HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-02-02 - Orange Coast Pilot..
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DRUGI CUil YllR HDIRlll DlllY PIPll
TUESDAY FEBRUARY 2. 19H2 ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Object dents Bush car; no one h111·t
WASHINGTON CAP > -An
armored limousine carrying
Vice President George Bush to
work, was hit by an unknown
object today but no one was
injured.
Secret·Service spokesman Jim
Boyle said agents had not found
··anything at this time lo
indicate there was a buhet
involved."
He said the car could have
OC taxes
paid
/aster
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of UM DellY .. , ... Su"
Despite the malaise affecting
the nation's economy, 1982
Orange County property tax
payments are being received at
a faster rate th~n one year ago,
ac cording to County Tax
Collector-Treasurer Robert
Citron to hjs annual listing or the
county's top ten taxpayers.
As of Dec. 31, Citron said,
$350 2 million, or 53.7 percent. of
the total property tax bill of
$6 53.8 millio n had b e en
c oJle cted. The comparable
percentage last year was 51'.9
percent. he said.
Whil e th e number of
taxpayers who failed to meet the
December\ deadline for payment
of t axes increased slightly, to 8. 7
pe r cent this year from 6.4
percent in 1981, Citron said more
taxpayers were opting to pay
b oth fi rs t and iecond
installments at the same time.
Second installment payments
are not due until April 10
Citron said changes in federal
rncome tax law likely res ulted in
people.._paYlng both installments
prio r to the Dec . 10 first
ins tallment deadline.
He said "blue collar and
lower-paid white collar workers
who have been more directly hit
by the recession." were those
unable to meet their fi rst
installment obligation.
E x -c o nvict s
held in Mesa
afte r lloldup
Two former state prisoners
were arrested in Costa Mesa
Monday an' hour afte r a
pharmacy in "Fountain Valley
was robbed at gunpoint of cash
and narcotics, police reported.
Gerald Wayne Moore, 48, of
Riverside and Teddy Georee
Radcliff, 36, of Norwalk are in.
custody at Orange County Jail
on suspicion of robbing Elliott's
Pharmacy, at the corner of
Garfield Avenue and Magnolia
Street, police said.
Moore, on parole from Slate
prison where he was held for
murder, allegedly entered the
pharmacy at 4: 15 p.m ., fired a
handgun into the floor and
ordered the three women
employees to glve him money
and narcotics. police said.
He allegedly took $550 to cuh
and $30,000 worth of narcotics
and ran lo a car reportedly
driven by f\adcliff, a convicted
armed robber, aald Fountain
Valley Police Lt. Lewil Barlow.
The suapect11' vehicle w11
'" spotted by Costa lfesa P9'.rol
officera·Clay Efpenon and D.8.
· Sanders abou an hour later
n ear Van1uard Str e•t and
Newport Boulevard, Barlow
said.
Other pollee unit.I amvW aDd
the two autpeetl aurrt~
police uld . ~:rhe ct1ba~
111rcode1 were found Ii tM cer1 police said. Both mtaJtaaa
handl'ft, police uld
been hit by a rock . District of
Columbia police spokes man
Joseph Gentile said police "still
don't know" what rut Bush's car.
.An FBI s pokesman, Larry
Knisley, said he did not know
wbe ther the rock had been
'4«lnd
But, f o r se veral hours
irrvestigators had worried that
the car might hllve been hit by a
bullet. Bush himself speculated
a s much, according to one
source who spoke with him at
the White House afterward.
Later. a s ked a s he was
arriving at the Senate if he knew
his car might have been the
target of a projectile, replied :
··No, I couldn't tell that. It was
j ust a big bang."
But security was unusually
tight a s he arrived at the
Capitol. Reporters were kept
well clear of the vice president
and police maintained a heavy
presence.
• Bush had pe r sonally told
President Reagan of the
incident, spokesman Pete
Roussel said. ·
Gentile sajd the car's driver
.. heard a thump, .. and when he
arrived at the White House,
discovered a V-shaped dent in
the rear roof of the car ..
FURRY FACE Virginia-born Baby Jackson.
resident groundhog at Santa Ana·s Prentice
Park Zoo. met h is shadow Monda~ when he
o.tty "' ... ,_..., Oler1e• ~.
roused from his hole to nibble on some fruit
Todar being his holidav. howen•r . ht• sk pt in
Groundhog sees shadow.
Furry prophet forecast s s ix m ore weeks of winter
P UNXSlITAWNEY , Pa. CAP>
-Punxsutawney Phil, the
underground oracle named for
this town, saw hi s shadow when
be peered from hls groundhog
burrow today and tradition says
that means six more weeks of
the calamjtous Winter of '82.
In Sun rrairie, Wis .• Jimmy
the Groundhog peeked out and
did not see hi~ shadow, but skies
were cloudy and, besides, it was
so cold at the time -13 degrees
-that he didn't stay out of his
hole to gi\'e a good look.
And in West Virginia, two
prognosticating groundhogs
didn't even show. One, French
Creek Freddie in French Creek,
decided to sleep through )he
morning, and it turns out that
Concord Charlie in Concord
doesn't exist at all.
··The rest of them are
Johnny-come-latelies or phonies.
Only Phil ls the seer or seers ...
said Erhard, who donned a silk
hat and tails and carried a
gnarled cane to rap on Phil's
burrow.
The groundtioc lives in a
(See SHADOW. Pa1e AZ>
Gentile, who earlier said there
had been an unconfirmed report
of a man with a rifle on a
rooftop, said police and Secret
Service agent conducted a
building-by-building s earch
along two blocks of L Street ,
whe re the incident occurred.
Agents also combed the street.
• picking up nails and other pieces
of metal in hopes of finding a
clue. ·
.
But the search was over by
mld-mornjng
.. We have found nothing.'•
Gentile s aid.
A c ondo miniu.m -office
complex is being built nearby.
Bus h s pokes man Shirley
Green said Bush "'heard a loud
noi se" But Bush's press
secretary. Pete Teeley, said the
vice president did not realize his
(See ROCK, Page AZ>
Murder trial moves
to scene·of crime·~
hut evidence lacking
By DAVID KUl'ZMANN
Of a. Delly ...... SU"
Tt'le·jury was there. So was the
judge. Not to mention the
defendant.
All that was missing Monday
for a trip to the alleged crime
scene in Huntington Beach was
the right piece of evidence a
1975 International Harvester
tractor -trailer rig with a
· 2,000-pound tilt-away cab.
Because a truck with the
wrong type of accessories was
there Instead, the eight-man,
four-woman Orange County
Superior Court jury was shuttled
back lo Santa Ana.
And a frustrated Willie Kay
Wis ely, charged with killing his
stepfather by suffocating hlm
beneath the cab of the truck last
March: was put back in a
sheriff's department patrol car
and returned to Orange County
Jail. where he is being held
without baH.
Wisely's murder trial has been
in progress for six weeks and
this was the fi rst opport1rnily the
jury has had to see the area
where the death took place -
the corner of Springdale Street
near Edinger Avenue.
The intersection is busy with
shopping eenter traffic and
school childre n walking or
riding by.
According lo previous
testimony, Jlsely and an
accomplice. James Dunagan.
drove to an area near where the
truck was parked on Springdale
Street, in front of a Von's
market , and wat c hed
Huntington Beach truck driver
Robert Bray work on his rig.
From his s eat in a panel
truck, Dunagan testified that he
was a lookout as Wisely
approached the cab, a
hypodermic needle in his
windbreaker pocket and a
revolver tucked in his belt.
Dunagan s aid h e saw
move ment around the cab and
when he looked again, "it was
down ··
Wisely, 29, has denied all
involvement in his stepfather·~
death. He is acting as bis own
lawyer. .....,
Wisely s aid he wanted his
s t e pfa ther 's truck at the
Springdale street location, but
he said Huntington Beach police
tohtiaim it wouldn't start.
So the defendant -from his
j ail cell arranged for a
stand-in truck. However, that
rig didn't have a large metaJ
chain rack on the rear of the
cab. like Bray's truck.
The difference was sigruficanl
enough that the Jury, after being
bus ed from Santa Ana to
. Huntington Beach , was put back
on the bus and sent back about
10 minutes alter arriving.
It was uncertain if Wisely,
who asked for the on-the-scene
jury inspection, would try again
this week.
Presiding over his trial has
be en Superior Court• Judge
Kenneth E. Lae. whe like the
jury. walked around tbe parking
lot area uncertainly for about 10
or 15 minutes and then left.
Take the bus
-anywhere
SAN FRANCISCO <APJ -An
off-duty Municipal Railway
ins pector who stayed away from
work because he was not feeling
well took the wheel of a Muni
bus after the regular driver look
a bathroom break and offered to
s top "wherever " passengers
wanted.
The furry prophet fed his
dr e ary forecast to a
winter-weary land through
Charles Erhard, president of the
Punxsutawney Groundhog Club,
who roused the slumbering
rodent from his electrically
he ated burrow.
The long-range forecast Issued
by the National Weather Service
concurred with Phil's findings in
a year that has seen record cold
temperatures nationwide.
Schooling tax Credits p:ushed ~
C lyde Sanders. 34 , was
captured by a motorcycle officer
after a 10-minute trip Mon~
with 12 to 35 passengers. ·:
"He was re al mellow aft6
acted like he kne~ what he was
doing," said David Wright, 2l.
who was o n the bus when
regular driver Carlton MilcheJI
took a break at 48tb A venue and
Point Lobos. ·'The National Meteorological
Center checked with Uncle Phil
before they put out their
exte nded forecast, and they
agree with his prognosis,'' said
meteorologist Frank Lucadamo
in Pittsburgll.
Accordin1 to (Dyth and legend,
s pring would Jiave been rtpt
around the comer it Phil .._d not
seen his shadow. ..
But the mystic marmo~ bu
predicted an extended winter
every year but two since u.>.
Phil. who bu been makina
lorecasu since 187,7, ii
· conaldered the nation'• chlef
pro1nosticat.or, but others have
been lrYlng to share in bla 1lory.
Private education br~ak urged for parents
By SANDIE JOY
of IM IWIY ...... l\aff
Noting concern for the future·
of the Catholic educational
system because or spiraling
costs, the bishop or the lloman
Catholic Diocese of Orange
called for tax credjts for parents •
\!(ho send their children to
private schools.
"I don't look at any public
support or private education
without a jaundiced eye,"
Bishop William Johnson eald
Monday, "because when the
m oney comes, t he hand of
control is clo&e by."
But, he contended, tax credits
wouldn't be a contrlb utlon to
•J>port private education.
He said be views tu credita u ''• wu t.o U1bten the burden"
lmROHd on penona for electln1 wut la their constitutional npt, u.e rtaht to clloole u.e form of educauoo their chlldrtb
reeetw.
et • luitcheon for tile
AntonellO Rlatoraate In
COMt VWace. Santa Ana, tb• Malaop und erscor ed bla r•••rk1 wllh eumer.oua
references to the high quality of
Catholic education.
He called it "an educational
environment that is second to
Catholic high schoolskin Orange
Couniy with a total enrollment
of approximately 20,000.
illlCI CPllT 1111111 .~
Fair through •
Wednesday. Local north to
northeast winds 15 t.o 20
mph at times. Highs 70 t..o
76. Ovemieht lows 48 to 54.
·111101 TODAY
"TM Jupfkr Elf•ct" f.a. ~
1omt f1.1ndome1t&a lbh • "
prtdicting the .-d o/ tlMr
world i.t 41 Mar cu March 10
of thu JllO'· PaQe A7 .•
NEW YORlt CAP) -A
_...,. In l.Dtetest rate. bU
t tM"prilM rate cU111biU and •l1hteud coacern tltaI the hf~lkm wtll WOl'IG.
Oltlbanlc, the nation's
oed·lar1ett bank, railed ltl rime lendln1 rate to 18.5 c.-llond-.v from \be 15. 75 ent rate that bad prevailed
D tbe lnd .. try lince Dec. 1. No:
2 Croelcer NaUonal Bank
ollowed Citibank'• lead.
lntereat rates rose for the
ourth 1trat1ht week at the
ree1ury Department'• weekly
.auction of three-and 1lx-month ·<1;~. blll1, cllmbtng to their hlabest '•'!' ~evels since Oct. s, 1981. The ~••Treasury auctioned about SlO
911 billion in bills Monday and Is
aitt'ICheduJed to auction $10 bllllon t In notes and bonds um week to ~elp nnance the federal dencit.
of•J On the New Yorlt Stock
.. Exchange, interest rate jitters o~ sent prices tumbling, with the ~--~ow Jones avera1e of 30 industrial stocks plummetlne
19.41 points to close at ~1.69, the
steepest one-day slide ln more
than ftve months. Bond and gold
bullion prices fell and the dollar soared.
The stock market was '·mixed
in early trading today but some
.-1-tey measures turned up, ~temmtna the steep decline of Monday.
..,,,. Tbe Dow Jones avera1e of 30
· .. ~.Jndu.strials gained 2.00 points to
; ~ 853.69 after an hour of triadlng. J . The prime rate, the base Upon· 9 • ·which banks compute interest ~1 .charges on short-term business
<! loans to their most credit-Worthy
•• ,, borrowers, reached a record 21.5
;0 Yt percent in December 1980. It
R,. stood as high as 20.S percent
n '· between July and September or
.re last year before falling as low as ·~ 15.5 percent at two banks iJ;I
'Iv :November. .!I~~ Concern over the course of
d ~terest rates has helgbtened as v.cf the Federal Reserve Board
,.11 c o n l i n u e s t o r e p o r t b~i'-reater-than-desired growth or
!"t,,the natlon's money supply and
. ~,the U.S. Treasury steps up its 1'-ll .borrowlng to finance a t~ecord-blgb government deficit.
3iiir,From Page A 1
et";
I :f.ROCK ~ ••
· ~tl"limousine had been hit. 1~~J Two Secret Service aaents
I , 'were in the· ca{ wilb him, Ms.
b Green said.
·. Secret Service agent Jack ti!; Warner said the agents said the
or''.npise "sounded like a gunshot" mt but that they could not be sure.
ot "Nobody was injured .
· ~ everybody is safe. The only r.r; harm was to the limousine,"
~,, Warner also said.
f ~ W amer said metal fragments lt:~presumed to have come from
... f-ithe projectile were recovered
I i;1\'1rom underneath the vinyl on the
311:-ita r roof. But it was not ?•~immediately clear what the
bt\f"R'le lal came from or even
, f :Whether it could be part of the
armored roof itself, be said.
b~ Gentile said shortly after the "'~incident that what sounded like ~igunshot.s had been heard in the ~· .area.
~ J The incident occurred on L
of.Street NW between 21sr and 22nd
tttr'streets, about eight blocks from
,v'f the White House, just as dawn
broke over the city. ... ~f Rush-hour traffic was backed II ~"Fu p for bloc Its as police ridf' blockaded L Street and several
· cross streets. Scores of Secret
---Service agents and city
> ,. policemen were at the scene and
police helicopters hovered
overhead checking rooftops.
t • • ~ Teeley saia that af'teT Bush
arrived at his office he re<:eived
· ' his usuJI intelligence briefing
and met with form.er
' Waabinaton Redskins football
• coach George Allen and Casey I J Conrad of the President's
: Council on Physi~ Fitness.
The first item on the vice
preaident'a publistaed schedule
wu an 8:30 a.m. ffSllon with
hi• Hldor staff In Bush'• oftlce
in the Oki Executlv• Office
Builctinf acljaeent to tbe White
Houae. But Teeley said It la not
unusual for Bush to arrtve about!
·7:30 and have bis inte1U1ence
brteftnl and a abort meetinl or
pleture-tald.Qc aesam before b.11
formal tulnea day be&W.
..
I
I
Midwest brac~s for still. another blaSt of Arcttc cold • • By Tbe MMda&ed Prete Un" and cut off electrlclty Co Thouundl OI lnvtlert ID u..
A winter storm followlnc ln • b o u t 9 , O O O ho m e a 1 n d M ldwnt ipiat SuDdaJ ftiOl In
the tracks ot IHt wHkend'a bu1lnelaet. Most had electricity emtr~ ......,.., tueb • tM
crippler dumped up to three back by Monday nt1bt Zton Bv-..lt~aJ Unit.cl Quift:b
Inches of 1now ln the Texas The weekend 1torm·1 hllb of Cbrilt tn Iodl•11polil. Wtddt
Panhandle today, and the winds and 10-inch snows in hou1e4250.
Midwest was "arned to 1et Michigan forced motorists to The NaUonal Guard abutUed
ready for another assault. abandon as many as •l,000 can nqrses and dodon to boepl&ala
1t was expected to be & repeat on DelrQit·area freeways. The af\er the weekend ltorm, and
of the 1torm that left '51 people Mtchl1an House canceled Ill 300 people were 1trucled at 13
dead and thousandJ of travelers Monday,nlihtlesslon btcauseof armories lo central and
stranded in almost two feet of the storm. and the Wayne nortbem Indlana.
snow in the Midwest on Sunday County clerk'e office closed, About 500 people atteadiDI the
and Monday. g l vi n g an extra day for Central lll~ol1 J 111 Festival
''It's Uke cara on a freight candlcW.es to file for a special were stranded for the nllht ln
train comlna down the track," House election March 23. Decatur, wbert 17 incbea of
aald Mary Kaufman of' the Hundreds of Michigan schools snow fell.
National Weather Service ln Ann shut down Monday and many Moll scboola were closed in
Arbor, Mich. "It may be the stayed closed today, lncludin1 Vermont with more than a foot
same even to the lime of day it the Detrott school syste m. or snow on the 1round .
bits."
Blowing snow reduced
visibility to near zero this
morning in Amarillo, Texas. Up
to four inches of snow was
expected in North Texas and
parta of New Mexico.
"We've got a lot of accidents
and stranded cars:· said Mabel
A be.rnathy. a deputy in the
Potter County sheriff's
department in Amarillo. "The
roads are very sllck and
dangerous, and with the blowing
snow the visibility is very poor."
Abusiveness argued
• • • in poisomng case
Despite their incompattb1hty,
Janette Baetz balked at having
her son -now accused or killing
her with cyanide poison -move·
from her Newport Beach home,
a prosecution witness has
testified.
bad numerous loud ar1umeat.s,
including one In which be la
alleged to have told her, "you're
nothing but a damned old
woman. I wish you were . . . /
dead." . ...........
SOUTH -AND HURRY An unidentified wom'an hitchhikes
on Inte~tate 75 near Clarkstown. Mich .. north of Detroit.
'Tm getting out of this mess." she told the phorographer.
Of the people kllled in the
weekend snowstorm. 15 died in
Michigan. inc luding 13 who
suffered apparent heart attacks
while shoveling snow and two
who froze to death.
Called to the witness stand by
prosecutor Patrick Geary.
Shirley Lever told j urors
Monday she and her husband.
Mrs. Baetz·s nephew. visited Ute
87-year-old woman regularly
during the years that Herbert
Barclay Baetz lived with his
mother at her Balboa peninsula
home.
Defense lawyer Stuart Grant
of Costa Mesa, who must still
give his opening statements to
the ·jury, bas Indicated Mrs .
Baetz was In poor healtb and
asked her son to help ber end
her life . Honesty, foresight
Ker.m Rima traits
By Monday. the storm had
moved into the East with icy
floods, freezing rain and snow.
lee chunks and water up to six
feet swirled through the streets
of Oil City, Pa., prompting the
evacuation or about 50 people
after water backed up behind a
huge ice jam where Oil Creek
Baetz, 57. is charged with
putting a lelJlal dose of cyanide
pois'on in his mother's orange'
juice after telling her she
·'should be dead."
Baetz admitted Co police' be
gave his mother the half
teaspoonful or cyanide ln her
orange juice.
Mrs. Lever said she and her
husband found Janette Baetz tQ.
be mentally alert the times they
saw her. She said the woman
never spoke or wantint to die.
By JODI CADENHEAD
C)( .. Dally ...... SUff
.Monday morning Keith and
Khmit Rima were seUing
hardware in the Costa Mesa
store their father started more
than 30 years ago.
That's the way he would have
wanted it. said t}le two brothers,
whose father Kermit Rima died
Sunday at 69 followinJ a stroke
Dec. 24. -.
A native of Grand Rapids,
Mich., Mr. Rima, who trained as
a dentist before World War II,
opened Kerm Rima Hardware in
1951 at Harbor Boulevard and
Broadway Street.
It was uie same year that he
married Betty, wbo worked
beside him selling everything
rrom pots and pans to wrenches.
• "He was a great guy. He was
very honest and very reliable,"
said ·Alvin Pinkley~ whaowned a
drug store just a few doors
away. "He always took the
positive attitude and was a great
booster to the city."
Following his discharge from
the Navy, Mr. Rima decided not
to pursue a career In dentistry
and instea,d opened a tackle
store in Newport Beach.
But his dream was always to
own a hardware store as his
rather had done in-Michigan,
said his two sons.
Selling hardware was Mr.
Rima 's life. and by the time the
sons were eight years old. they
were working in the Costa Mesa
store, too.
•·He never considered it
work," said Keith, 29. "There
wasn't anything he couldn't
sell."
In time the busy store not only•
became a center for hardware
deals, but also a meetin1 place
for friends and civic leaders.
Mr. Rima was active in city
and social affairs and served as
president of the Costa Mesa
Kiwanis in 1965 and director of
tbe Chamber of Commerce from
1964 to 1969.
··He was very generous and a
Safety booth
becomes tomb
N.EW YORK <AP> -A
subway .token clerk locked
inside a crime-proof booth died
of a heart attack while ruab-bour
commuters watched helplessly,
authorities said.
Passengers were unable to get
In the booth to h~lp James
Martin, 59, of Mount Vernon,
when be &lumped tb the floor
Monday in the IRT station in the
north Bronx.
Authorities said Martin
probably died btfore the first
re1eue units arrived. But
Translt Authority police and
Emersency Medical Service
technlcianl differed on how long
It took to break Into the booth.
lot of fun ," recalled realtor Roy m eets the Allegheny River.
Mccardle. ·'He was really one or <Photo, Page B2)
our more active members in the A b o u t 1 O o N a t i on a I
Kiwanis. Kerm was always on Guardsmen launched an assault
the lookout for other people." on the clogged streets or St
In 1965 Mr. Rima decided to Louis late Monday_ after the
expand his operations and city's worst snowstorm in 70
opened a new 26,000-square-foot years left nearly 14 inches or
store at 2666 Harbor Blvd. snow during the weekend.
"He had a lot of foresight," Arctic winds up to 40 mph
said bis ~ Kermit.. 26. "He raked CoJorado on Monday in
knew the town was growing. He the wake of a storm that
knew this was the place to dropped up to 10 in,ches of snow
come." / in the high country and 3 Inches
Although he enjoyed fjshing, on \he southeast plains. Another
his favorite pas ti me was sn<twstorm started today, and
designing ma i I boxes and bitter cold weather was
furniture to sell at the store. expected. •
2 c th of his sons went to A fierce Ice st..crm made a
college and both returned to delicate spectacle of trees and
work in the hardware store. fences in north-central and
"From the time we were kids , western Massachusetts over the
this store is basically. what be . weekend, but pulled down power
The woman was pronounced
dead Sept. 10, 1981 , at Hoag
Bemorial Hospital in Newport
Beach.
Mrs . Lever, who lives with
husband Charles in Torrance.
said although Janette Baetz and
her son had a s torm y
relatiomhip, the elder woman
never thought of asking Baetz to
leave her home.
"She'd say, ·I can't . l just
can't. He's my son'," the
witness said.
According to the prosecution,
Baetz, a cbetn~t was abusive
and cruel lclwards his mother.
who suffered from various
physical ailments.
Previous witnesses have
testified ~e son and bis mo\}\er
The witness told juron Baetz
had been loud and obnoxious
around his mother durine an
evening out several years ago
and she had kept her distance
from him from that Um~
onward.
Baetz could be sentenced to
· Jite imprisonment If he is
convicted or murder.
Boy~ 9, given LSD
LOS ANGEL.ES (AP) -A
9-year-old boy was eiven ·a
btick -0n "tattoo" laced with LSD
at his school campus in West Los
Angeles, a spokeswoman al
Queen of Angels hospital in
Hollywood said Monday.
tal"ed about," s~i<f ·Kermii. · • 1 •
-ntt .. s going to stay lhes-ame. r--...-----------------------_.;;...------------~ There's no doubt about it."
Added Keith, "It was bis
dream and it's ours too."
There will be no memorial
service. The family sugges~
that contributions be made to
the Calvary Chapel School.
From PageA1
·snADOW • • •
glass-enclosed pen with his
mate, Phyllis, In the center of
town . They eat a diet .
recommended by a zookeeper,
of dry dog food , animal
vitamins, apple$ aod carr:ots.
Phil is put into his burrow on
Gobbler's Knob just before tlle
big event on Groundhog Day.
There is no scientific evidence
that any animal can forecast the
weather. And the National
Geographic Society once pointed
out that groundhogs normally
hibernate until March. not early
February .
But this town ot 7,792, located
80 miles north of Pittsburgh and
named by the Delaware Indians
for a vicious species of black
flies Uµll once thrived here, has
cultivated intemaliooal fame by
promoting a myth that can be
traced back to ancient Scotland.
To mark the occasion. the
local hi1h school crowns· a
groundhog king and queen. And
the town honors its man and
woman of the year at a
Groundhog Day banquet, held
after Phil's prediction, which is
duly recorded annually in the
Congressional Record.
"It's a fun thing. It's the kind
of holiday that if it dido 't exist,
we'd have to Invent It. What else
would you do on Feb. 2?" said
Elaine Light., a historian and
former reporter who has written
two books about Punxsutawney
and Groundhol Day.
"Besides, Punxsutawney Phlt
Is as accura~ as any television
weatherman, and he doesn't
make bad jokes. He Just says
what he hQ to say and aoes
back to sleep,'' she said. ,
99-cer;it gas
brings mobs
Now's the time to join a
Holiday Spa Health Club, while
you can still take advantage of
ourl98Ir~s. ·
• Plus 1/2 off on a short
introductory course, and dis·
counts on all our other mem-
berships.
You'll get all of this year's
facilities, for last year's prices.
With separate, individually
specialized facilities and pro-
grams for men and women,
available every day. There's no
better time than now to give
Holiday Spa a try. So stop by
today for a free guest tour. n::=va
for Men and Women
I /2 ulf<.hort course not available::
al lhrr.1m:~ or West Los Angeles clu~.
Costa Mesa 2.100 Harbor Blvd ... '8ehind Thrifty
Drug>. 1714> 549-3368
Mission Viejo 24401 Alicia Pkwy. al San Diego
Freeway. 1714> 770-0822
Orange 622 East Katella Ave., West of Tustin
Ave .. 17141 639-2441
Westmiruiter 6757 Westminster Ave., at Golden
West, 1714) 894-3387
• lf••llh It 11-nnl• t ·....,, of Am•n ... lllRI
lI lV lI00100\ !VM A.NV
OUR 1981 RATES LOOK GREAT .·
..
,., .........
~,.,he woe
'die alale right
It wu a Uttle mo,.. thu
th• middle lnitJal that ftep.
Wlllla• a. &atellfer•,
D·Conn., lfClt ~ wbn be
roH to welcome recently
elected Rep. BartNln 8deJ
KeuelJY, D·Coan.
Ratchford cnettd btr u
"the oewelt member of the
HouH ol RepreHntaUves,
Barbara Balley
Connecticut."
Novelist GrU.• OreeM
aay1 threat.I to a woman be
had known ror year•
prompted him to delve into
the underworld and wrlt.e
what be calls a ractual
account of crime and
corruption ln Nice, the
French Mediterranean
coutaldty. •
"BEST ACTOR" -Burt Lancaster poses with daugbter
Joanna at the New York Film Critics Awards·in New York.
Lancaster won the Best Actor award for his role in the film ,
'·Atlantic City.··
Tb• BriUJb writer said be .baa been threatened ror bi.I
lnqulries and be now carries
a pocket gas c1Alster. ln
addition, be told the London
Sunday Times, bia
.diacoveries made him return
bl• Legion of Honor
decoration to authorities in
Paris. But they sent it back.
,., .......
Greene charl{ed that Nice
is the haunt of the mo11t
powerful crimlula in the
south or France.
Connecticut Gov. WWJam
O'Neill,· recovering from a
heart attack, says he'll be
back in the capital for the
opening of the legislative
session, and he's hinting that
he'll nm for a full term in
November.
O'Neill said be wiU return
part time beginning
Wednesday. He has been
,bsent since Nov. 20 when be
was hospitalized following a
heart attack.
The 51-year-old Democrat
stepped up from lieutenant
governor to governor shortly
before the death last year of
Gov. Ella Grauo.
British composer Sir
William Walton has
completed bis first major
works in 10 years in ti.me for
the celebration of his 80th
birthday.
FILM WINNERS -Actress Diane Keaton and Warren Beatty
leave' the New York Film Critics Awards dinner in New
York after winning a top award. Beatty's movie, "Reds.''
was voted the best movie of the year. He directed and she
starred in it.
Walton finished a
. "Passacaglia for Solo Cello"
which Matialav &o.tropeftdl
will premi~re in London oo
M'arch 16. Rostropovich also
will conduct the National
Sy mpbony Orchestra of
Washington, o.c .. on tour in
London this month, in the
first performance of
Walton's other new wort,
"Prologo e Fantasia." ,
Walton, who Uves in a villa
on the Italian island of Iacbia
with his wile, Suaaa, turns
80 March29.
Patchy fog forecast
Temperatures
AIN"Y l'elr 1,,,.°"911 w.-.,uy ••<•P1 Allluque
petclly tov n .. r llM co .. 1 H rty A""'rlllo
WednH Cloey morntno. Hl9M toeley AMho•-
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Do Aaabelm and Oran1e
CoWltf haw wtaat 1t tU• to bolt 9uper' Bowl XlX, ~ or
Ul?
Aaabetm. Ma)1or John
Se1mour ud a dele1atlon ol orance Couat>' iovernlPMlt and
buln., leaders believe lt doell.
Tbe 1183 &aper Bowl Will be
held lD Pueden•'• RoH Bowl,
and the ltM edltlon of tbe
annual football claaaic la
acbeduled.to be beld in Tampa, Fla., leavtn1 ~ u the ftnt
poaatble year a Super Bowl
could come to Anabelm
Stadium.
.. In abort, we tbtnlt we've eat
the facilities," Seymour aaid at a preu copfereoce at the
stadium Monday.
He listed the Anahelm
•Convention Center. the county's
numerous botela, Disneyland,
Knott's Berry Farm, the
county's many shopping malls
and the local trao1portation
system, including John W.,ne
Airport, u aaseta that will help
Anaheim rank b11b u a possible
Super Bowl locale.
Seymour said 40 officials
alt.ending a luncheon earlier
Monday expressed "unanimous
consent" for brtncJng the Super
Bowl to Orange County.
"It's much more than a
football game . . . it'I' like a
Mardi Gru, an Indianapolis 500
or a Kentucky Derby," Seymour
said. The 1ame itself would
. bring an eatlma\ed 50,000 to
60,000 persona to Oran1e County
and the influx Would 1enerate
about $50 to $60 million in
revenue, be said.
The next step in attemptlnlJ.O
convlnee tbe Nat.tonal Football
Lea1ue \o consider Anaheim on
the Utt ot possible Super Bowl
altet la formeUon or a "talk
force '• that will make
preaentations to ·NFL official.a
durln1 meettn1s lo March or
June.
"It's no .. euy task.'' Seymour
conceded. "W' need th~ positive
· support of th.e NFL lncludin1
I, (Commissioner> Pete Roselle
and a majority of the rrancbiae
ownen.''
Seymour said the "lostatica''
of hoatin1 a Super Bowl are
mind-boggling. One thousand
cabs and 300 private limousines
might be needed, be said.
He strongly hinted that the
county's airport access could
prove crucial. "In Detroit (at
the time of this year's Super
Bowl lo nearby Pontiac> a
private jet was leaving the
airport eve ry 30 seconds,"
Seymour said.
The mayor, who also ls a
declared candidate for the state
Senate seat vacated by former
Sen. John Briggs, R-Fullerton,
beaded an Orange County
delegation that traveled to
Pontiac. Others included
Anaheim Councilman E .
Llewellyn Overholt, Jr .. City
Manager William Talley ;
Stadium Manager Tom Liegler,
and Los Angeles Rams execu-
tive Dick Beam. Seymour noted that Anaheim
Stadium, which now has 69,000
s eats, might have to be
expanded to 72,000 or 73,000 to
hold a Super Bowl. "But that's a
decision yet to be made and we
beliJ!ve we can accomplish this
without major problems and
expense," he said.
Adjusting 'tough'
for kidnapped boy
MERCED <AP> -The ordeal
is over for 16-year-old Steven
Stayner, but some of the trauma
caused by bis seven-year
tl4napploa remains.
ICeDDflth Parnell and Ervin
M urp.by will be sentenced
Wednesday for 1natchtn1
Stayner off a Merced street
three blocks from h1I home De<:.
'· 1972, "hen be waa 7-yean-old. No one from the Stayner
family will attend the
proceedings lo Alameda County
Superior Court.
The bilh school junior is more
interested in leadint a (K>rmal
home life after years of upset,
aald b1a mother, Kay.
•'You don't go ttirou1h
something like that and come
out unscarred. That's an
impossibility," she aaid in a
telephone interview. "His
capacity to overcome, I think, ii
very, very great. With a lot of
support on our side, from bis
teachers and bis frlendl, I think
he'll come throueh it OK."
Living under the name Dennis
Parnell, Stayner kept up with
bis education while be and
Parnell drifted around Northern
Callfomia.
Stayner testified that be was
sexually abused b)' Parnell,
be1an drlnkinJ and smoting at
aie 11 and had several bruabea
with the law over vandalism .
He baa been back home ror
almost two years and ls
I
' -
The holiday for ceiebrat-
lng love and affection Is
fest approaching ... Valen-
, tine'• Day, February 14th.
We bllVe auch a wide aelec· ttom of Nntlmental glft1
hit you 1houkt eattr find Just the right one to oany
your me111ge of, love. We
hlYe chofcee for the mini
llzil budget to th• magnlfl·
oentl .
You aey "you gotta have
. hMrt"? We have them . . .
In lodeetl, necklecn, l'tnge,
br•c•l•tl, brooch••,
charma, earring•; book nwtca, kev topt, pll boxn,
picture fraMet trld key
cNIN.
In charm• which are 1ultablt to be worn on
1 either bt1oel•t• or n~k chalnt we haY• et-out I*'-lhlt ,..,., mt• -· · ioetlld" out In dlamo"" ..• :·voura.. toMY. toMOnow I ......\ end.~'TlfM ......
consum ed by "sc h ool ,
girlfriends and just messing
around," Mrs. Stayner said. "He
blends in. He tries desperately
to blend in. A lot of people ask
questions and so on. He's not too
cra1y about tt."
Steven earns spending money
working part-time at a Wendy's
Old-Fashioned Hamburgers
restaurant. Home video games,
movies and high-school friends
occupy his leisure time. .
The toot-lost son is treated
just the same u the Staynera'
other four children, bis mother
said. ·
"He's just one of the lclds,"
she said. "He does his chores.
He gets bis bawling out the same
as t verybody else."
Stayner earned a reward when
be turned himself in to Ukiah
police with 5-year-old Timmy
White two weeks arter the
younger boy was kidnapped in
what authorities contended was
a scheme by Parnell to build a
family.
The money was earmarked for
college or trade school tuition,
but Stayner's grades are poor:.
"He's not doing very well at
all, in ract he's failing, because
be spends more time messinJ
around Ulan studying. Like an
awrut lot of 16-and 17-year-old.a
toditY, he can't seem to keep bis
mind on school," Mrs. Stayner
Sa.id .
ELECTED -Orange County
Fair Board director Burr
Williams of Anaheim has
been elected president of tile
board overseeing operations
at the Orange County
f air,rounds in Costa Mesa .
Wilhams was appointed to
the board in 1968 and also
served as president in uns.
ERA vote
rejected
by .Virginia
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -111e
Virginia House of Deleta ... s
voted 62-35 Monday to reject a
proposal that would bave
compelled it to debate and vOte
OD the Equal Ri1hta
Amendment.
It was the latest in a seriel ol
setbacks for the coosUtutionel
amendment to ban
discrimination based ~ "lex.
Legislatures in Oklahoma,
Illinois and Georgia ba•e reeently refused to· raWy the
measure, which will die unlm-·,
three more states approve it hy
June 30.
Delegate Dorothy McDianDid
of Fairfax urged members of the
House to be remembered u
legislators of courage rather
than evasion, but her plea failed
-and with it apparently the
Chance of Virginia ratifyiill
ERA. ,
The ERA resolution now ii
before the House Privileeea ~
Elections Committee, where a
13-7 majority opposes the
measure. The committee must
report it to the House floor
before It can be debated and
voted on.
The committee for eight
straight years bas refused to
approve resolutions caWna for
ratificatioo of the amendment to
the U.S. Constitution.
The ERA issue ill sijll alive iD ,
tbe state Senate, where· a
friendly Senate Privileges aMl
Elections Committee woold
recommend adoption by the fl.lit
Senate. The vote ls expected to
be close in the Senate, but eftft
if it were approved,' the Senate
ERA resolution would tben ~
to be sent to the House -and
back to the s ame Hou'ae
committee.
So far, 3S states have ratified
the amendment and three more
are needed. Complicatlna O.e
count is the fact that five state
legislatures have rescinded
ratification. The legality of t.ti.lt
action will have to be decided
ultimately by the Supfeme Court
if the 38-state 1oal la reached in time. ,,
Another factor ~the two-year
extension Congress granted for
the raUfic.ation drive. A federal
judge ruled that the extenskiin
was improper.
8 Orange Cout DAILY PtLOT/Tunday, Pebruary 2, 198~
mmrr~rn rn I
·Re~gall identity with FDR risky
8YIAY PUJUN8
VI ASHIN GTON < AiK>
Pr"ldeot Rea•aa'a co ~
lab .. of h1I prealden *1th
&l a t of Fraok lln Oelano
aooaevelt may be 1ood
abort-term pollUea with a -··termriak. Pre1identa alwaya have h•d a
tendency ,to quote their
predeceuora and 1ome have
tried t.o publicly ldeoWy with a
' late peat. It makes tood copy
t_ and it lives them a 1tature
fbey have not yet attained on
their own. • eu• la also carries a risk that
tb~y may be Judged by the
st.ndard they have attempted to
e m u l ah. And no current
p resident, no matter bow
competent. can measure up to
the almost idealistic picture that
history and flawed memories
paint.
So It was with Jimmy Carter,
who emulated Harry Truman -
and was found wanting. And now
comes Reagan , setting for
himself by word and deed the
standard of Roosevelt.
R ea1an, a reformed New
Dealer himself, has quoted
Roosevelt on at least a
* * *
l•IDlYlll
half.dosen occulona in t}le put
year. In facth his acceptance
apeecb at t e Republican
NaUonal Convention contained a
pbraae from the apeech
Roosevelt made on accept1n1
the Democratic nominaUon in
1932.
He couldn't resist drawing
another parallel last week as be
led the nation in rememberint
the lOOth anniversary of
Roosevelt's birth.
Jtea1an quoted ttie late
journalist Walter Lippman as
writing off Roosevelt as "a
pleasant man, who without any
important qualifications for the
office would very much Uke to
be president.''
Then Reagan followed up by
saying, "Forgive me, but now
and then I think I've been
hearing an echo."
It's oniy natural for Reagan t.o
identify with Roosevelt. He was
the first president Reagan ever
saw. And he changed the face of
government -sometbin.1t
* * *
Rea11n la n(>w determined t.o dO
himaell.
In truth., there i1 some
almilartty between Rea1an and
Roosevelt.
Both men mastered the
media, ustnt electronics to ereat
advanta.ae. Roosevelt made his
radio-broadcast fireside chab a
household phrase. Ree1an
already ls 'l"ell known for his
mastery of television.
Both came into office on a
wave of dissatisfaction with the
way the nati9n had been 1oin1.
Both were better at inalllling
hope l n a discouraged elect.orate
than ln mastering the details of
the 1ovemmenl they ran.
And both scored a series of
smashing legislative victories
early ln the~ first terms.
But there are disslmHarities
as well -most notably In philosophy.
Rooaevelt built up the
1overnment in an effort t.o rlaht
the economy, t.o put the nation'•
unemployed back to work.
Rea1an wants to ahrlnk\
government remove the fetters ·
from private enterprise -a
latuez.faire philosophy more
akin to t he presidency of
Herbert Hoover, Roosevelt 's
predecessor.
Other notable differences exist
between Reagan and Rooaevelt.
'Roosevelt came into office
with the country In a
depression; R'a1an H the
country was headint out of a
recession.
Roosevelt moved quickly t.o
turn the nation around, even
though it took a war to end the
depression. Rea1an currently is
fighting a new recession and
slruggUn1 t.o get bis economic
policy working.
. ............
OET THE MESSAOE? Marge Stanowski posts sign in
window of Baltimore's store telling city firefighters she wants
a free smoke detector. A series of 18 fire deaths and more
than 20 vacant-building arsons has prompted the city to
give away detectors. scarce in retail stores.
Preparedness for water crashes flawed
BOSl'ON <AP) -A jetliner
descends for a normal night
landing. Suddenly lbere is a
sha'rp impact, a rush of freeiing
water and panic.
the N alional Transportation
Safety Board, complain that
federal reg1,alalions do not
require airlines to train and
the reaJ world." he says. ago," he says, adding they now
test just aircraft. "We changed
it because we had people getting
hurt in these demonstrations."
Reaganomics aiding
rich, hurting ·poor?
Experts on aircraft safety say
the terrifying scenario -played
out Jan. 23 when a World
Airways jet slid into Boston
Harbor -indicates the nation's
air travel system ls not
prepared lo handle sudden,
unexpected dllchings near
airports.
·equip air crews for t he
eventuality of a sudden descent
into the water.
The Federal Aviation
Administration does require air
''Premise.
doesn't exist
in r eal t00rld ."
David Stamey. managing
director of the Airline
Passengers Association, says
safety system flaws were
evident during the accident at
Boston's Logan International
Airport.
Passengers reported that
some of the cabin crew seemed
confused about what to do. Some
said they were told to assume
the crash position -hands on
ankles, bent over in their seats
-although the plane bad come to rest.
Williams also claims the
inflated "slide·rarts" used to
evacuate the plane al Logan
were not properly deployed,
sending many of the passengers
into icy, waist-high water.
The Airline Pilots Association
filed a petition with the FAA in
1980 asking that the federal
requirements for over.water air
operations be redefined to
include airport s with
"significant bodies of water in
the air traffic control area."
NEW YORK (AP> -Most
Americans believe
Reaganomics have helped the
rich a n d hurl the poor,
according lo the latest
Associated Press -NBC News
poll. \
But a majority believe
President Reagan's program
will eventually have a "trickle
down" effect t.o help middle and
lower income classes.
The nationwide poll surveyed
1,599 adults by telephone last
week, after the president's State
of the Union address a week ago
today.
Majorities also said they think
the president's economic
pro1ram will reduce inflation
further but will not reduce
unemployment, and a plurality
said they don't want lo see
inflation drop more if it means
higher unemployment.
Sixly·seven percent said they
think Reagan's economic
program has helped upper
income Americans, compared
with 13 percent who said it bas
hurt them. Twenty percent were
ejther not sure or said
Reaganomics had made no
difference to upper income
Americans.
On the other hand, S3 percent
said Reagan's economic
program· bas hurt middle
incomt: Americans, compared
with 24 percent who said it bas
helped them.
The DC ·lO, with 198
passengers on board, ran down
the length of t h e Logan
International Airport's longest
runway and into the shallow, icy
waters of the harbor.
Two people are missinli, but
all others were pulled out
without major injur)'..
"It would have been much
different if the plane came to
rest 200 feel out in the water,''
says Wayne Williams, a former
commander or the Air Force's
ocean survival school. "You
would have lost a bunch of
people. 1 know the crews are not
ready for this kind of accident."
Williams ~:lys there are 216
airports that lle near oceans,
lakes and bays. But Williams
and James Kini. farmer bead of
I
carriers to train cabin
attendants for ocean ditchings.
In such instances, the crew
theoretically bas prior warning
and can prepare the passengers.
But jetliners operating within
165 miles of the U.S. coastline
are not required lo carry
liferafts or lifejackets.
King, who stepped down from
the NTSB earlier this month.
says 75 percent of airline
accidents take place near
airports and a "substantial
KIDOunt" o! :Urport! are n,.u tlle
waCer.
·'The premise that the FAA
operates under doesn't exilt in
•
Depending on various
afCOunts, it took 30 minutes to
an hour to evacuate the plane.
According to Stamey. if it
lakes "upward to 50 minutes" to
evacuate a plane, it's likely due
to sloppy procedures or training.
"Obviously there was a human
deficiency," he said.
Fred Farrar. a spokesman for
the FAA : says administration
rules require that ··it be
demonstrated a plane can be
evacuated within 90 seconds
with half the exits available."
''We used to requirt! t:act.
airline to make the
demonstration separately, but
we changed that a few months
·'One of the things that bothers
us about the FAA regulations Is
that they talk about the aircraft
fl ying miles and miles out to
sea," said an APA spokes man
who asked not to be identified.
·'That just does n 't cover
s ituations lik~ we had in Boston.
where there's a possibility or a
plane ditchin.1t m the water "
Williams, who taught Air
Force flyers how lo survive
ocean landings, s ays the big
danger for pallSengers is
hypothermia, the loss or body
temperature sometimes caused
by exposure to chilly waters
.. SPORTSWEAR
I
. ---WESTCLI F F PLAZA
Newport Beach ,
WE'RE GOING ·ouT OF BUSINESS .
CLOSING OUR DOORS FOREVER!
0
Sale Siarts Wednesday~. Febr~ary 3rd 9:00 A.M.
· Ladies'Spqrtswe9r, .Men·' s A~~~ssoties, Fb_ct~res
Hangers, Furniture, SectJnty Tag ~ystem,
NeR2140, Everything! .
• Hrs. Monday'Sat~rday 10-6 . thursday 'til 9 P.M .
Mastercard, VISA, Checks -Alf Sales Final · ~
•
,
-• #', ., I • • o ---' p1eas 'fOr aid · continue: ~~~~~~.._.....
FlOod victims in north say help limited; slow. in coming
BEN LOMOND1 Calif. <AP> -
Jack Mllh 1nalu1 1oma
Powdered cement on th• billlide
above bla Love Creak hom'!1 boptns lt will aeap Into the aou
and prevent the IOUY land from
slldinl onto bla tiny cabin.
He hu reMOD to worry. On
Jan. 4, 300 yarda from MUla'
San\1 Cruz County home, a
l,50C).yard 1wath of mountain
tore loose durln1 a two·day
rainstorm, apllnterinl houaea
and kllllna 11 people.
''The nrst rain after the storm
I lay in bed U.tenlnJ to every
rain drop, wonderinl ii the bill
above my house would hold,"
Milla said. The winter rains
usually continue tbroulh March.
Looking at the half·mlle of
rubble left. by tbe slide, it seema
'
th• l'edtral Emersoncy
Mana,.l!Mllt A1ency ~ limited
and eatremely 1low ln c6mtna.
M icbael Van De Veer
admlnlatraUve analyst and
amercency services coordinator
for Santa Crua Cowity, 1ald the
county'• '80 mlUloo budfet w1ll
have to absorb the $5.6 million
already spent ln atorm repairs.
With at.rtct 1pendin1 llmitatioal
brou•ht on by Proposition 13, tbe
county can't afford to spend
much more.
There are also problerna for
residents whose homes were
dama1ed. There la loan money
available at 8 or 18 percent
interest. People who can't.
qualify for a loan from a
commercial institution are
"It's gone past the . ability of the
local peopl~ to cope with.''
doubtful if a thousand bags of
cement would make a
difference. But Mills' work was
the only sign s omeone was
trying to protect homes still
standing in this scenic canyon 70
miles south of San Francisco.
"It's really gone past the
abiJity of the local people to cope
with," he said. "We really need
federal help."
The plea for more federal help
is beard often in the 150-mile
stretch of northern California
where the storm killed 31 people
arid caused an estimated $280
million damage.
In all, 3,100 people were forced
from their homes and 477 people
were hurt. The storm destroyed
231 homes and 25 businesses.
Another 6,304 homes and 1,014
businesses were damaged .
Santa Cruz County al.one
suffered $106 million damage.
Although Santa Cruz and nine
other counties are eligible for
federal disaster aid, officials
and residents in the hard-bit
areas complain that help from
eligible for the lowe.r rate.
Before the loan is authorized,
an investigator must visit tbe
damaged home, verify damage,
set the interest rate, determine
if the homeowner can make the
payments and mail the papen to
the homeowner for signatures.
Jim Brady, a spokesman for tbe
Sm all Bwiiness Administration,
which runs the loan program,
says it takes an average ot two
months to process loans.
Grants of up lo $3,000 are
available for emergency home
repair, but they are subje('t to
delays as clerks verify
eligibililJ.. Brady says 47 grant
checks. totaling $36,314 , have
alread)' been sent out In Marin,
Sonoma and Contra Costa
counties under the Limited
Home Repair program. Checks
for Santa Cruz County are to go
out this week.
Many of the homes damaged
and lost in the flood did not
carry flood insurance, available
only through the federal
-AnnoundDQ .
government, accordln1 to
Uiaurance a1ent Colin GUee.
Some 8,380 northern
Callfomiam have asked for help
at one of aix federal diluter
centers opened after the 1t.orm,
accordin1 to another FEMA
offlclal, Charles Raudebaup.
In Marlo County, wltb f17
million dama1e and an S80
million annual bud1et, county
admlnt1trator Jobo Barrows
said clean-up alone coat $20
mtlllon, of which the federal
1overnment will pay 75 percent
To help flll tbe 1apa left. by
FEMA, the San Francisco
Foundation, a private charity, ia
aettin1 up a $500,000 pilot project
in Marin County to help
homeowners and small
businesses that don't qualify for
federal aid.
The lfOUP provided tbouaandl-
of dollars in disaster relief
immediately after the storm,
said direct.or Martin Paley.
"We then became aware that
people with significant pen;onai
and real property losses were
only partially aided by
establis hed governmental
programs," he said. "So we
asked people to come together
and design a loan and gant
program for homeowners and
small business people."
Other volunteer groups
continue to aid people evicted
from their homes by the storm,
providing food and clothing.
............
ELL SBERG ARRESTED -Anti-nuclear Research Laboratory in Live rmore on activi~t Daniel Ellsberg is arrested by Monday. At least 165 persons were arrested.
unidentified police officers during a protest police said. I
at the Lawrence Livermore Weapons _,
MX test site dedicated at Vandenberg 1
VANDENBERG AIR FORCE
BASE, Calif. (AP) -Secretary
of the Air Force Verne Orr
presided over the dedicaition of a
new test facility at what will be
the main test s ite for the
multi-billion dollar MX missile
program.
Some 250 invited guests and
media toured tbe new build.in&,
one of 12 structures in a $60
million MX construction
program at Vandenberg. a
sprawling Pacific c(>ast base
located about 180 miles north of
Los Angeles.
"This facility is the nerve
center of the MX, program here
.at Vandenberg," said Lt. Col.
Dick Heil, Vandenberg public
affairs officer. He said the
facility would house the launch
operation center, along with the
administrative, laboratory and
work spacP. for a scheduled 20
test flights of the new MX
missile.
The first test is scheduled for
early 1983, Heil said.
Speakers at the dedication
included Maj. Gen. Jack L.
Watkins, commander of the Air
Force's ls Strate le Aeros ace
Division. and Maj. Gen. Forrest
S . McCartney, commander of
the Ballistic Missile Office at .~
Norton Air Force base, which is 1,
in charg e or the MX I C
development program. ,,,,.
Hell also noted that the ~
runways at the 94,800-acre base
are to be lengthened in 1~
conj unction with the space •w
shuttle program. ,,IJ
nl
Talce~ll-Off ~ au. . . ..
... a stNctured.
8-week "minar · ICk program tor
aaster 1NtQbt l<m. Indt9tdual attention. ·
Techn1que1 for quick and permanent weight
control Enrollment Umtted.
Pr.iegtstratton requ1Ied.
Breeze through tax time
in HQme -Federal Country.
1.'
!<! a't
Call today
964:-6400'
SEMINARS ST ARTIMG
WEEK OF FEBRUARY 22nd
Attention
K mart Shoppers
In our January 28, 1982
u99e .S.ALE" Advertisement,
the l·Gallon Paint should
read 3 Quarts, 1Pint,14
Ounces.
We regret any
Inconvenience this may
have caused our
customers.
1HI AlllY SCHOOL . A c.tholtc 8oerdlng High School
for boys.
CAMP MOL Y CIOSS
A Sunlner 01mP for bova 8 to 14
yastotd.
Conducted t>Y the Benedlciine Monks of O>lotado In Southefn Rockies. C.ountry E~
WC>nment near lkI areas.
c••,.~•r•S..-Ctu 11 ...................... c ....
'I I ct111USI .. 11 • ...... 4111fila~ . .
Let professionals do your taxes tNs year.
At selected branches,
Home Federal now offers
accurate and professional
personal income tax prepa-
ration services from Tax
Masters~
Even if you're not a
Home Federal customer,
you can still take advantage
of this time-saving-and
often money-saving-tax
preparation service.
If you 're a Home
Federal customer, you may
be eligible for discounts of
up to 75% off normal
charges. The total of your
new or existing Home
Federal Savings balances
will determine your dis-
count. (Due to Federal r~g
ulations, this discount does
not apply to tax-free
accounts.)
ACCURACY YOU CAN
DEPEND ON.
Tax Masters® will help
you take sdv.antage of every
possible deduction. And
they take full responsiQility
for accuracy with a written
guarantee to pay any inter-
est or penalty resulting
from their mistake. You
pay only the correctly
computed tax.
To avoid the rush, re-
serve your date and time
IN ORANGE COUNTY,
CALL COIJ,ECT NOW
TO MAKE YOUR
APPOINTMENT
836-4338,
EXTENSION 343
todl\}'. Not all Home Federal
offices are offering tax prep-
aration services, so use the
number below. We'll sched-
t\le you in a branch and at
the hour that's best for you.
During pelik periods, we 'll
be open in the evening and
all day Saturdays.
Make your arrange-
ments now. It's a great time
to open or add to .your ac-
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order to reduce yo.ur tax
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I
I
•a... r ~-• . l
• Ae .
Twp index rejectio~
ShOrt on foresiglu
For three year1 Newport
Beach Assemblywoman Marian
Bergeson bas been trytn1 to cet a
permanent income tax indexing
measure on the California
lawbooka. Now. after yet another
rejectJon by the Legislature, she
has decided to back off and
support an lndexlng lnitiativ.e
that tax-cutter Howacd Jarvis
has qualified for the June ballot.
Indexing simply is a process
of adjusting tax brackets so that
a cost-of .. living pay ralse doesn't
automatically push a wage
earner into a higher tax bracket,
thereby reducing the real value
of the rafse.
In 1979, Mrs. Bergeson did
succeed in getting a tax indexing
m easure past both the
Legislature and Gov. Brown, but
the governor ins)sted on a
two-year limit for the bill. It
expired 'Jan. 1 and there now is
no cap on tax brackets .
The following year the
Legislature pas.:;ed a Bergeson
bill that would have made tax
indexing perrvanent, but it was
vet oed" b y the governor on
grounds of the state's economic
insecurity. A similar bill failed to
win passage last year. Then Mrs.
Be~eson set about trying to
persuade the Legislature to put
indexing on the ballot as a
constitutional amendmen t ,
which can be done without the
governor's signature.
Last week that measure was
rejected by the Senate Finance
Committee when two Democratic
senators who had promised
support failed to show up for the . vote.
· Since P••••a• of the amendment, which almost surely
would have won voter approval
had It reached the ballot, would
have cost the state some $200
million in windfall tax revenue in
1982-83, there's reason to suspect
the Brown administration had at
least a hand \n the vote maneuver. .,
But now that Mrs. Bergeson
has vowed to support the Jarvis
inititaUve -which also ls very
likely to be voted into law -the
legislators should be having some
second thoughts.
The Jarvis tnltlative would
index taxes on the basis of the
California Consumer Price Index
< CCPI > which is generally
believed to be flawed from the.
state's point of view since it
includes as ·•consumer costs"
such purchases as houses, cars
and many ''luxury" items the
average wage-earner simply
does not buy every year.
In order. to avoid -this valid
• criticism, Mrs. Bergeson had lied
her proi:>osed measure to the
wages and salaries <WAS ) index
which is ba sed sole ly on
statewide increases in wages and
salaries and not on the cost of
consumer goods.
While its approval would
have suootantially cut state tax
revenues. passage or the Jarvis
initiative undoubtedly will result
in a much more severe cut.
In rejecting the Bergeson
proposal, the Legislature may
well have bitten off its nose to
spite its face.
Poland link unwise
Despite the escalation or
tensions between the United
States and the Soviet Union since
the Polish crisis erupted, the two
sides are still talking -but the
atmosp}lere is decidedly chilly. L&A week, Secretary of State
Alexander Haig went ahead with
a scheduled meeting with Soviet
Foreign Minister Andrei
Gromyko ; but little was
accomplished outside of a verbal
confrontation over the repression
in Poland.
Haig had planned to discuss
a starting date ror the Strategic
Arms Reduction Talks (START ),
but the Reagan administration
b o w e d to p r,e s s u r e f r o m
ultraconservatives, and the issue
was put aside. It is appareht now
that progress in starting the talks
will be "linked" with progress in
ending the Polish crackdown.
This decision is regrettable.
Linking strategic arms reduction
efforts to Soviet behavior will
almost certainly do nothing to
restrain the Kremlin's activities,
while at the same time allowing
the dangerous stockpiling of ever
more sophisticated nuc lear
weaponry to continue unchecked.
There is no reason why
continuing arms reduction efforts
should be interpreted as being
"soft" on the Russians over
Poland. There are still sanctions
with real teeth -such as a grain
embargo on the Soviets or a
credit freeze on the Polish ------... , .. .
martial law regime -available
in the administration's arsenal. It
is necessary that Washington
contiriue pressing both Moscow
and the Polish generals to·let up.
At the same time. though, the
proliferation of nuclear weaponry
is a continuing and deadly threat
to the human race. Efforts to
reduce them must continue
without ''linkage.·•
Sen. Claiborne Pell of Rhode
Island. the ranking Democrat on.
the Foreign Relation s
Committee, put it this way:
· · 1t is the height of folly ror
the administration to link the
START negotiations to Soviet
misbehavior, whether in Poland
or anywhere else. lt is as if the
administration believes we are
conferring a great favor on the
Soviet Union by sitting down with
them to seek some means of
starting to get the nuclear genie·
back in the bottle.'·
The administration is
continuing talks with the Soviets
o v e r C(U t t i n g d o w n o n
intermediate range nuclear
weapons in Europe. This ls as it
s hould be because of the
mushrooming threat of the
Soviets' ~20 missiles, which are
being deployed every five days.
We wish , however, the
a dministration would be
consistent in its arms control
policy and press ahead with
START also.
Opinions expre$Sed lh the space •bove •re those of the D•llY Piiot. ~ vfews ex· pressed on tnis page are those ot their authOrs anCI artists. ReaMr comment.JS lnvlt·
• ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Me~. CA 92626. Pnorl• (71')
. 642·4321., \ • .
LM. Boyd/lntelllgence '
Q. U husbands are more iDtelllsent
tban their wives. cloel it not follow
that men are more iDteWiml than
womeo?
A. NO'; 11.r. that's not lndlcated. In
: t.be Uqo of the soctal acbolan, men
seem to prefer to marry down,
womea tend to marry up. But they
don't ~o 10 alwa11. Aad 1om•
gt.bo.riti• clalin~ca with the blcbelt ...... la
unmarried women.
Further lo tbat matter of
lntelHience. retired women teem to
retain their lively 1.DtelMet IGeaw
tbu do ndncl men. So COIMDd N"ew
Yon .......-cben wbo followed Uae
Uv.1 of 5' mea and wom. tlaroaO
their fOa Into tbelr 101. TbeJ
concluded it wu . beeaua. fewer ol
th• women had stven u:p pref_..•'
ORANGE COAST -.
, Illy Pillil
I ....... _,, ....... ,_ ...... ... ·~. Cfll8 ..... ..._ _, ... ""'' w ... ·-·~--CA-. •
careen. The men, the1 tboupt,
slmply lolt their lntenat wblD tbty
lost their WO~.
Eleven of the 12 moet eommonlJ
Uled words In ED•llab have eltbeJ'
two or three tett.ra. On.l1 cme bu
four letters. Can you awne lt? 5aJ
"tbat."
Q. Have wbal• alway• been that
abape?
A . Oalm ii wlW• and pc11= loo.keel eometblq like M1 lllO tftey W.......-S hack into· t6e water
IO-mllllon-pha fNn qo.
Q . II the word "taslcab"
copyn,ht.ed?
. A. It wu. One HUT)' Allm coUMd
Ud copyrtpt.ecf lt lD ll0'1. Bat It bu
1001 b4"ID In tbe public domain.
..
Europe fears not groundless
WASHINGTON -The Reagan
administration's worries over our
European allies' "pacifism" lo the face
of Soviet aegression are matched by the
allies' concern over the Reagan
administration.
The Europeans are nervous about
what they cons ider America's
traditional "amateurism" in foreicn
affairs generally. In addition, the allies
are upset by President Reagan's failure
to formulate a comprehensive Middle
East policy, and his admin1$tration's
apparent hostility to international
organizations like the United Nations
and the World Bank.
ONE ISSUE on which the Reagan
administration ls s howing increased
sensitivity to European concema is
nuclear arms negotiations with the
Soviet Union. Just as more and more
Americans object to nuclear power
plants in their backyard, so Europeans
are growing more frightened about the
55,000 NATO nuclear weapons in their
midst and an eqlJ&llY awesome .arsenal
in the Soviet bloc.
A m easure of this concern is the
Swiss government's program requiring
a fully equipped fallout shelter for
every home and public building. Such
wholesale precautions are beyond tbe
means of other European countries, so
their people are demanding that their
governments do something to halt the
nuclear arms race.
Meanwhile, the Pentagon has decided
to keep a low profile on its seml-annual
Q
-dl-Cl-11-1-111-1-1 -~
nuclear command exercise, "Ivy
League 82," scheduled for March l .
According to a secr et Pentagon
briefing paper, "conduct of a worldwide
nuclear command post exercise could
show s trength of p11rpose." But the
generals have decided that this spring's
·exercise will be "secret and sensitive.''
because of "the repeatedly
demonstrated sensitivities of the
European pubfic to the exereise of
nuclear war fightinl concepts."
The spring war game "could be
perceived by some a s making
preparations for the actual use of
nuclear weapons and thus acting
inconsist•nUy with our position that
such exis t for the purpose of
deterrence," the briefing document
acknowledge.a. It adds that the exereise
.
"could be exploited by certain elements
in Europe to increase fears that we are
planning for the conduct of a nuclear
conflict limited to the continent."
THIS FEAR intens ified by
President Reagan's injudicious remark
foreseeing just such a possibility -is.
not enl;irely groundless, sources told my~,
associate Ron Mc Rae. Since the
Warsaw Pact nations have far greater
ground forces tha n NATO, U.S.
planners do indeed envision "selective
releases" of tactical nukes against
Soviet armor invading Western Europe.
They hope the limited use of nuclear
weapons ,.vould not lead to a wholesale
exchange of m issiles between the Soviet
Union and the United States
1n fact,· however, the scenario for
"Ivy League 82" envisjons a worldwide
crisis, in which "active consideration of
sel~ctive nuclear release is under way
when a strategic nuclear strike is made
on lhe Unit ed States" by Soviet
miss iles.
'f.he command exercise culminates in
a simulated nuclear exchange between
the two superpowers So at least in I.his
paper exercise, the Pentagon hasn't
abandoned Europe. The alternative of a
worldwide holocaust may be of small
comfort to our a llie:., however.
For elected. noliility it,'s 'us' and 'them'
Expressing opposition to proposals
for "sln" taxes on liquor and tobacco, a
conareaslonal leader decried "That
kind al tax would come right out of tbe pockets ol those people out there ...
That be did not say it "wou.ld come
right out of our pockets" illustrates the
areat distance the elected
repreaentatlves have put between
themselves and the people who put
them in oftlce. It is no longer "we the
people" but "us" and "them," the
people belnt relegated to a separate
andiower class. .
IN CONTaAST the elected have
become the anointed, fast approaching
the nobWtj of an era when the world
wu ruled by those clalm1q "divine
right." Thia is not Just an attitude but a
fact expressed in laws eJlacted by
Con1res1 relating to their aalaries,
which at •.662.50 a year put them in
the top Income brackets enjoyed by less
than 5 percent of the people, and in tbe
taxes paid bY them.
