atT~[.~ ,.#-1.i\..__.!..,· ______ _
~argesl pasta maker, ll(Jll •' .. ITZ is that they are
making their bid
here with the help or healthy subsidies from the
,, Italian government. Some ltalian-made pasta bas
always been imported into the United States. But it
was never an important ractor in the market because
of a wide price differential. Now that's suddenly
cha.nged.
Thurston, who's currently serving as president or
the National Pasta Association, says that imports of
Italian pasta have been increasing at the incredible
rate of 30 percent a year. to the point where they 4re
now approaching 10 percent of the U.S. market, And
behind that surge is a narrowing of the price
difference. Italian pasta is landing on the Eastern
Seaboard and moving into stores to sell at only
10-.cents-a-pound more than the domestic product.
One of the major br ands you can find now in the New
York market is Spiga d'Oro, which comes from
Perugia and ranks ninth in the Italian market. The
leading brand in Italy, world's largest pasta market,
is BarUla.
Thurston claims there's no way ltahan pasta
could be packed and shipped across the ocean and
sell for so lilll& without a helping hand from the
government. As a result. the National Pasta
Association has filed a protest with the United States
trade representative, who's investigating the
complaint.
So it's the U.S. pasta makers squaring off against
the Italian pasta benders, making the same charges
that have been leveled by other industries <TV. steel.
car) against the Japanese. Not only are there more
To'yotas and Datsuns running on our roads, when the
drivers gel home. they're eating Italian spaghetti.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
UPS AND DOWNS
)¥ .. -.. ~...:·i. "'"' -" 17 •• ,,,_
~ -'-1~ _ ..
,~ -y.
ll -II> '°"' llo lS'At -~ 2''4 •• ,.
Jiii> -" 14"1 , ... "'" '•
t I u e.o ?1 ~.,
r~
··1 :. t u
o«w ¥()111( \AP!-SalM ,,_, "''°" """"91 ~ OI tht *" MOit -Ct1¥'9 Ameuc.., Sloe' ~ ..,.,. ffad~ "*'~"' •t ,... ""*'
WallQ 8 116,400 ~..,. II>
()omePlrl I IU.000 ''-'lo ~Eno ~ 1J2,700 ~ • " GvllCMI 9 IOS.100 12'-'-
'NeMtlfrcl I '7,600 131'1 • '" 1ta-oi1 •uao ,.,_ -"' Intl 1ltllcnlll SS,100 •It• -'• ~ U,100 2•'• -,!'" MklllE t 49,IOO 1' -l''o HouOllTr 41 . .00 10'4 , •1,
METALS
NEW VOlll( (API
""'lei prk H _,
Ce .. ,.r 11 '-·IO cenll a pounCI U ~ dHlln.iloM
L.ot .. 30 <aftb. llCM>CI
llac 42~ ~a llOllftCI. clellYffecl
T .. $1.ns. M9lats W•k <-lie ID
,........._ 1 ... 11 ceflts a '*"'41. N V
~c.llfY PIO.GO,,_, lla'llt
,...llOIW•\llM.4111""1' 01., N V
SILVER
Handy .. Herm ... SI OU,.., lrOY ounc•
GOLD QUOTA Tf ONS ,,, ... ,._ ..............
S.l•ttlcl WOf'IO oold P<lt•t toelay.
I...._: IN)f'n!nV 11•""' Ut1 JS, o" U , •
......._, •tternoon ""'"' "19.Jt, Off v Jt. ... ,..: un.n .01n10AO.
P'rllllldll!i: im "· o" n .os. lllrkll: Late ll•lt'IO U?tM, lift &t.411 bid;
._,,OOIUMf
NeNy I N•rMUI ~ly •a lly ...... Wt.so . .,. i 1 JO,
........... : OfllY d<llfy ... "1'M, 4lfl
$1.JO .
...... , .,.,. Clally .,.,.,.. •aM'lt ....
utt.ia. 01t 51.11
/
Will pullout
I
:·of Hayakawa
aid Democrats·?
Republican Sen . S .J.
Hayakawa's surprise
announcement that be ls not
seeking re-election this year·
may have prevented a GOP
"bloodbath" in the June
primary but could ultimately
benefit Democrats in November,
Orange County politicians said
today. <Related story, Page AS>.
