HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-02-03 - Orange Coast Pilot. . . . . ..
-11111• llllY NIU
W EDNS:SDAY FfBRUARY 3 . 1 ~8.l ORANGE COUNTY. C ALI FORNIA 25 CENTS
.• •
•• ·u ~S. buzzed jetliner, Libya claims :~· ~ .. ,,, ,,.,,
,J ~ ... '·"' · .. ,-;
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP> -
Libya state radio said today that
two U.S. jet flpten buued a
Libyan jetliner over Greece, and
called on the U.N. Security
Council .to condemn American
"terrorist practices."
In an Arablc -lan1ua1e
newscast monitored in Beirut,
the radio said the F·lt U.S.
fi1hten intereepted the IJbyan
airliner Sunday while it wu a
re1ular flltbt from Athena,
Greece, to the Libyan capltai,
Trip0U. It said the American
"jets staged provocative acts"
a1ainst the commercial plane.
'llhe radio did not e:splain why
the incident was not announced
earlier. '11\ere wu no immediate
comment from WashiJllton.
"The American jets, which
took off from an American
aircraft. carries: in the area, new
over the Libyan airliner and
chased it for more than seven
miles in Greek airspace some 30
GOING OUT ON A LIMB? -Springtime is
bloomln1 early on eversreen pear trees
along coastal community streeta. lya Lewis,
.........................
·a clerJc typist in the city clerk's office,
inspects a branch outside Costa Mesa City
Hall. The fragile blossoms last twol weeks:
upervisor Wieder
o seek re-election • Between ltU and 11'11 lbe aerved aa an eueutiff a..l.tam
to tben Los Anaelel Ila,... Sam
YOft1. llon ,..U,t 1be ...
........ by ~= to u ad boe com~
blocksr1Dta.
miles southeast of Athens." the
broadcut said.
It said the incident was
brought to the attention of the
Security Council in a Libyan
government note that strongly
protested "this barbaric act by
the American administration."
The Libyan government of
Col. Moammar Khadafy also
asked the Security Council to
"lake a stand that condemns
these terrorist practices which
violate all international laws
and traditions and demonstrate
fiagranUy that the American
administration derives lt1
conduct from the law of the
••
jun1le. ;f
Libya's relatiqDI with ttit1
Rea1an admini1tratlon hue
been tense ii.Dee two F-14• from·
the A.merican etb Fleet in t.be
Mediterranean Sea abot don
two Soviet-made SU-22 Libyan
air force jell over the Sidra Gulf
last August. . r .
Riley-PSA feud boi/Jj ,,
: i : :
I •
Airline's billboard r.efers to 'Orange County Airi>Orii
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL °'-Deity N.e ....
~ !' I ~
A 4-month old argument between Oran1e
County Supervisor Tbomu Riley and Pacific
Southwest Airlines over -whether to use the
name John Wayne Airport or Oran1e County
Airport is fiarin1 up again.
AirJ)ort, rather than John Wayne Airport, wu t )
meant neither u a all1bt to your ettorta to , >
effect the name chan1e nor to the memory ol a f ~
great·Aniericao." ~ ·! O'lilalley aald the billboard would be ~ ~
changed; it wu. Aa for the bus adverUatng, . \.
O'Malley said it was geared to OnlJ those : :
port.ions ol the county where tourilta mlebt be '•
present and would end in November. It did. All ~
other advertlalnC, be said, eltber uaea t.be name :
.JQbn W•yne Airport or Jobn Wayne/OY'Nl!e ~
County Airport..
Riley, who was instrumental la cbanlln1
the airport's name to honor the late aet«, is
unhappy because a PSA billboard aloopide tbe
Santa Ana FreeW11y 1n the Santa Fe ~prings
area refers to the airport as Orance County
AirDort.,
"lln't lt possible for you to demonstrate a bit more cooperaUon ln th1a matter!" RUey
asked in a Jan. ~ letter to John O'Malley,
·PSA'• director of aovemmeat atrain.
PSA becan aerv1ce Oct. 1 to Oranp County
with two Oi&bta dally. At t.be same time, the
airline beean advertislnl ita new service on
aipboarda on Orance County TranaJt District
buses and on a billboard located in Santa Ana.
Riley objected ln an Oct. 14 letter to PSA;
O'Malley responded in an Oct. 21 letter in which
he said, "I want to assun: you that the reference
to the county's facility as Oi;,an1e County
O'Malley could not be reached tbla monlin1
for comment on the newly diaeovered billboard
cited in Riley's letter. "S~ your adverti.ILnc coatiDuea to be
wrong, I can only conclude that PSA wilbea to
continue aloq a path that cannot ultimately be
very productive,'' Riley said.
Relatioal between Riley and PSA bave not
been the belt. It •u PSA 1'bkb iniUally ftled a
lawsuit ln U.S. District Court ln Loa An&eles
that led to a court order overtumm1 a Ailey
plan to reeutate which commerdal carrien
serve the airport.
That lower court order Jast Friday wu
stayed by a federal appeals court peod1q a
hearing on the merits of the access issue.
Phony TV number l>usy, busy !
• 15 ,000 try to call toll-free 'vacant code'. after. appeal v ?
l
putting a disclaimer on tb.I
screen to coincide with tb~
phony number. ,
NEW YORK (AP> -The
distinction between art and
reality is apparently 1etting
harder for TV audiences to
distinguish. When a non-working
telephone number nashed on the
screen as part of ABC's movie
"Pray TV" Monday ni&ht, an
estimated 15,000 people tried to call it .. '-
In the drama, Ned Beatty,
playl.na a television evan1ellat,
said: "If you have a prot>lem of
any kind -fmancial, medical,
spiritual -call the number you
now aee on the bottom of your
screen and let us help you to be
-born again by the spirit of God."
The toll-free number ,
800-555-al&&, is a "vacant code,"
wbicb the telephone company
aaalene<I to ABC for the movie.
It la one of many numbers not in
operation, which, when called,
geta a computerized response:
"We're sorry. Your call
cannot be completed u dialed.
~lease check the nlUDber and
dial a1ain, or ask your oper..ator to help you."
Harry Scboepe, the telephone
company's ·staff supel'Visor for
TV network operations, said
normally a total of about 300
calls an hour reach non-existent
numbers. But during the time
when the fictitious preacher
made hia appeal, 10,000 calls to
vacant numbers were received.
ln the next two hours 5,000 came
in.
ABC spokesman Tom Mackin
said the network didn't consider
Schoepe said that tbis = the first time a fictitious
number was inundated by calls
because of television. He said
comedian Pat Paulsen made a
request for support for bis
presidential bid several ye.,..,
ago and more than lS.000 can.
were then made to vacant'code
numbers.
··White House goof
Egypt president's name garbl~d
WASHINGTON <AP> -Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak, the largefy Unknown figure who succeeded Anwar
Sadat, was introduced to the nation's capital today with his
name mispronounced.
In stentorian tones, in the White House East Room, an
official loudly called him ''Miraback. ''
Kidnaps, r~pes ·get
le~Y se~tences
1liAICLA1111UTlll :
Coalidei'able cloudiD4118 late tonllllt ...a '11nu·1u1 mornlnl, becwnlnc partly
cl o u d-y Tb u r J d a 7
1afternoon . Cooler
1Tbpnc1.ty With ~ o1 a The pro.eeutor'• comment.I
brou1bt lmmecllate protnu
from R-.-ell'• lawyer, Deputy
Public Defender .lamH P .
Spellman, but Judie lleCartla
took DO actica
to•· Lowa tonicbt from • Ito•. . ..
t••T1M1·
I •
....
PL YllOtn"H, Mau. '(AP> -
Juda• A\&f\allUI Wainer J>lued
SolomoG ln SUpertor Court bin;
dlvlcllq UJ> euatody of an qint
do1 csalmed by two mut.n by a•ar~ Jl1~ both, .. .
"lt'1 funny," 11td Suaan
Graham, who with ~r b•band
Wllllam ~ .aet c:µft¥f durlu.
February Of the di01 they call
Tedd)'. "We uaed to own a dot,
now l l\Mll we own ball a do1. ·
"But we•,. b•P.J>Y wtttl tbe
Jud1e'1 declalon, ' ab• added
Tuesday after the rullnl.
In Mareb, Teddy . .wUI move
from tbe Orablm home la
Qua bury to the realdene• of Kathl~ and Stanley Kroll In
Pembroke, 10 mUea away. Ill
that bouaebold, the dot la called
Olllfer.
The Krolla, who found the loet
do& 3~ years aao and took lt In
u tM1t owa, were leaa than
happy wtth Wasner'• rulln1.
"I'll have to read the entire
declaloo ftnt, but I can't believe
IUCb I ludleroua decbion WU
made. 1t iaa't a matter of
cultody. It a a matter of owoerl~e," Mra. Kroll said.
"Wt my GOI· And lt'a not fair to
1buttle a dot back and forth like
some kind of obie'ct." ·
It wu partly the doi'a aie
that made Wasner declde so aDd
the bickerlnc a.nd award both
coupl• Joint cuatody.
The 14-year-old dot a. about
100 yean old tn human terma -
too old U> waat.e much lime
· flth~~·· ~atper aald.
AJtftOUlb Ul.e do8 apparently
haa(l 't abown a preference for
either ow~er. Mra. Graham
aaid, "He can atlll do all hll old
tricks. Even after 1a~ yean, be
di 't f'Orpt what W. l•uebt htm.:• .
Teddy d1a1PPtared from the
Orab&ma' bomt 1hortly after
tbey moved from Scituate I~
'yean •IO· About the aa1a• U.e, Mt1. Kroll found an inJ.ared, 1 coltarleu dot ln the 1hnabl ln
front of her home.
She 11ld 1he tried to find tbe
do1'1 owner, but when that ~ailed, Ginter became part ot
the family.
•'
fte Gra.ham.1 tracked down
'UM JOit pet. and took him bome
ln December. llra. Kroll
claimed tbe Grabama
trHpuaed on ber property,
,.moved tbe do1'1 collar ud
carried h1m away ln tbelr car.
She went 10 court to claim
ownership.
"Money la no object," Mn.
Kroll said. "lt'a tbe dol that
counta. I want It back."
Floodwaters hit
from Georgia
to Pennsylvania
FromPageA1
WIEDER • • •
a1reed to Join the campalJD
effort.''
M ra. Wieder'• 1Upportera
have formed a campal1n
committee in her behalf, the
Friends of Ha1riell Wieder.
Ray Ma11i . .Cypreaa, and
William Schroeder, Garden
Grove, have been named
CO·Chalnnen.
........... ,J, OVER THE EDGE -A garbage truck rests on top of a bridge
lo raiton Philadelphia's Schuylkill Express.way after hitting a
lo sp6rt$ cal' and narrowly avoidtng a 12()-foot• plunge to the
et I road below. Three frightened men in the truck escaped 27i without inju1·y.
ZI L-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--'--....-~~~~~~~
:;Eco'nomy to come
_'r;~ari_ng b.ack?'
~
By Tiile Aaod.ated Presa
v • DeapHe climbio1 interest
"""fates and mixed signals for the
manufacturing and housing
industries, Treasury Secretary
Donlild Reaan says the sluggish
econcfmy will come "roaring
back ~the late spring.''
.,.,. Rea.an said Tuesday tMI first
..,,1Vld4Npread incruse In th~
prim.e lt!l'\dlng rate since July,
-----~~~~~~~~~~ ~Ol.CKER SHOULD *"• R!StON-EdttCJflal, AtO ,. ttoct>rompted by a two--month surge
.Jn other boirowtng coats, was a
"temporary phenomenon'' that
·~aa 1•dt1couragm1 but not
.I> ............. •unex~-·
-:'. The prime rate. the bue upon
which banU compute interest
"' charges OD ahort·lerm business
io..na lo beal·risk customers,
... bad linaered at lS. 75 percent
N. ce . Dec. 1 before spurting
htU' Moot'A!f. P• •
But Tuesday. most banks had
aiaed their prime rate to 161Ai
percent, while a few banks held
the increase to 16'4.
Rates also have increased for
long·term borrowing, shutting
out many corporations from a
bond market dominated bit the u.s. Treasury. This ttc!1l'r the
Treasury is selling $20 billion in
bonds, notes and bills to help
finance the federal deficit.
In aq a.uction of $5 billion in
3·year Treasury notes Tuesday,
the average yield rose to 14.63
percellt in heavy bidding from
14.43 percent at the previous
auction Nov. 2.
Some economists have said
the resurgence of interest rates
will delay a reeovery from the
recesskJn, which was brought on
by high tnterest rates.'
But Regan told the NaUohal
Press Club , ''Thia is a
temporary phenomenon and
should wash out over the ~e
of the next four to six weeks."
Re said that in the past, interest
rates have incteased brieny in
the early stages of an economic
recovery, ool)I-to decline as the
recovery takes hold .
• .
By TIM! AslOdated Pre11
A New En1land lee storm
caused blackouts in several
. Massachusetts cities today while
pounding rains sent floodwaters
pouring through other
communities along the Eastern
Sea board from Georgia to
Pennsylvania.
In Oklahoma, farm tractors
were pressed into service to
rescue travelers stranded in
fender·deep snow left by a fierce
Gulf storm Tuesday.
Snow continued to fall today
from eastern Oklahoma to the
Great Lakes states, with
northern Arkansas getting four
lncbes, 'as temperatures dipped
more than 30 degrees below zero
in parts of the upper Mississippi
Valley and northern plains.
Rains of up to 6 inches in 24
hours closed scores of roads in
Geor.gia. The Elk River bloated
by night·long rain and melting
snow surged out of its banks in
Maryland and police closed
much of downtown Elkton which
was awash.
Flash·flood watches were
posted across the mountains of
the Carolinas, in eastern
Pennsylvania, northwest New
Jersey and much of Ohio.
A second ice storm in as many
days tore down tree limbs and
power lines in western and
central Massachusetts, leavin&
entire communities without
Plectricity.
Massachusetts Electric
estimated 6,000 customers were
without power in the
north·cenlral part of the state. A
spokesman for Western
M auachusetts Electric Co .•
could not estimate how many
customers lost power, but said.
"lt'a in the thousands.''
''Conditions are lousy
everywhere," said police chief
Ronald LePlante in
Ashburnham, Mass.
Tuesday's storm left six.foot
drifts in the Texas Panhandle
and frustrated road cleanup
operations in Oklahoma, where
many highways had only one
lane open after a snowfall ot up
to 18 Inches .
Tuesday's storm hit northwest
Kansas with up to nine inches of
snow and s plashed Arkansas
with freezing rain. '
"Anybody in a two-wheel
drive vehicle can't navigate at
all -and a four-wheel-drive
can't because the road's blocked
with stranded two -wheel
drivers," said Woods County
sheriff's dispatcher Beverly
Yadon.