Normally substantial deductions are
taken from aucb salaries for both
income and Sodal Secunty taxes. But
dot ftom the coogresamen who, h•Wll
their bWll pension plan. pay no Social
Security tu• and, under a new law
• they paued last year, bave virtually
eliminated income tam on tbetr paf.
T.bat new law permit• them to
exclude at leaat $21,000 a year lD
''tXpeGHI" calcul•ted..at the rate of $7S
a day for every day Congress is in
session whether ~e member is in
attendance or not. Additionally they
may deduct travel expenses for trips
more than 50 miles distant from the
Capitol. Such trips are commonplace.
They also are allowed the regular
EIRl WATERS
deductions shared by other individuals.
According to IRS officials the new law
"just about eliminates income taxes on
congressional salaries."
The congressmen al.so adopted new
rules making it possible for them to
accept unlimited contributions for their
personal use from special interest
gt'oups always anxious to curry favor.
These are the so-called "booorartuma"
and "fees" for "speeches" before
various special interest groups. In other
days the congressmen would have been
glad to make such appearances for ff'ft
just to aet the exposure. Besides tbe
takin& of bribes WU illegal.
And there ls a fine Une between these
"feea .. and bribes. It is well known that
the or1anlutlons bestowing tbe
honorariums often couldn't care leas
whether tbe conareumen make their
1peeebea or even attend tile flmdiOns .
And when they do make their speeches
it is a safe bet the congressman will
present himself as a great Jriend of the
particular group before which be. is
appearing.
This outside money isn't the only
additional income enjoyed by the elite
and privileged elected representatives.
Many, like U.S. Sen. Alan Cranston, are
double dipping into the taxpayers'
pockets for pensions by reason of
having served in some public office at
the state or local level before coming tc
Congress.
In the case of Cranston, who last yea1
reported earning some $25,000 for
speechmaking, he also draws a pension
of $3,930. 73 a month Crom the State of
California for having held the office of
s tate controller. The pension was
boosted more than $600 a month last
July , and will automatically increase
again this coming July and each July
thereafter. His pension paymeatl are
already greater than the salary paid the
currepl slate controller, Ken Cory, and
more than twice as much as be was
paid during the eight years be held the
office.
Kissinger platitudes costly
THE CONGRESSMEN aren't the only
ones to put themselves in a privileged
class. California's own lawmakers who
receive $28,000 a year, grant themselves
an additional $50 a day "expeme"
allowance each day of the week the
Legislature is In session lncludinl 1be
weekeods when no meetings are held .
Some months th.is adds up to $1,500 a
month.
In a UWe·lmown maneuver lut year
the lawmakers journeyed ln great
numbers to Washington at the
taxpayers ' ex p e nse to lobby
concressmen for a bill excluding these
payments from income tax. Tbey
secured the privlle1e tn a trade-off
whereby they gave the ~
carle blanche in drawln& tbe
reapportionment lines for tll•l~
Trrn.,.u:=: I may, it's bard for me to
get t or upset about the fact
that Dr. Henry Klssinger found himself
trap&>ed fot two boura at the Unlveraity
of Brullla, and bad to be rescued iD a
paddy waeon.
He wu not in real trouble, Juat
em barrasament: 400 student. w•re
protHtlni bl1 appearance by
barrlca4ln1 tb• lecture ball and
bombardiq It wlth e111. tomatoes ud
tbe odd rock. Part of tbe anlmm waa
plaln old·faablonecl antl·Amerlcanllm,
but aDo&ber ~ 1ee1111 mon Jmlifted.
x:1~ wu QMk1q et tbe tcbool
durtial a .......... aruma .trike bJ
prefe11ora o•eT 1alal1H at tb•
federal11·ru unlvertltJ. One of th•
lon1·wl .. ed b••••ra beld by th•
4emOlll&r'IMln tHI: • • .,... ndal'-·t baYe .... , to bl.re
pi'Of-. • a traDa1attaa coune. but be 1peadl $11,• to brla1 to tu
uel••ilb -·~ --· ,,. killedmantMl'lam•lb~''
Dl1n1ardJa1 U1t lafiainmator1
proe.e, k ltiD ...all !!!Mc:lrt ... ID .. ~-•
Dr. Kisstnaer can command, and get,
$15,000 per tallt. And I mmt coafess that
I say this in a crabbed, envious sense,
as a man on the fnn1es of the lecture
circuit who wouldn't uk 1$,000 clams
for a talk ii I held in my hands the
original tablets from Mount Sinai.
1 can undentand, ii not a~pt. an
athlete or an entertainer recelYlnl vast
sums for bis or her servicea, ii enoup
people want to see what. tbQ can do
( altbou&h for tbe usual 45-minute
lecture, Killinaer ii •ettlnl tt.ooo for
every three minutes, and doeln't have
to practice or reheane. which *ta
even the moet altltudlnoua buketball •tar). , 2
But tbi boDeat fact la that while 'they
amuse « altoGllb ua with tMtr feata,
tbe Cood doctor says abeol\Mb nothtn1
ln flla tallm tbat be bu not Hkl before a
hundred Umea, botb orally ud In prlDt.
Tbe unlv.nlty could Ullb' baYe aaftd
}1',950 ot fta fee by lmportlnc a tape
ca11ette, or readlnt aloud an o\a
ma1U1M tntervtew.
Wbethier J ~ with hll Ylews or
not, I Wou1dn t tblDk he waa worth $15,000 .,., ...... _ aad ........ ,.not
to a unl....tty wtioM prof a, Rt eara aa
little • UleJ' do In Br..Wa. II! mar not
be u lmaMtrialllt or aa w .. , blll IM
districts. • Additional tax-exempt beneflt1
received t,>y the elite le&illaton lnch•
an automobile for their per'llCJftal ~1.IM?
1mall item these daya, and an \aWmlWCI
1uppJY ot euollne, allo no amall lte111
and certa1n1Y ooe wblcb made tt easier
for them to vote the recent tax lncreae
oa vehicle fuel since it wu a ta on
''thoae people out. there.'•
·la aurely taklnl lllOUJ ... falle ' ~ lf bll ~ ma1• 11111 • --------------deUnr au\lilil1 '"8t .Uae ......
Lmastc aetolia..., a pl~~
LOS ANGE.LES (AP> -Ewr U..C. brael
became a 10verelp country acatn aDd "peelally
a1nce the Jewlah nation re1aln.ct t• anclfat capital. Jeruulem, aome fundamtDtallat
mlnJaten and autbora have been Potatlnl to Old and New Tettament propheclel anit aaylU: .. ..,,.
end ls near... .,
Altboulh aucb ministers continually polot to
Jesus• edmoniUon that "no one will know the day
or the hour,'' that doesn't atop them from
predlctlnl the yur or the decade of The Second
Co mini. A Jl'OUP of believers quit thetr Jobe, sold their
belonsmp and 1athered ln their homes laat 1prtn1
to await the "raptul'e" (tranaporltllon to Heaven),
wblcb they bad been told would take place before a
seven-year "tribulation" bellna on Eartb.
The IJ'OUP's leader said be'd miscalculated.
They reirouped, and still nothin8 happened.
"I'd never tell anyone to do that," said the
Rev. Charles Taylor, who wama on his 0 Today In
Bible Prophecy" television show that "within
three years the Christian believers wlU be
removed hom the Earth and World War m will
be1tn." For the past few years, Taylor bas intenstfled
his warnings each September, because be hu
fi1ured that the end will come to Yom Klppur, the
Jewish Day of Atonement.
"I always talk about September, but I never
say, "Ibis ls the year,' '' Taylor said.
Yet each fall, some of his listeners pay off
their debts and get ready, just in case.
•'Such religious urges are not at all new, and
as we approach the year 2000, and the rounding off
of a millennium, we shall encounter many more of
them," said Edward Krupp, director of the
Griffith Observatory. •
He and his staff have spent the past few
months trying to dissipate a brewing panic over a
prediction that on March 10 all nine planets will
line up on the same side of the sun, triggering
devastating earthquakes, particularly in
quake-prone areas like California.
The theory was proposed in 1974, in a book
called "The Jupiter Effect." It suggested that
having all the planets bunched together on one side
of the sun would increase the gravitational pull
that causes tides on the sun, thus heightening the
level of solar activity such as solar winds and
solar particles. These would hit our atmosphere,
according to the book's authors, slightly cbangtni
the Earth's rotation and triggering major
earthquakes.
"But that's not the way tides work," said
Griffith's prQgram supervisor, John Mosley, "and
there is no alignment. All nine planets are in one
quadrant, but they're spread as far apart as 90
degrees. That's not a line. It bas the same
significance as Friday, the 13th."
All nine planets are often closer together than
90 degrees, he said.
The significance of the March 10 "alignment"
is that it's the closest the planets will be during a
period the authors of "The Jupiter Effect had
predicted would also be high in solar activity.
But in ~. Joh.I} Gribbin, one of the aulbqrs,
admitted the prediction of earthquakes in 1982 was
wrong, t.hst the correlatiOn between planetary
alignment and increased solar acli vily had
already been shown to be in error, since the peak
period of solar activity had already passed.
In Omni magadne, Gribbin wrote, "A great
many people in fringe cults have Interpreted the
forecast as a -prediction of the world's end, divine
retribution on.mankind for their sinful ways.
"Because of the way the book has been
misused by cultists who must never have read it, 1
want lo make it clear that there is no reason now
to expect an unusual seismic disturbance in 1982
frorn the causes given in the.book," be said. "This
does not, of course, rule out the possibility of bil
earthquakes then." -.
But Gribbin's admission has not reduced
interest in the "planetary alignment" as the day
approaches.
"I've spoken to the members of more than one
family emotionally split by the contradictory
claims they ftave heard from the pulpit," Krupp
wrote in the latest issue o( The Griffith Observer.
" 'The Jupiter Effect' is no longer just a
0 BEDWETTER -
LET THEM HAVE A DRY' BED
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r-::~:~::..:~==~~:~°.:-~~~~~,· .
Mell to: PAClf'IC INTONATIONAL, LTO.
311 First Street / NekOOM. WI 54457
I
i\ARENTS NAME I I
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~
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9!!8 NO DOOM -John Mosley ot the
Griffith Park Observatory in Los Angeles
has been trying to dissipate unrest
surrounding controversial predictions of
doomsday when all nine planets line up on
the same side of the sun March 10.
scientific dispute," be said. "The damage has
been done. It bas aroused public anxiety and
undermined public understanding of science."
Thus , said Mosley, Griffith and other
observatories and planetariums plan shows about
the Jupiter Effect and the astronomical events of
March 10.
''It gives us a chance to teach good
astronomy,'' said Mosley.
But even in the Griffith show, the narrator
notes that there hasn't been a major earthquake in
Southern California in 100 years, and pressure is
buildina oo the San Andrea Fault.
Last month, county and city officials gathered
for an earthquake preparedness seminar, and
were told by Gov. Edmund Brown's Southern
California Earthquake Preparedness Project
director, Richard Andrews: "Chances are 50.50
that now and in the next three decades, we'll have
a plus-8-(on the Richter Scale) earthquake in
Southern Califomi'-· ·
Taylor says those dates reinforce bis beliefs.
"The Bible says it (the ApocalY.J>Se) wtll come.
within a generation of the reformation of the
Jewish state."
' Or~ COilt OAILY PILOTfTueaday. Ptbruary 2, 1982
(One to a·famJ/y
whJJe the supply lasts.)
I Free cookbook from
Republic Federal Savings
162 sllmmlng recipes that don't stint on taste or
full nutrition. A prized collection of easy-to-pre-
pare meals from the California Home Economics
Association. "Cook light-eat right" is the theme
of this dellghtful cookbook. Everything from hors
d"oeuvres, soups and salads to entrees and des-
serts. Also, low calorie pre.planned meals for busy
people. 92 pages with color illustrations.
Drop by for your free cookbook and get acquainted with Republic's many services. Ask about
CHEK/IN, our interest·earning checking accounts. And the new tax·deductlons for IRA aeuntl
and Keogh plans for the self-employed. Inquire about the high yields available for these ret ement
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Every time the Rooster Crows your Money Grows
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. AP---
-•
'Dinosaurs come 'aliYe' in booi ' .
Beasts roamed long.ago, but.authors dramatize their life in book • SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -A .0-foot,
two-ton dinosaur clashed ln the Tent
cfountry1lde with a 30-foot, four-ton
beHt from New Mexico. Jt haPPtbed
Ion• •Co· But now they meet a1a.tn. The reunion takea place ln "The
Dino .. lU"S," a new book that comlUet
the latest aclentlflc research with the
drawln11 of William Stout and
narrative of William Service. .
Unlike most books about the ancient
beaata, ''The Dlnosaura" 11 mote than a
textbook crammed with facta. It la a
1llmpse at private momenta that~.
millions of years a10.
Introduction and the sclentllic
commentary. ·
St.out, whole po1t.era have promoted
PoP ntma sucb aa "More Amerlean
Gratntl" and "Allesro Noo Troppo,"
baa been fudnat.ed by dlnoaaun slnct
cblldbood. He bad been a member of
the Dlnoeaiar Society of Lot Anaeles for
Illustrations," recalled Pretaa. ''What
· finally emeried wu a book about the
way dinos aurs Uved, rather than what
they were.''
Stout aald he \rled to show tbe
dinosaurs as creaturet wlth feellnp
• and emotions.
"They're not slow, dim-witted
creatures," the arUat proteated.
"They're really very agile. They had· ·
family 1roups that raised their youn1.
They cared for their youns in ways we
never thought of."
The collaborato rs had to invent
certain details. Science cannot yet •
prove how the dinosaurs sounded or
exactly what color they were. But care
has been taken to make the portrait.a u
accurately as possible
ILLUST'RATOA -William Stout, whose drawings bring ancient
beasts to new life poses with new book, "The Dinosaurs," written
by William Service. The two combined the latest scientific
research for accurate portrayal.
These dinosaurs are not llfele11
muaeum akeletons. They 1ave blrth.
They ficbt. They die. They Oy. They
make love. In hi• openln1 remarks,
acleoce fiction writer Ray Bradbury
calls the book a "Ume machine."
Though the tales are lilied wltb
enouah Information to aatlafy a colle1e
paleontoloSY clau, they are plea .. nt
enouch to aerve as bedUme 1torte1.
It's more than ·.a
textbook . . . It is . a
glimpse of private
moments that passed
millions of years.ago . "We tried to keep everythlne Koaher
in the book by gettine Peter Dodson to
approve It," said Preiss.
year• befo,.. th• ldea of a book came
up.
Author
defends
his hook
TB hospital for sale The atunnlna lllu1tratlon1 were
chan1ed repeatedly to reflect sclentlnc
.fact. If a muscle was mllslna or a rib
was misplaced, Stout corrected lt.
The concept for "The Dlnoaaurs"
flnaUy 1urf1c1d when editor Byron
Prellt wu worklna wlth Stout on a
book about The Beach Boya. One day.
he happened to 1ee Stout's drawings of
dlnollUl'I.
L.M. Boyd informs
SAN FRANCISCO (AJ>) -San Francisco
supervtaora have put a former tuberculosis
treatment facility on the market -with a $2.5
million minimum bid.
The facta were checked by an expert
Peter Dodson of the University of
J>ennsylvania. who also wrote the
"For the next year, I talked to Bill
about how we could do a book usina his
in the DailJPilDt
' GIJlARD, l'a. TAP> -Studs Terkel plans to
visit thi~ Erie County
community to defend his
be s t ·selling book ,
"Working," against a
move by some parents
to have it banned. '
"If it was a straight
pornographic book it
would be diffe rent."
Terkel said by telephone
Crom Chicago .. But this ls a very serious book ..
Sc h oo l Board
President Alice
Fulgenzio said Terkel
will meet with tt).e
board 's ed u cation
·committee tonight over
the book.
"We really don't know
what Terkel can explain
a bout the book that we
can't already see,:• she
said, "but we welcome
his attendance ...
The book ls assigned
to two English classes
for vocational students,
and about JO parents
have complained abou ·
some language in the
book, a 1963 bestaeUer
which is a coUection ol
i n t er v i ·e w s w i t h
American workers in
various occupatio1\5.
"It's ironic," Terker
commented, "because
the people who are
objecting are the heros
and heroines of this
book."
Disabled
decline
WASHINGTON (AP>
-The number of
workers added to Social
Security's disability
rolls in 1981 was down
11.3 percent from the
p~evious year and
totaled fewer than in
any of the past dozen
years. . Last year, 345,254
wor~ers were put on the
d i a.a b i l i t y r o l I a ,
compared with 389,000 in
1980 and down almost 42
percent from the peak
year of 1975, when
592,000 workers were put
OD diaabillty. '
About 2.8 million
workers and 1. 7 million
family members gel
dlaabWty benefits, with
the av,raae disabled
worker drawing $414 a
month plus $122 each
month for a spouse and
.$123 for cblldren.
1 n th• Sears advertlsln9 section
of Feb. 2 Md 3 there ,
Is an lldVertlsement tor #6001 refrloer•tM·frH~r, \
sale priced at
SU9.95 : Th• copy 1 description ts
lncorr.•ct. This · model refrigerator
d 0 ... " 0 t .... y • epoxy<Hted st•I 1helv•• or rorc••••n·on•tt••• . ntertor. W• 1tncerety regret
#
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but that gives you the p~rsonal
attention your future deserves. And
allows you the opportunity to ·
change and grow over the years.
That's' where Wells Fargo
offers some significant advantages
over other institutions.
1. Yom own Personal Banker.'·
Your retirement investment is, above
alL a personal decision, and we feel
it deserves personal attention Your
nearest Wells Fargo Bank has a finan-
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exactly that. A Wells Fargo Personal
Banker, who's thoroughly versed in
the complexities of IRA regulations.
And who'll prepare a free IRA·
BENEm ANALYSIS to show you
how an IRA would fit your personal
retirement plans before you invest.
the road.
~u'II .choose
oBankSI
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offers a choice of six Individual
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' \
I .. '
..
Daily Pilat
TUESDAY, FEBRUARYl, 1992
Maureen Reagan pitches
' international trade
0
0 CAVALCADE
BUSINESS
82
83-5 to local group ... 83
Mariries, Navy 'ftssaUlt' San Clemente Island
* * * 12,000.
• • • lUJOlUl
• exercise
By GREG GAGNE s.ec1e1 • .. DaMy Hiii
SAN CLEMENTE ISLAND -
Operating under the tightest
security, Pacific Fleet
amphibious forces with
embarked Marines concluded a
major civilian evacuation
exercise here in mid-January.
Supported by an aircraft
carrier battle group, composed
of the USS Ranger and eight
cruisers, destroyers and support
ships, the six-ship amphibious
ready group led by the USS
Peleliu evacuated a simulated
U.S. embassy and other U.S.
civilians during the exercise.
Code-named Kernel Egress,
the exercise was the first of its
kind ever staged on the west
coast to demonstrate the
fast-r eaction capability of
Southern California and Hawaii
homeported ships and Marine
unit s to re s pond to
contingencies.
The exercise was labeled "no
notice" and Imposed tight
security, including not providing
information to news media
before or during the exercise.
A Navy spokesman in San
Diego, who announced the
exercise at its conclusion, said
the tight security restrictions
were designed to approximate
the same security which .would
exist in an actual contingency.
Most of the sailor s a nd
Marines in the task force knew
little or nothing about what to
expect when they were alerted
for the exercise. Not until the
ships had cleared the piers in
San Diego did it become clear to
many that it was an exercise.
Involving nearly 12,000 sailo~
and Marines. the exercise was
NO-NOTICE EXERCISE -Marine helicopter and Navy LSTs
cruise off San Clemente Island. The combined forces
recently participated in Kernel Egress. the first of its kind
held on the west coast. The exercise demonstrated the ..
Amphibious Squadron Seven), of
Chula Vista, Calif., said "We
beat the required s h ort
timetable for readiness to
deploy It went smoothly and
quietly," r eferring to the
imposed security. "It was a
magnificent effort on very short
· notice by every., sailor and
Marine."
The highpoint of the exercise
In the capital near the U.S
Embassy, heliborne Marines
were evacuating U.S. civilians
from the landing zone and also
by landing craft from nearby
Wilson Cove. ·
"It was .a magnificent effort on
very short notice by every sailor
and Marine.''
The evacuees were
immediately transported to the
Peleliu·. with 5ome going to the
USS Cleveland, to y.'aiting
medical and processing teams.
The teams were trained to
handle most evacuee problems,
including medical treatment,
passport and identification
checks, contraband checks. and
their need for bot meals and a
place toisleep after the strain of
their ordeal ,in the collapsing
country.
staged in a highly realistic
environment, including the
removal of approximately 110
Marine "actors" in civilian
clothing. They represented a
fictional U.S . ambassador,
embassy officials. private U.S.
citizens and one news
correspondent in a country
whose government was
collapsing m the fac~ of terrorist
attacks and insurgent fighting.
FJrst notice of the exercise
was received on Thursday, Jan.
7, while ships and Marines were
mostly at their homeports and
bases conducting routine
day -to -day maintenance,
training and spending time with
their families.
Thal abruptly stopped as a
full-scale effort was mounted to
plan the operation, order and
stow hundreds of tons of
supplies, food and equipment,
and embark .3,000
combat-equipped Marines and
helicopters for the evacuation
exercise.
The amphibious task group
staged from San Diego and Long
Beach. setting to sea last
Wednesday afternoon. The
commander of the amphlbious
task force, Navy Capt. John J.
Higginson (commander of
was the actual evacuation on
Sunday, Jan. 17. The Marine
landing -force conducted a
si mu llaneous amph ibious
landing and helicoptfr assault to
secure an airport on the north
end of ··Island Purple''. while
seizing. occupying and
defending the U.S. Embassy in
the capital city to the south.
The realism included Marines
acting as sick , injured and
occasionally hysterical civilians,
as encountered in previous real
evacuations by NAvy and
Marine forces in past years.
Helicopters in the precision
operation launch.ed from the
new amphibious assault ship
USS Peleliu, operating in Its
rirst major exercise since her
assignment to homeport of Long
Beach about a year ago.
The amphlbious assault was
supported by close air support
from the Ranger battle group
which added muscle to the
evacuation operation.
On signal from the flagship
Peleliu, Marine assault troops
stormed West Cove Beach from
tracked amphibious landing
vehicles (LSTs), secured the
airport and then sped south to
the capital where the majority
of evacuees were located.
Great effort was made to look
after the personal comfort of
each evacuee. .
Marine Col. John l. Hopkins,
of Brooklyn, N.Y., commander
of the 17th Marine Amphibious
Unit, said. "The realism ~nd
intensity of this evacuation
exercise was a great
demonstration of our capability
to do it fast and do it well.
' "lt provided the ideal
oppo rtunity to conduct a
co ntingenc y amphibious
operation by the Navy-Marine
Corps team to protect and
evacuate threatened Americans
any place in the world ,"
Hopkins said.
The Third Fleet s pokesman at
Naval Surface Forces
headquarters in San Diego said
this was the first in a series of
no·notice exercises planned on a
variety o r co ntingen cy
operations . He declined lo
elaborate on when they might
occur or what type they might
be.
Since news media were not
permitted lo cover the exercise,
reports were provided by Navy
and Marine Co rp s
photog,aphers, journalists and
television video tape teams.
operatlii1 in lt. first major exercise since
asslanment to the home port of tona Beach
abOut •year: aao.
~.
u ...... .,., ........
ability of Navy an«ir"Marine uni'ts t o res pond to
contingencies. The operation involved evacuating a
simulated U.S. embassy in a mythi<'al country
Amphibious troops
'the cutting edge'
S!)"!cial totbe DaUy Piiot
OFF THE COAS'i' OF SAN
CLEMENTE ISLAND -· The
cutting edge of an evacuation
operation like Kernel Egress 1s
the 17th Marine Amphibious
Unit, a Marine air and ground
task force of 3,000 Marines and
corpsmen, helicopters and
e quipment organized
specifi cally for this evacuation
operation.
When the lead wave of Marine
CH-46 Sea Knight helicopters
touch down1 their rotors blast up
c louds of dust and island
tumbleweeds and pour out the
400-man ground combat force to
ensure the safety of the lanqing
zone LZ in Marine parlance
The job of the 17lh Marine
Amphibious Unit has begun
Fanning out , they form a
security perimeter lo ward off
any insurgent attacks and give
initial processi, teams a haven
to work in. •
"We 're the cutting edge," said
Lt. Col. Robert L Peterson,
commanding officer or Battalion
Landing Team 2/9, part of the
Isl Marine Division at Camp
Pendleton. "A lot of work goes
into something like this. And a
lot of sleepless nights."
Long hours are taken up with
sharpening that edge through
intricate planning, gathering
intelligence on any expected
opposition , a nd carefully
weighing information on what to
expect in a continuo us ly
changing, deteriorating political
situation in the fictitious
"Purple Nation.".
But even with the bes t
inte lligence and planning, the
Marines must remain flexible.
"That's where the platoon
commander make:. 111:. money,"
Peterson said. "The terrain may
vary, the w~ather change, the
r esistance be more than he
bargained for. the number of
evacuees change -all these
things he needs to take into
a ccount.
"He yells and screams ruid
gives a lot of orders." Peterson
said, "but he knows m his mind
what he ultimately wants."
Throughout the process, the
perimeter force security teams
are busy
"While watching the LZ. we
have lo think of our own tactical
ability," said Marine Capt
James Gillies. "The teams are
constantly adjusting for better
security. establis hing road
blocks, taking nea rby high
ground everything possible to
protect the evacuees. helos and
their fellow Marines."
Kernel Egress has been the
first extraction exercise !or the
unit. Its unannounced, realistic
approach will no doubt reap the
obvious training benefits needed
if ever called upon for the real
thing.
But one Marine put his finger
on one aspect perhaps not so
obvious.
C pl. Rodney Neal of Golf
Company put it this way:
'·A lot of jobs depend on
morale. A realistic exercise like
this keeps everyone boosted up.
It's great for training, too,"
Neal said.
When asked if he was bothered
by being the "cutting edge'', the
first .. land and fight, another
Marine replied, .. H we weren't
the first in. we'd feel cheated." .
Logistics
study in
contrasts
By TERRY MJTCHl!LL
s.eci.• •-D.itr N.e SAN CLEMENTE ISLAND -
To care for the influx of civilian
refugees in the Kernel Ecreu
evacuation exercise, the medical
and supply departments were a
study in contrasts.
The doctors and corpsmen ol
the USS Peleliu and the medical
augmentation teams embarked
were among the most prepared,
for an exercise Auch as Kernell
Egress.
Aside from medical treatment
of crewmen and troops, the
department's primary role ls to1
treat disaster relief victims and
emergency evacuees. As a
result, the medical department
looked nothing like what you
would expect for a ship at sea.
Along with substantial stocb,
o r medical supplies were
blankets, baby bottles, baby
food and other unusual items.\
Sterile linens were periodically
re·sterilized for operating room
use on a moment's notice.
The ship's medical facilities
themselves are a mo ng tbel largest and best afloat. 'There
are seven operating rooms, a
17-bed intensive care unit, and al
48-bed primary ward. Additional
beds can eJCpand into tr90p
berthing in adjacent spaces.
And 11ke any other hospital,:
the Peleliu's medical staff bas
laboratories, X-ray dartrooms,1
a nd a blood bank to support
doctors. I When the first wave of troops
left the s hip, the corpsmen
scurried to set up litters inltbe
spaces normally used for sick
call.
"We set up the triage on the
flight deck," said Senior Chief
Hospital Corp s man Herb
Garman. leading chief ot the
m edical department. ''Triage ls
the French word for sortinc.
There, we examine incoming
wounded and assign treatment
priorities." he said. •
Critical patients go directly to
the major operating rooms,
while others are treated in the
minor operating rooms where
burns. small cuts and broken
bones are tended to.
While the ship w~s still in the
hectic last stages of preparation
.for the evacuation, Garman
remained calm.
"When you've been around as
long as I have and done this as
many times as I have, it doesn't
faze you," he said. ·
It was somewhat differen( in
the ship's supply department,
faced with a gargantuan task in
preparing for the short-notice
exercise.
It took a nine-hour planning
meeting to determine what was
needed, in what priority, and
where to find it. The orders
began to go out.
By telephone , naval messages
and even l>y hand-couriered
delivery. supply orders went to
Long Beach, San Francisco, San
Diego and even Norfolk, Va.
Arrangements we~ made with
the Long Beach detachment of
the San Diego Naval Supply
Center to have deliveries made
the day of arrival.
Five days later. the ship's
store rooms held enou1h
provisions for 60 days at sea and
e nough general stores and
aircraft. repair parts for 90 days.
• I
•ANN LANDERS •.
•ERMA BOMBE.OK
•HOROSCOPE
en's education parents' obligation
· 1: DEAB BAT'ft,INGt So Gary, age 8,
wuta to qalt ldool anti stay home and
wa&dl TV ud ,_.. INabucl says II'• OK
··Study
. ~ . '::~Bil .print
• I I . .... ~ ....... \_ 1~ Wfdnetdtt~ ..... rn ,... . • '"ft ' i ..t"' Ald'fl8 <.as.aJt ft-April 19>: Persons I; cotli4dl~ w?tri~t weeks will se.em
suddenly to converge on you. Ideas,
1 l•c,pb ·.i•" bad received a cool ·~.r·~ ~~~ appea~ bot.
• ! ttuittJS 'cl'*° 26-1'lay 20): Money
problem is resolved .. Budget leak sealed.
You gain wider audience, product has
more appeal and you complete
longstanding assignment.
GgMJNJ .Wy 21.4une 2()>: You take
cold .plunge illto "fuf\11:.e., Cycle continues
high. new contract1J jrove froitf ul and you
will be at rtllbt place ·at crucial moment. , . .... .
CANCD (/ane 21-July 22>: Hunch is
aec:urat.f!~ IDD*~ serve as reliable
:alllde. SbsJ,lcl•n• concerning slick
111dlvtdual prtive t'9rrect. Look behind 1 see~ dilcerD lllOtives and ref use to be
sitting~ f~°"" ~would exploit you._
' L80 ·~~ut1~uk: 2"2•: Save details for &!t ~ pietceive picture as a
' '11)tedial is great and
l*Ml•~• ... "6Q the rise. ,.,. ,
·Vllb!Wf\'"~bll:.'il~""-Zl>: Attention lo
deklb ·ni.strect results. Study t smell · t..,eetr lines and review
·source roaterial. ~You could be accorded
special hmor resulting from community.
group or charitable activity.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22>: Be ready for
change, travel, variety. lQng -distance
communication and ways of;A>vercoming
distan~ and language barriers. Member
of opposite sex does care and you'll know
it.
SCOJlPIO .(Qc:t. 23-Nov. 21>: Make
lfttellp c:C>QCeUk>D to family member.
Purchale otluxury ltem or art object could
be-OIJ a n a. Notlcf. from bank or · i°'t.ar es false alarm. '•' \g . ; . •~*'llitlllat
~~·
t li;
with Mm. Woaderful. Wllat U lae wuta to
get married at 13, will your buabaad •tree
to tbat, too' Puab are obU1ated by law to Hod
their cblklrea to 1ebool or 1et diem tatorecl
at bome1 My au11eatlon la tp take Gary to
a counaelor and flad out wily lie 11
uamoUvated, bored with school and
dlarupdve. If you don't get hlqi on the
track now, he wU1 be ln deep trouble la&er.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: This letter is
a response to the woman who, after two
very difficult pregnancies and excruciating
labors, produced two girls .. Her husban_d let
her know he was disappointed both tames
because she didn't give him a son.
I am the mother of two fine boys. My
husband and I consider ourselves ~ery
lucky, but remarks by so-called friends
forced me to seek counseling to overcome
the anger, guilt and frustration from S\lch
RESCUE OPERATION -Gas employees
paddle through downtown business district of
Oil City. Pa .. Monday searching buildings for
persons in need of assistance after Oil Creek
remarks as, ··~ are you going to try for
a lltUe girl?·· and •·Boys are no fun to
dreas -you r'eally should have a ·
dau1hter." Also, "A son always goes over
to hl1 wife's side or the family when he
marries -a girl will be your lifetime
friend.''
My therapist made me see that people
who make SIJCh cracks are not friends
just opinionated boots with no regard for
your feelings.
I hope you will -print my letter. so other
mothers of boys-only will see it and jet a
better perspective. -PLA YEO IN
PEORIA
DEAR PEORIA: Thanks ln behalf of
one-sex offlprtng everywhere. \'our
tberapbt'1 evaluation of those eo-caUed
f rlends ls right on.
flooded city. Ice jammed on Oil Creek and
Allegheny River forcing Oil Creek to spill its
banks.
CONFIDENTIAL to Can't Make Up My
Mind: Indecision is slow j>Oison. !t begets
do-nothingness and can become a habit.
Better to fail because you made the wrone
move than because you made no move at
all.
Even if drinkmg "' the ··m" thing in your
crowd, il needn't crowd you out. Learn tM fact•
from Ann Landers' booklet, .. Booze and You -
For THn.ageri Onl11." !nd 50 cnt1 and a
self-addre&sed envelope to Ann Landtrs, P.O.
Box 11995 , Chicago. Ill. 60611.
llMA IOMIKI
AT WIT'S ENO
.
She's sorry
about habit
When I was five years old, a playmate
was cutting out paper dolls one day when J
sneezed and sent 57 pieces of paper flying
through the air. My mother said, "You tell
your little friend you're sorry."
I've been apologizing to people ever
since for things over which· I have no
control. Every time someone climbs into
my car, I apologize for the Slush cups, the
redeemable bottles and the crack in the
window.
I can't give anyone a present without
telling them how I went to three stores and
they still didn't have what I wanted, so I
settled for the one I bought but if they don't
like it they can take it back.
I MAKE EXCUSES for cooking
cabbage when someone drops in
unexpectedly. I apotogize for my dog when
he scratches, and when someone gets the
bent fork at dinner . . . Edith Bunker
lives!
City reputation capped
Never am 1 more contrite than when I
enter a fitting room. You would think I'm
carrying the sins of every woman who ever
ate a dressing sandwich. lo take the taste of
a chocolate eclair out of her mouth.
"I know you're wondering why I have
the same dress in three sizes. Please
for_give me, It's just that ii they run tight in
the arms I have t-0 go to the next size or if
they're not full in the hips I have to go one
more.
Let's talk about San Francisco's
drinking problem. for which I feel partly
responsible. In small part. Don't get me
wropg. This town was reeling around on its
hills and heels long before I came along.
and will continue to do so till the day or
night it dies of one massive hangover.
EVER SINCE THE MIDDLE 1930s.
l ' ve written of San Franciset> bars.
bartenders, patrons. boozers. Skid
~owgues , winos and alcoholics -not
always admiringly, but always
approvingly. In one of my earliest columns
I quoted some visitor who toasted "the San
Franciscan. whose cool climate both
fosters a desire for liquor and enables him
to carry it!" Proper bull but part of the
canon. · Despite his effete manners and velvet
·knickers, Oscar Wilde was a hit here
because he could drink the miners under
the table. A durable legend : the two-fisted
drinking town, with three times as many
bars as churches, and more deaths from
cirrhosis than any other city in the land.
We took a perverse pride in that, we
~ who thought our livers indestructible. A
remarkable organ, the liver. Let us now
praise famous livers, especially those
whose owners have survived 60 years of
three-martini lunches.
ENTRE NOUS, I was winding up to
deliver a sermon today on the evils of
drink, but it isn't easy in this town. An
oversized nose is bad enough ; blue, it is
worse. Out near the Palace of the Legion of
Honor, Frances Willard of the Women's
Christian Temperance Union once gave· an
impassioned speech about "one world of
tempted humanity" -she meant the local 1
topers -but who listened?
Along the Barbara Coast, the rotgut
continued ·to now. The Mickey Finn was
commonplace. Many a knocked-out sailor
found himself shanghai'ed aboard a
hellship bound for Port Said. During
Prohibition, San Francisco prided itself on
the country's finest, lushest (in both
senses ol the word> speakeasies, and the
clty fat.hen landed the 1920 Democratic
convention by offertn1 barrels of meaal
whiskey. What .. Sunny Jlm" Rolph
promised, be delivered.
NO, I RA VEN,-gone onl the wagon
exacttY. l am not that famous reformed
whore. If I "(ere, I would hive to ret out of
the newspaper bullnea1. I at<>s)Ped amoklol a decade •IO. tn an exerclle of will powert
· that ~ even me, but. I'm not about
to tell you to 1top. Jutt don't Hibl up
bet ween the counes of a tbree·atar meal,
~
HER9.MEN
OUR MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO
don't stick your butt in the blanc manse
(that sounds rude> and don't blow smoke m
my face.
"ON THE OTHER HAND, if the waist
is elastic or undefined, I can go down a
size, but ifthe pleats are in the wrong spot,
I just go bigger and take up the shoulders.
It's not your fault or the dress. It's me. I
still retain water from when I carried the
baby. I thought once he got int,o graduate
school. I'd get rid of it, but ... I'm sorry
to take up your time. You don't have to zip
it up. I won't force it. l promise I'll out all I have given up the vodka. however .
Stolichnaya is the best, but it's Russian.
Wyborowa is Polish and excellent but will
not help Lech Walesa. 1 quit because the
hangovers were becoming unbearable and
the guilt likewise ("I said WHAT last
night?"). I also quit because too many of
my old friends have drunk themselves out.
Their graves were not early, but graves all
the same.
three back on the hangers. -
Last week the salesperson excused
herself and told another one, "If the meek
are going to inherit the earth, this one's got it. ..
I stuck my head outside the door and
said . ''I'm sorry, did you want first crack
at it?"
GOREN ON BRIDGE
•BY CHARLES H. GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF
Eut-We•l vulnerable. East
deals.
NORTH
•UHZ
<;i V.W o ll 10
• 1'1087'4
WEST EAST
+I • AlO
<;i AJ1017 '>?llQ5U
0 9815 OAQU ,
•QJt •U
80\JTB
+ltQJU
<;i tU oeu
•Al
Tbe biddlnr:
EMt 9.-a. Wet& Nertlt
l e::? •• 4 <;1 ,.
5 <;) ....... 5. ow. , ...... , ...
Op.nlnc l•ad: Ace of c::?.
A laud.able pal la "t.o make
th• punlah111•nt flt th•
crl1H... But eom•t.Jm•• JOU
uve t.o ~Joe wba&. ttM
eri ............ _.,,.
t.ed It! Who woold ~ ... .,.,.
oo thie halld, 'aod "IUa wllat?
A tem,.UU .. l~D N41·
e4 whe11 &a.M MAI Lo d~r
mlae whtthr t.o double Ove
.,... or t.o ~ oo t.o aJam.
Jo theory he chose wiHly, for
hi1 1ide had two unavoidable
club lo1er1. Unfortunately,
lhe defenden did not r•t all
the trlc.ltt that weni lhei.r
due. West led the ace of
heart.I and the play wu eoon
over. Dedarer ruUed and
drove oul the ace of trumpe.
East had no way t.o get to hia
partner for a lead t.hrou1h
the ~nr or diamond.a. lo fact,
had IM not cubed hit ac. of
cliamobd.a wh4tn h• •a• on
lead, h• would oot have
Kored It, IW declarer c:oWd
Mt up dulDJll1'• dube for all
tbe dlaearda lie M9ded.
True, Weft could M••
defu\ed lM coo~ b1 lea~nt a dwno.td. b\lt -. at·
tacb no blalM t.o !Um fOf' faO· IAJ t.o do IO. IDched, ba4 he
dedded DOl Lo IMd I~ M
th• openlar I"•· Ill• O&W
choke wOUld aure)y .h&n
been tba qoeea of clu...., Willl
no tietwr rMlt.
Tbt eu1prtt. Mn la £lat,
wbohad\liie~J ..
dlrtd ..... ,._ "' ,....
to do eo. AM * ...... oe C"'"1 d11rler \he ~· ao4. lite p1-1I
Ooce Ea.el had dMNt4
that. he wu piJ1f t.o compete
up to the level of five hurt.I,
he uhJbiled a laek of Im·
afin&Uoa about Mw t.o ,.t
there. H·e ud arr..°"""
tunit1 t.o ahow whilN Ma
1lde·1ult 1tren1tll wa•
located-Ilia cornet 11611 ... •
five diamonclll
That could not taave bteD
mblat.erP"ted. Al\w ll&viq
a1nMlJ a,r..d OD a..n. U a
lnlmp 1uit, the,. wu DO
NUOD wh7 Eut alloQhl W•D\
t.o pi., clve dlamoedt. n-.
tbe l>'d t!IHlW ootJ ... ....
dlreeUn1. Now, If tc.ni.:
South let Eut-WMt plaJ he
hea,rt.t, tbat eoatnet wwW
llaveMeo ..... ~8" ·~would p dcrirftWftll •
dlamOid.-S.
~,. ............ .. ~ .......... ..._,.l. .... .
a.rt.I ........ ~ ...
!f .. ocMJ." t I ';'9 _. ._,, , .......... .............. ~
11.11 Ill .._•DIM • ............ , ..... ... -.. ......_ ""'· .....................
•New I 4 •11t
I
.,
Emphasize what's
worth exporting
By IUD'ftl TUll&a ....., ...............
Maureen R••ean , chl~r
e•ecuttve officer or Sell
Overseas Amertca, told
members or tbe media and
World Tride Center Association
of Oranae County that "It's
tlmt to 1et up ort our backsides"
and do aometlna to reverse the
United State's inferior position
in international trade.
"The anawers are at home,"
Ma. Reaaan said Monday at the
Reelatry Hotel in Irvine. "'lie
taught the world everything
about sales and marketing, and
now our students are kicking us
in the backside. It's time we got
the word out that we taught
them e~rythibl they know. but
not everything we know.·'
In ber speech, "Promoting
ex port for American
businesses," Ms . Reagan said
the public bas 'been on the Wl"OOg
side of the lookln1 glass Uie last
15 to 20 years.
"It's very easy to blame U.S.
business and industry for the
country's woes, especially
during the last 10 years," Ms .
Reagan said. "But we haven't
been dojng that much wrong -
we're still the world's biggest
marketplace. We just need to
export more."
Ms. Reagan used the ailing
auto industry as an example of
being on the wrong side of the
lboking glass.
"What's wrong with the U.S.
auto industry was the 1973 Arab
oil embargo, when our tastes in
automobiles c hanged 180
degrees ill 24 hours :·she said.
"We were told it would take 20
years to turn the industry
around. But it wJsn't that the
competition in Ja])an, Germany,
and other countries were more
far sighted -they just had their
own self interests."
In those countries, Ms .
Reagan said, narrow streets ,
crowded metropolitan areas ,
historically hlgh prices of
gasoline and a lack of sufficierit
parklna have requlrtd the
production of smaller, more
fuel·efflclent vehlclea.
She said tbJt ·in only eight
,9ears. the U.S. auto Industry haa
been able to turn around
production and provide more
compact economical cars.
"Look at the good side or the
story. see how good we are and
bow good we can be."
A mopg the solut.lon~ Ms.
Reagan said would help solve
the U.S . international trade
deficit are lo rebuild the
language structure (less than 20
percent of the nation's colleges
require knowledge of another
language for entry. she pointed
out), involve labor unions pass
a trading rompany act Jllowing
banks to take part in ownership
of trading companies and rally
more community involvement.
·'There are some 380,000
manufacturing companies In the
country. and only 30,000 have
be~n involved in exporting," she said.
Her company. Sell Overseas
America <SOS ), i s an
organization dedicated to
promotion of U.S. trade, and
boasts an active membership of
more than 2,000 companies -
including s uch corporation!
as Bank of Americ:a, Union
Bank, Occidental Petroleum,
U.S. Steel, Exxon and Allergan.
ln an interview before her
speech. Maureen Reagan, as a
candidate for the U.S Senate
seat currently held by Sen. S I.
.Hayakawa. said she is in the
race ror good des pite the
c ampaign managers of
opponents who say s he will pull
out and offer them her support.
"f'm in it and I'm going to win
it and that is the end," she said
She added that her father,
President Reagan, as leader of
the Republican party would
remain neutral.
She concluded her
presentation as Mau-re en
R e agan. daughter o f th e
,.
WE~RE A LOT MRE THAii
A BELL Oii YOR WALL
........... ..,_ ..
laMOUI ···~" •lie-.. ......., .... -.-.. .. _ ...... ..._ ........ -·--·-------W1-........ _...1111 ....
-~.--......... In a .....-11. t'°"OUt·---
EXPRESSIVE Maure en
Reagan talks to World Trade
Center Association in Irvine.
president and actress Jane
Wyman
"ll 's funny." Ms. Reagan
said "Up until 1966 I was known
as Jane Wyman's daughter.
Maybe the cycle is· coming
around again." The statement
was made in reference to her
mother's role on the popular
weekly tel evision series ,
"Falcon Crest."
Or-. COllltt DAILY P1LOT/Tue1day, February 2. 1982
•-•• lac. of Garden Grove reported net
lneome tor tbe thlrd qu1rter ended 0.0. rt of
'3M,000, or Sl ceotl a 1har1, • 5e percent lncreaae
over th~ $247 ,000, or ao cenu. earned lo the
correspondln1 period last year. Sales lncrelled 14
percent to •.2 mllllon from S8 mllllon.
* The or11nliera of &be proposed CaUforaia
Mekoa1 Mak were 1ranted a letter of approval to
or1anize the nation'• first Vietnamese-American
bank by the caurornia Department of Banking.
The propoeed bank proposes to be headqua.Ured
in Oranee County.
* Work haa beeun on redecorating all of the
cdstln1 377 room• and suites ln the Newport
Beacla Marriott Hotel Ii ,.__.. Oub. Coit of the
project, expected to be completed by May. is in
excess of S2 million. • A lilDOr Corp. aublidlary and SNC/FW Ltd. or
Montreal have been Jointly awarded Phase 11
engineerin1 to develop the design, construction·
schedule and capital and operaUna costs for a
propOJed $1 .2 blllion heavy-ru'el-oll up1rader .
Value ol the award to FlUOT' Canada Ltd .. which
w)ll carry out It.a portion or the work from its
engineering office ln Cal1ary. was not disclosed.
Another Fluor s ubsidiary, Daniel
International, has been selected by Merck Sharp &
Oohme ol West Point, Pa., to provide design,
procurement and construction 1ervices ror -. $30
million pharmaceutical complex at Wilson . N.C.
Value or the contract to Fluor was not disclosed. • EIP Microwave Inc. of Newport Beach has
received a Sl.7 million contract for microwave
pulse frequency counters from the U.S. Army
Communications· Electronics Command. Ft.
Monmouth, N.J . • The board of directors of EECO Inc, of Santa
Ana has declared a quarterly cash dividend of 7
cents a share, payable March l to shareholders of
record Feb. 16. • Ultruy1tem1 Inc. of Irvine has adopted an
employee stock ownership plan to be effective
Feb. 1. The new ESOP is designed to provide
employees of the company with an opportunity to
acquire an equity interest in their company's stock
and to build incentives for the company's success.
It is anticipated that beginning in May and
continuing through January 1983 the ESOP will
spend SD>,000 and $500,000 purchasing shares of
Ullruystems' common stock on the open market. •
f70$,000, or 28 centa. on aalea of $10.S mUU . • Westludl 9aall or Sula ADa pottelll MW'
highs ln operatln1 reaultl ln 1•1 on t.ht bull of
unaudited figures. For the tbrM months ended •
Dec. 31, the fourth quarter, ne< lncome totaled a
record $389,000, or 15 cent.a a share. up ao percent
Crom $298,000, or 20 centl a share, In Uae year
earlier period. Net lncome includes $112,000, or 4 .:. •
cents per s hare . from 1aln on 1ecurltle• '•
transactions ln 1981 and a loaa of $2,000 ln 1980. • Nuclear Medical 8yatem. lac. of Newport
Beach reported net income of $34,~14. or 1 cent •
share, on revenues of $1.1 million for the tbr~
months ended Nov. 30. This compares to net
income or $22,717, or 1 cen\. on revenuet of "'8.an
for the second quarter of fiscal 1911 . For the alx
months ended Nov. 30 net Income w11 f73,20f, or 2
cents, on revenues or $1.8 million. For the year
earlier period, net Income was $76,999, or 2 cent.a,
on revenues of $901 ,568.
Lockheed reports ·
$289 million loss
BURBANK <AP) -Lockheed Corp. has
reJ>?r:ted a 1981 loss of *289 million, sayln1 its
dec1s1on to halt production of t he L·1011 TriStar
had resulted in an aftertax writeoff or 1398 million.
The net loss per share for 1981 waa $18.03
p~lmary and $17.17 fully diluted, Lockheed said,
w1tb the per share net loss in the fourth quarter
$21.68 primary and $21.17 fully diluted. In 1980, the
ae.r~space company reported net Income of $27 .6 .
m1lhon and per share earnings or $1.S3 prlm(lry and $1.50 fully diluted.
Lockheed said it had earnings from continuing
operations of $155 million, up from $135 million in
1980 . The company s aid primary per share
earnings from continuing operations were $'9.27 for
1981 •. up from $8.87 a year ago. Fully diluted 1981
earntngs per share from continuing operations
were $8.89, Lockheed said, up from $8.04 a year · earlier
Progran;i profits from continuing operations in
1981 were S461 million before interest expenses of
$186 million, Lockheed said, compared to 1980
program profits of $343 million before interest expenses of S106 million
Lockheed Chairman Roy Anderson noted that
the decision to phase out production or the jetliner
also resulted in a $70 million aner·tax loss ·
associated with L·lOll operations for 1981. In 1980, ·
the comparable loss was $108 million.
EECO Inc. of Santa Ana reported net income
for the full 1981 year amounted to $1.l million, or
46 cents a share, on sales of $36.1 million. This
compares wtth lnco~ from continuing operations r.::=======::::============::;:;
of $2.3 million. or 95 cents.~on 1980 sales of $42.6 If The Bid F Your Solar Hot Water
million. Net income for 1980, including Exceeded The Gas Company Limit ;.
discontinued operations (disposition or
investments in Siliconix>: was $5.2 million, or -CAI.I. US -
$2.14. For the three months ended Dec. 31, net SOLAR DAYS 12131 355-1015
income totaled $324,000, or 13 cents, on sal~ of $'9.2 l.C.S. COMT'IACTOI
million. Net income in the 1980 fourth quarter was.!=====================
"We reel the corporation is now in a sound '
1111h.I
position to embark on a program of future growth
and earnings improvement," Anderson said. "We
Iii••·················· .••. will be working with our TriStar customef"S over the next several months to arrive at their fmafl'
requirements and then det ermine the most .
'"' efficient schedule for completing the program."
Anderson said Lockheed expects no further
c harges from the decision to halt Tri·Star
lpr9duction.
"We believe that we have recognized all costs .~
inrluding those yet to be mcurred. that are:
associated with the phase-out of the TriStar:
program,'' he said
F Lockheed said fourth quarter earnings from
'
continuing operations were $52 million, up from
$48 million in the last quarter of 1980. Earnings per
share for the fourth quarter were $3.03 primary
and $2.96 fully diluted, the company said ,
_,"91 Ulioft. II IN "9M1.
""llc.atM 1110. bll<Olery o/
,_...., we call IN pel;Oa or "
compared to $3.22 and $2.90 a year ago.
Sales totaled $5.2 billion In 1981 , Lockheed
S h I d . said, up from $4.4 billion in 1980. Fourth-quarter tart a tax-s e tere msuresales were $15 billion, the company said, up from
f $1.2 billion in the fourth quarter of 1980. Total
* .. .-.i-\
Since ""' --ion le UL hied our Olll'Cnll tcMJon
cu•tOf'ft9"1 cen oue11ty tor a
t f11ble dtecourit 0" '"'•" .,...,.,_
A/Id lo ,,.,,.. ""' -mike r•1oon1e lime •ven
,..,., --•ltcwncy •• re comouter111nv ou• ••IOn But •l'ftOIOvetMn4t aten t ,,..
ID._ Wll"--Q911 .. -lot 21 _.. And toeley .. 19 , .... 1-1 tn "" MCunty -,,. .. tt1
"'9 ---. -10000 ~ •nct\.Cl•"O • •>CH ,.,. ol l>OQ ano •-11 191••1 tllelutlnol and
~· , . .......,,..
To_,.. OUI """" -...., s.a...i '*"'"' .... ..,,, ... ,, •• "' come .,, °"' -facthly •I 2'f9 N-1 Ii.ct CO.-
lii\SEM:OAST \J Ai.cuRrrY SYSTEMS 2488 NEWPORT BOULEVARD• COSTA MESA
CALIFORNIA • 92627 • (714) 642-3490
"t7g~~~ 6 START j.~~. COMPUTING
~ Our Most Affordable TRS-80 J( For Professional or Home Use
s999
•Manage Your
B~dget
• Track
lnveetment1 ·
• Gamn for
The Famtty
• '9.mto
Progrllm
Ke gh A t t G•b alt long.term debt at yearend was $758 million, the 0 CCOun a I r (company said. down rrom $840 million at the end
. or 1980. •
Announcing new retirement benefits for 1982.
Now. woriting individuals may deposit up to $2,000 per
year into an IRA. Self-employed persons may deposit
up to $15,000 into a Keogh account. Deposits are tax-
deductible and intettSt earned is tax-deferred.
Fixed Rate. Ea.ms 14%, compounded semi-annually.
Term is 18 months to S years. No additions a~ted.
Rate offered during this month.
Variable Rate. Ea.ms 2'-~k T-Bill discount rate +Vz%,
compounded daily. Term is 18 months to 10 years.
Rate varies on entitt ba1a.noe ~ery 26 weeks. Additions
ao:::epttd. Substantial intmst penalty for early withdrawal.
No trustee neon new accounts for 1982 t.ax year.
Freel lntaat-Eamlng Checking with your account.
Only $1,000 a year-$2.74 a day-could
lead to a million dollar .retirement.
A wulthy, MCUre retirement can be more than a
dram. The chart at right tells the story.
Let11 sup~ your 14 % account continues to earn that
rate until yoo mire at 65. [)q>ending upon your present
age, your account could grow to a mnaruble size.
ftor example: By making annual c!eposiJ of just $1,000
over 36 years, you could mire with well over a million
dollars. Md nurly all of it would be in interest earned.
Remember. too, that if you deposit the maximum $2,000
per y~ you1J have twice as much money.
Check with our expert Retirement Account
Counselon at your nu.rat Gibraltar offb.
IRA ACCOUNr GROwrH
At aod ol sP"&~. Sl,~r. yurNo.
.s s 7,687 $15,374
10 $22,951 545.902
15 $.SJ,254 $'106.508
20 5113.416 $226,&2
25 $232,859 $465,718
30 5469.996 $939,992
l5 $940,196 $1,881,592
40 Sl,87.S.501 $3,751,002
SAYINGS
Al••I• cner t ltllllcm doll~• • Offl~ 1tatftlh ..
HUNTINCTON BEAOi: l'/1 Huntlr1gton Ctr./ (714) ~9666
LA.CUNA Hll,l.S: 24260 EJ Toro Rd./ (714) 951-.8454
RJUfllTON: 255 W. OranetthorPeAw. /(714) 811-&101
NEWPORT IEAOI: 2?00 W. ~<mt HWy. / (114) 6.11-26ll
lllC'TITIOUS MIM .. 811
• .. AMII .TATaMll .. T
I 1'11• ftlltwl"' ""on II dolnt
. -'----------_ .. _ .. ,
.. llUONAL etLI. "AVINO 11:•v1c1E, ti.7 Alll•M~• Terr,,'
C...e ....... CA tl6l7 OIMN a. $mill\, llt7 A111efnen
TH'!'., C-.. llMM, CA nt17.
TM.I ......... It <tMlllC ... •r en
!Miii ...... o ...... a.Sn\111'1
Tiiie ltMtfNrlt w• flle«I wUll Ille c-tv c...-ot 0r..,.. c:-tl' ...
JINl.l , 1-.. ,..
,.wblla~ ~•nee Coal! Delly
Pllet, J.,._ 12 .. It. 1' Feit. 2,
ttl2 11141
:
NOT!Ca l .. VITINO .. ,... HAUD "'°"°"'U t•IDll f'l('TITIOUI a""N8M' N•TM8 COMTltUCTIC»ICH' NAM8 ITAT8M81fT
•w•ll•liff Oro .... CMU Delly ...... JM. tt. tt. 2' ...... 2,
l.U.DCANYC*AYIMU8 Tiie lollowlnt pertoft II delnt
•AT8aTUMIMtUM*MAIN b<ISIMl,lft:
SA .. TIAeOAOU8~CTlllAltAU.•L IA} 1.YHCH •EAL.TY, I ll
TO ••v1 .. aCJNT•• O••v• L. YHCH REAi. TY COMPANY. ((I Hl2 ·-
llllOJICTNUMal• trt1t 1.YHCH REALTORS, and (0) LYNCH
f'CNtTM•1•YtN8aANCM "fo"L ESTATE COMPANY, 160
WAT8R DllT•ICT C.nteftnlel Wey, ~ 1', T11tUn, Ce. NOTICE IS Haiti:~ GIVEN lllet t?t10
OllAMOll COUNTY Ille ltYIM Roncll Weter Ol1trlct L.owlM JMft UWty LV'llCll. taSll
lllU .. tCIPALClOU•T lnotllu ond wlll rece lu .. •l•d WMmbtr Or .. SMtA AM, (Al. ft105
....... ""'9dl( ~ ,,-epoul1 lbidl) ... to IN booK of IO:• Tllll INMMH 11 condll<IH b'f M •ttt I•·~~· •••leotor•. A..M.Oft ..... doyofMercll,lta,el ll'dl111®o1.
........ ~nMt IN efflee of .. E ........ /AKlllWCI, IAWI• L LY'llCll llLAINTaf'I": MAIK "·TOW ., ,,.,.,. ......... tor flltftltlll"9 le .. Id Tllll __ , w• flied wltll llle
0 IE If I ft 0 ANTS: J AM l S Ol1trlct oll lt..,.._.Ao!ICHI, fMl~lel1, Cownty Cieri! of ~eft9t Cwnty INI' ••IOGI.,_.., NANCY lltlOGEMAH eq11lpm•"'· labor, 1enlcea, end J.,.uory 29, IW:Z.
Mii W9Plle1 -\I to ~trucl .. 111 '1-0011 t-10, ~ worts tqr IM Oh1tict, el wtlkh time PWll...., Or .... (MA Delly PllM
f'llllTAMllNHD ::::.=::1:',.·=i:.~--Feo J,.,1',U,tta •'241
CAM~·-lntN Rerldl W-Olslrkt MOTtal Y .. Mw .... --. n. 1911 ...... A_ PUBUC NOTICE ~ _., _... ..... ,_....... lrvlne, Colltomle '271S
,_ .............. ,_ ,....... Sold btds NII -..or... to end be ~
........... .._. ......... ,..... rellPOftll.,. to Ille <Olltrect 00c;.,,,_.. MOTICll OP T•UITl8'1 IAl.I
...... for Mid --..... ,..,..,,,.. _,...,.. On .. ~ 10, 1"2 .. tl:OO ··""· llyou ...... to-llt,__.,,lceOfen by uld Olllrlct end m11st be F l •S T AMERIC AN TITL.I
MW...., II\ tlllt -·yow IMwd do eccom.,...._. bJ IM -urlty referred INSV•ANCE COMPANY,• cellfornlo 10 llt•tftPtly M ,,.., YO\lr wrltt... '9 tllerell\. corporelloft, es Tl'\n!M, or Sii<<-
,........ If eny, lfte\l 119 fll9d • tlffte. C091e•Of lflec0fttnc1CIOCVrlWlts•re TNllM., s.atl ...... Tf'lllllN. Of llWI
AVllOI u... ... .... ... •• • . Oft fH• .... -y be •um!Md '" IM urteln OMd Of Trldl UKWIN by
II ............ 1KMlr Alltn UC. oftlee Of llle 1>15trlc1 end In Ille off~ VINCENT J SU•ACE, ... -rl9d
1111 ••• ,.... • ..... ••• U1. ot .... Enelnffr /Arc"llKI •• JOfln "'•"· .... reconllld F~y •• "" ..
,___.. ....,.. • • .._ ""-• corollo ~ 10M> Wor-A.... lnUrwlftent "°· n10, In bOOlt ttttt,
........... ... ...... ~lie 100, FOW>teln VelleV, CA '210t. pa ... "' Offlclel Recorcll Of ~ ....
SI Ulted .._ Mllcl!M' el <-to de CoplH moy bt pwrcl\e-el Ille Cow,.ty, Ce111ornl•, -.... ....,.,, IO
IHI ........ Oft .... -·· ...... ,. efflc• "' ... E,,.,_/ArcMte<t by Hid Deed of TNSI HU •• pwbll< hecerl• ln"*letemente, de HI• .,..y_t of Slll.00 per wt end this c_.. euc:llon for ~. lowfllf -Y of Ille
-•· Ill ,._.. ~~ s1 l\oy 11 net relwndeble reeerdl•u ol Uftlled st:nts Of Amffic•, et tM main ~O~~:t':rO::;:U:~it _,..r .. !MW_.. IOKlfkllUoM enlrence to Flrat ,\merlcen Tiii•
<-.ialttl ""flted 11y -lllMIAtlfl -Atv.-. 1111ur•1te• ~ny louted at ti.
-i..11 -.. If~"'"" ta defelld _._ "'•M eNI -lflull0ft1 wlll o. Ent FINI Sttwt. In the Ctty Of Senta .._.... •-·-,,_ mollecl, -,.....,., to ~ti.,. Ana Collfllmla oll 11\M rlgllt, title ..W •-tt..,., ""* w!Wtln • de-,s •,..r ttlddert tor .,. ddlllenel •S.00 1,,._;..1 ~ '° enc1-Mid by It
lltli -It _,,.,... Oii YoV, flle ,,,...,.. ....... , '° ,_ IN <Mt ot wnder Hid Deed el Trust In Ille
wltll ltlb <-' o IW!Utn ,..._ to pcme .. -NMll"I, ~ sit ....... tn ..... c-.tY end
t11t <..,...,,._ Ullleu yow c1o • .,_ Under'"• pro11lllon1 of the StetecMl<r1-H'CllyOflntlne.
*fwlt wtll M.....,.. Oft otlllllcellon Collfof'l\fo Ulbor C-. ,,,. DlrectM et I.el ... Tract '11t, et "'°"'"' Oft e
ef aw~. -IN• c..-t may ,,,.~ot lndllStrlollt-JoM Met>rKCW'ded ln ._...,,...,..,. ...
e!IW •~ .... ,,..\IOU'°' IN II• delemllned .,,.pn11e111ntrow ot end H el Mlscellenee111 Mepa. relief ...,..,,.. In tM <-plelnt, ..,._.. tar h IO<Ollty In wMcll tlw •ecorcllofar.tllfCeuftlY,C.ilfonlio,
wftlc" C*otl1 ,_ .. In ~ of _,,ts to lie performed -flle lr111M he~ !Nnfrwm. ell M.._rea, ........ t.111111 of -y °" ....... rt.,« "•IKll -District hos edop4ed..... ea• Oii -h.,...._ ..--. in
otll•r rellef reqwut•d '" tll• fl'..,•ilb>9 ,.. CJI weQM A Cl1flY of enc1' ~ ... -...... • ~ -1 1 '"°~litl tMw preyelllflg rllles ere Oft Ille et IN SOO fHt, but Wlthovt tM rltlll af
TIEOl>econlttff n. ,., office Of the lr11ln• "•"'" W•t•r -1K• .-Y ... ,_,... .... 0...