However, two members of the
county 's congressional
' delegation in Washington D.C.
said it is still hard to predict the
USC urged
to drop
CdM plaru
B)' STEVE MARBLE
Of tlM D.ity ...... S'-fl
Administrators from the
University of Southern
California have been asked t.o
think about dropping plans t.o
move into a vacant Corona del Mar school. Th~y are being
urged to sublease it to a
Christian organization instead.
The suggestion comes from
residents who have sued USC t.o
block the school from opening a
business administration
graduate school at the
abandoned elementary campus.
Residents have urged USC t.o
sublease the vacant school to
Carden Christian School as an
elementary school.
lon,·range effect of Hayakawa's
decision.
"I don 't think (the
announcement) will help sort it
out or unconrplicate it," Rep.
Robert Badham, R-Newport
Beach, said of the GOP race in
. June , when up to s even
announced candidates vie for
the Republican nomination.
"(Hayakawa's> support was
thin, or shallow, but It was
broadly diversified," Badham
said by tel1?phor1e from his
Washington office this morning.
For this reason, he said, It was
hard to say which ,candidate in
June would ·benefit most from
the former San F.rancisco State
University president 's
unexpected announcement.
Hayakawa told delegates t.o
the state's GOP convention in
Monterey Saturday that he
would not run for a second term.
In making his announcement,
the U.S . senator s aid that
legis lative considerations were
more important than pursuing
1'e-e lection al this point.
According to one Democratic
observer, Rep. Jerry Patterson,
D -Santa Ana , Hayakawa 's
departure from the election has
opened up the race
considerably.
Without a R e public an
inc umbent, Patterson said,
Democrats could ultimately
benefit in the Nove mber
gene ral election.
Most observers , however,
believed Hayakawa stood little
chance of winning either his
party's nomination or of
defeating a Democ ratic
candidate in November.
LOST IN FOG Lady. a 36-foot sailboat. lies on its side at
Tre as ure Cove south or New port Bea ch Craft came
3 sailboats run
' . •• • Deity "'-' """'..., 9My........ "
aground Sunday afte rnoon when fog suddenly set in More ;
heavy fog was predicted for this evening
• in aground
Carden bid on the elementary
school before the Newport-Mesa
Unified $Cbool District Kwarded
a five-year lease to use.
The Democrats likely will be
oinning their hopes of wiMing
California's second U.S. Senate
seat on Gov. Edmund G. Brown
Jr., observers say. .
/More 'pea soup,' poor visibility due on Coast during night
~.
Resident said the Christian
school would bring fewer. cars
and no evening classes such as
USC wahts.
"It's only a notion so far,"
commented William Mann, a use program coordinator.
"We do not have any plans
right now t.o sublease and we're
not so sure it would work
anyway," Mann said.
A spokesman for the <see use, Page AZ>
GOP candidates are Rep.
Barry Go l dwater Jr .,
R-Woodland Hills, San Diego
Mayor Pete Wilson and Rep.
Paul N. McCloskey of San Mateo
County.
Others are Rep. Bob Doman,
President Reagan's daughter
Maureen , State Sen. John
Schmitz and former Loyola Law
School dean Ted Bruinsma.
FROM TRASH BINS TO BAGS -Lucia Nosenzo rummage6 in
tr~sb bins for beer and soft drink cans which s he bags and
sells to raise money for charity. Last year the Costa Mes an
Anglers fin:d haven •
By PATRICK KENNEDY
Of .. D.tly "-' .....
Three sailboats ran aground
Sunday afternoon in thick fog
that's expected to return to the
Orange Coast again tomght
Fog also delayed early
morning flights by one hour out
of John Wayne Airport, but by 8
a .m . takeoff schedules were
back lo normal as fog lightened.
None of the 14 passengers
aboard the three grounded
sailboats was injur_ed, but this
morning one 36-foot craft sUll
was stuck offshore in sand and
r·ocks at Treasure Cove, just
south of Newport.Beach. .