Ab&entee high
VISALIA CAP) -Two Visalia
high schools apparently hit with
an. outbreak ol the Hone Koog
flu reported absentee rates
above 30 percent.
buried under debris
W iclOW., "78, found dec)d in Ball)oa Island home
'
'91 STEVE llAllBLE • hash tha' in,apectors aay trash. But they did not see the
f .... .....,,........ • coverect her entire house. woman.
I Grace E. Lee was a familiar . · ·· Tuesday , police finally got
face on Balboa Island. Police belleve she likely died permission to remove the trash
I Neighbon say she was the of natural causes and probably which was determined to be a
'triendly aort who would 10 out of was buried when she fell to the fire and health hazard.
I her way to ...,i everyone when Ooor and caused a pile of litter Officers say they removed
•she set out f~ber daily walb. to topple on top of her. several tona of material before
The 71-y -old 'wldow also The Orange County Coroner's they found the woman, slumped
ffa• a priv•peraoo. Nei&bbors office baa been asked to in a comer near a wall beat.er.
aay they weinever inYlted 1Dto determlne the exact cause or The refuse, estimated tD be ,ber Coral eet •e wbet'e death. five feet high in some rooms of
1he'd lived f near= yUl'I. tbe house, bad been there for
But New rt 8 • polite It ~ last Wednesday wheO years, police say. Officers claim
officers WI t I *Hda1~ the woman waa reported they found old . newspapers
'concemed tblll no.,_'ud aeea misalnl by concerned nel&bbora. dating back to tbe early '70s,
It.be woman ld llmolt"neet. Police entered her home at that balf·eaten food and dozens or
• Tbey found her. Sbe was dud1 '11111• ·ad .._ftftd what one e~~ty boxes.
•burled under 1neral feet or Qllkera&C.,_ "mowttatn" of· •
1 •• _...,...,. _ _._..-...._ ___ ~~=;:~~~-~·-.-.-...--"'li The odOr wit so atrona, police ti aay, that investigators. were
forced to we,ar masks while
•hovelln1 out the debris ' In all, Police say they too~ five
tons of truh out of the house 1
durlnt a aeveral-bour cleanup
period.
Officers and net1bbon were
· unabl' to otter any reaaona why
th• woman lived 11 abe dld.
Scboola lo northwest
Oklahoma were clo1ed and
stranded travelerJ dolfbled up
with strangers in crowded
motels.
The storm plastered the
panhandle of Texu with up to 9
inches of snow and "we've sot
'drifts all over everywhere," said
dispatcher Clndy Farr of the
Ochiltree County sheriff's
department in Perryton, Texas.
Schools in Amarillo and other
panhandle towns were shut.
Michigan and other northern
states braced for another storm
billed as the twln of a storm that
killed at least S6 people ln a
snowfall up to 2 feel deep
Sunday and Monday.
But the storm "looks most like
a fin.le," said National Weather
Service forecaster John McLeod
in North LllUe Rock, Ark. The
northwest comer of Arkansas
got snow for about two hours.
but it didn't stick, and sleet and
soow hit the eastern part of the
state.
Another storm dropped up to
16 inches of new snow in the
Colorado Rockies and the state
bundled up for bitter cold
weather.
In the East, lee jams on rivers
and streams caused more
. floodina. Water swirled for a
third day through the slreets of
Oil City , Pa ., north of
PittSburgh, and 100 people were
as ked to evacuate their homes in
Renova, halfway across the
slate.
GLOOMY -Secretary of
State Alexander Haig told
the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee that
the crisis in Poland is "far
from over."
Mayor 'har888ed'
by anti-gun law
MORTON GROVE, Ill. <AP)
-The mayor of Morton Grove
baa received so many baraaatn1
telephone calls aa a result of the
village's tough anli·hand1un
ordinance that he bas asked
police to tap hiB home phone,
authorities say.
Mayor Richard Flickinaer
said Tuesday be hoped a t.ap
might lead police to the catiera,
who be said have been baraas1n1
him ever since the ordinance
was passed in June.
The Butcher-Forde conaultmt
firm of Newport Beach baa been
retained to handle tbe
campaign, according to a
spokesman for Mn. Wieder.
The incumbent supervisor baa
collected a $226,010 campaicn
war chest to date for her
re·elecUon bid, according to
report.II OD file witll the Oraqe
County Registrar of Voters Office.
Ford seeking
• CODCe8810D8
DEARBORN, Mich. (A.P)
Ford Motor Co. wants the United
Auto Worken union to accept a
lS·month freeze on coat-of·liviDg
allowances and wants to wipe
out paid penonal holidays in
exchanee for profit sharing and
job security, The Detroit News
reported today.
A copy of Ford's initial,
17 ·page contract concession
proposal , obtained by the
new a paper, focuses on future
Income, and benefit restrictions,
rather than reductions in
. current pay, the copyrtabt st«y
said .
The proposal also calla for a
one.week r.eduetlon in paid
vacation, requirinvTnll five years of
1ervice before gi , fufi wacea
and cost-of-Uvtna benefits. the
newspaper •aid.
Winter Sale Continues
Now rs your chance for the best values from
the iargest stock in the area. Tremendous price
reductions on the most famous lines of quality furniture
• l
...
COITAMIM
1 ..... ,.,.aw.
(T14)'4t-..0
. ..~ .........
LENA HORNE HONORED -Singer Lena Home chats with
actor Jahies Mason after she was honored by the Dance
Theater of Harlem. Miss Horne is currently starring in
her own one-woman show on Broadway in New York City.
...........
TAKES THE CHAIR -Prince Charles of England carries
chair presented hiJTI as he opened the Crafts Council
Gallery and Information Center in London. He was given
the high chair Tuesday for the child he and Princess
Diana are expecting this summer.
Media ·upaet
Mn. Trudeau
Marcam Tncleau. Hid to
be "unprepared for the
dev astatine eftect of the
one·1ided media reaction" to
ber new boot
''Comequencee,'' J*tpoaed a 1cbedule of lntervlew1 that
were to have taken her
across Canada lo the next
three weeks.
A spokesman said that
Mrs. Trudeau decided she'
.. was not NfdY to continue the
promotion tour after seven
lntervtewa lP Ottawa.
Mrs. Truaeau 1aJd she wu
diam ayed at the way some
interviewers, book reviewft'I
and newspapers which
published excerpts from the
book centered on the more
tittllatln1 paasa1ea. They
overlooked many of "the
substance of the book and of
my own feeHn1s of shame
. . . and the buman emotions
that make sense of what I
was saying."
Comedian Fllp WUIOll filed
a SZ million false
imprisonment suit a1ainst
the city and county of Los
Angeles over his arrest for
alleged drue possession.
The Superior Court suit,
also seeks dama1es for civil
rights violation, negligent
and intentional infiiction of
emotional distress, and
invasion of privacy.
Wilson was arrested March
. 10, 1981 at Los Angeles
International Airport after
authorilie!f, acting on an
anoJ!ymous Up, said they
found 2th grams of cocaine
and a quantity of hashish oil
in Wilson's lugeage. Wilson
contends he was the victim of
unconstitutional search and
seizure.
Reid Sbeltoa performed
Daddy Warbucks for the
2,000t.h time ln the musical
"Annie," and says he's still
delighted with the role.
Shelton, who originated the
role in the summer of 1976,
was given a huge red, green
and white cake with an iced
replica of the orphan girl in
Boston, and said, "All 2,000
performances have been
wonderful.''
After tbe performance be
was joined by other calf
members , includin1 bis
present Annie , .llrh&I
MeAnDe, 9, of North Cape
May, N.J ., •bo flrat played
Molly, the 1malle1t orpban.
ln the ahow. Also on band
was Annie's dog, Sandy,
whose real name is
Buttercup. , 1
Cooling trend
will be lelr ltwouQll n.u..-, uceot
,., pot<lly lot nl9"b end marnft191 In
tckllherfl Sier-to Velley -Son
JooQuln Velioy Chene• of e -llurrlos over northoesl Celllorftle
Tllu"4ay Pattty ,_., lt1 not11Mm
mo11nlell1t lonl9nl Liiiie
11tmpereturo CNr9
forecast U.S. summary Frldey '"rou1" Sunde y :
CoftMder-CloudiN .. -CO-. A wlmlr norm tYStem o""' h Windy In mounteln1 end below
.wtflffn llell of ... Plel ... "'.... -'"· C-st.81 -"itN S2 '° 62 -from tlle Teus pen....,,le Into encl 0,,.,....,,. ~ n 1o •2. Mountain
Diii•-encl Konso1 on Tuetdey, 1, .. .,1g1wao1ooend1owsnte22. ' •OAA. u I o.,.. ef <••••re••
en49 tho ln6w moved onw"°CI 10 -----------Artl--Mlt.lourl.
llelft tell from Hstern Teus lo tlle T t •a• CorollnOI Ond tNro wM snow In empera ur!fe:;,o _ .. of Ula -11><..,trel POr1 of IN
(4Mlftlry, A hlofl pruwro ....... ,,. NATIC>tt
bnMtlfl1 <leorint Mias Ond W"f Colol Al~
we•l"•r to North Dekote eftd A,...rlllo
MlnftOM41 wttfl mlddov ...-... lfl "...," .. mwhof .. .....,_lbe-nro. Attti'lllO . J"! ......... hod KAltorod 1119'1 Atlonk Ctr <-. ttw ~ hod .-.. ...... ,""_ 01141 tho l'.c:"I< __ , .. _. e 91nnlnvfWn
cl!M;dy cley. 911marcll
, Tllo '-'-' lcM' t-y tolled '°' aollO
-lr.m .. mlf.MISllUlclcll va11oy 9oaWn to"'° """'*' Groot 1.a&es "l.IUI rel11 • .,,.. .. Ofttl th11ftdentorm1 from tllt ChlrtstlllC
T--Velloy IO ttlo loWW G.-CherttenWV
l.AllM Ond Kr'OIO tho AllMtk' Olelt a...-
ltMol. CNc ...
Clolldy llllH woro e11.pectecl Ill CIMINMIU
HMM from ............ Tnol Ill .. ~
cenlrol Ollf Coest stotet, whHe -~
wot on tOll lor '"• cemrol u• oei.trt w-.
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t I W
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Whal do you like about the Dally Ptlot? WtMal don't you llkt1
Call the. number below and your masa1~ wUl be rttorded
traf'scribed and delivered totbe approprta~e ..attor. · •
. --. :··:!::.:sa:'9e=.-d~rcc-~ IO U.edkaif'; llt1 topte, •l!l*"fo:t~!ftbr1 lil&i'
their name .net ~lepbone nuin"r for vtrlftcatlon. No dtt.al8tiill calla, pleue.
Tell ue what's on your mlnd.
' Orange Coat DAILVPILOTIWednetday, February 3, 1812
-
I •
A TRIBUTE TO KERM R.IMA
Kenntt RJma .
Noftmbrr 12, 1912 -)aauuy 31. 1'92
A
.!
He will be, gsady ..Di.ed.
. • t • ' 1
i l l l
County judges stick together
Seventeen j~rists file papers in re-election drive
By JEFF ADLEB each judge's individual $632.67 °'_.,_,....,.,.... filing fee only minutes after the
In a well-organized display of filin1 ~riod for such document.I
solidmty, all 17 Orange County .. opened Muodey mornin1. a
Superior Court judees seeking spokeswoman for the registrar's
re-election toaether have filed office said.
the first batch of election-related documents with the Oranie Candidates for stat.e
County Reaistrar of Voters legialative offices a.nd Judicial Office. poStl m&ast ·rue declarations of
The c1eclaratioos of intent to intent by 5 p.m. on Feb. 10,
baa not been deterred from
filing for office by the ~lay ol
solidarity. William Farria. of
Oran1e. i• tbe 1oie
non-incumbent who so far baa
filed papers declarin1 bia
intent.ion to seek omee.
Caacldate. wbo already have
filed declaratiom of intent to
seek eledion are:
... l _.,_ filed l according to the apokeawoman. teea re-e e"uuu were ear Y 0tt~•NltfOlte94'1tT • Monday morning by' Oranae The incumbent judgea, who _ 1-1'-.n._,.,.,,.,..,...ML County SuperioT Court may even form 4l formal joint -,_..,_.._,., .... ~.
Executive Officer Alan Slater, , campaign committee, coiled.eel ~. 1 -..... ~"' 11 r .0
who said be delivered the sheaf close to $54,000 at a "solidarity -Offlce•-Plll••ca.• LMMeMlll&. ·
of documents on hi5 own, rather oight" rally on Jan. 19. All 48 :C::::.s.-~~::-~
than on county time, on hi.a way Superior Court judges are lilted hedl. •
to ... d . th Co ill , -Offlu 7-"'*-" 0-.., .... ~ wor... u a vuers to e mm ee aor -Ot11c.a-~JeckMM,e10r-.. "I've done it in the past as a · Preserving a Responsi ble -Offk:9t-W1111 ... ir.ma..,°"81111t.
ni " SI te l · ed di -~tO-Jca-..i,.,,.....,.,._ conve ence, a r exp am . Ju ciary. -Offlul1 -wwu .... Mun-..,,et0r-. .. "It's no big service, it just One judicial hopeful. however, -Ot11ce11-Jerro1c1011wr,.,LeH.,.. makes it easier for us. This way, -Ot1ic.11-~o...,.ot0r.,.. -Office u _,_,........, ,.....,__ when 'you have so many judges -0tt1ce1s-PM11p1"wny,.,~a.c11.
running you can keep them on Bird recall -Offlu16-PNHplcftwM,efS.....AM. the bench," (freeing them from -Offk• 17 -Her-1co¥1t1e, ., v.,.. Lines.. : filing papers themselves.) -0tt1u 11 -SN1i. SoMfttlllM, ., ......,..
Slater added that the joint study r~··died ·~T•AL OllAMO• CIOUN1'\' "W•IO~AL. filing by the judges has ~ couaT "absolutely" nothing at all to do -Office 1 -"--.,.. .. ,IW4 • .,......., Viejo. wlth the fact the 17 incumbents SACRAMENTO (AP) --0ttk:9J -A1e11Mctt-.lf~v....,.
are seekingre-elecUon as a slate Senate Republican leader -0tt1ce • -K-"' ""1•· "'...._.,.
will ...... in 1982. William Campbell aaid ·he . -Offkes -MwWiwa.u.et~......._
Judge James Perez, who bead a GOP committee to study NOHNOtWeNMU...a••'-courr
admitted the 17 were "trying to the possibility of tryln1 to recall :=:::=.:;..=."~"e::.:':-..:·
stick together" through the 1982 Chief Justice Rose Bird. -Offk:94-0..AMlllMl-.etSentaAM.
campaign, also said the joint ~~~:,::,a~.TlllMllWNl'-s.~ flllng was handled by Slater as a The Republican S~te Central .. oar11a11 ~; K.aty __. .. DetNcnl, .,
cenvenience. Comm lttee approved a w:;::u.._L.,
Slater delivered the judges• reaolution at its weekend -oltlrtd 11 -o.ns "'*'· ll~.,
declarations of intent to the convention in Monterey calline ~-:;:=n-o-vev . ..._,, "----.
re1i1trar' s office alone witb_fiiiiioirisiucbiiiai1itudyiiii. ii.iiiiii!!!iiiiiiiiiiiiiii.,ii..,.iii'-iiAN.&iiiiliiiiiiiiiiiil!ii8iiiimil-
'°em
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
C1rtifkd 01molo6i•t. AGS
-THE SPINEL
• • .• en undeffattcl ..-
I
1
e s-eraJ told his first luU
a confereQce Tue.day aiDce
escue lut Tbunday that be
s t moat of bia captivity
d in&, readin1 books and
newspaper clippings on bis
abduction, and moving his arms
and leis for better blood
cirtulation.