J . .....,_, District end 11\efl be""-offflebllt '° from c.. • le a.a.. • UfftltM ~ en., lnt-ttd PM1v .., r-9t. • Per1Mt1HP.,........, ~it. tm
9y: Y. I.. D"-, c09y ot su<h wevt rllln IMll IM In aoa11 ta7, ....,. 164 ef Offklet °"""1 11•1i•d on tll• 1011111• o., tlle •ecw ... LAWO~~ C..trador N __ ..._eft11t...nc'-Y
MA•C •·TOW It •"•II be mondotory ,,_ tlM ti _.... ,...,... ....... Is Mlfll
lflllCe •· ....._, ••· Contractor to ........,. h Clllf'tlrllC1 Is u11••<lt•: Artletll M. $<-•••• 4ltl ._..,_, ewerdecl. end -MY 911tteontrectDr T~, Cle~ HelM ~. .._.,.._., -r him, top.-, nd less tlMfl IN lllC., 1#1 O.W Mfwt, hi .. ttt,
......,.9-dl,CAfllMt IP•<lfled rain 10 •II worlcmen N...-rt...._CA ......
f7M) 7DMU Mnpto\19d bJ '*" In ti. .,_.,. ... of 01~ .. tll9 ......... rty
"'*4 ....... Or .... Ceell Doily Piiot, t ... COfttrad. -y M ...... W ............ -
""· 2. t, ... n. 1m s.141 Each *,,. _,.,.. .. be m.-111 ""1""9 .,_ .. ~ wttMo ..._ __ .;.... _______ -_. eolt or ~n.d Oft • tonn ....... ...,... tt doyl "-h flnl ~ M
-n port of IM ~reel ooc~. -••Milke. · -..C 1111( mwtt be ~led by • c..,.,.1 Seid .. le •Ill M m.-•ltMvt
-----------' cllecll, • <»~llecl check, or• blddlf'• co11e11ont or wura11ty, ••P'911 er
NOTICE OF DE .. TH OF boftellnon--iessll\MIO%of 1m11lled, os tt tit .. , ...... 111°" ar
.. IN amovM of IN bid, ll'>Odll .,._yeMe l.o eroc""'br-to MlltfY IM ........ LORETTA THU DI UM -orderof.•t•t,.btfMfltot,aeld b•l•nct -en tM nott or netH BICKELHAUPT AND OF 1>111rk1,eut.u•meyo.;-eoc11 atcwrH 11Jwld DeeclotJ"nKt, tit wit:
P E T I T I 0 N T 0 ::.io:,1:=:=v":.::':1s1~ !!::~::~:,~:~~~ ~~~::~!~·!~:
ADMINISTER ESTATE et or.....,. 11w ume 1n tt111 ""'le• ed11eMH .t t11e Um• ot tlM 1n111e1 NO. #..112017. Pt'Olllded. The ebo.,. ,,,_._ cheelc pwbll<ellOft of this Hollo of Sele:
T o a I I h e I r s • :~.~. ":;~ ~ :~1:;"'{:0'°: 1102:::; J.-rt is, 1t12 beneficiaries, creditors , ... 1rect wtth IN oistr1<111 aw¥ded A rst-lcMTlll• and contingent creditors of th• wer11, end w111 oe d•<••od 1-enc•Comper!Y L 0 r e t t a T h u d I u m forfeited It lh• W«•Hfwl Oldder • c.lllorlll• c.._.11 ...
d rwlllvs to-1,.towldcontrecl OenOrnwrod Bickelhaupt an persons Th• llo.,d ol Olrectors ol lh• A-1uc10ffk W who may be otherwise 0111r1<1 ,_._ u. r'9N 1.o ,..._, meesH1fttls1 ... 1 Interested In the wl II •ny onct e11-. •nd 1o we1.,. MY and s..u~.1CA'2101 ell lrr..,..nty In.,.., Old 11t!S~·I and/or estate: PuttttsNcl orenoe coe;. o.iiy Pllol Pwblllllld 0r.,. CMst o.uy Piiot A petition has been flled ,...,. 2.t. 1m m.ci J.,. "· ». r:-. 2, 1t12 2~
by Allan A. Slgel in the -·--------Superior Court of Orange
County requestino that
Allan A . Sloel be
appointed as personal
representative to
administer the es1ate of
Loretta Thudlum
Bickelhaupt (under the
lnd-ependent
Administration of Estates
Act>. The petition Is set for
hearlno In Dept. No. 3 at
700 Civic Center Drive,
West. In the City of Santa
Ana, California on March
3, 1982 at 9:30 A.M.
IF YOU OBJECT to the
granting of the petition,
you shOUld either appear
at the hearlno and state
your objections or flle
written objections with the
court before the hearlno.
Your appearance may be
In person or by your
attfrr*yv 0 u -AR E A
CREDITOR or a
contingent c;redltor of the
deceased, you must flle
your claim with the court
or present It to the
personal representative
appointed by the court
within tour months from
the date of first Jssuanc;e
of letters as provided lrt
Section 700 of V'9 Probate
Cod• of Callfornla. T'1• time for flllno Claims wlU
not expire ptk>r to four montM from ttte dam of
the hffrlng noticed above.
YOU N.AY EXAMINE
the tit• "-' bV the court.
If you ar9 lrttllrest.d In the ·~~!!i you may flt• a r~ with the court to
re<elYe ~lal notice of t"• Inventory of ••late ...... and of tht PlftlOn•, accounts and r•porta dltCrtMd In SectlOn 1200.S of tM CellfOmla ~
Code.
Consolidated Report Of Condition Of "SOUtll Coast
Bank" of Costa Mesa, County of Orang•, and
Domestic SulKldlaries at the close of bulfMSs on
Dec•mber 31, 19'1. \ State Bank No. 1239
ASSETS
Thousands of
Dollars
Cash and due from banks ... .,. ................. 8,072
Investment securities. <Market value S8,294) ................................ a.Ma
Federal funds sold and securUles
purchased under agreements to resell In domestic offices .......................... 7 ,000
a. Loans, Total <excluding
unearned Income> .................. 35,723
b. Less: Reserve for possible
loan losses ............................ 3,,16
Loans, net .................................. 3S,A87
Bank premises, F .F. & E .• etc; .................. 3,461
Real estate owned other than
bank premises ................................ 679
Other assets . . . ............. ·.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,320
TOT AL ASSETS .......•...................... M,667
LIABILITIES
A. TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC
OFFICES .......................... 59,350
'Total demand deposits .........•.... 12, 189
Total time and savings depoSlts • ». -47, 161
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC
AND FOREIGN OFFICES ................ 59,3.SO
Other llabllltles ................................ 1,S95
TOTAL LIABILITIES ........................ 60,,..S
SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY
Common stock
a:No. shllres authorized ... 1,000,000
b. No. shllres outstandlno •.315 ...... 1216
Surplus •••.•••••••..•.................. 1,611
TOTAL CONTRIBUTED CAPITAL •.•...•••••• 2,133
Retained earnl.ngs .........••..••••••••••••••••• 119
TOTAL SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY .......... 3,722
TOTAL LIABILITIES ANO
SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY •••....••.•.•.•. 64,667
The underslQMd, Nick J. Flork>, PrKldent and
Mary A· Ale, Vke President & Cas.,ler of "'•
abOve-named blnler each declar•, for hlm•lf •*" and not for the otn.r: I nave .,_rsonal knowleckM of tn• matter•
contained In this repon (lnctudrno 1tlt re•rve side
tMrtof>, •net I befleve that ~nt m Mid T~ II true. Eech Of the U , for himself
•IOM and f'lot for the other cer11fles u~ JMNttY of perJurv th•t the tor99o{nv Is true end cor ... ct.
E"ec;uted on January t7, t9ft 81 Cost•1 Mha,
California. Nick J . Florio,
Pruldent
Mary A.Ale,
.......,_.J..ici....,~~!.~~r
. •
AllNAMl-......5 . DISCOUNTED
RCA-SANYO -GE
MGA-JVC -SONY
QUASAR -HITACHI
PANASONIC -ETC.
••NEVER••
UNDERSOLD
.•ED•LE•
Pweohic ..
Programmable
VldeoC-tte
Recorder
• e hOUn of reQ()fdlng
• Program one "on" end
one "otr' Cycle for UMt1ended r9COl'dlng
• EJectrontc aodl end
Timer
e Remote Pauae/Edlt
Control e Tape Counter wtth
memC>fY
..-OXID '"eaAL OflNll
: s491
• NtTULE•
VIS SYSTEllS
INCLUDING CAMERA
~988=
MOVIE CLUB
RENTALS
WIDE
SC.EN
HEADOUARTERS
* W.A * ICA ... : ::...
·~
P1CT1TIOUI 9UllQll
MAMSITATIM8 .. T
Tiie followlnt ,.,..., la dol11t -'-·=
. '
~ ,
Thrift firm names President
.lob I. Gl'lllD Ir. bU been •
named pnsldent of Far •• Thrll\ le Load AlloclaUon, a new
financial tUtltutSoa aebedw.d td
open lD LaJUlla Hilla\bl·alarcb.
Moat rec~ntly Grlffitb w11
executive vlce prealdent and
partner ol Carlton Browne lc to .
of Coeta Mesa, a commettlal
and lnduttrial devel~r, and
latet wu Involved In bullnesa development for the Lonnie
D u n n Co . ,, a N e w port
Beach-based develo11er of
com merclal and industrial
property • ...
Larry Laatermaa, vice
president and maaa1er of
Sumitomo Bank of Callfo~a·s Pomona office, bu been named
to be the rtnt mana1er of tbe
newly acqQlred Hunttnston
Beach main office. The bankitle
office ii one of four acquired lut
mont.h wben Sumitomo
completed a mer"r with the
then Padfic City Ban~. • Pa-1 Pfetlfer bu' been named
a partner and Jack OlAam a
tax partner in the certified
public accounUn1 flrm of
Kenned\ Leventhal and Co. Both
will won lD the firm's Newport
Beacbalftce. • lob E. Wood.nll of Mission
Viejo bu joined Anaheim-baaed
Carl Karcher Ent.erprisea as
~MUTUAL FUND
director of marketine. • BUI aoaecraH of Lacuna
Nlauel has been promeyd to
vice preaident-plannlne and
development ol FHP. a Fountain
Valley -baaed health maintenance organb:ation. • Stepllea K. Cummla11 baa
been named. general manager ol
Laurten Color Lab lu Irvine, a
custom photographic procesaina
firm. • N. Ke via Orm ea has been appointed western regional
mamaaer and leaaM K. HooYer
aalea promotion and
merchandising manager of
M ltsubisbi Motor Sales of
America Inc. in Fountain
Valley. • M aUttD Mallllla has joined
the NeWporter Hotel as sales
manager. • Daab Bo has joined the
Irvine-based civil engineerlna
firm of Adams. Streeter and
Woolsey u design engineer. • W .B. •1Blll"· Ryherd, area
superintendent al Chevron's
productJon det:':ent at Santa l Barbara, bu tramfe"*9 to
Huntlniton Beach. • Eclwl• P. Seber has been
appointed director of p!JnnJni
and bu1ine11 development by
Oranee·based TRW lnformatloo
Services. • David E. Blalack, prftkteat
of Blalack School Pictures Inc.
has been elected board
chairman of Portrate World tnc.
of Anaheim. • Katb)' Hollard has been
promoted to branch manafer ol
the Weatcllff Piasa
headquarters office of Newport Balboa Savings & Loan
Association . Ms. Holfard
gradu4ted from Newport Harbor
high itchool and obtained an associate or arts degree from
Orange College. •
John S. Tate has been named
vice pre,idenl of sales for
Newport Beach-based Monex International, a l?recious
metals investment firm. Tate
lives ln Newport Beach. • Tbomae C. McBrearty has
be c ome vice president-marketing services ror
Ir vine-bas ed Data comp
International ~rp. He lives iii Newport Beach.
11'<1. Up 21.4
Up I0.4 Up 11.S •
VP 11..4 VD 17.AI lJ:i l~.1 Up 10 Up 1U Up tU Up 1U
Up 10.7 Up 10.J Up 11,,1
Uo to.t Up 10.t Up t.S Up U
Up t.J Up t .t
Up t.t Up 1.7
Up U Up 1.t Up 7.t
Up 7.7 Vp 7.1
VD 7.1
<f,, ~~~ Olf Prt••
N -2 Ott 11A
!\'> -.... °" 16.1 "' -,.... Ott 16..J ~ -~ g: lt1
SVt -I Off \S.A
2--I'> Ott ISA •Y> -1\lt Ott , ... t~-V.OlllU
"" -1 Vt °" ,._. 41'>•--Off IU 2Yt -" Off IU IJVt -I Off 1U
•-Y>OfllU S\'I -. Ofl IU
Ult --Off 11.J 4 .... ()fl 1t.1
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N•W YO•UtCAPI llvllCll '4.AS IS.1' 1-Tiw ......_ ~ ~ JM 1.J'D i4i111CO 1.~ HI Yl4 t .U Lt...... 7.fl
NL JP Gl'tll to.t2 11.17 ln<Oft'I , .. t.• NI. ,,. 1nco .... 7.1• Ta ,,. ._ ... _. =-::.=~ Hli: lit itt; :=,,: ~ r:s \':.: ... "''""" ..... Tllf'lft ....., TIWll .. ,.
NL J-IAIS NL. ._.,. Sf\r -•ell
NL JeM Ha11eodl: N-T "-" NL. 12.MI tUA Not A11le 7.M HL. t.G 10A1 .... llld IUt NL
YAl.E NATIONAL. ALLENTOWN •
eUSIHESS SCHOOi.i , A•l~ONA
AUTOMOTIVI INSTITUTE,
NATIONAL INSTITUTE 01'
El.IECTltOHICS, Sl(AOltON
COLLEGE oir aus1HeSs, TAM .. A
TECHNICAi. IHSTITVT8 ,
KINTUCKY CDL.1.IOIE O~
TIC H HOLOOY, A" KAN SAS
COLLIGIE 01' TICHNOLOOY,
NATIOMAL INSUAAHCI GOMPAJitY,
,,., ••r~ll """'· N..,.,, he<fl, c:en1er111a...o
MIC ••ldellt l<lltel1, lllC,. e C•lll•tnl• cor...,etlo,., •a.t a1rc111 lltt•I. H-Porl loecll, CelllOt"lo
'wt
Thll MlntM h (Oftd\l<tff •'I' e
~··· NIC""*"'
SdlMllt. IM. JefffwYA.er111
Tfll•.....,,.... -11• ......... C:-IY Cftf11 ti Or ..... c-ty 911
l)Kem..,11, '"'·. ~·,... l"WlltMC Or .. CNtC O.lly ....... ,_ 1'.-. ...._I, t, 1• Ul<tll
T f'a&lllll
• •
r
..
Pl&yboy ~.PM company that paablll.b6
PlayboJ matallne, bit juat whipped lbnMilb • cUmactlc year1 oae that will P")btbly lt8DCt M a
turn.~ point ... Tbe quelttoa la: "What will it do
next?' II yoa baw oy ldeu, 1end them ID <Playboy
ii headquartered at 111 N. lllcbican. ChJeaao .mu.
The company soon expeeta to have In tu cub bib
about S100 million, and lt 'I lootinl for UHful t.h1np to
do. What'• useful depends, of COWM, on bow you
define that \enn.
Rev. Jerry Falwell of the Moral MaJonty
wouldn't ftnd much that Playboy does to be mef'Ul,
althoup he would probably approve or the way tbe
company moved ln 1981 to 1« rid of a bunch ol
operaUoris. In ltel, Playboy Enterprlan dJd tbte
followinl:
-Sold Oul ma1at1ne.
-A&reed to sell it.a 1amblin1 casi.Dol in Britaln. -Acreed to sell lb six blnto parlon ID Britain.
-Aareed to seU tta two resort hotels at Lake ~:~Y~·!~l·~ F! :r·t[Goree~· . N.J. _ _
p r o p e r t i e a \~
represented nearly -~ · 0
half of Playboy's 4'/.f · ~~t:.•0::1~:~ ~~= ·1-11-11-1 1a•m· ·' aelloffs bad nothin& ·
to do with Jerry _....,~-------
Falwell'• oplnkms. The two resort hotels and Ou1
masazine were conalatent money-losers -hence the
decision to Jet rid Of them. The 1amblln1 operation.I
are another story. They were so profttable that if not
for them the company wouldn't have made any
money.
So why get rid of them? Because the company
wa1 virtually forced to do so after authorities ln
London refused to renew Playboy's licenses on the
ground that unsavory -and unlawful -actlvitlet
were going on 1n the Playboy casinos. Playboy feel.a
it was the victim of anti-American prejudice tn
Eneland, but rather than fight by appealing to tbe
Crown Court, it decided to take the money -ind run.
It's from dlaposition of the 1ambllng operation.a
!in Britain and the two resort hotel.a in the United
States that Playboy will realize ita $100 million -in
cash. And that's why it needs ideas on where to put
all that caah. The one major new venture on the
horizon la a "Playboy Channel" for pay television.
That's ex:pecl4:d to 1et going by the end of tb1a month.·
Playboy founder H'-'lh Hefner describes ti as "a very
,excltlnc extension of the maguine, because what we
Intend. to do ii 'quite literally turn the maeaztne l.nto a
pay televWoll phenomenon.''
4 •
' ~ •
I ..
" ..
" .. •
It's not that Playboy has given up the eambllng • ,
business. It has a partnership with a company called :
Elsinore in the Playboy Hotel and Casino that opened "
in AUanUc City last April. Tbe ~ has 500 cuest
rooms, and the casino~a.s 1,300 slot machines. But
the company still d~n·t have a permanent license
from the Atlantic City authorities -and one of the
blg reasons for fleeing Br it:iin was to avoid
j~pardiz:iAg the chances of setting this license.
What else does Playboy Enterp'1ses do! It
operates another casino ib Nassau in the Babamu; it
publishes Game9 macazine; it bas a book publishing
bualneu (Playboy Press, Seaview Books, Wideview
Books. Playboy Paperbacka, Playboy Book Club); it
owns a company, Boarts lnternalional, that
distributes U .$. magazines and paperbacka
overseas; it has a luxury-limousine service in Los
Angeles; and it bas model agencies in Chicago and
Los Angeles.
• 11
Cl .. .. .,
... • ,
J ._ • •• ..
14 <I
----------~--------..-----------~------; STOCKS JN THE SPOTUGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
NEWYCMUCIAPI ~NI~ .... . . . . . , ~ """"'*"· -'. • MaW YCMt• IAPI -...... .._.., ..W .STOCICS • .. . • • .. . • .. • ••• • ..... ·~· I
Wld Mt """"' M .,,. fltliMfl -I ecllW I 0lr9 ...... '-~ ' .._ . Ylftl M1K11 Ea<...... 1.-, JO Ind •. SI M.14 =::: 1111..._" I ~llltioNl•y r...""= 1Nfl ~ _ "' ~ ~tr :.fi ~t.:n:t" ~ t:? ·
A-TOT .... ,,_ ft -"' U Stll DS ... a» JU.ts a»-UI llM ...... ~ -1 1"4vS ................... ...,, .. 1 ~i::: ~ .. Id ::: ~ -;1~ z~~ ................. :.::::.-.-:·:. ·~
ltCA UtflD '"' +\lo 4S Stll . ,....,_
T-o Inc •·* 21 -.,,, ........ 416,JIO ~ _ ..
'StllOlllnd .... 100 .. .,,, -1 ..
Uft!Tel •11-""° -"' JC "'-" ,..... \6\lo -.. T.,_.., t JtS,MI ~ -1 ="' 17).. "' --IC81 J37;JIO M\'J -nt. 116,...,. • Ja,JIO .... -M
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YOltlC IAPI Fft. i
SILVER ......
T,
11~ Jlt .... .. »
TOC:-rl .,, -"' 1
IJ
......... -. 11' = • 1
HMdy&.._, ... ntpert,...,-.
GOLD QUOTATIONS \,: .. Tiit._......._
..... wwte .... prQI MIMey,
....... : "-"'fllflklflea. n. .-... ,,. ~ ....,_flllMttlPA•aa. ..... : ....... .,...
~~.tl.•te.JI, ~ .... ,. ..... -.. .......
.. ..., & ...._: (Mly Mll'f' ..... ,.
1111 ..... u.JO.
,
~·MOVIE
**"' "Sphinx" (11111)
Frw\11 ~ Liiiey·
Anni Oow(I A rulttlMa
bUdc ,,_... entlqultill
ring ati.mpt1 to atop 81\
Egyptologlll from dlloov·
lffng ttll ... Mbou .. of a .
prlcMIM atatue 11\1 W..
pennlltld to view 'PO'
(l)fllOW * * "Uncle Vanya" 7:20. NaA IAIQTMU
• Golden Stale Werrlon "'
l.ol ~ Laker•
1:t0 •. 2 ON THE TOWN
F .. tured: Jeck Lemmon,
Phylllll Diiier and their trev-
11 agenll; • IOOk ., the :
large community of Briton.
Hvlng In Southern Callf«-
nla; • 1oo11 at Items cenaln
PfU!TeNDER -Merlin Olsen 'stars tn the
title role in "Father Murph)'.'' • series
about a rugged" 18708 gota miller who
I .. must occasionally pretend to be a priest
ito keep authorities from closlnR down
t the orphanage he runs. The show airs at
' 8 tonigtit on KNBC ( 4).
r111tura nt1 r1fue1 lo
eerw.
I QI 'N/l/LY RUD
LAYIRNR & IMALaY
&OOtltNH'f
Thi otrte ...... their -neighbOfl Md ...,.,.._
tllllr llrlt ~·· 8 ~OHL.A.
A report on wtllt tl'll
hMllll 10M of ttle Mure
may bl lllie; • proflll ol
d\llufleur1 10 thl Ollebr~
tlee: an Interview with
Hugll liefnlr. • w·A·a·H
When lt'I found t rc>bWI
nurN II lonely and Md, Iha
Olhlr nut ... declare they
Wiii hold baek ,,,.., 19VOF9
until 1111 O-C• • boyfriend. I 'TIC TMJ OOUOH
MACNll&.11.EHMA
AUOtn'
• NlWI
(I) P ..M. MAGAZINI
A 16-YM!'-old gW1 being
groomed for modeling
llWdorn; an L_A,·tO-Hew v ant an.met/lie 111111 eat
rdy
QI YOU AllCED fOA rT
(H) STANDWO AOOM
OHl'f
"Liza. An Evening WIUI
Uu MIMlll" Thi at-oe
end ICI~ 1Uper$t.,. dllo-
pl9)'9 her r11ng1 of ....,., ..
In • c:onOlf1 llPPM'ane8
wtlh mualc ranging from
a...ic ~ 10 9roedw9y
ehowlloppen. t:OO. Cl) 8UGI MMrrS
VAl.IHTllE
9ugl &moy falll In love
wltll an -.et~ rabbit et
the dog''-*· (A) G 8 FATHER UUAPHY
A klan-llke group ol hOod·
Id bigolt warn MOIMM
Gege 10 llllve Iha 9Chool·
orphanage °' f-<11at11 .MOW * • • "Torn Curtain'·
(1986) Paul Newman, ju111
Andrewt. In order to
obtain • llCt9I formula
~!or~o(jii
new 'MllPOfl, an AmericlWI
pllyalct•t pr•t1nd1 10
cMfecl 10 e.-Oer-.y. 8111 HAPPY OAY8
Fonzie ltW to ~
Iha oenQ to llwltctl from
rod! to claM6cal muelc Q ......... ~
A 1$-Y9Af-old glt1 being
groomed for mod.Ung
atwdorn; en L A..to-New
Yant lltemetlvl 11;11e car
rally. Cllll r.11 mall• ..,,.,
plquMt; P9lM ...._, on
finding OU1 your Cl'ldlt ....
IUI
• MCME ** * "A Oy In Thi Wll-'*-" (11174) 0-ge
Kannady, Joanna Pettet.
To protlC1 hla lamtty, 1
man chelne lllmMH In. hie
barn after being bitten !)oy
a r•bld llkunk.
• LIFE ON EARTH
"The Swennlng Hardee"
D•Yld ~nenborough looll1
•• tn. •trenoe courting
tedwllquia Gt ...... _,
IMIC1&.Q • NOVA
"The Hurtt ~Of Thi LeolOn
IOI¥'' TN Int....,_ "'--
t~lon lalnCfled ~ thl ~tot~ Control
to Clllcov.r the microbe
rtllPOf'lllble I« Lllli0n-
nalr1'1 d'-le tr_,,
~MOW! • * • "Shoo! The Plano
Player" ( 1992) CNwlel
Aznlvour, Mer1I °'4,bola. A
woman convince• her
o,,c1.famou1 mu1lcl1n
boyfriend to atlempt 1
~.
(l)MOYW * 1': * "Hofth By Nortt.-_, .. ( tOH) Cery Ocent.
Eva Marie Saint. An lldwr·
tlllnt man'• ... le c:Nngld
drMtlcally when hi II tnllt-
tMlll IOf a CIA~ ctM<ME -• ***'" "The Wey We Were" ( 11173) Barbre
Stre!Und, Aoblr1 5*tlord.
A )'OUnt OOllgl coupe "'
Iha t930t 111-that
their polUcel ~
are ltrong ~ lo )eot>-
wdtu their mwn.g. e:ao. (I) "*' "°""' VALENT'INI SPICW.
Alter Poptlye '°'~ v .... entlnl'• Dey, Ollve Oyl
aigna up for • ~ lrl
hopM of meeting "Mr
Rlght."(R)
8 9 LAVEAHI&
ltlM£(
LeYwne Mel Shlf1ey try to
dig up IOfftl dlr1 on • no•-
~ Clllbrl1y. Q
• A&..L If THE FNll/4. Y
Ardlll and Miiia lock
l)orna -the 800ft.lo-ti.
bom be~ Stlvlc'1 rellglon
-Of led! of It. 9:00. (I) MOvll
"Miiiion Ooll•r Infield"
(Pr-'lre) Rob Reiner,
Bonnie Bedllle. A.._..
lul ~divot•
m«e .. ~IO 1111
~ t-lhen ... dow
to 1111 crurnl>llng per-.. .... 8 QI MET MAVUICK
A beaulllut woman
Mdl.-M--. after
~ ,,..... from j911, end
Marytou ~ .... tot.
nolorloul~. 8 9nwr8 COMPAi«
Jad<, T 1rr1 and Mt. Fur1ey
try 10 geoc .,, obnoxloul
1tllcl111cy expert oll
Jal'9t'ebldl.Q
·~ P\AYH<>t*
''SenM Of Humor: Who
Am I Tlllt 1'1me?" Chfleto-
ptllr Walken and 8ueen
S9rWldon por1rey ec:tOf e lrl '
a llNlll l!Mn play wtlo fall
In love In • tlllpll)' of Kur1
Vonnegut Jr 'I .cctalmecl
lflOr1 1tory. Q
• LROM!Almi
CHANNEL LISTINGS
"Thi Swarming HordM"
Oe'1d All~ lool<I
al ttle strange courting
~of "-land
"-ta 0
Clf)WOV-.
• • "Frld1y Thi 13111" '
(1MO) Blt9Y P..,_, Adri-
B KNXT IC8Sl
8 KNBC INBCI e KT.LA (Ind I
• K>-BC (ABC>
~ KF.MB ICBSI
fl) KHJ·TV (Ind.I e KCST CABCI
e KTTV (Ind.I e KCOP· TV (Jnd l
e KCET IP.BS)
_JO ~OCE CPBSI
10 On TV
l Z·TV
Ill HBO
c IC1nemu1
IWORI NY ,NY
Q1J IWTBSI
t i tESPNl
rs, 1Showl1me1
• Spolllght • (CM>le News Network)
-King The, ............ ol. ~ eemp, ....,
20 ~ _.., .,.. lhf•
INa'dera. •llraot9 • Wldlo-
t lvl lllller wllo knlfn
~ ._....,. ....
(Q)MOW
•• "019tencll"' (11175)
PMil BenJeml,,, Ja,_
Woode A/I Anny Mrgeant
euflerlng a ~ cr1lll •
tlndl 1111 .,. OOfflPlloatld
bv .,, ~ mamage.
•
All unknown eomeone
brain•..,_ Jennifer Into ll.alint ._... from her
lrllncll Q • diOMICALD
..ow.t
A looa le t-.n _, tlll AM-
llllv9 and powerl\11 o4I
plllnl#IQI of the "MJIAOUfl
.Attlet." .MOYll
• • "MIMn And Howard"
(1N0) PAY! L.IMat, JMC>n
Aobard1. All OlhefwtN
unk,,own gH 1tatlon
attendant Cl"m• to be ttle
nghtlul halt to Howard'•
Hug11' bllllon doller
•tale. 'A' to:M. IHOIPl!NOINT
NITWONC~ -~ llCllCHOOl
"Waxing And Trait Sensel'
A iooa le tallen at what
lype9 of ... .,. available,
wtwat to ..., and llOw to
aoc>fY .,,. -nMCtld '°' vsytng -c:oncllllon&
; AMENCAH
Pt.AYMOUSE
"SenN Of Humor Who
Am I Thie Time?" Clvllto-
plllr W.illen and Suear>
Sarllndon por1rey actore In
• amall l!Mn play wtlo ....
In to\19 "' • t.-ptay of 1(1.11'1
Vonnegut Jr.'a ICCl9lrnld
..-ietory.Q (l)~LOOKS
AT1tl1
The -lloriM. people
and event• ol 1111 -
'-lurid Ir\ w. y.ar-.nd
~
10-M CZ)MOW •*'A "Baell Ro•d1"
(1911) Sally Fllld, Tommy
LM -'-· A hool<er end a
down-on-111 .. luclt boxer
"-' and Med _, In
-di of•,_ ltte 'R'
11:00 eaewt11a MIWI
• IATUflDAY MGMT
Holt· Paul Simon-Ou.I .
Oeorve Har1'lon.
• ICOMK •. e THI JC I iiMON8
-~NfOION
• DOCCAWTT
Qu11t· larbar• Cool!.
(Pet12)
(8)~
•• ''Thi Raitum" (1911)
J 1n·Mlella11 Vincent.
Cyblll SMpNrd Two peo.
pfe wfM> had • eloM
eneounw """ .,, ....,
·~•ft u dllldren ...,., the ..... Imminent
racum.
(Q)MOY!a
•• "Fuc:INltlon" (1980) ·
A young man'• family
lrll.,..,_ with Na plane
after lie mowa Into an
eper1menl !Nit II per1ect
for Ndudng _. young -.·R' 11:IO 9 (I) ALICE
Allee convlncet Mel to
ldwrtlae to •tlrflCI eu1o-
~L (R)
G 8TONIOHT
Ho•t· Johnny Ceraon.
Gueat: Dom Oet..ulM 8 0 MCNIWS
~
• THE 000 OOUPL.!
,... ··~··., oC)lfa
linflr,Jlul .,. •• too..., to
111'11 "' pubic. • Low. MmlCAH
ITYLI
''Lo-.. And Thi Stnglll
Apartment" Trevor 11
~ ltv• montha In 1
Loe~on~ •
whldl he mlJl.ll with plea.
-e.
'Wh0 AuO This Time' is warm,
KTLA e 8:00 -··Tom Curtuin ...
Alfted Hitchcock thriller about an,.
American 11clenl11t pret n4tna to be a
·defector.
KNXT 9 9:00 -"Mllllol') Dollar
Infield." RobRelner and Bonnle Bcdcllu
star in this TV movie premiere See
story below.
· KCET 9 8 :00 and KOCE 50 9·00
"Life on 6rth." David Allenborough
looks at the strange courting techniques
of flowers and insects.
KABC 0 10 :00 -"Hart to Hart ...
Jennifer is brainwashed into stealing
jewels from her friends.
• tCC9f NIWNIAT1
CAUPOfMA ooueWIOW.
""'°"" • CAl'nONID MO
NlWI CC)MQYm I
•• "Mt!M" And .._d ..
(IMO) Pu LIMll. JMOn
Aotlard1 An oth.,.....
u11llnow11 911 1tallon
1ntfldan1 c1a11n1 to bl ttll
rlf'ltful heir to Howttd
Hugh .. ' bllllon dolter
...... 'R'
Cl)MOVll
. * * "Tiie t11ciedlble
Stwlnklng Women" ( 1980)
Lily Tomttn, Cher* Oro-
dltl A ~le finds It
llard to oope wtl«'I 1111
~ly begin• to lflrink
In alN. 'l,'Q'
-~r---
ll:OO. IHA NA NA
0--t: Btendll LM. • 9 'N#TMY llUHD
A young -t.rlel to
WI!\ her fllthlt'• '°"*· and
lhrM !--. •x«:ul'-
lluntf« plrllt•l,_re (R)
D MOVll * • "o...tl'1 Eight" ( tM91
~ a-oa. Ralpll ..... .,
• MICaDOllG.IA8
Cotiost "*1111 SCono
au.ti Doug Kerll\•w.
Robin L•n1lng, Frank
GoraNn. George Jaoeck
Jr
• LOW. 4MUllCAH
STY~
"Love And The Sat.ly
Married Men" A bechllor
~ ., lna1ent lamlly
men ro qualify for a d•t•
wtth • ooroeou• woman euovw *•'Ao .. Bttek Road a"
( 11111) Sally Field. Tommy
L• ~. A llOoll• end 1
down-on-flla-luotl bo•er
meet Md Med -t In
~ofaMWll ... 'A'
1l:tl 9 (I) WKAP 1H
CtNCINHATI
Mr. Carlton decldee IO nm
for Cll)' Counc:ll. (R)
12:a0 0 8 LAn NtQHT WTTH
Do\VIO lETT'EAMAN
Ou.I: acr__..ter SI-
T ..... 8 MOYIE
• •• "Marnie" (1116A)
Tippt Hedrwl, ._, Con-
~ f• ICAJSBW NlTWOAK NIWI
Clf)MCME
• • • "Cll11ch And
Chong'• Nut Movie"
(1M0) Aic;:h.vd "Ct.-:h"
Marin, ThomM Chong
Two poth11d1 111v1
numlrOUI tmell ldVln·
tur• wlllll roemlng 1111
ltrwll of Loa AngetM In
~ OI the "per1ec1
hloh." 'A'
~MOW
• •'h "Cerny.. (1980)
Jodie Foeler, Gary 8uNY
A,, adventurou• young
women JOln• 1 c:t1rnlvll
troupe and 1Mrn1 llbollt
Ille hidden emollon1 and
frustrattonl behind 1111
"'"-llllPl)lnMe of Ille oerf ormers 'A'
11:40 ii (I) MOCLOUO
MoCloud 11 aaalgned to
protect ,,,. llee<I of • faml·
lyo(JWf'lld c:otoor•tlon (R) ,
1:00 • MOVll! • * •• ''Goodbye Again"
C 1118 t) lllQrld Bergman. v-Montano
• MOVll
***'-' "Ouna At Batul"
( tMAI Ridlard Anenbor·
ouoh. J.ck H.,...,,,.
(l)WOVIE ** *'" "Don• Flor And Her Two Huabend1" C 19711>
SOiiie Br1Q9, JOM Wiiker
A young Brullllln woman'•
boring MCond marriage Is
enllvened by the 1rr1v.i or
her flrat hu1band'1 pu-
lllOO•t• ghOll 'R'
1;10G MOVIE
• e '" "Operalion Mad
Ball" ( 1957) Jack Lemmon.
Ernie Kovac• l1Jl NEWS
l:IOCil EHTEATAINMEHT
TONIGHT
Tiie Siiiier Brolllers pet·
:Jorm and 1a1k about the
help Johnny Cash hU giY1 .,, ,,,.,.,
IBNEWS (CJ MOVIE * * ''Olly• 01 Fury Nar-
rated by \/1neen1 P"ce An
1nve1t1ga11on 01 the ChtlflllQ
1v1nta Of deeth and
deslrucilOn are &IUdled 2:000 HEWS
0MOVIE
• • · S101rat• ways
(1980) Katen Black. Tony
Lo Blanco A young cou-
pll'1 lallure 10 com"""'•·
c:t1te neatly resuJll 1n the
dlllructlon or lllelr mat·
riage 'R'
2: 10 Of) MOVIE * * * >n .. My Bodyguard'
( 19791 Chrlll MUI~.
Adem B.idwln The new
kid •t a Clllc.ego high
actiool milk" lrlenda with
tile 9Clhoc>I OUICNt and •
together they lland up to
tlle erUll4 OtnQ which had
per-.cutld them both.
'PG'
=~= * • "Tiie lncredlble
Shrll\IUng Woman' (1980)
L~ r.:. .. ltotl, er .... ;.. Glo-
din A hOuMWif• finds 11
h.atd to eooe when lfll
euddlnl)' beglnl 10 llWWr
lflliie 'PO' 2:A0 8 NIW8 2:89 MOVIE
* * "Tiie Girl Who Knew
Too Muell" (111'9) Nartj
Kwen.M11mWeet
a:OO CC) MOVIE
......... Searl-(19321
Paul Munl, George Rall A
amall-IHne l'IOOdfum ,,_
lo tlle top ol lt>I !leap dur •
I~ Prol'liblllon
3:10U MOVIE *I• .. Edge 0 1 Doorn"
( 19!IOI Din• Andr-. F•r·
i.., Gr•nger
.1:1UD MOVIE * • '" .. The "'-lnlerna·
(1964) Mk;hffl Callan, Ber·
bar• Eden
:1:30 C $}MOVIE * * I "North By North-
_, .. (1959) Cary Grent
Ev• Meri. Saint An adver-
JOHN DARLING
•
tiling,._, ....... ---
clt•tlalllly wMlt lie .. ,,,...
-.rt lot a CIA....,.
1:4f MIC>e.M ~ lll9NMllY • I
A MW '*1 llltr.._ IN
movt••. epeolale a114 tfMl'1• _., ~ 10
....... ,. ()fftOt Ill,~
•:OO •• MCMI ** ''lrnc>rGPW °"9nllm" (1M1) AIM Atkin, Man.tt. 1 Hat'Uliy. A _... of "'*"'-
deratlllldl1109 oau"' a
Mldal won. IO ~
Iha ~-old dlUglMt of a..., .... ~ lettle
lilctlm of Chlld a1M1M 'PO'
Cl)MOVI&
••''Percy'' c111111 HytMI
~. OellhOlm l!lllOll. A
man ~ 91\ IMIMI
Ollebrlty aflet • OOfltro,,.,.
Ila! lrflnll)llllll operation
'A'
•: 11 (8) MOWI * • "Fr1daiy The 13tll"
( 11110) 9't•Y Palmaf, Adtt-
entMI King, TM f90C* Mrlo
of a aunimer cemp, dOMd
20 ~ --""" llv• mutdet9, •ttract• a wtndb
llve klller wllo knlf11
uneuepeottnQ '-""aoer-'A' dO (C)~ * * "Ptlobie" (IMO) Peul
MlchMI 01-, lu .. n
Hogen A group of menllll
patient• er4 mur«Serld
ICCOfdlng to their lndlvldu-
1111-a. 'A
Wedne•da11'•
Doytbtte Mo"le•
~MORNltG-
a:ao (]l) I*•·~ "Breaker
Me>rant" ( llllO) EOW11d
Woodward, Jactl Thomp·
eon AullrtllMt conlefipl·
Id to fight on England'•
••d• In the Boer War
decide to fight thl Boer
guerillas on thelr own
tllfml
9'.30CIJ **~"Jllopy"C tll531
8owlr)' Boyl. Leo Goroey
TM 8oyl dltcoY« • lor-
muta for making gNOllne
and try ,,,.., luck at lllOC>Y
racing
(C) • **'!\ Benenu"
(11H1) w oody Allen,
lou111 L...-A product
1111.. bored with hi•
everyday routine. goet to 1
sma ll Latin Amertc•n
country and ~ a
dtctator durtng a polltlcal
upMlvll ·PG'
10:00 <R ••'-'''Zulu Dawn"
( 19110) Burt L1ncet11r,
Peter 0 Toole Thi Engllllh
Wtgl a btltlr ltrvogie
aoain•I tile Zulu natlOn I,,
19th-cenlury Alflee
0 * • • "An Enemy Of
The People" ( 1977) St-
Mc~. Cherlel Durn-
ing. 8ued on 11>9en'• otey.
The clllzena of a IMAll
lown first appleud thin
OlfMCUll e local physician
for dlClerlng the local hot
IC>l'lnl)• unaelt doe to oot·
lullon. 'G'
10:30. * * "The Slat PIClter"
( t934) John W1&yn1, Verne
HIHll A tough cowboy
depulizH 1 group of
rancn.n to rocnd i:p o
~ of outi.wa.
11:00 le) •*"'"Thi Frlleo Kid"
(1979) Gene Wilder, HM'rl-
son Ford A Polllll rabbi
llnd• hlrnlelf lr>YOIY9cl In
wild lrontler mlaed~·
tur11 with a daring bank
robber W'*> lie trevell to
San Franellco to 111111 over a,_ cong.egatton 'PG'
fSJ 1': * 14 "Tiie loved
One" ( 11185) Robert MorM,
An)•n1n1 Corner The
~ole~Hol·
lywood .,., lneur• -
dlbtl Ind headeChH
wllerl It COfTIM llrne 10
make the runer•I •rr~
men II
12:00 G ••'lo "SWdd1-Hool
Scudda-Hayl" (1941) June
Haver, Lori McCllliller
Two mulll help a young
boy win both Ille girt he
loves and her lather's
reapect
0) e e *'It "Miii Me In
SI Louis" (1845) Judy
&UT LET'S 0E
REAL-t&"TIC.'
OURINGA
AAtlNGS PE~ rT MEL.PS IF WE
CAN SHOWA
UTTl.£ SKIN.'
~ T• OtMa. C*o .. ., ..... ,...,. ..
It. L.MI ~......., .., ..........
'fork juat ..,.,. tN
W.W• '* ....... .. ~ .... ..,. ... OrNot
To .. "(1Mt)J.-~.
0.dl L.-..rd A .. ~
of IOtCl!J ~ ...
..... .. llllp All '41#
pllot...,..,.
QD. ·~ ....... "°"" Aloatraa" ( 117t) Cilnt
l!HIWOOd, Pair loll
~ A llatdel\Od
OOfMlit, lwNmod .......
llnlt .._,. "°"' ''flle ~.·· ~to~ out llfl9lll 'l'Q' • * * ..... ''Thi W"f We Were" ( 1t7J) larbro
l 1rel9Md, Robert~.
A young OOillOI ~ Ill
the 11130e ~ INt
theff pollllcel .,,., 91M;9
er• llr0f10 lflOUQh IO )lop-
ardlze their 1n11"99L
(%) **°" "iro .. " (1NO)
JodM ~. """' ~-
1'111111 Thi lltctlml of bn*er1
~ llf>d uncwirlg -~ anti, lour t-.eoe g1r1e try
to IOOttll "'* ll'llOtlol iel
wound9 ltv~ .. and ....w
1:00 IJ:) I**'" "Dey For
Hlghl" (1972) leoQulll• .,....., v~ CotteM.
Olreci.d ~ Ffanoo6t Truf.
llUI Tiii 11¥11 and io-of
Nm !*'f«mere -etuct-
llCI In.~ .......
m<MI 'PO' (I} I l 'A "FellO" (11180)
Dom Oll...ulM, AnM 8-
uoft. A portly c:ompulslvl
•ter find• tllat nOtNng
can dampen 1111 ~ for
1000 untU he f.,.. In love.
'PG'
1:44 Cil •• 'Ar • '8actc Rotld•"
( I 118 t) S.ity Fllld, Tommy
L•J~A~~·
dow1. on-hla-luoti boxer
,,_. and heed _, In
-Clflot•-Hfl.'R'
2:00 0 •• "lme>foper Ctlan-
,,.._.. (\Ill I I Alen Ancln,
Mar1111• HW11ey A _...
ol (Yll1und1retandlng1
Ca&JMe • IOd9I --. to
1u1pect Ille ~)'lllt-old
daiught• ol • MC>af9tld
c:ouple I• ttle \llc:tlm ol ct*!
abuM 'PO'
1:000 **'h"AcllHIQh"
( 1977} MMcxllm Mco-.11,
Cfl'111<>P'* Plummer A
,_.,., ol .... ,, a.ned Britlllh
Hllr1 aoatl Into .-Jal
action In the .... ()Yer
Eurooe during WOf'ld Ww
I .
<BJ • *'Ao "Borderl;ne"
( 19801 CtwlM Btoneon, ·
8tuno Kltby A police oft!.
cer ~ • amuggllng
hng oper1t1ng along Ille
Me1t1Cen b«d9r and lrlel
to keep Incoming lllena
from becoming -.... to
Nth .... ~ OWi>·
er1. 'PG'
J:ao(S) •• "S.naby And
Me" (1177) Ski c-t.
Jullet Mlll9 A cute, CUddly
k09l• bear "r111tr•l1S" lhe
1tory of en Autlrlllan leml-
ly _'G' CD • • • "The Boy
Friend" (19711 Twtggy,
CMllQPhw G~· V.nen
an ...iatent at11g1 ~
oar rlC)leca the ........
l••d In • allow, all•
~ • llar and llnda r_ ......
•:OO 0 • • 'Ole Laugtling'
(1980) Rob!)oy Benion .
Cllul•• Durning A
~tong cab ~ 11
llidld 11y • amen monk.,.
In proving hllNlll '"'-"
or 1 murder cllarge 'PG'
&:00 CC) * e '-' "Thi Fr18co Kid"
(1117111 0-Wilder. Harri-'°" Ford A P~ rablll
finds hlmMlf 1nW>IWCI In
wtld frontier m1 .. oven-
11JrM with I dlflng bMll
robber '"'*1 hi lr•Yli• to
S•n Fr9"Cleco to talc• OYlf
•MWeongregetlon 'PG'
&:30 CZ') **'Ao "On Any Sun-
day" (1971) Documentary
St•v• Mcou .. n , M1r1
L•-111 Tt11 world o•
motorcycll racing HI -
fr om varying point• OI
view
• witty ···.-.-.-.iiii.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.·.iiii·iii·ijiiij·iii~··--·~·iji
'Mi~lion Dollar Infield' called fairly standard television movie ESCAPE TO THE MARRIOTT
~lT!..~f,!"ffENBERG
NEW YORK -Television offers two
stories tonight about social misfits
Uvtna vicariously and vi1orously In
fantasy worlds. In "Who Am I 'Ibis
Time?". tbe latest In PBS' weekly
r. American Playhouse., aeries, tbe
escape ~ the dramatic state: lo CBS'
···111woo Dollar Infield" the dreama are
on tbe IOftball diamond.
Both are entutainlnl explorations
into the human condition. But while
"Million Dollar Infield'• LI a fairly
atodard TV movie, with momenta of
atronc feelinl. "Wbo Am I Tbll Time?"
· la one ot U.. wtttielt, wanlMlt boun of
the cun..t aeuoG. Both Ac>wt air at t
tontfbt. ''Infield'' II on KNIT <2> and "Wio Am I" .. OD Kerr <•>.
aoa &BINB&, tate Of "Alt tn the
Family,'' II the writer, producer and
star ot. "MlWon Dollar Jnlleld," and
• JU"ltt-llh 'Tb* M•tbMd' to COIM up wttla a relatlrilJ ~ movie wbeo
''Amerloan PlaJbilM.&H" la doln1 tucll a
AleUOtful Joi> with Kurt Vonnept'a
........ tbort at«y? • r '.~ Walha, Aeldetny Award
..._. froiD "'l"be 0.... Rwster," It
r 8arrf'\tfliM, • clDaJ ~ clerk a.' ·~1ho AID I Tlafl 'l'lm•f '' 'ho bellatul
............ DOMDal ~. . . .,
This year make V ALENTINE,S DAY a weekmd qffaitf
Spend Valentine's weekend at the Newport Beach Mand.
~~............ .. ... .,..,
-. ----------------------~ -
• Hntag_e Simon on
87 'IO•,,,,,. -............ .__one of tb• ,.._,.thy call Neb
SlmOG 11DOe" le becauae ol tbe tber..,.udc ettec\ that cm of b1a play• cu have oa a eommwllty
\beater l'W.P· Sven "Com• Blow Your Hom," Simon'• ftrst
and tbe product of a more lnnocept era of
playwritJna, remain• hlthb entertatnln1 u tbe
latest project of the Mlaalon Vt•Jo Playbouat. lt'I
on •t.I• WMkendl t.broufh Feb. JO at tbe Porum Tbeater on the Festival o Art.a 1rounda Sn Lasuna
Beacb. Alt.bou&b tt really 1bould be played aa a period
piece, circa ueo when vlrtue wu lta own Teward,
or at the very leut updated to cover 11.nft like
"They're &ettinf ready to aeod a man t6 the
moon," the play 1 comic •
tbru1t remains lntact.tml ilii It'• always lntereatln• to1
examlne the roots of a .
playwrt1ht who haa ·
become leaendary over
the put two deeades and see hls deft touch ln
evidence even then. The Mission Viejo production, under the
direcUoo of Dick Vara, ls nicely paced and
imaginatively interpreted. While tbe blockin1 la a .
bit static ln spots, the performances effectively
compensate.
Particularly impressive la Michael BieUt.z as
the hilh·livina older brother who, being over ao
and unmarried, ls the "bum" of the staunch
Jewish family. Bielit1 employs a natural, bree1y
manner to render bis character both believable
and sympathetic.
Tom Neverman as the 21 -year -old
"dependable" son who be&ins taking bumming
lessons also is quite good, notably in his
transformation (or graduation) in the final scene.
Barbara Hollis ls Cine as Bielitz! primary
heartthrob, even though she's saddled with some
of Simon's most pedestrian lines.
The no-nonsense father , a wax fruit
manufac:turer of the old school, ls hilariously
interpreted by Joe Cordio who delivers the playWright's best lines with high authority. Gwen
Placko fills the bill nicely as the jittery mother.
tbougb more could be done with her
telephone-pencil routine, one of Simon's fuMiest
passages.
Finally, Lori Nicklin as the dingallng sexpot
from upstairs is probably the most seductive
actress to play the role locally. and does
splendidly on a physical plane. Her constant
downstage playing becomes bothersome, however,
tending to se\ herc-out.ide the action.
Senti a Valentine message to that
special person in your life. Put 1t in
print in our speciaJ Love Lines col-
umns on Valentines Day. Sunday.
Feb. 14.
(A)
(B)
~
(C)
(0)
Here are some examples:
2-lnch Ad
s11 .oo
•
•
1-lnch Ad
$7.50
~ineAd
$5.00
3-UneNJ
$3.00
11 .. ME
C ... STIMI
UMTIL THE
OCEAN
fl&US
SOLID
LOftALWAYS
JOIY
1912
a.n.tm.1 Is rcw 1M11f; New Y ean llfcd11n ut Valeat.lna Day 11 lbe
lime to remind )'OU
YOU'ii THI OML Y
"i
OMll
Love
to Annie fl1llD Bob
S4.00 I
---ss.oo I
' "CW ................. ~_, ..... ..._,.....,.._Otcl!Y••• ......... _,...., =t«ttNc•~atl-~---........... .. v~.= ~.:.~r·-Te:5 • .... ,..,_ T...W.,ft""tli .. 1'..U\1411 tif Ml .,._. C:...¥911 ..... L...-llMtll. .. ..,,, ........ --. •••CAtt ··1-·
AIMl.-r . ...... . .................... llMCMel lllttlll 1..-,a-.r .......... ,,.,. • ..................... T----Mr. ........ • • . ................................ " ......... c:..Mt
Mtt.I.._, • ........ ........................ . .. 0-.... .. c_.. °""" ..................... , ................ ....., ..... .. ~' ·-.......................................... I.Ml Nk•llll ·-·~·······································'-........ ~
"COme Blow Your Hom" may be an oldle, but
It's a IOOdJe for the Mluion Viejo Playbo~e.
which will sta1e lt Fridays and Saturdays at I :'°
throu~ Feb. 2IO in the Forum Theater on Lapna
Beach's Festival of Arta IJ'OUDda. It'• vtntaae
Simon, but Simon nevertbeleu.
* BACKSTAGE -South Coast Repertory bu
announced a special Saturday matinee performan~ for lta current SecolRt'Staae offerin1,
"Bodles," at 3 p.m . this Saturday .... unusually
heavy Ucket demand prompted tbe extra 1taatn1
at the SCR theater, 655 Town Center Drive. Costa
Mesa .....
The Newport Harbor Actors Theater bas
shelved ill last t~o scheduled producUona of the
season, "The Rimers of Eldrilcb" and "Hay
Fever," and replaced them with "The Royal
Famlly'' for April 2·25 and "Joseph and bis
Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoal," May 20-June
28. . . .the latter is a musical by the authors of
''Jesus Christ Superstar" ....
NY Fihn Critics
pick 'l{eds' as top
NEW YORK (AP) -"Reda," a sweepin1 saga
of a socialist journalist and his wile, bas been
presented the New York Film Critics' award for
best movie of 1981.
The winners, who were announced Dec. 21,
received their awards Sunday night in a ceremony
at Sardi's restaurant.
"''Reds" was represented bv co-stars Diane
Keaton and Warren Beatty.
Burt Lancaster received the best actor award
for his P<>rtrayal of an aging numbers runner in
"Atlantic City," and Glenda Jackson received the
prize for best actress for'her role as the Britlah
poet Stevie Smith in ."Stevie."
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE n......, ... o1 ........... to ......
,,,.,_ -... ...,,..,, ol ..... __,,,.,_.., __
fiil AU AGES AOMIT'TlO ~ 0..-aJAud-
® llESTlllCTIO Uf'lldllf t1 , .... _,. ICQI T'*1¥fi lll
~-,Of AdlAI ~
AU. am NfO Ill Fu. •cervE
'n4E If.AL OF THE lifOro. "'C:T!Jf'E
COOE OF MV llEOUlATI09t
NEW
BUSINESSMEN
Con I act lhe DAILY
PILOT for Information
regarding the county
requirement• for
uelng • Ftctltloua
Buelne .. N•me.
842-4321
EXT. 332
• --~$6.00:' __ -.;. ______ ...-____ I
Orange CoMt DAILY PfLOT/Tuetday, Februwy 2. 1982
Whose
Ufelslt
~
l'iil MGM. mw-,_..
l.!!J .----«» ·-~:
NOW PLAYING
mi ll TWO -T•T• IUCI 8'11 Plaza EdwMIS $......... EdRdt ClnllM
529-5339 581 ·SHO 148.0HI
COITlmlA ..,.
Edwlrds Soutft Coal PllU 548·2711 Edwlrda Woodbrtllge 551 ·ffH
I NO ,. .. ucco1p POii TM !'!'PP i r I --------------
•BARGAIN MATINERS •
Monday tttru S1turd1y
All Performance• before 5:00 PM
{E1c.,t Specill flpf11Mllt1 llMf Hllldays)
...... , ... " -_ ..... ------···-----... ··MOS"' --
'"IHAltKY"• ~·ti!
_..., .. _____ _
--~1?:~~-
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALK IN ..,. ____ ..,_
"'ON GCM.DCN '°NO" ------_., ___ __
""TAN""' ·-----
lAl<EWOOO CENTER
SOUTH WAI • '"
-----"'WHOM Ufll! 18 IT AHYWAY'r .............. __ .. l&-··-·-~~a..-
foc11lty ot ColldtewoOCI
213/531·9110
--· ~Y .. lllo\CHNe" flt ·------------·---.. ·-
--·-Ml.Ill I •'MIGUaJ OI' THI L09T AM" ==--t!;lll==--mt
.... -.--·-""CMANOTSOll' ......... .
"" I
____ .. ..
-'°"=~) ~ •M-151• ----· "'THR IOMlll" .. ---MT.--....------·----"P'OWt,....... .. ---... ,. ____ _
-........ -e:1& "" \oo•:oo-. ..... e:4t IMrOllTHT NOTICll Cllll OlllN UNDllll 12 fltHI
........... Wit-.... llW• Flo & 30, ht , .. , -4~N
Cl94! -• -Ml "'~ llllOll • -...... ,,, ... Ml C.111 IWJO Wlll4 ....,,. ~ 1111111911
..... ,. Nll'TlllU.l•M.L c..fl ..........
_,__,, ... , '""'
ANAHEIM DRIVE-IN
F...-cry '1 01 le"'°" St
179-tllO
•, I *'II A '"ASH
BUENA PARK OlliVl IN
l>M-A•• WMI ol ll-llt•4010
Tftllff!nil1"f .... o.._.~ .. ....--(S.)
f'2•2 .. I
• '• /j. ••
>. ..... '• ..
---·--·-I& ___ __
• •YIJIOlll" • -''NIGHT tc:MDCk." •
__ ....._,·-···
"THI IOOG.INI" • -""THn CAm ""'* tflTlW'.
----·--·-n.~···
''\.OOICD'" ... -------·-··-. 'WNOll''• -"NIGHT ICHOOl." •
Cllll ·" touNO
Iii WA'( 39 [lll•it '"
....... So OI O..• GI-ft""9Y
191·S6ta
' I
..... i..
lA HARRA ,. ,1 "
....... -~ .... -·--.,.. ... .
~
.. ,.,
ORANGE "' 111 1 ·~
_ .. _. ___
''TAl'r' .. -"'THI C'N9tOlll•U. MM" ..
Ctlll ·'I ---------· •'Tftl IOlll8" • . -•'fMC«DOWN''. * "IOllllD ---·--· ---·--''VIMOlll" ... -.. .......,~" ..
............ ,,.,,
..... c ......
Hl·7012
• •
l i
t I t
I r .
•
Reagan's
'openness'
'rapped
t WASHINGTON CAP>
-The Society of
Profes s ional
Journalists , Sigma
Della Chi, has given the
Reagan administration
a ''falling grade" for its
performance last year
ob issues involving
openness in
gQvemmenl.
"The administration consisteoUy took actions
that would restrict the
flow of infor,mation
about the federal
government lo the
people who pay for it,"
the group said In a
statement issued by 111
national officers.
When taken together,
the society said, these
actions represent "a
fundamental assault on
First Amendment
~gbts.
1 "ln assembling its
report card on President
Reagan's first year in
o(flce, the White House
wisely chose not to
i,.oclude his scor'e on
ls s u e s i n v o l v i n g
openness ln
government,'• the group
said. "It would have
brought down hi s
a,,.erage considerably.'·
The society. which has ~.ooo members from all
.Segments of journalism,
issued a report card of lts own, giving Reagan
failing grades in 9 of 10
openness categories.
The only passing
irade was awarded for
"orld press· freedom,
with the organization
praising his
a.d m I n is tr a tl on tor
"forcefully opposing
efforts by UNESCO to
J"egulate journalists
around the world and
impose governmental
Controls on ttie now of
news."
11'...1 A m o n 8 a c t i o !1 s
1,;..uticized were:
· -New Justice
Department guidelines
that, in effec t , encouraged all federal
a•encies to be more restrictiVe' in their
telease or information
tinder the federal
Freedom of Information
Act.
-A proposed
executive ord.,r that
would make lt much
e.aaler for federal
agencies to elaulfv
information -and thus
pitbbold it from the
IJUbllc -and much
harder for them lo
~clualfy lt.
. "Tbe president dld ~
aet a very poalttr ~ x•mp!e for hi•
dmlnJatratlon," the
IOclety aald. "In boldin•
Just slx press conferences laat year,
• r . Rea1an m &de
blmself avaUable to the
newt media h!J• ....ay um any nnt
ear Pr•ldeet la at aat a W-e.tury.' •
. ·. . -· . ~ ....
Student defends course at university
• .. t ) •• . .... " . :
aet a lot out of it, thouah."
"St.a.r Trek'' wH produ~ to th
19801. Even thouah th• show WH
canceled more than a decade aao. It
can be aeen In reruns and hu
developed a cult rollowlna.
Anderson said three ol the
program's main characters portray
three aspects of the self and
Ulustrate how they must set alone.
According lo Anderson, Capt. Kirk
stands for lntuJtion, Mr. Spock, the
first officer, gives us logic , and the
ship's s urgeon , Dr. McCoy , represents emotion.
''There's a lot of b1ckerina.
especially between Spock and
McCoy, but deep down they do work
together and they succeed," Anderson said.
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SCORING SPREE Newport Harbor High's Byron Ball
collects two of his game-high 28 points Monday night
against Costa Mesa. It wasn 't enough, however. as the
Mustangs pulled off a come-from-behind 70-67 victory.
Mus tangs convince
··anothe r oppone~t ,..
Sailors realize Costa Me$a's for real
By JIM McCURDIE
CM-Dettf ...... MMf Newport Harbor High Coach
Jerry OeBusk knew beforehand
that the Mustangs of Costa Mesa
were better than the 5·4 Sea
View League record they took
with them lnto Monday night's
game at the Newport gyrp.
He had all the evidence he
needed in Cost.a ~a·s 49-41
follow shot in al the 2:57 mark,
giving Costa Mesa a 62-61 lead.
It was the first time lbe
Mus tangs led since midway
through the first quarter, and
they made it hold up.
•' Pelichowski drove inside for •
basket with 1:53 left and, after
Newport's Byron Ball cut the
upset of Corona del Mar last Cd".1 Est · · Friday night, the Sea Kiogs' rvi, anc1a Win
first league loss or the year. And
what were DeBusk 's
impressions after Monday's
game? . .
"EVEN THOUGH they Cthe
Mustangg) have fallen on some
hard times, they're still a team
that probably possesses the best
talent in the league," be said.
The reason for DeBusk's
feelines bein1 confirmed: Costa
lleH rallied to come back from
(SH Page C2)
lead to 64-63 with a turnaround
jumper, Pelicbowski tqok a pass
from Ken ·Bardsley and scored
on an almost identical shot,
making it 66-63.
Arter Jeff Field stole the ball
in the front court for the
Mustangs, Bardsley bit two free
throws to give Mesa a 68-63 lead
with 52 seeonds left.
a six-point fourth-quarter deficit THE SAJWRS countered with
and outscor~ the Sailors, 14-4, Steve Pelletler's 18-footer from
in the final three minutes to the baseline and a pair of free
claim a 70-67 win that further throws from Ball making it
scrambles the wild Sea View 68-67 with 28 secon~ left.
race. °"\.: Following a Costa Mesa time
The win keeps the Mustangs oin. the Muslinei-broke
(6·4) in contention fol'I" a playoff Newport's full-court pressure
spot while Newport (7-3) and spread t heir offense,
dropped another 1ame off the running the clock down to three
pace of tea1ue-leadln1 CdM, seconds before Gres Selby
which easily dhpoaed of fouled John Rlshebar ger.
Saddleback Monday. Estanci• Risbebarger, who led the
remained in a tie for fint at 9-1. Mustangs with 22 points, sank
Jim Pellcbowskl had four key , both free throws and Costa Mesa fourth.q~r fleld 1oals and b•d pulled off ill second upset in
the lllustanp connected on tile as many outings.
of seven fr~ throw auempta in •'The inability to take care ol
the finaJ peflod u Coet• Meta-the ball and IO to the buket bl
after 1taytq within atrilrlnt the lut tbtee minut~ burt "' a
distance throughout tbe 1am.-little bit.'' DeBuak said. "We
flnally atrtack. bad a kid aet • nve·HC:oDd all
on blm becauae .,..aotiodj ....
out to the ball. •
"SVEN ~114'.JUGB we h-4
1ood c h ancea. we dlCSn 't
eapitaliit OD them. ftq 6L'' ,fte brtlbt .............. was tile performance Of a.II,
wbO Md a 1amH11p•a ,....,
~ll•Uiaa..Mlf .. .... ~~:.= .... {)18111J9T~, PallG> . '
No-nam e_ Vikings t rying t o ride off with !he Sunset
By ROGER CUI.SON
O( .. Dlllly,.. ...
Take a look around and in
almost every case, where
there's • eood basketball team,
there's an individual or two who
really sUcb out. '
Richard CbaJll and Rick
DlBernardo at Edison, for
instance. Jeff Hu1hea at
Fountain Valley, Jeff Gardner
at Estancia, Jim Lane at
Huntington Beach, Tim Os1ood
at Servile, Paul Thomas at
Bro-Olinda, Chris Lynch at
Corona del Mar, Matt
Beeuwsaert at Mater Del or Jim
Usevitcb at Ocean View.
Those are all ranked teams in
Orange County by the Daily
Pilot -but ther~ was another
one there last week and ~e
which is in contention for a ..,;1F
4-A playoffs berth as the seuoo
nears the latter stages.
ll 's Marina -and the
no-name Vikings.
It's not that there iao'l
standout talent at Marina, but
when you have four players
averagin1 in double ficures, yet
with no one scoring as much as
15 points a game, well, the1joke
around the Vikin11' floor is
about newspapers which carry
scoring averages down to only 15
points or so.
"They don't even know we
exist,'' say11 Coach· Steve
Popovich with a laugll.
But that's OK wlUi Popovich.
who is in bis seveqth year at the
helm. He planned it that way.
"We tried to atrive for
balance," says Popovich. "The
last two years we were
unbalanced, with a couple of
guys scoring at 15 or 16 points a
game, and a couple more at 5
and 6 points a 1ame.
"When you. only have two
\
Gilbert -~plan~ing·
response
LOS ANGEL~ (AP) -Sam
Gilbe r t, charged with
improprieties in connectioa ~th
the UCLA basketball proeram
during the past 15 years in
several recent Los Angeles
Times articles, said Monday
nigM that several people quoted
by the nmes have told him they
were misquoted.
· ·'I've gotten more coverage
than the President," said
Gilbert. "What I'm doing is
something which I feel wiH be a
different type or response than
you've ever seen before. I'm
accumulatin1 a list of all the.
people who've called me and
said they were misquoted.
"I have one letter which is a
very startling rt!pudiation of
what was said by the Times. I
have another man who is very.
reputable, a man of great
'stature, .JVbo is wllline to say
that what was printed was a
total falsehood. I think I'm
,.-going to respond by lettine u.:.e
who uve been misquoted
re.spond. '•
Stories in the Times have
referred to Gilbertl~' a wealthy
contractor in nearuy Encino, u
·'The Godfather, patriarch of
UCL.fA bas~etball," a nd "a
one-man clearlne bouae who bu
enabled players and their
families to receive toocls and
services usUll11y at blt discount.
and sometitqes at no cos~." -~
"rr you wkre in my positron I
think yau would •ll"ee that the
best way lo respond la this
way," saidfGilbert. "If you
would juat 10 throu1b the
articles and take a mark1n1
pencil and take tbe ones wbo
have been ne1atJve, there 1'Ul
be a reaponae from them. It wt11
be on local televillon.