At 9 a .m., a cbmmercial boat
was trying to rJislodge the
"Lady" o wned by James
Jordan, of Villa Park. It ran
aground 40 yards offshore at
3:50 p.m. after the densea fog
rolled in and cut visibility to 5
feet, said coastal officials.
Deity,..... ...... ..,"-,.....
with ~elp of her friends rounded up SI .500 worth of
aluminum.~is cQllection awaits a pick up by the Coors Co.
in coast ·trash .. bins
'
Group hooks profits in fishing for aluminum to benefit' charities
By STEVE llAULE or four pounds a momlna", ahe
............... aaya, poinUn1 out that there are
Lud8 NGeenlo ls proud of her about 20 cans per pound.
abllity -not to mention her Sbe stores the empties In her·
· reputation -for rummagin& 1ara1e and bac91&'ard and -
throuih trMb cans. , every three weeks or so -sells
f NobOdy does lt better than them. She then divides the
Lucia, her frienda and fellow earntno emong four canaries,
truh em cliQen aaree. "I get 25 centa a pound," ahe &••n morninf, the Co1ta says • "and the CQon co. won't
Mu• woman Mt.I out oe her • come plct tbem,~p_unJeuJ have ioUDdl, plucklftl aluminum cans at lea.It 200 pouna. nat'a a lot
from tbe trUlr biDI beblncl the of caDI." beer bara . taverna and She 1ay1 eJCperlence baa
J'liltaunDta, taucbt her to avoid tbe blc
dumpsters. and to 1tlck to the
lrHbCUI. lb• :J: abe isn't picky. eoon. OliiDP.la •• ,.. ~ -It dDiin't matter. •• IOna u It'• ahailliium. ~ "I 111U1t am-a1e a~t Lbrie
"I leave the bl& dumpsters tO
the men. You •et tn one of lhOle
and It'• mestJ and ~metlmet
bard to get out," t he advises.
She isn't al9ne ln roundina up
cans for her favortte chariUes -
the Gulde Doi Boosters, the
Shrine Hospital for Crfppled
Children, the City of Hope and
Toys for Tots.
Her fellow members tn. lb•
Antlers Friday Luncheon Club
ln Newport Beach al.o round up
discarded loft drink and beer
cans.
"We meet every Friday aJld
every Friday they brln1 m their
sacks ol cans and we 1tun lbem
into my car." she aay1.
The An1lera club 1he
explahli, ii a H ·year;olCI h.bift1
1roup that doesn't do ao nadeh flstiln• anymore. . .
But, she adds, club members
did heir her round "up $1,500
worth o al4mlnum last year ror
the charities.
"I· love lt because it's for such
a ·1ood cause. I don't mlnd
d111Lnt around in the cans ...
And abe'a come away from
her ·dally routine wltb a few
ob9ervatJons.
"Take the hara," sbe ••YI·
"Toward the eftd of tM inOntb
tbln&• at.art &ettln& a little lean.
But lbe .iart of the mOnlb -
boy, you j u1t can't pick up enoup of them.
"It Jutt all dependa on how •
much people ~re driilkm1," lbt
au11e1t1.
The other two sailboa~. the 39-foot Sagittarius, out of
Newport Harbor, and the 28-foot
Gammon, fro°' Dana Point
Harbor, were pulled free of
destructive tides Sunday,
coastal officials said.
The Sagittarius ran aground al
11th Street on Balboa Peninsula
and was pulled out to sea bY. a
Harbor Patrol boat.
The Gamrnon went agrou.nd at
Cyprus Shores Beach about 2~
miles south of the San Clemente •
municipal pi er and was towed
onto the sand.
Weather officials say the fo&
was limited to Orange County:
s tretching inland to Garden
·Grove.
Tuesday's temperature is
expected t.o be in the low 70s
with nighttime lows in the 40s.
Tonight's fog as expected to lift
by mid-morning.
Sculptor gets new
hearing on charge
By DAVID KUTZMANN
Olttleo.lty ..........
Rebel Costa Mesa sculptor Ali
Roushan on~ again has been
spared from going to Oranae
County Jail and payln1 a $500
fine.
What's more, Roushan wlll
have his day in court -once
again. 1 A spokesman for the
California Supreme Court said
today that the panel has granted
Roushan's petition for a hearing
before the State Fourth District
Court o f Appeals in San
Bernardino.