"The /erlod was characterize by excruciating
boredom ... I went from
competitive supersonic
extsteDce to elow subsonic
existence," be said.
Asked what be missed most
during bis captivity, Dozier
replied: "In addition to not
havine my personal frffdom,
not being with my wile, the
lblng I missed mest was the
p hysical exercise ... I
normally jog about four
kilometers (2.5 miles) a day,"
Dozier said.
The 50 -year-old general
admitted he had ignored
warnings by lulian authorities
a nd failed to take adequate
security to protect himself
against a terromt kidnapping.
"You folb are lookin1 at an
embarrassed guy ... I usume
full respon~ibility for not
he~ding the warning," Dozier
said . He said it bad never
occurred to him that the Red
Brigad~ would be interested in
kidnap.,mi an ltmerican.
Oozier, tbe highest f'anking
U.S. officer at the NATO bue in
Verona. wu •bducted from tUs
unguarded apartment in that
northem Italian city Dec. 17 in
the first polJtleaJ kidlt-.>pins °'
an American ln ltaly. ltallaa neWBPQen U.S 10me
magistnltes ba.e aa14 there is
evldenc. of linkJ betwffD Italian
terrori4t llO&lPI an• foreip
lntelUgmce Mr'vlces. aut Dozier
said his captors gave hi121 no
indication of outside support.
·'They assured me they were
ltal4tn communists," he 11ld.
· "Doller appeared rela•ed Ud
Occaak>nall.Y drew laulbter ft'OIQ
nearly 150 reporters and
pboto1rapbeu with bla
commmta oo bow the terrortata
over..Umated bis command ol
Itallan, and how be ariuecl wtth
bis captor• over the t1prof
music they forced him to l1lteD
to tbrouab earphones. "Rtabt from the betlnnillt l
wu · fOrced to wear e~
through wblcb mualc , waa
played. Some of the tapes tbet
would play were what I would
call bard rock, and thole ol you
wbo aever beard bard rock for
ei1ht or nlM hOUrl O"'lht to try
it some tirpe. r don't ... bow
teen·asera do tt.·• Ddder said.
He aald rock wu later replaced
by aemi·clualcal mualc.
TheH detaila ol hll captivity
~m•raecl M>m Dot!er'a one-hour
new a conference at. the cbapeJ of
the U.S. Army blue here, and
rrom mllltary apokeaman Lt.
Col. Jack Barham:
-His rtsbt wrist and left
ank'e were cha.lned to a at.eel cot
tor '2 days, abd be wu never
a!lowed to leave the
two-aqu&re·Y•~ tent conatantly
lit by a 40-watt bulb. He was not
perabltt~ to shower and wu
forced to use a portab~ toilet ln
tbe tent.
-He apoke very little w1th b1a
capton becauae they did not
understand En1U1h and his
Italian was ver~ poor. The
terrorlllta made "no real serious
effort" to extract mllltary
secrets rrom him.
-He aaw only four terrorilta
wearinl aid muka with narrow
·eye openinga, who rotated auard
shifta outside bia Lent. "I didn't
make friends witbr1.bem and
they sure aa hell dJtn 't make
friends with me," Do&ler said.
. u---"0000 TO SEE YOU " -Gen James L. Dozier ls greeted by
Italian President Sandro Pertini at Qulrinale Presidential
Palace in Rome. Pertini told Dozier, "We have trembled a
lot for you.''
·Voluntary cl.eanup sought of hazardous dumps
·'
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
eovernment has said it is
sending out,ft9llcea to hundreds
of wast" dump operators,
truciters and chemical'
companies, seeking voluntary
cleanup of the country's 115
worst hazardous waste dumps.
The Environmedtal P~
Agency announced the creation
of a special task force to notify
companies associated with the
WHA!z ME WORRY? -Vice , Presioent George Bush was
a 11 smiles at a Senate
leadership meeting in Vhshin&too. D.C. His happy
mood prevailed Tuesday
despite the fact that earlier
his car was hit by a
projectile.
.
dumps that they are responsible ~ the companies which
for cleaning them up. EPA g nerated the wastes and try to
estimated that more than l,!500 et them to voluntarily clean up
com panaes and Individuals the dump sites.
would be notified. In some cases, hundreds of
In October, EPA picked the companies could be involved in
worst 115 dumps in the country. productn1 and baullnc wastes to
They becam~ the first onea a aln&le dump. The 1980 law
elielble for cleanup under the maltet tbem all Uable for a
$1.6 billlon fund created by port.lonoltbecleanup.
Congress 1 l980. Th9; can refuse to voluntarily
Before the 1overoment can clean tbe alte, but then the
commit money to the cleanup, governioent (s allowed to spend
Jt musteont.act the owners of the. •. .auperfund money on cleanup
dumps, trucking companies and 80 to court to collect from
whlch hauled wastes to tbe aites the companies.
But since eoverninent clean-
up will cost subMantially more ·
than what most private
companies would pay on thelr
own , EPA officials said thi1
created a substantial incenllve
for companies to clean up the
dumps voluntarily.
William A. Sullivan Jr., EPA
enforc•~nt counnl, sa1d he hope$ within 90 days to set up. a
timetable for negotiations aimed
at arriving at voluntary
settlements.
Tt\e Reagan administration
bas come under criticism from
environmentalists for halting an
anr~ive campalsn becun by the Carter administration to
forward cases to the Juatlce
Depa'l'lmenl for prosecution.
In its first year of operation,
$29 million In supfrfund money
was used to do partial cleanup
work at 30 sites.
The initial list of us sites
included dumps ln 40 states.
States wlth no dumps are
Alaska, Hawaii , 14',abo ,
Louisiana, Montana, Nebraska,
Nevada, Oreeon, Wisconsin and
Wyomin1.
The EPA is now preparinc a
llst of 400 sites. · ·
Americans ignore alerts to exit Libya
~ 0 M E C A P > -S·o me
Am~ricans ln Libya are ignoring
their covemment's call to leave,
and Libyan immigration police
have helped a few to flout tbe
ban on travel there, according to
reports from the North African
country. .
Most of the 1,500 Americans
who were living in Libya left
after the U.S. State Department
urged them to depart fast Dec.
10, saying it waa no longer safe
there. The U.S. action followed
reports Libyan leader Col.
Moammar Kbadafy had sent
asaaaatns to klll Preatdent
Reagan. But a few Americans say
t.bey'te bangipg on, reluctant to
give up hlab-paylna jobs or
uproot their famWes.
"My wife and I wlll stay as
long aa it's le1aL We don't feel
in any physical danger, ahd I'd
like at least for my son to finish
the school year in June," said" Skende~ Brame, a 46-year-old
Cleveland native reached by
.telephone in Tripoli. He has
worked ror 10 years as
recreation director at the oil
·companies' school for foreign
children in the Libyan capital.
At least a dozen other
Americans are plannln& to stay,
and maybe more. according to.
Brame and other Americans in
Tripoli. They have the legal
right to do ao, aa long aa they
don't leave the North African
country .md then ret\D"D.
"There's always 1oing to be
this element. I'm sure some
Americans are stiU living in
Hanoi," said one U.S . oil
executive in Tripoli. He asked
anonymity. citing company
policy.
The U.S. government set no
deadline when it urged
Americans to leave Libya. The
While House said it hoped the
departure would be
"expeditious," and the State
'Department predicted nearly all
Americans would be gone by the
end of January.
The government threatened to
imJ)ose unspecified sanctions ii
necessary to force U .s. citizens
to lc•~e . Lat~r . State
Department officials in
Washington conceded privately
that they bad little, if any, power
to make the Americans go.
When the government asked
Americans to leave Libya, it
invalidated U.S. passports for
travel there. As a res ult,
Americans risk a five-year jail
sentence and $2,000 fine if they
enter the C<\untry.
Despite the rule. several
Americans have taken holidays
in ~urope apd returned to
Libya, according to senior oi.l
executives a nd other U.S .
'citizens there.
Libyan nrport police
conveniently "forget" to stamp
the Americans' passports when
they leave or enter the country,
thus leaVtng no record of the
misdeed, the Americans aald.
Libyan autborltiea -who
sharr.11 mticlie the Rea;an
adm nistration, but HY tney
bear no grudge against the
Am erican people -seem
perfectly happy to help
Americans deceive their own
government.
Many of the Americans
remaining are oil engineers who
have been working in the Libyan
desert for 10 to 20 years. They
may go to work for the Libyan
government or European finns.
fAt the Pilo.t, people mcike the djff erence.
w '
Ir' -,.
... • . . peoPle like thes~ .in th~ pressroom.
.. , thfnk the work is
intertstbig and there i& a
lot to leam. YQ\l're kept
bu.tJI , and I Uke that. And
the people are ntce to
work with."
Th~ press is probably the single most important piece of machin,ry at .
'8ny newspaper. But any printed piece is only as good as the people who
print it. That's why we're so proud of these seven guys. Working under
constant deadline pressure, they perform the final step in the
manufacturing process, producing a folded newspaper from ink, plates
and paper. And our press crew takes pride in what they do. They know
their work is refiec:ted by the paper's final appearance. That's why we
have the cleanest, brightest color photos of any newspaper around.
Getting good people who enjoy their work environment may take lonaer
and cost more, but at the Daily Pilot we know it's worth it because
people do make a difference.
· · 1 thank the Pilot is an
m1oyable place to work.
.Ttieu treat 11ou right hen.
I wouldn't leave. WhJI
leave when you're happy
where you are?"
Jerry HUI, ,
Costa Mesa
• I Jerry ls ~e press trew
leader aild operat~ the
main -control panel on the
pr•111.
"Even thovgh tltu paper
hal been around /or a Long
time. the new
• mmaagement make• it a
young paper. I Wu
working m the •go gtt it'
otmo8J)lvre this paper
ha!f."
Robert CantreJJ,
, Santa Fe Spring•
>J press machinist,
Robert k"~ u.i preaaes .
runnlna, and ~ects a SC
million Investment.
• •
---------~---.. ~ .... -. ---• Ii •
• VllTA (AP> -A defenH
attonity In • bank ro.....,._murder trtal bu been
cited fw ecintempt by a Judie be
crlUalHd ID a letter to a
Rlvenide ~per. It wu the
HCODd "'°'Mmpt order aaalmt
law,.,. mu.ea ...
lltcbael a. Lloyd received " ordtr lloaday to appear in W
Dleao County Superior Court OD
l'eb. • to 1bow cauae wby ~
1bould not be aentencecf ror contempt.
Lloyd wrote a letter to the
Riverside Preaa-Enterpriae
"Readers' Open Forum" on
Dec.' critlch:ln& Superior Court Judie Charles W. Froehlich, Jr.
for "denying due process of
law" in bandHna the earlier
contempt citation -(or which
attorney Clayton F. Adami wu
ordered to spend five days in
Jail.
Lloyd and Adams r~present
two of the three defendants
charsed with ktlling Riverside
County aberifrs Deputy James
B. Evans in a mountain ambush
following a 40-mlle chase that
bee •.n _ wltb a Norco bank
robberj llay t, ~. The cue i.
beln1 btard lft lu Diep CcM.mty
becaUM OI wWl9pr"Md pubUdty
in RiJel'llde eo.&y.
Georp W~ Sm.Ith, •. ot Cypr .. , Cb~er GretorY Harvm, ao, of' Mira Li>ma ud
brother RUIMU Aaroe Han.a,
II, of Anaheim face UM deatb
penalty if convicted. ~loycl
repreaenta Cbriatopber Harven.
Adami repreaenta Smith.·
Adams was cited for fatllna to
appear u ordered ror a JW'>'
selection "811on Nov. 20. In a
dllpute with trial Judie J . David
Hennlaan,~·Adama bad aaid be
would not appear unleu be bad
a meeting with. the Judae 1n
chambers Nov. 19. HennJaan
aaid they could not meet m1Ul
the 30th and ordered Adams to
appear. He didn't.
Cited ror dlaobeyin1 the order,
he was told to appear before
Froehlich. On Dec. 4, he
appeared in court askln1 for
psychiatric evaluation ln
support of a temporary insanity
defense.
Froehlich retuaed and when
Ma.u olfeNd no other deltaH,
be 1ent4llced blm to ftye daft ln
Jail and a S5llO flne. An appellate
court stayed tbe aentence untll
after the trial. now in lta ftftb
Wffk of testimony.
In bla letter publiahed ~· 10.
Lloyd aald the Judie bad
suspended the ConaUtuUon Lo
denyin1 Adami a chance to
present hla defenae.
•'On that day tbe prtJudlce
that the Con1Ututlon battles
a1atnat stole the treasure. of the
land. The wealth that wu taken,
so notoriously, ao cuually, ta
known to ua all u 'due .Procell
of law: " the letter sayi.
In court documents, Froebllcb
called the letter "false,
maUck>us and llbeloua."
"It's a sad commentary when
a Superior Court Judie can't
take any criticism," Lloyd said. ••If it's libelous be should rue a
libel 1utt. It's hard for me to be
1n contempt when l wu under
no court order. "~hat happen.a when a lawyer
12· lwspitals sue state
·over Medi-Cal limit
SACRAMENTO (AP> -Twelve
hospitals are suina the state, sayina
laat year's 6 percent limit on their
lledi-Cal payments violated federal
law
treatment of patients ln hospitala,
• The suU, }lied in Sacramento
County SUperlor Court UU. week,
said holpltals would have to cut
services to the poor drastJcally
because ot the limit.
The Le1islature, as part of a
1enral bud1et cut, limited Medi-Cat
ree lncreaaes to 6 percent last year.
Aft.er waiting for federal clearance,
the Health Services Department put
the limit into effect last month for
retroactive to last July 1. ,
The boepltals said their January
payments were actually cut by
one·third because of the r«rQactlve
action.
They also said the state action
violated federal law1 requirinl
special consideration for bOtpttab
1ervin1 large numbers of Medi-Cal
patients, would have "di111trou1
financial consequences" for the
hospitals, and would "aeverely atrect
the availability of services to
Medi·Cal paU~nts.''