IMITM ltLUI~
guys, in this (Sunset) leaeue.
you 're in trouble. We tried to
make sure our offense was
pretty well balanced."
The balance begins with
returning starter Rick Smith, at
6-5, with 6·4 senior Andy
Kluasman, 6·1 senior John Berry
and 6-0 Scott Filipek, the only
junior, rounding it out.
The Vlkes don't use just a
four-man squad, but that quartet
forms the vast majority of
Marina's success. Popovich
rounds out his starling unit
with either 6·5 Mark Tandy
or 6-3 Greg Chomlk, and
combined, the Vikings are 11-8
overall, 3-3 in leaeue, in a
scramble al the moment for
third place.
"I've tried to get them to
realize the importance of
playine aa a team." says
Popovich. "There have been
times when we haven't and
when we haven't, we haven't
been successful. · '
This isn't a group that bas
been brought along at Marina,
the ideal thine would be to bring
them along, all on the freshman,
and sophamore levels, first.
"The depth of talent
throughout our program has
been down," says Popovich.
"We have the same amount of .,...
aaa.aY PILI PUC
kids, but not as many Quality
players.
"So Filipek was on the
sophomore team as a freshman
and junior varsity as a
sophomore. Berry was on the
varsity as a junior and Rick
Smith was on the junior varsity
as a sophomore.
''Kl~man was on the varsity
for half a year. then down to the
junior varsity as a junior.
··A lot or patience and hard
work paid off for Smith, because
be wasn't ready at the start or
bis sophomore year for the
junior varsity.''
So, the Vikings are a
conglomeration, as Popovich
puts it.
When they're on the court
sometimes it's difficult to single
them out -but each bas his
values, s uch as Filipek's
shooting and playmaking.
Klussman oo the boards, Smith
in most departments and
Berry's shooting, especially
when it's his night to shoot.
''Scott is an excellent
ballbandler and makes things
happen as a penetrating point
guard," says Popovich. "He has
had some inconsistencies, but
not lately. He is realizing more
and more things he has to work
on."
Berry limited Fouot•lo
Valley's Hushes to only four
points In a 42...Cl victory receaUy
1out of a diamond-and-one
defense and Klusaman kept
.some of the lid on Ocean View's
,Usevitcb (17 point.) in Marina's
~2-60 victory with the aame style
f defense.
"Klussman ls our leadini
rebounder and the team's mOlt
improved player," saya
Popovich. "Smith? He'• the IUY
we go to in the clutch, OW' most
consistent shooter (over 50
percent) and he's in lbe middle
of our four-corners offense
because he is our moat mobile
" and best offensive weapon up
front."
The Vikings are within range
of their long-ranee eoal -a
berth in the CIF \ 4·A playoffs
from what is obviously one of
the toughest leagues in Southern
California.
"We knew bow exceptional
this league was going to be,"
says Popovich. "It's the best
I've ever seen and our goal was
to be ready for league and get
into the playoffs." .
For the statistical minded,
here is each of those four
starter's scorine averages:
Filipek is at 14.7 (16.2 in league;
Smith is at 13.8 (15.5 in league);
Berry is at 11. 7 (league, too);
and Klussman is at 10.4 (7.7 in
league).
As stated, no-names, at least ..
statistically. Ocean View and
Fountain Valley players,
however, may not agree.
It's been a team which has
operated with peak efficiency at
times, but not always. "I'm
down to 216 pounds now ," says
the 6~ Popovich. "And thars the
lowest I've weighed in 10
years."
Rogers wants variety
·Golfer of the year 1ays TPA tour needS some changes
By BOWilD L RANDY °' .. ..., ......... If variety-.Js the spice of life,
then Bill Rogers is enjoying bis
role to the fullest these days.
Rogers, on band at La Costa
Count ry Club in Carlsbad
recently to pick up a trophy for
·being named MONY Golfer of
the Year, feels the TPA .tour
needs some variety as well.
"We need some variety on the
tour[" Rogers said. "In the next
few years, you'll see some
changes made with more
variety including some match
play events.
''I th1nk we need to get away
from the sameness that now
prevails."
ROGERS BAD his troubles
early in 1981, failing to make the
cut in five straight tournaments.
But he added some variety to his
game by playing a pair or
exhibition matches with
Japanese star lsao Aoki.
"I went over there (to Japan)
and things started going beUer
for me," Rogers says. "He beat
me in the first match in Japan
and I won in the Philippines. I
started feeling more
comfortable about my game."
The variety in his game
included winning the British
Open, Japan's Suntory Classic
and the New South Wales Open
in Australia.
Rogers started his comeback
in the Tournament Players
Championship when be made
the cut for the first time in a'-
long while. He went on to win
tb~ Heritage Classic, the World
Serie• of Golf and the Texas
Open and tied for second in the
U.S. Open.
HE CREDITS his upsurge to a
hom~wn golf pro who viewed
films of two years earliu and
helped him change his grip. But
it wasn't an easy comeback.
"It was a 'step in the right
dil'ection but I still missed the
cuts in the next two tournaments
before my matches with Aoki ,''
Rogers recalls.
He was named to the Ryder
Cup team and says that was a
big thrill for him.
"When you are a member of
the Ryder Cup team , you
suddenJy find yourself puJling
for someone else. You are
together for a full week and you
get to know the other players
much better ln that time.
"Golf is so competitive and
there aren't a lot of others
pulline for you. But in the Ryder
Cup, you get to know the others
and pull for them."
Courses in other countries are
much the same as here
according to Rogers.
"THE WEATHER is the big
factor," be says. ''I'm not sure ..
our courses are faster tban those
1in other countries. But in
England and Scotland, all of
their opens are held at seaside
courses. With good weather. I
would say their courses aren't
that much different than ours.
"But it's • great cbanee of
pace to play on their courses.
But you do tiave to cban1e to
I your game and adapt to their
, deal for a week," be says.
1 Roten isn't at all happy wUll 1
1tbe loss o f several key
tournaments such as the.. CBS
Golf Claaalc or the Wonderful
I World or Golf. "Our commissioner (Deane
IBemao) told me he was
responsible for oustln1 the CBS
Golf Clualc. We were wearin1
lmlkea in that one. People have a
bard time ldent1fyin1 witb the
pl a yen. I .. A lot of people can identify
with FA Fk>rt (winner of tbe Bob
Hope Delert Clauic tb.l1 year). I
think that's great."
&OGB&8 SA l'S be plays
lntematlonaUy for the money.
"I like the cuh, .. be M)'S.
"South Africa ii a tnmendcNs
country to aee. J 41oD't ,p&u, In
tb ... otbel' eowltNi .. ~
·a star or llMIMdoaal ..a.rer.
•'I tblnk Clae publlc .ll~JiliMinl
more to tbe 111\eraaU..al
touraa..U ... ~It .. ll'Mt
;uperieiace tor .. ·• '° play O¥ll' tMri. ~ .. ..... Jot.Q ........ t.bilt (8M:~.Pa•ICI> •
~
.1
l
I
'I
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tuiiday, February 2, 1982 lii"liiiiiiilliii ....... __ ,.... ____ ..., ....... -"!I.
....
· Maigee's big.week
1\ e&rl18 PCA.A honor
From AP dlilpa$cllea ·
Kevin Ma1ee of UC Irvine, a .~
first-team All-American last season,
ha,.s been selected as the Paclfic
Coast Athletic Asaociatlon'a
basketball player of the week for b1I effort.I last
week, the PCAA announced Monday.
Ma1ee, a 6·8 , 220-pound senior from
Magnolia, Miss., scored 60 polnta and pulled
down 40 rebounds ln a pair of wins by the
Anteaters over Long Beach
State.
I Maeee bad 31 points
and lS rebounds as UC Irvine
whjpped Long Beach State
78 -88 Thursday night. On
Saturday night, Magee bad
29 points and 2S rebounds in a
71 -59 triumph by the
Anteaters over the 49ers.
MA••• Magee, the PCAA's
player of the year last
.seasonl Is averaging 27.4 points and 12.9
rebouna.s for OC Irvine, which ii 8.0 in PCAA
play and 67.9 percent of hls field goal attempts.
Fresno State ls also 6·0 in PCAA action and
17-1 on the season. The Bulldogs and Anteaten
will' square off this week for the fint time this
season.
Quote of the day
Bob Weasel, Jacksonville University
basketball coach, when bis team was
averaging 25 fouls a game: "We're·
playing that Bell Telephone defense. You
know. reach out and touch someone."
Hollywood Parle security beefed up
INGLEWOOD -Employees at
Hollywood Park race track are
taking extra precauti-Ons to make
sure that a robber who ha.s struck the area six
times in January doesn't make a comeback,
police said.
Jay Stroh, a retired Inglewood police chief
who heads security at the park, said patrols
" have been beefed up, but noted that fear has
become widespread. Some stable employees are
carrying bats to ward off the intruder who was
last spotted last week.
"The last robbery was on Jan. 20 but there
was an attempt on Jan. 24," police Detective
Robert Czach said Monday.
Czach said a group of pitchfork-toting
stablPhAndc; -p11Mmed the man they thought \was
the robber. but he escaped over the rence even
though they were tuggina at bis leg.
Police said that all the robbery victims
have been employees of the track.
Moore KOs Mlh..,-a In tttle bOut
. TOKYO -American Davey Sil Moore made 1ood today on the
prediction that be would take tbe
World Boxin1 A.aaoclaUon Junior mldd.lewel&bt
tltle from Japan's Tadashi Mibara, with a
alxth·round Jmocltout.
The 22-year-old New Yorker floored Mihara
three times ln tbe alxth after havln11him oo the
canvu ln the fifth. The scheduled is.rounder
ended under a three-knockdown rule, at S3
seconds of the round.
"I'm oo top of the world," Moore said
afterward. "When I came to Japan I knew I
would beat Mihara."
BYU's McMahon named top QB
Jim McMahon, who broke 55 :.
NCAA reCQrds and tied another in his 1
Brigham Young University career,
was presented with the Davey O'Brle• award
Monday as the nation's outatandlng
quarterback. The award ii named after the late
Heisman Trophy winner who was All-America
at TCU . . . Detroit Tigers General Mana1er
Jim Campbell was scheduled to undergo open
heart surgery in Detroit today . . . AUanta
Braves officials have offered outfielder Dale
Murphy an $80,000 pay cut for 1982. "He bad the
largest single-year contract ever offered, and
be didn't fullfill expectations," said Braves
executive vice president AI Thorell.
Television, radio ' Following are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratings are: " " / " excellent; / / / worth watching; 11 fair; I forget It.
[-) 7:20 P.M., Channel 9 ./ ./ ./ ./
NBA BASKETBALL: Lakers at Golden State.
Announcers: Chick Hearn and Keith
Erickson. ·
The Lakers return to action after the all-star
break at Golden State. Despite a slow-down
attempt by Phoenix In their last game, the Lakers pulled out a 97-87 decision with three quick fourth
quartfr baskets by Michael Cooper, Jim Brewer and Bob McAdoo. Golden State Is seven games
behind the Lakers In the Western Conference, Pacific Division.
RADIO Basketban -Lake rs at Gotden State, 7: 20
p.m., KLAC (S70); Hockey -Hartford at Kings, 7:20 p.m., l<PRZ (1150).
CdM bench sparks vidory
Estancia, Costa Me$c;i win; El Taro's Holmes hot
Corona del Mar, Estancia 'and Costa Mesa all
recorded victories in Sea View League women's
basketball a'Ction, but University was the victim of
a 41-1>0int performance by EJ Toro's Robin Holmes
Monday night.
Here's how the action went:
' Corona del Mar 48, Saddlebeek 21
Merilee Oscbner scored 14 points and Angie
Dodds added eight as the Sea Kings improved
their league record to 11·1 with the win in
Saddleback's gym.
But the key to the Sea Kings' victory was the
strong play of the CdM bench, and ln particular,
defensive work by Joan Loos and Jenny McNamee
·off the bench.
Loos, a sophomore, came up with several
steals in the se&0nd half to go along with her six
points. McName~ and teammate Lisa Greenberg
also chipped in six polnts apiece. .
Eatancla 54, lrvlne 42
Sophomore Amy Hatbcock tossed ln 22 points
while the Eagles' top sco~Debbie Hughes
and Joan Howland -were in trouble, as the
Eagles improved their record to 7-'n league play,
12-6 overall.
The host Eagles limited Irvine to just 12 points
In the middle quarters and effectively shut off Ole
Vaqueroe' top scorer, Kim Oden. Oden fini.Sbed the
night with eight points.
Reserves Sheri Carpenter and Amy Scholes
turned in strong efforts on the boards while
chipping ln six points apiece for the Eagles.
FromPageC1
WOMEN
Dominic Trammell bad 14 points for the
Vaqueros while Lisa Slessman added 11.
El Toro 88, University 48
Senior Robin Holmes pumped home 30 of 41
points in the second half as tile Chargers were
rude hosts to the Trojans.
El Toro put 48 points on the board over the
final two quarters to break open a close eontest.
The Chargers maintained a 24·21 advantage after
t WO periods.
University kept things interesting as Monica
Contrera scored 12 points and Michelle Newell
added 10.
Lorita Hines collected 18 rebounds to 10 along
with her seven points, while teammate Brenda
,Zimmerman added 10 points/or the Trojans.
Coate Mna 53, Newport Harbor 44 '
1 The Mustangs out.cored the Sallon 13-2 In the
first quarter en route to jhelr slxtb Sea View
League victory a1alnlt four defeats.
A trio of sophomores provided most of the
damage as Anlie Garcia scored 16 points and.
hauled down eight rebounds; Shelly Neal added
•10 points and six rebounds; and Nance l.ux
chipped in ntne points and added .ix uaiata for
Costa Mda.
Newport Harbor recejved 18 points from
.Elizabeth Dodds and 15 from Usa Wayne.
NHL inquiry
of Mulvey set BILL. ROGERS. • • • tQaarnament in South Africa and
picked q$500,000 for nrst place,
be paid their government half of
tbe amount anct ·tept the other
hall. We aren't double taxed
when we set back here so be
won $250,000."
"I put myself in a poeitioo to
wjn a lot that year," be aaya ..
"Because of the frustratioal, I
didn't get h\lftl Up. 1 WU patient
through it all. I am a ftrm
believer in not forclq thlnp.
And then all of • l\ldden lt
:Jtarted to happen for me."
-
'
• E.ataoda and Corona del M 1r blsha ,..malned
tltd for th• Sea, Vltw Leasue ltact in men,'a
bt11lttball action Monday nlC)lt, wttb winl over
Irvin• and Sadcllebaek, retpectJvely.
Meanwhile, U1ttveralty stayed In t.be bunt for a
CIF playoff berth,1 be1tlo1 IJ Toro to move lnto a
tie for Wrd place •lth Cotta MtH.
Here'• bow tt went:
ltt•ncle II, lrvlne 45
Eat.aocla'1 Steve ·Kralla turned l.n perhap1 'hJJ beet Portormance of the aeuon blttina for a
1ame·hi1h 21 polnta while puhtn1 down 13
rebounds to help the Ea1les remaln tied for the
lea1ue lead.
Kralu waa one of four Ea1lea in-
double·flgures aa Jeff Gardner coat,ftbuted 14
points, Randy Ttft had 14 and Brian JlldllDd 12.
Gardner bad a typically IOlid offeulve ni1ht,
di1bln1 off 11 a11lst1 , while Midland, a 1-4 senior,
bad 10 rebowtda and ala ateall u Eat.aocla coach
Larry Sunderman went to the lull court press in
both the flrat and third periods. '
Sophomore Lance Neal led Irvine with lS
potnts while John Baxter added 10. TIM loss drops
the Vaqueros to 1-9 ln Sea View play.
CdM ee, Saddl•b•ck 32
Hank Goebel, the Sea Kin1s' 6-7 senl01' center,
had his most productive 1ame of the year, pouring ~ a game-high 21 points and 1rabbln1 nine
rebounds as Coach Jack Errlon's Corona del Mar
team rebounded from last Friday's loas to Costa Mesa in style.
I
Chril Lyncb ud Kurt PeterMn bad 11·,_.ta
each in suppOf't of Goebel u the Sea ~ 1ot.
back on the *innllll trick after bavta1 t.betr
13·aame wtnnlnc atreall anapped by tbe Muatup.
The dtfeftdJn1 CIF l ·A champe are now t-1 In
lea1ue play and 14·3 ovtrall.
Larrv Davenport 11nd Tom Gana paced
Saddleback wttb eiSbt potnt.a apleoe but that w11
hardly enou1h to keep the Roadrunnel'9 from
remalnln1 wlnle11 ln Sea View play.
Errion Uled 10 pl~era Ill the rout, 1ivln1 Dave
VanSteenhuyae a e,hance to come off the bench and
chip in 1Jx rebounds and two po!nta.
Unlver91ty 15, El Toro 43
Brad Guess and Crala Rouse combined for S2
points as the TroJant erupted to outsoore El Toro,
45-26, in the rmal two quart.en after a relatively
tt1ht nrat half.
Univenity had a sllm 19-17 halftime lead
before turnln1 it into a rout in the third quarter u
El Toro mana1ed to hit only two of U shot
attempts ln that period.
Guess wu hllh·poiot man fo~ tbe Trojans with
17 while Rouse had 15 and Norm Stoboff and Troy Laraen had seven each and Rancty Myers and
Daryl Monroe bad alx apiece.
The wtn puts University at M, lood eoouah
for a third-place tie in the wild race.
El Toro (2-8) got 10 polnta from Jim Hammell 1 and seven from Trent Fouts but the Cbargen
couldn't seem to solve University's 2·1·2 zone defense.
. From Page C 1
MUSTANGS • for 10 points in the fll"St ball for
Newport but waJS held to just one
field goal in the second half.
Bardsley had an unusually
cold night from the floor, hitting
just five of 17 shots, but made 6
of 6 free throws to fmisb the
game with 16 points .
Pelichowski finished with 16
while Strayer added seven,
including the go-ahead basket in
the final period.
The Mustangs were actually
outshot from the floor but used a
big edge at the free thro'N line,
hitting 18 of 25 to Newport's 13 of
18.
· Costa Mesa, as DeBusk would
join CdM coach Jack Errion in
attesting, may not always have
the statistical edge, but the
Mustangs are capable or finding
ways to win.
Rustlers host
Sant~ Monica
Santa Monica City College, the
one team that seems to have a
legitimate chance of catching
undefeated Cypress in the
Southern Cal Conference
bas ketball race , provides the
opposition tonight (7:30) for
Coach Jim Greenfield's Golden
West Rustlers.
GWC, 3·5 in conference, but an
i mpreHlve 16·7 overall, is
coming off another one of t.OOse
heart-breaking defeats which
has res~lted in the Rustlers'
poor conference mark.
LA Southwest nipped the
Rustlers. 103-102 Friday night,
despite 35 points from "'rward
Darin Bowen.
D.ity ""' Plllltlt"' Ilk ...........
Bowen and guard Truiell
Hatton ( 19.2 average) spar'k the
GWC attack. NO STOPPING 'EM -Costa Mesa's Jim Pelichowski
battles past Newport Harbor·s Byron Ball <center l and
Joe Seager to record a basket Monday night. Pelichowski
had 17 points in the Mustangs' Sea View League victory
over the Sailors.
W. 111 . IEPllT \¥/~
a
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
8Mw cleptk/1aea.ea c-dltloal
Mountain Hi&h 21 hp
Holiday Hill 21 hp
Mt. Baldy 12·2' hp
Kratk• Rld1e 1 . 36 pow/pp
Mt. Waterman 36 pow/pp
Snow Summit 36 pow /fip
Snow Valley 48 pow/pp
Goldmine 36-48 pp
CENTRAL CALH'U&NIA June Mowitain
Mammoth ¥ountain
China Peak
67-84 pow/pp
112 pow/pp
Dod1e Rldfe
., pow/pp
80-108 pow/pp
Lllb/cllaln
4C
2C
4L
FO FO FO
FO
FO
SL
FO FO
FO
NOa1'8El.N CALIFOaNJA
Mt. Rebll · 8'-14' pow/pp FO
• Kirkwood 144-JIM pow /pp FO
Sierra Ski Ranch 10'1 pow /pp FO is.
Heavenly Valley M pow/pp 22L
Northstar 48rllt pow/pp FO
Squaw Valley -.m pow /pp 19L
Donner Ski Ranch · 188· 198 I pow /pp 2C
Alpine Meadows 11-111 pp UL
Santa Monica, 7-1 and .17-7
overall, is trying to catch Coach
Don Johnso n 's Cypress
Chargers (8-0, 16-5> in the ftte
for the conferen.ce championship.
--
OUTSTANDING
VALUES!
· MEW ltl2VW
IAlllT "1. .. SIDAH
Suoer economy with th la one I Fu l'ly
equipped inciudlng • 4 llP8ed trtnsml•lon, tinted gt~11. fadial
' tirM end ~rel-(-Stk. som co1e1s).
SALIPllCI s
He doesn't begrud.ae the fact
tha&. fie wun't ·invited to pJay.
"Gary Player picked UM floeld
ind J feel be fot tbe rjpt people
to pla,y down there. If I were
P'lcllln& the field for a
lounwnent, I wo9ld want the
playen J picked to tietbere."
Su1ar Bowl 111).214 pow /pp IC BUchanan rites Boreat 1 .. 112 pow/pp IC
Homewood Ski Area 12.111 pow/PP' # 2C
.
TBll WBBll aoes•B la PllilDI Uf t.be CrOebJ clambake
lt:Peblale Beacb: Re will play IA
tM Lal~ Open Feb. Jl.%1.
With tM U.S. Optn comlq to
Pebble leach ln. June, '• doela't W tlaat playin• tben at
• ~~af,..,we.adbeilaJ ~-=· .... , ---.. ~--&hla It clolii" ..... ..... ..-U.,''btaaya.
ID lt'lt, be won a record •no,soo without wlantn1 a
I toutaa..-. i
eeiWedne1day Condittona: hp -bardpack: PP -packed powder. pow -powder.
F ~ ~ ~ r ~~ OaEe lfv~ c (e~P )f o-; r--:""'."-:-:--1.Jfta--/-c_hain_'"'.':_L_-___;.Ufta~;-C;,,.-....... chalrs __ :_FO_-_ru_1_1 ope ___ ra_Uon......_._
profeulonal tennl1 player
Andrea Buchanan wW be beld
W edneeclay afternoon at AnplU1
Funtral Home. •
Bueh•uan, 21. and ber
emplolJ:'D Wathaalel Browa,
were d 1bot lo ..... ilt .
Browa'1 fllb market nd ..-aurmt lut Tbun4ta1 . .Nee
••II !t motive bea bffn .........
BucMaail, wbo waa OG9 of
only five bl•clf womea
proftPiOiaJ teula pla7en.
tumid ~ "' Im:
.. . '
................ -.i ................................ ..,
I
Orange Coat DAiU' PILOT/Tutlday, February 2, 1982
~~------------------------------------------
'• . . .
NM
WaST••NC:O.Pa••NC• ,. ... Df¥tll9
• L. Pn. ..
" 11 .nt
" ' ti ,711 IV..
24 17 .• ' ti .. .lit 1 n 11 .J6t 1 .,. •tt ...... °"' .... SenA11'°'" Deflver
MolllMft "-•Cltv Doll•• Utah
,. 1' ·"' -2J • .US M 21 12 .. 7~
14 2' .D M~ u ,. .110 1S
U 29 .JIO 1S
aASTa•N CONP•••HC• AtiMllkDf,,._
.. ton
"""-~ W•Mll,..._
NowYCIA
NowJ-y
W L J2 It
• 14 n »
20 2A
" 14 c:.trelDIYllN9
Mllw-• Atlenl.I•
lnctlene
CN< ... Detroit Clevoteftd
tt 14
" 22 It 2A
11 " 11 » . ,.
MlolMy'•k-No QarnH Klleduled
T ....... •0-L.Hen .. ~lilate
Dotroll •I A t!Mla
eo.ton•ll ........
Cle,..landA«W•IN"91on
D•ll .... s... ""'°"'° New .,..._, .. OliCAltO
S...D .... MHOllllM
N.WY-at Den-
KansnCltva1 Portl-
NBA IHdefS
......... ~.ti)
SCORING
l'c't. oa
144 -
AG 2Vt
.S2A M .w 11V.
UJ 11
.674 -
.463 ' .442 10 .... " ... """ ltO~
P PO PT""'-A-.,
Gervin, SA Jt -_, 12M IU
Oanll•Y. Utah 42 •1 JM 12" JO.t
Malone,....._.. n ... 111 11n 11.• EnQlltll. Deftwr 42 "56 214 1126 JU
Ervlno, PNI 44 4121 ns im iu
llrd loAlln 42 420 117 10)4 14.0
w111(am1. SMttlo 40 * 161 'ISt 2A.O ..... ,Mr. i.-. 11 -"' .. D.t King, 0-Slate 0 -Its t'7 1U
Fr ... a-Slate ,. m no "' n.o
••llOUNDINO Me•-·-Slllm•. Sffttle
,l .Wlll ....... NJ
Tllonl-.Portt-lllrd,11-
0 Oft 00.. T .. A"I
42 3'5 117 m IU
., 115 41t S'3 12'
4 175 lJO SU IU
Jt IU JOS -11 S 4l 121 )60 415 11.J
AUllTS
0 No .....
Moore, Sall A-H JM t .-_,......., ~ 41 4IJ t .J
Archlbeld, eo.1on .0 MO 1.S c--·· ""''-""'• 42 )0 .. , ThOmaa, Oelrolt H JU 1. I
Plal.DOOAL l'a•CElfTAOa l'O POA l'n.
Giimore, CNca.,.
Klft9, G-Slat•
S. Jol\ntOfl, KMWS Clly
II. Wllll-NewJ-y
............ L.11119n
"° m .w Jt6'32.611
111 313 ."1
JU 413 .l6f
"' .. .Ml
COLLEGE UCI atatt•tk: it 0 ... "' ...... ... Ke11tn Magee 11 ttO 114 ... 11.4
Refldy ~ 11 11' JI .. U.t a. Mcoar..ct " .. 1' J01 11.J ...... ,Wulf " ,. ts 141 1.1 Kevin l'u,.... II 11 20 t4 S.2
lloll T...,_ 11 U 20 10 4 I ~'11~ 11 H 12 M 11
Jofln 11...UV 11 12 10 )< l I
Gr-t Taylor 10 12 6 JO J_O
ltl<tt Ciaccio 6 7 J 11 U
Curtis Cl'OM!ey 6 1 0 • o 1
Marll 5-lnn 6 0 J l OS
TOTALS 11 512 2tO l,4'M 10 2
PCAAleeden
ICOltlNO
0 ~ "' ,..,
--· ..... in. " Ito 114 ... G~. LI SC.lo IS 115 SI 111
Woecl,CSF-.-21 111 111 Jft
Waktron, PecKlc II 114 '°' aw
HOclgel, L II State 11 IU 46 211
MeN .. ly,S...JOMS4 11 111 " m
Wtlloktoft, UC Irvine 11 12A • ..
Ande._..ucse 11 1,. " m c ...... 1 .......... Uafl SI 11 '1 61 >49
H1t91ft1, F..-St. 11 101 46 2A1
OTHa• INDIYIOUAL LaADa•I
Rebounding· !!MOM IUCll 12.t •"9 .
Aftde,._, CUCSlll, C1•>1llfl9'1em CU5Ul 10.6
Flold Goel Pltr<entavt "'-CUCll 61.t
llt0·2IOI, CUCll 60.1 llf.1•1. Wllleldoft
IUCll ".J 112.a.JOtl. Fr• Tll,.... Ptrum.ge
Whleldon (UCll tt.4 1-.01; H19'111" (FS4JI
n .1 C•S.>. -•rd CUOP> 111 ·~111
Alslsh· Wood ICSFI 16 •VQ.; ..,_
(USU; 4.1 • ...,,... 4, .-..,.. CU S1-I
4 O; MecDenetd'tUCll 4.0.
TaAMLaADaH
Scor1,,.· I, UC lrvlfte, I0..2 •"'9-; J, Long
leecll St., 11.2. °"""'9e. 1. F-se..,
4.6 ...... 2, s.. .......... SJ'· kcwlfl(I Ma111ln: I, ,.,_ St. + U.6; 2, UC lrvlfte
IM l,ltll
.... 1,11'
JI.I l,tll
1•1 1,Gllt p l,.J '74
14-a Ml
l~t 111 ... , ...
14-4 614
IW .. I,., -144 ~
.... 171
1W ..
IM -14-4 .,.
IM »t
11·1 t•
1M tat I .. , 112
-HIGH SCHOOL 1 Coit• ..._ 70, Nwpt. H1rtaor •7
COSTA MalA-..... ., 16. Rllllebereor
22. l'elrnlll-•. flwllchcMnlll 11, Stroyer 1, J. Field 2, EdaGll O. T°'ela: 26 1 .. U 10.
N•Wl'OllT HA•IO•-,.,, ... Liner n.
............ Foll!'· Seib'( •• Se ... r 2 • .,_ 2, Scldmon 0. Tota11 'l11,,_1161
i<M9WOlll~ Coat. Moae 20 " u 20-10
Nawp0r1 H•-20 1t 11 11-.1
Total , ... , •. COii.i Mesa "· N•WPOrt
Harbor 21, Fouled out PetmblOCle CCAllt• Meul
Eatancla 89, lrvln• 45
aSTAHCI-Krall$ 21, e».r-r 14, Tift
10, Mldlend n. PlncltMy 2. Jollnston 2.
McCel\111 l. FO<tNtll I. Ma\'dOI• 4 Tolala 2'
1l·IS ...
••VINE -CWwr '· aaxter 10, 8rOIOVlcll 1, Neal 15, Jofv>s 4, U•-Y •. Mertof 2.
Tol•ls· 1' 1-10 0
k-wo-~ Estancle 16 II 11 17_..
lrvlne 10 t 14 12~
Total tOU11: Ellenc:la 6, 1rvl11e U ; Fouled
out: Bexter (Irvine).
CdM 00. Sa~bedl a2 tADD\.a~ -O.wnpwt I. Le-11 2, Ga ruo I, Moncrief 4, 'O'Leuthlln s.
Rotllnson 5. T_,, IJ .. 12 n. co•ONA D•L ""'" -Lt'ft(h 10, Heu .. Goebel 21, Ptlerson 10, Klncennon •. Holllngs-111 •. S..rhoo 2. O.vl1 J, v ..
StHnllUyW 2. U--. Totels· 1t 1 .. 16 ...
k-byQMl1en
Saddl-k • • • lol--aJ
Coron• Clel -14 11 11 11-
Tot•I loub· Sacldl-0 ••. Corona Clel Mer 11
Uni 85, El Toro 43
UNIVl!•SITY -Guns 17, Myers 6,
Ratcliffe S, ,..,._ IS, SI04roH 1, L.anen 1,
Monroo6,Atipl....,J
• L TORO -Fout• 7, Hammell 10. Lewis
•. Arnold S, Mertln..., 2, Rkhttr •. Trkkott
2, MatrMQe 1. Pwre1 2, Wllert!y 6
k-byQMrten
UntwnUy I) ' JI 24-4S
El Toro 11 6 • 12--0
HIGH SCHOOL STANDINGS
See VleWLHgue u.e-Ovwall
W L • L
Corona dltl Mar t 1
Est•ncla • I _"°"...,.... 1 ,
Cea!•-' ' U1tlwr.ity 6 •
El TOf'O 1 I lrvlne I t
Saddltl»O 0 10
....... .,..0-11:•1
El Toroa«Cor-•1-
Cost• -a« Ellar>ele
N••-1 ~at lrvlM
University al S--k
(.
" 2
"' J •• • 1
11 •
12 •
J 14
I u , ,.
~OGH SCH06t. WOMEN
Eatancl• 54, Irvine 42 1•vtNE -Stenman II, Tremmel! 14, K.
Oden a. E. Odtft 4, Mor* 2. l'rwtt J. Ttllels
"10.lt 42
EITANCJA -Cori:ienter •• VMCNr 2.
Howland 4, MacMllll•n •. ScllolH • Hall><ocll t2, HUC!f* I. 'Totals: JS .. s )< SC-.., Ola,.,..
lrvlne U 1 5 11 ... ,
E•l•n<la u 1' 12 " )<
Total"""' Irvine 11, Ellancta 16.
Co1ta Meaa 53, Nwpt. HarbOr 44 .
NaW"°'" HA•IOlt -Doltdl 16, WeyM
U. Ooen 0, 8eldle 1, Adkin_.. 4, Ptetfool J,
JurllovkO. T-1 11 i.1644
CMTA MaSA -Lua t , ~ I, -· 10, Garcia 1', Atmendlrl1 2, McAIMr O, Price o.
Rlsnooerver ~ Gl911ftt o. seliov1c 2. Greoty o. Grastn..., 0 Tolala· 26 1 ... SS
k-byQMrton _.,..., ~ J 10 u 11-44
Costa Mew U 12 16 12-s.s·
Tol•I 1ou11· NltWPOrt H•rbOr •• c..i.
Meu 14.
CdM 41, Sedddleback 21
co•ONA D•L MA• -Romney 4,
K•ndall 2, Loos 6, Oschner '" Von Kltln1mlcl 2, G,......bero 6. M<Nam .. •.
0-11 Total• 12 ........
SADDL.aaACK -Terr-4, MeGlftnlt S,
Moc:lllz'*I 4, Novak 4, ""9m 4 Totel•; IM
JI. k-llYO-~
Corone Clel -14 10 12 n-Sadd,_k • 0 • 1-21
~ Total foul• Corona dtl Mar 11,
Sadddl-k II.
f UNLV rips 49ers ·
i'rom AP dlspatcht!1
LAS VEGAS -Reserve center Michael
Johnson scored 17 points and grabbed six rebounds
as Nevada·La$. Vegas rolled to a convincing 97-61
non-conference victory over visiting Long Beach
State Monday night in college basketball acUon.
A total of six UNLV playen scored in double
figures as the Rebels recorded their sixth strat)bt
victory and raised their record to 14-6.
, Guard Cl"aig Hodges led Long Beach State l with 18 points.
} Rice IO, Teu1 49
1
1
, HOUSTON -Rice's Ricky Pierce
pumped in 32 Points to lead the Owls to a
surprising 80-49 upset Southwest Conference
basketball victory over fifth-ranked Texas Monday
1 • nJght, handing the Longhorns their third straight
loss. j ! Pierce and teammate Bobby Tudor led an
'
I• early first half Rice aurae when tJie Owls hit 13 of
. their ftrSt 16 ~bots and the stunned Longhorns
· never n!CC>vered, droppina to a 5-3 SWC record and
14-3 overall. I· ' Basketball scores ll Col.J:r ... e-~••re'1
No<r.-1.M .,.._ '1 '-I IMcft St. aveM!lt"' .. Yllt!llW ... M
" • Leveta, '"· .. o.v.n 11 Cl ... t UllU 7~ "-II ,_dfk .S S. 111111111 ... er. ..... ti
I'• Cl II c L ttt 11•r•11 76 Ofal ~•'1, ...,_,Oflle77 I • AIMQ.P..,.... • • WrltM !It. IS, Y-.i"""' It. 14
t
•· MertW1 n. ""-~.. ....
I: ---oov .... 1'. VMI '* ""-·" .......... c ...... , ,, . ..,...., 61 r ........ • Me .... ,,,,.,.,._. JJ, Jatll~lle
Arll.•Llttlt C ocll "· "=:..... .. n.~TKll6' ~it::=:· .... Ol'IM91'. ........... .. LMllr•IWLel!WiiiJI ........... ._.........,. ... ·--.~-OilGWl•••~Jt T•-Nl•-:et,..,._lt.61 TllllM .......... ta •
TIMIA&M ... ......_,,
Te....-.---11 ....... tt • .. :t..-=. c:-a-.-. ........ ~., c.w .............. dC • ........ ~ . ........... ~.
NR.tr..• .. nu
ATLANTA -Alfred JifNllM. wr; T..., Morleny,-.
IAL.TIMOfta -Jee......,,,..,, Mt; k1
JOflU, Qll; OOll McCe11ley, rll; ......
l'lnuy.41b.
IUl'l'ALO -Cenr ... Oelller, 9; ....... HoM•, "'; ltOll ......_, wr; Miiia KedlM, •;
••o••Y•lt l.••11•, r•; Lewr•11<• McCllte,_.., .-r Nlcll ~¥er. 11; I.ell
l'ICCelM, -; l•lell ..... rhOll, "; 1111 llmt"Oll. 1111. • CHICA00-8rleft8e1ef1Meel, wr; ~ C•rnPIMW, 1'; Vlllce .,....,., •: • .._.
H•rl'er, r•; Lee K11111 , l b ; am••Y
Moen ..... -: ~ ~11Uf\9'1Wft, 1';
Jim Otllome, dt; Alell 1'A9t, dt, Miiie
Ptllppt, Qll; Dew Wllllem1, rll; am_. ?M*n,e.
CINCl,.NATI -Dew ............ 9 .
Cl.l!VEl.AND -Mett Helv, It
DALLAS -JCIM ""-r•ld, c; ad J-ell; D. D. U.lt, 111; Ro0er1 Newlloll .. , rb.
Dl!NVI!• -Keith "'"°"· c ; •ulllft Cert•r. di; lerMy a.Y01t1, de, Lerrt
Ev-. 1'; 1'9MI ._ ... d. 1; Tom JecU...,
lb; AerOft Kyle, db; Crelg Mortoft "°;
H•v.,. Mo991, wr; Freel Slelnfort, 11;-.._
Swenson. lb; 11111 ThOmPtofl, db; Louie
Wrltlll,db
Dl!TROIT G•y 0...lellOft, eb • .-
Ehrm-. di, S..... ,..,,.. .. , cit. ~
ThOm-. wr; Stew Towle, lb.
GREEN llAY-Tim Stollel, ol.
HOUSTON Adolr Armstf'CNl9, rb; 0.vld
C..IVf. c; Dew~. le, o,... Dev...,.,
<. Leon Gr•y, ol; t.wr H•rtwlg, cMI; MIU
lhlnfeldt, db; Cerl Roech•a. wr;
Joh<\ Sc"""""'-. og; Ted Tllom-. lb; Tim Wlltot1, rb.
KANSAS CITY -Cherlet JeOson, lb;
Dino Menelwo. di.
•AMS-........ ; ,._.IMcK .... ly,llL
MIAMI -Lyl• lllecllwood, db; ....
Grlete, qb; TilofNI H..-"°". lb; anc
L••lllO, ot , Bo M•llll•••· rb; T•rry lteOhllle,111.
MlflNESOTA -IOO lruer, le; Stew OM1,
qb, Jlf'll Unvtt'. c; Rl<lly R........,, de; K.,.
Sendera, de; Well w1111om1, db.
HEW ENGi.AND -H•t91d Jecll_.., -;
Joh<\ L•, Cle; 11111 Metthewl, lb; Tom 0-,
qll, Cerlos PeM,,_.., wr. G•rrv Pwtt, t.
Nl!W ORLEANS -Rich MAnlnl, wr; 11o1> Nalrne, lb, Jim Pletru1111, c ; Peul Rye..._
c; Freel 54urt, o; 11«1 y-ot.
NEW YORK GIANTS -Rob C•-W,
rb; Jim Cleclt. c, llHI CIWrler, db; Ille
Fort•, rb. Cl'" Olendltr, qb.
OAKLAND Morris llr-. wr; Ted
H•nctrlclls, lb; Motlte JecklOft, db; H.vy L.•wr-enc.e, ot.
PHILADELPWIA -Keltll Krepflo. •: Cherie• Smith, wr.
l'ITTS80RGH -lMeft T-., lb; Sem
Davi., Iii J"" K ... , ot.
ST. LOUIS -Mel Gre,, wr; I( ... a-.
db; WlllMd Harrotl, '9; Nell o·~.
k, llob Pollard, de, Dow s .. 11. wr.
SAN DIEGO -Doug ~. db, G'"'
Edw•rdl, dll; J-H¥rlt, qll; Cher11e
Joiner, wr; Jim L.amvlc. I b.
SAN FRANCISCO -Jol\n Ayers, og;
Len•ll Elliot, rb; Arcllle R-. cit, G-
Vll90r, di; Cherie YCMIQ. le
SEATTLE -Freel ,.,,.,._, 41e; 0...
OUt•lt. dO, -'-Harris, dO; u .... H .......
k , Art ICuefvl, c; Bob Newton, 09; .Jolin
Sa•y•r, te •
TAMPA llAY -Goreld C-. •r. Jeff D•l•n•Y. db; Chuck Fusln•, qb, Jim ~rd, c; Tim OOr-vlch, t•.
WASHINGTON -Deve Ill.lb, di; Rlcll
CAiier, le; Rick.., Ctaltt, rb; Miii• C-'1.
p; Pelo 0-; lb; llred DuMa, lb; 8all
Kullel. c; Joe u~. db, Kerl Lordi, Cle, T•rry ~K. rb; Deft l"elfMr. c; 8all
Reba, t~1 Joe ~.-l~m .... , qb, li•y ...,..P,, •
dll; CharltoWMwr. lb.
Men'• tournament , .. .,...,_, ....................
llrl.,. Gottfried clltt. Pwtor R...,,.rt, M ,
.. lj Frlti ...-1"11 def. Tom GUlllltlOft, M .
M llruu -OM. Stow ICnilevlU. .. i.
.. 1. '"°
Women'• toumenMnt
I .. ~,
l'lntlt ...........
JoAnne "-II dlf. °'* Hee Leo, "4, H ,
M . Yvonne V.,....... clef. Andfw Leend,
~. 1_., 1-4, DI.,,,,. F~ ai. Sendy
Collins, M , .. I ; Virginia •uncl def 01.,.,is
COl .. ,M .. I
Conege women
UC lriJM t, USIU I
~ Ma M,,on IUCll ai ICnlQl!t, .. I, t-0;
Nixon IUCll ai llry.,, .. J. M , Elledge
IUCll Clef Stoffen. W , t-4. Me. ""-"
IUCll def. Ge• ... 1, .. 2. K-IUCll o.f.
Alln•lo, ._J, .. J; SOrrano (UC 11 del.
Hllll•rd, .. I, ...0,
o.Me9
My•r .. Myera IVCll ai. Kn ..... ·lry.,,
6•2, 6·2; Mallory-Elledt• IUCI) del.
Cox·Altevaoto, M , .. I ; Nlaon-Kevt CUCI)
def. HUii-·~ ... ,, .. 2.
= -•'t. , ""-J
NHL ..
CA.6N&LL CO.Hl••NH
Ml_ ....
M L.Wt
Wlllftl"9t
T-
Clllc ...
0.t'91t
...... ~
W L. T eP eA"" u 11 ,. m tu ,. ttntt•m• t1Mt1MI"'•
14 17 11 -Ml " It M I IJI Ml »
....... DMMIR
ti 16 u -.. S1 t4 D 4 .. IM • " a n 1• m .., 16 )f I) Ill Ill d 11u10m .....
14 a to 177 DI »
WAL&I CC*HIHNCf p_..Df.,...
NY lale...,. IO ti 6 2tt lft 6' 1"1111_.,... 21 ,, • JO) ~ ..
NY lt1N19H1 24 a 1 1• 1'1 •
l'ltt11Mit911 21 u • I.. 216 •
Wlltll"'-' 14 2' I Ito 211 • ._.....,....
lulfalo
Mont•••• tt ... -I" 61 n 11 12 m 141 " ... '°" Quebec
H~
"" 11111•~ U 10 I m 1U •
14 )f 11 I .. 214 40 ......,..ac..
No QarTWl tclleduled T ....... t0-
H•r1fonl M I( ...
Co!Of'-a« Quebec
W•alll ....... etNY ,....,...,.
Wl,...11191 et St. Louis,
MontrHI at C•IOarY
NY Ra119tt1 a1 Vancouwr
KJnp' atatlattc:a ,.,,.,....~,,
ICOttlNO 01' 0 A ,.._
Marcel Olorw 50 J3 4' 1'
Dav.Taylor SI ,. SI n
Yrr y Murpfly 5 I 16 :13 4'
Jim Fox so It 'l1 4'
Sieve llODll 45 11 11 45
Merli H....,., SO 6 u JO
Den8-'1 10 11 a
GretT..,.,... 40 12 u 11 ••~ Tur...,.I 4t t it u St•ve J..,.... 42 1 17 2A
Doug Smltf'I 57 10 I 11 Cherllo~ ts 7 t 16 Peul Mutwy • 1 14 u
Dave Lewft 49 I IJ 14 DeanH..,...lnl JS I 12 U
Jotlft Peut Kotly 42 I I 11
Jt rry KorllD J1 I I 11
TreYOf' ~ .. , 1 IO
Ala1tH.,...._. JI I S I
Andre St. j..AIU""'t t I 2 I S J•y WOlll U 0
Mlh Murpfly 6 O
Rkk Chert;ew S I
NHLleede,..
IT'lnoolllJ•.11)
Gret111,, ~ton
P Slfftny, Owbec
MaN ll, WnHngton
Saverd, Ciika.,. aoa.,. NY ,..._,..
Smllll, Mlnr!Hota D.._.,IU• ..
Te.,..,, I( ...
Trottier, NY,._.,
Andertot1, EAlrnonlon
0 A l't1
67 ,. 146
JI S7 •
)6 ., IJ
" s. a " .. " Jl .. IO
» ~ " H SI 11 '7 41 u
JS .. 14
eoa.c .,... re1u1ta
U.CWNA laAOt MaN c .. o-•hw..,.c-1
LOW Not T ... rnamont. Fllgllt A -I
0-ge Fowler. 77-11_.. Fl19M I -1. (llol
Lou K-r. '1·17-70 and Cllff«d A-IOfl.
... 16-10. l'lilflt C -I Ctlel Joh<\ Dnirt.
t+n-n. o.o,... Mitt....._, ~20-1:1 -
Vert1 ~ ..... J l-1J Flltlht D -I. Ulel
Dalo W.lae, fS.D-71 -Geo,... y-._
'5·23-1' "l~M C -1. Elllolt Lifton t1-Jl-t6. •
Mondlly'1 trenaadlont
USSULL
"-tcMloelm CHICAGO WHITE SOX -51_.i Rlchercl Ootaon, pltcller, lo• __ .,..,. contrect.
piooTaALL ........ ....... u.e-
CHICAOO IEARS -Homes Ed HUllMI offenltw~.
HEW ENGL.ANO PATRIOTS -N-
Tom"'f' lresner. d9lon1lvo lln• coecll;
Steve si.w.u, H...O.Cker coac11. -Stew
Walt•ra • .....,w -II co.ell SAN DIEGO CHARGERS -Acquired
O.vlcl Lewis, 11-k•, from Tampa &.,
lor undlKloled future dran cllOlcH.
HOCKaY
N ....... ......,~
OUEllEC HORDIOUES -Tr-LH Norwood. _,,..,,,_, lo IN Wa•Nnot-
Cepltalslor Tim TOOlley, certter socc•• N-~leu-~ JAtKSONVILLE TEA MEN -S'9Md
Denni• Wit. lorwlnl, to a _.,..., contrect.
Sig-Nino Zee, rnldllelOH, to • l•e>yoer
cOfltract.
TORONTO 8LIUARD -Hamid a_.,
Hougllt• Plead coecll.
CC>U.a•E
GEORGIA TECH -N-Rick LentJ eulst•nt I-ti coech.
Dlllly ...... "'9te by...,_ L--.....,
NEW CHAMPS -Paul Noring, 14-year old . 98 pound
skipper from Huntington Harbour Yacht Club. is the new
temporary owner of the E .E . Manning Trophy for
winning the class with the largest number of entries in
the Southern California Yachting Association Ma nning
Series for dinghies . Noring was the winner in the 25 -boat
Naples Sabot Class at Alamitos Bay Yacht Club.
Merlin~ hreezirig ...
She has big lead in Manzanillo race
By ALMON LOCKABEY
Dalty~ ......... w~
Mike Satterlee and his San
Diego Yacht C lub crew
appeared lo be Qushing the
67-foot sloop Merlin to a new
elaps.ed time record Monday in
the fourth biennial San Diego to
Manzanillo yacht race.
At the 9 a.m. position report
Whitbread
nears end
MAR DEL PLATA, Argentina
<AP) -The field for the last leg
of the Whitbread Round the
World Regatta was completed
Monday with the arrival of the
Spanish yacht Licor 43 and the
West German entry Walrose of
Berlin.
C reky of Belgium and
llgagomma of Italy arrived over
the weekend.
Croky, a 13.4-meter yacht
captained by Gustaar Versluys,
stands in 15th place with a
corrected time of 2,382 hours, 17
minutes and 52 seconds over the
20,100 miles sailed since the
boats left Portsmouth, EngJand
.last Aug. 29. Corrected time is
computed according to a
handicap based on the size of the
yacht.
Merlin had logged 411 miles
since the 1 p.m. Saturday start
off Point Loma, leaving her arch
rival Christine'@d four Santa
Cruz-50s nearly 40 miles astern.
Second on the elapsed time
scale was Morrie Kirk's Santa
Cruz-50 Hana Ho, Balboa Yacht
Club, with 375 miles under her
keel since the start.
Christine was in third place,
373 miles. followed by Michael
Abraham's SC-50 Night Train,
Newport Harbor Yacht Clu~. 372
miles , Brad Herman's SC-50
Secret Love, Del Rey Yacht
Club, 369 miles; and Stewart
Kelt's SC-50 Octavia, St. Francis
Yacht Club, 361 miles.
Wind conditions along the
Baja California coast were not
reported, but veteran yacht
racers agree that they must be
moderate to strong for. the lead
yachts lo log 200 miles a day or
more.
Overall handicap leader was
the Newport 41 Summerwind II ,
co-skippered by Bob Perrin and
'Earl Pitkin, Cabrillo Beach
Yacht Club.
Class leaders were Hana Ho,
Class A; Timber Wolfe, Class B;
1Ami ga , Class C, and
1Summerwind II, Class D.
Merlin's own elapsed time I record for the 1,110-mile race is
6 da s 2 hours and 17 minutes.
TOP &owl. ro I.
At a recent gathering at the
, Ritz Restaurant in Newport
Jack Penny, Walt Spicer, Geor• J<>na. Jim Penney. Bob Bocden,
Ted Tiberg. Theodoce (Bob) l.obins. Jr .. Bill Gnandy, Tom
Mom.
SECX>ND lbW L TO I. ·.
..
• Milo a.a.~. IQb HjDOn, Hulan Royt, Sim Hiaon. Dr-.
.. l.i~. Bob~. llO)' Waid, Jldc Badham, Nick
SI•~·
i
"And now, it's Ml .. r time ..•. "
by Brad Anderson
"Don't expect any help from me ...
I'm In the doghouse myself!"
1
"If thla Jazz kHPI up, the Oulnnna Book of
Rtcorde ta gonna come In two volumes."
DENNIS THE MENt\CE
IRMA---CAN I
HAVE ONE OF
YOUR
BLONDE
HAIRS?
GORDO
weu.. l'L.L ~
9E eEAIJTIFOL,
MA'AM ...
OH, SLUGG0---1
DIDN'T KNOW
YOU CARED
I DON1T---
IT15 JUST
THAT NANCY
TAKES ME
FOR GRANTED
by Jeff MacNelly
--AND IF I PUT
THIS ON MY
SHOULDER,
SHE'LL BE
JEALOUS
by Gus Arnola
• ... HE ISt(r ~BPCf(f. If ---t'lf-,v-E-~-f -~~---.
ro~ ~ M.ela:
UA.1.1."
!JTll.L TAKe
~e~T~!'
~TIC.Al E!.ONOMICS-
1HI!> COUR5£ 15 De!GNE.D lO PRE5ENT AN ~IE.UJ ~ ANANCIAL MANAGEMENT A5 IT~ 101HE REAL
LJ.XlRLD. FOR 0'AMPLE , ~·u. LEARN HOW fMl.tJ ®5 <XXJ tWJE ro GET lO ~£ BANK IN ~DER m COJER. A BAD oEa< !
fV,.!::i) HOW 10 BACK-DA'Tt unur4' BIL..L.510 ~D PENAL.TIE!>, ANO~~ rTEM5 ARE 1HE BE5i 10 'JAKE ~ WHEN (X){J
OON'f t-W/E EN00<:*1 MON~ AT~ 50PERIMRKET !
SU AA 'iOJR~\..~ 1•
I -~ 11' ~""1' OO'fl,\QE. tMt~!--"""'
by Kevin Fagan
••
I
I
. '
TITANIC MODEL -Cecil Gates and his
wife. Pat, pose with his 22-(oot model of the
RMS Titanic at the Southern California
boat s how in Los Angeles. He spent e1 ht
,.,....,....
months building the replica of plywood and
fiberglass and hopes to find a sponsor for
LA project to start
LOS ANGELES <AP) -G roundbreaking is
planned this fall for a $1.2 billion downtown
development on a five-block area o r Bunke r HHI
vacant since c rumbling Victorian-era mansion s
w e re rued in the 1960s.
an English tour
•
l'ICTITIOUI 8UllNUI
NAMe ITATIMaNT
T llt loll owl no puson Is dot no llUSIMHH
111 J"'YNA ASSOCIATES ENTERTAINERS , lll JAY
MILBURN, 1'81 War,... Aw .. SUllt s1. HuntlftgtOfl 8"cll. Ca ~
Ja-. Mlltlum sm1t11. M2 P.Ow Or .. Hunllft(l1on e .. cll, ca '2649
Thh llU~lntt> ls Conclucled by an lndl•ICIUll
Jam.. Miiburn Smllll
Tll lS lltl-1 WIS llltd •Ith lllt
County Clerk ol Oranoe Count~ on
P'ICTITIOUI 8USINIS$
NAMI STATaMINT
Tiie lollowino parson Is doing
Dusl ... Uts
Pll.0.Gef'IC OF HOLLYWOOD.
IJ Oul•I ""-'·Irvine, Ct . .,, ..
Kyp 5'As9f, IJ Oultl -. lrvtne, Ct '27U T!lrt butlnH> h COllCIUCled llY tn lncll•ldual.
KypSuuor
Tiiis •l•lflnant was flltd wllll Ille
County Clark of Or•"Of County on January IS. 1"2
""'" Publl"'9<1 Or•"Of Coast Dally Piiot
The -City C ouncil approved the project after
more than two years or wrangling. It includes
offices, s hops , ~ondom lniums , theaters,
underground parking, a $20 million Museum of
Contemporary Art and restoration o f a wooden
cable car to its fo rmer route along Third Stre eL
Januarr 1S 1"2 Fllltff Jan 1' 24. Feo. 2, t, 1m ltt-lf
The develope rs, Shapell Indus tries Inc ,
Goldrich, Kest & A ssociat es and Cadillac Fairview
California Inc . h ave a 99-year lease o n the site
bounded by First, Fourth, Grand and Hill streets.
Closing law upheld
MONTPELIER, Vt. <AP> -A judge has
uphe ld Vermont's Sunday c losing law. giv tng a
victor y to the s tate's Mom a nd Pop grocery s tores
in t heir battle against c h a in supermarkets.
A group of s upermarkets c halle n ged the Blue
Law in Was hington S uperior Court, claiming it
unfairly d e prived the m of business by forcing
them to close Sundays and some holidays.
"Large stores have numerous and substantial
compe titive advantages over s mall s tores." said
Superio r Court Judge Edwin Amidon. "Many
s mall grocery stor es were falling because of the
entry or supermarkets into the Sunday markeJ. '1
011111 •c1s
• WJGlffMAN p a(' 11 ic· \ ll' \\ M CH I u a r).
dtrt•ctors
f>aR()t;
J OSE Pll P Ua H O~
r eside nt or Costa Mesa. Cu
Passed a wii\ on J anuarv Jo
1982 Born AUj(USl 21 189! tn
V llto r1a, \'l•nclo. Ital}
Putlloslled Ortn9t Cot\1 Dally Piiot JAn 1t. U, Feb 2. •. 1"2 1n.n
"ICTITIOU!> 8USINISS
N-f STATE"MINT f llt lellow1ng person It doing
IMl>lntll•• WILDWOOD COMPANY. No I
B•r una Court, Newport B••c t\,
C•lltorn1•
Alan IC...-llO WHI ''°° So
Sall LAkt Ctty Ut•ll ... 101
Thi> 11U1ineu 11 conducted lly an ll'Cllv1clua1 Al•n K....O\on
Tll11 Sltltme<OI wos lllecl wltll t11t
Cou"IY Clt•k oJ Oran09 County on J•niltrry n ,,_,
F1ttlt1
Pullll•lled <>anoe Coa>I O•lly Piiot J an It u Feo I • 1'112 ,,...,
PHUC .-rtE
l'ICTITIOUS 8USINeSS
"A.~ STATU•UUn
T "" lollowino persont are do•no b4.n•n•'-' •s EUROPEAN PAINTERS, H•
Cflll Maw SI • C.ta -.. Ct '2421
V lecllmir Balllk, "' Coale Moll St . CO\la Nine, C. '2U7 Jlrl Atctk, ,,. Costa Mow SI .
Costa Mesa, C. t2W
Tllll bu&IM>I ti cono..ct"O by f'
general perlnef'Sltlp
v1ac11m1r B1tn.,
lly M. Balllk
T1111 •l•loment was llltcl with the
County Cler~ ol O••n~ County on January U, 1911
F1111U Put>lllhtcl Or-Co.st Dally Piiot
Jan " 1' Fttl 2 • t'ltl? 193 n
LOUlSA H. WIGHTMAN.
res ident of Balboa. Ca
Passed away on January 30.
1982. She 1s survived b y her
daughter June L Wood. h er
daughter tn·law Lois M
Wightman. g randchildre n .
Wendy L. Freeman. Douglas
M ~ood Jr . and John and
L is a Wightman Graveside
s ervices will be held on
Tuesday. Fe bruary 2, 1982 at
2 OOPM at Herbo r La\\n
M e morial Park Ser v ices
under the direct ion of
H arbor Lawn-Mount Oh ve
Mortuary o r Costa Me!>a
S40 SS54
S urv ived hv h i:; \\lfr Mar}. PUil.iC Nim-,
so n C h aril's O ii Ros o f 1------------
N e wport R e a c h Ca .
daughter Franrei. Stoch el' of
Lon~ Is land, 'lew York. 7
gra ndr h'ild r<·n an d t
gre.il g randch 1ldrc•n M a!ls
or C hnstrnn Aurtal "111 be o n
Tuesdav. Ft•bruii1' :! 1982 ut
lO t)()A~t a t St JoJch1m''I
Ca tho lic C hurch . Co~t a
Ml'~a. Ca lnl t•rm c nt al
BERNTII Pacific \'JC'\\ :\1l•mottal
P'ICTITIOUS 8USIN•IS
NAME STATE"M•NT
Tiit lollowln9 peoonJ an oolno
buslneu •• SMALL CL,..IMS PROCESSING COM PAHY 170 Ctrclt Ort••.
He•PGf1 Bffch CA 92663 Jolln C••rlr. THI, Jr .. 1m c1rc1t
Dri•t. N--1 8H<fl. CA '2663 tc.atlllnn Mary THI. 21'2 Clrclt Ori ye H-1 BffCll, CA '7661.
Tiil\ ~,,_.., I> <ondu<ltd l>y an
unlncorporattd auoclallon ot,..r
tllan a par1nerYl!t> J-C T .. 1 Jr
Tiiis •1•1-nt wH llled wllll Ille County Clerk ol Or-County on
Jan S. 1"1 ,,, .. ,
Publlltwd Oranoa Coast Delly
Piiot, Jen 11. It, t•. l"tb 2.
l'ltlt n~
P'ICTITIOUS 8USINHS
NAMIE ITATllMIENT
Tiit lollowtno person I• dolno buSIM.UH:
THE COSMIC GARDEN, 123 2lnl SlrHI, N-1 lletdt, CA '2663
DOREEN ANH GUNTHER, 11010
Dow,,.y "'-· • 103, Btllllow.r, CA 9010.
Tiiis l>Ullne·n Is conoucteo llY •n lndlv._I
Dor_,G.-.111tr This mt......,. wos llled wltll tlle
County Clerk of Ot"'9t Coumy °" J.., "· ,.., Ptlml Pul>ll"'9CI Or_,. Coest Otlly Piiot, Fall. 2. t. 16, 23, 1"1 S4s.a
l'ICTITIOUS 8US1NIU
NAMe STATeMIHT
T llt lollowlng person Is Ool"ll
bu>lneu es CERTIFIED SERVICES, 111S2
San1a IMibel, Four.t.s!fl Valley. C•
'21• Delt Pel...., Witt. 11UJ Santa 1,.tMI, F--. Valley, (.a,.,,_
Tllh llUSlnftt Is COftdUUod 111¥ ell
lndMdUll.
o.t.Wln
Tiiis •-wet flied wit!> h COUftlY Cltt'lr ol Ot-County on January 2', 1tl2
P1-PulllltNd Ortn9t Cot\1 D .. ly Piiot
Fel> 1.•. 1•,U.1m -
"CTITIOUS 8USINllSS
NAMe ITATeMIENT Tit• lollowlno person h doing
bu&lneuu LORETT! VANZETTt~1..TD ,
LORETTI VANZETTI, 71' Utl\ Strtot
51r .. 1. H-1 BMdt, CA '2663 LORETTA JO BALDIVIA, tit Hiii
Slrfft, N-1 8atdt, CA '2663. Tllh llUll...u Is c-.Cltd -. an
lndl•IOutl
LOAti. Jo Beldlvla
Tiii\ stotement w• 111.0 with. lllt County Clerk of OrtftQI Coumy on J.., ,., ,.., ,, ...
Pullllslltd Oranoe Coa11 Dally Piiot,
Ftb J, t, t•. 13, 1"2 Sl2_.,
F ICTITIOUI au st H •ss H-• STATaMeNT Tiie 1011owlno person Is dolno
bullntll ••
C YNTHIA ANN BERNTH. Par k In heu of rlov.e rs
res ident o f Laguna Beach, m c m cmal contnbult<ms ma)
Ca . Pass ed away o n be made to St .loach1m's
J anuary 30, 1982 Born Catholic C hurch or t he
September 7. 1962 m Long H a rbo r Senior C 1t11cn s
Beach. Ca. Survived by her P11c1f1r V tE•w M o rtua r y
mother Stella Miller and direc tors
W arren Miller or Laguna DOUGLAS
I Al SHERl.OCk HOLMES "'CADE MY OF INVESTIGATION. (B)
SHERLOCK HOLMES DETECTIVE
-------------AGENCY, end t CI SHERLOCK HOLMES INVESTIGATION, 1'0
Centennial Way, SUit• It, Tuslln, C• Beach , Ca .• rather H arold L 0 U I S C 1\ n R 0 L L
Bern th or Garden Grove' D 0 u G L /\ s. a R l' fl I . a ---,-,-C-T-IT-10U_S_8_U_l_l_N_l(_l_S __ ca .. broth ers J ames a nd resident or Westm10stC'r . Ca NAMllSTATEMaNT
Dou&las and sisters Cori and Passed awa) 0 11 Sun day. Tu followtno person• 11 dolno
9210S Jolln v Lynell. tlSl2 Wlltmbly
Drive, S-.o Ana, Ca ~ This ""61MU 1' c~lad lrl an
lndhldual.
PUIUC mtll
Orang. Coest OAJLY PILOT/Tuetday, Ftbruuy 2, 1882
TNOMASWCUS ,. ..... c.r.-.... _ N..,.,.C..-~ ........
.... ,.... -..ell, c. ......
PubllsNd Or ..... Coelt D•Hy Pl
F91».2,t,,.,U,1tl2 W
"'" .. 1"u4>11Mtd Or-COHt Delly Pilot,
Fee. 2, t , 16, 23, 1tl2 S2'-C
.... fl(
-
PIC'TITIOUI aUllNeSS
Nt.Me ITATUoUl"T TllO 1o11ow1119 perton• ere 001no i.u1lnt11 es.