At issue is whether Roushan
has the constitutional ritht to
put up towering red metal
sculptur~ without getting Cost.
Mesa City Hall's stamp of
approval first.
·In granting the new hearings,
Dow rocked
as 2 banks
hike prime
NEW YORK <AP > -The
stock market lapsed into a steep
de~lin~ today, bringing an
abrupt halt to last we'ek's rally.
Part of the drop was
attrtbuted to fears that the
pTime interest rate would rise,
and late In the tnoming Crocker
and at least one other bank did
10 rrom l~ percent to 16~.
·The· Dow Jones average of 30
industrials, uJ) a&.0'7 last week,
fell tt.•t pointl to 851.69.
Losers held a 2·1 lead over
gainen among New York Stock
Exchange-listed iasuea.
the state high court -in an
order signed by five of its sevell
justices -rurther extended a
delay or all proceedings against
Roushan at the Orange County
Superior court level.
The fi ery Iranian immigrant '
who has beer(tocked in a legli
battle with city officials fo
nearly two years, is seeking
overturn conte mpt of cour
convictions agains t him fo
erecting red steel artworks
defiance "' city obtained orders.
Orange County Superior
judge Robert R. Fltzgeral
imposed the $500 fine a
five -day jail sentence laa
December.
In all, ~ushan has e
four colorful sculptures, three
them wt'thout proper cit
approval and safet)' checks.
The state Suprem e Coo
s pokesman said justic
transferred jurisdiction fOf
case from the superior
level to the appeals court leve
Either side could then a
again to the state hi«h
<See SCVLPTOa, Pase Al> •
-r • I East Co.ast, Middle West
'n. AlllK .... ..,... 'A 1urprl1e _llorm that
lrnct.d tboulandl ol mocorilta
U'9 llldw"t In up lo 2& lnchft
tOOW and aenl fioodwaten
grla1 lbrou1h tbrH 1tate1
Wll1Md New En1land today
ltb freeatn1 rain, sleet and now .
Jct Jams caused uttnalve
loodln1 and forced some
vacuaUons in parta of Ohio, ••t Virginia and
euaylvanJa.
Su nday'• snowstorm In the
ldwest save students and
vemment workers 1-!aolid
today whUe resi4enll w&tted ror
1nowplow1 aod tb National
Guard to t1cklt 1lx·foot drift.I. At leut 21 people dled In the
atorin, officials reported.
Rah1 and freulnc rain
awe pine throu1b
M 11sachUS4)tt.s knocked out the
power to about 9,000 bomes In
Mauachuselts and caused a
crash Involving ao cars and a
bus on Route 2 at Westminster.
Most 1chool1 were cloted ln
Vermont with more than a foot
of enow on the ground.
More than 1.000 cara and
truck• were abandoned on
bl1hway1 ln a 100.mJle radius of
0.trolt. Schools were closed In
Detroit and Ann Arbor.
lncUana Gov. Robert D. Orr
scheduled a beUeopter tour of
hi• anow·burted state today.
About 35 people were
evacuated in Oil City, Pa .. a city
or 14,000 about 80 miles north of
Plttsbureh. when an Ice Jam
broke oo Oil Creek, and sent
water six feet deep throu1h th~
streets.
As the temperatures dipped
into the 20s today in OU City. the
flood water began to freeze and
one resident said, "It could tum
lbo whole downtown Into • 1lant
'ce cube."
•'The main Intersection In
town Ill flooded ... Water
surrounds some homes six Ctel
d~p." said Frank Stacy ot radio
station WOYI "The water Is
movln1 fast. It's got a lot or
iceberas In it."
Dauberger said the homes
mlaht 1et washed away and
poHce abandoned their station
when It was flooded with l ~ feet
of water.
In Marbnton, a city or 1,300 in
a valley between ridges of the
Allegheny mountains. an ice
jam on Knapp Creek 11ve way,
undln1 3~ feet of wattr
throuah partJ or lhe tow~. Police
and fire omclal1 uld four
famlllea were evacuated.