: Diamond firm lays off.
o:D~-lhirtf of payroll
•
SAN RAFAEL (AP) -The
International Diamond Corp., whose
top officers have been indicted for
securities fraud, bas laid IJff a third
of its workforce apparently because
of a downturn in diamond sales and prices.
week after 2~ weeks of four-day
shifts, St.einman'sald.
"I imagine it bas to do with the
way diamond salea. have been going
lately, .. he said.
1tandl up and HYI thil ii not
due proceu? 11 ttiat contempt?"
Froebllch Hid he waan't
conalderJnl a Ubel lull but that Llo~d'1 letter went beyond fair
crtucllm. ·
· • Evcnbody has the rllht to
criticise a Jud1e'1 Judicial
opinion. But when the crttldlm
aoes to the character, morality
or honesty of the Judie, then it
1oe1 to the system," Froehlich
said.
He said the part about
1u1pendin1 the Constitution
attacked his honesty. ·
In the court documents,
Froehlich Hid Lloyd's letter
w aa deaianed "to enc ender
disrespect for the Judiciary and
to Influence public opinion
a1ainst the disnity and
usefulneu of the court in
particular and of the judicial
system of this county in
general."
Lloyd believes the maximum
penalty would be a $500 fine.
"He certainly could not put
me lniall," Lloyd Hid.
,,
b
f1
II
•ti.
AP---.t1b BULLETS PIERCE VEST -Assemblyman Tom Bane. D·Van·
Nuys, shows the type of bullet he wants outlawed because it41b
is capable of penetrating bulletproof vest worn by members101t
of several law enforcement agencies. o'
NEW!
Fish Sandwich
Platter 8 1.99
You'll love our crispy N&rth Atlantic fish fillet on a warm
bakery bun with Shredded lettuce! Complete
with rresh c:oJe slaw and golden fryes, Ifs
great for lunch or enytlmet Try our
Chicken Sandwich Platter, tool
Jt9
du
A
•lib
"!11
ii.It
)•JO
mit
ti q
'u ll
'>I tJC . .,a
f ,. "
ra w •a• .,,. •••• ..
tms
llul ·
•?•ti
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The company also fired ooe of the
indicted officers, Bernhard
Dohrmann, from bis corporate
planntn1 post, according to company
attorney Jonathan H. Steinman. No
reason was given. Anotb~of the indicted of(icials .. George . easier,
retired last Friday as natio al sales
director.
According to many dealers,
diamond prices dipped as much a 40
perC4l0t during 1981.
On Dec. 4, .1981, five officers. were
indicted by a grand jury in Kansas
City, Mo., in connection with
securities fraud , selling unreg:i.atered
securities and employing
unregistered agents. Besides Keuler
and Dohrmann, those Indicted
included company president Thomas
Lewsader ; John Hod1e. vice
president of international operations;
and Steven Gre.enbau·m, eiecutive
Vice preSident.
:SUPER ,,
One hundred of 300 wo ers at
IDC's San Rafael bead.quart were
laid off Friday. and the company )r Tue~day resumed a fiv'e-day work
· Deukmejian leads
Curb by big margin
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -
Attorney General Geor1e
Deultmejian bas jumped 11
percentaae points a.bead of Lt. Gov.
llike CUrb ln an opinion survey of the
race for tbe Republican
cubematorial nomination, accordift1
tbe Calfornla Poll.
The neld Institute 1urvey said a
trend of preference for DeukmeJlan
h_. emerced, credltinl thJ attorney·
eneral with belnl the ll'ioice of a
percent of respondent.a polled iD
January who idenWy with t.be GOP
and are retisU'red to vote. Another
32 percent chose Curb and 25 percent
were undecided.
'.l'be 11-point difference was a
broadenlna of the 1pread iD lut
October's California Poll when '1
percent ol Republlcan,...reepondenti
opted for Deukm~Jlan compared wttb
35 percent for Curb. _
WE KNOW HOW A WOMAN
FEELS . AFTER A MASTECTOMY
•
.. . ..
SHIE SALE
WOMEN
~ATURALIZER •• • • • • • • • 1.1•1 -::
LIFE STRIDE ••••••••••• I 7'7 -= ..
17 97•., HUSH PUPPIES ••••••••
t
CHEROKEES •to 40°/o OF.F
FL:ORSHEIM ...... 71
30°/o-40°/o OFF ~
.
HUSH PUPPIES ...........
19'7·27'7
..
r.. : '. ..-
' · .'l~lfiployee
} DEAR READERS: If you've been
waltlnt patiently ·for your Form W·2,
"Employee's Waae and Tax Statement,'! to
arrive from your employer, the Internal
Revenue Serv)ee aay1 your wait should lie
over. Tbe IRS requires all employers to
provide their employees with W·2 forms by
Jan. 31 each year. If you ,have not received
your W·2 form, 1et In touch with your
employerright away.
After Feb. 15, employees who have not received a W·2 form should contact their
local IRS office. Local toll·free numbers are
listed in the white pages of the ~lephone
directory under U.S. Government, Internal
Revenue Service.
'Even if a W ·2 form never arrives, your .
return still must be filed by April 15. The IRS
can provide you with Form 4852 ,
"Employee's Substitute Wage and Tax
Statement," so you will be able to file on
time.
Spirulina data tol,d
DEAR PAT DUNN: I've beea &old that
taking Spirullaa p~a can be very good for a
person's bealth. The oae·weell S,lna.llaa fas&
as well as a sb:·weell pro1ram are supposed
to result in bavln1 better health ud more
energy. What have you beard about Ulll? P .e., Costa Mesa
There's no doubt that Spirulina, the
blue.green, one·celled algae, is increaaine In
popularity as a high protein health food and
appetite depressant. The six·week prorram
invplves taking as many as 12 one.gram
tablets of Spirulina wffh other tablets. Tbls regimen would provide more than 12 grams
of Spirulina p er day. Fasting and
semi·fasting coupled with high intakes of
Spirulina products or other hi&h·protein
substances may result in conditions similar
to that observed with the "liquid protein"
diet fad which was implicated in numerous
deaths in 1977, accordiag to Dr. Helena
Swenerton, Cooperative Extension nutrition
specialist.
Some literature promotln1 SplruUna claim~ that It's "hither in protein than any
other natural food and that it Is a complete
nutrJtioua. food, far auperior to soy beans,
cheese, ftlh, meat, •IC•. or milk." However,
according to scientific llteiature, the protein
in dried Splrullna ta limited 1n sulfur amino
acid,, es.,.cially methionine. Jn feet, the
protein quality of Spirulina falls far short of
many other ordinary hlih quality protein
sources. And, ordinary cbfcken liver contains
more than twice as much vitamin 8 ·12, of
which. Spirulina claims to be "the highest
known aourte.' ·
Time-aliarea regulated
DEAR PAT DUNN: I aUended a
vacatloa tlme·share preaeata&loD for 10me
condomlDJuma recently. n.e lllgh preu•re
sales &aetle1 were uabellevlble. Wllat would
happen II someone weat alilead and signed a
contract for purcllaae aad llad second
thougbta' about It after CettlaC lilome! Woald
there be uy way to 1et oat of the deal!
K.G., Huttastoa Beach
Yes. State law (SB 355) gives purchaser~ of time·share interests three days in which to
change their minds about their purchase, as
those buying merchandise from door·to-door
salespeople are allowed to do under state
law. Time·share transactions also are under the regulatory authority of the J)epartment of
Real Estate. . ___... \.
• "Got o e_roblem? Then wtite to Pat '
'I.. l Dunn. Pat wiU ~ riif t~. getting-
"' the answers and action you need Jo
•
$0l!H! inequitie• in government and
,... bwineu. Moil your question& to Pat
! I Durin, At Your Service. Orange C0oal
Daily PilOt. P.O. Soz 1560. COJfo Me/14, CA 92626. A1
many Letttr• tu po13ib~ Ulill be answered. but phoned
inqu1rie1 or letter• not including the reader's Juli
name. addreu and bu1ine&1 houri · phone numbe't
cannot be considered. Thia column appeaTI dally er•
cept Sundays."
11101 a. Harbor 8.A.
C> z 2 xi Merch .49 ft I ,.
2 xi Mch Hrt .57 ft
2 xi Cir Hrt 1.39 ft
~ 1 xix I' Fnc1 .97••
IJ) + 2x4'a, •••'• a more .J -~ 1oocf thru 2 / 1 IJ)
OPEN 9 :00 TO e :oo
s
n
0 z n ::u "' ~ "' .,,
"'-::u IJ)
TH ABBEY·
'IHI A111Y ScHOOL A. c.ltlQllo Boerdlng H19h School few boyt.
CAMP HOLY CIOSS A. Summit Oemp for boys 8 to 14
)'Mflold.
Conducted bV the Benedictine Monka of O:>lorado In Southern Rockies, Country En-
vironment near sJd areas. . c••"c••s..ICf•rft ~-.,.,. .... c .... .... , ............. Al ...... Acc4~e4 .......
775-1411 or 141·1111 DlllCTOI OP ADMISSIONS THI A111Y SCHOOL
IOI HI
1.000 winners of
4" plants during
Huntington Center
Ladies Days thru Sun. Just check
your driver lie. number.
AD
PRICES
PR£YAIL
WEDNESDAY,
FEB. 3rd
THRU
SATURDAY,
FEB. 6th
CAMON crn. COLORADO 11212
"-: CJOJI 27MH I -OI-._.,.,_. ............... ......., ...
.. WPOIT llACH
1714t 960.2941
=•· .. ~ ~ l ~_.:r~ ~
I OS-CAL
-==--TAIUTS
(tdls] Goo6uttll =~ns~~RIN~~-S.39 ~~~~~~;~nst c
6
alc1u
8
m
3 ~:~:vSYRINGE •ls-s4. 49 lOOTMUTS •
WATEll BOTTLE
2-0t Capacity
FOLDING SYRINGE
Compact & expaodable
BAUER & BLACK
Suppor1ers are des1oned tor pro1ec1100.
suppor1 & appearance
ADULT
SUPPORTER
YOUTH
SUPPORTER
·~1 4.59
~.s3.59
ADULT CUP •.j 7 89 SUPPORTER •w •
Ellecttve. tor soolht~
;oUl£TS 1.69
YOUTH CUP
SUPPORTER
FOOT POWDER rM &.45 ~l~altate 2 85
,...--------------------------------~Su.SIZE •
NATURE'S
PHARMACY
•ALOE GEL
First Aid Gel
• PAIN RELIEVER GEL
AnaloesJc Pain Relief
YOUR CHOICEl
·HIW~<••-> Cleans & CondtliOll$
• Pll.-0 Clf•ITIONEI <•-.> Tht blntflla of htnna & no colof change . ""'*"' COIDmoftl
Fot probltm h1tr (J .... l .. ,..)
.......... (t ...
Covtrf oray •
•MOT OI. TllA'9DT • 3 llqu1d Tteatmenta (Ii-. ... ,
FOOT SPRAY :sm 3.49
FOOT SPRAY
=-139
BOlln SOAK ,._,.._,.LDID
Stet'Oe. 11tine solution.
TO PR E SIDE -
Evangelist Rex
Humbard will
perform the
CC)l'emony when his
daughter. Liz, will
wed Dan Darling on
Va l entine 's Day •
before millions or
television viewers.
NuPtials l
to be
telecast
AKRON, Ohio <AP> -
Evange l ist Rex
Humbard says he feels
"like any other father who loses hia only
dauehter,'.-but when
Aimee Elizabeth
Humbard say~ her vows
on Valentine's Day, ll
won 't b e a normal
wedding.
Miss Humbard will
share her wedding
ceremony with millions
of television viewers.
Hu m bard , a
fundamentalist preacher
'who be-ad s the
Ak ron-based ministry,
estimates that more
than 4 mllllon people
will watc h t h e
ceremony, which he will
perform.
The nuptials will be
broadcast in two parts
on Hurnbard's weekly
Sunday program Feb. 21
•Jld Feb. 2' over 240 U.S. stations and about
300 othe r station s
abroad, Humbard said.
He said he will ask all
married co uples
watching to renew their
own marriage vows
Miss Humbard, known
as Liz, will be married
to Dan Darling of Acworth, Ga ., in the
la vi ah C~thedral of
Tomorrow in suburban
Cuyahoga Falls.
Miss Humbard has traveled around the
world for the Humbard
family program, which
features about 13 family
members. She also has
record e d several
a l bums of r e ligious
songs.
Happiest
centrally
located
NEW YORK <A P >
The happiest people live
in th~ central United
States between the
Mississippi River and
the Rockies , according
to a st.udy reported in
Psycholosy Today
magazine.
R esiden ts of the mid~AUantic states and
the Great Lakes resion
ra n k l ow In
psycholotlca l
well-beins, alons with
parts of the boomin1
Sun Belt, the study aafd.
Economically 1tru11Un1
New Ensland showed
o n e of t he hieher
ratinp , it said. The ftndlnp, by aocial
paycholo1i1t Carin
Rubenstein, ~e based
on 3,000 interviews in
which peopl e were
aated 200 que1Uon1
a boot their sense of
b a p pi n eaa a nd
~ell-beinc.
.~co.tDAILY PtLOT/Wtdnetday, F•bruary 3, 1982 • Alf
CIMCJNNATJ 'AP> -Workers at three bnw.rtes ht,.. eajoy.ct a
paid holldar to celebrate tbt
blrtbda1 of Preatdeot Franklin
Delano Roosevelt, the man
credited wltb maklnl tbelr work
le1al.
After l\ooaevelt aaaumed the
presidency ln 1983, oM of h1I flrlt
propoaal1 to Con1re11 wH to
repeal ProblblUon -to acaln
allow the le1a1 manufacture and
Hie of alcoboUc bevera1es.
"We felt Roolevelt did ao much
to help unionl that hi.I blrthda)'
ahould H honored 11 a paid
holiday for ua," said John Kataler, .
former president of the local
Brewery Workers Union. "He
brouabt beer back, and he waa for labor."
Workers at thrff of 28 ClnclMatJ
area breweriea atUJ 1urvlvtn1 -
Hudepohl, Schoenlln1 and
Wiechmann -bad the birthday
put Into tbetr contract a• a paid
holiday about 1~ yeara 110.
•'They were look int for a
holtday ln the lalttr part of
Jan uary," 1ald O. Thomas
Scburter, 1eneral admlnlatratlve
m anacer for Wiedemann 'a
SPECIAL I
brewery in Newport, Ky . "lt'1 Just
one of thQH tbln11 neaotlated Into the local fontract."
"It's in the contract and you
live by the rulu," ••Id SchoenUnt
Prttldent Kenneth LicbtendabJ.
•'The malt industry ln Cloelnnatl
l11hutdownon f'DR'1 birthday."