HOLISTIC NUTRITIONAL
l'llODUCT$, LTD., 0.1911 Plata, 710 Newport Center Ori ... Newport B•ac11, ca. '2660 P'ICTITIOUS 8UllNaH Davkl Gt-.... ~et Port,,..., NAM• STATa'MeNT 301 F A NltMte Tiit lollowlnt perton la dolno '26SI onsi ..... .._ 8ta<ll. Ca
P'ICTITlout 8UllNelJ bullnHI ts Jeck Ulltf 0..-al Partner >01
NAMe ITAT.MaNT SHC ASSOCIATES, 210 A-Ide Fo<t'1Avo .. u:_8t~ll. Ca ti.s1
Tiit followtno persons •tt oolno Del Mer, S<llta IA, S.n Cl•....,,t•. Tiiis buslnHs 11 <OflO..clad 111 •
business•• Cetlfornla mn n llmltoo 11#1-lp ' CENTUllY COUlllER 5EllVICE. Clltlsllna C'"IH•nrlck, Jtlt1 Jtck Ut...-
2JU1 PtMO Do V•l•ncl•. L•oun• N•lloft•I Plftl Drive, L...-Ni9uel, ~.i Partner
• -
,., ... ,
P'uOll~ Or ..... GM.C o.11, Pl ...
,ell.7,t, 1 .. U . HG JIU:t
P'ICTITIOUS auStNaSS NAM• STA T8MelfT Tiit follOwtno _....,,, are ooift11
butlMHH:
CANYOHWOOOS APAllTMeNTS, msi u.. Atltot Blvd., IE• Toro. ca.
"'*° AlllO Crot-W.. COfn!NllY la
Llml\oo Portnwtfllp), Roy E. °"'·
Jt tlld Mary IEll.., Doi,, <>-al Partners. Clo Roy IE Daly A
fffin'~. c:,-r,w::.~~11 ·~~~::
D-..rl-P-. K-s "210 Tiii\ tivtlneu I• c-ctoo by • llmlltd P#1ntnftlp
Roy E Daly & Co
-., Ellen Doly, P-
T Ills 11ai-1 "'°' 11..-wltll Ille County Clerk ol 0ra"9f County °" J.,.w,.,1a,1m
Hiiia, ce11tom11 ms> c 1110 1 m n Gell L. Goncoe, 1111 tUI Strtot, t "'• ~ Tiii• sc.t-1 w .. lllao with Ille THOMASWeLU Wutmlrm.r. Callfoml• '1613 Tiii• bu•IRHS Is COfl cltd lly a County C1¥k .. Otenot County Ofl A uw Certler ..... llmltad pertne""tg J..,uer., 1s 1m • .. _,.~Dr .......... -Mo,,,__ MtNll Ekltft lt, S.2 OWllUN C. HOlll'lO ' Plttt'1 ,..__.. --~ -..-
W•tl Petm Drift, No C, Gttnot lt, Tiiis ate1WNn1 w• ftl9o wltll lllO Pul>ll"*I 0r_,. CNll Dally Piiot .... ,_... lleedl, Cl. t2* Celllo~nla t1102 County CIOt'll of Or•"99 county on Jan It, 2', Fell. 2• t. t"2 112"2 l"ullll"*' Ora"91 Cou t Dally P'llot Tiiis bu•lnHa Is co..duoted 11y 1 January 22, l"2. Fee. 2, •. "· U . tm ~ g-ra• pe.-sNp Ptl1611l-------------
Gall L GoftCOt PubllsNd Or119 Cotll Oally Pilot, ~ llTE(
Tiiis 11a1......,1 ., .. fll.0 •1111 lllO J .... 1•. l'OO. 2, t, 16, 1"2 ,...,1-------------
County Clerk of Or-County on•-------------
Docemti.f ti, 1tt1 ,1111.. PllJC 9ITIC( M~
l'ICTITIOUI 8UltNelS NAMe IYATIMeNT Publl-Or-Cotll Dally Pilot. a-------------Je11 "· 2', ,..,_ 2. •. 1"1 ,,..., Tll• tollowlno persons are dotno
PICTITIOU' 8USINIU NAMI ITATeMaNT
Tiit lollOwlnv ""'°"' ••• doln9 IMlslneUtl' MIDWAY ASSOCIATES. 1141
Harlley A•enu•, Midway City.
Cetlfornle ftlU6 OACIC G. GOEN, cr-11 Pat1,...,
1 ... 1 He""" ,.,,_,., Mldwey City,
Callfomle m55 ROllERT M. SMITH, General
Perlner. , .. Main Street. Sulla 110.
H untln(lloft Ilea< II. Callfon>lt ,_
Tiiis tlullnnl 11 tl\ino conducltd l>y • paf1r.enflip, •
Rober1 M. 5mltll
Tiiis ttatt,,,..t llltd wttll Ille County
Clerk ol Otmnoit CawtlY °" J-y 19.
ltlt. ,,..,,
Publll-Oronge Coe.st Delly Pll04,
l'ICTITIOUI 8UllNelS buslnets es:
N.AMe:STATaMa'NT A VALON 8 R 0 KER AGE
Tiie lollowt•o "'"°" 11 001no COMP'ANY, tt c.or-ot• Pica, su11e t1us1,,.u • , uo, Hewpon 111Hc11. ca ,,_
llOAT WOllK), JOI loltll Sttwt, Auoclaltd h••r-Company,
N••""'1 lleodl. callfomla t*1 Inc. <• o.l•were c-••llonl. nto G r•o NHry. JOI 34111 Strati, E.Hl tttfl ICrott, Vemon. Ca, tOttJ
-P«t 9tocl\, C.Clfomla t2'6.I Tiils -'""' Is COfldUCIOO l>y a Tlll1 ~ Is <enduclod l>y t n CCN'PCN'lllon,
lndlYldl.111. ASIOCteltd 8t-..r-
G ... Hoery ~.Inc
Tiiis a.titrrwnt •• Iliad wllll -Honnen M. Nee-.. County Clef11 of Or•"Ot County on Vice Prosldtnl
J-ry 22. 1"2. Tiiis statamtne ., .. llled wllll IN
"""" County Clerk of Or•noo County on Publl"*I Or-Cottt Dolly Pilot, J..,uary U. 1tl2. ~
J ..... 24. Foti. 2, '· "· 1912 ,.,..., ,...,.,.
P'ICTITIOUI 8UllNaU
NAMIE STAT'aMalfT TIM fol-'"9 per_,. era dtlno
11\nlnouet:
1•eU&MANll.LA ......... ,...,...le_....,. t• Aw ... tllt SC.1, Sta. 1W Let ........ c. . ....,
Pu1>11-Oranoe Cot\1 Dally Pilof
~·n "· ,., ,... 1. '· 1"2 JJ.s-tt
NM1m
NOTICe TOCllaDITOllS
01' 8Ul.K T•AllSl'all
c1ec .. 011•m u.c.c.1
Notice Is htte•y gl••n 10 the
C•tdllOt\ ol Smllll. Hvnter A
Auocl•I••· Inc .• • Calllornla corporation, Tr•ntttror1~ whH• buslneu _, is 1.01 Dow, S<ltta
,.S, Newport Beacll, County of
Or-, SC-of Callfornla, -•bulk
lr•nsler Is t l>Oul to be mt dt to
Equldon Compenlts, • Ctlllor11I•
corporellon, Tran•••r••, •"••• lluslneu lddrtst Is UOO Mklltl""" Drlv•. Suitt 100. lr;,I,.., C-ly .i
Or-. sa.ttof C~ltorftlt
TIM P"-f1Y t• lie tr-rrod 11 IOCaltd a1 U00 Mk llehOfl Drive. S..111
100, lrvlM, C*#lty of Ottnoe, SC.I• .. C.Cltornit.
S..0 -rty I\ dlHCrl-on 99Nrel u All lloh In ltad•. fl•turu, equlpm•nt and 9oocl wilt of 111•1 morto-llf'ok.r119t _.....,, k"°wn
It Smltll, Hunttr A A-II~. In<,
and IOCeted M t.01 Dow, SUilt 141,
tffwport 8Mcll, County of or..,oe. Slate of Calllomla.
Tiit bulk tran1ler w ill lie
Fell. J, '· 1', 23, ltl2 -COUNTRY WOODS ASSOCIATES.
1000 Oualt S4rwt. Sut• HO. Newoort
BNCll, CA""°·
--~---------,_,._on.,.. altar Ille tttll <Uy
........
P'ICTITICIUS •u11NeU NAMa STATeMINT
Tiit fof-...0 PtrtoM .rt OOlne
bullntHMl s~~~ ::,NN.,tt_~NT~,H~·:Ty:~
VILLAGE. l:iTO .. JOIO Newport
Roed, c .. ta -· ca111or11la ~71. Mervyn A. Pllelan, Mane11lf•O
Gtntt ll Partner. Wetlclt•st•r v111age. Lid., uo Soutll Gtuwll
SIT"I, Ot-. Calllomll t2'M Tiiis t>usl.-a 11 conduci.d lly •
llmlted pertnt'1Hp
Mervyn A """Ian
This •-waa filed wllll Ille c-ty C-of Ortn9t County on
Dtc . .-.1•1. ,,717 ..
Pullllsllad Oran99 Coast Delly
Piiot, J.,. 12, It, 2', F.o.1, ,.., tnc
NS'1Ja
l'ICTITIOUI 8UllNHS NAME ITATaM•NT
Tiit loltowlno perso•" ••• dolno llUSIMSS at
THE CARMA·SA NDLI HG
3ROUP. t.m Htlt Avenue. lr•IM,
Ctlllotnla t271A
Sand¥ Stftdllno & AHOC: laltt, Inc: ..
• Callfornla CCH'llOftllon, 1.StJ H•lt
Avenue, trvlJ'9, CalllOf'nla t71U Tiiis t>uslnets 11 conoucted llY a (CN'l'Of'l llon
Sartclv s..ot tno ' A._latts, Inc. er: R. A. Sanclttno. ,.....__
Tlllt Sia-WM filed wit!\ 11w
County CIOtll of Ot1n9t County °"
Jenuary tt. 1m
1'111111
Publl"*I Or-Coell Dally Piiot, Jan. 2'. FA 1, t, 16, 1912 A~
Don ... ..,~ .... °""'"'"' t'trtnet', 1000 Ou.II SIAot. S<llte HO, N.._t
9otcll, CAftMO. D••nlt A Matlin, G•11era1 p.,,,..., 1-au.II tf!Wt, Sut• HO,
-port INOI, CA "'60.
• Tlll1 -"'"s Is conduclod l>Y •
tlmllad...,_..,.... DanN.VIWa ~~-"-Tiiis ,....,_. was 111.0 wllll -
COvnty C*" of Or-c-ty on
Jen.1.1-. .. .......,.-....w.~ . ._....., "'""'" .................. .............. car,. .....
-~ . ..,., ...... ,. ,._..,.._,CA ....
Pt.al
PubllSllOd Orenoe CoHI D•llY Piiot, J"' 11, 19, ,., l<t«>. 2, 1"2
t lt-C
01 FtbrGary, tttt. et 10 • m at
Squid ... C-nl .. , 2m Mklltlson Ort..•. SUlle 100, lrvl,,., County .i
Orenoe. Sla!a of Callfof'ftta.
So IM .. -to ,,,. Tr-i...ao •
... t>utl..u ,_encl~-· .. -by ,,.. Trensfaro<hl lot tllt tllr"
, .. ,. led~ are: .-. tasl CUit• lo<
llllf>9 ti.ifM 2·1~
0ATEDJ-ry21, 1tl2 E ......... ~ltt, Trtntf9ree
By Clltton:I~ KOi_,
Att111: 0.P. '--· 1-..
,. .... N......,J-yaw ....
ttS T-• C.-. Dr., 11'11 P'lr
C•la Mtu, CA tt6» Pul>I'-OrlnQll GMsl Delly PlleC,
Fe«> 2. 1~ S47.-,
C rys tal. Funeral servic es J a n u a r ) J I . I 9 H 2 u t '-l:~~.:'eow SPORTING GOODS,
wUI be held on Wednesd l\.Y. Huntington lntercommumty ll't E tu s1,...1. Tuttln. ca11tornt•
February 3, 11182 al Pac ific H ospital Mr DouJllas "a~ :i .,..,
JOMV. Lynell
Tllll statement was filed wit" lht t-------------1
View Mortuary Chapel at veteran or World WJr I a od eruc• s s .. anc:u11, 13'1 E. 111
d h r Slttol, Tuslln CellfOf'nla ,,.., t l :OOAM . Interment at a r e tire mac 10 1:.l o r Tiii• t>ustn~u 1, cOfldu<ttd wan
Pacitic Vi ew Memorial McDonnell Doug las Aircraft 1nc11v1ou.1.
Park. Newport Beach. C'a C o rpo ratio n B e lov ed llNCtS swencutt
h b d ( A L Tiiis Slat-I ... llled witll Ille -------------, U S a n O n g I e County Cl.rk of Oran99 County on
Douglas. beloved father of January 22, 1"2
14LT11HGHOH
SMITH & TUTHILL
WISTCUFf CHAnl
427 E 17th St
Costa Mpr,;i
fl 4f\-9371
"HCl AOTHHS
SMITHS' MORTUUT
627 Main St
Huntinqton Bto-arn
536·6539
rACIHC VIEW
MIMOllAL rA11
Ce"1ttery Mortuarv Ch1pe1..CrematoN
3500 Pac1lic View Om1e
Newoort Beac h
644·2700
McCOIMIQC MOITUAllH
l&Quna Beach
494-9415
Laquna Hills
768--0933
San Juan Ca~ostrano
495-1776
HAlaoe L.AW"'-14T. OUYI MonutN • C.ni I~
Chttratorv
1$2$ G1si.r Ave
Cotta Me!ll
$40-SSS.
C harles r D o u g l as or 1<111H2
Westminste r . Ca and Mary Publl"*' <>.-oe eo.11 oa11y Pltot.
A Butler or Hesiwr1a. Ca Jen ,., ho. J. '· "· 1"" 316.ft
·als o s ur v 1 v 1n g are 6 -------------
g ra nd c h 1 ldre n and 9 PlllJC'91U
great -gr a nd c h1ldr<·n -----------
Fun e ral ser v ices and
10te rme nt arc private
Pierce B rothe r" Smithe;
Mortuar} directors SJli 65.19
N•:LSON
IVER EDW A RO
NELSON, reside nt of S anta
Ana, Ca Passed a way on
January 30. 1982 lie is
survived b y h is w1fe
. Pauline. brother Victo r o r
M innesota , s isters Vlctorta
Thompson of Iowa and Irene
Dennison also o r Iowa,
several nieces and ne phews
Services will be he ld o n
Wednesday. F e bruary 3,
1982 at 10 OOAM at the
Harbor Lawn Memorl4'11
C h apel with Inte rment
1ervltu lmmedintrl y
following. Ser vices under
the djrecllon of Harbor
Lawn.Mount Olive Mortuary r Costa Mesa. S40 S5S4
P'ICTITtOUt 8UllNHS N-IE STATl!M•NT
T "' lollowlllt person Is dot no
llUSIMH H
NORLIN PAPER COMPANY. 601
8rook¥,e w WAY, Cott• M•ta,
Ctlllorl• 92'16 Dennis Attllur Norlin, 601
llrookvl•w Way, Co•ll M•••·
Calllo<nlt '262' Tltlt -lntu I• condu<ltd by an
lftlllvlclual. 09nnls A NOtllll
Tllll tlal-1 w• lllod wllll tlle
covnty Ctm ol Otenge County °"
J•n11ary IS, 1''2 ,.,., ...
Pu1Ml"'9CI Or119 GMtt Delly Pl ....
Jen It.,._ Ftb 2, t . ,,., JJl-17
•
County Clerk .i Or•"Of County on
Jtnuary 2'. 1"1 ,,..,
Pullllslled Or-Coell Dally Piiot
Fell 2. t. 16. 23. Its? $42
P'IC'rlTIOUS AUltN.US
NAMe STATeMaNT
Tiit lollowlnt Ptrto" Is dotno
ouflneues: PROGRESSIVE AVIATION
DEVELOPMeNT, U01 Su vl•w.
:orone dt4 -, CA '2US. RICHARD A. GAD&OIS 111. lJOI
s.avl••, Corona e1t1 Mor. c"' mu.
Tiii• MIMM Is <'Ondu<ltd by an
•ndlv-1.
Rlclltrd A GedbOlt 111
Tiii& tta-1 w .. 111.0 wllll Ille
Cou1>ly Cltril of Ortnet County on Jeti.
1,1.., Pl._
Pvbll•"*' Or_,. Coe1t Dally Piiot,
Fob. t, t, 1l, U, !tu S4l-t2
I
,,
. '=""""'~--
:; Orange Cout DAIL:Y f>tLOTITuttday, February 2. 1982
i J ' . .
ClABllfllD The marketplace on the Orange Coast
I ... 642-5678'
)'
Among ptOPle looking for a rmtal, 10%
read rtal tttatt cltuaifi«J adl.
~.For Wt . ....... For Ut ....... For We ....... For Wt ...... ForWt ......••..............•...•................... ·.............•.••.••••• . •.••....•....•...••.. ·~····················· ..............................................•••••.•................... , ................... .
• . • ... ,.. lOOJI IOOZ. 10021 ., .. ,.. lOOJ :•••r.. IOOJ _ .. Mw IOJJ c.t.MeM I024 &.-....... · ltll ' 1 ·~····················· ••••••·••••••···••·•••· •..•.•...•..•.....•.••.•••••• , •.••.•••••••..•. ~······················ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••
' I • 1'11r1 IK ...... t ...... ~Pl.US.. COtt .. •CIAL u.ooo. DOWN SHAU WTSIDI
EQUAL HOUStNQ
OPPORTUNITY~•
,...,... .. Meilkr.
All reel eatate ad-
vert I 1 e d in tbla oewspaper II aubject to
the Federal Fair Hous·
IQ& Att ol lNI wldcb
naka It lUe1a1 to ld-
Yertile "any preference,
limitation. or dla·
trimlnaUon baaed on
1• race, color. reli1ion , -aex. or uUonal ori1in, :: or aa intention lo make
i5 rr~1~:~~o:~e~~re3f::
:: crtmlnaUon." -:= Thia newspaper will not
i. knowioflY acrepl any
:: advert alng for real
-.Ute which is in viola· : Uonctthelaw. -.-.=--.-.-...-------~~~1 -~-------1 _,.,,,,_ , .. -u---........ u., .. ..__"'" -C I b..,t:•f Ma
T-hn -T-Uel -o..w ... rw. -~,:;.tet =
Ajlla t ..... -Afl>"""w tol ----·-4 ---,,. c....-. •1111 ~..:.~= ::1im-------1 a...w. .. iow.. .. &~.!'..i.... :: Ha.et for s•
.._...... 4'l1e ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.i~...... = .._... 1002 ::=......... -.. ., ........ t&» •••••••••••••••••••••••
llSIUSS. lllVEST· 121/2% FIN.
MOO, NANCE AV AIL.AILE == : ·That's right! Own this 1 ..... ~111 o..on·, 1t1J newly decorated home =-:T.!'f•-4 : in one cl Costa Mesa's
=.:~'C~ = finest areas. 4 Bdrm 2 AllllllNCEMEllJS bath, ~th areal terms.
m:wllMa•s & • P\&U pnce, $129.500. Call ru-.111. for details, 64&· 7171 ~~lfDUID i ttl!{!'I-!
Sot•N 0..111• 1401 T'tu-11• Milt
SOYICES
W-O.rtnw1
EMFtGnlENT &
Pl£PAHTION -1 ...... _,
JwWytf'd• Hott>•-116P
IOCIWlllSE
"'"-..,..._ -= Metm.t1 c:-.... ,__ .. c... Dop r19,.,. """" ... c.,.,.s.a. --c-. _,.,
LI-11..-., -M-ntt...._. .... ,,.. 11-e11..u._ ...
om... ........ ""'"' ,...
=~~r.:. =.;:::.a., ~'f-H1Pl..5lrno
18ATS & MAllNE
EOVIPMENT
C-el =: =:,"'-sr~~: -. ..... -·-a...... -~ -JI ... 0..b ~, .. , -.... ...
TIAMSPDIT~TIOll
""""" ~.s. .... -c.tli =-=---· -H-.Solt .... ~1 ..... 1 =-~i-
a-.. A¥TMIR.£
""'-CW.in ........ v ....... ~.~.!' ...
Trwu v-MtGIAM .. C A-•-UTIS, IMntTCI
GtMfej .urar.-o ....
-"'''"' lllW c..., ~ °""' .. ,.,.,,,,
r..i -· ,_, -ra;:=" 11• •
llft'ttdnttir•• 110 1101
o,oi ,...,.,. ........ ........ -.... _...,,. ..... a t-:. v-. ..... v ....
--,.a mo -...
••> -----------Im --.. , ---------
•1• --------., ..
IUI tilt
lie ... ,,.
'"' lllt -•tt -----•1' ---,,.
""' -fllJ
t11i ,,.
flll fl• flll -j ~ flJI m6 ,,.
fl• fl• "142 flM 11• fl411
fl• ---i --"" '"' ITD ----... •" --= ---I "" --' llCI ·=, = --·-· ...
* -Q)
~ • I 4
00 •
~ ·c.:>
~
• >.<
C)
•
~~
• I f
P9INSULA H~·· ' 3 Bdnn, pooU1 •P•. new with Ulla 4 rm. fenced 2 atort1, 1 bloc II to IY ow... 6 Pl.IX w~ ···" ~ · carpdta, very beat ln.poolbomtooaqulet ocan.2:1f4 clown.Owner .,.,...TtrNCt OM.Yll~ DOWM
Remodeled, decorated 3 bdrm, 3 bath, flnariclnJ· available ln· ~~ac l~ ::•ts~d~ wlll urry balance. 2 Bdt, + Coov. den, 1~ Owner will itnance to
mstr bdrm, ocean view SC25,000. veattn ahouta leap at back .;:•Wtui aul :CS Dll5,000. Ba, esir Jot, pool+apa, qualified buyer. Well
--tllle one. Pull price 11 d cover ..... ..,,..., hnmed. oceupancy. A•· located good look!Jll e
West Bay bayfront. Slips for 2 boats, $1.l!iK. m .3u1 ~ea C, ~. f1~~~ le••• · m exlat. tlnanctn1. units +' 4 c111ara1• +
remodeled 3 bdrm, 3 bath $1,200,000. room. There'• morel A•· •'7$.7060• owe.MS-Om ampJeparttn1. Below u
Ocean & jetty views. Marine room, 4
bdrm, 3 bath, 3700 sq.fl. $1,385,000.
UDO ISLE HOMIS
c::. ',f f ( •
~Pflllf'l•I',(', awnable loau and ID WANTED. 2·3 BR In titne1.,_.
an1iou1 teller. Only Sllclrecllff1, Old CdM, c:.I..., 644-711 I
M.IOO Ca.II t'1Hl10 to •r•f AJMllS Bill lale. Fee oaJy. Pvt · 'ftOIATI" dly. OIU6Nrt .ete-1GN ·
A fantutic 4 Bdrm. 2 LLSTATE. ~.~~~ Locorv~ OCIAMVllW Pnth·mP Lido Nord bav{ront. 5 bdrm, 5 • ba . Lg._L.R. 2 boats 1ps $1,500.000.
COST A MESA A ln ltv!M Terrace and
a tor y b o me w i t b _ Wo1 -Private community with ma1nlflcent living, REALTORS nerlocatJoa,formalUv-pooludireenbelt.Tbil
family ana Fireplace, --------1 IJll rm .• plua, 1pacloua outatandin1 4 Bdrm, E. Slh, 3bdrm, 2ba + lbdrm apt. 1189,000,
$10,000 dwn Call
Cluiatina: 557 2713
Private 4 bedroom, 2
bath home that sbow• lib a model. Over 1000
lquart feet ol dtckllll
wltll apa overlookln1
aetluded creel! aod woodl Formal dlnJn1
ro om, 2 cuatom ftreplaces, plush c:.,,et-
IQI, wood plank nooilnf In kitchen and ooo
area, and atrium olf the
f amUy room make thll
home a true dell1bt. 1314,000 with uaumable
f\nt loan ol nst ,'53 at
12\IJ3 . SubmH lerma lO
Remode led 3 bdrm, 2 bath + large
rec. rm. beam ceilings, $420,000.
UM>A ISLE IA YFIONTS "' Main channel view from 4 bdrm, 5
bath home with pool Sl,495,000.
Lagoon view from 6 btfrm, 5 bath.
playroom, dark rm, den. $1,350,000!
C.AINATION COYE
Spectacular bayfront view 4 bdrm, 4
bath,.2 boat slips $1,900,000.
BILL GRUNDY, RF.ALTO~
,.11 fl,,,, 11. lJ• •. •, fl to:., biol
\\" ES!.L Y \
TAYLOR CO.
!{LAL TOHS ..,, 111 ,. I ~l·W
DECOIATOl'S MASTIArlECE
Subdued elegance and charm. Near
new 4 Bdrm & Family Rm . Library
'with brick fireplace. Spacious e ntry.
Formal dining room. Huge family
kitchen. Island cabinet with butcher
block top. Bright c heerful family
room w/fireplace overlooks heated
pool & spa. $625,000 including the land.
Quiet, Secluded Westcliff G rove in
Doyer Shores .
WESLIY .H. TAnOI CO .. REALTORS
1111 Saa ...... H• iioed
N11i!EW~~.,,,..., CBfrB. M.1. 644-4fl 0
countey kllcben. 12~ famUY room with ruatJc family room home la 10 financtn1 available. Call fireplace, plug patio. move· ia rondit Ion !
for more details. Workabop In &araee. $421,000. Call for more COLDWeu.
BANl(C!RC S4&Zt1J 1c1all about excellent d«aila. •c·~---u.•5•-... 1•,.• owner.
-
THE REAL
ESTATERS
naoclne available 64z.5200 ~· -"' $115,000. J .. JI/ .. frpk
j PETE
7'MSH
Owner/a1ent
Bhtra. Lease option. 2 br. EMCHAMTIMG ' BAARETI .. REALTY
Mdtt&Alfy
Sf7t,SOO
'7S.1771
tll ''rt It-I 06' wide areenbelt. $139,500. UTUAT
Bkr1644·0U.. A turnkey situation •••••••••••••••••••••••
available. Gor1eou1 ap· MUST SEE RNANCING! Pointed waterfront con· 67S.34 I 1 ColtlJ Mtso 1024 ~ean • bay vu , 4 Bdf FANTASTIC! do that bu been highly '!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I....................... w/bonua rm, pool, apa.
SJ,5,000 down, owner will cllSUlmized. Totally in· .... Isled 1006 -OM HOUSE ~~~~~~~l + dly lites. Prof. decor. carry the financing. vilina thla well ltnown ,.__,, ~ Allwnt U.78%. A areat ~per sharp 2 Bdrm, 2 decorator will make ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3Br000.1Ba.l~aeyardA ·---.. ---•I value. $429,000. Woo 'l
bath townho!J\f condo. fumlehinaa naalable ~~~~~-:'~'!'!'11J!!~~··:.:.·.J .... ~1-~07[!63~L(L_. la1t. Patrick. a1l Pool. UWla, and spa a>.ooo. ~landm !!~t do~,.,, Ba0lboa ,_ _______ I DAm.IMG ! 7$-1221
Great terms! Great 64"9060 "' .. ..., ccul. ver This nawlesa E11uide • !!O'"'o equity Short or long MESA VHDE bar&ain! $109,900. Call I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! term ISOOO minimum 3 bdrm, 2 bath, frplc. dbl c.osta Mesa borne olfers now, $46-2313 I A 1 d 3 Bcinns, 2 balbs and iJ TENNIS? .. .._.,ty IUtr aaraae . · r on 111 excel cood Perfect THE REAL
ESTATERS The aoly LOT 10 Cy pruJ "'!!!!!!!!!!6!!7!!S.~2l!!I,!!,,!!' !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !!4~Ui!!icl!ie; will as· for active family Uvtne Ea1tbluff. $2 45 . 000. Cove San Clemente -= •-Mcc.nle IUtr . or ~1.1111n1 An out· 4bdrm, 2~ba, lrs yrd, AmlufrombothTenrus .... p ..... 1007 _., ' ' standing va lue at szm.ooousumable 13'k V'IEWTOWMHOMES ~•Clubhouse Isl ......... ,............. 541·772t $159 ,950 Owner will llt.642-SlSl j 640--8l0'7.
Master suites View of llnY olfered! Firm al Perun Pt home . 2bdrm, finance Call John BAYFRONT ~ean & Nlg)lt lights $185,000 Penniman & 2''%ba. den Xlnt cond. •MESA VBDE * f=tr!. for further in LE~EHOLD ~el Area Parks open <:ompany 11.Sl-IOOO new rrpt Owner will wtm POOL AND SPA ROGllS RULn Ex.Qw1le 4 BR, 5 BA,
spares $137,000 ' Xlnt ANAHEIM 'S BEST I consider long escrow Spacious 3 Bdrm. 2.ba 67S.2ll I oearUndalsle,includH Fin Hal or Pat Agts Slll,900 buys this spec Will finance S4lS.OOO Beautiful area SlS.000 private dock. 60' on the
751·9905, 673-7300 tacular 4 Bdrm pool Owner/A · 675·5134 dn Asking $240,000 l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~l 1111in bay. SS0.000. down . .,..
home Best area No Corc.odetMw 1022 Sltm/mopymt pp Agt *VA I PIJO/q * • uaume $750,000 at GIEATSTARTER quablYIJl&.Bkr848·0'709 ....................... 760-7089 l BR +t•,ba, 76K at•_l23 __ 642-_923_l ___ _
IN COST A MESA 1------• 3 Prinw DllnleHs HEW COMDO so DH S11S01>1u wtposs sssoo dn . ._. ____ _
Low down payment to 100/oDOWH 3 Bdr + 3 8rdr Assume pn' only Bkr667 3863 WAT&FIOMT easy terms! Vacant 3 Agent. 631·S737n ~ Bdrm plus terrific rami· Spacious 4 bdrm "C" S290,000. in loans. Asking ---'-..._--'-~'--"----Fst• V._ I 014 HOME
Plan in The Bluffs $389000 -_., PllVATEIEACH ly room Covered patio ~per location overlook· 2 B~ .+ 2 Br, so. of MESA VERDE ••••••••••••••••••••••• SenuUonal 4 Br home J~l reduced! Hurry, ingthepool.Pricedright baysldel389.000. 4BR, 3BA, Fam Rm . TrtL.ntlPoofHo.t smack oo the water!!
c 673-8SSO at $299,500 L.H. Best of 4 Br + 2 Br. Jumbo Pool, Spa. OWC. Assume Owner will carry pa~r Featllrin& French doors , all 'th I ..1 h u49 000 Existing Loans. Equity '"" t.hla v•ry emot1'onal you ran move1n w1 oam, so."' wy .,. , N .... ~ frplc, professionally de· THE REAL
ESTATERS
9>f•%LOAN ~wd S I 00,000
SPYGLASS IYOWNER
JUSt 10"4 down and a Call for more details. Sharing Straight ote home No expense has tarated & pnvate SAN-l2'1~ r1xed rate 30 year Darrell, Pash, agt or Trade. Sl85,000 By been spared in uperad· DY BEACH . Only
loan ! ..:Re;/M._ax,7iSll;··l22-1jiiij'jOwnerijiiil.9'79ij·iijS8ijl4ijijiiliij ing Central air, huge 12~.ooo & seller will master auite. 3 or 4 carty 80~ loan al 13%! ! 1714t 67J-4400 ~. 3 ti1th' Good 7:D-ISOtormma
location. 1187 .500
Our Town Realty
T1S.1501 or 64 l ·0399
fWJ Prite t.nS,OIO aa.Je Ai. '!4/!1 reallv Wbm you call Cl~ified Mamhly Payment 12999
11119u "people to people'f' to~ an ad. you re at· SCX1111PORT MODEL
aa.Les calla ~ith bil re-1ured of a friend!~ 6br/4i,.,ba. 4100aq n
1w.,..1e-10•0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ARTIST ABODE. l m1 to
beach, 3 Br, 2 Ba SllOK .
Walker & lee
Heal fstate
1s•1sc1
adersbip and big re· wel~mt and belp 10 2S Bodeaa Bay
aulta! To !lace your wordiq your ad for besl Call owner759-0737
clasaifled a . call today rn~ae. Call Now CcM FIXER
642-51'18. ea. I sz 2s ooo
I
=.ue beach cottage
L palnl, carpel and
unagmation ! Excellent
lorat100':" Motivated llDlll ILlllS ca. ~~~~~!(~~~.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE LoclllAa....,tto.
EMEIALD IAY MODEAH ~ rl!Lli!J;1
Ocean View Home . .Superb Mode rn BLDRS. CLOSE·OUT
CDM d•plu wlftt
good flMitcl.Q, Eod1
.... 3 ..... 2 lattt.
fCRily rooa Close to
•••rrthl119 at
$429,500.
Styling. Sharp, Cle ar. Clean Fantastic large trHevel
Features. Many Special Attributes. rustom designed condos
Excellent Financ ing. Undoubtedly nr best beach areas From S78 ,500 with One Of The Best Priced Homes In special low int financ·
Emerald Bay. $695,000 ing. HURRY -call
1197 23'9 Bkr
COL.a OF NIWPORT
MM.TORS
--...... ,_ ..
llWAATIC HARBOR HOME
This j~C Usled H~tlngton Harbour
3 Br with open floor plan, vaulted
ceilings, secluded pool & s pa,
im~cable decor make this a home
for the truly discriminating.
Offered at $389,500 with financing
available.
S AXER-UPPERS S
32 lllltt • Coroea "'O .. V ACAHCIES
Far below market. For
set -up call Rick
anytime 7141700-7292
Sell With t!:ASt;1
It 's a BREEZE
Class1f1ed Ads 642~S678
HtlLC-tNwr. c:--.. ...
175·5511
STOP!! Take time lO relax and
shop at home. It's sim-
ple witb Daily Pilot Classified Ada. And 1r
you have aomething lO
sell. call a friendly Classified Ad-Visor at
64Z-5e78
BIG CANYON -VIEW
S...ty ~ .... • ciatre4 .....,.
UgM -lfNClo.t J .... + ... ,.. ••••r ckcll. Pool, tpo •d ttHlt.
$3ft,000
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC.
R£A1. EST A TE
s...~.Prlll'eftv ~
2436 W COUI ~ 315 Ml<ww A .. Newport Buch f' e.aio. lalMd
'31·1• 67Utte
HllEIUIATORS
CRHNSNMANDRATSLPOSP
S L C Y C G U A I A I S F L I E E
PACHMEOK 18 R A
E A S L I Y S 0 S K R S 0 E N 0 A Y A
6M&ORPSYEVESGG~SEIT
S A 0 0 S J flt A 0 I A S S H IC P Iii L R
R L H E 0 I 8 U L A A A l M P I 0 I l
I CLOVA r I I I'
E S E S T A 8 F M A F J U 8 E U 0 G A
ABGRUPAIEKMKAYOTDRA
IUOlRET8C£SAKROTCRS
G If E C T I A Y R I M A II A P l H I l
UMHTLAUllDK£RWOXRUUt
I 0 A 8 Y H
I I r I
G R U 0 O E
I r I I r
£ S U R E 0 H Q 0 G 0 0 C S l W C Q S
H8HESOD6St6SIESRKEL
CTSHURJKT"PSllAkESMU ............................. wn; ................ ,.. .. ~ ......
QIJ nlll 1 ...... .._ :l Twllll .. f' 1 ... .... iJ ................ ... I' ,, ... "" ........ ....
Sun.sational!
~house Sun l S 20612 I'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ~l.11 1 HB960-2183
~ QUAUF'YING Sper C:>p. W /S. 11·5 tacular 3 Br w1pool Nr-3sty t>eacbhouse Best ar u J UST 1911 CGUrt Street .
$1351000. Bllr 841HY709 w alt 10 or rail. lnW I 044 __ 67_s._m_1_or_IM8_·_3133 __
•••••••••••••••••••••••
DHPBATE I Woodbrid&e 3Br 2ba, I
yr new Low down as
SUll'lf loans Need fast
sale.
SUCCF.SS REALTY
S49 7991
University Park 4 BR, 2')
BA. Fam room, green
belt lor11tion, cobble stone dri ve & entry. many xtras ! Must see•
$175,000. wt min dn
0 W C a t I 2 ~, 't
Ownertagnt ~ 8046 or
I ( 702) 588-8123
UllYenlty Pen 2BR 2ba, 2 car garage. coey frpk, nr schools.
sbqia, fwys Vacant. re·
ady for occupancy
Sl.55.000
644-1385
RARE
• Free standing G roas-
J monl on fee I and 2
1 bdnM, 2 ba well ma in
ta1ned Good location
backs to small park
1139.900.
'523 lAM""5Dl:fR'/111£
L.,_ltld 1041 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Lot JwA Uttlt
1 acre + bldl site, gent·
ly alootnl parcel short
diltlinCt lrom tennis ' beach. Ownr hu In·
eluded pl1n1 for custom
villa. 1175,000. Sper·
lae\llar views I MJSSlON REALTY
•4731
Mini Res ort AlOP
Panaftno'• Peak. Spec·
taclllat view home wttb DOol A pC"OPertf. 2 BR, 2 BA, den. ll brary .
••· superb owner flnancln1. Call owner dlncllY, dya, M5·llM; .... ~
TAllOVB ~% loan at $786 per
mo or SZS.000 down. OWC balance. 5 BR 3 Ba.
lovely 2 sty, $245.000
~S880 or 631-7215 evs.
Vlnce
LEASE/OPT or SALi 4 br. 3 ba extt Westcliff
hoOY. AJI new in • f'lll.
Qllet. res1d street. Va -
r ant -i mm ed . occ FISK. Own /a&t 752-2550.
llAUT1AILLY
MAJMJAIMID 3 bdrm. 2 bath Westtlifl
homr Close to schools,
part and tennis. Room for npan11on. Gctod
financin111 $185,500.
SPACIOUS 4BR. 2BA.
Family Room. Pool, 9'1·
de-Sac. !llM-0808 •
ClffDr.W~ltr# abdrm, 2ba. PH.tot. lrl bome w/remodeled kitdl. fam rm w/bar. &d ftn. avail. call 642-8113;
6*-5Cll8 yt.
ALL PLAY-NO WORK:
Newport Beacb
Vtnallles Condo was de-
si&n«I with today'• busy
llfutyle in miod.
Completely uptraded
bacbelor llftlt. OCEAN
VIEW! L11alHy
landacaped 1ro11Dd1
feetun • lmmacalate chMouM ...... Cl)ttal
cle9rtwlmmtq POOL! DefWtelJ a mHt ...
and priced rlabt at
-·-lltbmit 10W ol· , .. ~.---n••· llA&.TOll
........ CNtt
WILL TRAO! or at·
IUftll low 811J -lal T.D at tU1'. OWC IC 2nd. Vl4w nlOt ttpta,
momtaia.Mitm
Harbor IUdtt lMente
blt&e Model .....
Home " •1•.• ...., appralaal! 10'1 don . ....
-----
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Ml•po.rtlt~ 106' o.6ntt/ ...._,,.,.,.. 2000 Ml ,,,..... Jl6t C....Mete 122' c.taMtM 3224 ............ UU MlwlMM't .. ed JUf •••••••••• •••••••••••• Ulltsllle II ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... ••••••••••••••••••·~I · .. •••••••••••••••••••• .. ••••••••••••••••••• .. --·•••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• --~~---••••• .. •••n••H .. H•••• & It CM C.nery Viltqt Mobtlt •ott10F %BR ~flM't ' DrlPd a C.-lint' Vu Adlt comm POOL HOME uoo tSU I ........... .u. pri~ . Apt. 1980 Home Park f\amlthed 2 THI wc•Y NW car &af No Peta 14SO Oor&eou• bdrm. 2 ba 3RRl-'m hon~ Bk 81y IAYMOMT so -it 0111.ACM f4).'llfisl2fA,f#). ca 57.. Br, 2ba, pool, ldlt1, no Rent in Cotta MH1'1 Mo. u t, t..•t. •aoo Dtp. .!l!!..m!>J93-2256_ 11200 mo Call Suianne
$1 OOOOOO 0re: •on ennr{" -· -peta, dOH tA> lhOllt It NEWEST t•ted 20 ~ MOMAICHIAY _ 815344511Jnt_
t'harmlni 2 Odrm plu1 octan ~wed 2r0~ :0:. W.fw We 2 200 ~'f:if· ~f.~ y:r Uw~~m'TY 12L~~~ E Houle wltb Ol'7.n view. Oeean view Modern 3 2 :!· 2 HA, ~cx· tn xlnt W; :sen· 2 b~ pier -.pd alip m1: 3 comm'I, 7 a pta. "•a.;td,•.;jj~;:;;;:-u 1·525-1641, 1:m .1101 he.. lCIOO-leOosq. rt ~f 2br 2ba. 2283 Pac1ric br. 2 ba. 1 yr or more ~ ~~75.:~'" now·
u llCCO •tt 40 boat. *°·000 w/:IO'X dn Xlnt Corcrut dtl H 20K rt UDO ISLE hr B I G w/dblgaraac. 61!4928 I e u e New er pt . ~ side. For 11n IP· usum finand na. OWC. IU twnhae/c~ndo ::\e. 2110., la ,:M;''P•~I: ~0.~::.ry In :::te:; MESA VHDI --S.~lipo Agl. ~ 8939 _ 4bdrm F.111lbluff home: :ual~n~:g;;t~hla~·~i Cal!.!farta,.wf·'Jl32. Pvt beHh accus ICl&raded.11300/mo Biii suite, dlnln& rooms, Lease 4Br. 38a. Pool. 2bdrm, 2ba townhouu, u,;~o14mo 644 1541 •
540-1151 ' .._.,......., JOOO Stt10UI princ only By GNndyfl'J.8181 woodbumlnallreplares. Spa, Lrg Ftm rm, Avail din rm. frpk, a1c. pool, -
••••••••••••••••••••••• owner 559-926.S I OCEANFRONT 2 Br 1 mlt ro wave ovens. Mattb I. $950 979·581!._ iac .• patio. au dr opnr Wes1d1rr Sharp 111e 3Br. INCOME HUNTCLUBLOT ba. HOO/mo . Rlla pnvate patios" yards 3 BR 2 Ba, lge ramlly Adults ooly S7251mo Qlll'I ~l. b111 lrt't!S 1995.
1 Acre auarded gat.e Writer,Af. 7sz.5710 Gardener provided. room , gardener In 1714)675-7171 6461>1~.646·67t0 PIOPEITY romm SZS0,000 low · 2 Bdrm MOBILE Lido Fh1ant livma only 15 chaied. f795 mo 6"0.6161 LA6e Pornt ]JS5 Nwpt ~'· 2 br. very~vt, ·u• HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
s.t.Allo fl.1Ul8lol( Townhouse Immaculate ' mnues 0 1·5bf-'1 S200toS2000 l.AKEFOREST2story.3 haip ~ls 64"~--SP!CIAUST I dwn 493 3395 h m. Pllt$700fum • w~'1 rrlomt F~s~I':!' oc RENTALS ••••••••••••••••••••••• gar .Nor ~at·~ !'-'1()9: ..
••••••••••••••••••!~.~~ Stl~ rl·om multiple lln ..._. .. Dn«t 3Br llZ7S/~ rum r~~a e:!t ~re ~1 ~:::. 7S0.3.114 ~n 1 d~ 'den. J bath On water, Loudt'd 3br. rrplr, 11''·
3bdrin. 2ba, $98,000, ~t)·=~~allable to leMrt • J400 Waterfront Homes Inc Blvd "50 ol sa: Diego lovtl) 3+ br. t'l;-.. ~ pe: ::a~~~·7~ail ~Rt~K~ n;;S:4 SlS .~00 down Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• 631·1400 Frwy Start1ngatS900a rncd,yd pur opt ssso. -. --
lllnslina. 557-2783 J Ptrti City Ut.. Decorators 28R. 2BA Bi& month 631 5439, 24 73 _OC RENTALS 750-3314 Newpori leac• 326 SI.aper Harbor Ot-ean Vu
OWNEI WILL SfLl ~ ..-'~ttD ertlciency rondo with Canyon 1'1wnhome No Orange Ave . Costa Easuide lge 1 bdrm, den, ... ••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR. 2 ba Sl18S mo 239
With only ssooo down. N.lil~ kitchenette $65.000 Children/Pets 11100 Mesa earage. laundry fat•11 . Big Canyon 2 Br 2 Ba. Ore;inVu 675 2961
charming 3 bdrm. Iba Q3111tfWVl IOC llO,OOOdn 13•, int on bal A&l.646-0!295 2 Br enrlsd garage blllls Pvt street Frt!Sh IB7S/mo Patm·k, aet 2 Br 2 8a w Slone rrpll'.
SIS.900 to the loan or --:.Jf -:.W -or wHI takt-partner Hames.,.,.,..slt.ct Adults.nopelS S52S mo parnt, new rrpt S425 _ 7591221 yrd pool & gar
OWC SlOS.000 <:all 714 f.4107fl3 ...._,, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 773W Wilson 6314889 8325086_alter~rn ___ 28R Condo Adult l67~1mo_!7S2.~20!ay_s _
ageotMargotorPalty, 29'l.H'ollt•l(l'i\H' o.tof~ ~ lJ02 4 BR. 2 BA. adu1t~1-;;11 MIESAVYDE Compl~" 2BA NrHoag NewportShrshonw .S7SO 707~~!..1.07·642 84~3 t'o~lJ Me'J r \ '9opwty 2550 ....................... pets temp rental 3 6 mo 3 Bdrm, 2 ba fareplare. Sli2!> Mo bl, Liul &t Dep Bayfrt JBr w dock S32SO ~t'\ll LF ••••••••••••••••••••••• REH'TALS On Monrovia St near dishwas her. renl·ed NoDop7687633 Walerlrootflnme~lnr """"'...,,.,A I YING * •601 TOTAL Yearly Weekly.Winter, 19lh:.SS50~7 0899 Y a rd S 7 7 s mo Sea111ew lrg 4 Br. ocean -631 1400 ·ASSUME ArPLfVALUY 2.3.4 Bdrms. Newport 3BR l 'i BA . nu ,•pt. wtgardener Option tu vu. Sl6001mo Patrick. S...._
F'antastar dreamhouse. Ta~ OOWN PAYMENT Beach &B1lboa. wallpaper bkyllght~ buy a 7591221 • Cap.Urano 3271
nearly new 3 Bdr 2 Ba. Near new 4 pin 2 JACOIS REALTY stungled ext frplc-lg yd ----~·2574 •••••••••••••••••••••••
family rm. l'Ul·df'·sac. 2 bdrm, 2 bath eu,·h uni\ 7Xgross ! 15 houst ... 1111 PROPERTY dblgar S7S01mo 7JI Oil~ ,._,...Vall-l2]4 IAYRtOMT 3Br 112ba, garage 25~2 l'ar gar. lrg lot S20,000 with f 1 I d run II) apt rnrnplt>x • -, Via Del Rey $675imo down. owe Lease OP· p~t10. ·~eapra~rce'9~.n.~.oslset. P<».ltave l'ash flow l'ull MGRS F. Side 2bdrm. new thru ··Bd····················· 2 story. 4 i bdrm~. 2 ..... :700 ""I '><'lC
11ona11ail Hurry, won 't " " " rordetalls l..'7r._1.,1.j out. form;il din . 4 rm.2 BanearMile baths. r trcplaee . ....,.ti""'........, --last! Susan Han. a11t Pos rash now Now (Ul] -~F_!LU breakrasl nook . 2 ear S..1uare Avail 2 10 No gorgeow. view Pier and s..setleech l211
9400or775·061J Sl!>9,SOO Bill Grund)·, W~ldbrfdgc Lg 3 Br. l',ba frpk, 2 l(ar. yrd. grdnr S67S pets S795 mo · S!ISO i.Llp PIOO per mo Av.itl ••••••••••-•••••••••••• RJt~67~616t t'ar gar. patio. 12671 Al 546-42SJ / serunty deposit Our Feb. I Deluxl' Rust1t· Beach ReafflJ lard, GG. $lll0. 531l_J_4S3 Lr 11 4H1t F. x l'l' SI) I e T o w n R e a I l > Hou:.c 3BR 2HA. with
C.M. Ta Slltff~ 551 :i111111 3206 llome In Pn•rt•rrl'd n~1..SC116410399 sunken tub. J i.tories.
, pl•• "Int "inan~e tt!tlbrnnn t'k1H.lr1l111· lllaoellled Rcsldt'nttal Area ('M ~CMl leoch 3240 1pm1I •li11rrasl'. hot tub, .. ~"" A II " •••••••••••••••••••••• .. _... • .,.. 3 2 II
K Bay< ....... '--arh, 2 Br 2 Brand New. C:a rpt"ts. ••••••••••••••••••••••• P•lltOI>, 11ar.1,1?es. a Jll> 675 0073 I 34~ 4123 For Sale or Trade By • "'" ""' t d & d Ownl'r 1 l'orunado Ba 123 E Bayfront. Drapes. & Pd1nt 4BR Condo ll~BA S625 carpl' I.' rapes B Ibo I I d Throu11houl E1 H\ rm Isl. Last & Dep No Su~r Sharp C.ill 12t31 Caye. I Waterfront I Yr a a I an Sl200 Room & Wtndow 3 t'c1r Pets __ 768 7_633 4 S Br 2 8a fam1I) rm . e1J12 7.1 X GIOSS! Old 3BR. 281\ Condo winter Sl400 annual 101 Oeean \'1ews 8UN1TSin hid\ demand Sl1pfot4~' Boal For lbe I f1erb.days2l3/47113S77 ~ .. r ft'fl(•t'(i Bal·k Y.i~~ F.xdw.l\l' 2 B 2': Ba pl. Oimng rm . I blcx:k rrom W~tef' 3291 I Jl!11a1e ~ar_h and ten rent.ii att!a Assume ex or r~o lkt~cl'n L\ & I C... .. M.. 322 'J:;~geen1~:ee~";.,13't~~· (!j~/::::.~ ~ ~1~es ~1 ~00 11:if ~ S\ ~ ~onl 1 •••••••••••••••••••••••
rus Let s talk termlt ll>ltng r1n anc1ng or , San<.:lelTlt'nH Cln orNr , ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pets Subicrt to -\p 196'l1J98 I ~15032 tWwtvltmod~ed
I 1495.000 Sl50 000 .it 10'. .ind W d t e r 0 a ' " . Lease Nrly new 3 br 31 1 1 d 0 --Stngll' (am1h huuse. 2 LagllliNtYilloqel.f. OWTlt'C' wl.11 rarn l'Ull 213 28Z 02K2 E1e . ba 2 fr le bale ' pron mme cc' 14 Br 2•, Ba Bonui. rm. Ne"pon HI!> fn•'h & bdrm 1•, ba Living
497·17'1 l pnre 1240.000 C:a ll , 213-S76-07l2 I nu~rowa:e 'bar 2~!r Sl250Mo9S7.$74 F'amrm.3.100.sq ft nr l l'll'im 3 BR, fpk. lgt> room furm.il d1n1nf
W,........__._ -,. 9'T9·S370 Red &tat~ g H G ~rd en er 511 , ... DllYE Creer L.;i.ke SI09S l'H'!> t:.,r~..,,,. S8SO 646 1220. room Gar New rpts,
..-.-sttr 1091 A I S1250imo 3Br. tRa. 'a<·.inl. new s.o.6203 .,...,......., drps lg back 1·d $600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LLST"TE bO•ge 2IOO ss1~r1 6 rpl&&drpslgydS7SO•~B2-o.:-h 2 . Spar1oushouiol'Wllh mo 21JSl24731 da. 'SE YOUR \' A on th1~ I,. ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• ._ .. a 11>m Own · • ~ r ..., ouse. rar R great 3 Bdrm Loli. of e>. Want a t;u: shelter~ Seti ii'N VIEW-Pvtbch, ntw rm l'r ~9 2042 garage. new paint & &'~~::;,, ~I l 1; '/. 71C 340 7380
tr;u. Just Slt9.900 Bkr REALTORS myl l2ye11rnewtnplex deror, 2 u r gar. 2Br. &ecJ-tTw1lllla11se ~arpets S69S mo 2 .idd1t1~noll u7'.111y ~~ -or ext'h~ngc l'QU1ty for 18a 1!050 mo 7608382 3 bdrm. 21 , bu, vit'w. ~27QO__ bdrm s N 11• e Iv 3425 E.SIDEU~S ~or ~wner Arter ? Lrg Jbdrm. 2'2ba.. f11m ~ t2lJIY.12411W Cute bch home, IBR w l11ndsr.iped . .iut'o •••••••••••••••••••••••
Other IHI Estate lmmar units with 1 lrg :l60-a7 rm, den. drn rm. rrpk. Sh 3 r P 3 b r 2 b a gar. kid ok, now $375 llpnnklers Sl2SO mo in Beaut 2bdrm rondo.
••••••••••••••••••••••• 2Bdrm~otta11e swtable .... pat10.2blklfrom1X·un pool spa. bl>q . gar. ~Rt!N'fAl..§_iSO..E!! tl<b ~ardener & pool ~~~rf;lf'I . ~l~::a::;,
MoWl!ttto..s ror an owner In add111on ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ren•, le a se. It 4 00 rarpel. drapes. new H~Oll >l' r 111 r l' 6 4 o I 3 2 7.
Far S. 1100 lhere are three I Bdrm & Homet ,.,.shed . _!40-14114 __ __ k i 1 ch en S8 9 5 m 0 ~ u 42 I ~ til88 QHll'l' 759 6S97 ~_fi: ioiJ~~9, :~~g~~.o ·
••••••••••••••••••••••• ~t' 2 Bdrm umts As· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2br, frplc, patio. nr Isl ilallt SSOO dep •••••••••••••••••••••••IF.astbluHs 4 Br. family -1 Newport Beach De Ann sumt existing lo~n~ imd C...def Mer l 122 fashion Island & <X't'an i<J6.7650 Waterfront Bro;idmoor rm lge yard 642 5161 or Upper 2 Bdrm 1 3 Bath
bayfront Park Mtnt owner "'.111 help rmanre ••••••••••••••••••••••• S7S01c~ 640 117,7 •:.s1dl' l'Ute l Hr i·ollagt•. 2bdrm. 2ba, frpk. wet i ~8107 • So Coast Plaza area, lg
t'Olld. ·7s double wide fUUpncel349.SOO Upgraded 2Br 2ba. yard. Chaim1;;g28R. IBA.j yard arc11 5415 + :.l'l' I bar. dbl gar. shp a1·a1I. Blulrs Best ttreenbelt ~~nrall~il'~~ rec .. ~~~l·e.9~1~c~r~~l~~ m;r:.,r~~;3.1~:1gs Frplt',Gar f650 Adults I Sgl or married rpl M4t~~5-7l~f lOO mo lot• & Deror• 3RR . 67551JR · r146.4844 6'75-0l6I ------~Pets.~ 646:02!'5 ~7~ I -------2';BA. ram Rm. SIOSO I -Nl OF.LUX Jo'tB_R_
1c:s-rdal
I Pl..,.,ty '
•••••••••••••••••••••••
MIWPOIT llACH Web visibility. C-3 . Ocean view. l.2JO ft. rroa .
tage. Use esJ.stJn1 build·
1111 ct 4000 aq. n. cw bul Id I0,000 aq. rt. Owner wUI
cany S71S,000. Gl-730I,
Ruhar.
c .. •••••-n•••I ............ , .. ....................... ,
Lasure World Condo. For .
I Sale By Owner 2B R. , 28A. Upgraded carpets
Great View . $8S,000
714-545·7101 , Moll·Fri 1 ~5_1..14·n0·~1-.:_1-SPM_,
NORTII LONC BEACH
\'irgm1a Country Club Estatell
New 3 br. 3 ba Condo
Lwcul)' Dl'rnrator
Extra)
FromSli;i.000 J t714) 847-7066
IS c Pina. 3BR 28/\. JS
sum It I'.. S60K l~t . owe 2nd Submll tt>rm~
!!OlK ~ !_9!8
ColteMeso 3124 Shorttlirrs Mo to mo be 2, CHOICE E. SIDE ~miw 3244 7ro.B384. 675 5930 I TeM". ~ a· ,~1ew rull a::::v*:rd:.j;;;:n~·;b:.•. 8.-1'2 ba, !cm rm. h~L"lll 1 ZCr. 1 .... lla. frvk. bltn •..-unn•u .......... Bh.if Londo 4 bdrm 3 5tt1Jnl\', ~It 111 bk·,.d3c,
lrg ram rm ss,w mo Isl I rm. kitchen. 2 fp!>. lge ran~e oven. d~hw~hr. · n"''j;.3 ~r. 3 b~. IMth.<. Sl200 munth SA. S42S mo85i 2914 fl last r· 548 6381 y11rd Pt'U1k1ds <* SllSO. patio Pool SliOO mo patio. gar ar . ~. I 1>-1~ 2007 ----!:Ss>m;.~01~1 afl Spm. · lstilu1. rer:. r t,-q Jdlt•. no pel:. 311 1 .lar S97S mo 833905, 3U loaf SU WESTCLIFf -I 644--0164 Hairulton Orangetree Patio Home I b w /b P f.xt•cptJonall>· neat con·
................................. :c~~1';1pooRrl + ~"'1~·~~ I ~·e~·J.:,~~1:'0941 do t:round leul
Spauws t"o bedrooms .
• • • !illl 316S Newport <:rl'llt 2 Br. 2': T"'" bath:. Prnate 8 DAY WEEK SPECIAL • TU--..£90 ,.., -ba.loft.rrptr.pool,:.p.i, palio U>\el.' .:rounds &
• • $pt'<'l.i~i~n~ruct (;~~JS87~~.1~75'~17 pool \dull 1·omplex
• I Days • 3 Linea • 9 ,,._ ... ,. e I ed 11ew of S.ind ( .. n) on f.ai._1 -.alk to ~hops and """ • Resen o1r. City hghb \'er:.,11IJe, PenthoUSl' bank\ S6 70 month
• . .ind roam1n11 r attlt' 2 Condo 2 b d r m . Ye<1rh it'aJ>t' Br~er.
•
Its easy to place your 8-Day Week Classified by mall and 11 e BR. 2 ba. J M PET~Rs f1rt,-plac·l' n1re oc·cJn 631 aoo
costs JUSI S8 -that s only a dollar a day' To qualify for this Oesignt'd home Jen \lt'W Gatt'd rommunll). ---... --11111!!!!!!~
• ' I ff · · • I naire. Tra~h !'Ompal·tor. dOM' lo shop:. and water spec1a 0 er. YOU must 00 3 non-commerCtal USer Offering • Stereo IOlt'rrom. pool. Si50 + utJI 7~4 114 ext 21dnft.21afM me h d f I I $800 d d 503 C c Huntington BeJch New.
• re an 1se or sa e up o per a . an the price must tenrui;. spa 1 .H ll'dbl' are'!_!um pool. tl!nnii.. extras be in your ad The cost stays the same whether your ad e 11200 mo "1 ail im galore'J700 6iS 11252 • eed h . m"' d i a I l' I y M r llG CANYON ----
• n s e 1g I days selling time or JU~I one • I Hanman Aj!t G34·0328da Lux u ri 0 u' th rt' t' To#l•C*M
113.1-3122 el'c & wkcnd~ bt>droom~ Two hal hs u..MW•ed 3525
• Use one word in each box Ab9ut 4 words ma .. e one • 'RANl'l~OSAN JOAQL'IN f ormal d1111n~ room ...................... . " • \'II L\~ ?b 2 b R DELlfX.£ end untl. like
• Class ified line o f typL> M1n1mum ad IS 3 lines Please print I • '·· "r .• , ... ll'hl\'dl'<'Orah'dlnmut '-den. pool & jul· . adult l'<I tones 3000 sq fl new 2 BR 2 Ha frpl.
• plainly • 1·omm $825 mo Marc·h Jai·u111 off mJ sll'r pool gate. mJn1 xtras
•
,,. • L~t ~ 9ti.56 broroom 3 i·;ir it.irai:e Tuslin·S A hne S62S No r ------------------------------, 2story. -!RR :JB,\. fam SZ050 month Yt•a rl~ ~ HS2S80.7SI0796
• • rm, lg k1khen. S8,<,0 mo 1 lea~l' (';ill 631 7300. °"*IHUafunl 3600
No ~s. 559-8523 Realtor •••••••••••• •• ••• ••• •••
• • -~ 1 Beautifu l Ne" Custom NORTHWOOD" 1 Oe1u~e Dupll'~ 3BR.
• • 3 bdrm. 2 ba, f1replarc I WESTCLIFF 2BA t'rplr. CentrJI Air.
• • 1750 sq rt 1hatl 1mmed , ""· ._..,. E}i('! Dbl Garo1,1?es S8SO o'Cs"s'. I ll50 Mo 5S9 6207 1 • .. o """room I wo hath M t L & ••"" 0
• ., -1 4 b d I rondo Ground floor 0 '1· asl '''''"' ep llOO • r ur r e n rm . ,.,,. d 1 1 N Lot·.i1ed .1 1 193 E fireplace sk11hght air ,· =.et.~ rkttromhp c' 0 \'trj?IOld r .. 11 Saber
0r a 1ot of cun~
Thencell
olaHlfled. ThOM
thl"OI tMlng up
·llpect In-your
home, lttml you
ha¥en't \iltd In ==•t .........
Sogt¥tuu
Call • lt't 1MY to * CIMIHied 10 gtt~hlndlfll
90nteomt\. ..
• e I cond cul de sar i:~een , :;.;;: .. y 0 '1 °P1P'"~ 'I Reath 114 1;11 ~ooo -·v mo e.ir \ l'a~e • -
• • I belt lmpt>rrable l'' I 6317300Bkr I B!lr wa~her drytr.
I crut1\ e home . no ~ard Soulh l..iJ!una.
• • rtuldren. no pets S9SO I -SSOO tori ut1I Call.
mo A\atl Feb 251h llGCAHYONLSE 499448/i
• • I 759~-__ -1 2BR M rLa1~ Condo
• • Woodbndge Condo 3 Br SI 125 per mo l 11 II C m ·,v -, s IWW'nts Fwmillted
1 •, 93 Isl & last mo 673 7761or760 1397 I ••••••••••••••••• ••••••
• • rent ~ depos it A' ail leeaut ~xl't· honw' s br. 4 CodaMHa ]724
• t • ~ <;all ~H;J67 _ _ ba. Weslthff are;i. he nr 1 ·•••••••••••••••• ••••••
P b I h d f 8 d · lrg 4bdrm pool home. 3 lse_11pt SliOO 641\ !i3.'>S I bdrm rurn or unrurn.
• I u IS my a or ays starting • I rar gar. S9SO mo l'all Blllrs. 4 br. mo 10 mo S39~ !'Urn bachelor. I colll'<'t. l 42l·l371 lease. short term. red · S345 S200 St't' rlep · + • I Classification • t lOOALS r.!'fll.nopet~ 4941\163 1.§t roove:tn ~·2112.__
• I Name e 1 Rr I Ba S6SO Spar 4 BR. 2• .. a,\, ram Furn .urn Apt Nr occ
• • 2 Br' l Ra 5700 room. pool. frpl. 9~ 0809 12.SOmo bl & Last Ut1I
II Address 3 er: 2 Ba $1250 SISOO mo tum No Pct~ 546·959!_
• • LeRa1sorRlt1 8338600 Eastblurrs. ts MO ~ottS.ech 3740 t c·t Phone 1..:.:.... -.. -h---324-1 1.E1\SE w 0PT10N To ••••••••••••••••••••••• • I I y Zip • _,.... CIC BUY. 4 BR. 2 1J BA. "HI' Fl~EST
••••••••••••••••••••••• \1t'W 1aru111 appra1s;il • • 1 " • I Check or M 0 enclosed 0 • oc1:.1.NFIO....,. . · SpamshF...,tatel.11mg1
· · ~ "' pn re S290 .000 . )Our fll>auhful purk hkl' sur
• I Ch d t • 24 Hr Stturity. '2 m1 orr pnre ~.000 5lti00 mo rounding~ TrrriH·ed
I arge my a o: • pvt bch. (1sh1ng pier. 6401!,!g! pool Sunken llllli bbq.
• ZBr. ad Its only. JlO dfW's k I r . ~ • "" LWl/orT or SAU spar 1ng oun1111ns
• I 0 # Exp. • ~rroi .tt7141!49!:38_R16 •br.3baextt· Westl'11rr ~~~r1ou~ roomii I l ~· cu ar v ew• • r 3 home All new In ' out .xparate dining uu • I • Ba den. dining area. 1111 '"'•et rend i1treet Va W a I k 1 n ,. Io sets .
I D # E dedts, dlsh"asher. """ • · hom('hke k1trhen ' • Xp. • ~t.1arage.SJOS011no. !'ant -Im med on l'ill>IQt'tS Walk IQ ~nt L 1&4-166\art&PM_ ~'11' 7$2 2S~ tnl!\lllll.:fnter
------------------------------Ml .... _... l""t W\!\T \l,.IO:'\' I Bdrm rum.1485 r ••••••••• WE 'LL PAY THE POSTAGE ·-····•·····'"'-e •,aw -a• 1.1 ...... ,,rt~• ''""12 -~;;11 I .. ••••••••••••••••••••
i 111111 I ~~~~:;:AGYE i : I IF MAILED I • f IN THE ~ • j UNI TED STATES ~ •
,. BUSINESS REPLY LABEL ~ .