Jn the winter-weary Mldwett,
the deepest ~now was reported
at Greenville, in south·centrai
Illinois, where 22 •inches fell.
Chuck Jones of the llllnols
Emereency Services and
Disaster agency said 2,000
motorists were stranded In
temporary shelte rs Sunday
night
"I've never seen the snow so
deep," i>Qid David Denbow,
driver ot a 1nowplow 1tuck for
more than an hoOr Sunday on
tnteratate ~. Louil. "We'll
Jet ~eared out eventuall> &fl don't know when."
he 1urprtte 1torm developed
w en warnf. moilt air from the
fiulf or Mulco suddenly moved
up and collided with cold air
from Canada . which kept
temperatures ln the northern
Midwest as low as 38 dlgreea
below zero In Detroit Lakes,
Minn.
An uccldent on Interstate 55
near Pontiac in central llllnols
involved 17 to 20 vehicles. -
Trio take cash, diamonds
.............
LEGEND DfES -Sally Stanford. the former San Francisco
call house madam who became a two-term mavor of
Sausalito. is dead of heart failure at 78. · ,.
... Ex-madam, mayor .
~:Sally Stanford dies
, : GREENBKAE <AP> -Sally
' ·stan.tord. the former San
··,!•Francisco madam and Sausalito
-'mayor whose life became a
television movie, died today in a
• ',1Greenbrae hospital at age 78.
· Ms. Stanford, whose real
.,"name was Mabel Janice Busby,
t• ·'served two terms as a city
1 "councilwoman and served both
1 • as mayor and vice mayor before
·• her rt>lirement from politics.
She died in Marin General
l •Hospital of apparent heart
• f hllure, said Loia Bevan.s,
oursine supervisor. She had .~.~been admitted to the hospital
·-·over the weekend because or her
:·,.eakening heart, Ms. Bevans
• 'said. ·
,;• Ma. Stanford, raised in Baker,
1.1''0re .• had a reputation as a
., >
··'.·83.43 theft
:~~.jails youth
I • ,
; . A 19-ye.ar-0ld Irvine resident,
, who police allege stole a March ;·~r Dimes collection can
'.containing $3.43 in pennies,
>! oickels and dimes, was arr.ested
Sunday night on suspicion of
~•possessin g stole n property.
; officers said
'·., Robert Albert Ling of 5112
,. ffiahgate 'Terrace was arrested
.~at 10 p.m. on a street near
' Ralphs Supermarket, 14400
Culver Drive , a fter a
{supermarket employee reporred ·
" ;.the theft.
d!' Police assert that Ling told
them he took the can on the
.. "spur of the moment" because
ilf he needed money for gasoline.
it
coJorful and fun -l oving
madam-turned-mayor whose _
first omcial act was to break
open a case of champagne.
She purchased the Valhalla
Restaurant in Sausalito in about
1948.
·'I s hould have run for
president of the United States,"
she said during the March 1976
champagne bash. "At least
t~r~·:, :,ome dough in tt. ··
Ms. Stanford ran for council
five times under t he name
M arsba Owen before wlnnina
election under her best·ip»wn
name lo April 1972.
The day aft.er ber eled..loG to a ·
second four-year term lD llarcb
1976, she announced abe would
not seek a third term.
"I don't want any more," abe
said. "I think I've done a 1ood
iob."
· As top vote-getter with 1,203
votes in the 1976 city eleetioo,
Ms . Stanford -as custom
dictated -was elected mayor
by the other council members
that year. She served as vice
mayor in 1978.
In a 1970 interview, Ms.
Stanford reminisced about the
days of operating a house of
prostitution.
"I was arrested 17 times," she
said, "but I only had to pay a
couple of $2.50 fines."
Three years later, she told a
reporter that she came to San
Francisco in the 1920s with an
attorney she met and married in
Ventura.
"I was doing a little
bootlegging down there
C Southern California>." she
said "l didn't tell him that."
Police are searching for three
armed men who robbed a Seal
Beach jeweler of $75,000 m cash
and diamonds.
Seal Beach police said the
holdup occurred at 10: 10 a.m.
Sunday at Hatchet Enterprises,
2904 W~lminster Ave
Police said one of the suspects
entered and attempted to sell a
gold ring to jeweler Mark A.