About 400 workers bad the cl&)'
otl at the Wiedemann brewery1 abo"lt 100 at Schoenlln1 and about
271 at HudePObJ. Tbe bo.llday w .
oburved Monday becaufe
Rooaevelt'1 tooth birthday -Jan~
30 -wu on a Saturday t.h11 year,
The breWery workers Wllon
Milwaµk" 1111 there i1 no au
allpulatlon ln Ill contr act, a
workera at Pab1t and MUI
breweriee wer• on the Job u1ual,
SAVE •t .30 soc REBATE*
,
~AL
CURLING 'BRUSH
H's a hot stynno. cutllno. Ind wavlno bftsh •II rolltd
Into one. f1ngle frM
bristles stay cool and protect tht scalp.
•a.oo REBATE
':To cw COFFEEMAKER
...... fll J MlllT
~-~~ Automatic control switches from brew to kttp wlfm.
.... ~,.:: 19.99
~~ -3.00
.'::-.: 16.99
.......... u.. ... , ... 111 .... ,.,c... ... c...••s...1111 ...... , ........ ... ....
SAVEaoc
SOUP or CHILI ...
Hand decorated
stoneware ..
jumbo size ptrfect
for stew. soo.p,
chowdJr. cereal.
etc.
is oz. sm 1 .39 YOUI aeoai I IA.
SAVE44c
VIBRANCY CMIWAIU
YnAMMC
Delicious Natural
Orange Fl1vor
~::un 1.49
SAVEaoc
IOIDtl WIPER BLADES
& IEFILLS
ALL-weather wiper blldff
and live edge refills In 1
choice of sizes
·IUID (PM Of l)
11"'. 11". 11". 11".
• IUIUS (PM Of 2) w . sr. ir. sr
~1.79 ..
AIJ PR1(f<, PRF\All WFUNf \£,AY HR lrrt THRll SA TURD.\~ HR hth
e1RONING
··tD1a CUTP
IRONING BOARD COYER ............ , ... c..-..
Ww rlliltlnt coated
pnllf ... WIWI you need •• * • It t111 IMltl PLUS .. .a
ctlterlul bord• dlllfn. I I
"Cata -cnr COYER
_ .... 1 & IR•C PAD ......
llmTAlffruu.
..,,4.99
1911
1-NA:I IO•G COYER & PAD
c....c..... ...._
•1 3.99
LIQUORS
«9111Wii"" Andre CHAllPAGN• === 150 .. 2.19
Mag Kinnon' s ?~o!,CH 8 99
1.75 LT. •
Smirnoff ~2~A 9 99 1.71 LT. •
SAVE 12.00 SAVE 11.00 SAVE 40"
Rubiks Cube .......
Over 3 billion comblna· t t YO YO" tlonl onfy 1 tolutlonl • ....... 4.95 .. 1.29
WE HONOR YOUR CREDIT!
-~ -.
SAVE 99c II ~-
c Facial Scrub ~-'
nUIUUllU
trs a n1tunil fiber scrub, m:>de .~
with !Intl~ crushed --aprl;::i 1.99 ~
/ ....... '\
COSlllTCO
·N111tral...Add1 no
Color For luster·
Ing 1nd ~ndition-
~~,'." ''~~I 1.99
REVLON
11. ICMOU.'S Air-Pillo
INSOLES
Put 1 cool
cushion In 1ny
shot
SAt••Na 69C
'tlllll •n CQC .... aat ii
• '::".= 19C
• • --• 111 u .. -IY9lS ,. • 111111 mn .... .al.
·sAVE2ae
-.um
19.QJEWS!
IAZOI
with
MICROSMOOTH TWIN BL.ADES
PMOFI 1.29 .
SAVE•t .to
2% QT. "WlllTUNG"
TEA KffiLE
ITWDf QU1C118Tlll ALUl•IUll
Euy-1111 easy·
pour spout with
1 cheery wh11ttt
3:&9 •.•
SWITZER'S
UCORICE
•mBYln'D
•l&Aal ln'D
SPECIAL I
WMm FACIAL TISSUE
'M
• -
One of the best
on-time records going.
That's style Appreci· atfng vou and showing we ~prec1ate vou.
Thats style. Fares that save vou monev ~rv
dav on everv flight
That's 6tYle. too A1rCal. we do more than get
YOU there. We get YOU
there in stvle!
S£fll l l£
114.~n
Nft YOU -fte IOW eooeomlo outlook baa Pl'Oduetd otber UIMI mlaht bl
con1id•r•cl
un·Amerlc•.'!i .but wbl~h IOrDe UUU la welcome today .. It
h11 undermined
1omt of our 1reat •x~~atklns. · Not all of them.
The tecbnololittl are
1Ull drawlnc up the
f u t u re on t be l r ~" ... " plannln1 boards, and the think tanka
are buntlnl wltb lAnovatlve concept&.
But the Inflation exploiters are
dlsappeartna like medtllea.
WbJtbli bappald,to UM MUm ol
lnftatklt, tlil "6Pl• wbo tmt JOU ror. lettt" 11ytn1 Uuit U 10u rtall~ wutecl \.q be rtoh qutoldy 1ou 1hduld buy dlamoadl or lold or anUque print.I or
other collffttbl• T
Soma of tbem are around atlll,
umalntn1 certain that tnnatlon 11
1nevltable and that lt will make them
wealth~ and you Loo, ff you'd only
ll1ten. But people aren't lfstentns u
they did a few years a10, wlMo the
rlaln• con1umer price index lent
credlbllity to the peddJera.
Some of tbote who write cet-rich
newaletten find circulation is down.
Some are flndina 1n(lated poetap coetl
too much to contend with. Many ba"
been forced to lay low unW lnflatlon
.Avco earnings Of f
Avco Financial Services lnc. of
Newport Beach reported net eamlnp
for rascal 1981 were S'18.3 million, down
19 percent from the Sff.4 million
reported in 1980. .
AFS, one of the world's larceat
lnternaUonal finance companiea, ia a
wholly owned subltdlary of Avco Corp.,
a dlvenlfied company headquartered In
Greenwich, Conn.
H. Wallace Merryman, c~airman of
the board, and Theodore M. Cttmm1n1,
pre,1ldent, said that the decreue in 1981
net earninp was due to hicb money
costs, Increased credit 1011ea, a
decrease In earnin11 from credit
related insurance businesa and reallied
capital losses this year venua capital
galns last year. The dramatic lncreues
iD abort-term interest rates In Canada
Jnd the United State'& raised the
company's blended cost of borrowed
tu.Dds from 10.34 percent in 1980 to 11.10
~rcenl ln 1981.
Net credit loues, as a percentage or
avera1e net receivables, increased
from 2.17 percent 1n l9eO to 2.77 percent
ln 1981 due lar1e\y to the weak economy
and the hlCh level of bankruptcies. The
decreaae in earnin1s from credit
related tnaurance business was a direct
result of the compahy's planned
reduction of unsecured consumer loam.
Net eamln11 for the fourth quarter of
1981 were $16.5 milll.on compared with
'2().9 mllllon 1n 1980. The decrease was
due primarily to the hi•h coet of money
and lncrellled credit losses. Receivable
volume alao decreased refle<:t1nJ the
bich cost of money and the reduction of
receivables 1n the U.S.
Introducing Jerry Holm,
a guy you ca n bank o n .
If Th& Bid For Your Solar Hot W.ier
Exoeeded The Gas Corripany Umit
-CAU.US -
SOl.AR DAYS 121 JJ 351-1015
1.C.S. COMl'UCTOI
·Only
Answer Page
offers you all this:
• California's largest paolno aoent.
• Inexpensive ·· less than 75¢ a day. • Wide-area coverage·· 15, 000 square miles.
• A location near you. plus field representatMIS at your beck and call. • 24·hOiJr service We rey.-er ~lccp.
• Free unlimited beeping,dettvery and full maintenance.
• Quantity discounts.
Keep in tooch with home, office. answenno service.
school. kids. babySitttr~ etc. Save time. gas and money.
can 9"IY tor'""'"" Mii a ht •-••Uoat "The better beeper"
@ fl~Sl\IER Pfl(jE.
t-f CallZ~2 ~.U.!!161~1 c!~7~8! ! Antwtr Page office nearnt you ......, , oJc
J ' --to SIGO,OllO il :~AQttl;;;;~";~~ll.i;;;;~~Aetly;;;;CO<~OOl;;;;~~oOll~!:::==;:===================~~====================::;:======:::::============~
flU 191a PIU lllll PIU l91a NU lllll
l'ICTITIOUI •UllN•U ptC1'1110US •UllM•IS l'IC'Tmou1 •u••M•U
MAM• ITAT•M .. fT NAMa ITAT•M•NT MAMa ITATHll•NT
Tll• lottowlno penon 1, dolnv TM IOll-lno penona •r• dolno Tiie followmo peuona ••• dolno
bualMn .. : lllislnesset: buslne,tH:
GREIENWOOO'S MILL, 114,4 fUILPH H. CASTLETON l'LAOITAI',. PARTNERS, LTD ..
• ' led unn G ,. tel V•ll•Y MANAGEMENT COMPANY. J260 .... Calle AvtNor, Suitt c. SM J-.. m t • • oun n • Colofedo l.Mie, CMt.e Mew, Otllfornle .C.lalr-.~ft61J
Cell,.,,,,_t!M. .,.u H11ntor EllO•ll'I C-••llon, • S11wn GrHnW'l!Pd, '415 AQnH OyOfl l!M•OY Corporellon, • Celllornle C«PO,..llon, >J04t C•llt
Aw-. ...,_ Heltywood, Olllfonlle CAlllemle 'Gr1IOl'etloll, J2'0 cow-A•lll-. S4otlte C, SM J-C8111tlreno,
tl60t. !AN, Colte Mn«. calNWnle ta» Celller"'8 ta1S . ..:~·:.v..~ 11 ~!Of by en Tllla llvaiMll It Qll><Nded Illy 8 llelpt! •. ~ Jr., llltft Celle "s.-0 ,_.... <OF1>«•llon: A•ltdor, Wte C. S.. J-(#ht..-,
0yon e,...,.,~ .. 1on ca111on11etan Tiiis ............... fllod wl1'I ... llel!lfl N c..tlnln Tiiis bWl""6 I• cMducto• by • c ... n1y c1er11 of o...,.. Ceuftty on vice .....;.141nt · 11m11ec1 ...,..,...,..,..
J-ry », IC . l'ttt• Tiiis ~ -tllod wit!\ the .._IE....., Corp.
"'*'stl9d 0r...,. c.... Deity l'llot, C-ty Clon of 0te11Qa Co_, on "elPft IE. Ptleltf\. Jr.,
Jltft. 21, .._,_ J, 10, 17, 1"2 "7-G. J-nt ll, l"1. l't•o Tlllt .=: •• llled wltll tlle
Pvl>llllled Or.,.. Cont Delly ,.,lot, County Cltf1ll of Orrefl99 COMnty on
JM IJ, 20, 27. Fof>. l, 1'12 *"G. J~ ,, 9-YAT•• AJHUU .. N -·-.... _........._ .... ,.. ITAT._NT~WITMCNlAWAL ,.-..., .. ,-. SeMeA-CllNwlNfU't1 , ...... .,... .... ,, ..... Intl mwJCl
l'ICTio:=~=~::r:AM. ITATSM•!'T ,.o.:,:1TMDHWAL P111>11111od °' ..... Ceetl oe11~':':. Tfl•........,,...,_"Mwl!Mlr.-l'A•TM .. UMIP OP••ATIMO J ltft.20,V ,FIO.J,I0,1"2 HM!
•• • t•Mr•I pertnor frem Ill• UMIHI•
pert11e rtlllp t'°retlftt 11114or lit• l'IC'TITt~llMM•ll NAM•
tletltl-.....,_ "8mt of MOllllt Tllo IOflo""""""'-lies WflMr•-
ltneN ANnwl VRH....,., lenk• .. H a t•n•r•I pertner fr,o"' tllo -----------•...,..,,~._II, CA "'ft. '8rtnertfllp opor1U111 111\Mr Ille l'tenTIOUI e1111M ... .. TU flctlllo111 b111lnua ft8nlt lkUtlow ..... ,..,,.. of WALK IN llAMll ITATIMaMT •ttmentflllrtN~llerMip.wHflled VAUL Tl llt UOtl CIOmona Clrclt. Tiie ,.ll•lnt --ert fflftt •11 Je11. •. '"° lfl tllo c-ty et ,,.,,IM, Oallfomi. '2114 llvtlMI• u : 0....... Tiie flcllllo111 blltlnou n•111• C•I INTlltNAT)ONAL 1'1111 Nlmo •M A_.,..., of llt0 tlAl•IMl!tftrU.pe,,,..,.,,.weslttM TILIVISION Cll) INTlltNAJIONAL ,...._With*_.,..: . enle,..,,..,10,1"11nll!eCoU!ttrot VtOl!O, S11 W. lttll "'"'· C9M• Mercie Lyn11 1111wor11i, 111 oranw. MoM, CellftrnleftU7
•m•••lcl • ..,. Letun• ••• ,11. CA """ N•mo •nd Addrou of I~ Allld HlltMlft, IHOI Lt11rllld•
""'· PenonWltfldr8W"'91 w..,,, ..... .,..,Cefffoml•t2705
Allll M. I.lie•, OVM Donald It. &oncl, Ueltl Clo-JllClllll I.. H-ln. 1"'1 l..elif'lflde MeKle L. IEll•-111 Clrclo, lntlno,CAllfOmleft714 Wey, S.....Me,Callfonlt•tt10S I' 11141' Oclflelll It. a-Tiiis llullflOM 11 <OlllNclM .., .,. ""*"'*' Or .... C..11 Delly Piiot, ~11Nlt lltcllvlcluel.
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ff ,,.., Ju.a Tiiis ~ w• flied wllfl IM Jen. • 21• J, to, I"!_ -COllftly·Cltnl of Or~ C-ty °"
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f'IC'Tl110UI aUStN•H
MAM• ITATeM•N'T Tiie lollowlno poraon 11 ctol110
IMdl "°" .. : fl'LOWIEM & COLLECTA8LES,
t<IOI WOOOCrHI, H11ntlnoto.-....
CellfOrflle ~
••Ill Lynn Forall•Y. t•OI llllt•ctcre11; H11nt1nol•I\ •••ell,
Celllwnle"'46 •
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lndMdu81. liMll L '/M flenlley
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ht Defel<e, Mil MecArtll1.,
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OVER THE COUNTER "NASO USllNGS
bnttrta ll re111n'Mted. -
Wbtrt art all U.1 new ltook ....
that doublt ln DriH btloN t.bt WM ... 1om1Um• before UM clay II oun Yau
don't lMer much about them. PromcMrl
of such ta1uee know bow bard It 11 to
attract money.
And what happerJed to that old ltaplt
of coclttaU parttu, the llD• tbat .,_.... "Do you know what I w11 offend for
my houae th• otber day?" How
smoothly It was 11tpped into th•
conversation. How practlced the
indifference with which t.b• owner
dropped ~e questlon. What trtum,,. •
he wltnesaed the envy of his lilhnen.