FlltST CLASS ""MIT HO 11 co~u MESA, CALIFO't!tlA ·------··' •
g ._ ____________________________________ __,
• • • • • • • • ••••••••••••
11$ CANYON LIASI Furnished 5
BR home designed foh.(umlly
hving w/exccullvc cmh·'.9.~iniroc .
L& living & form din rm~ open to
private patio & spudous yurd
Amenitle~ 1nch1d(.': pur<1ucl
noors. rrench ~)()~ & skylhthl.
Available ~·cb ruary 19"2
S3200 /mo t..ynnc Vulc.!nllnc.!
6"-6200 CS20) \
Adult!!, no peb
l'tilitit',., 1-'Tt't'.
I.A QUINT,\ m :RMOSA
11'll I r1.1 rkMdt• l.n. I htll
W II lteat·h. !I hlh S o(
fo:dln1wr
147·5441
L.,..lttd 3741 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t.A11w,t 11tudlt>, '\flU. TV1
maid ~er111rl'. 11hones.
lllhlt 4992227
.~ stud1oa. one
, Ind two bedroom apart·
m&nls. FURNISHED
· tnd UNFURNISHED.
o.kwood also offers
• AM Utllltiel Plld ............
Occupency
• , , Miiiion In
~
And Much More•
1 .for a month. or a hfe-
bme Models ~dally
lllm IO 6pm Adults only
no pets
I I
'
.......................
iw.•1 Home for retit.d
Blimp Pllotl 1teeda MW
loc. C.M. • N.B. 2bdnna. ta or under. .U.5311 eva tJtwn Mpm.
soro lillll'& f di's
.......................
Wllr'~Co. All types of real estate
lnvestmeot11lnce 1N9.
S,.c1t1•1• MTD1
'4J.2171 54H+ I I
WIDOW ·HAS SU for
TD'!t RE Loan1, 101'
Up. "'°Credit Check, No P8WtJ. DenoialOll A$-
IOC. 8'71-731l
•• b~ I ,. I '
J Liit&,.... ......................
II
*'ICOIU•
BA<S • BETl'D THAN EVDI M RllS
669..0207 ( OuleaJJ)
----
For womtD ODlJ·tatal llcdJ llllUlal• by Diane. "appt. 10-6. 54l-W7
POOlmE
ISCOITS 11/PCouples --
atimMA11 ora••
Motor route in Prime Newport
seacb area. Low ~; ap-s>roximately 350 c tomers.
Weekday hours 2: 5:30pm. s.i & SW\. Sam-7am. Minimum
am0tmt of collecting. For de·
tails call Bruce Carty or
Foster ~et at 6G-4321.
5'Gp! I Take Ume to relax lbd lboD •l home. It ••
limple Wtth Dail1 PUot a.allied Ada. And If
JGt hft IOml!thlnt to sell, call a frieodl1
Oauifted Ad·VlJer at
19=51'11
Top DIUar
hill For Your Cu!
JOHt4SOM & SOM
=l':re's?v'l .... 540-sacl
Premhun pnu1
paid ror any uaed car
(lorelp ordomuUc)
IA lQOd condition. . ... u.rtnu
..
..
•••••
-mmlRI 11111 PIPll
, t ' , 1 ~ • ' • r , . ,
• ..
·Vice 'president's· li.mo11sine 'struck by · r()ck'
I '
WASHINGTON (AP) -AG
armored llmoualne carrylnl
Vlet President Geor1e Bush to
work wu struck early today by
an unknown obJec\ -almoet
· certalnly a rock, the FBI aald.
No one wu injured and lt wu
• unknown where the rock came
from .
For 1everal houri
lnveati1ator1 bad worried the car might have been bJt by a
1>ullet. Bush hlmaeU 1peculated as much, accord,..,, to one
aource who 1poke with him at
the White House afterward.
But the speclal FBI a1ent in
* * *
charge of ·the lnve1U1at~n1 Jamet W. Vatter, Hid be rM1C1
inapec!ted the car and UM bureau
was "99 percent sure, baled on
preliminary laboratory analyala,
that the car was hit by a rock or
similar objtd.
•'There were no metal
fragments or other tracet to
Indicate it •11 a bullet," he
said.
What had appeared to be a
dent in the car's roof, the PBI
said, was only a tear in its vinyl
covering.
FBI spokesman Ron Dervilh
said he did not know bow the
Incident happened. "The rock aetd, "they couldn't rt;ach me. I a1enta travellnt with btm heard
ml1ht bave been thrown or waa alttin& in the back aeat." a nolae that "sounded llke a
picked up by another car," he Later, he told reportert that 1un1hot," Secret Service
Hid. when he beard the ban11 "I 1poke1man Jack Warner Hid.
Another FBI apokeamao, asked what It wu and nobody But the vice president did not
Larry Knialey, said be did not waa 1u.re. . . . I thou1bt It miJbt reaUie somethina had hit bis
know whether tbe rock had ~ have been a CUD or 1omethtn1." car, a pokes man Peter Teeley
found. Police aearcbed the area Security wu unusually tlt)lt said, and the motorcade, plck1n1
and found nothln1. aa he arrived at the Capitol. up apeed but taking no evulve
BUib, uked as be arrived at Report.en were kept 'Well clear actlon, proceeded to the White
the Senate if be knew bis car of the vice president and police House.
ml1bt bave been the taraet ol a maintaiited a heavy presence. When the car arrived at the
projectlle, replled: "No, I Bu1h had personally told Wblte House, District of
couldn't tell that. It wu just a President Rea1an of the Columbia potlce spokesman
big bana." incident, spokesman Pete Joseph Gentile said, the driver
Had he been pushed to the Rouasel said. discovered a V ·shaped dent In
floor, be wu uked. "No," be Bush and two Secret Service the left rear portion of the roof.
Bush entered his office ln ~ :: \
Old ExecuUve Office 8u1Jdlq, -~ 1
next to the White House and ·#' I held what a.n aide called I '•
"routine meeUn1.'' •
Later he met with former • • •
Redsldna football coach ae.,. I Allen and Casey Conrad of thl
President's Council oo Ph.yalcaJ
Fitness before going to the
Capitol.
At the scene, police blocked
several blocks of L Street,
causln1 rush-hour traffic Jama,
a nd co ndu cte d•
buildlng-by·buiJding search.
Solons
Speculate
on 'hi('
Oran1e County lawmakers ln
Washington D.C. were buuing
today with different notions on
what it was that struck Vice
P fesldent George Bush's
workbound limousine this
morning.
Gunshots fired
in V 31ley store;
2 convicts jailed
Theories on what caused the
V-shaped dent on the 'roof of
Bush 'a limo ranged from the
"Lyblan bit sq1fad" to an
innocent r~k in the road.
An aide to Newport Beach
Congressman Robert Badham
said he beard a rivetlng aun
loaded with nails might have
been fired in the direction of .the
Bush Umousine.
A· second thought was that a
construction worker in the nation's capital may accidentally
have dropped some unknown
projectile from a multi-story
bulldini under construction.
Officials did say that Bush's
driver passed a partially
completed condominium
com.Plex on the way to the White
House.
.An aide to Lona Beach
Con1ressman Dan Luopen said.
he'd even heard one rumor
which pinned the incident on the
Lyblan bit squad.
FURAY FACE -Viriinia·bom Baby .Jack.son.
resi<lent groundhog ;il Santa Ana's Prentic;e
Parli Zoo. met his shadow Monday when tie
omty,.... ._.., Clleftn IWr.
rous~ from Ms hole to.nibble on 1>ume fruit.
Tod~y ~g his holiday. however. he slepl in.
misslng a pleasant sunny day
He said a local radio station
bad launched that rumor.
But by far, the most popular
rumor was that the Bush limo
kicked up a rock on the road
which then slammed down on
the roof above the vice
president's head.
Groundhog ·-misses cue
County zoo's weather forecaster sleeps in today
By all accounts, ~he incident
did not mterrupt Bush's mofQing -
schedule. ~
"It all haPs>ened so early,"
one aide said, ·'that the
Washington rufnor mill really
hasn't had the opportunity to
swing into full gear. I'd give it a
few more hours."
Evidence
lacking
• at site
By DAVID ICUTZMANN
Of .. Dalfy "'-l ....
The jury wu there. So was the
jtad&e. Not lo mention the
defendant.
Ml that wu ml.utng Monday
for a trip to 'the alleged crime
scene ln Huntington Beach was
the right piece of evidence -a
1975 International Harvester
tractor-trailer ri1 with a
2,000.pound tilt-away cab.
Because a truck with the ~ wrong type of accessories wu
By GLENN SCOTT
CM tM Dlilty PMlt SIMf
One crummy momln2 each year Orange County's curiosity
seekers turn to the
carefully crafted groundhog hole
at Prentice Park Zoo In Santa
Ana to discove r what its·
resident. 5-year -old Baby
Jackson will see uoon bis species' ·legendary awakenin&
from hibernation.
J f he sees bis 'hadow. the
legend says, he'll t>e frightened
back into his hole for another six·
weeks of rotten winter weather.
If be doesn't, he'll remain out
of hibernation and bring an end
to the winter dregs.
It is a clever myth built on the
cycles of the seasons and the
animals. But Baby Jackson just
doesn't seem to care.
Baby Jack.son slept in \oday. ·
"He only bas to work one day
of the year and he was late
today." lamented zoo attendant
Jeannie Jenkins.
But it's bard to fault Baby
Jackson -call him B.J . for
short -beca\15e to a Vir&lnia
native, this winter can't be very
rough.
Eastern groundho11, also·
known as woodchucks, marmots
and whistle pigs, b~d down
underground in October or
November when food supplies
become scarce and they
normally get up this time of
* * * More winter
prophesied
PUNXSUTAWNEY, Pa. (A P J
-Punxsutawney Phil, the
undercround oracle named for
this town. saw his shadow when
he peered from bis groundhog
burrow today and tradition says
that means six more weeks of
the calamitous Winter of '82.
The furry prophet fed his
dreary forecast to a
winter-weary land through
Charles Erhard, president of the
•Punxsutawney Groundhog Club,
who roused the slumbering
rodent from his electrically
heated burrow.
The long-range forecast issued
by the National Weather Service
concurred wtttr Phil's flndtnp 1n
a year that has seen record cold
temperatures nationwide.
year, Ms. Jenkins noted.
As a West Coast resident,
though, B.J . only takes a "token
nap" of about six _weeks, she
said. He was out and about a
month ago soaking in the
Southern California sun and
leading the solitary lifestyle that
groundhogs live.
If he were still back in
Virginia, B.J . might be
burrowing under fields
seatching for a vegetarian meal
and, at the same time, trlf'l'lmlng
his ever-growin& teeth needed
to gnaw out a livin1. He might
also be dodging the hunters who,
considering him a pest, earn a
50-cent-per-tail bounty on
groundhogs, Ms . Jenkins said.
In Santa Ana, zoo officials laid
a chain-link surface at the
bottom of the groundhog yard
before they filled it. with dirt for
the imported B.J . Like most
groundhogs, he spends much of
bi s time keeping the
subterranean quarters tidy. she
said, noting that groundhop dig
separate sections for "bedroom
and bathroom chambers."
B.J . obviously enjoys the
bedroom.
"He ls a late sleeper," she
observed.
II · there Instead, the etaht-man,
four-woman Orange County
Superior Court jury was shuttled
back to Santa Ana.
And a frustrated Wlllie Kay
Wisely . charged with ktllln1 bis
stepfather by suffocating him
beneath the cab of the truck last.
March, was put back in a
Schoolfug tax; credits pushed ·
Prirote education break urged for parents
sheriffs department. patrol car By SANDIE lOY
and returned to Orange County °' .. Dlllr,.. .... J II b h i bet b Id Notl.d• coocem for the future .....,. wltbcn;' ~~ \ 1 na · e of the Catholic educatlooal
WiSely's murder trtal bas been system becauH of aplrall.nl
in p'l'Glfess for six week.a and coats, the bilhop of the Roman
tbl.J wu the fitlt qpportunity the Catholic Diocese of Oran1e
jury baa bad 10.,eee. the area called for tax credits for parents
where the death toqk 'place -wbo send their chllc!ren to
the comer of Sprtntdale-stnet print.ac:hoola.
near Edinler Avenue. "I don't. look at HY public
The lntenectlon ii buay wtth aupport of private educattoq
1boppln1 center traffic and wltbout~• Jaundiced eye,"
acbool children walkln1 or Blahop William JohDtoD aald
rtdtn1 by. Monday, "because when th•
Accordtn1 to prtvlou1 mone1 cotnea, th• bend of\
teatlmony, Wtuly and an eoatJ'ol la clole by.''
accomplice, Jamea Duaa1an, But, be contended, taiJ credtta drove to an area near w.._. tbe wouldn't be a coelrlbatkln to
truck wu parted on Sprtqda&e 1upport private edueatkla. .
StrHt, in front of a \TGD'.t' 'If• Hid IM vlnl taa endtta 11 m a r t • t , a D d w a t e la• d ••a way to lil)ltea tM ......,,, Hun~ Beacb tnell drtwr • laPoMCl oa penou tot ....... Robert-..ay Wort oa bll rta. •bat li tllelr eonatltutlonal rrom hl• Hat ta a · HMI rllbt, the rtabt to eboOM tie tnct, IM\i1• teiUfted tiM M •fwm of ..SUCMAOD tbelr cblldrtil !~•-a. lo~.koui~-.~'°"1,.•~,~ ....... neelft. ~ --.-ntlT"' Spe•"'na at a luDcMoa tor u.e
(lee ft1AL, .._ AJ) ID A....alo IUitormlM la ..
South Cout Villa1e, Santa Ana,
the blshop_underscored bis rem arks wllb numerous
references to the hi&b quality of
Catholic education.
He called lt ·•an edutMional
environment that la seC9ftd to
none."
Also 1peaki.n1 at the luncheon
was Slater Celine Leydon,
1uperintendent of Catbollc
educatJon for the diocese, who
explalned Catholic schools teach
1U the •-.bitetl tauaht ill public
1chooll wilh the addition of a
formal rellaton.
l:i1hth·1rade .atudenh
nrolled in the cUoce1e'1 Catholic
1ebooll lut. year ranked in the
top IO percent ot the nation. IM
iaii, Of 1tudeat1 wbo took a
Dalloftal aebolutlc ac:hll\'ellMDl
Milt.
And, lbe iald, " perceDt of tlit dloc•H'• Catbollc bltb HllGOl...._IOODto~.
..... ta.at It coita ... a
'"' to MUoate elemtatary ~ ID "bUc HMDll la
Orange County, Sliter Celine
contended tbat. the Catholic
SF.bOOla save ~unty taxpayers
JU million annually.
There are H parochial
grammar achoola and five
Catholic hip 1cbooll in Oran1e
County with a total enrollment
of epproximately 20,000.
Tuition for the . Catbollc
1cbooll la tl()O per atudent.. the
auperlntendent 11ld, with the
rett of the eo1t provided \)y the
parlabH and vartoua other ·
private means.
Unllke trend• acrou the
nation. the blahop aatd, Catbollc
aehoola Ill Oraqe Countt are nourilhbic.
Sliter OeUM-*' dM ~ "Pl&DI to optn a DtW
elemdar')' aeliool In lrYIM tldl
~ aad II loic*lal tor a .... ,. .... la lllllloll ~
wlltre a ••~ '.~atllollc lll1b .......... ~ .
Tilt aoo•U•• 1atllnl•I
( ... _,., .... Al>
By ,PATRICllKENNEDY
Of ... Deity~,_
A convicted murderer free on
parole allegedly fired bis gun
into the floor of a Fountain
Valley pharmacy Monday,
threatening three women
emp}oyees before demanding
cash and narcotics, police
reported.
Gerald Wayne Moore, 48, the
alle1ed gunman, and Teddy
George Radcliff, 36, his alle&ed
getaway driver, were arrested
an hour later in Costa Mesa,
police said.
Both had he.ndguns and pollct
found about $30,000 worth of
narcotics and $550 in cash in the
car, autboritie5 said. Authorities
added they believe the drugs
and cash were taken in the
Fountain Valley holdup.
Moore, paroled from state
prison in November, allegedly
entered Elliott's Pharmacy at
4 : 15 p.m. No one was injured
durina the robbery at Garfield
Street and Magnolia Avenue,
police said.
Costa Mesa police , who
received an all. points bulletin,
saw fbe suspects' vehicle neaJ
Vanguard Street and Newport
Boulevard and the two men
were arrested without incident
and taken to Orange County
Jail, police said.
Radcliff is a convicted armed
robber who also has served time
in prison, pollce'8aid.
Moore's former parole officer
R.A. Castaneda said today ln
Riverside that h~s not surp~
that Moore was allegedly
involved in an armed robbery.
He said his former client bu
killed and has threatened to kill again
"The courts sent him back to·
priaon on a parole violation
when he • was arrested for
drunken driving and carryin1 a
concealed weapon," Castaneda
said. -
"He told the judge he'd been
al a bar waiting for a guy to
come in with his ex-wUe so he
co uld kHl hlm," Castaneda said.
"He said be changed bis mind
and w.as driving home from the
bar when he was pulled over.
··But this guy's been to ~
joint for murder so he ain't
jivln'. He's had two or three
heart attacks and so he figures
he's going to die anyway and he
just doesn't car~:· the parole-
omcer said.
He says Moore was sent back
to prison for flolatine parole, for
drunken driving and carrying a
conceale d weapon but was
released In November after serving about a year.
"The law says when you do
your time, you're released,"
Castaneda said "It's a
(See ROBBERY, Page AZ>
HUD chief pledges
lwusing stimultJ:nts
··Housing is in a very poor
economic condition . . . that will
continue until interest rates
come down."
It was with that assessment
that Samuel Pierce, U.S.
Secretary of Housing and Urban
Dav.elopment, opened a press
conference Monday night In
Irvine on the nation's bousln1
dilemmas.
Despite the interest rate
obstacle, Pierce maintained that
step s are being taken to
sti mulat e the housing
construction..market.
The secretary said be ls
working on a program to permit
some part of the $600 billion In
pension funds to be made
available for hou sl n&
mortgages. "Savin~ and loan
banks and mutual savings and
loans . . . are dried up,·· Pierce
said.
And, he said, "demonstration
project.a" have shown that the
cost of new housing can be
reduced "20 to 30 percent'' by
modification in local building
codes and constructilrn
regulation1.
Oranie County eovemment, In
conjHctioo wltb the Oranae
County chapter of the Building
lndu1try AasoclaUon of Southern
California, baa been
experimentlne wttb such
projectl. The county also ta
adaeduled to open a "one·•top''
proceaaln• center for houaln1
develoPmeat plaru1.
. Pierce Hld the 1oal la ''to
build more cheaply, whether
(the buyer) la ricb or poor."
I
DettyHlll .....
SPEAKER HUD Secreta~
Samuel Pierce, speaking itl
Irvine. assessed nation'&
housing dilemmas. :
Fair throu•h
Wednesday. Local north to ·•
northeast winds l5 to JO
rnph at times. Hithl 70 to
78. Overnight Iowa 41 to 54.
tllll.DI TllAY
''TM JvpiUr Elffct" kif
1om1 /u,.damet1CoU••• ,
prtdfctmg th. nd of IM
world u °' IMOf' cu March Jt
o/ ""' llfO". P.al1I A7,
• . h TAX CREDITS -Bishop
11u William Johnson, leader of
•Orange County's Catholics,
-Mi. urged tax credtts for parents
, ,,.00 f ch ii d re n i n p r i vat e
·~'*schools.
£'From Page A1
..
...............
SCHOOL REVIEW -Sister
C~line Leydon said 94
percent of .the Diocese of
Orange's Catholic high
school students go on to
college.
.=JBISHOP URGES CREDITS ••
marked the beginning of
Catholic Schools Week, an event
commemorated by the Orange
County Board of Supervisors in
a resolution presented at th~
1 u o ch eon by 5th Dhirict
Supervisor Thomas Riley to
Sister Celfoe.
•HoneSty, foresight
~Kerm Rima traits
4'?'t 4'\8yJODICADENHEAD
,,.< y I of'°•• D.llly ~ llUtl • . Monday mormng Keith and
l~\a Kermit Rima were selling 1~ hardware in the Costa Mesa .Fat-store their father started• more
lf'!Jt than 30 years ago.
Jrr That's the way he would have
!l~ll wanted it, said the two brothers,
~· whose father Kermit Rima died
C!'@tl Sunday at 69 following a stroke
·~Dec. 24. · A native of Grand Rapids,
~Mich., Mr. Rima, who trained as
.mtr a dentist before World War 11, di opened Kenn Rima Hardware in
~ 1951 at Harbor Boulevard and D13tl Broadway Street. 1dl' It was the .same year that he
~1married Betty, who worked
beside him selling everything
21'·' ,.from pots and pans to wrenches.
~ "He was a great guy. He was
t/J ~ery honest and verj reliable;"
:hl"said Alvin Pinkley. who owned a
hdrug stor~ just a few doors
i'Bt1la\l;!a)I . "lie al11Vays took, the
Wwsltlve attitude and was a l?'eat
. booster to the city.·· r~ Following his discharge from
dl'Jthe Navy, Mr. Rima decided not t'&!~ to pursue a ca~ in dentistry ~~if and insteatr0pened a tackle
. store in Newport Beach. tMI· But his dream was always to
i own a hardware store as his:
father had done in Michigan,
said his two sons.
Selling hardware was Mr !ltf~Rima 's life and by the time the ~sons were eight years old, they
-:.~ were working in the Costa Mesa ,ff~ store, too.
"He never cons idered it
work," said Keith , 29 "There
wasn 't anything he couldn't
sell."
In Ume the busy store not only•
became a center for hardware
deals, but also a meeting place
for friends and civic leaders.
Mr. Rima was active In city
and social affairs and served as
president of the Costa Mesa
Kiwanis in 1965 and director or
the Chamber of Commerce from
1964 to 1969.
"He was very generous and a
lot or fWl," recalled realtor Roy
Mccardle. "He was really one of
our more active members in the
Kiwanis. Kerm was always on
the lookout for other people."
In 1965 Mr. Rima decided to
e xpand his operations and
opened a new 26,000.square-foot
store at 266G Harbor Blvd.
"He had a lot of foresieht,"
s aid bis son Kermit, as.. "He
knew the town waa 1rowlnc. He
knew tbis waa the place to
come." 1
Althou&h he eqJoyed flabl.nt,
his favorite pastime waa
designing mallboxea and
furniture to sell at the at.on.
Both or his aons went to.
college and both returned to
work in the hardware st.ore .
"From the time we were kids,
this store is basically what be
talked about," said Kermit.
"It's going to stay tbe same.
There's no doubt about It."
Added Keith, "It was his
dream and it'• ours too."
There will be rio memorial
service. The family suggests
that contributions be made to
the Calvary Chapel School.
Prevl1>us wltnessew 1rave
testified the son. and bis mother
h'ad numerous loud arauments,
including one in which be is
alleged to bave t.old bet, "you're
nothing but a damned old
woman. J wish you were ...
dead.''
Defense lawyer Stuart Grant
of Cost.a Meta, wbo must still
give hll openln1 statements to
the Jury, baa indt~ated lln.
"81et1 waa ln poor bealth and
ulted her son t.o help her end
ber Ille.
Baet.i admitted to police be
1a ve bla mother the half
teaspoonful of cyanide ln her
oran1• Juice.
•
Nl!it OSK <AP> -A NIUr lD batertll f bu Hit prtme ,_.., CllllDIOt ror the ._ ume •*• Dteembtr, bet1bteD1D•·. CODCU'D that tbit
rec"'loa .tJJ worMft.
cMc:lloe to 15.6 percent at two
lar1e banlta tn November. TboM
two banu ralted tb•Jr prtme
ratet to 16.15 percent to Join the
re1t of the 1ndu1try ln
December,
Interest rate• ro11 for the
fourth 1tral1ht week at the
Trea1ury Department'• weekly
a.action ol thret· and •lJl·G)Onth
chtrte!I on abOrt·-. ...an•• loan.1 t.o thttr most c~·WCll'tllY
borrowers, reacbed a record 11.1
percent in Dfftmber 1•. It
1tood u ldO u JO.I ,_11•t
bttween July aDd Stpt.embs ol laat year before fa111ftf aa to.r u
15.5 percent •t two banu ln
November.
Cit~ naU.'a Mcoad lar1• ertlil bank, rabed
Jt.1 prime a.cUU ntf Monday to 1~ .• percent •from the u .11 r:rcent rate that bad prevailed
the Industry alnce Dec. 1. Nq
12·ranked Crocker N1Uoul
Bank of San Francilco qwc3 followed Citlb1nk'a lead, 10
Chemical Bank and Uoydl 8
California Jolned ~he mov
today.
~ bllll, cUmblne to tbelr hlabest
level• 1lnce Oct. 5, 1981. The
Treasury auctioned about SlO
billion in billa Monday and i.a
scheduled to auction SlO bllllon
In notes and bonda this week to
raise cub to help finance the
federal deficit.
Sxc~. lnter t rate jltten
Mftl': trleet tumblln1 11°'*1
wlth the Dow Jona avera11 Oi
30 lndua~al 1tockl plummetlDI
1t.•1 polDt.a to cloee at 111.M, the
ateepest one.day 1Ude ln IMr'e
than ftve moot.ha. But tn tbe flrat
bour of tradln1 today, the
blue-cblp avera1e was up 2
pointlet8N.ee.
B..dnd prlcea , whloh tell
Monday, recovered some of that
lost. around in the early gotn1
today. But gold bullion price.
continued to fall whlle the dollar
aoared for the second 1tra1pt
di)'',
The prime rate. the bue upon
which banlca compute interest
Concern over the coune of
interest rates bu helJ)ltened u
the Federal Reserve Bond
c on t In u e• to report
1reatcr·than-dealred 1rowth of
the natJon'a monty supply aod
the u .s. Treasury •teP. up it.a
borrowinf to finance a
record·bith 1ovemmen\ deOC!lt. Chue Manhattan Bank, u,.
tbJrd lar1est. also increaHd it.a
prlme rate today, but not u
much u the other banks,
movin& to 16.25 percent.
The prime rate laat rose
throughout t.be banking lndust.ry
last July before be&innlng a
FromPageA1
TRIAL. • •
hyp9dermtc needle ln bis
Windbreaker pocket and a
revolver tu~ked in hta tNtlt.
'Dunagan said be saw
movefl*lt around the cab ~ \v~ he looked acaip, "it was
d,owp." .
Wisely, ~' has denied all involvement lo h1a stepfather's
death. He is acting as hl1 own
lawyer. ·
Wisely said he wanted h1s
etepfather's truck at the
Springdale street location, but
he said Huntington Beach police
told blm it wouldn't start.
So the defendant -from bis
j-ail cell -arranged for a
stand-in truck. However, that
rig didn't have a large metal
chain rack on the rear of the
cab, Uke Bray's truck.
The difference was significant
enough that the Jury, after beinl
bused from Santa Ana to
Huntington Beach, was put back
'on the bus and sent back about
10 minutes after arriving.
It was uncertain if Wisely,
wh.o asked for the on·tbe-acene JW'Y inspection, would try •lain
this week. · ,
Presiding over bis triaJ bu
been Superior Court Judee
Kenneth E. Lae, who like the
jury, walked around the parking
lot area uncertalnll for about 10
or !! rqint:"...e:a ar.d th~n left.
. From Page A 1
BOB{l~RYr1.·.
reTI>lvtq door, dicbl't you know
that? But the way I see it, this
1uy'1 been in prison three or
four Umes and ht'a gotn1 to do
something again."
One of the women clerks of the ·
pbarmacy said, "l remember
being scared. He t.o1d us not to
make a move so we wouldn't get
hurt. Then he fired h1a 1un into
the floor.-"
She declined to give her name
because she said she didn't want
it known in the event that the
suspect was released. She said
she didn't ,know the suspect is a
convicted murderer.
Jury hears
analysis in
Atlanta trial
ATLANTA <AP) -A
Canadian acientlet teattfteJl.
today at Wayne B. WUUams'·
murder trial that hi• analysis ol
bak'a Jnd flben found on' the·
bodies of three slain youn1
blacks made blm ·•nearly
cert.am" the victims had some
contact with Williama.
OP the New York Stock
'East's storms like clockwork
Midwest braces for still another blast of Arctic cold
By Tiie IUIOdatecl Prete
A winter storm folJowing in
the tracks of last weekend's
crippler dumped up to three
inches of snow in the Texas
Panbandle today~ and the
Midwest was warned to cet
ready"°' another aasault.
It wu eQeCf.ed to be a repeat
of the atorm that left 51 people
dead ud thousands of tra.welers
stranded in -almost two feet or
snow in the Midwest qn Sunday
and Monda)'.
"Jt'a ll~o cart on a freight
trail\ comln1 down tbe track,''
,.id Mary Kaufman o' tbe
Nat.lOMl Weather Service in Ann
Arbor, Mich. "It ma)' be the
same even to the time or day U
)lits... '
B lowin1 •now reduced
vialblllty to near zero this
mornln,-1n 1'.marillo, Texas. Up
to four inches of snow was
expected. in North Texas and
parts of New Mexico.
"We've got a tot of accidents
and stranded cars," said Mabel
Abernathy, a deputy in the
Potter .Co'1ot,y sheriff's
department tn Amarillo. "The
roada are very slick and
dangerous, and With the blowing
snow the visibility is very poor."
Of th(( people killed in the
weekend snowstorm, 15 died in
Michigan, ,including 13 who
suffer~ apparent heart attacks
while shovelln1 snow and two
who froze t.o death.
By Monday; the storm had
moved Into the East with icy
floods, tr.:~ng rain and snow.
Ice chunks and water up t.o six
feet swirled through the streets
of OU Qty, Pa. 1 prompting the
evacuation of abou~ .so people
after water backed up behind a
huge Ice jam where Oil Creek
meets the Allegheny River.
~Photo, Page B2)
About 100 National
GuardsmeQ launched an U1*1lt
on the clo11ed streets of St.
Louis late Monday after the
cl1,>''• worst snowstorm ln 70
yean left neatly 14 Inches or
snow durlnB tbe weeke.,d. Arctic winda up to 40 mph
raked Colorado on Moeday in
the wake of a storm that
dropped up to 10 inches of snow
in the hllh country and 3 Inches
on the southeast plains. Another
snowstorm started today, and
bi tler cold weather was
expected.
A fierce ice storm made a
delicate spectacle of trees and
fences in nortb·central and
western Maaaacllusetts over the
weekend, but pulled down power
Waterslide victim
seeking $I · million
6
An Anaheim man who
suffered injuries when a
Plexiglass tube at the towerin1
Big 0 waterslide rupWl'ed last
August la suing the N$PC>rt
Beach operat.Ors and builders
for more thaa $1 million.
The ride, located ·in Orange,
stands up to 70 feet and was
closed to the public followin1 the
Aug. 9 accident. Accordlnl to a·
city building de pa r'tJDent
spokesman, the "aquatube" ride
remains closed.
Filing suit in Orange County
Boy, 9, given LSD
LOS ANG.ELES <AP> -A
9-year·old bo'y was given a
st1'k-on "tattoo" laced with LSD
at his school campus in West Los
. Angeles, a spokeswoman at
Queen of Angels hospital in
Hollywood said Monday.
Superior Court Monday was
Joseph Deterdine. 19, who
claims that he and another man
were left "tanging about 40 leet
above the ground when the tube
ruptured. Seven people in all
were reported injured In the
accident.
The Anaheim man is seeking
$1 million in punitive damages
as well as unspecified damaces
for medical bills. He also seeks
1eneral damages.
His lawsuit alle1es that the
tube ride had design defects and
waa not properly inspected.
The ride is owned by James L.
Herrell of Newport Beach.
Also named as defendants in
the legal action are the city of
-Orange, J .J . Kras Cumtruetioo
Co. and Radical Recreation
DeveJopers Inc., Genera.I
Electric Corp. and architect R.
John Beisch.
Now's the time to join a
Holiday Spa Health Club, while
·you can still take aclftntage of
eur 1981 rates.
better time than now to give
Holiday Spa a try. So stop by
today for a free guest tour.
Hol~Spa
HealthCIUb *,, Plus 1/2 off on a short
introductory course, and dis-
counts on all our other mem·
berships.
You'll get all of this year's
~facilities, for last year's prices.
Wtth separate, individually
specialized facilities and pro-
grams for men and women,
available every day. There's no
for Men and Women
1/2 off short course not available
at Torrance or West Lo~ Angdes clubs.
Costa Mesa 2300 Harbor Blvd ., CBehand Thrifty
· Drug>, 1714) 049-3368 .
Miuion Viejo 24401 Alicia Pkwy. at San D1ego
Freeway. 1714) 770-0822
Orange 622 Ea.st Kat.ella Ave .. West of Tustin
Ave., (714) 639-2441
Westmln11ter 6757 Westminster Ave., at Golden
West . 17141 894-3387
i'IHralth" 1).,.., .. l'•"l' n( A,,...nu 19111 •
· ll lV JI00'100\ AVM A.NV
OUR 1981 RATES LOOK GREAT
,,
I
•
1
'
..
l
j I
I
1# .....
"BEST ACTOR" -Burt Lancaster poses with daughter
Joanna at the New York Film Critics Awards in New York .
Lancaster won the Best Actor award for his role in the film .
.. Atlantic City ...
u .......
FILM WINNERS -Actress Diane Keaton and Warren Beatty
leave the New York Film Critics Awards dinner in New
York after winning a top award. Beatty's movie. ··Reds:·
was voted the best movie•of the vear. He directed and she
starred in it. ·
-
It wu a Uttl• more thU
tbe middle laillal that Rep.
Wtlllaa a. aatellfer•,
D·Cona., tot wronc when be
ro1e to welcome rectnUy
elected Rep. ....... ra BalleJ
&....U1. D-Conn.
Ra= sreete4 her u "tbe member of tbe HouH ot Repre11nt1tln1,
Barbara Balley Connecticut.''
Novelist Oralla• Gr ....
eaya threatl t.o a woman be
had known for yean
pronuited hlm to delve lnto
the underworld and writ•
what he calla a factual
account of crime and
corruption in Nice, the
French Mediterranean
coastal city.
The Brtilsh writer said be
bas been threatened for Ids
lnqulrles and he now carries
a pocket gas canister. In
addition, be told the London
Sunday Times, hi t
discoveries made him return
hls Legion of Honor
decoration to authorities ln
Paris. But they sent lt back.
Greene char1ed that Nice
is the haunt of the mol't
powerful criminals In the
south or France.
Connecticut Gov. WUllam
O'Neill, recovering from a
heart attack, says he'll be
back In the capital for the
opening or the legislative
session, and he's hinting that
he'll run for a full term iD
November.
O'Neill said he will return
part time beginning
Wednesday . He bas been
absent since Nov. 20 when be
was bospltali~ following a
heart attack.
The 51-year-old Democrat
stepped up from lieutenant
governor to governor shortly
before the death last ye•r of
Gov. Ella Grasso.
British composer Sir
Wiiiiam Walton has
completed his first major
works In 10 years in time for
the celebration of hls 80th
birthday.
Walton finished a
"Passacaglia for Solo Cello"
which Msdslav Rostropo.SCh
will premiere In London oo
March 16. Rostropovich also
will conduct the National
Sympllon-f Orcbeetr: cf
Wuhington, D.C., OD tour in
London this month, In the
first performance or
Walton's other new work,
''Prologo e Fanuasi,a." .
Walton, who Uves In a villa
on the Italian island of lschla
with his wife, Slllana, turns
80 March 29.
Fair weather on tap
California
l'elr Ulfo..Qlll W•-ld•Y Looi
-1tl to --• wlncb U to JO mpft _, llmn. Coesal '-• lonlQl>I, hlQll 10 W~y. W1119r '6.
DHPll• <l'lllty nlollls, mou ol
Sovt,,.rn c.llfornl• "-Id ..,lo., lelr
llllH end werm cie-,. el -1111,.,.,.,.
mld·WHk, I,,. Nellonet W••lller
Servi<• .. .,..
Intend 1-S4 lonlohl, hloh 7•
Wedneldey
EtM-..e, 119"1 verl•lll• wln<ls
tllrougll lllnl9'll •XUl!t -.t"'"Ht lo
WHI 1~1t knlOts eft-. WHI to
nonll.-t 1-t 1-J fwt. CINr slllft
Hc.epl for INlk!ly ...... fdl nf9hl -moml"I melnl., sout,,.rn •-rs
Fore<eal•rs utd lem"reluru
should <limb lo •bOlll 7S In Loa
A""IH. COHlel -1111 ... m.cllete
...... .,, -the lllQtl-rt
TM mefe"Y .,_Id be -10
....,.... ~ '" lhe -deMm •ncl U ....... '-' 114 mount.In'-''·
lJ .S. summary
Temperatures
111_ Me1llco ...., .,. penNnclle Of Al!Nn,
THH -• .,.... from • ,,..,,., Al~
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..
Orange CO. DAILY PtlOT/Tuetday, February 2, 1982 ,
-Wm Anaheiin . . .
bid for 1985
Super Bowl?
By ram> ICllOE•au. ...............
Do Aoahelm and Oran1e
County bave what tt takll to
hoat SUper 'Bowl XIX, XX or , xxn
Anabelm Mayor John
Seymour and a dtle1aUoD ot
Oranp County sovernment and
bu1lneu leaden believe lt doet.
The 19IS Super Bowl will be
held ln Puadena '1 ROH Bowl.
and tbe 1984 edition of tbe
annual football eluate la
1cbeduled to be '"'Id ln Tampa,
Fla., leavtn1 11185 as tbe first
pouible year a Super Bowl
could come to Anaheim
Stadium .
"In abort, we think we've rot
the f acWtles," Seymour said at
a preaa conference at the
stadium Monday.
He Hated the Anaheim
·Convention center, the county's
numerous hotel•, Disneyland,
Knoll's Berry Farm , the
county's many shoppln1 malla
and the local transportation
syst.em, locludinl John Wayne
Airport, aa asHtl that will help
Anaheim rank hilb u a poealble
Super Bowl locale.
Seymour sald 40 officiala
attendin1 a luncheon earlier
Monday expressed "unanimous
coruent" for brlnginc the Super
Bowl to Orange County.
"It's much more than a
football game . . . It's Ute a
Mardi Gras, an Indianapolla 500
or a Kentucky Derby,'· Seymour
sald. The game itself would
bring an estimated 50,000 to
60,000 pel"IODS to Orange County
and the lnflux would generate
about $50 to $60 million in
revenue, be said.
The next step lo attempting to
convince the National Football
Lea1ue to consider Anatielm on
tbe llat of poulble Super Bowl
altes ii formation of a •'Wk
force" that will make
presentatlona to NFL offlcls
durln1 mHtln11 In March or
June.
"It's no easy task," Seymour
conceded. "We need the poettlve
support of the NFL lncludloa
· <Commissioner) Pete Rozelle
and a majority of the franchise
owners.''
Seymour aald the "loptics"
or hoatin& a Super Bowl are
mlnd·bo11lin1. One thousand
cabs and 300 private limousines
might be needed, he said.
He strongly hinted that the
county's airport acce111 could
prove crucial. "In Detroit (at
the time or this year's Super
Bowl In nearby Pontiac> a
private jet was leaving the
airport every 30 seconds,"
Seymour said.
The mayor, who also is a
declared candidate for the state
Senate seat vacated by former
Sen. John Briggs, R·Fullerton,
headed an Orange County
delegation that traveled to
Pontiac. Others included
Anaheim Councilman E .
Llewellyn Overholt, Jr., City
Manager William Talley;
Stadium Manager Tom Liecler.
and Los Angeles Rams execu·
tive Dick Beam.
Seymour noted that Anaheim
Stadium, which now bu 69,000
seats , might have to be
expanded to 72,000 or 73,000 to
hold a Super Bowl. "But that's a
decision yet to be made and we
believe we can accomplish this
without major problems and
expense," be said.
Adjusting 'tough'
f Or kidnapped hoy
MERCED <AP> -Tbr nrdul ls over for 16-year-old Steven
Stayner, but some of the trauma
caused by ~11 seven-year
kidnapping rema.lnl.
Kenneth P~ell and Ervin
Mtlrply will be •entenced
Wednesday for snatcbin&
Stayner off a Merced atreet
three blocks from h1I home Dec.
4, 1972. when be wu 7;yean-old.
No one from the Stayner
family will attend the
proceedlnp in Alameda CotanlY
Superior Court.
The bilh Kbool junior ls more
interested in leading a normal
home lite after years of upset,
said h1I mother. Kay.
••You don't 10 through
something like that and come
out unscarred. That's an
impossibility,'' she said in a
telephone jnterview. "His
capacity to overcome, 1 thln.k, is
very, very areat. With a lot of
support on our side, from bil
teachers and his friends, I think
he'll come throu1h It OK."
Livinl under the.name Dennis
Parnell, Stayner kept up with
his education while be and
Parnell drtfted around Northern
Callfornla.
Stayner testified that he wu
sexually abused .bY Parnell,
beaan drlnklnc and smokinl at
aae 11 and bad several brushes
with the law over vandallam .
Re hu been back ~e for
al most two years and ii
consumed by "school,
girlfriends and just messing
around," Mrs. Stayner said. "He
blends m. Ile tries desperately
to blend in. A lot or people uk
quest.ions and so on. He's not too
crazy about it."
Steven earns spending money
~orklog part-time at a Wendy's
Old-Fashioned Hamburgers
restaurant. Home video games.
movies and hi&h-school friends
occupy his leisure time.
The long-loet son is treated
just the same as the Stayners'
other four children, his mother said. ..
"He's just one of the kids."
she said. "He does his chores.
He gets his bawllni out the same
as everybody else."
Stayner earned a reward when
he turned himself lo to Ukiah
po1ice with 5-year-old Timmy
White two weeks after the
younger boy was kidnapped in
what authorities contended wu
a scheme by Parnell to build a
family .
The money was earmarked for
college or trade school tuition,
but Stayner'• 1rades are poor .
"He's not $k>inl very well at
all, ln fact be's fallln&, because
be spends more time messlo1
around than studyin1. Like an
awful lot of 18-and 17-year-olda
today, he can't seem to l(f!ep bis
mind on school," Mrs. Sfayner
said. · ·
ELECTED -Orange Count~ '
Fair Board director Blfrr
Williams of Anabeim ha
been elected president of U.
board overseeing operatiOllS
at the Orange Councy
fairgrounds in Costa Men.
Williams was appointed to
the board in 1968 and al!I()
served as president in 1975.
ERA vote
rejected
by Virginie
RICHMOND, Va. CAP> -Ttie ,
Virginia House of Dele&litt!a
voted 62-35 Monday to rejeet a
proposal that would ha¥e
compelled it to debate and vofe
on the Equal Ri1ht's
Amendment.
It was the latest in a series Of
setbaclts for the constituUoaal
amendment to baia
discrimination baaed on sex.
Legislatures in Oklahoma,
llllnois and Geor1ia have
recently refused to raWy 0..
measure, which will die unlete
three more slat.es approve it :taiy
June 30.
Delegate Dorothy McDlardtfa
or Fairfax urged members ot._.
House to be remembered •
leeislators of courage ramft
than evasion, but her plea falM
-and with it apparently ·~
chance or Virginia ratlfylJtC
ERA. The ERA resolution now Is
before the House Privile1ea IOCil
Elections Committee, where ta
13-7 majority opposes f1w
measure. The committee mtlllt
reR.Qrt it to the House ffdbr
berore it can be debated liilll
voted on.
The committee for el.tbt
straight years has refused 'fo
approve resolutions calllnl f6r
ratification or the amendmeur'tb
the U.S. Constitution.
So far, 35 stat.es have ratlftlil
the amendment and three~
are needed. Complicatln1 ·• count is the fact that five atm
legislatures have reacindeCl
ratification. The legality of Ullil
action will have to be decJd1!11
ultimately by the Supreme Codft
if the 38-state goal is reacbdl lb
time.
Watt faces vote
on policy issue
WASHINGTON (AP> -~
House subcommittee will *
Thursday on whether~~ Secretary James Watt 1 . .
l)eld in coot.empt of Conrreu M-
retusing to turn over docu~
dealing with Canadian enBCY
pollcy.
President Reagan, cit~
executive privilege, ordett;_e
Watt to defy the panij1'9
subpoena in October.
1 A4 tf/f! •
illffiTI~OO [~J
Radioactive water··
·Bpill clearwd up
LOWER ALLOWAYS
• CREEK, N.J . (AP> -Workmen : bve mopped up some 23,000
aalloaa ol 1omlldly" radloactlve
•ater that 1pllled into an
auxiliary bulldin1 and 1plubed
1 • onto workers at the Salem I
Duclear power plant, officials
tald. .
About UI workmen "1ot their
feet wet, t.helr shoes, their IOClu
• and their trousers," taid Wes
Denman, 1poke1man for plant
operator Public Service Eleetric
" Gu Co. here of the Monday morninc accident.
Reagan urging
~re for j ob le•• .
WASHINGTON (AP> -
President Rea1an asked
Con1reaa Monday to provide
another $2.3 billion thla year lo
cope with the rising tide of
unemployed work~rs a~d to
insure that they will continue lo
receive benefits.
Since Reagan took office a
year ago, the unemployment
rate has risen from 7.4 percent
to 8.9 percent. About 9.5 million
Americans are out of work.
U.S. a id h ik e
for El Salvador.
WASIDNGTON CAP> -The
Reagan administration is
sharply escalating U.S. military
aid for El Salvador's embattled
government while disputing
recent reports that Salvadoran
troops massacred hundreds of
unarmed civilians.
Thomas Enders, assistant
secretary of state for
inter-American affairs, outlined
the administration's plan
Monday and assured Congress
that the military-civilian junta
c was improving its human rigt)ts
record.
GM prof i t• up
deapite sale• dip
DETROIT CAP> -Despite a 3
percent decline in sales, General
Motors Cotp. reported Monday
iu profits increased 56 percent
in the fourtll quarter of 1981
.-.. compared with the comparable
1980 period, eamln1 san mllllon
for the year.
The earnlnp report came on
the same day that GM dlrecton,
meetlnt In New York,
announced a shakeup of top
exectttlves.
Worki ng welfare
recip ient• h it
WASHINGTON CAP)
Thousands of welfare reciplenta
who work began to feel the
impact Monday of new federal
rules desiped to reduce their
benefits or force them off the
welfare rolls.
In most states stricter rules
took effect on how much people
can earn while drawin& Aid lo
Families with Dependent
Children, the $14. 7 billion
program that supports 11.1
million people, primarily
mothers and children.
' Treaaury b illa
continue c limb
W ASIDNGTON CAP) -Yields
on short-term Treasury
securities rose for the fourth
straight week in Monday's
auctions, reaching the highest
levels in four months, officials
said.
About $S billion in six-month
bills were sold at an average
discount rate of 13.846 percent,
up from the 13.53 percent of the
previous Monday.
Preaident OKa
change of pla n
WASHINGTON <AP)
President Reagan agreed
Monday to consider changing his
"new federalism" proposal lo
meet criticisms raised by state
apd local leaders, including•
trying to find a way to aid states
too poor lo take over pro1rams
the federal government now
pays for.
Reagan met for an hour at the
White House with governors,
state legislators and
congressional leaders, and
spokesmen said there was
general agreement to make tbe
plan work.
JURY VISITS MANSION The jury in the
trial of millionaire Claus. C. von Bulow steps
off bus to view his mansion in Newport. R.I.
They got a look at the pink marble bathroom
where Mrs. von Bulow was found unconscious
,,,.,.,,.....
Dec. 21 . 1980 after her husband allegedly
injected insulin into her body. Von Butow's
stepson, Prince Alexander von Auersperg.
claims his stepfather tried to kill his mother
because of love for another,woman.
Coin flip decides man's fate ·
·Jail senten ce reduced 10 d ays with lucky toss
NEW YORK (AP> -Justice is sometimes
literally a coin toss in Manhattan Criminal Court.
An 18-year-old man got sentenced to 20 days
instead of 30 last week by flipping a quarter.
Judge Alan Friess, who sparked controversy
when he· took a woman defendant home for
Thanksgiving in 1980, said he sanctioned the coin
toss la.st Tuesday to allow defendant Jeffrey Jones
"to decide his own fate."
Manhattan District Attorney Robert M.
Morgenthau, whose assistant, John Jordon,
prosecuted the case and provided the quarter.
called the incident "outrageous."
"I think the assistant DA was satisfied with
the plea and with the sentence," the judge said in
explaining his treatment of Jones, a Manhattan
man who had pleaded guilty lo jostling a woman
on th_e street in an alleged pickpocketing incident.
Jones, w,bo was accused of act_ing with two
others, was picked up a week ago today after
failing to appear in court lo answer charges
stemming from the Oct. 10, 1981 , incide;nt at 14th
Street and Union Square.
He pleaded guilty to jostling, a misdemeanor
carrylug a maximum penalty of one year in
prison. But Friess said that 30 days would be
•
approrpiale, considering Jones' age and the fact
he had never served any jail lime. Jones' lawyer,
Legal Aid Society attorney Michael Muscato,
asked for 20 days.
"I felt that the plea warranted a jail term,"
Friess said. "I had s uggested 30 days. His attorney
wanted 20 days. and at that lime, 1 determined the
scope of punishment and the interests of justice
would be served by e ither a 20· or a 30-day
sentence."
He said he told Jones· "I'm prepared lo allow
you. lo decide your own fate, and if you're a
gambling man, I'll permit you lo flip a coin fof
that purpose."
Jones was qlJoled as expressing skepticism
that he would be handed a "two-headed coin," but
, he agreed to toss a quarter supplied by the
prosecutor, who had taken no position on the
sentence.
Friess suggested tbe coin toss on hls second
day as a judge in Manhattan's Criminal Court. He
had been transferred from the Criminal Court in
Brooklyn where he came under fire in 1980 for
allowing a woman murder suspect to spend
Thanksgiving Eve at his Brooklyn townhouse.
•
emon·s
Polish ~
• pnces
WARSAW, Poland <AP> -"'I
Observers say an1er over the
Polhh 1overnment'1 bu1e
lncreuet In the price of food
and fuel may deveJop as the
impact is felt. But for now,
martial law appeared to be
keepin1 the Poles in Une.
The bi11e1t price hikes In ;
Poland's postwar blatory, '
ran•lnl from 200 lo <600 percent,
took effect Monday after a
propa1anda campal1n of
several week.a lo convince the
public the 1ovemment no 1001er
can afford the subsidies that kep
prices down.
Warsaw remained calm. One
big supermarket was nearly
empty, and an older woman
suegested that new prices kept
shoppe rs at home . Another
woman stopped at a counter,
gasped and walk_ed away.
ll was impossible lo determine 1 I the reaction lo the price hikes in
other parts of the country
because of a communications
blackout on telephone service
bet ween Polish cities since
martial law was imposed Dec.
13 . But no reports of
disturbances filtered into the
capital from the provinces.
Some observers auegested
since it was the tlrat of the
month, many people had not yet
received their ration cards.
The last major attempt to
rai s e food pri ce s In 1980
triggered nationwide strikes
that mu s hroomed into a
movement for economic and
political reform and resulted in
legalization of Solidarity, the
first labor union in the Soviet
Bloc free of Communist· Party
co ntrol. Martial law was
imposed 16 months later lo bring
the labor movement back under
the party's control.
Attempts to raise prices in
1970 and 1976 resulted in bloody
rip ts, and the government
canceled the increases.
PAP. the government news
agency, warned more shortages
were in s tore and renewed
c harge s farmers are
withholding s upplies from
government store~ to get hit;her
prices on the free market.
SPORTSWEAR
eee WESTCLIFF PLAZA
Newport Beach
.. WE'RE GOING OUT OF BUSINESS
CLOSING OUR DOORS FOREVER!
10-o ·o
\
I
~UillUU:
lnnoce.nt plea
in murder of Turk
LOS ANGELES <AP) -An
Armenian imml1unt char1ed
with murderlna Turkish Consul
General Kemal Arlkan could
receive the death penalty if a
Jury finds him 1uilty of
ambushing and killlnti lhe man
becauae ofhla naUonaflty.
Hanpig "Harry" Saasounian
pleaded Innocent in Municipal
Court on Monday to charges of
murder and using a handl\IJ\
while committin& a felony.
Los Angeles County District
.Attorney John Van de Kamp
filed the complaint Monday
alleging the slayin1 bad two
s pecial circumstances which
permit the death penalty under
California law.
Sassounian, a teen-ager whose
relatives have said he was
raised with a herita1e of
bitterness .against the Turks,
was ordered held without bail
because of those circumstances.
'Supe r-bullet '
ban back ed
SACRAMENTO <AP> -An
Assembly committee watched a
televis~d de monstration of a
"s uper-bullet " pier cing four
"bullet-proof" vests and two
telephone books, then voted to
ban such bullets in California.
U ,S. Dtat.rict Court JudMe A.
Wallace Taahlma scbedufed a
Feb. 12 meetin8 with attorneys
in the suit, med by the NAACP
las t April on behalf of the
district's estimated 120,000 black
students and future black
scboolcblldren.
Hls rulin1 Monday came hours
after the 9th U .S.· Court of
Appeals in San Francisco
rejected the school district's
appeal for a stay until the U.S.
Supreme Court decides a related
case on Callfomla's Proposition
1.
Campaign c u rb•
back ed by p anel
SACRAMENTo (AP) -The
Ca lifornia Fair P olitical
Practices Commission says it
will try, in the words of its
ch a irman, to "drive the
m o ney-c ha nger s from the
temple."
Specifi cally, the political
watchdog age ncy vot e d 4-1
Monday to try outlawing the
making o f campaign
contributions in the Capitol, and
try limiting the a mounts that
may be donated to legislative
races.
Frenwnt GM
worker• l aid off
FREMONT <AP> -Some
JU ...i ...icp · und t ,900 wo rke r s a t Gene ral nnn Wl.n S rO Motors' assembly plant will be
The bill now goes to the
Assembly Ways and Means
Committee.
• ., ...J h l la id off immediate ly for an lR L&tA SC 0 0 S case indefinite per iod becaus e of
LOS ANGELES <A p ) -The s 1 u g g is b a uto s a 1 es , the
NAACP won a r ound in its company says.
18-year-old battle for mandatory The la yoffs, a nnounced
infegra llo n in the nation's Monday, leave 2,500 workers at
second largest school district the plant that once employed
when a federal judge certified 6,800 during a peak period in
Its case as a limited class-action early 1979, said G~ spokesman
_la_w_s_u_it_. ---------"""K""'u~rt Antonius.
-AnnOwM:mg
...........
J UST A BABY -S ha rpi, a fe male African bus h ele phant.
keeps an eye on he r four-day-0ld baby Tavi as they stroll
around the ba rn at the Sa n Diego Wild Anima l P ark. Fe we r
t h an 10 African elepha nts have been bor n in captivity.
"
Nuke protest
f Orce jaiJed·
J
l
L•VERMORE (AP ) -
Activllt Dante! Ellaber1 and let
other protesters 1pent the n.llht
in jail after a blockade of a
weapons research lab ln the
bl11est anti -nucl e ar
de m9n1tration in California
since fall's mass arrests at the
Dlablo Canyon power plant.
In all, 166 demonstrators were
arrested Monday as more than
400 people chanted and beat
drums in a peaceful 2~·hour
demonat.raUon at the Lawrence
Uvermore Laboratory, about 30
miles eut of San Francisco.
Those arrested were cbar1ed
with oblt.ructlng a thoroughfare
or public place, said Lt. Larry
Roten of the Alameda County
Sheriff's Department.
Only four of those arrested
signed their citations, while
Ells berg and the rest ·'have
chosen to stay in custody'· in lbe
facility at Pleasanton, Roten
said early today. Arraignments
for the 166 were scheduled for
later this afternoon.
All face up to six months in
jail and a $500 fine on the
misdemeanors.
The protest was sponsored by
the Livermore Action Group, an
umbrella organization for 40
anti-nuclear groups tbrouihout
the San Francisco Bay area.
Jn September, nearly 2,000
arretU were made durln1 ~
demonat.ration.e at Pacific Gu fs •
Electric Co. 's Diablo Canyon
nuclear plant near San Lui1 13
Obl1po, midway between San _.,.
Franctaco and Lot An1eles.
•'This ls a factory for the first ~
nuclear strike," Ellsberc said of 11._
Monday'• protest at Uvermore 60 Lab. ua
Ell s b e r1 , wbo wa1 H
instrumental ln releaaina the
· · Pentaaon Papera'' during the •lit
Vietnam War, said that "without u
actions like thla, bombs would ,\J
still be falling on Vietnam." 11'>
He made his comment~ ·l
momenta before police lifted ~0 him to his feet to arrest him, as
a crowd across the street san1 R
"We Shall Overcome ....
The sheriff's department ~
o ffered thos e arrested
immediate freedom in exchaqe
for a promise to appear in court '~
later . But most refused to sign, l)
and were jailed overnight in the rir
county jail at Santa Rila , !)'\
offi cials said. l.•
Meanwhile, about 100 people r.i
attended a peaceful rally at lhe .,,
University of California at Los
Angeles at noon Monday in 1 i
s upport o f the L ivermore s-.
blockade. y f
Assembly backs hearings bill
The lab employs about 7 ,400 ~·
people. Several hundred came to } t
work at 6 a.m., an hour early,
because of a magnetic fusion •' expe riment, facility information '\
people said.
At about 6 :45 ..a .m ., the .a
protesters mostly kneeled or sat 11"
on the ground before workbound •'.:
ve hicles. University police ''
walked up and warned the ''>
d e mons trators they were ··l
trespassing and c ould be ~
arrested. After wdlting a few
moments , officers ordered 1
arrests.
SACRAM ENTO (AP) -The
state Assembly bas appro\'ed a
newspaper-s ponsored bill to
a llow a judge to decide whether
preliminary hearings are open
or closed. ·
The lower house voted 57·1
Mond ay fo r a compromis e
worked out by a ~wo-house
confere nce committee. The
Sen ate m us t no w vot e on
wh e th e r to acce pt th e
amendments.
Th e bill , AB 27 7 b y
Assemblyman Terry Goggin,
D·San Bernardino, would repeal
an 1872 law that requires closed
h e arings at th e c r i minal
defendant's request.
AB277 would allow a judge to
close the hearing if he found that
closure was "necessary in order
to protect the defendant's right
to a fair and impartial trial. ..
It would als o r equire the
police to make public their
information on arrest s and
c r im e in ciden ts -unless
disclosure would endanger a
witness or an investigation.
Goggin said the new version is
no longer opposed by police
groups.
Preliminary bearings are held
to determine if there is enough
evidence to keep a defendant for
trial. The hearings are closed in
onl y a s mall per centage of
cases.
Livermore city police also ~J
made arrests and contingents ol ;t,
the California Highway Patrol . )i
a.nd sheriffs office stood bv. 1
.)
Take-It-Off~
Quick . . .
. i~~
. progtamf~
.aster we6gbt Joa 1ndtTidual attention.
Techniques tor quick and permanent weight
control. Enrollment 11.mJted.
Pre-regiatration requ1red.
Breeze through tax time
in Home Federal Country. >II
1\1
·u
can today. ~ ttTtl
96+6400 ~
SEMINAR$ STARTING
WEEK OF FEBRUARY 22nd
Attention
K mart Shoppers
In our January 28, 1982
"99~ SALE" Advertisement,
the 1-Gallon Paint should
read 3 Quarts, 1 Pint, 14
Ounces.
We regret any
Inconvenience this may
have caused our
customers.
1HI AUIY SCHOOL
A c.lhoftc 8osdinO H!Qt'l'School
forboyt.
~HOLY CIOSS ' .A 8wmwr Camp for boys t to 14
~old.
-..~IL·~ed t>Y . the Benedictine Monks of
Cokndo In Southern Rockies. Country En-vtronment near lkl areas. C••••"'_.., . .-c· , ................... ,., .... c .. ...
... ·~· ....... Al ........... ..
Let profesffionals do your taxes this year.
At selected branches,
Home Federal now offers
accurate and professional
personal income tax prepa-
ration services from Tax
Masters~
Even if you 're not a
Home Federal customer,
you can still take advantage
of this time-saving-and
often money-saving-tax
preparation service.
If you 're a Home
Federal customer, you may
be eligible for discounts of
up to 75% off normal
charges. The total of your
new or existing Home
Federal Savings balances
will determine your dis-
count. (Due to Federal reg-
ulations, this discount does
not apply to tax-free
accounts.)
ACCURACY YOU CAN
DEPEND ON.
Tax Masters3 will help
you take advantage of every
possible deduction. And
they take full responsibility
for accuracy with a written
guarantee to pay any inter-
est or penalty resulting
from their mistake. You
pay only the correctly
computed tax.
To avoid the rush, re-
serve your date and time
IN ORANGE COUNTY,
CALL COI,J,ECT NOW
TO MAKE YOUR
APPOINTMENT
835-4336,
EXTENSION 343
today. Not all Home Federal
offices are offering tax prep-
aration services, so use the
number below. We'll sched-
ule you in a bra nch and at
the hour that's best for you.
During peak periods, we'll
be open in the evening and
all day Saturdays.
Make your arrange-
ments now. It's a great time
to open or add to your ac-
counts at Home Federal in
order to reduce your tax
preparation charges. The
higher your savings
balances, the lower your
tax preparation bill. It's
that simple.
HOME FEDERAL.
ALL THE FINANCIAL
SERVICES YOU NEED
UNDER ONE SAIL!
'
..
.... ..
\
Maureen Reagan pitches
international trade
lllTlllJll llll:l/flllTlll lllllY CAVALCADE
BUSINESS
82
83-5 to local group . . . 83
Countians paying property tax hills earlier
(
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL
O(&MDMty ...... IWI
Despite the malaise affecting
the nation's economy, 1982
Orange County property tax
payments are belne received at
a faster rate than one year llgo,
according to County Tax
Collector-Treasurer Robert
Citron in his annual listing of the
county's top ten taxpayers.
As or Dec. 31, Citron said,
$350.2 million. or 53.7 percent, or
the total property tax bill of
$ 6 5·3 . 8 m 111 ion h a d . been
collected. The comparable
percentaee last year was Sl.9
percent, he said.
While the number of
taxpayers who failed to meet the
December deadline for payment
of taxes increased sllehtly, to 8. 7
percent this year from 8.4
percent in 1981, Citron said more
taxpayers were opllnl to pay
both first and second
Installments al the same time.
Second installment payments
are not due until April 10.
Citron said changes in federal
income tax law likely resulted In
people paying both inslallmenta
LINING UP FOR BOOKS Stud ents at Orange Coast College
form a long line as they moved around construction area at
campus book store to temporary quarters in the rear
• Bailies named humanitiea dean
UC Irvine history professor
Dr. Kadall E. Balles baa
been appointed dean of the
UCI School or Humanities.
Bailes s ucceeds Dr.
wnnam ~. i:1111maa,
professor or German, who
last summer was appointed
vice chancellor ror academic
affairs at UCI.
•Career seminar set at library
Educator Caro l
Barke-Foa&e will conduct a
seminar titled "Skills
ldenUfi~ation : A Model for
Career Oeci.s!ons," Feb. 9 at
the Huntington Beach Public
Library on Talbert Street.
Ms. Burke·Fonte, who
worked in the fields of
1dvertlsin1, community
development and
fund . r ••• sin I
before Joinln1 the staff of
Golden West CoUe1e. said
the 1oal of the aemlnar ta to
enable participants 'llo
asaeas your skills for both
career advancement and
career change."
Objecttves of the
three·bour seminar will be to
Identity the types of skills
needed in a variety of
careers, outline the types ol
careen avaUable to people
with a variety of experienee,
hi1hU1ht 1trate1ies UHd by
employers ln aelect1n1
employees and describe
cbaracteri1Ucs employer•
look for when con1lderln1
promotion.
The aemmar wUI run from
8 to 9 p.m. ReliatraUoa fee ta
$20.
• Ap~hian folk mruic •lated
10• •ee.ullieea and a1c11
aa• Lerratae L•• will
pre1eat a pro1ra m of
AppalHtilan folk mu1lc at I e.m. Feb. 3 ID the UC lrvtM ' nne Ar1I Oancert Hall.
Ttckea for tbe concert are
'5 for 1eneral admillloa. sa
for UCI atudeilta, '4 for other
1tudent1. aemor ciUaena, UCl
staff, faculty and Alumni
A11oelatton memben. Por
more Information call
933""19.
r.rlor to the Dec. 10 first
nslallment deadline.