Jones, A second man then d.rew
an automatic pistol from his
R.D. Howe ll
d e ad at 67;
services due
Memorial services are
pending for Newport Beach
resident and bus iness man
Richard D. Howell, who died
Jan. 28 in La Jolla after a battle
with cancer .
He was 67 .
Mr. Howell , a native of
Australia who came to the
United States with his family in
the 1920s, founded an optical
supply firm, Lido International,
In Newport Beach in the early
19SOs.
He was a member of the
Palisades Tennis Club in Santa
Ana and a former member of
the Balboa Bay Club and the El
Niguel Country Club.
He is survived by a daughter.
Virginia Howell of Solana
Beach; a son, Richard Howell or
Sebastopol and a sister, Mrs.
Robert Hill or La Jolla
He wa.'l a U.S. Navy pilot in
World Wilt' II.
There were no funeral
•Services.
Mesa w.eighs
parking ban
The Costa Mesa City Council
is experted to consider a Traffic
Commission recommendation to
ban parking Monday mornings
in north ('..osta Mesa for street
sweeping.
If adopted, the ban will affect
all streets between• Fairview
Road, South Coast Drive, Bear
Street and Sunflower A venue.
A $10 fine would be Imposed
for violators.
City council members will
meet at 6:30 p.m. at council
chambers. 77 Fair Drive. ,
U.S. to pay
N'EW YORK <AP ) The
Reagan administration has
decided to repay $71 million that
Poland owes to American banks,
but will not require the banks to
formally declare Poland in
default, The New York Times
reported today.
waistband and ordered Jones to
sit down, police said.
The intruder then opened a
back door to admit a third man
armed with a double-barreled
shotgun, officers said.
Jeweler Jones was taken to a
back room, stripped or hrs gold
ring and told to remam on the
floor until the trio left. police
said.·
Orrlcers said the jeweler saw a
dark blue mini-pickup truck
leaving the scene of the robbery
$3(},000 HB fire
blamed on grease
An unwatched skillet erupted
into a grease fire early today in
a Huntington Beach apartment
causing s:l>,000 damage
Resident Mark Lehtloa
complained of s moke inhalation
and was given oxygen at the
scene and released following the
3: 17 a.m . blaze at 8081 Holland
Drive, said Fire Captain Roger
Hosmer
Hosmer said another dwelling
fire on Saturday also caused
$30,000 damage, 'but was the
result of arson.
He said a two-story home at
9371 Cape Cod Drive caught rire
at 10: 10 a.m. and was reported
by neighbors.
The fire was started in several
places m the home. including the
den and upstairs bedroom,
Hosmer said. No one was home
at the lime. The house is owned
by Lee Niederinghaus, Hosmer
said.
Careless cooking and .arson
have been the leading causes of
structure Ctr.es in Huntington
Beach for the past t.wo years,
Hosmer said.
Smoke screen hits
Orange County Jail
There was more smoke than
fire Sunday night on the second
floor of the Orange County
Men'..s Jail after an inmate or
inmate s se t fire to an
accum•tl.:ltion of dust rn a
ventilation .duct.
Orange County S h e r i ff's
Department Lt. Wyatt Hart said
smoke rorced jail . personnel to
move 85 inmates to other areas
of the second noor where the air
rem ained breathable Other
floo rs of the jail were not
affected, Hart said
From Page A1
The incident occurred about
7 . 15 p.m . Santa Ana Fire
Department firefighters were
dispatched lo assist Jailers 'in
clearing the smoke,. from the
floor
H art said ,t.te fare was
deliberately set. There was no
known underlying disturbance.
he said The fire broke out in a ward
reserved for inmates with minor
medical problems About 35
inmates were in the ward at the
time the fire occurr ed. Hart
said
USC:-S CHOOL PLANS • • •
Christian school could not be been unable to move onto the
reached ror comment. campus Mann said USC still hopes to A court hearing on the
resolve its dispute with Corona residenL<;' lawsuit is !!cheduled
del Mar residents and move into . for Feb.~ .