Too bad; no more.
What became of the 1rro1ance of ~
seller who used to say "That's the
price, take lt or leave lt?" Reefttl)'
somebody told him "for1et It." He'll
never set over it. No tonier does he
matntaln even the pose. No loo1er la he
confident he can get bl.a price. Just
witness the behaVior of automakers. Or
real estate acents. Or diamond
merchanta.
Where are the boasts from labor?
Gone. You can't make demands unless
someone is buyln& the cooda. Instead,
labor negoUatora today are often found
working with management on tbe
problem of raising productivity, and
they are even wllllng to give back
benefits In order to help.
Innauon was the simplest of concepts
to exploit. It took no great lnal&ht to
understand that so lone as demaoa
exceeded supply. so long as borrowlnc
was easy and lnexpenslve, so long as eo
maoy people felt they should have
everything they set their eyes on, that
1nflatlon would exist. So, lf prices were
goin1 to rtse, get in on the action.
lndlvidu•ls and companies and
institutions have abandoned many of
their great expe ctatlon1. especially
those they couldn't afford but still felt
were within their grasp in a world of
wild Inflation.
The problem now is to save the
legitimate, productive. practical,
sensible. achievable dreams and keep
them from bein~ destroyed too.
DOWNI
~ ..
Up 1U
UP D.S Up 11.A
Up lt.J Up IU u. 11.J UP lw.t Up 17.6 Up 17.J Up lU Up 11.t Up IU Up IJ.I Up 12.t Up IU
Up II.I Up t0.S
Up IG.S Up IO.S Up 10.J Up IOA
Up 1U Up 10..1 Up 10.11 Ult 10.C
ult CllQ Pct.
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YSE COMPO ITE TRANSACtrION
, WOf .t.flOlll& 1111<\.UM TaADU O• '"' NIW Y~. 11111 ... U , •Att•tC, ,.., ~tOlf., ot .. Oil A•O Cll!!Ct11•11tt STOCll l•t•A•Ua•oaail'O .. IOIY Yltl MUOAllOllOTlllln .
s
Buaineu people ve auppo1ed to be bard~Maded
realllu. But that reallam r..-.oeAUy teta ~ucktd out
when tt coJnes to the motion picture buslna1.
People's heacb are quickly turned br t.be PT'OI~ of
belnc involved in movies. So they forget all about
finand.al prudence.
ll'a a 1cenarlo that baa been played many times
over mwiy years. The latest epllode Is the 1tunnln1
$790 mllllon offer that the Coca-Cola Co. has made for
Columbia Pictures Coke hu made a lot or money ln
soft drinks, and It has used those profits to buy lt.s
way into citrus juices ( Mlnute Maid> and wine
<Taylor. Sterling and Monterey Vineyards). It baa
done well in both of those areas'. But movies! and
$790 million?
It takes Coke nearly two yeafS lo earn f790
million. Al the rate Columbia is making money, il
will take more than 15 years for Coke to 1et IU
money back. And even that's not certain aiven the
volatile nature of the movie business. In three of the
past 10 years Columbia has lost money.
That Coke wants r ~ lo get into thi s
business was clear \'; ~
from the pre-emptive ~ ,
bid it ~ade for ,4 .. ! Co I um b1 a $7 4 a _._..,.~..,._,,.:f;._ ______ .,
s hare. That was ll(Jll 111 .. RZ 1• almost twice what
Columbia shares
were selling for on the New York Stock Exchange.
And the price they were selling for, $41.75, wu close
to an all·time high.
It's enough lo validate a one-two foolproof theory
of how to make money in the stock market· ( lJ look
for a company lbal's about lo be bought up and <2>
make sure it's a movie company. ·
Movfe companies always seem to. be up for
grabs. and there always seems to~ someone around
who's ready to buy, no matter how bad the movie
business is -and 1981 was not a g90d year for the
industry. Two other big film companies changed hands in the past year
One was 20th Century-Fox, which had been
pursued by a number of companies, includinc a boat
manufacturer. Chris-Craft Industries. In t he spring
o~ 19811 Fox. which hit il big with "Star Wars,"
~lSappeared as a publicly owned company when all
its shares were bought for $722 million by one person
Denver oilman Marvin Davia. SitUn1 on Fox's board
now are two of Davis' friends, former President
G~r~ld Ford and former Secretary of State Henry Ktssinaer. Yes. everyone loves the movie business.
San Francisco 's financial octopus,
Transamerica, bought its way into the movie
business in 1967 by acquiring one of Hollywood's
oldest companies. United Artists With tM purchase
came the two men who had built United Artist.a into a
formidable presence in the movie business: Arthur
Krim a,nd Robert Benjamin. In 1978, chafing under
Transamerica':i rule. Krirn anli Beniamin tried to
repurchase their company from Transamerica but
were told: "Nothing doing." So they left to form
another movie company, Orion.
Last year, a'fler takin1 a terrible beating on a
fllm called "lfeaven's Gate.'' a S36 million W~tern
that bombed with the critics and movletoera,
Transalherica decided il had had enough of the
movie business. For $380 million, it peddled United
Artists to MGM Film, a company that's controlled by
one man, Kirk Kerkorian. • .
Where are the other big movie companies?
Warne1' Bros. now btlongs t o Warner
Communications. which makes most of lt.s money !
from Atari video games Paramount Pictures t
belongs to lhe Gulf & Western conglomerate. Walt 1£
Disney makes much more money from amusement !E
parks than movies. ~
AMERICAN LEADERS
091£ J9Jt~p,\V!M§~ .....
lorT~.~2 STOCkS " . ,,.., °I:;' n '::r--. ::"" is';'tso fZ
JO Trn UOIO .SLM :wt." JU.a+ 4.JJ UUtl 1~.tl IC17" -M 1C17.51 + 0.61 t1 Siil • ,01 .. 1.'3 da.4S :i...11 + 1.16 ndul s II 4,.MS.100• ,, ... t.IG,• Ullls m.-U Siil ... ,.. ..
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YORI( IAPI "911 l "'"" ,...,_" TOO.sh -:11 DKllMd tat llU Un<henotO 44 , ..
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SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS s.i.c.e ..... ...-.na. ,_.,,
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• ··-
'14•• -
High court ruling
confuses the issue
The Callfornla Supreme
Court haa performed a disservice
to the state's voters ln its recent
ruling on a Republican Party
ch ~llenge t o Democratic
1l .d ... : re;.pportionment
proposals.
. The court, in a narrow 4 to 3
decision. ordered that the
Legislature's new redistricting
plans for the state Assembly and
Senate and federal_ qongresslonal
seats be used ~ the June
primary and November general
elections.
Here's the rub: The court
also ruled that a
Republican-backed referendum
which, if successful, would void
the reapportionment plans also
appear on the June ballot. If the
referendum is successful.
candidates elected in the new
districts still would be permitted
to hold office until 1984,
presumably the year by which a_
new reapportionment plan could
be developed by the Legislature
and signed by the governor.
What the high court has done
is take a mess and make it
messier. Why was the court
unable. for example. to delay the
primary elections pending a vote
on the referendum ? Such an
approach would have been much
more reasonable.
Not surprisingly .
Republicans are not happy with
the court's ruling. They are
promising to appeal the decision
in federal court. They argue, in
part, that it would be unfair for
candidates elected this year
assuming the referendum is
successful -to remain in office
for two years pending
deve~opment of new
reapportionment plans.
It's not yet known when the
federal courts will hear the case.
if at all. We hope they do take the
case and provide a more sensible
solution to the reapportionment
juggernaut than what came' out
of San Francisco.
Ti-lne to step down
Calling on Paul Volcker to
resign is like asking the San
Francisco 49ers to trade Joe
Montana.
But, reluctantly. we feel that
may be the only way out of a
budding confrontation between
the Reagan administration and
the Federal Reserve. The danger
is that the confrontation could
prove disastrous to the already
beset economy and to the
nation's financial markets .
There are signs that the
battlf has begun.
But first let us praise Volcker
before we bury him.
Some historians eventually
may look on Volcker as one of a
handful of men who was in a
position to have s ignificant
impact on the course of the
world.
Recall the circumstances
under which Volcker took over
the helm in 1979 : The Carter
administration ~as in an
out-of-control spending binge and
prices were escalating : the U.S.
dollar was battered in foreign
trading : interest rates had
already started t o rise :
confidence in the U.S. economy
was negligible.
And soon after Volcker was
installed as chairman of the Fed.
two e¥ents occurred that could
have caused even graver danger
to the U.S. economy had not
Volcker been there. They were.
of course, the taking of the U.S.
hostages in I ran and the Russian
invasion of Afghanistan. Gold
and silver soared.
Volcker was the 'right man at
the place. Even today. we may
not realize the mammoth
influence he has had on the world
order.
But Volcker was brought in
to harness a different situation. ,
Productivity. profits. tax cuts.
phasing out of federal programs
and savings were not popular
topics ln 1979.
True. Volcker's tight-money
policies that restricted growth of
the money supply have been
controversial and led to serious
difficulties for the houslng and
auto industries. The Fed also has
had difficulty In pursuing a
consistent money policy.
But as President Reagan
enters his second year in office.
Volcker's policies can be credited
with bringing the inflation rate
below double digits for the first
time slnce 1977.
He has done his job well . But
it is time to move on before his
term expires in August, 1983.
A new -and much different
·-administration ls in office. And
its policies are much dlfferent
from the ones under Jimmy
Carter that Volcker was called on
to control.
The Fed. by necessity. is an
agency independent or the
administration. And It should be.
But, we are sorry to say. the
Rea,an admlulstratlon ls
conducting a dangerous and
devious campaign to pressure
Volcker.
On one hand. President
Reagan. in one of his rare
Machiavellian postures. is trying
to look as though he is above all
this. He piously turns aside
questions about his. relationship
with Volcker with silence or
lukewarm praise.
On the other hand, Treasury
Secretary Donald Regan. with
obvious blessing of Rea~an. is
verbally firing at Vo lcker from
both bjps.
He tried humor: He said he
was misquoted in saying Volcker
is "obstinate. tyrannical and
smokes cheap cigars ... Regan
said he didn't mention cigars.
But later Regan sharply
criticized the Federal Reserve
Board for ··erratic" credlt
policies and again placed much
or the blame for the recession on
the central bank.
With the U.S . government
having to borrow to finance a
$100 billion deficit. tbls year and
private industry competing for
the same money :·some
economists fear the prime rate
will go to :.l percent this year.
Were Volcker to resign.
would the tight·money policies
stop? Would interest rates fall'.'
Would the recession end this
spring! Probably not, in each
case. This would not be a
panacea iri itself. •
The president would appoint
a new Fed chairman. Though the
appointee would hav e
independence. he still would be
more in line with Reagan ·s
philosophy There are other
Volckers available.
Whether and how close they
worked together is not the point.·
The point is simply this: In
the coming months. the president
-either by himself and or
through aides will blame
Volcker. the Fed and its policies
for the continuing recession
He will have a ready
scapegoat, deserved or not. And
the nation's attention will be on
whom to blame rather than who
can reverse the recession.
With his own appointee. the
president could be held
accountable.
If we had our choice. we'd
keep Volcker. But we don't sec
how he and the president can
avoid their collision course.
Therefore. we salute him on
the one hand but urge him to step
aside on the other.
The situation is s imilar to the
time a senator. years ago. said
the U.S. should declare that it
had won the war in Vietnam and
should come home.
The rapid decrease in the
inflation rate is the wtr that
Volcker won. He should let
someone more compatible wtth
the administration tackle the
nex.t conflict. , . .
·opinions tlC.,,..Nd '" the s~ •bow •N thOM of the D•llY Piiot. Othtr views ••-. PrtHtd on tnls ~•re those ot their •uthon •M •rt1sts. RMOtl' comment.ls tnvlt· 1td. Add.rus The O•llv Piiot, Po. 8ox '560, Costa MeM, CA 92&26. Phone (7 U )
.642 ... 32t.
(
Motives good, memory had
W A S H 01 N G T 0 N -• ' T h l 1
admlnistr.Uon," the preaident ealdl ·'has faith in state and Loca
1overnmenta and 'the' conatltutional
balance envisioned by the Foundlnt
Fathers."
Thus Ronald Reagan, in bis Slate of
the Union messaae last week, beaan bi.a
call for a return to the aood old daya.
He calls it the "new federallam." It
used to be called, among other thinp,
"stales' rights." And it never worked
all that well.
REroRN WITll ME to t.hoee thrillina
days of yesteryear:
We are riding the stagecoach along
the bumpy roads through the Carolinas.
Inside the stage is Joel Roberts
Poinsett, an American diplomat and a
former congressman from South
Carolina. He is being questioned by a
young Frenchman named Alexia de
Tocqueville, who ii lblnkin& of wnUng a
book about Amertc-. The date ii Jan.
13, 1832.
·•How ·are the roads made and
repaired in America!" the Frenchmao asked. '-· /
"It'• a sreat conaUtuUon.al question
whether Cdlgeaa baa the ria.bt t.O make
anythiq but military roads," answered
the American. "lt'a the ·nai. that often
undertake to opea and keep up the
roach traventnc them. MOit frequently
tbeae rollda are at the expmae ot the
counties. ln general our roads are in
very bad repair. We haven't the ce.ntral
authority to force the counties to do
their duty. The inspecllon, being local,
s biased and slack."
That exchan1e, from Tocqueville's
original notebooks, was part of the
interviewine be did before wriUn1
RICIAID RllVll
"Democracy in America," which may
be the best book a bout the subject and
the country.
Because of lousy roads in South
Carolina -and because, for instance,
there is no .reuon for New Mexico to
build a highway for trucks to go from
Dallas to Los An1eles -the federal
govemment had to take the principal
reaponslbility for important
road-bulldinJ and maintenance in the
country. And the feds did a magnificent
job. From the 1950s through the 19705,
W asbin&ton spent $80 biiJion to
construct 42,500 milea of the finest
roadway in the world. One measure or
that achievement was the fact that the
death rate on American highways was
reduced by 75 percent durinl that
period.
Tbe highways, of course, are. among
the thing~ President Reatan would like
to remove f.,om federal control and
return to state authority. That's part of
the packa1e of more than 40 federal
programs he believes should run the
way they did in the good old days. Many
of the others are social programs -
welfare, food alamps, the things we all
like to complain about.
Those programs are for poor people.
In many, many American places they
are for black people. They became, or
originated as. federal programs
because many states not onJy did not
want to help black folk . They
occasionally counten.anced the random
murder or a few.
THERE ARE, I know, cynics who
believe that the reason Reagan wants to
return many of these progr$ms to the
slates ls that, in his heart, he knows the
states are quite capable of killing
programs. too. Many states, perhaps
most, will try to force the truly needy to
move someplace else. The federal
government, whatever its faults, does
not have that temptation· to cut social
programs to poor ~iile's bor.~. Th~
poor, aft.er all, can't be forced off the
continent Reagan's motives, I assume, are fine.