He said "blue collar and lower-paid wtllte collar workers
who have been more directly hit
by the recession," were those
unable to meet their first
installment oblieatlon.
The county 's top five
taxpayers, and amount! of their
1982 tax bills, are: lhe Irvine
Company, $11.3 million; Pacific
Telephone , $11.2 million ;
Soulhem California Edison Co.,
$8 .5 million ; Rockwell
International, $3 million, and
General Telephone Co., $2.6
million. Ranking for those five
firms were the same as last
year.
Rounding out the top 10 tbla
year are Hu1hes Aircraft Co .•
$2.4 million; Union 011 Co .. S2
m il lion ; Walt Di s ney
Productions . $1.8 m i llion ;
McDoMell Douglas, $1.7. and
Chevron USA Inc .. $1.7 million.
Hughes advanced to sixth
from 10th place last year ; Union
slipped to seventh from sixth:
Walt Disney edged down from
seventh to eighth: Mc Donnell
Douglas went to ninth from
elehtb, and Chevron went to 10th
from 12th. /
Fluor Corp., $1.6 million .
Mobil Oi l , $1 4 million,
Beckman Instruments Inc .• $1.2
million, and Southern California
Gas Co., Sl.2 million. placed 11th
through 14th this year, Citron
reported.
The top 10 taxpayers paid 7
percent of the total $653.8 million
tax bUI, a percentage identical
1.o last year, he s aid.
Citron noted in his report that
during the rtrst six ::?1ntba of fiscal year 1981·82, le be&an
July 1, the count'f' tr sury
reaped interest in~~ll f •1
million. up 39 percent over the
$58 million earned In the same
pe riod in 1980. The county'•
current yield on investments la I 17.66 percent, Citron said.
The county treasury invests
money for ,170 taxing a1enclea in
the county. Amone them are
school districts, water and 1
sitnltary districts and other
special service districts.
Some college classes available
~
By PIOL SNEIDERMAN oi .. Deity ...........
D4'spJte fears that an early
bait to registration might be
necessary, Coast Community
College officials said Monday
that students can continue to
sign up ttils week for some
spring semester coorses.
As in past years, registration,
with a few new restrictions, will
continue through the first week
of instruction.
Classes began Monday at
Orange Coast College in Costa
Mesa, Golden West College in
Huntington Beach and Coastline
College, which is based in
Fountain Valley but offers
instruction throughout the Coast
district.
The district has attempted to
control its spring enrollment
because the state has said it will
provide additional funds to
cover only 2.5 percent growth in
the 1981-82-school year.
District officials eliminated
abo1.1t 700 classes from the
spring schedule in an attempt to
curtail an enrollment surge.
District Chancellor Norman
Watson said Monday he believes
the spring enrollment will bring
the yearly growth percentage
close to the 2.5 percent limit.
The most severe late
enrollmelft restrictions this
week will be in effect at
Coastline College, which grew
an unanticipated 20 percent in
the fall semester.
John Breihan, associate dean
for admissions and records. said
no in-class registration will be
permitted in filled Coastline
classes this semester.
In the past, students who were
not pre-registered have been
able to sign up in fllled classes
during the first session. lf the
teacher approved.
This year. teachers are not
.+lowed to exceed their
pre-determined class limits,
Breihan said. This will apply to
about 400 classes that already
are considered closed.
Breihan added. however , that
students can still sign up in 800
classes.
He said Coastline already has
registered about 23,000 spring
students, down 2 percent from
the fall.
Jn further efforts to control
~rowth. Coastline offiC'ials have
LOOKING FOR HOUSING Orange ,Coast
College students inspect hug"e bulletin board
Deity "9t,......."' Gery..-
f i 11 e d w ith card:-. from different cit ies
announcing where housing 1s available.
ca nceled some n ine-week
courses they had planned to
offer at mid-semester .
_ Also, about 200 additional
Coastline classes were canceled
because they had not drawn the ·
minimum 18 pre-r egister ed
stude nts by one week before
classes began.
Regi stratio n in s pring
televised Coastline courses is up
about 10 percent to about 4,300.
District officials said they are
n o t concern e d about the
television s tudent in crease
because it has little effect on lhe
cost of offering the class.
At Orange Coast College,
a bout 25 ,300 stude nts were
re g i s t ere d b y M o n d a-y ,
according to Kenneth Mowrey,
dean of admissions and records.
This was about a 4 percent
increase over spring 1981 ,
though the college was aiming
for zero growth, Mowrey said.
H e added. however. that
registration will continue as
scheduled ·ws week at Orange
Coast and that teachers will be
permitted to allow additional
students mto the ir classes if they
wish.
The same procedure will be in
effect at Golden West, which had
about 19,000 students registered
Monday, according to Fred
Garcia, dean of admissions and
records.
He said the total 1s 4.3 percent
below the spring 1981 figure but
added ... In terms o f our
rei;tistratson target, we·re just
about where we want to be."
Garcia also noted thllt Golden
West for the first time offered a
series of community service
classes. including art and dance,
on a fee basis ($10 to $40). He
said more than half of the 51 fee
classes lured the required 18 or
more students.
Valley mulls
changes in
campaign law
Fountain Valley City Council
will consider a change in the
local campaign contribution law
tonight. raising t he permitted
anonymous donation limit from
$10 to $50
The council meets at 7 p m.
for a study session, followed by
the regular meeting at 8 p.m. in
the council chambers, 10200
Slater Ave
If the proposed campaign
contribution change is approved
tonight and al a second reading
in two weeks. it will take effed
immediately after the second
approval.
Huntington firemen
keep busy in 1982
Huntington Beach fire officials
--s117 the new year baa been
"disastrous" because 25
buildings have caught fire ,
equaling one-third the total
• damage caused by all bulld.ini
fires in 1$81.
Fire Captain Roger Hosmer
says this year's fires through
Mo~da y c aused $402 ,000
Valley board
seeks middle
school ideas
Fountain Valley School
Dlstrlcl trustees will seek
commenta tonl1bt from parents
and other community members
on a recommendation to create
a middle school system ln the
elementary dlstrict.
The publJc bearing wUI be&ln
at 1 p.m. in the district'• new
headquarters, 17210 Oak St.
The tnaatees are conalderinl
an advisory commlttee'a
recommendation that the
dlatrlct set up a aertea of middle
scboola for sr.-.a tbrouab
el1bt. Fountain Valley lthooll
now are arran1ed to offer
klnderaarten tbrouah et1hth
srade at a •inele site.
The bOard ta expeeted to make
ltl dedllOD on the middle school
recomme8dauon at lta replar
meeilnl 'l'IManday nlpt.
damage, compared to $1.2
million aam~e from 271
building blazes last year.
"January wa s just
disastrous," Hosmer said. "We
hope that things calm down. At
this pace, fire loss (for 1982)
would surpass the last two
years' loss put together."
In 1980. 360 building fires
r esulted In $1.9 million of
destru c tion . Hom es or
apartments make up about 75
percent of building fires ,
Hosmer said.
No one bas been kllled in a
building fire in this coastal city
of 170,000 people since 1979.
Seven people died in home fires
in that year.
For the past two years, the
leading causes of structure fires,
have been careless cookln1,
arson and smoklna acddenta
Hosmer says.
However, he aaya there's no
explanation for the rash of
costly fl.res ln the fint 33 days ol
1982.
He aald causes of the recent
fires haven't been determined
yet but at least two are
suspected arson. Fires have
included 18 home s or
apartments, five commercl••
bu.Udinp, one achool, and the
EdJaon Co. electrical plant on
Pacillo CoHt H'1hway and
Ne•lud Street.
Laat year, 4' llrea were
c:auaed b)' c:areJesa cookin1. 31
by al'IOft, anct 22 by 1moktna
accldents. Holmer said. .
THE . LOOK PROUD ·NEW Of THE
SEA HAWK~
l
'
Emphasiz e ivhat'S
wofth exporting
11 KEl'nl TUBER '
Ody ..................
Maureen Reaaan , chief
, executive officer of Sell
Overseas America , told
members of the, media and
World Trade Center A1111oclatlon
of Orange County that "It's
tt'me to get up off our backsides"
and do someUnc to reverse the
United State's lnferlor position
in international trade.
''The answers are at home,"
Ms. Reagan said Monday at the
Registry Hotel in Irvine. "We
taught the world !.verything
about sale! and Dlarl<eting, and
now our students are kicking us
in the backside. It's time we got
the word otlt that we .taught
them everything they know, but
not everything we know."
In her speech, "Promoting
export for American
businesses," Ms. Reagan said
the public has been on the wrong
side or the looking glass the last
15 to 20 years.
"It's very easy to blame U.S.
business and industry for the
country's woes. especially
during the las t 10 years," Ms.
·Reagan said. ·•But we haven't
been <Joing that much wrong
we'Fe still the world's biggest
marketplace. We just need to
export more."
Ms. Reaean used the ailing
auto industry as an example or
being on the wrong side or the
looking glass.
"What's wrong with the U S.
auto industry was the 1973 Arab
oil embargo, when our tastes in
automobiles changed 180
degrees in 24 hours • ·' she said.
··we we re told it would take 20
years to turn tbe industry
around. But it wasn't that the
competition in Japan, Germany,
and other countries were more
far sighted -they just had their
own self interests ''
In t h ose countries, Ms .
Reagan said, narrow streets,
crowded metropolitan areas.
historically high prices of
gasoline and a lack or sufficient
parldna have required the
production of smaller, more
fuel-efficient vehicles.
She said that in only elaht
years. the U.S. al.Ito induttry hQ
been able to turn around
production and provide more
compact economical cars.
'·Look at the good side of the
story . see how good we are and
how good we can be."
Among the solutions Ms.
Reagan said would help solve
the U .S. international trade
defi cit are to rebuild the
language structure (less than 20
percent or the nation's colleges
require knowJedge of another
language for entry, she pointed
out>. involve labor unions, pass
a trading company act auowm(I
banks to take part in ownership
or trading companies and rally
more community in vol vemenl.
''There are some 380,000
manuracturing companies in the
country, and only 30,000 have
been involved in exporting," s he
said.
Her company. Sell Overseas
America (SOS >. is an
o rganization dedicated to
promotion of U.S. trade, and
boasts an active membership of
more than 2,000 companies -
including such corporation~
as Bank or America, Union
Bank. Occidental Petroleum,
US. Steel, Exxon and Allergan.
In an interview before her
speech . Maureen Reagan, as a
candidate for the U.S . Senate
seat currently held by Sen. S.I
Hayakawa, said s he is In the
race for good despite the
ca mpaign managers of
opponents who say s he will pull
out and orrer them her support.
"I'm in it and I'm going to win
it and that is the end," she said.
She added that her father.
President Reagan, as leader of
· the Republican party would
remain neutral.
S he co ncluded her
pre s entation as Maureen
R eagan . daughter or the
..
WE'RE A LOT MORE THAii
A BELL Oii Y-•LL
a.i..nO 1119 -Betvnd .... ta moue Seac:o••• thcker -•net all IN -9-d.f,,. .,.
on>lect-~ ......... .,..,,,,...,. .~.,.,,. ....
""'-w ..... on-...-lllf on
~_,., .. 991 ... _..
I" I ,,..tt>y 2•-llo11<•1-41y
cet>lrll IUllOft ti I,,. 1iQne1
'"d1c1te1 lire burol•rv 0t
-..... -colt .... POl'CI Of ~ .. ..,.,._,.
s ...... °" oenlrll 11.Clon ..
U L llwled OJI oentfli .. .,.,,,
Cul l_.. can QU&lily '°' 1
1•11b1e d11count on '"•" .,._
A/Id IO "'""-°" -mike r .. oonM hrne •"•" '-·--~ •• '• co""outeri1tno o"''
llotlon
But ·~n11 .,." 1 new
to 8-W.'W-llllllflo b91• tor 21....,. And IOdly-re,... ,.-W "' '""' NCuniy b<lofneu"'
.,. - -.,.,, .,... 10000 CUii.,,,.... •nclull•nv • • ..,. ronoe ol 009 1no •-II re1111 """'''""' 1no _............, .
To""" OUI ....... ....,... """ s.co... _...,.., .... .,., -'• "' """"' Oy °"' ,,_ •oc.•4v •I 2488 N--1
8MI a.i.Mll&
EXPRESSIVE Maureen
Reagan talks to World Trade
Center Association m I n ·inc
president a nd ,actress Jane
Wyman.
"lt's runny," Ms . Reagan
said. "Up until 1966 I was known
as Jane Wyman's daughter.
Maybe the cycle is coming
a round again." The statement
was made in reference to her
mother's role on the popular
weekly tel~vision series ,
"Falcon Crest."
•
-· • •
Orange Cout DAILY P1LOT/Tuelday, Febru•ry 2, 1982 ..
I ••••• lac. of Garden Grove ~ net
Income for the third quarter ended Dec:. 17 of
$3&C,OOO, or 31 ctntl a rhare, a 5e per~nt tncreaae
over the $247,000, or 20 centl, tamed in the
corre1pondJn1 period laat year. Sales lncreued 14
perceat to $9.2 mutton from $8 million.
* The or1anlaere of tbe propoaed California
Mekont 8aak were 1ranted a letter of approval to
or1ani~ the nation's first Vlel$lameae·Amer1can
bank by the Callfornla Department or Bankina.
The proposed bank proposes to be headquartered
in Orange County. • Work bu beeun on redecoratina all of the
existing 377 rooms and suites ln the Newport
Beaeb Marriott Hotel & Teanta Club. Cost of the
project, expected to be completed by May, ia in
excess of $2 million. • A Fl•r Corp. subsidiary and SNC/FW Ltd. or
Montreal have been jolnlly awarded Phase II
engineering to develop the deslcn. conatructJon
schedule and capital and operaUne coata for a
proposed $1.2 billion heavy-fuel-oil up1rader.
Value of lbe award to Fluor Canada Ltd., which
will carry out lts portion of the wofk from jts
engineering office in Caleary, was no( disclosed.
Another Fluor subsidiary , Daniel
Intematiogal, has been selected by Merck Sharp &
Dohme of West Point, Pa., to provide design,
procurement and construction services for a $30
million pharmaceutical complex at Wilson, N.C.
Value of.the contract to Fluor was not disclosed.
*
'705,000, or• centa, on •alee ot tlO.S mtwoa. • Westlaacb 8 Hk of Santa Ana potted n.w
hltb• in operatin1 reault.t in 1181 on ~ bait.. of
unaudited n1ures. For the Utree moothl ended
Dec. 31, the fourth quarter, net income totaled a
record $389,000, or 15 cent.I a share, up ao percent
from $299,000, or 20 cent.I a ahare, In lhe year
earlier period. Net Income inchuSet 1112,000, or 4
cents per shar e. from aaln on aeeurltlea
transactions In 1981 and a losa of $2,000 in 1980.
* Nuclear MedlHI 81rtem1 lac. of Newport
Bbch reported net Income of $34,514, or 1 cent a
share, on r.evenuet of Sl.l million for the three
months ended Nov. 30. Thia compares to net
income of $22,717, or 1 cent, on revenues of '438,867
for the second q~arter or fl.seal 1981. For lhe rlt
months ended Nov. 30 net income wu '73.20', or 2
cents. on revenues of $1.8 million. For the year
earlier period, net lncome was '76,999, or 2 centa,
on revenues of $901,568.
Lockheed reports
$289 lllillion loss
BURBANK (AP > Lockheed Corp. has
reported a 1981 loss of $289 million, saying Its
decision to halt production of the L-1011 TriStar
had resulted in an aftertax writeofr of $396 million.
E IP Microwave Inc. of Newport Beach has . The net loss per share for 1981 was $18.03
received a $1.7 million contract for microwave p~1mary and $17.17 fully diluted, Lockheed said,
pulse frequency counters rrom the U.S. Army with the per share net loss in the fourth quarter
Communications· Electronics Command, Ft. $21.68 primary and $21.17 fully diluted. rn 1980, the
Monmouth, N.J . ae_r~space company reported net income of $27.6
• m1lhon and per share earnings or Sl.53 primary
The board of directors of EECO Inc. of Santa and $1.50 fully diluted.
Ana has declared a quarterly cash dividend of 7 Lockheed said it had earnings from continuing
cents a share, payable March 1 lo shareholders of operations or $155 million, up from $135 million in
record Feb. 16. 1980. The company s aid primary per share * earnings from continuing operations were $9.27 for
Ultra.systems loc. or Irvine has adopted an 1981 .. up from $8.87 a year ago. Fully diluted 1981
employee stock ownership plan to be efrective earnings per share from continuing operations
Feb. 1. The new ESOP is designed to provide were $8.89. Lockheed said, up rrom $8.04 a year
employees or the company with an opportunity to earlier
acquire an equity interest in their company's stock Program profits from continuing operations-in
and to build incentives for the company's success. l981 were. $461 million before interest expenses of
It is anticipated that beginning in May and $186 m1lhon, Lockheed said, compared to 1980
continuing through January 1983 the ESOP will program profits or $343 million before interest
s pend $300,000 and $500 ,000 purchasing shares or expenses of $106 million
Ultrasystems' common stock on the open market. Lockheed Chairman Roy Anderson noted that * the decision to phase out production or the jetliner
EECO Inc. or Santa Ana reported net income also resulted in a $70 million after-tax loss
for the fuJI 1981 year amounted to $1.1 million, or associated with L·lOll operations for 1981. In 1980 ,
46 cents a share. on ·sales or $36.1 million. This r.=th=e=c=o=m=p=a=r=a=b=le=l=o=ss=w=a=s=$=108=m=il=li=o=n=. ========:::;-compares with income from continuing operations
of $2.3 million, or 95 cents, on 1980 sales of $42.6 If The Bid For Your Solar Hot Water
million . Net Incom e for 1980, Including Exceeded The Gas Company Limit
discontinued operations (dis position of
investments in Siliconix>. was SS.2 million, or -CAI.I. US -
$2.14. For the three months ended Dec. 31, net SOLAR D.A YS (2131 355-1015
income totaled $324,000, or 13 cents, on sales of $9.2 l.C.S. COM'f'liCTOI
million. Net income In the 1980 fourth quarter was,~============================
--------14lhJ.; -------
TWO STEPS 'TO I . .
BTIREllENT FORTUNE.
Start a tax-sheltered, insured IRA or
Keogh Account at Gibraltar.
Announcing new retirement benefits for 1982.
No'?', working individuals may deposit up to $2,000 per
year it)to an IRA. Self-employed persons may deposit
up to $15,000 Into a Keogh account. Deposits are)BX -
deductible and interest earned is tax-deferred.
·'
Iii\ SEACOAST \l~RITY~ 2488 NEWPORT BOULEVARD • COSTA MESA
CALIFORNIA • 92627 • (71•! 6•2·3•90
Fixed Rate. Ealll514%, compounded semi-annually.
Term is 18 months to 5 years. No additions accepted.
Rate~ during this month.
Variable Rate. Earns 26-week T-Bill discount rate + 1/2%,
comp<>Unded daily. Term is 18 months to 10 years.
• ManttQ• Your
Budget
• Track
lnveetment•
• O.mea for
The Famlly
• L.Mm to
Progr11m
0 A
Rate varies on entire b~ every 26 wttks. Additions
accepted. Substantial interest penalty for early withdrawal.
No trustee fee o n new accounts for 1982 tax year.
Free! lnterest-Earri.ing Checking with your account.
Only $1,000 a year-$2 .74 a day-could
lead to a million dollar retirement.
A wealthy, secure tttirement can be more than a
dream. The chart at right tells the story.
Let's suppose your 14% account continues to eam that
rate until you ~ at 6S. Depending upon your present
age, your account could grow to a ttmarkable siu.
For oample: By making annual deposits of Just $1,000
over 36 years, you could rttitt with well over a million
doll an. And nearly all of it would be in interest earned.
Remember, too, that if you depOlit the maximum $2,000
per year, you'll have twice as much money.
Check with our expert Retirement .t\ccount
Counselon at your narat Gibraltar offke.
IRA ACCOUNT GROWTH
Atendol 0.polk O.pollt yu1No. Sl.000/yr. , S2,000tyr.
s s 7,6!7 Sl5,374
10 S22.951 $4.5,902
15 SSJ.2.54 S106.S08
20 $113,416 $2.26,832
25 $232,&59 5465.m
30 ' $169,996 $1)39,992
35 $940.796 Sl,881,.592
4.0 Sl.815.501 SJ.7'1,002
.SAVINGS .
..
1
i
Plvbor s.&erpriaee, the company that pubU1hff Playboy ma1a1lM, baa Juat wbippecl Olroqb a cllmac:uc ,..,. , ODe tbat will probe IQ ataoct • •
tumJD' .PQiDL The cau.U. la: "What will 1t do
next?' ti jou'bav• any ldeu, Hild them ln <Playboy
la headquartered at llt N. IOcb11an, Cblc:ato eotll).
Tbe company eooo ei~c:U to have ln its cub box
about SlOO milUon, and lt'1 lookin1 for useful lhlQ,. to
do. Wbat'I useful dependl, of courte, on bow you
define that term.
Rev. Jerry Falwell of tbe Moral Majority
woutdn•t find much that Playboy does to be useful,
althou1h he would probably approve of tbe way the
company moved in 1981 to set rtd of a buncb ol
operatiOOJ. In 1181, Playboy Enterprises dld the
followtn1:
-Sold Oul m11uine.
-Aireed to sell its 1amblln1 cumos In Britain. -Acreed to HU Us alx bingo parlors In Britain.
-Aireed to tell its two resort hotels at Lake
Geneva, Wia., and Great Gor1e, N.J .
That's a lot or r
action . Those ~ p r o p e r t t e s \';
represented nearly ~. 0
half of Playboy's :-1:1
total sales . The ... ~-·~-':...~ ... ------
reasons for the llDll lmlRm sellorts had nothing
lo do with Jerry
FalwelJ's opinions. The two resort hotels and Oui
magazine we~ consistent money·loaers -hence the
decl1l0n to get rid or them. The gamblift1 operalions
are another story. Tbey were so profit.able that if not
for them the company wouldn't have made any
money.
So why &et rid of them?. Bee a use the company
was virtually forced to do so a~er authorities lo
London ref\ised to renew Playboy's licenses on the
ground that unsavory -and unlawful -acUvities
were going on in the Playboy casinos. Playboy feeb
it wu the vicUm of anti-American prejudice in
F.;ngland, but l'atber than ngbt by appealing to the
Crown Court, it decided to take the money -and run.
It's from disposition of the gambling operations
in Britain and the two resort hotels in the United
States that Playboy will realize its $100 million -in
cash. And that's why it needs ideas on where to put
all that cash. The one major new venture on the
horizon is a "Playboy Channel" for .pay television.
That·a expected to get going by the end of fbis month.
Playboy founder Hugh Hefner describes it u "a very
excitlng exteMion of the maguine, because what we
intend to do is quite literally turn the magazine into a
pay television phenomenon."
It's not that Playboy has given up the gambling
business. It has a partnerah1p with a company called
Elsinore in the Playboy Hotel and Casino that opened
in Atlantic City last AprU. The hotel bas SOO guest
rooms, and the casino has 1,300 slot machines. But
the company still doesn't have a permanent license
from the Atlantic City authorities -and one of the
big reasons for fleeing Britain waa to avoid
jeopardizing the chances of getting uns license.
What else does Playboy Enterprises do? It
operates another casino in Na'asau in the Bahamas; It
publishes Games magazine; it bas a book publishing buslnea~ (Playboy Pl"ess. Seaview Books, Wideview
Books, Playboy Paperbacks, Playboy Book Club); It
owoa a company. Boarts Inlernatlonal , that
distributes U.S. magazines and paperbacks
overseas; it bas a luxury-limousine service in Los
Angeles; and it has model agencies in Chicago and
Los Angeles.
09! J!~~. &!~[.~
.. , Maftll9y, ..... I. ldTOCKS ........................ .
JO Ind °l::s. ~ ~ =-~ JO TN\ ..U.U ,,._01 MlAO ,_...._ UI IS Ull -ts l07_.. *·11 ,..,,._ t .'1 ., $111 m .. Dl.21 DUS~ s.• ''"''" •.ID.•· Tre11 1~-~ni~ ... ,:=:
WHAT STOCKS DID
HEW Y°"I( IAPI 1'91>. I
-T MICXQD
T~
1153
'" , ..
" •
HEW Y°"I( (AP) '1tlo. I
rocr,1 ,,, .. m 7 u
......... ma 01 ru , ..
" IS
""" ~ '" "' -• 1
TITANIC MODEL -Cecil Gates and his
wife, Pat, pose with his 22·foot model of the
RMS Titanic at the Southern Cahfornia
boat show in Los Angeles He spent ei ht
bEATHS .
ELSEWHERE
APPLE VALLEY IAPI
G lenn Darwin, 69. the
Army AJr Corps ' "Singing
Sergeant" who ascended to
New York's Me tro politan
Opera and performances
for heads of state. died
Friday
S AN FRANCISCO I AP>
Germ an-born art ist
Satty-Wllfrted Podricb, 42.
whose eerily complex
collages became famous
during the psyched elic era
or the 1960s. died Sunda~
Pilot logs
milestone
A Marine helicopter
pilot reached a n
aviation milestone at
MCAS (H), Tustin.
Lt. Col. James 8 .
Barr, fl ying a CH-S3D
Sea Stallion, clocked his
4 ,OOOth accident-free
flight hour in a Marine
aircraft.
Flying both
h elicopters and
fixed -wing ai r c raft,
Barr began amassing
flight time while al
Pensacola, Fla .. in 1965.
LA p roject to start
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Groundbreaking is
planned this fall for a $1.2 bilHon downtown
development on a five-block area of Bunker Hill
vacant since crumbling Victorian-era mansions
were razed in the 1960s .
Or1ngeeo.t DA.ICY PtLOT/TUffday, Fe.bruyr 2. 1982 ..... .....
..........
months building the replica of plywood and
fiberglass and hopes to find a sponsor for
.... , ...
~I.,,. Or ..... ~ Deity ,.llo4,
"-•· 2, t, 16, U. HG 1312
f'ICTITICIUI eU.INHI
MMIUl ITAHMalfT
TM 1e1-.,. --ere 0011'9 llOISh .. UM.
HOLISTIC NUTltl TtOHAL. jJltODucn. LTD . Dt&l9'I Pleu, 210 Newpotl Ce11ter D•l•t , Newport an English tour.
l'tCTITIOUI •UltM•ll NAMa ITAftMeNT
Tiie lollowl"t PorlOll I• oolftt b\ltllleUH.
111 J AYNA ASSOCIATES·
ENTERTAtNlltS, 121 J AY
MIL.llUltN, H01 We,_. A,,.., S11lw
JI, H11nt"'910I\ llH<ll, Ca. m.. Jemea Mlltlllm Stnllfl, M2 ,_,...
Dr • H11llllllQllOI\ llH<ll, Ce n.tt
Thlt l>llslneas 11 <-..Ct..S bf Oii
11\111•1-I
J-.MllllumSmltft
Tllll llOt-i WM ttled wltll IM
COUtllf Cteo ol Or ..... County on J.,,wirf IS, t"1
f'ICTITIOUI eut1•eU e.ec:.,,'i:· =...... 0-rel Part_., MAMe ITATeMe•T JO F .... ,... Tll• lollowlllt "''°" I• dO ll\t ~SI ...... A .... ~ llH<ll, Ce '~~::!::!~"::' ..., .. ,... ... : Jeo ut .... Getwfet ... ..-.. JOI SHC ASSOCIATES, 210 A,,...lde Forett A,,.., u_.. llH<ll, Ce. f2'5I f'ICTITICIUI •UlllHU .,..!1';!.~0~~-lllt peraofl& ere dol"t Del Mer, S.,ltt IA, Sell Clemet1te, Tiit& bualllest It <C>ftduCled oy e
NAMe ITAT•MUfT CENTUltY COUlttElt S£1t\/IC£. C•llforlllamn llmlted ...,,,.,.. .. ,p. Tiit lollowlftt pertott h dol119 Cllrhllne C He11rl<I<, Jlltl Jeu UHH, -'11euu· 2U21 p-Dt lf•l•11<I•, L., ..... N•l..,,,.I Petti or1 ... ~... ........ O....et ,..,_
PILO-Gl!NIC Of' HOLLYWOOD. Hiii~;.~~~ 7111 Jltt Slnet Cellfornlen.77 Tlllt -..-t wM filed wltll Ille
ll Quiet Moon, tn11M, Ce. '211' Wettml-w CAI~• t2'G • Tllla ..,_,,.... It <Oftclu<led •Y • County Cl-of 0r.,.._ COUftl' °"
,._ !Y1P1."-', t1Qulet ~. lrvlne, 1110._.,.;. M911dl El<Wfate, M2 llmltMpett~ J_,, u .1ta. ..... T• • Orlttlne C Haflrkk flllHQ
Tllll """"-• 11 <-I-I> a11 WHI . "°"" Or1w. Ho C, G-.ie, Tllla ..__ •• fltecl wllll tlle Pliltll-0r.,. CMlt Deity f>llot
hldl¥1«Nel y c.tt'-ftlo elm C-'Y Cter1l Of Or..._ ~y M JM. It -FOi> 2 t 1---kY'P Su-Tllll ..... lllKI It COl\du'tad l>Y • J-ry 12. 1m • -• • -•-... •
Tiit. .......,._t WM Ill.ct wllJI ttw feMr•I ~ Piil ..
C01111ty Cl«k of Or-COOlllty °" Tllti ~ 0.:: flled wlltl W ,....,.,.. Or ... CMll Delly Pllo4, ..C llTI(
J.,,wiry IS, 1112 COOlf'lly Cl-of 0.-Coul\ly .,, JM. 26, ..... t, t, 16, ttG _.., -------------
fltlltt'I t-------------.........,.. P111>1I-Or9099 C-t o.lly Piiot DK•,...._ II. 1''1. ,.,,..,.. '9a1C l91IC( ,.CTtTIOUI •UllNell
'111'.. Jell. It, 2', Feb. 2• t, lta 119-C Pvtlll-Or .... CMll Detty Pttol, ·-------------NAMe ITAT&MeNT " P111>11.-Orel\09 CMSI Delly Piiot Jtl\. tt, 26, l'OI>. 2, t, tta nt-c The lot I-Int peracmt ere dol"V Jeft. It, 2'. Feb 2. t. 1"2 1'1-C 1 '9a1C llllC( PICTITIOUI lutt•ets tlUSJMSi ti:
llAM4l ITATeMeNT A II A I. 0 N 8 R 0 K e R AGE
.. ,~
Pu1>11...., Orenoe Coolt Dollf Pltoe, ,.,.,., ,, .... 2, •• I•, u. 1"2 J4).ft
P11bllitled Or-Coott O.llf Piiat,
Je11 It, 2', Fe!>. i, '· lta 32~
Tiie lollowl111 peraon la dol119 COMPANY, It Coflioret• Plate, Suite
!»Wine"•: HO, N--' 8ee<JI, Ce. t2t60
---.. -ICTl--Tl-out--.-Ull-.. -... ---1 IOAT WORKS, -MU> Stnet, Aaaoclel ........ reoe Compa11y,
•AMS ITATtlMelfT HewllOf" ~. Collfonll• t2MJ 111<. le Del-Me QH110retl011). n20 Gret N .. ry, IOI )4111 SlrHt, EHl26Cf!St ...... ll-,C..t00n
Tiie IOllOWlf'9 --· are dol119 Newport IMcfl, c.llfomt. 9*' Tllll llWlllfta h <-V<led by e bvaillfta ... Tlll1 ~ la <-tad l>y _,, cor-etlon. MIDWAY ASSOCIATES, 7U1 tndMdvat ._ ..... a. .. r-Herlley A•111111, Midway City, G<wtNMl"t '-Y. t11e
c.llfonlle ""'5 Tlllt .-1 wM Hied wltll h ....,.,_ M. HettOI\, GACKO.GOeN,~etP~, COOlf'lty Clerll ol Or-Coul\ty °" \/l(IPr..._.
1141 Ho'1My A-. Ml<lw•Y City. J-rytt.1"1 Tlllt ~ .., .. fltecl wltll ttw
c.lttomle""'5 fltl1Ut C011111, CleR ot Or.,,.. Cou11ty °" 1toee1n M. SMITH, o ... erol PYl>tl .... Dr .. Ceelt Detty Piiot. J-ery u. 1tl:l
Pert,..,, , .. ""911\ Slr'Mt, s-H• 110, JOll 2•. Fft. 2, t , 16, 1"2 J7'-C 1'111'19 Hlllltl ....... IMcll, Collfot'llla.,...
Tiii• ................ ~'"bf ------------.... ,, ... .......
Rollltt1 M. Smltft
Thlt ......,_, tltecl wm. ttw CW!ltf
Clerk Of 0r.,.. c...mv °" J_., Jt,
1912. flt..n ............. Or .... COUl Deity ... lo4,
f'ICTITIOUI •UMNaU
•AMII ITATaMe•T T lie lollowiftt _ _., ere dOllle
.... IMUM .
t•&l.L a MAN&LI..A
A ........ :WlllM~ t• Aft. ef ... Mor-. Ito. 1• LM ........ Ce • ...,
P~ll-Ortn91 COHI O.lt, Piiat
J.en It. 2', Fel>. I, t , 1ta 3ts.t2
\
H/P ... ..
f'ICTITtout •u11•ass
NAMC ITATeMll•T
Tiie IOl ... 11\t --• ere ~ bullllfftUl
CAHYDffWOOOS APA•TMEHTS,
mst 1..1e Al"°' •i..d,. El Toro, c.. ...
Allto C..... WoMt C..,.._.1' l• Limited ~~I, it.., a Dely.
Jr. Ol\CI Mery Elleft 0.1,, Oeft«ot
Pa''""'· c /o ltof E Oety & ~ffi'r"Ji. ':,r,"::.~11 ·="i::
0,,.rlolld Per1l, KM~.U ..
Tlll1 Mlneta It <ondu<lecl l>f 1
"""'led part~. Ito,, E. Dety & Co.
MM)' l.llell O.ly. P•rt-
Tlllt ... ...._. wet 111..S w"" Illa Cou11ty Cieri< of Ore11te County Oft J.,wirfll.1'111
TNOMASWeLU AU.c._ ....
........ c-lao' Dr., ....... .___. .... ,C...'*9
fl'ullfl.,_. Or ..... Coett Dally Piiot
F .... 2, t, 16, %1, 1m S»a
•a.oflm MOTIC& TOc•eDITOtll
o .. 1uucT•AMlfl•1t IS.CL •ttt•W U.C.C:.)
Notice IS 11ere1>y 9lve11 to Ill•
Ctedllort OI Smllll, H11111er ..
Anoctat••. 111<.. • C•lllor11I•
corporelle11, Tre111rer•rt, wlloH
IMnlMSI ....... .. 1601 Dov., 5"lta 1U, Newport lleecll, Co11,.ty ol
Or..,.., SC-O/f Cetffornt.. ,,,.. • IMltl<
t•e11at" It •l>Ovl to l>e mo .. to
£4111ldOI\ CompeftlU , a Celllot11le
corporalloft, Tre1111eree, whne
..... ,,,,... eddrost It UOO Mk MllOI\ Drl••, SlilW 100. lrvl .... C-y of
Or-.SC....Of~. Ti.e _.if to be tr~recl It
IOC-8' UIO Mk.lie-Drj,,., 5"lff ~~,,~=-· C-tr of Q<' ...... Mole Of
Sold~ It CIHetl-111 ..... rel u : All •tock 111 tr•d•, llat11ru,
aqulpmo"I ·~ toOcl wllt of thet
mor19e0t ""*•-llusll19U k-.. Smith, -& AMOCle ... , 11\C., and loceleel et ttol Dov., Sutt• t4S. N••Port llffcll, C-ty Of OrMge, SUia ot Cellfomle
Tiie l>ll l k 1te111ter w ttt I>•
The City Council approved the project after
more than two years of wrangling. It includes
offi ce1i. s hops. condominiums, theaters,
underground parking, a $20 million Museum of
Contemporary ,\rt and restoration or a wooden
cable car to its former route along Third Street.
fllC"TtTloUt •u111teU NAMll ITAHMeMT
Tiie fOttowlng ,..rao11 la dol119
Ml-•·
F .... t .t,i..D,1'12 ~ CCXJNTltY WOODS ASSOCIATES.
1000 o..ott 14"Mt. Sult. HO, H-por1
llM<ll, CA f2MO
------------C«ISIOmf\'-.t °" or elWr IN nttl dO'f
DEATH llTICIB
GARVIS
HELEN GARVlS. age 89,
a resident or Hu'1tington
Beach. Ca. Passed away on
Sunday, January 31. 1982 at
Pacifica Hospital Mrs
Garvis was the widow of
Arthur J Ga r vis. who
passed away tn December of
1977 She was bom m Lyons.
Nebraska on Apnl 23. 1892
Beloved mother of Jeanelle
Bjerknes or Escondido. Ca .
Norine Powell and Evelyn
M c Beth both or Hliltnngton
Beach. Ca a nd Norma
Mallnzak of Riverside, Ca .
a lso s urv1v1ng are 10
grandchi ld ren. 16
great grandchildren and 1
great great grandson
Friends may call at the
mortuary from 2 ·00PM to
9 OOP M on Tuesday .
February 2. 1982 where
funeral services will be
conducted o n Wednesday.
Februa r y 3, 1982 at 10 OOAM .
Interment will be In Good
S he pherd Ceme tery. Pierce
Brothers S m iths' Mortuary
directors. 536-6539. ,
NELSON
!VER EDWARD
NELSON, resident or Santa
Ana. Ca. Passed away on
January 30, 1982 He 1s
s ur v ived by his wife
Pauline. brother Victor or
Minnesota. sisters Victoria
Thompson or Iowa a nd Irene
Dennison also of I o wa ,
several nieces and nephe ws .
Services wlll be he ld on
Wednes day, February 3,
f'ICTITICIUI ~•au
MAMelTATeMe•T
Tll• IOllOwt"' ,..,_,ore iMtng ..... , ...... ,
EUltOPCAN PAtNTlltR$, HO
Cotlo ..... SC., Ce14A MeN, c.. ft6D
.......... , ,Mlllt. -c.ta Mete St., eo.taW1'C-.fM1' J lrl .._, 116 Celto Melo St.,
Cotto lllleM, Ce f2U7
Tlllt llllM,...a la <-<tad l>y a -r•l_......p.
Vlecllmlr 1.ettMI ..., ...... 11 ..
Tlll1 .....,.,.. -flied with t11e Co•illly Clerk Of Or ..... C-y Oft
J._ryU,lm.
CEltTtl'tlD SHVICIS, 17U2
S...ta 1 .... 1, F-lft Velley, CL
'27'1
Oeta l'Ot,_ Witt, tTU1 -IMWI, .......... \/allrf, CL ftM Tlll1....,_l1~ It\' .. ,........,,
O...Mt
Tlllt .........,._ -lllM •Mii .. C-ty OWll Of M...,. ~ on ,_,,,,.,, .. ,._,,
fl'ullf..,_. Or .... c.tt Delly Piiot ,. ... , 2, t, 1•, n , 1tm *'G
1982 al IO·OOAM at Harbor '1llm
Lawn Memorial Cha ..... fwith Pvllll-0r.,. <:Mat Delly Pt1et ,.1CT1TIOU1•111t•eu .,~ Jen. It. 2'. ,.._ 2, t, 1"' 2tl-et MAMS ITAffMSllT
1 n l e r m e n l s e r v i c es -------------Tll• loll•••"• .,.,..,. 1a ffl•t
1mmed1ate ly followi ng -• 11111 ...,....... .. :
Services under the direction ----~-----------L.O ltETTI VAHZ&TTt LTD.,
of H arbor Lawn Mount Olive l'ICT"IOUI iwt11t•ll LDREnt VAHZETT•. 2",... Strwt StrMt, "-1 9-dl, CA '2M3.
Mortuary or Costa Mesa NAMlllTATaMeWT L.OltETTA JO aAl.DIVIA, Jlt""'
ltMMM PICT1TtOUI 1Utot1tall
....... ITATaMelfT Tiie .......... _ ........
tlUslne&I•· HA' "ENNY INNS l ltOYAI. SUtT&SI WIST CHESTElt
II t LL.AG•, I. TO .• 20IO Newport
.. .... c.i. ...... Coll'°""8 f2U7.
Mer"'" A. Phol•n. Mo1109l119 G1fte•ol f'e rl,.•r, Wnlclluter
\/lllege, Ltd., m Soulll OIHMll StrMI, Or .... Collfonlla ~.
Tiits ......... II C..-...Cleel by e
llml ......... ....
~"-"*°" Tllh .....,_ WM fl-Witt\ "'9
Couol!Y Clertl "" Or... c-ty ... DK."''"'· "1111• l'11•llt11ec1 0r•"99 CNll Dally PllOt, J ... 12, tt. 26, I" ... 2.
'"' J:Da
OM N. Iii.tr•. Generol P-. t• OYell ser-t, Sulla MO, __, 9M<ll,CA'*'· Gennl • A Mertlft, Gefterel Pwt-. IOOO QllMI Street, SYiia HO,
Now,.nlNcll,CAftWO TMa _..,... le c-.ic..,. ..., •
llmltect--lfllP.
Doi\ N. II lelre
~,,._
TMI ~WM lltecl wltfl llW C-ty o..ti of 0r..,.. C-tf on JOll.l , 1'11.
H ........ ,Mlller.~ ............
AU.I'.._...._ ..... .............. ~ .... .u,.. ........ ,.
............. CA .... .......
Plll>llllltll Oun .. CNll Dolly
f>llOt. JOll 12, It, •• ,.. 2. '"' 2-...a
540-5554 Tl,. tot-1ftt __. -Clol"' StrM1, N_,,.., hec:ll. CA~
WIG HTMAN "";~~~~LAIMS PROCHSINO m:.~·~~· 11 ,.-.c_ ..., ... '9alC 11111 SU,.111tlO•COU•TOl'T:A
LOU ISA Ii W IG HTMAN, COM~~~,~~n~"' Drl••. °""°Jellalodlvle s:::-c:~uo'::i~e
res ident o r Balboa . Ca . H~=c·-Teel, Jr .. -27'2 Circle Tiii• ·--•• Ill.ct wllll the f'ICTtTl':t~':11Ne11 '" tM ~ ..... AtoPlk•llOI\"" Passed awa~ on January 30. DrlY1,Newpof18H<ll.CA9*3. CovntyCltr110/f 0r ..... GOlll\tyOl\J... NAMelTAT•MSllT SONVAHTltAH
l982 .Shl' is survived by her KetlllMI\ Mory THI, 21'2 Ctrcle Jt,nti. ....... Tll• '°'-'"'per .... , ••e dot119 ORP ER TO~~~-!-'°'iAuSE FOlt
daughter June L Wood her OrlYI, N-1 llto<ll,CA'2Ml. PYl>lllNd Or ..... Cooll o.lly Pllo4, busl~-E :CA ft~. -S ·ND' I "~ CHANGE OF HAM£
d h I 1 . · M Tiiis bUllneu It conducted 11¥ °" ,...,, 2. t. 16, u . '* 11242 ",.." ~ .. .. au g ler t n a" .01s 11,.1,.corporet•d auo<tellOI\ oilier 31tOUP, 1Uf'l Hot• AWl\w, trvl11t. wi.eret1, tt1e petllloll ot Son 11..,
Wightman. grandchildren 111a11 • p¥111trttl!P ~tllomla'2714 TRAN"-...,, 111ee1 •""IN cter11 of
Wendy L Freeman. Douglas JoflnC """'·Jr. .-JC 1911( S.ndY SMdtl•te & Auo<i.tet, t11e .. 1111a coun for •11 order chenet11e
W-ood Tlltl •t.M-... "'"' wtlll ttw • Coll,.,,,.. ""-....... 1..m Hale PtlltlOMr'• namo ,,..., SON VAN M Jr and John and '°""'Y Ctert. ""°' ..... c_,., °" l'ICTITIOUl•USIM•U A .. -.ll'vlne,Cellloml•t17U TRAN t•.J050NllAIHG CHAH£1..
Lisa Wightman Gra\eside J•" s, tm 1tAM•1TAftMelfT Tiii• bvalnets '' col\CN<ted "' • IT tS HEltlllY OltD£1taD -•II services "ill be held on .., .... , Tll• rollowlnt perao" 11 Clotne corporation porao11a l11t•re•-111 .. ,., ... n.,
Tuesda}. Februar} 2.1982al PYl>llthed Or•lltt CoHt De lly .... , .... ,!',0\~ERLOCK HOLMES =:::::... ::::::..=z:.t=!~
1 Pltol. J.,, 12. "· 1', F ... 2, II ,.,._ -'I II -,,_ ~ 2 .00Pl't al H arbor Lawn 1'12 22442 ACADEMYOFIHllESTIGATIOH.lll) ey:lt.A.Sendll.... .., y ...... _.ca°" ... r c.--...
Memorial Park Services SHERl.OCK HOl.MU DETECTIVE Pretldllnt _........, ....... -. -------------AGENCY. a nd ICI SHERLOCK Tllla ....._,. was !tied wltll Ille IT IS f'UltTHER OltDEltlD -• under the d1rect1on o r IUC ~ HOLMES tH\/ESTIGATIOH, ''° Cou11tv CIOfll of 0••"91 COUlllf °" <09Y Of""'°'*' to .-c.1199 .. Harbor Lawn Mount Olive ptf ,.,llK . c......,111e1 way, S.."• "· T11•111, co. Je,.,..ry It, 1'1l. p111>lltllod 0110 • ••Ill ror tovr
M o rtuary of Cos t a Mesa.I:.-------------: m~ ,.,.,,,, tucceatt,,.. _ ... tlf'tcw 10 ttw Clef ot 540-5554 l'ICTITIOUI au11Nass JoM \/. Lynell. tun WMml>ty Pvt>ll ...... Or .... CM•I Oelty Piiat, Ulld Morl"t In The o.lly ,.,lot, • NAMa ITATeMaNT Ortve, s...u Ane, Ce. '2705 Je11. 16, '°°-2, t, 16, tW 4tJ..a 11ewapeper ol ..... rel clrcvt•tton ZARP The IOllOWll'lt penon I• dolnt Tllll toutlneaa 11 '°"411Ct..S llY en 1-------------I prl11tld 11\tlw CAlul\tyOfDt0111119.
VETA MA RI E ZAR p . butl'.!9!'1 "eow' SPORTING GOODS 11\dl•-· _.., -Dete:J-y2t,tt12 ,.~ N J.,,.., \/,Lynell ..__ -·-AOHAl.D H. Plt.NNElt res ident of Newport Beach. 1,.1 E. ht s.,...1, T"•'"· ca111om1~ Tiit. •ta"1'Mllt •• n1..s w1t11 .,. Jllllltotlllit
C a P a s s e d a " a v o n ""° COOlf'llY cterk of Ot8"9t cou111r °" ro1CT1T1Q&11 •u1111au "-tar'-'
January 31 1982 at th·e age llr..c• $. s.-"''· "" E. Ht Je11wiryJt, 1tm NAM81 ITAftMalfT ....,OMcie.,
f S-. d St'"'· TUltll\Cell-·~ ,.,_. Tiie fottoWlr>t --· .... -............... ,r. o 86 he 1s s urvive by a Tiii• ..,..,..0 ,, cOftdu<tlCI ..,, •11 p.,1111..., 0r..,.. eoo11 o.ity Plle4 tlw.lnets .. , • ....., .. Law
daughter V1rgtn1a LaLande lncllvlclu.i F ... 2 ••• "· U, '"' ...., THE Vl$UAL.llTS, .. .._ .. or La Mirada. Ca. 2 sons en.c.s SwOllC"'1 A ........ eor-Clel MM, Cellfomlo R h d z r R id Tiii• ,.,_, ... 111..S wllfl ,,. _ ... -nttS -------------. 1c ar arp o 1vers e . c 011111y Cl••" of Or•"91 Countf .,, ,._ ,.,1111< Joltory J sc,.,....r, • lle99ftla
Ca and Thomas Zarp of J..,uery2:2,t"1 -------------Av-, c.-•• ""9r, COIHwnNt
IALnl HGllOH
SMITH & TUTHILL
WISTCLIPJ CHA"fL
4127 E l71n 51
Costa Mesa
R4fl-Q371
NICIUOTHHS
SMITHS' MOITUAlY
627 Main SI
Hun11no1on Btoacn
536·6639
PACIAC Vlt-W
MIMOllAL ,.MK
Ce1TW1erv Mortu•rv
Chapel-Crematory
3500 P.ctloc Vtew Drive
N4twOOf1 BHCh
6"-2700
llikc:obKll MOITUAlll5
LAIQuna Beach
494·941~
L.auna Hills
788'°933
San Juan C.p11trano
495-1776
MAMOI U.wt6-MT. OUYI
r.tdf't'*V • C.mitteiv
Cl'emllO'V 1825 G11i.r A.,.
Cotti Mfta
s.iO-s&s-4
-r
B e 1 I f I o w e r • C a • l "'"m ,.ICTtTIOUI •uJ1•H1 t2tU d h I d d PYl>ltitled Or-ColJI 0.llf ... lot. MAMtl ITATaMeMT Corot l.yM Trevt .. ...,.,_.. g r a n c 1 re n a n I 8 Jell. u , F" 1, t, 1•, lta >1442 T 11e 1011owt11e per .. " 11 dol111 Av-c.-clltt :_, c.tlf9rftl -------,,.--------
great -gr andc h 1 Id ren. She iMnlMtut: n.u • • , • ..._ ,.,.,..
has worked for many years -------------.... OGRISSlllE AVIATION Tiii• .,.,. ...... la COfMN(\H by.-------------·
a l O ur Lady o r M ount Piil.JC 9ll1C( OlllEL.O .. MaNT, JJOl s. ....... 91Mrol.......,..,..p. CorOft• ... MM, CA fttU. Jeff Sdllator Carm e l Catho lic Chur ch .------------••CHAltD A. OAD901S 111, not Tiii& ......,_, •• 11..., wltll !tit
Newport Beach. Ca a nd was PICTITIOUl•UllNHS S.•¥1aw,C--tllltMer,CA"'2S. Cov11ty Clefll .. Or ..... Ceunty ...
a m e mber of t h e Lady's NAMelTAT•M•NT "''' llutlneas '' c-..ctM...,.,, J-rytJ,Hll.
Guild. Rosary will be recited ...,!1~,~:~•0•1"' P•"011 1' dol"O •ndtv~i(,.,. A o.oeet• 111
o n Tuesday, February 2 . HORI.IN PAPER COMPANY, 601 Tiit. ~ -II ... •lltl tile
1982 at 8 OOPM at St Paul's ~;1~,:~.:~. WAY Co••• Meu, '°""tfC1tnio10r.,...c-'°"J•.
or the Cross Cathol ic D•nnlt Artll11r NO•tlft, 401 ,,l"2 .....
Church . Mass or Christian •rookYt1w .... ,, CotU Meu, PYl>ll ...... Or ... c.ooat Deity Pllet,
Burial "1ll be celebrated o n Ctfllorlll•f»2' F .... 2.•. t•,U. 1m so.a
W e dnesdav. F ebruary 3. 1..:rv·.~:.-· II condllct..S..., ...
11112 al lO :OOAM at St DltnnlaA.NOfll11
Paul of the Cr08s Catholic Tiii• ~· •• Hied w1111 ..,.
C hurch. La M irad a . Ca. CjMjlllf Clerk ol 0r•"91 Cf-If°"
M emorial M oss will be J.,, ... ,.,,s,nm. "'" ... f'llbttlMd Or111199 CNtt o.lly ... let. celebrated at Our Lady ot
M o u nt Carmel Catholic
Church. Newport Beach. Ca.
on Frldoy, February 12, 1982
at 7 .30PM
"KTITIOUI IUll•aU NAMe ITAflMaNT n11 lollowlllt 1Nrto11 II dolnt .. ,,. .....
.. VIDEO "'-111. tttl Wanwr A-. u' 14~ a-11, c:. . .,..,
AllO D. 01Ullltll0m, 107' v .......... Or., HllM1l'llOll 9MCll, c.. _.,.
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-rv1J,111t1.
,, .... It, ...... '· •• •• "'""
PICTITIOUI •u11••u •AMII ITATeMeNT Tllo lellowl11e perMn I• dol11t
buMllfftHr ALL AMl'-ICAN IUStH«U
Dlllt•CTOttY, 1'11 ,.,..,.._, CetU
Me .. ,CAflW.
IUCHA'-P JAMH ITO'-Y, 1•11 ~-. C.te Mete, CA "'27. Tiits lluoUMu IS ~ '°' ... IMWld'*. lltlcflef'fJ ,..,,
Tiii• _. -'"" .... ... C9IMtY Cllft"' Ofw'9t c..M'f ... ,, ... . "· ""·
"* ........... Or ... c.tt Detty ........
)Ml. tt, ,. .... 2, '· ,., '"' cu.a
fllCTl'hOUI eUttNall
MAMe ITATeMa•T
n .. IOllOwlft9 ~ ••• "°"" ~SS ...
STANFOltD WEST , ltlO
Cem-1 lt4., N-1 hocft, CA .... .
J•••Pll N Stoftlo•CI. 1'10
Com~ ltd , H-1 llffdl. CA .....
Levis J. s~. 11420 WHI Ovt.tr
Dt'lve, ~ Ho19'1ta, Mi<N9M 41127.
H•ten A Dot .. tt. 1m S.ndel•OOCI L•"•· Newport ... ell, C•lllOtlll•
n.tel.
L.aslle J. ~. T ... So. Glllley ltoed, 0eotWm .....,..,, Mk ll .....
.alU. Tllh _...., Is c--lly e .....,..1,.., .... 9'11t>
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Tlll1 .__ w• lltecl wltll llw
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A ......... etY. .-c..,...o.t..
,. .. , otlk• ... 1111
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fllltSM
P111>llalled 0••111• CoHt D•lly Piiot, J _, 12, 1', 26, F .... 2,
"" 2:1JO.C
f'ICTITIOUI 9UllNaU
NAMalTAT&MeNT
TM f9llowlfte _..,. ... dolftt
llOnllleMM PACIFIC WOODS ASSOCIATES.
1000 o...lt Sw.t, S..lte UO, N.-pOn
l•NCll. CA tMtlO DOI\ N. Vle4ro, ~el ,..,.,,,.,. 1000 Qu.it Street, Sul• 160, H _ _,
ttM<ll, CA t'2'60
0...111• A. -.111, -•I ,.ortMr,
1000 o...lt S .... t. Suite HO, H-por1
11~11,CAftMO. Tiiis ....,_, It Condll<Wd lly a
ktmllld wtfltnlllp.
OenH.Vlelro Oenenll ,..,,_
I Tlltt ~ •• llted wftll the CO\lllty Oerti _, Or ..... C_,tf on
J ...... .. 1 ... 11..-r ........ eorn-. ._....,
AU. ....... ._ ....
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....,.,.._.,CA .... ,t..u
1'11•111,,.. Ore11 .. Coelt D•llf jJllel, JM. 12, It, It, f'el>. I, 1'11
tlMJ
ol Fel>r ... •y, tm, •I 10 ··"'· •t Eq111dOI\ ~In, UGO MIClllllOI\
Dtl•e. Suite 100. lrvlllO, C-y of
or-...~oteeii.....
Sci 1er oa .._ to tM n-. ....... ti_.....,... .... .-.u. • ..-
f n.. TrW1tlerort1I fer ti.. tlw'M f ........ t .... _:_ ......... ....
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DA TED JINiery a, tta.
E~C°""'°"'91, Tr ..... ,_
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P11t>ll-0--Coett Delly Piie!, F .... 2. ltl:l S.7-C
INVITATtC* TO e10
Hotlu It Mreby elven '"°' Ille &oenl tA Tl'\lltaet _, IM H_..,...,,
llte< II Cl1' S<'-91 Dlltrlc1, 111 Ille
C-tf O/f 0r.,.., wlll real,,. -\IC> to, ""1~, .. .,.tlWfl1.00 p,m . OI\ n.. MC-11Nl oev O/f F"""°''· 1tm tor 1111 p11r<lleH of lo11r PAjJ£R
COP IE AS. 1peclllcet10111 for H IO
melerlat Oft Ille In 1111 District PYrGtletll\I offke M 7U 14'11 St,...1,
H11fttl1'19lOI\ llHOI, Cetlforllle.
Ea<ll bid 1'1etl be_..., --II ... u comPoftled by • cenllled check, c11llter'1 <lla<k or bldclltf't llond. for .... ...-~ .... ''-s~ o1 ttw lllgMSI or lolet e..-bid, PtY•lllt to IM orGer O/f ... d I<_. Cllttrlc1. Tiie llootd d Trllllaet r._.,.. tlW
r19'11 to «c-..C or re)eet °"' or ett bldt, « MY <..,....._Ion Of '*Is, 16 wetve el\YJnlormatlty or ,,,_...,,Iv.
and to tltincl ect .. ,... > .... of_
merit e11d q11etlllcello"' ol Ille
meterl•I 011.,ed and may •«•P' wll•I•...., llld. or cOf"ll>lftetlOI\ Of ....,,
n -"*"to Ill 1,. tN ""1 lnt .... at of
Ille Sc-Dlttrkt. llf orwr of tM &oerd tA Tnnt ... of IM HUl\U119tOI\
lleocll Cltf SCMOI DKlrkl.
lly· 8rl0ft Gari-.
Ctorti
O/ftlle 0--.."'9 loord Dill• le-I
Or .... Coumy. Colllornl•
Hs-12 Pllt>ll-OrMllt Cooll Dettf Plio.,
JOll. ,., ,._ J, 1"2 ·-
PIU ll1ll
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..
llllJPlllt
I TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 19'2
Maureen Reagan pitches
ihtemational trade
Ullll IEICl/11111 ClllT CAVALCADE
BUSINESS
82
83-5 to local group 83
Countians.r paying Property tax hills earlier
I l
By FREDE&JCK SCllOEMEllt of-.o.i ............
Despite the malaiae affedinl
the nation's economy. 1982
Orange County property tax
payments are being received at
a faster rate than one year aao.
according to County Tax
Collector-Treasurer Robert '
Citron in bis annual listing of the
county's top ten taxpayers.
As of Dec. 31 , Citron said,
$350.2 million, or 53. 7 percent, of
the total property tax bill of
$6 5·3 . 8 m i I Ii on h a d b ee n
collected. The comparable
Victim's .
1 identity
I soug-,it ·
•
California Highway Patrol
investigators are' sti ll
attempting to identify a female
pedestri~n whose body was
found late Friday just north of
'Laguna Beach's city limits.
And Laguna police are
awaiting toxicological tests on a
19-year-o ld Laguna Beach
woman who was killed In a
single car accident Saturday.
In the pedestrian accident, the
body of a woman described as in
her mid-ftfties was found on the
shoulder of the southbound lanes
of North Coast Highway at about
11 :30 p.m. Friday.
A Long Beach man discovered
the body of the S-foot-5 victim,
who weighed about 9S pounds.
CHP spokesman Dick Van
Cott said the woman apparently
was walking along the shoulder
when she was struck by an
unknown southb6und vehicle.
The highway patrol is seeking
the identity of the wnm~n. who
was carrying no papers but was
wearing a red sweatshirt with a
brown shirt tmderneath, denim
trousers and blue tennis shoes.
Investigators are also seeking
the driver of the vehicle that
struck the woman. or witnesses
who may have seen the
accident.
In the Saturday crash, police
said Cynthia Ann Bernth, 19,
who lived at 128 MacAuley
Place, was driving southbound
on t.he highway at about 2:S4
a. m. Saturday when her sedan
s lammed into a traffic signal
pole at Ocean A venue near the
South Coast Theaters.
The woman was given
emergency treatment at the
scene by Laguna Beach firenfen·
and .paramedics , but was
pronounced dead on arrival at
South Coast Medical Center.
Police investigators are
awaiting the results of tests
from the county coroner's office,
to determine whether the
woman had been drinking prior
to the crash.
...., ............
NUCLEAR OPPONENT -Dr.
Robert Keller, a Santa Ana
· psychiatrist.· spoke Monday
against nuclear arms race.
.....
PoUce car
buy approved
L'8una Beach City Couactl members have approved tbe
porch.ue ot a new patrol car tor \be police department tb4't wW
COit '11.171.
Tb• bid ... tbe btPer ol tWQ
eubmlttecl. bat Police Cha.I N.U
· Purcell Hid Uat Chtnoltt.
MallbU ,,.. bitter Htt9d for, Lapa.a'•..., ldlll.
Tia• 'Ht WUI -~ purcbaMd from S.U CbeWOllt lfter ..al
percentage last year was 51.9
percent. be said.
Whi le the number of
taxpayers who failed to meet the
December deadline for payment
of taxes increased sll1bUy, to 8.7
percent this year from 8.4
perc~nt in 1981, Citron said mo~
taxpayers were opting t.o pay
both firs t and second
installments at the same time.
Second installment payment&
are not due until April 10.
Citron said changes ln federal
income tu law likely resulted in
people paying bot!1 installments
r.rlor to the Deo. 10 flrat
net.aliment deadline.
He said "blue collar and
lower-paid white collar workers
who have been more directly bit
.by the recession," were those
unable to meet their first
installment obligation.
'Pile county 's top five
taxpayers, and amounts of their
1982 tax bllls, are: the Irvine
Company, $11.3 million; Pacific
Telephone . $11 .2 m illion ;
Southern California Edison Co.,
$8.S million ; Rockwell
International, $3 million, and
General Telephone Co., ta.I
million. Ranldn1 for tbOH flw
firms were the same aa lut
year.
Roundina out the top 10 th1a
•year are Huahes Aircraft Co.,
$2.4 million; Union OU Co., S:Z
million : Walt Disney
Productions, $1.8 million;
Mc.Donnell Dou1laa, $1 .1, and
Chevron USA Inc., $1.7 mUUon.
Hu1hea advanced to sixth
from loth place tut year; Union
slipped to seventh from sixth;
Walt Disney edled down from
seventh to eighth; Mc Donnell
Dou1la1 went to ninth from
el1btb, and Chevron went to loth
from 12th.
Fluor Corp .• $1.6 million;
Mobil Oil, $1.4 million ;
Beckman Instruments lnc., $1.2
million, and Southern California
Gas Co .• $1.2 million. placed nth
throup 14th this year. Citron
reported.
The top 10 taxpayers paid 7
percent of the total $653.8 million
tax bill, a percentage identical
to last year. be said.
Citron noted in his report that
durini . the fiat 1lx m~uW of
flsc,1 year 1981-82, wb1cb bqan
July t, the county treU\ll'J
reaped Interest income of tit
million, up 39 percent over tbe
$58 million earned lo the same
period lo 1980. The county's .
current yield on lnveatmeota LI
17.68 percent, Citron said.
The county treuury lnv•tl
money for 170 taxiq a1enclel lD
the county. Amon1 them are
school distric ts, water and
sanitary districts and other
special service d.iatricll.
Parking price pr:~mium:
Laguna's cost for Ocean ~v.enue· lot rises by $23,940
DUSTY DOWNTOWN Heavy equipment operators lay
pipeline and cover up a large trench on Forest Avenue in
Laguna Beach where the city is installing new storm drains.
The dirty work is e x,ected to continue for the next few
weeks as the $231,000 project to reduce winter flooding in
the do\\ryltown sector is completed
Talk about stee p rent
increases.
The City of Laguna Beach
haggled until it was blue in the
face, but trustees for the owners
of a municipal parking lot stood
fU'm lo the negotiations.
If the city wanta to continue to
use the Ocean A venue parking
lot, it'U have-to come up with a
lot more than the $6,420 it's been
paying each year.
In fact, city officialB will uk
the City Council tonight to
approve paying $30,360 for the
2· rnore.
• • JOID race
for council
Two more Lagunans have
taken out nomination papers for
the April 13 City Council
election_. bringing the number of
potential candidates to ei1bt.
Pat Barry. director of the
Laguna Beach Boys Club, and
Ricky Slater, who said be is
employed at a local church, join
six other Lagunans seeking
three seats in the April election.
Others who have t..ken out
papers include incumbent
council member Kelly Boyd ;
city activist John Gabriels;
homeowner a4ociation officer
Bobbie Minkin; real estate
developer Ron Williams ; UC
Irvine administrator Robert
Gentry and director of
pharmacy services Dan Kenney.
The three councilmen whose
terms expire in April include
incumbent Boyd, Howard
Dawson and William Wilcoxen.
Wilcoxen ha s publicly
announced he will not seek a
four.year term , and Dawson
calls the pe>SSibiUty he will run
"unlikely."
If any of the three incumbents
declines .to file, candidates will
have until next Tuesday to
return nomination papers.
Nuke • warwm blasted
Physicians iay survivors would envy dead • By RICllAllD GREEN
Oftho.lty ...........
There is no way this country
or Russia could s urvive an
all-out nuclear attack, despite'
what some members of the
Reagan administration are
saying.