the school. USC already has paid "We stall want t?. re~olve this
$69,000 to use the school. ~ a friendly way . said Mann
So far , the closest USC has " W e W ~ n t t 0 a V 0 I d . the
gotten to the school is Corona del a~ ta g~n 1 s m a court f1 gh t
Mar High School where several brings . -or USC's graduate courses are Residents s aid they are
being held. worried a bout traffic, street
Officials from the school parking and no~se th.e USC
district said they are unaware of graduate school might bring The h o me o wn e r s h ave any pl~ns USC might have for s tressed that they have nothing
subleasing the .campus against use and belie~e the
They also said use Will not be graduate school is a good idea -
r eimbursed even though the as long a~ it's not located in
private university, so rar, has Corona del Mar.
o.tty ........... -
SUCCUMBS Costa Mesa
hardwan• store owner Kerm
Rim a t !-. dead at the age of
69
Co st a M esan
Ke rm Rima
succumbs
Kermit "Kerm" Rima, who
operated a hardware store in
Costa Mesa for more than three
decades, is dead at the age of 68.
Mr Rima, a longtime Costa
Mesa resident, died Sunday
morning at Fountain Valley
Community, Hospital after being
admitted T1ve weeks ago for an
illness .
The white-haired salesman
opened his first shop _in .Costa
Mesa about 30 years ago at the
corner of Newport Boulevard
and Broadway
He moved the family business
to 2666 Harbor Blvd. 16 years
ago
Before opening his Costa Mesa
shop . Mr Rima 'operated a bait
and tackle s hop on Coast
Hi g hwa y near the-Upper
Newport Bay bridge
He as survived by Belly, his
wire of 31 years; ·and sons Keith
and Kermit, both of Costa Mesa.
A family s pokesman said
there will be no memorial
service He said M't Rima was a
member of the Neptune Society.
Dozier rescu e
'great joy'
VATICAN CITY <AP> -Pope
John Paul II told NATO military
officers today that the rescue of
U.S_ Brig Gen. James L. Doner
was a "moment of great joy"
and evidence that terrorism can
be defeated.
Dozier told a congregation at
church services Sunday be was
never really worried during the
six weeks he was a captive of
the Red Brigades because he
believed "the good Lord knows
what he's doing."
~ From Page A 1
I
SCULPTOR .•
epending on the outcome of the
lower court hearin&s in San
Bernardino.
A bout six years before her
first e lection, Ms. Stanford
authored a book, "Lady or the
House." in which she described
her exploits as the "empress" of
1144 Pine St.. San FTancisco.
Reagan, Volcker '"clash expected
No dates for the hearings were
set.
Roushan put up hts 'high rise
structures on his Industrial
property at 1550 Superior Ave.
He said this mom.in1 "This
e (CGsta Mesa city officials >
re dealing with a chess pi ayer.
hey thought they were dealing
Ith a poker player.•'
~The elty ba!J ar1ued that
oushan's sculptures, which
tand up to 60 reet hiah, require
Ute proper city buildina permits
u d safety checks like any other
stnactures.
Representatives In the city
1 ttorn ey 's office were
uaaYaltable for comment this
morning.
"l dldn 't set out to be a
madam," she wrote, "any more
than Arthur Michael Ramsey
. . . figured someday on
becoming Archbishop of
Canterbury.
·'Things just sort of developed
for both of us, I guess."
Of her childhood, Ms. Stanford
wrote that her family was "so
poor, we envied everyone we
ever heard or.:.
She changed her name to Sally
Stanrord in 1933 while attending
a football game between
Stanford University and the
University of Calilornia.
"Stanford won • .and I bad
already picked tbe name Sally,
so I said. that's it," she recalled.
W ASWNGTON <AP> -The
well-known Ronald Reagan and
the relatively little-known Paul
Volcker appear to be~n
collision course over ho to
straighten out the Am rican
. economy, and it's not at al clear
the betler·known player would
win.
Volcker, chairman o f the
Federal Reserve Board, says
the economy will be gradually
strangled by e ver hjgber
interest rates unless Reagan
reduces gigantic redernl budget
deficits.