It's bis memory that is bad. 1be federai
government had to take power from
state and local governments because
the good old days weren't that good.
County,. state roles "'need definition
The suit filed jointly by 38 counllea in
an attempt to compel the state to
finance wbat they claim to be slate
mandated programs ta a political oddity. It's like a family of child.rel\
suing their parents for child support.
County governmenta exist and
function as part of the overall stale
government. They are creations of tl'le
state and could not exist were there no
slate. Unlike cities, the state has drawn
their boundaries and prescribed their
orrlcers. All of their functions have been
delegated by the state.
YET FOR MANY years the county
govemments existed with UWe or no
financial aid from the state, belna
permitted to raise their own revenues,
mostly through property taxes.
In Its earliest Jonna, auOc:ltions to the
counties were for roads and fairs. With
the advent of the sales tax and repeal of
prohibition, new allocations were
commenced. Still state aid to county
govemmenl.s was scanty even thouah
increuing burdens were being heaped
upon the counties by the state in the
form of new programs.
In 1971, during the admlnistraUon of
Gov. Ronald Reagan, the counties
finally·prevailed upon the state for an
agreement• whereby any new
state-mandated programs obligating
the county government's would be
funded by the state.
As it turned out' the legislators had
tongue In c.bet!1t when they made the
agreement. Unwilling to risk defeat of
; .
(; Ci -·1·"'\ ~ 1111111111
f
their iJtt programs by including the
funds whlch passage would r~, the
lawmakers convenienti-,. got
disclalmen as to any costs involved
thus rene&ing on their pledge lo finance
new mandated programs to the
COUf\ties.
·Even so, with the passage of
Proposition 13 in 1978, which cut
property tax revenues for the counties
in half, the state's subsequent bailout
allocations of more than $5 billion
annually to the local 1overnments
probably has more than covered the
coal.!! of any new mandated programs.
The trouble i.s that the money thus
provided the counties has simply been
handouts, unidentified as to their
purpose. In fact no requirement has
been made that the local governments
justify their needs Jor the funds granted
them and they have been free to use
them a.a they see fit.
The result has been that while the
slate has been denying its employees
realhttc cost or living salary
adjustments the local governments
have acted in such matters without
inhjbition, continuing to live it up like
the p~verbiaJ grasshopper.
ALntOUGH THE state is now on the
brink or fiscal disaster. Gov. Jerry
Brown plans to continue the unjustified
ball-out program al the same rate of
previous years.
What the supervisors' lawsuit m.ay
do is force the slate to dlacontlnue these
haphu.ard allocationa and commence
identifying the proper functioOI of ita
subordinate county govemments and
providing funds · only for specific
purposes.
In other words the long overdue tuk
of apelllng out the role of county
government and the obllcauon.s of the
state may be f$st approaching.
Winning sports, ga1nes largely psychology
Some years ago, a writer for The New
Yorker magazine did a series on tennis,
called ''Level! of the Game," which
vividly demonstrated tl\at the same
being played by cbamplons on the court
la not the same game beln1 watched by
the spectatorf.
Thia is lrue, of course, in far more
aport.s than tennis: what the spectator
IYlllY 11111
teea, 8"d appreciates, ls merely the
overt action: what the Hp.ert ll
perf onntna la ao eurcl.le in llrateiy at
a far _blcher level that u u mucb
psychok>CIC)al aa lt LI pbyalcal.
l tbouebl of tbJI nac1Jn1 about lbl
recent ch,11 champloHblp match
between Karpov and ICorchnol. For
there ar. two tames called dMM,
memories, infinite patience and the
uncanny ability to project a dozen
moves ahead. As It happen.a, none of
• these characterfzaUona ia correct: the
best chess players are youn1, they don't
all have eood memories or
mathematical prowe11 and most or
them can onJy aee two or three movea
ahead.
AT D'S IDGHEST levels, cheu, llkt
all 1ood 1amea, whether tenota or
brJd1• or poker. I• p1ycboloclcal
combat. All the top tenn.la players have
rou1hly the "me 1Ut1 or atroke
production; all the leadlna card playen
are equally pfoftcient in technique; all
the toumameat ca..u. .playera know
e~ery open.tnr. t•mbtt, trap and all
the.tr nriatlon.a.
It t1 the boldlleu, the lmqil\atton, the endurance, the Dla)'iDI Oil nerv .. ,
that event11aUy dtel.de the ~ The
nHntlal perlOftal factors ol character
and tem~ment aaake the uldlna&e
dlft•r•ce betwe.. two comlMttutl
bf 1Ddllbla11-..ueu wu
relentless attack. This fiaw may be
vanity, or timidity, or ruhneH, or
anger, or arroaance -but it ls always,
at thl! level, a psychotoctca1 wealmea .
And this la what Smyalov, the world's
champion two decades a10. alluded to
when replyina to an interviewer's
question, "Who ta your mOlt daofll'CJ'm
opponent?" He said: "lo ebela, u lD
life. a man ls b1a own most daqerous
opponent.'' For, lD every COQteat, more
points and more aamea are lOat b7 ta.
loser than won by the victor.
• Orange Coat OAIL Y PILOT/\Yedneeda 3,1982 ~u
PUBUC OFFICIMS
CYPlllm
Mayot Gcn1d Mulleft
Mayor Pro4'ern
Comd1us M. Col"C>MdO
Council Member Otto 1.acayo
CouncU Member IUchard Partin
Council Member Howard Rowan
GAIU>llN GROVE
~Ot Jbqathan H. C&nnon
Council Member Robert Dinscn
Council M.cmbcf Milton Krieger
Council Member
j . Tillman Wllllams
NATIONAL
Conpaaman Rohen ~adham
Conpalman Danl~l B.1.uqpn
~an Jury Pattertoo
Sf ATE
A.Nembtyml.n Chet Wray
Senator Paul Cupqner ·
COUNTY
Supervisor Ralph B. Clafk
Supervisor Bruce Nest2.0dl'
Supervisor Thomas F. Riley
Supervisor Rogtt R. Scancon
Orange: Counry Treuurer
•
Bob~ Alberta
Robert AJbcru
A.E. "Pat" Arnold
Joan D. Amold
WllUamJ. Anthol1y
Ruth Bajrd
Wlaaton Baird
Judtth.li.llcy
ShenVood V. Balley
Jerry Bnne
We5 Baqnlster
lktty Bannister
Van E. Barcus
Bob Baron
ENQOBS~
Jerri Clmmamml lichatd Hartl.son
Mlkc Clmmarrustl Mr. and Mrt.Jllllt'I A. Hayes, Jr.
Pcllcla Coen Mildred Helkr
Funner Mayor iDbcn Heller
AJvln M. Coen Donna Honon
H. WlllJam Compton Peter Honon
Elaine A. Craft Rohen Houlcal, Jr
Vlclcy L Dagei, i.o...tsc P Hutton
R.D. Davis Thomas E. Hyams
Joanne Dcatrtck RuaeUJcdJna.k • John F. Dcatrl~k J.H>Jcn K!n
Joann E. Dlxon Shirley Jen KJn
Ken Dlxon Laurie Jetmore
Jan Dodson A. Carol Jone•
oj f I . ~ Rayroond T. UnteU
Barban N. Love '
Mary BUubeth Maut
Connlt Mandk
Gcoree M. Manny
Norma Jean Muley
Porrnet}!layor \
Jetty A. Mallle9' ~
lktty MCCo\alt
WUUaQt M. "cC~
Lorraine ll Mc<:p'hi
Ann·Marie McMenamin
Dr Mtfton J. McMenalnin
Louil P. Merandi 1
,
HONTINGTON BEACH
Mayor Ruth Flnlcy
Robert "Bob" Cltlt>n
Oran~ County Sheriff'
Brad Gates
Lloyd A. Baron
Fonner Mayor
WWlam T, "BUI" Dod5on Gerald A. Jones
Susan Mayo Dominik M yldrcd E. Jones R<>jCt' A. Mohthotr 1 Daniel C. Montano ,
Mayor Pro Tern Ron PaUIMOn
Council Member Rulh Baill'y
Council Member
Ted BanJcu
Phylis 8at~bclor
Former Councilman
Walt Donovan
Rdbcn E. Joyce
Vivian Joyce Formct Mayor Joy Neugebauer
Sherry Baum Patrick G. Downey Dankl Kafer RoK F. Nicholas ~
Rohen P. M.,uilc,Jr.
Council Member Don McAllister
Council Mt"mbcr John A. Thomas
Chief of Police Earl Robitaille
LOS ALUlll'OS
Mayor K.conelh Zommlck
Mayor Pro Tern Charles Sylvia
Council Member Paul Bcma1
Council Mcmba' David A. Lander
OUd of Police Ket.on McDanid
Board of Educadon Member
Marte Abrams
SEAL BEACH
Mayor Frank Laszlo
Mayor Pro Tcm
WUlcmlcc Vandcrsta.ay
Council Member
Ronald "Chi" Kreddl
Council Member Kem Sdtz
·Council Ml'fl\ber
George H. Supple
Chief of Poll(·e Stacy T. Picascla
STANTON
Mayor Larry Romagnlno
~ayor Pro Tern Charll'S Rell
O>uncll Member
Frank N. Marshuu
Council Member
Martha Weishaupt
Council Ml'mbcr
Joseph M. Wheeler
ChJef of Police Ron Johnson
Fire Chief Jerold Hunter
WESTMINSTER
Mayor Kathy Buchoz
Mayor Pro Tcm Evar P. Peterson
CounclJ Member
Eldl'n f. Gllll'sple
Council Member GU Hodges
Counc il Member Melvin Jay
Chief o f Police Jack Shoddey
EXECUTIVE
COMMITIEE TO
RE-ELECT
SUPERVISOR
HARRIETI WIEDER
Co-Chainnan Ray Maggi
Co-Chairman
William C. Schroeder
Kenneth). Bourgulgnon
Gus Brickman
Jane Caln
Richard Harrison
Stephen F. Holden
Mary Ellen Houseal
Nancy Kasabali
frank Marshott
Jerry Matn~y
Evelyn P. Mayberry
Jack Miller
Barban Rountree
Ron Shenkman
Bill Taylor
Bob Terry
John and Haydee Tillotson
Frank P. UchJc
Shirley Walton
Rohen Zinngrabc:
'
Charl~s C. Bcnneu
Sean Boylan
DyAnnc Brooks
Robert It Brunelle
Kathy Byrne
Paul Byrne, Jr
UndaCannon ,
Mary Carleuo
Elsie Carruthers
Robcn T Castrey
Vincent s. Celano
Matthe°9?' S. Chishojm
Mary M. ClddJo
Johanne Duft'y Doris K. Kafer
William M. DuJfy Council Member
Former Councilman Miriam ~ywuod
Henry H. Duke Allene Kelley
Shirley Earley Edward King
Vaughn Edcwards Jodie KJng
Thomas C. Elllck Steven Knoblock
~ Former Mayor Darlene Korn
VlckJc M. Evans Jullos Korn
Jo Ann Frtcdman Gloria Krieger
Daniel E. Gillen David L'Hommclleu
Miriam T. Gillen < Grace LachJna
Form.er Mayor Jack Green Peter Lachlna
John Lanton
Ted L Lawson
Judith L Lawson
Betry Lattleton
Hden D. Paris
Russell Paris
Dlanc Parker
Judy Patrick
Irving PlckJer
Gaylt' Posner
Curt Pringle
Coun Prowell
Rosemary Prowell
Roben G. QuigJcy
Jerry ~Jcy
RAlul Rangel
Calvin Recd
ShJrlcy G. Recd
Edwin H. R.ippcrdan
Robcn Ross
Shlrlcy R. Rowland
Fred L Rumbold
Lu Ryder
Wally Ryder
Mary I!. Schroeder
Steve Schumacher
Gladys Schwanz
Mayor Jo hn Sey~071r
Donald Shapiro
Jeanl'ttc Shapiro
Former Mayor
Donal~ D Shipley
Betty SIJver
John H. SIJver
Roger D. Slates
Janet Slick
Ron Slick
Charlyn A. Smith
Jack E'. Smith
Stan Smolln
Helen Spatz
Morris~tz
Jay 0 . Stout
S. Takahashi
Anne a. Taylor
William H. Taylor
Harold Thompspn
StanJcy 1l"bt.-zyk
Harlan Tnylor
Pttyllis Traylor
RAly C. )/an Vorce
&mcy T. Villa
Ma~ f\.. WaUacc
Robcn·Lynn Welch
Susan White
Bobbitt Williams
.Edwin Williams
Joseph H. Wood
Leonard Wrlght
Tina Wright
Former Councilm~
Clancy Yoder
Mary L Yum
Paml'la H. Zanelh
This week Harriett Wieder announced she Will be a candidate fot re-election to the Orange County Board of
I Supervisors. ·
Simultaneously, hundreds of people, including virtually every Mayor, City CouncihJlan and City Councilwo-·
man from Cypress, Los Alamitos, Stanton, Huntington Beach, Westminster, Seal Beach, and Garden Grove an-
nounced their suppon for her re-election.
Business owners, labor leaders, environmentalists, civic leaders, law enforcement officials, aerospace and
government employees, retired persons and others from every walk of life have said they want to see our fine
Supervisor returned tQ office. "' ,
If you agree that, based upon Harriett Wieder's outstanding service to our community, she deserves to be
returned for a second term in office, clip and mail the coupon below today.
I
I J ...
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.
------~--
..
MllLTO:
Friends of Harriett Wieder
5682 Nevada P'iiv~
Huntington Beach, .CA 9264
j
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednffday, February 3, 1812
. Odds, ends sale ·mo.stly odds
• l
Arizona department store pokes fun at self in event
TUCSON, Ar la. (AP) - -18 ol t.bem, ort,inally $31 ~ ads are "extremely effective."
Arlaona'a oldeat family-owned $2.QZ," read oae ad. < "The ads have alwaya been ln
department at.ore bu offered lta Other 11le items included thia vein," she aaid. "We have to
dama1ed, poorly delJped and chocolate aardinea in a fryln1 be dianlfted ma.t of the Ume. '
u1ly merchandlae in a 1ale that pa.n for 81 cent• and cotton We t.hlnk it lives people a 1ood
lt promises 11 "final, thank fiannel p-.Jamaa with no bottoms impresaloo ll we can make tun
1oodw1.'' for 99 cents. Also, 1raduated of ourselves ... show our Steinfeld'• biannual White stripe cardl1ans ''that never customers that we're human.
Elephant Sale waa billed .. "a made lt put Basic U1ly" for Then they think we'll be friendly
coloaaal collection of leftovers, $3.88 and "$28 Western bata with irultead of stiff."