And those ~. survived
probably would #ivy the dead.
Thal message was delivered
Monday night at UC Irvine
Medical Center by members of
the fledgling Orange County
chapter of Physicians for Social
Responsibility. a national
or1anhation oppoaln1 the
nuclear arms race. Monday's
meeting at UClMC was one of
the first meettn111 of the Orante
County chapter, which now bu
only a bandful of members.
··The ar1ument ln tome
administration quarten 11 that
we could win a nuclear
exchanie throuah eUective civil
defense ,'' said chapter
spokeamlln Dr. Robert Keller, a
Santa Ana psycblatrlst.
-Medical "disaster
planning" for nuclear war is
meaningless . There is no
poss Ible e rtecll ve medical
response. Most hospitals would
be <iestroyed, most medical
personnel dead or injured and
most supplies unavailable. MOit
survivors would die.
-There is no effective civil
defense. The blast, thermal and
radiaUon effects would kill even
those in shelters. ind the fallout
South Coast
students on
dean's list
More than a doaen south
Oranae Coast studente ·have
been placed on the Dean's Honor
Llst for the fall semester at Cal
State .F\lllerton.
Studenta achlevtn1 a 3.5 rrade
aver••• or above trom Laaunn
Beacb include Llnda C. Barker,
Cheryl L. Brady, Trudie
Dlederteb, Alan D. Fretta1,
Antoinette D. Gendun and John
R. Huddlestoo.
Baalna his statement.a on
reaear~b dor)e by Physlclane for
Social BeaponalblUty, Keller
aald that ln addlUon to the
ilJ'medlatt ••dlcal
conaequencea of a nuclear war,
aucb a war could trl11er a
worldwide disea.ae eplMmlc. I Fro01 w1una Nl1uel, honor
ln a ftlm lhowo by tbe J,~ lt . atudenll Include Mary van L.
waa UMl"t.d MoQcla1 by Dawton, Nlcholu P. He.rt.neck,
medical and 1clinWJ.c uperU J'an D. Lyl•DoUva, Stephen J.
that: Stanko.
-Nuclear war, •••n a
"Uinited" OM, woul4 ~ In
death, lQJUry. and dileaM cm a
would reach those who had been
evacua.t.ed.
-A nuclear war could cause
a depletion of the Earth's Omle
layer. Such a depletion would
cauae widespread bllndneu and
skin cancer. authorities said In
the fllm.
People appeartn1 in the film
also indicated that thia country's
nuclear aneual bas 1one beyond
deterrenee and ls lncreaalDlly
being aimed at havin1 the
capability to deatroy Ruuia'1
nuclear capabllity on first
strike.
Accordin1 to the film .
problems wblcb mate medical
war medically unthinkable are:
-1be spread of diMaH from
the bundreda of tbousanda ol
corpses tha( would IO unburied.
-Petttlence cauaed by the
prollfer.tion of lnaecta, Wlalcb
aeem to be able to eurvlve
radiation more ea1lly Utan
humans. ·
28-space lot sandwiched between
Ocean and the alley in the city's
congested downtown area.
Citizens Bank, trustees for the
owners of the 9,2QO-square-foot
parcel. originally had asked
$50,000 rent per year for the
improved municipal lot.
The city offered $15,000, then
$20,000, but the trustees rejected
that bid, lowering their proposal
lo $40,000.
An appraisal, the cost of which
was split between the owners
and the city. showed the 92-foot
by 100-foot parcel to be worth
'$506.000.
And, since the original lease
provides the city pay i percent
of such an appraised value,
Laguna Beach city council
members &J'e expected to end up
agreeing to pay $30,360 when
they meet at 6 o'clock In council
chambers tonight.
The 28 parking spaces are just
a drop in the bucket compared
to a shortage of 1,208 spac:es
shown in the city's local couta1
plan for the downtown sector.
And while the city council
members probably grumble
over the rent increase, they're
not likely to terminate the leue.
City Manager Ken Frank bu
recommended the lease be
extended at the new rate, which
became eff~ve Jan. l, but to
look t.o other areas to lncreue
parklng for Laguna's downtown.
Specifically. he wanll hia staff
to look into construction of a
second parking level above the
city-owned Glenneyre Street
parking lot, a proposal that has
been considered in the past.
• UCI prof esaor geta VCR po at . ..
Dr. Stepaa KaramaJ'dl.-.
a mathematics professor at
UC Irvine for 15 years, bu
been named dean of the UC
Riverside Graduate School of
Admlni.stration.
Karamardian earned bia
bachelor 's degre"e in
mathe matics and physics
from Syrian University ln
Damascus, Syria, bh
ma ster 's degree in
ma thematics from the
University ol llllnoll and bis
doctorate in en1ineerin1
science from UC Berkeley.
•Bailes named humanities dean
UC Irvine history professor
Dr. Kendall E. Balles has
been appointed dean of the
.UCI School of Humanities.
Bailes succeeds Dr.
Wllllam J . Llllyaaa.
professor of Gesman, wbo
last summer was appointed
vice chancellor for academic
affairs at UCI.
•Appalachian folk mwic a lated
lolUl Mceutckcla and Rick ·
aad Lorralae Lee will
present a program of
Appalachian folk music at 8
p.m . Feb. 3 in the UC Irvine
Fine Arts Concert Hall.
Tickets for the concert are
$5 for general admlaaion, $3
for UCI studenta, S4 for other
studenll.~r cithena, UCI
staff. faculty and Alumnl
Association members. For
more information call
883-6379.
• Mesa artist ~• ivorks ahown
A show of new works by
Costa Mesa artist Fraak
Dlxoe, titled ''Paintings and
Monotypes," is now open for
a three·week exhibition at
the Fine Arts Gallery at
Saddleback College lo
Mission Viejo.
Dixon's work has been
shown at the Los Angeles
County Museum of Art, the
Newspace Gallery In Los
Angeles, the Newport Harbor
Art Museum and Bowers
Museum in Santa Ana.
Dixon la on the art
faculties of Orange Cout
College Laauna teach School of Art and Scripps Colle1e.
The Saddleback Fine Arta
Gallery ls located at 28000
Marguerite Parkway, off the
A very Parkway exit from the
San Diego Freeway. Hours
are 10 a .m . to 3 p .m .
weekdays.
• Solar workahopa to be offered ,
The Capistrano Adult
School will offer solar
workshops durtn1 ita spriq
semester proaram which will
teach students bow to-
conatruct. their own solar
collectors.
Cost of ~ clua LI $50 .. It
will cover solar bulct, IOlar
1eometry , collector
mounttna. plumbftll and
electrical. For more·
inlormaUon call the Ad.it
School om~ at49Mal.
•Boat /amilie• •oUlfM'
lnterpac, a non-profit
forelp exchan1e 1tudtat
or••nlPUon will 1poneor a
two-w•ek home It•)'
~rosram In ti.. Saddleback
CoUt .. wea from Feb. 23 to
March lt, About 21> Japanese collep
stud'tnta will be comln1 to
Tlcketa are oo salt for "A
Day at tb• Racte,'1
1pc>neored by C..pt.er T1J'O GI . lrilM •• IUlld alaiif ftmdl f0rt.be~"a£t»•
mlWcm Oran.-~ Mme
tht. country tq lludlt BDl1lab
and the Amtrl(H cullun •
and tour plae91 ol lDtereei.
Local (amW• will be Mid
to act •• bos\1 for tlielr
foret•n vl•itort. Por •
tnformaUon on beeomu.a a
bolt famllJ call EleoDOr'~ Di
Camdla at -.-i.
191111
DlllyPtllt
~UESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1912
CA VALCADE
BUSIN~SS
92
83-5
•
'
Maureen-Reagan pitches
international trade
to local group . . . 83
Countians paying property tax hills earlier
By FREDERICK 8CBOEMEBL percenta1e last year was ~1.9
0t ... o.1tr,........, percent, he said. prior t o the Dec. 10 first General Telephone Co., $2.8
Despite the malaise affecting w b i l e t b e n u m be r of installment deadline. million Ranking for those five
He said "blue collar and firms were the same as lut
1 the nation's economy, 1982 taxpayeri who failed to meet the ~Oran1e County property tax December deadline for payment
lower-paid white collar worken year
aymenta are belnl received at of laxes'increased allghtly, to8.7 who have been more directly hit Roundin& out the top 10 this
by the recession," were those •year are Hughes Aircraft Co .. faster rate than one year aio. percent this year from 8.4
ccording to County Tax t · 1981 Cit id unable lo meet their first $2.4 million; Union Oil Co., $2
installment obligation. m i I I ion ; W a I t D I s n e y ollector-Treasurer Robert percen an • ron aa more
Itron lo hia annual listln° o· f the taxpayers were opting to pay • both first and second
The county '11 lop five -Productions. $1.8 million;
taxpayers, and amounts of their McDoMell DougJas , $1 .7, and ounty'a top ten taxpayers. installments at the s•me Ume.
1 As of Dec. 31, Citron said, Second installment payments
1982 tax bills, are: the Irvine Chevron USA Inc., $1.7 million.
t..2 million, or 53.7 percent, of are not due unUJ April 10. • Companj, $11.3 million;· Pacifte Hughes advanced to sixth
Telephone , $11.2 million ; from loth place last year: Union
total property tax bill o~ Citron said changes in federal
$ 3 .8 million bad been incometaxlawlikelyresul~in Southern California Edison Co., slipped to seventh from sixth:
'$8 .5 million ; Ro ckwell Walt Disney edged down from I c9llected . The compJtrable .• people paying both inst.Alllments International, $3 million, ana seventh to eighth; McDonnell
..
OPENING GAME Irvine's
Woodbridgt: High Schooi
students had more than a
score to cheer about Friday
night. During the first game
pl ayed in the school's new
gymnasium the home team
beat Vincent Me morial
School, Calexico, 63-32.
Leading the crowd in cheers
are Kris Woolever and
Leora Berdner. dressed as a
gorilla. On Saturday.
however . the visitors .
Capistrano Valley Christian
School, scored the victory
42-43.
~-
Psychiatrist rdps nuke exchange
Group told survivors of atomic attack would probably envy the dead
By RICllAllD GREEN Santa Ana psychiatrist. °' .. .,..,,,....,.... Basing his statements on
There ls no way this country research done by Physicians for
or Russia.....,could survive an Social Responsibility, Keller
all-out nuclear attack, despite said that in addition to the
what some membe rs of the ; m m e di ate m e d I ca I
Reagan administration are consequences of a nuclear war,
saying. such a war could trigger a
And those who surviy..ed worldwide disease epidemic.
probably would envy the de,a. In a mm shown by the group it
That message was delivered was asserted Monday niaht by
Monday night at UC Irvine medical and scientific experts
Medical Center by members of that:
the\ fledgling Orange County -Nuclear war, even a
chapter of Physicians for Social "limited" one, would result in
Res ponsibility, a national death, injury, and disease on a
orga n ization opposing tbe scale that bas no precedent in
nuclear arms race. Monday's the history of human existence.
meeting at UCIMC was one of -Med ic al ''dis a st er
the first meetinp of the Orange planning" for nuclear war 1$
County chapter , which now bas meaningless. There is no
only a handful of members. p ossible effect! ve m edical
......,,.......,.,.... •'The argument l n som e response. Most hospitals would
NUCLEAR OPPONENT -Dr. administration quarters la that be destroyed, most medical
Robert Keller, 8 Santa Ana we co u 1 d w In a nu c I ear personnel dead or injured and
Psychiatrist. spoke Monday exchange throuth effective civil most aupplles unavailable. Most
d e f e o 1 e , • ' s a Id c b apter survtvon would dJe. \ a1ainst nuclear arms race. 1pokuman Dr. Robert Ketler, a -There ls no effective civil
' ~t-ron vict~'s identity sOught
California Hl•hway Patrol
i D v e 1 ll...& a tor 1 a r • 1tl11
attemiitiDI · £i>'ldentU1 a female
pedestrian whose body wa1
found late Friday Juat nortb ol
La1una Beach'• city llmlta. ·
And La1una police are
awaltm, toxicoloetcal tetU oa •
it-year-old La1una Beach
woman who w11 killed In a
1ln1le car acdde.ftt setirda1.
In the pedmtrlU aceldeat. u..•
body ol ...... delertbed • in
her mid-ftliill •• foUDd oa the 1'°'1lder ol tbe iDatbbouad ....
· of North CoUt ffllbway at a.._.
'U :IO p.m. ftfda1 .
•
who lived at 128 llacAuley
Plac., WU drivinl southbound
on the hipway al about 2:5'
a.m. Sawrcs.y when her HdUl
slammed Jnto a traffic alpal
pole at Ocean A venue near th•
South Cout Theaters.
The woman waa atven
defense. The blast, thermal and
radiation effects would kill even
those in shelters, and the fallout
would reach those who had been
evacuated. '
-A nuclear war could cause
a depletion of the Earth's ozone
layer. Such a depletion would
cause widespread blindness and
s kin cancer, authorities said in
the film.
Douglas went lo ninth from
eiebth, and Chevron went to lotb
from 12th. ·
Fluor Corp .. Sl 6 m1lllon ;
Mobil Oil, $1 .4 million :
Beckman Instruments Inc . $1.2
mllllon, and Southern California
Gas Co., $1.2 million, placed 11th
through 14th this year, Citron
reported.
The top 10 taxpayers paid 7
percent of the total $653.8 million
lax bill, a percentage identical
to last year , he said.
Citron noted In his report that
during the first six months of
fiscal year 1981·82, which be1ao
July 1, the county treHUl'J
reaped Interest income of •1
million, up 39 percent over the
S58 mUIJon earned in the same
period In t~. Tt\e county'•
current yield on investments ii
17.86 percent, Citron said.
The county treasury investa
money for 170 taxing agenetes ln
the county. Among them are
sc hoot districts, water and
s anitary districts and other
special service districts.
Student fees hike
backed by Aldrich
UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel'
Aldrich said today he endorses a·
refe rendum that will ask
s tude nts to increase their
quarterly fees to pa y for a
proposed 6,000-seat athletic
pavilion.
''The (acility is needed to
acco mmodate expa nd ed
univers ity .Prog r ams in
athletics , recreation a nd•
inlramurafs," h e s aid in a
telephone Interview ... as well as
tremendous growth in women's
intercollegiate athletics."
Su ch activities a r e now
a ccommodated' in l ,500-seat
Crawford Hall.
"Crawford Hall has ceased to
be sufficient to house these
activities let alone the size of
crowds that attend athletic
events," said Aldrich.
The UCI men's basketball
team is 17·1 this season. and 6-0
in the Pacific Coast Athletic
Conference and plays to
capacity houses.
Aldrich said, however , that
even if there is a drop-off in
interest.$', the proposed faculty
would still be necessary.
Kathy Stangl, UCI student
government president, said the
stud ent council has voted to
place a referendum before tbe
students Feb. 22, giving them
the option of increasing
quarterly fees by $17, $20 or $23.
The proposed fee hike couldl
raise up to $4 million to pay offl
revenue bonds the university
would sell to help pay for the $101
million proposed facility.
The university is considerinel seeking private donations for the
balance of the project, Aldrich
said. I Students now pay $347 in fees
per quarter to attend UCJ. j
Building slmnp spurs
If.vine city layoffs
A sharp downturn In building
activity in Irvine has forced the
layoff of six part·time City Hall
employees and is jeopardizing
the full-time jobs of six others,
Assis tant City Manager Paul
Brady said.
The layoffs in the city's
C'lm mun ity Deve lopment
Department are n ecessary
because the department has a
$306,000 ·budget deficit. created
by the collection of fewer than
expected building fees. said
Brady
Unless building activities
increase, four department
employees will have to be let go
in April and two more in May,
he said .
Irvine Company spokesman
Ed P or tman sai d that
"economic uncertainty and
record high inter est rates"
r es u I ted in a 37. 5 percent
decrease in new home sales last
year in Irvine in comparison to
1980.
Portman said that 915 homes
were sold by the company last
year in Irvine. Tbe company
sold 1,400 homes in 1980.
The reduction in company
sales refl ected an overall
decrease in building in Irvine,
city officials say.
According to city records, a
total of 1,372 new housing units
we re approved las t year in
comparison with 2,187 in 1980.
Brady said that despite the
layoffs and expected layoffs. the
city remains sound financially.
He added that the city will
consider transferring the six
full ·ti me Community
Development employees to other
iobs that come open in the city.
UCI teacher
joins Irvine
water board
A UC Irvine associate
professor will be sworn in Feb. 8
as the first woman director on
the Irvine Ranch Water District
Board of Directors.
Be tty Haak Olson , 34 , of
Ir vi ne, a social ecology
associate professor, has been'
selected by the board to flll the
director's seat vacated by
Wayne Clark, who said he left
the .board to lead a campaign ln
Orange County in support of tbe
peripheral canal.
Directors on tbe board, the
governing body for the water
and sewage utility serving
Irvine, get paid $100 per meeting
up lo a maximum of $600 per
month.
The term of Ms. Olson, who
ha s a doctorate in
environmental health science
from UC Berkeley, expires in
June. She was selected for the
water post late last month.
IUllEG•
I
TUESOAV, FE8RUARV2, 1982 I
CAVALCADE
BUSINESS
82
83-S
Maureen Reagan pitche~
, international trade
to local group . . . 83
Countians paying property tax hills earlier
By FaEDE&ICK SCHOEMEll.L percenta1e la.at year was 51.9
Of .. Mtt,....-.-... percent, be said.
Despite lhe malaise affeclinc w h l le the n u m be r 0 f
the nation's economy, 1982 taxpayers who falled to meet the
Orance County property tax December deadline for payment
payments are being received at or taxes increased sUchUy, to 8. 7
a faster rate than one year •Co. percent this year from 6.•
accordinc to County Tax percent ln 1981, Citron said more
Collector-Treasurer Rctbert taxpayers were optinc to pay
Citron ln his annual Uatinc or the b o t h r i r s t a n d s e c o n d
county's top ten taxpayers. installments at the same time.
As of Dec. 31, Citron said, Second installment paymenU
$350.2 million, or 53.7 percent, of are not due unW·April 10.
the total property tax bill of Citron said changes in federal
$6 5 3 . 8 million had bee n income tax law likely resulted in
c~llected. The compJtr~ble ·-people paying both inat.allm~ts
I I
prlor to the Dec . 10 first
installment deadline.
He said "blue collar and
lower·paid white collar workers
who have been more dtrecUy hit
by the recession," were those
unable to meet their first
installment obligation.
The\county's top five
taxpayers, and amounts of their
1982 tax bills, are: the Irvine
Company, $11.3 million; Pacific
Telephone, $11.2 mlllion;
Southern California Edison Co.,
$8 .5 million ; Ro ckwell
International, "43 million, and
"LADV" FULLED TO SHORE -Salvage c.-~w
members pull 36-foot sailboat. the "Lady,"
off rocks in Treasure Cove south of Newport
Beach where it was stranded Sunday when a
.............. ..,...., . ....._
thick fog bank covered the coastline.
Workmen used a pair of bulldozers to pull the
vessel ooto the beach and planned to haul the
damaged craft by land to a salvage yard.
6.5 percent teacher raises?
N etvp0rt-M~$a schools release fact-finding report
Newport-Mesa Unified School
District officials released a
long-awaited fact-finding report
today that recommends a 6.5
percent cost of living pay hike
Jor teachers.
The 25-page report written by
state-appointed panel member
Douglas Collins, includes
dissenting reports from both the
district and the Newport-Mesa
Federation of Teachers.
Representatives from the
teachers' union and the dlatrict
turned to a fact-finding panel
after teachers voted Nov. 18 to
reject a 6 percent pay raise
offered by the district.
The decision by the
three-member panel calls for a '
percent salary inc rease for
teachers retroactive from July 1
and a 9 percent increase
effective Feb. 1, for an annual
pay raise of 6.5 percent.
The panel decision is not
binding.
Bill Cue, chief necotiator for
the teachers' union said no
decision has been made b~the
union to either endorse or reject
the report's findings. Teachers
will have to wait untll a fornud
offer is made by the school
board.
··I'm certainly not going to
celebrate," Cue said of the pay
offer. "But it's a half percent we
would not have gotten."
Superintendent John Nicoll
said today that he intends to
continue talks with union
leaders after meeting with the
school board in a closed session
either this week or following the
regular school board meeting
Feb. 8.
"I think il' s necessary
because of the dissenting reports
from both sides," said Nicoll. "I
think we need to talk about it."
1n t.he dissent report filed in
behalf of the district, anel
member John Bukey said that
the 9 percent pay increase
beginning Feb. 1 would "create
excessive continuing costs" to
the district.
In hi s dis s ent report
r epresenting the teachers'
union, Chuck Caniff said that the
-district is capable or paying
salary increases comparable to
the countywide average of 8
percent.
Collins rejected the union's
demands for additional health
and life ins urance benefits and
increased pay\nents for girls'
basketball and softball coaches.
He recommended continuance
of a stipend paid to special
education teachers in the
'cijstrict.
General Telephone Co., $2.8
million. Rank.inc for thoae five
firms were the same as last
year.
Round.inc out the top 10 this
•year are Hughes Aircraft Co.,
$2.4 million; Union OU Co., $2
million ; Walt Disney
Prod uctlons, $1 . 8 mi lllon;
McDonnell Douglas. $1 .7, and
Chevron USA Inc., $1.7 million.
Hughes advanced to sixth
Crom 10th place last year; UnJon
slipped to seventh Crom sixth,
Walt Disney edged down from
seventh to eighth; Mc Donnell
Douataa went to ninth from
etabth, and Chevron w~nl to 10th
from 12th.
Fluor Corp .• $1 .6 million ;
Mobil Oi l , Sl .4 million ;
Beckman Instruments Inc., $1.2
mllllon. and Southern California
Gas Co., $1.2 million. placed lllh
throu.&h 14th this year, Citron
reported.
The top -10 taxpayers paid 7
percent oft.he total $653.8 million
tax bill, a percentage identical
to last year, he said.
Citron noted in his report that
during the first six months of
fiscal year 1981·82, which beaao
July 1. the county treasury
reaped interest Income of '81
million. up 39 percent over the
$58 million earned in the same
period In 1980. The county's
current yield on investmenta ii
17 66 percent, Citron said.
The county treasury invest.I
money for 170 taxing agencies in
the county. Arnone them are
school districts, water and
sanitary districts an~ other
special service districts.
, Center -vote targeted
Newport council members may scrap election
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. o.ltyPl ... 9'alf
Two Newport' Beach City
Council members are indicating
that they want to scrap a June
r~ferendum e lection on the
controversial Newport Center
expansion plan.
The officials expressed
concern this week that the
Irvine Company project might
not stand a fair chance if put up
for a citywide vote
The concern is based on
threats made by a group
Mesa warns
of bilking
of elderly
Costa Mesa police are warning
elderly women to be on the
lookout for a man poslnJ as a
bank official who ha,s bilked two
women out of their Jl'fe savings .
Detective Dan lfogue said the
elederly woman living at Bethel
Towers lost Sl .soo a ft er the
s mooth-talking con a rtlst
persuaded her to empty her
savings account Jan. 22.
The man, identifying himself
as a planager at Crocker Bank
in C-osta Mesa, told the
79-year-old woman that he
needed her to withdraw the
money in orde r to catch a
dishonest employee, Hogue said.
For her efforts she was told
she'd receive a $500 reward.
After she withdrew the money a
middle-aged man with gray hair
and a mustache s howed up at
her resi d e n ce ide ntifying
himself as a police orficer, said
· Hogue.
He thanked her for he,.c help
and volunteered to return the
money to the bank. That' was the
las t s he saw of the man or her
savings, Hogue said.
A similar operation failed Jan.
29 when another Bethel Towers
resident became suspicious and
asked Bank of America officials
whether such a bank manager
was employed there, according
to Hogue.
Police in Long Beach and
Westminster are investigating
similar cases that have occurred
in their cities in recent weeks,
Hogue said.
representing di sg runtled
hom~owners who lease their
property from the Irvine
Company.
That group -the Committee
of 4,000 -is suing the Irvine
Company and has threatened to
help get out the vote against the
$124 million Newport Center
project.
Up to now, the council has
appeared to be in agreement
that the Irvine Company project
would be placed on the June 8
ballot'
If an election is not held, the
council would have to rescind
the project , a move that would
block the Irvine Company from
resubmitting the plan for one
year
An election defeat would have
the same effect.
The council, last s ummer,
approved the project on a split
vote. But the plan was put in
limbo when critics of the project
gathered enough signatures t.o
force the council to either call an
election or scrap the plan.
"I'm willing to put it to a vote
if there would be a fair
hearing," said Mayor Jackie
Heather, who favors.the project
·'I'm not convinced now it
would get'that fair hearing," she
continued, adding, "it would be
difficult to weed out the various
issues and causes."
She said she is keeping her
"options open."
Councilman Don Strauss, who
voted against the project, said
he is. opposed to the election for
a difrere.nt reason
"I've heafd that rumor too,"
he said when asked about plans
to drop the election, "and I lhlnk
there's something to it."
He said an election could be
"divisive" and he would
wekome the chance to "avoid it
and let the Irvine Company
come back with something
else "
Some council members,
though, said they are committed
to an election
"l don't believe the Newport
voters are so dumb that they'd
be swayed by some other issue,"
said Councilman Phil Maurer.
He suggested there' could be a
"backlash" to attempts by the
Committee of 4,000 to get out the
vote agai n st the Irvine
Company.
"I'm strongly in favor of an
election," he said. "You won't
see me bend."
Councilwoman Evelyn Hart
said the s ame thing.
"No matter what ~olors it (an
election>," Mrs Hart said, "the
people said they wanted to vote
and they have a right tu vote.··
A prevailing theory with some
city hall observers is that a
referendum election would serve
as a "primary" for the city
council election to follow in
November.
Four council seats will be up
for grabs in November. Those
posts are-now held by Mayor
Heather. Mrs. Hart. Strauss and
Councilman Paul Hummel.
The council is expected lo
decide Feb. ·s whether it will call
an election
Student fees hike
backed by Aldrich,
• I
UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel
Aldrich said today he endorses a·
referendum that will ask
s tudents to increase their
quarterly f ees lo pay for a
proposed 6,000-seat athletic
pavilion.
"The facility is needed to
accommodate expanded
uni ve r s ity program s in
a thle tics, recreation and
intramurals," he said in a
telephone interview, "as well as •
tremendous growth m women's
intercollegiate athletics.'•
S uch activities are now
accommodated in l ,500·seat
Cr awford Hall.
"Crawford Hall has ceased to
be suffi cient to house these
activities let alone the size of
c rowds that attend athletic
events," said Aldrich.
The UCI men's basketball
team is 17·1 this season ·
Classes still available ·in Coast College District
'
By PIDL SNEIDERMAN
Oftlleo.ity ..........
Despite fears that an early
halt to registration might be
necessary Coast Community
College olflcials said Monday
that students can continue to
sign up this week for some
·spring semester oounes.
As in put yeara, reciatratioo,
with a few new reatrlctiona, will
continue through the first week
of instruction.
Classes began Monday at
Orange Cout Colleae in Costa
Mesa, Golden West Collete in
Huntington Beach and Coastline
Colleae, which 11 based ln
Fountain Valley but offers
inatruction t.tiroutbout the Cout
diltrict.
The district bu atumpted to
control U.a sprlna enrollment
because the sCate baa said lt wttl
provide additional funds to
cover only 2.5 percent 1rowtb ln
the 1•1-12.schooJ year.
Dlltrtct official• ellminai.d
about 700 c1aa1ea from the
•J>rlnl schedule tn an attempt to
curtaU an enrollmeat 1urie.
District Chancellor Norman
Wat.Ion u.ld II~~
• the ·~ 8nrollment will ~ the yearb ~wtb pereftta,. c tbe a. Umlt. . --·~~ [ emrollm D r•1trle o 1 t 1 week will be la effect at
co.t'1111 Coll•... wtMtt '""'
an unanticipated 20 percent in
the fall semester.
John Breihan, associate dean
for admissions and records, said
no in-class registration will be
permitted in filled Coastline
classes this semester.
ln t.he past, students who were
not pre-registered have been
able to sign up ln filled classes
during the first session, if the
teacher approved.
This year. teachen are not
allowed to exceed their
pre-determined clau ltmlta.
,
Mesa awards
eable .'FV pact
The Costa Mesa City Council
awarded a contract Monday to
CATV, 1 cable televl1loa
con1ultant in Anabelm.
Ronald DYH. president of
CATV, was ewarde·d tbe
contract not to exceed sas.ooo ln
order to re.eardl the tne of
HNlCfll needed by tbe city from
a cable telen.ian traiicblM.
Tbe city will be ready by
December to bellD acceDtlnt
bld• from eable telev{1ton com , Nld t aty
mif
• cable te&ntiioe •Jttem to be
oper .... llttMdl.YYDUl la
Breihan said. This will apply to
about 400 classes that already
are considered closed.
Breihan added, however, that
s tudents can still sign up in 800
classes.
He said Coastline already has
registered about 23,000 spring
students, down-2 percent from
the fall.
In fUrther efforts lo control
1rowtb, Coaatllbe officials have
canceled some nine·week
courses tbey had planned to
offer at mid·semester.
Also, about 200 additional
CoasUine cluses were canceled
because they had not drawp the
minimum 18 pre-re1istered
student.a by one week be(ore
classes beaan.
Re1tatraUon in 1prin1
televised CoutUne courses la up
about 10 percent to abo1't •.300.
District olflciala said they a.re
not concerned about the
televl1lon student Increase
becauttJt has Uttle effect on the
cost of dPfertni the clu1.
At Oran1~ Coast Colleae.
about 25,300 1tudenll were
re111ured by Monday,
aecordina to Keftftetb Mowrey,
dean ol admliltona and records.
...
• •
.. Ylll llllTlll llllY PAPll .
fUE SDAV FEBRUARY '2 1lJ8l ORANGE COUNl V. CALIF Oll NIA 25 CE NTS
/
Vice president's limousine 'struck by rock'
: WASHINGTON CAP> -An
armored limousine carryin1
Vi~e President George Bush to
work was struck early today by
an unknown object -almost
' certainJy a rock, the FBI said.
No one was injured and it was
unknown where the rock came
from.
For several hours
Investigators had worried the
car might have been hit by a
bullet . Bush himself ~peculated
as much, accord~g to one
source who spoke with him al
the White House afterward.
• But the special FBI agent in
* . * *
Solons
speculate
on 'hit' I
Orange County lawmakers in
Washington D.C. were buzzing
today with dJfferent notions on
what 1t was that struck Vice
Pres ident George Bush 's
wo rkbound Ii mousine this
morning. .
Theories on what caused the
V ·sh aped dent on the roof or
Bush's limo ranged from the
"Ly bian hit squad" to an
innocent ·rock in the road.
An aide to Newport Beach
Congressman Robert Badham
said he heard a riveting gun
loaded with nails might have
been fired in the direction of the
Bush limousine.
A second thought was that a
con s truction worker in the
nation's capital may accidentally
have dropped some unknown
projectile from a multi-story
building under construction.
Officials did say that Bush's
driver passed a partially
com pleted co nd o m1n1um
complPic on the w:iy to the WhitP
House .
An a ide to Long Beach
Congressman Dan Lungren said,
he'd even heard one rumor
which pinned the incident on the
Lybian hit squad.
He said a local radio station
had launched that rumor .
But by far, the most popular
rumor was that the Bush limo
kickE>d up,. a rock on the road
which then slammed down on
the roo f above t h e vice
president's head •
By all accounts, the incident
did not interrupt Bush's mommg
schedule
"ll all happe ned so early,"
one a ide sa id , "that the
Washington rumor mill really
hasn't had the opportunity to
swing into full gear I'd give it a
few more hours ..
Evidence
lacking
• at site
By DAVID KUTZMANN
Of -Delly ...... SW!
The jury was there. So was the
j ooge . Not to mention the
defendant.
A,.I that was missing Monday
for a trip to the alleged crime
scene in Huntmgton Beach was
the right piece of evidence -a
1975 International Harvester
trac tor-traile r rig· with a
2,000-pound tilt-away cab.
Because a truck with the
wrong type of accessories was
there ins\ead, the eight·man,
four-woma n Or ange County
Superior Court jury was shuttled
back to Santa Ana.
And a frustrated Willie Kay
Wisely, charged with killing his
stepfather by suffocating him
beneath the cab of the truck last
March , was put back in a
sherlfrs department. patrol car
and retume.&. to Orange County
Jail, where he is being held
without bail.
Wlsely's murder trial has been
in progress for six weeks and
thls was the first opportunity the
jury hu had to see the area
where the death took place -
the comer of Springdale ~
near Edincel' Avenue.
Tbe lnt.eraection is busy with
1ho])pln1 center traffic and
school children walklnl or
riding by.
A ccordln1 to ])reviou1
teatlmony. Wisely and a n
accomplice, James Duna•an,
drove to an area near where the
tn1ck wu parked on Spr1n1d.ale
Street, in front of a Von'•
market , and watctied
Huntm,t.on Beach truck dttver
Robert Bny work on b1a rt1.
~--• -....-=.
·-m.et:. Dmaa-t..ufted tllllt -wu a lookout 11 Tll••IJ
approacbtd tbe cab. 1
(lee~ Pap .U)
)
charge of the invest11at1on.
James W. Vatter, said he had
inspected the cAr and the bureau
was "99 percent sure, baaed on
preliminary laboratory analysis,
that the car was hit by a rock or
s imilar object.
•'There were n o metal
fragments or other traces to
indicate it was a bullet," he
said.
What had appeared to be a
dent in the car's roof, the FBI
said, was only a tear In its vinyl
covering.
FBI spokesman Ron Dervish
said he did not know how the
incident happened. ·'The rock
might have been thrown or
picked up by another car," be
said.
Another FBI s poJtesmao ,
Larry Knisley, said be did not
know whether the rock had been
found. Police searched the area
and found nothing.
Bush, asked as he arrived at
the Senate ir he kne w his car
might have been the target of a
projectile, replied : ''No, I
couldn't tell that. It was just a
big bang."
Had he been pushed to the
floor, be was asked. "No," he
said, "they couldn't reach me I
was sitting In the back seat."
Later. he told reporters that
when he heard the bang, "I
asked what it was and nobody
was sure. . . I thought it might
have been a gun or sometbin&."
Secunty was unusually tight
as he ar rived at the Capitol.
Reporters were kept well clear
of the vice president and police
malntalned a heavy presence.
Bus h had personally told
President R eagan o f the
inci dent, s pokes man Pete
Roussel said.
Bush and two Secret Service
FURRY FACE Virginia born Baby Jackson.
resid ent groundhog at Santa Ana's Prentice
Park Zoo. met his shado" Monda~· when he
Deily ,..... -.., a..n.. MM'!'.
roused from his hole to nibblt· on some fruit
Today being his holiday. howe ver . he sle pt in.
m issing a pleasant sunn' da~
Groundhog • misses cue
County zoo's weather forecaster sleeps in today
By GLENN SCOTT
Of UM Delly ,.. ... Sutt
One crummy mornin.li! each
year Orange County's curiosity
see k ers tur n to the
ca rerully crafted groundhog hole
at Prentice Park Zoo in Santa
Ana to discover what its
resident . 5-year-old Baby
Ja c kson will sec uoon his s pecies· legendary awakening
from hibernation
H he sees his ~hadow , the
legend s ays, he'll tie frightened
back mto his hole fo r another six
weeks of rotten winter weather.
Jr he doesn 't, he'll remain out
of hibernation and bring an end
lo the winter dregs .
It is a clever myth built on the
cycles or the seasons and the
anamals. But Baby J ackson just
doesn't seem to care.
Baby Jackson slept in today.
"He only has to work one day
or the year and he was late
today ... lamented zoo attendant
J eannie Jenkins.
But it's hard • fault Baby
Jackson -call him B.J . for
short -because to a Virginia
native, this winter can't be very
rough.
Eastern groundhogs, also
known as woodch11cks, marmots
and whistle pigs, bed down
unde rground in October or
November when food supplies
become scarce and they
normally gel up this time of
* * * More winter
prophesied
PUNXSUTAWNEY, Pa. <AP>
-Punxsutawney Phil , the
underground oracle named for
this town, saw his shadow when
he peered from his groundhog
burrow today and tradition says
that means six more weeks of
the calamitous Winter or '82.
The furry prophe t fed his
dreary forecast t o a
winter-weary land through
Charles Erhard, president of the
•Punxsutawney Groundhog Club,
who roused the s lumbering
rodent from his electricall y
heated burrow.
The long-range forecast issued
by the National Weather Service
concurred with Phil's findings in
a year that has seen record cold
temperatures nationwide.
year, .)\1s J enkins noted
As a Wes t Coast resident ,
though, B J only takes a "token
nap" or about six weeks, she
said He was out and about a
month ago s oaking in the
Southern California sun and
leading the solitary lifestyle that
groundhogs li ve
U h e were still back in
Virginia , BJ . might be
burrowing und e r fi elds
searching for a vegetarian meal
and, at the same lime, trimming
his ever-growing teeth needed
to gnaw out a living. He might
also bE! dodgmg the hunters who,
considering him a pest, earn a
50 ·cent-pe r -tail bounty on
groundhogs, Ms. J enkins said.
In Santa Ana, zoo officials laid
a c hain-link surface at the
bottom of the groundhog yard
before they rilled it with dirt for
the imported B J . Like most
groundhogs, he spends much or
hi s time keeping the
subterranean quarters tidy, she
said. noting that groundhogs dig
separ ate sections for "bedroom
and bathroom chambers."
B. J . obviously enjoys the
bedroom.
"He is a late sleeper," she
observed
Schooling tax credits pushed
Private, education break urged for parents
By SANDIE JOV
of-Daly ..........
Noting concern for the future
of the Catholic educationa l
system because or s piraling
costs. the bishop or the Roman
Catholtc Diocese of Oranae
called for tu credits for parenll
who send their children to
private schools.
"l don't look It any public
1upport of private edfcatlon
without a Jaund.lced eye,"
Blthop Willfam Johnaon aald
Monday, ''because when the
money comes , the ha nd of'
control II cloM by."
But ne conttnded. tax credill
wouldn't M a cont.ribuUoo to
support private education. •
He aald he Views tax crecllll u
"I way to lighten the burden"
imposed on peraona for electinl
what ls their con1tlluUonal
South Coast Village, Santa Ana,
the bis hop_underscored his
remarks with numerous
r.eferences to the high quality of
Catholic education.
He ·called it "an educational
environment that is se<:ond to
none."
Also speaking at the luncheon
was Sister Celine Leydon.
superintendent of Catholic
education ror the diocese, who
explained CathoUc achools teach
all the subjects taught In pubUc
schools wlth the addition of a
formal religion.
Elghth·8rade student•
enrolled ln the diocese's Catholic
1cbools Jut year ranked tn the
top 30 percent of the nation. 1he
utd, of 1tudenll who took •
oaUonal acboluUc achievement
teat.
And 1he aald M
.. , 1ChOol IWdiQll 10 on to eoue.e.
Notinl that tt «*ti •.JaO I
1•ar to educate elemeat1r1 1tudenu ln oubUc 1chool1 ln
Orange County. Sister Celine
contended that the Catholic
schools save county t~xpayers
$42 million annually.
T h ere are 36 p·arochial
grammar schools and five
Catholic high schools ln Orange
County with a total enrollment
of approdmat.ely 20,000.
Tuition for the Catholic
schools is seoc> per student, the
auperlntendent said, with the
rest of the cost provtded by the
parl1hes and various other
prtvate means.
Unlike tre nds · across the
nation, the bllhop aald, Catholic
scboolt In Oranc County 'are
nourbhtna.
Slater C.lln• noted the ~
plant to open a n ew
elementary 1cbool ta Irvine WI
· September and 11 loold.Dc a 1
w"n • ae Calbolb1
achool can be built.
Tbe ooontlme 1atbertnc
Clee BllllOP, P11e AS)_
agents traveling with him heard
u noise that ·'sounded like a
gunshot,'' Secret Ser vice
spokesman Jack Warner said.
But the vice president did not
reallse something had bit his
car. spokesman Peter Teeley
said, and the motorcade, picking
up speed but taking no evasive
action, proceeded to lbe White
House.
When the car arrived at the
White House, Dis trict of
Columbia police s pokesman
Joseph Gentile said, the driver
discovered a V-shaped dent m
the left rear portion or the roof
Bush entered his office in lh~1
Old Executive Olfice Buildlnc.
next to the White Hou~e. and
held what an aide called ,~ '
"routine meeting "
Later he met with former
Redskins rootball coach George
Allen and Casey Conrad or the
President's Council on Physical
Fitness before going to the
Capit-01.
At the scene. police blocked
several blocks of L Street,
causing rush-hour traffic Jams,
and conducted a
building-by-building search
Gunshots fired
in Valley store;
2 convicts jailed
By PATRICK KENNEDY
01 IM D•llY -l ufl
A convicted murderer free on
parole aUegedly fired his gun
rnto the floor of a Fountain
Valley pha rm acy Mo nday,
thr e atening three wome n
employees before de manding
cash and narcotics, police
reported.
Gerald Wayne Moore , 48, the
alleged gunman, a nd Teddy
George Radcliff, 36, his alleged
getaway driver. were arrested
an hour later in Costa Mesa.
police said.
Both had handguns and police
fou nd about $30,000 worth or
narcotics and $S50 in cash in the
car, authorities said. Authorities
added they believe the drug~
and cash were taken in the
Fountain Valley holdup.
Moore, paroled from state
prison in November. allegedly
entered Elliott's Pharmacy at.
4: 15 p.m No one was inJured
during the robbery at Ganleid
Street and Magnolia Avenue,
police said.
Costa Mesa paJi ce. who
received an all points bulletin,
saw the suspects' vehicle near
Vanguard Street and Newport
Boulevard and the two men
were arrested without incident
and taken to Or ange County
Jail, pohce said.
Radclifr is a convicted armed
robber who also has served time
in prison, police said
Moore's former parole officer
R A. Castaneda said today in
Riverside that he'~ not surprised
that Moore wa s allegedly
involved in an armed robbery.
lie said hi s rormer client has
killed and has threatened to kill
again
"The courts sent him back to
prison on a parole violation
when he was a rrested for
drunken dnvmg a nd carrying a
concealed weapon,.. Castaneda
said.
··He told the Judge he'd been·
at a bar waiting ror a guy to
come in with his ex wife so he
could kill him," Castaneda said
"He said he changed his mind
and was driving home from the
bar when he was pulled over.
.. But this guy's been to the
101nl for murder so be ain't
Jivin' He's had two or three
heart attacks and so he figures
he's gotng to die :in:;way and he
JUSt doesn't care," the parole
officer said
He says Moore was sent back
lo prison for v10lat1ne parole, for
drunken dnvmg and carrymg a
concealed wea·pon b ut was
r e leased in November after
serving about a year
"The law says when you do
your time, you re released,"
Casta neda sai d "It 's a
CSee ROBBER 'V . Page AZ>
HUD chief pledges
lwusing stimulants
"Housmg is in a very poor
economic condition ... that will
continue until interest rates
come down."
It was with· that assessment
th al Samuel Pie rce, U.S .
Secretary of Housing and Urban
Development, opened a press
conference Monday night in
Irvine on the nation's housing
dilemmas.
Despite the interes t rate
obstacle, Pierce maintained that
s teps are being take n to
s t imula t e the hou si n g
construction market.
The secretary said he 1s
working on a program to permit
some part or the $600 billion in
pensi9n funds to be made
avai labl e f o r housi n g
mort gages. "Savings and loan
banks and mutual savings and
loans ... are dried up," Pierce
said.
And, he said. "demonstration
projects" have shown that the
cost of new housing can be
reduced "20 to 30 percent" by
modification in local building
co des and cons tru c tion
regulations.
Orange County government, in
conjunction with the Orange
County chapter of the Building
Industry Association of Southern
C a l I r o r n·i a , h a s b e e n
experime nting with such
projects. The county also is
scheduled to open a ''one-stop"
processina center for housln1
development plans .
Pierce said the 1oal ls "to
build more cheaply. whether
<the buyer ) ls rich or poor."
The bouaina secretary wu ln
trvlne as a cuest ipeaker at a
BIA meettna.
Plerce said he belleved
Preeldent R.ta1an'1 economic
procram wtll have the effect of
bf'inaln1 interest rates down He
warned, however, tbat "It 11
o.lly "'"' ...........
SPEAKER llUD Secretary
Samuel Pierce. s peaking in
Irvine. assessed nation's
housing dJlemmas
a·RlfHil COAST 1111111 ·.~:
Fair through
Wednesday. Local north to
northeast winds 15 to ~ .;. ... '
mph at times. Highs 70 to
78. Overnight lows 48 to 54.
tlftllDI TODAY
"Th~ Jup#ln-,Efltct" 1aa.t
1ome fundoJacntolf•h
prcdfcUng the end of Ila.
world u.0& near cu Morch 10 of tM1 ~r. Page A7.
'~11011 . ..
....
1Jlt ,~[,TAX CREDITS -Bishop
tit~ilUam Johnson, leader of
,lfJOrange County's Catholics. ,..tt(urged tax credits for parents
1 l ;o f c hi I d r e n i n p r i v a t e
s~chools. ,,.,
f)~f <..From Page A 1
~ .................
SCHOOL AEYlEW -Sister
Celine Leydon said 94
percent of the Diocese of
Orange's Catholic high
school students go on to
college.
BISHOP URGES CREDITS • •
marked the beginning of
Catbotic Schools Week, an event
commemorated by the Orange
County Board of Supervisors in
a resolution presented at the
luncheon by 5th District
Supervisor Thomas Riley to
Sister Celine.
,lj'HoneSty, f oresigh~
?-;, u R. . :;,;n.erm ima traits 3'f~·
:o J)By JODI CADENHEAD
•• Of .. o.ttr ~ 5Uff
·iJ '2 Monday morning Keith and
l;!tl'fKermlt Rima were selling
1{ ll hardware in the Costa Mesa
x~. store their father started more
s'rfthan 30 years ago. 9h That's the way he would have
91fJ wanted lt, said the two brothers.
2e!'lwhose father Kermit Rima died
'{cf Sunday at 69 following a stroke
Dec. 24. h'i/t A native of Grand Rapids,
.. ~,Mich., Mr. Rima, who trained as
~ti~ a dentist before World War II,
··id.opened Kerm Rima Hardware in o;u 1951 at Harbor Boulevard and <llff ·eroadway Street.
;;'n'i It was the same year that he
married Betty, who worked "~~ beside him selling everything
!'1'?t.frl)m pot..s e.'ld pans lo wrenches
ft' -~ "He was a great guy He was ~J.kverx honest and very reliable,"
1Cif •aid Alvin Pinkley, who O'f!'ed a
b1QArug store just a few doors
away. "He always took the
1~siUve attitude and was a great J, booster to the city.'·
,0~ Following bis discharge from
af'frtbe Navy, Mr. Rima .decid~ not
to pursue a career m dentistry
~..,and instead opened a tackle
¥,_tore in Newport Beach.
')1 , But his .dream was always to
' :kwn a hardware store as bis ;1\})'fa~ber bad done in Michigan,
i•~sa•d hi.I two sons. ) ~if, Selling hardware was Mr . 1~Rima's life and by the lime the ~f. tr sons were eig~l years old, they
· were working Jn the Costa Mesa
store, too. ''He never cons idered it
work." said Keith: 29. "There
was n't anything he couldn't
sell."
In time the busy store not only•
became a center for hardware
deals, but also a meeting place
for friends and civic leaders.
· Mr. Rima was active in city
and social affairs and served as
president of the Costa Mesa
Kiwanis in 1965 and director of
the Chamber of Commerce from
1964 to 1969.
"He was very generous and a
lot of fun," recalled realtor Roy
Mccardle. "He was really one of
our more active members in the
Kiwanis. Kerm was always on
the lookout for other people."
In 1965 Mr. Rima decided to
expand bJs operations and
opened a new 26,000-square-foot
store at 2f.GG Harbor Bivd. ·
"He bad a lot of forealtbt,"
said bis son Kermit, JI. "He
knew the town wu crowtq. He
knew this waa the plaee to
come."
Although be eaJo7ed ........
his favorite paatlme •••
designing mallboae1 and
furniture to sell at tbt Rare.
Both-of bis aou weal to
college and botb rehlrned to
work in the hardware store.
"From the time we wen lddl,
this store is buically what he
talked about," said Kermit.
"It's going to stay the 1ame.
There's no doubt about it ... ,
Added Keith, "It was bis
dream and it's ours too."
There will be no memorial
service. The family suggests
that c:ontributions be made to
the Calvary Chapel School.
NEW YOllK CAP) -A rt1u~ in J,nterest rat411 bu
aent t:&. prlmt rate cllmbln1 tor
the flnt time since December.
hel1htenJQ1 concern thal the rec:tr~ .UI worsen.
Cltl , 'the n1tloe'1 second
l1r1eat commercial bank, raised
Ila prime lendln1 rate Monday to
II.I .,.rcent ftom tbe 15.T5
percent rate that bad prevailed
in the Industry alnce Dec. 1. No.
12-ranked Crock1tr National
Bank of San Francl1co quJckly
followed Cltlbank'1 lead, and
Chemical Bank and Uoyda Bank
California joined ~he move
today.
Cbue Manhattan Bank, the
third Iara~. also increued ita
prime rate today, but not as
much as the other banks,
movlnt to 10.25 percent.
The prime rate last rose
throu&bout the banking industry
last July before beginning a
From PageA1
TRIAL. • •
bypoderm\c needJe In bis
wln4breaker pocket and a
revolver tucked in his belt.
Dunaaan ·said be saw
movement around the cab and
when he looked again, "it was
down.''
Wisely, 29, has denl'ed all involvement in bia step ather's
death. Ht is acting as his own
lawyer.
Wisely said be wanted his
stepfather's truck at the
Sprln1dale street location, but
be said Huntlngton Beach police
told blm it wouldn't start.
So the defendant -from his
Jail cell -arranged for a
stead-in truck. However, that
ri1 didn't have a large metal
chain rack on the rear of the
cab. Uke Bray's truck.
The difference was significant
enough that the jury. after being
bused from Santa Ana to
Huntington Beach; was put back
on the bus and sent back about
10 minutes after arriving.
It was uncertain if Wiaely,
who asked for the on-the-scene
jury inspection, would try again
thia week. I
Presidio& oyer bis triaJ bu
been Superior Court Judge
Kenneth E. Lae, who like the
jury, walked around the park.in1
lot area uncerta.lnJy for about 10
or 15 minutes and then left
FromPageA1
ROBBERY •.
re•ol.tq door. clidn't YoU know
that 1 But the way I aee It, this
1\1"1 '• been Ill prtaoo three or
four tlmee and he's 101n1 to do
aometbtni a1aJn."
One of the women clerk.I of the
pharmacy said, "I. remember
belng scared. He told us not to
make a move so we woukln1t get
hurt. Then be tired his gun lnto
the noor."
She declined to give her name
because she said she didn't want
it known in the event that the
suspect was released. She said
she didn't know the_suspect is a
convicted murderer.
~';~other wouldn't eViCt her son
ji.oyalty described at Newport murder trial
· • Despite thelr lncompabbib.ty. never thought of asking Baetz to be mentally alert the limes they ~JJanette Baell balked at ha"!llg leave her home. saw her. She said the woman
fJfl!ber son -no~ accused of killing "~he'd s~y , 'I can't; .~ just never spoke of wanting to die .
. ~'!~her with cyanide poison -move c~n t. ff~ s my son , the The witness told jurors Baets
from her Newport Beach home, witness said. h d bee lo d and obnoxious
·--a proaecution witness has According to the prosecution a d hin u th d lng an · "'"'ed . • aroun s mo er ur tesi.u.1 . Baetz, a chem1St was abusive i ut l ago Called to the witness stand by and cruel towards his mother even ng 0 severa ye~ prose~utor Patrick Geary. who suffered from varlou~ :nd sb~ihad l~~ h~~a~as~C:
hirley Lever told Jurors physical ailments. rom m r
Monday, she and her husband, Previous w\lnesses have onward.
Mrs. Baell's nephew, visited the testified the son and bis mother Baetz could be sentenced to
8T-year-old woman regularly had numerous loud arguments, life . Imprisonment 'if he is
I durln1 the years that Herbert including one in which be ls c9nv1ctcd of murder.
Barclay Baeti lived with bl~ alleged to have.told h~r. "you're
mother at her Balboa peninsule nothing but a damned old
I z'llome. woman. I wish you were . . . "'.;r Fl on· da I E Baeti, 57' is charged with dead." .tJ...,
• putting a lethal dose 1f cyanide Defense lawyer Stuart Grant }•et h;iacked poison in b1a mothe 's orange of Costa Mesa, who mt11t still .,_,
• t juice after tellin11 her she give his openin1 1tatementa to
t "abould be dead." ~,... tM Jury, has indicated Mrs. t,o Havana
E The woman wu pronounced Baell was in poor health and
2dead Sept. 10, 1981, at Hoaa asked her son to help her end
·'Memorial Koapital ln Newport her Ille.
E Beach. · Baell admitted to police be
llri. Lever. who lives with eav~ bis mother lbJ! ball f buaband Cbarlea in TorTance, tea1poonfuJ of cyan.Ide ln her 1 ~d althoulh Janette Baetz and oran«e juice. • _
.... ion bad a storl"f\y Mn. Lever 1atd 1be and her
;:r.aationlblp, t.he elder woman huaband foUnd .Janette Baell to1
-
WASHINGTON (AP> -An
Alr Florida Boelnl 737 jetliner
bound tot Key West, Fla., from
Miami with T8 people aboard
was hijacked today and ordered
·to Havana. the Federal Aviation
Admln.lstratloo said.
FAA 1pokesm.aa Fred Farrar said the hijacked plane wa Air
Florida Fli1ht TlO. which left
Miami about 2:40 p.m. ·EST. He
Hid the plane w .. on th•~
at Havana airport, havln1
landed there about 3:30 p.m. .
Farrar aald tht aircraft wu
hl.Jecked by an tncllvtdual wbo aald he bad a bottle contalnlq
flamQ\able UquJd. · The plane carl'led a crew of
'fhe.
TIM FM •Nd the hijackjq
·wu the nm aut~f\al attept
in lht United Stat.es 1lne9 Allr,
wben an E11tern AlrllDH wu commandeered ..S
Ha•-. Tbere wu a rHb
ltljaeldlql Ill tu U. . .
declloe to 15 I percHt at two
larP, bankl ln November. n.o..
two bankl ralHd their prime
ratn to lS.'75 percent to jolo UM
rest of th• lndu1tr1 ln
December.
Interest ntH roae for the
fourth 1trat1ht week at the Treaau.ry Department'• weekly
auction of three-eod 1br-month
blll• cllmblna to thelF hl..,_t
level. since Oct. 5, 1981. Ttle
Treaaury auctJoned. about $10
billion in btll• Monday and la
scheduled to auction $10 billion
In notes and bonda thl1 week to
raise cub to help finance the
federal deOcit.
On the New York Stock •
• •
~•cMPte. lntere.t rate Jltterl
aent f>rteet tumbllnt MODday 1 with the Dow Jones avera1e or
30 lndu.atrial 1tockl plummetinl
19.,J poiAtl to clOM at 851 .• , the
1teepett ooe-day 1llde in more
than nve montbl. But in tradlna
today, tbe. l>lue·cblp aver11e waa up 0.85 polnta to 852.IO at the ·~loee . ._
Bond prlcH, wbtcb fell
Monday, reeovered aome of that
lost 1round 1n the early 1olng
today. But told bullion pricea
continued to faU \ihlle..the..dollar
soared for the second strailbt
da}'.
Tho prime rate, the base upon
which banks compute interest
" char1es on abott·term brrb•·
loan1 to tbllr molt cNdlt·wortb1
borrowen, reached• Nedll.S
percent ln Deffmber ~. lt
•tood u hllh ..... perallll
between July aod September tJI
lHt year before f alll.DC u low u
U .5 percent at two bank.I lD
November.
Concern over tbe. coune ol
interett rat.ea bu belcbteoed u
the Federal Reserve Board
continue• to report
greater-than-desired arowth "' the nallon'• mone)' 1upply and
the u .S. Treuury ate~ up tu.
borrowlo1 to finance a·
record·hlah ~vernment deftclt.
East's storms like clockwork
' Midwest braces for still another blast of Arctic cold
By The AUOCtat.ed Prell
A winter atorm following in
tbe tracks of last weekend's
crippler dumped up to three
inches of snow In the Texas
Panhandle today, and the
Midwest was warned to 1et
ready for another assault.
It was expected to be a repeat
of tbe storm that left 51 people
dead and thousands of travelers
stranded in almost two feet of
snow in the Midwest on Sunday
and Monday.
"It's like cars on a freight
train coming down the track,"
said Mary Ka1>fman of the
National Weather Service in Ann
Arbor, Mich. "It' may be the
same even to the time of day it
hits."
Blowing snow reduced
visibility to near zero tb\s
momtna in Amarillo, Texas. Up
to four Inches of snow was
expected in North Texas and
parts of New Mexico.
"We've got a lot of accidents
and stranded cars," said Mabel
Abernathy, a deputy In the
Potter County sheriff's
department in Amarillo. "The
roads are very slick and
dangerous, and with the blowing
snow tbe visibility is very poor."
Of the people killed in the
weekend snowstorm, 15 died in
Michigan, including 13 who
suffered apparent heart attacks
while shoveling snow and two
who froze to death.
By Monday, the storm had
moved into the East. with icy
floods, freezine rain and s11ow.
Ice chunks and water up to six
feet swirled throuah the streets
of OU City, Pa., prompting the
evacuation of about 50 people
after water backed up behind a
huge ice jam where Oil Creek
meets the Allegheny River~
c Photo. Page B2 >
About 100 National
Guardsmen launched an assault
on the clogged streets of St.
Louis late Monday after the
city's worst snowstorm in 70
years left nearly 14 Inches of
snow during the weekend.
Arctic winds up to 40 mph
raked Colorado on Monday in
the wake of a storm that
dropped up to 10 inches of anow
in the high counto-and 3 inches
on the southeut t)lalnl. Aootber
snowstorm started today, and
bitter cold weather was
expected.
A fierce ice storm made a
delicate spectacle of trees and
fences In north-central and
western Massachusetts o'#'r the
weekend. but pulled down power
W aterslide victim
seeking $1 million
An Anaheim man who
suffered injuries when a
Plexiglass tube at the towering
Big 0 waterslide ruptured last
August is suing the Newport
Beach operators and builders
for more than $1 million.
The ride, located in Orange,
stands up to 70 feet and was
closed to the public following the
Aug. 9 accident. According to a·
city building department
spokesman, the ••aquatube" ride
remains closed.
Filing suit in Orange County
Qoy, 9, given LSD
LOS ANGELES CAP> -A
9.year-old boy was given a
stick-on "tat.too" laced with LSD
at his school campus in West Los
. Angeles, a s pokes woman at
Queen of Angels hospital in
Hollywood said Monday.
Superior Court Monday was
Joseph Deterding, 19, who
claims that be and another man
were left. hanging about 40 feet
a hove the ground when the tube
ruptured. Seven people in all
were reported injured in the
accident.
The Anaheim man is seeking
$1 million in punitive damaaes
as well as unspecified damaees
for medical bills. He also seeks
general damages.
His lawsuit alleges that the
tube ride bad design defects and
was not properly inspected.
The ride ls owned by James L.
Herrell of Newport Beach.
Also named as defendants in
the legal action are the city of
Orange, J .J . Kr~" Construction
Co. and Radical Recreation
Developers Inc., General
Electric Corp. and arcbited R.
John Helsch.
Now's the time to join a
Holiday Spa Health Club, while
you can still take advantage of
our 1981 rates.
better time than now to give
Holiday Spa ·a try. So stop by
today for a free guest tour.
Hol~~ ·11ealth CIUb • Plus 1/2 off on a short
introductory course, and dis-
counts on all our other mem-
berships.
You'll get all of this year's
facilities, for last year's prices.
With separate, individually
...specialized facilities and pro-
grams for men and women,
available every day. There's no
for Men and Women/
1/2 off short course not available
at ·1brrancc or West Los Angeles clubs.
Costa Mesa i300 Harbor Blvd., !Behind Thrifty
Drug). (714! 549-3368 .
Mission Viejo 24401 Alicia Pkwy. at San Diego
Freeway, (714 l 77Q.Q822
Orange 622 EasL Kat.ells Ave .. West of Tustin
Ave., 1714) 639·2441
Westminster 6757 Westminster Ave., at Golden
West, 171411394-3387
lI lV DYi 00! 'SVM A.NV
.-OUR 1981 RATES LOOK GREAT
•
J
Playboy EntuprlHI, the company that publlahll
Pla7boy ma1ulne, baa Ju1t whipped throu1h a
climactic year, one that wUl probablJ ltand u a tu.rntni point. Tbe quest.kin la: "What will it do
next1" U you have any ldeu, send them lD (Playboy
ii headquartered at 911 N. MichlCan, Cblcasc> tOlll).
The eompan)' 1000 eiq>ectl to bave in ltl cub box
about SlOO millloa, and tt'1 lookJ.nl for waelul lhlnaa to
do. Whal'• useful depends, of coune, on bOw you
define tbal term.
Rev. Jerry Falwell of the Moral Majority
wouldn't find much that Playbo)' does to be UMful,
althouib be would probably approve of the WQ' tbe
company moved in 1981 to 1et rid or a bunch ot
operations. In 1981, Playboy Enterprt.ea did the
follo~:
-SoJd Oui magazine. -A&reed to sell ita 1ambllng casinos in Britain.
-Agreed to aell lta aix blnfO parlon ln Britain. -Ao'eed to aelJ lll two resort hotela al Lake
::n;:r;~~!~ .. ~·~:! :r·t~Gora~e, N.J . _ • -.·
properties l';
r epresented nearly -~ · e.
half of Playboy's l /.:J! • • ·
total s ales. The A :! J ~;)l!,~,~n:aJ0~~; :llllll 1au1nz ~
to do with Jerry
Falwell'• o~ns. The two resort hotels and Oui
maguine were"'conaistent mooey-IOHn -benee the
decision to get rid or them. The 1ambllni operatlom
are another story. They were IO profltabfe that if not.
for them the company wouldn't have made any
money.
So wby get rid of tbem? Bec:ause tbe company.
was virtually fore~ to do so after authorities In
London refused to renew Playboy's Uc6es oo the
ground that unsavory "-and unlawful -activities
were going on in the Playboy casinos. Playboy feels
it was the victim or anti-American prejudice ln
England, but rather than fllbt by appealln1 to the
Crown Court, it decided to take the money -and run.
It's from disposition of the 1amblin1 operations
lln Britain and the two resort hotels ln the United
States that Playboy will realize ill $100 million -ln
,cash~.And that's why it needs Ideas on where to put
all lliit cash. The one major new venture on the
1h'oa'tUAi is ~ "Playboy Cbaunel" (or pay television ..
Tbat'a expected to 1et 1oin1 by the end ur thli mo::~. ·
Playboy founder Huth Hefner describes It u "a very
exciting eldeUlon of the matulne. because what we
intend to do is quite literally tum the ma1aline lnlo a
pay television phenomenon.''
It's not that Playboy bu itven up the 1ambliq
business. It baa a partnenblp with a company called
Elsinore in the Playboy Hotel and Casino that opened
In Atlantic City last April. The hotel bas 500 peat
rooms, and the casino bu 1,300 slot machines. But
the company sWl doesn't have a permanent llcenae
from the Atlantic City authorities -and one of the
bll reasons ,.,,-fleeing Britain was to avoid
J'°pardi.zina the chances or geWn1 th1s license.
What else does Playboy Enterprises do! It
rates another casino ln Nassau ln the Babamu; It ·
ublisbes Games magazine; it bas a book publilbin1
slness <Playboy Press, Seaview Book.a, Wldeview
ooks, Playboy Paperbacks, Playboy Book Club); it
owns a company , Boarts International, that
distributes U.S. magazines and paperbacks
o1verseas; it bas <a luxury-limou.9ine service in Loa
A.ngeles; and it has model agencies in Chicago and
l .os Angeles. •
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
NlW "fOflll I#') ---. -,._ -.... ~ ....... ___ YOrll-;---...... ____,, .. __
. . : .U'5 AND DOWNS
. ~ . -. . ~ -7 -~ •' . ,._
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MflALS
New vo.-1e tAP'I -5"' Mflftrt"OUI
IM "le.et ...,._,.
(Ill"' 1t·tl <eftll • p1uftf, U.S.
dtttln« .... t..eM•-·...-. 11111 O.OCllM.,..... .... _. .. Tie 17Aa2M9YllW--IW lb.
.......... H-11 umtl ......... N. Y.
Mefc..-y ....... ,er flalll .
....._.UW.GOll'lt'fOL, N.Y.
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