Reaga,n, president or the
United States, says his economic
recovery program, deticits and
all, will be thwarted by rising
interest rates unless the nation's
central bank does a better job of
manalina the amount of money
.iiiiJ°Pi1at CIHtttted •dvenfafnt 714"42.5f7'
Alt other d9p•rtmenta M2-tllt
It allows to circulate In the
economy. ~ Private economists ,
meanwhile, say the nation may
be headed for far worse Umes
unless Volcker eases the Fed's
t11ht·credll sta6ce or Reaean
flnds a way to cut those deficlu.
Without a policy change by
one or bqth sides, "lbe U.S.
econo01y runa the rlsk or a
major collapse, unprecedented
to the postwar period,"
economlat Allen Sln.a of tbc
forecuUn1 flrrn Data Resources
Inc., wamed ln an Interview.
Senate lhJorlty Leader
Howard Paker, R·Tenn •• ursed
Ru1an and Volcker to "alt
down and 1et away from tb1I •
business of ading like they are
so independent they never
communicate.
"We 've got to get thla.
economy going again, we've got
to synchronize," Baker said.
But so far . Volc ker and
Reagan are refusing lo budge.
Some veteran Fed watchers
say the lndep~ndent bank is
merely pursuing the tight-credit
look mg for someone to blame for
an economy far wotse off than
the president bad predicted.
Treasury Secretary Donald T .
Regan said Sunday on CBS's
"Face the Na ti on" that the
administration is not tryintt. to
make lilt: Fed a scapegoat and
"will take the blame or the ·~redit" for what happens to the
, ?conomy.
the way the bank has been
managing the nation's money
supply. Instead of pursuing a
slow and steady course, the Fed
.has swung wildly over tbe past
ye ar bet ween extreme
clam pdowns on c redit and
ertormous increases, the
administration argues.
"There seems to be more pressure
. on the Fed t han ever betore."
Volcker. who may have more
say about the course or the U.S.
economy than any other
individual. has slated
repeatedly that he has no
intention of backing orr the
Fed ·s anti·inflation course
despite the economic paln It is
causln1 the nation and the
.political discomfort It may
catfse Reagan.
policy the president has been
advocating to fight lnOatlon.
''The .Fed is a lways the
scapeeoat, the easy out,''
observed one ba.nklng official,
wbo did not want his name u5ed.
"8ul there seems to be more
pressure being put on the Fed
today then ever before."
.Reagan and his economic
advisers deny lbey are ln any
fundamental conflict with the
Fed's Uicht·money policy or
And budget director David A.
Stockman, Interviewed on ABC's
"This Week With David
Brinkley," said that "despite
some recent administration
discomfort" over Fed pollcie5
thet "No one ln the
adminl11tratlon believes the
course ls wrong."
Nonetheless, there has been
an increasing pattern of
criticism from the president lnd
his aides in recent ·week• about
Volcker also contends the Fed
'is doing its best to regulate the
money supply but that tbe
economy is too complex to
achieve the week·lO·Weelt
precision the admlnlltration
seems to be demandln1.
If that doesn't satisfy Rea1a.n.
there's nol much he can do Oneil
the Fed thairmao'• term
Israeli bribe tries told explres ln Aupat Ula. •
Sy dtsisn. t h e Fed ., ..
establllhed bY Consreu In 1111
WASRINGTON CAP> -
laraeli intemeence •tencles
have tried to bribe and
bl1ckm1U U.S . covernlllent
worlcen stationed ln ltratl ln an
attempt to 1et .un1lllve
informatlon from thtm ,
aocordln1 lo aft account
publiabed tn todl.)l'I Washlntton
f'>olt .
The report waa baaed on to be maUveJy free of PGUUt&l!
cla11lfied American documents presaw-from the White Hoille.
captured wh o Iranian mllltanta Thu1, wblle the prealdea t
look over tht U.S. Emba11y ln appolnll memben to the bMlt.
Tehran and f u buquenpy he can not fire t be m . Anti
publllbe.d in Iran. VoJcker ha5 liven no lndic~
Tbe Post aald lt obtalned1 be would coutder re1l1nla1
coplee ol e paptrbacks from before hll 4·year term eiMla. lree·l~ llita *hen they Volcker w11 a ppointed
returned I Iran, rormer ~Cart.tr. . -~ .