1reat ideas that bombed, the ele1ant look of dirt/' one of .-----------1
manufacturers' mistakes , which "was trampiea by the
buyen' boo-boos .•. and odds Budwelaer Clydeadalea," $1.78 CALL 642-5671 . '
U ID _ D 8 v Id and ends <mostly odda)." apiece. and let a friendly Ad·
9ld-Fashioned, Family-Style
·SWAP MEET
l!Yl!RY SUNDAY, 8 A.M. • 3 P.M.
Starting February 7 ...
ORANG• COA8T COLL•G• AUDITORIUM ~ARKING
Fairview & Arlington, Coeta Meta
Space for Sellers -$8.00
For reservations. call 556-5880 or sign In at Swap Meet.
Frtt Parking -_ Frtt Admission to Buyers!
ftennedy
1
treasury "Do you have a bandbaa you Advertlsin1 director Karen vlaor help you place your . can't stand any more? So do we Tafoya says the li1ht-hearted ·ad today.
. secretary lo the ,...------------------------'------------~--------~---~-----------.......... Nixon admin -
istration, has been
•ued for $.54.2 mlllion1
by liquidators for an I
Jtalian bank who
charge he aided a
jailed financier in
defrauding the bank.
Parking
war
waged
BOSTON <AP)
Somebody owes the city
of Boston $6,000 for
hundreds of unpaid
parklna tickets, and
soon a lat of people wUI
know who it la.
That substantial
debtor and 2,000 or so
others will soon find
their names being
liatributed to
n.ewspapen across the
state. The city hopes
that embarrassment at the prospect of having
their names published
will prod the culprits
ffito paying an overdue
$2 million.
It's part of a new
offensive to put the
~ch on violators. An
aaditional 100 ticket
writers are being
mobilized, and the cost
of freeing a car from the
reared "Denver Boot" is
1oing up more than 400
percent.
,~on Monday, a young
"an who declined to
i)entl!y himself stood in
pe in City Hall waiting
tiO pay $359 in parklnc
t\cketa dating back to
ft74 -for his boss.
, "He's been parking in
~e parking garage for
four to six months
because he's afraid of
being booted," the
young man said .
• The offending vehicle
was a truck used in a
Boston construction
buaineu, and the youn1 ~an said Boston shoutdl
'llive the working man. r. a break" in its parking
line crackdown.
... C i t y C o 1 I ·e c t ·1
o r · T r e a s u r e r,
Lowell L. Richards Ill
said the publicity idea
came from the practice
Qf publicizing delinquent
property tax lists.
Benjamin Kilgore,
okeaman for Mayor
evin H. White, said
t!lea.ae of the list will be
Id ttp unW lat.er in the
eek ~ com put.era will,
ave time to delete
ames of people who
paid tickets by the end
of a 101lay grace period
that ran through Friday.
"The $2 million is
.1ignlflcant, but it's by no
means the onJy
objective in publishing
ibe list," Kilgore said.
"The publication of the
Uat la destined to create ,;m environment in which
payment of o verdue
parkinl tickets is
J'e1arded aa a serious
'Ulatter." A spot check of
Massachusetts
newspaper edit.on found
several willin1 to
publ{1b tbe names of
vlolatora from areas
served by tbelr papen.
"We'd me every local
name on that llat," aald
David Hill, city editor of
'J'be Salem Evenln1
,.ew1. "'1Jton of newspapers
ln Sprin1fleld, Lowell
1 and Framln1ham also
lndlcated they would
carry tbe names.
..
T he shocking truth ts that
when ttcomes to lOOs,
regular or menthol, Carlton
contains more than twice as
much tar as Now!
The chart at the right
should make it very clear.
Antl when it comes to
1 OOs Box, Now ts lower by
far than Carlton .. Inf act.
"
_._..,__ ....
,.
.. ,.,, .... "Ga •a.ic.c.oc.
Now Box lOOs ts lowe,r than
any other lOOmm cigarette
anywhere. There's no question
about it. Now ts the Ultra
Lowest Tar'" brand.
So, if lowest tar ts what
you'd. like ln a iOOs
cigarette, theres also no
questton about what you
should be smoking. Now.
~
t
NUMBERS DON'T LIE. NOW lOOs
ARE LOWER THAN CARLTON 100s.
eqJI •Cl1t
lOO's ~'~ lOO'sm':::i~ lOO's 11or
NOW 2mg
CARLTON Smg
All tar rurrt>ers are av:pef cigarette by FTC method
2mg
5mg
, v
less than
O.Olmg
lmg
I
,
Daily Pilat
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 3, 1982 •
CAVALCADE
COMICS
TELEVISION
82
84
87
Bette Davis portrays
widow fighting to rejoin
'life in TV movie tonight.
0
-0 See. P.age B7.
• pe sustains
refugees
Austrian camp
• in
TEMPORARY HAVEN -The Polis h CrlSIS which drove
hundreds to seek asylum has strained the capacity or
Traiskirken refugee camp some 20 miles south or Vienna
'Crow capit1;11'
blasts birds
out of trees
HOLDREGE. Neb. (AP>
"The crow capital or the world"
tried to live down ils reputation
with a posse of shooters stalking
the pesky birds and blasting
them from trees.
Nobody knows why crows like
lo bang around thls
south-central Nebraska town.
but they do -in the thousands
since early January. They have
blackened skies. damaged trees
and soiled the streets until city
ttealth officials finally
recommend ed a ma ss
extermination.
Armed bands of city
employees, policemen and a few
citizens marched from the north
end of the city, drt vinl the birds
to a park in the south where the
sbootin• took place.
Al'• JI I
This is the mafn building of the center where political
refugees are processed for lat~r resettlemen~. they hope.
~
TRAISKJRKEN, Austria <AP)
-Human tragedy and hope are
close neighbors in Traiskirken,
Austria's main refugee camp.
The camp, located 20 miles
south of Vienna, has processed
about 300,000 refu gees s ince its
opening in 1956. All who seek
refuge in Austria are processed
here.
Traiskirken was founded al
the turn of the century as a
ca det sc ho o l f o r the
Aus tro-Hunga r ian e mpire,
turned into a Nazi school and
later became barracks for the
,occupying Red army after
World Warn.
. Files next to the office or Karl
Radek. who has headed the
camp for 19 years. cObtain 29,000
names -includin« 24,000 Poles
-who applied for political
uylum in Austria lut year.
Camp officials try to aid the
refugees in their immigration
attempts. Most seek ultimate
resettlement in countries like
tbe United States, Canada or
Australia.
At the. end last year. wben the
situ ation In Poland was
worsening and the Chopin
Express train from Warsaw was
bringing hundreds or refugees
into Vienna's southern railway
station. Traiski rke n was
overflowing.
At that time, more than 3,000
refugees lived in crowded
rooms, sleeping in double beds
i'h the hallways and some ln
tents. Even now, with 2,500
refu gees under its roof ,
Traiskirken is filled to capacity.
While the crowding has eased,
the cramped surroundings allow
only a minimum or privacy, and
te mpers sometimes Oare over
the frustration or camp routine
-especially with the mix of
more than a dozen nationalities.
Younger people. who sUU have
hop es of leaving the camp
quickly, attend English classes.
But the older r e fugees.
especially those with health
problems, find 1t t\arder t.u g~l
out of Traiskirken. .:;um'° o!
them have givc:i ••P hope of reaching ti1.-i1 i'!•a•1vt'5 in Ute
West.
. City Administrator Terry
Currey said up to 1,300 crows
were killed durinl the drive.
Despite some complaints
about the sbootin1, Currey said
tbert was no dama1e other than
to some tree branches: "'lbere
were no lftjurlea -Just crowt
YOUNG MSIDENT -A girl sits on a bed in a
transit room at the Traisktrken refugee camp
which is mted to near capacity with recent
political refugees. The child and her parents
s hare this s helter with some 300 people
fl eeing from Eastern European countries.
abot." Most Californians ignore earth11_.,,., ___ ~·e 'insurance
Mayor Rodale Emken
authorised the .1hootln1 after a recommendation from the ctty'a By Tlile.luoclated PreM "If a home la owfted by a pa)'inl '20() a year to lnaure a
Board of-lfealtb. t>o-u 8 O ~· r c • n t or aaUve Calilomlan, ehanees are lon tbat II sreater tban SS,000,''
Holdreie resident• a\arted Californians believe a major tt won't be earthquake Insured," Flynn said. "If th.• damaie ii
eomplalldnl about tNe daniaie earthquake will 1trlke their s al d Thom as rt y n n, a le11 than that, you don't 1et people, or
from lar,. flock.I of the black state wtth.ln their UleUmea, ~ spokesman fof Santa Afta·b&led dime one." damaltd, on1 5 percent wen.
blrdl Md iftOfdtnate amounta o1 95 percent of the state • Allatate lnlw-a.nc. <;o., tlM third · la1ured, Flynn clro lnp crows Uk• Other homeowners bypua earthquake lar1e1t tuurance writer in tbe De.Pitt &bet catch, Bernard blr:~ .~metlme• carry 8 insurance 1aid tbe Insurance state, "814 1111•1 owned by an Farrell, cbl•f <0f coHum~r A dlu1tr 1 eartb~= ti. tut can be .. to Information Servlctt In San Eaatemer, the odds Increase affalra f9r the state • meaaurtJit 8. OD the
::::..... Frucbco. 'that it 11 earthquake wured." Department of lnaurance. ~ale in a m ~
&mun 'called bll CttJ "Tbe Native Calilomlana -people The COit of a policy II only· ~dvoca!~• !::!e v:.•::nce, area COUid ca --inlDIGa.to
-.. ..o..M ... °' ....... wor ... -1 JI.tao.Jl.t.Na.Jb~.-4 .._i•h .... tlulUt. ....... _......... • ... =..1~ ·-r--. ·-··---~~~ .ia.~s=r-=;: ~iiai..-~l'ii'a'iai:· ... ~~~Bii-riiblY~'eifiicfuW.--· --·a~ar .. ~':fioo:•·~fn~!~ ~~f enITTi ~~Mi°'
TM erow la•..,. tlaat....... all tbelr livee -tend &o be more But U..'1 a catch: a 5 J)efttftt • BarUMia*• Preo&r'edlllell tArli In ,,........, ii Mt IM l1nt cnalier than neweomen about deductible on· the value ol the The pcMadal fol' 101a Ill ,...-. Foree ttm•-lloldnla ......... Milt '° tbe ialuruce, wd H lnsuranc:. boule. The 1171 SJlmar ~ •
tloclll of UM..-. company apot11man. .ii "Oft 1 1100:000 bOuH, you are north ~ l:o1 tu1elt1, wblc.b Tlae "teatlaJ
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•ANN LANDERS
•HUGij MULLIGAN
•HOROSCOPE I -I D,!~~!:s . ~~n ~ .. ?~~~~~ ... ~~s~~~~~!~m ~.~ reade_r _______ l
seems to dump their petty annoyances and had your address, I'd send you a get.well SUFFERING A LOT
small gripes on good old Ann . Will you card.
please let me get something off my chest? OF.AR SUFFE RING : Now that
Why do people, when they order in DEAR ANN LANDERS: My parents divorce ls as common 11 marriage, the
restaurants. ask for THE sirloin. or THE are divorced. My father has remarried. problem you write about b an everyday
leg or lamb or THE breast or chicken as if For any special event that comes along occurrence. I agree that It ls unfair of
i\ is the last one in the place? When they <recently our baby's christening> my divorced parents to punitb &betr chUdren
k for THE lemQn pie I always hope the mother backs out at the last minute. by puUlog them ln the middle.
watter will give them the whole pie -right saying she doesn't want to be in the same Both parents should attend happy
in th~ kisser. room with my father's new wife. family evenu and behave clvllly. If the
Cast night I heard a woman.al the next divorce was especially bitter, a classy
table tell the wailer she would like to have Why is it thal children musl bear the second wife (or husband> wtll atay home. HIS liver _ smothered in onions. brunt of a divorce forever'? Don't parents
The' stupidity of the average person understand it is possible to love them both DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband and we try our darnedest not to take makes me foi.ck . How do you stand your sides. 1 hoped when my father remarried it and I were discussing a colleague who
job? -PEOPLE·WATCHER FROM would make him happy. 1 also hope my came to work for the company two years
ALABAMA. mother will be happy again someday. The ago. He is handsome. well·dressed.
·n1 t · h h h' k h well·groomed. has a wonderful sense of .,,.E"AR WATCHER : Inflation is most pai u part is t at 5 et m 5 anot er humor. is knowledgeable about his work. "~ woman could replace her in our hearts. ramjt'ant, unemployment l• near an intelligent. has loads or friends who adore
all·tlme high, t""e threat of nutleu warfare Are children wrong to expect ~th him yet he has had three disastrous
ls hanging over our heads like the sword or parents to show up for happy occasious.. marriages and bounced from company to
D•modes and you are 1lck because a even though one is remarried? Please say company , never quite making it anyplace
This man should be a lot further ahead fo , I
life than he is.
My hus band ins11ts that ne is Jn
unlucky so·and·so. born under the wro~g
star and the failures were not his fautu I
believe there·s more to it than that. r
CYNICAL IN PENDLETON. ORE. I DEAR CYNIC: I'm with you. People
wh9 seem to have everything going fbr
the m but fail repeatedly program
themselves to self.destruct.
In spite or the charm and smooth talk.
the man has unresolved problems that
need to be worked out. He has probably
rejected the s uggestion because j
self·examlnatlon ls too painful. Too bad. I
Pomposity · pm:ictured
COUTURE CELEBRATION French fashion
designer Yves Saint Laurent gets ready to
blow out candles on cake during eata
celebrating 20th anniversary of the Saint
• llOIQSCOPf
BY SIDNEY OMARA
Fresh start
fOr Cancer
Thursday, Feb. 4
ARIES <March 21 ·April 19>: Accolade
received from older individual who lends
support to your e fforts . Focus on
investme nts , property. rei;ponsibility.
secu~ty. Dilemma is resolved.
TAURUS <April 20·May 20 l: Ideas are
plentiful -key is to be selective. Choose
quality over quantity. You gain greater
degr~ of independence: you also make
contact with creative individual .
GEMlNI (May 21.June 20l : Emphasis
on pacing, direction , payments and
collections. Cycle continues hl&h -you
recoup loss and prove major contention.
Financial prospect s improve. ·
CANCER (June 21·July 22>: Reach
beyond current expectations -cycle high
and circumstances conspire in your favor.
Focus on fresh start. originality and
personal magnetism.
.,,,,,,
Qy PtilL INTERLANOI of Laou~eacb
/ )~
,,, ........
Laurent fas hion house. Applauding the
honored guest at party at Lido Club, in Paris.
is actress Catherine Deneuve.
'POJIHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
WHV AM I
SO SELDOM
DISAPPOtNTED
NOWADAVS'?
-BECAUSE
IN THE PAST
I WAS SO OF"T£N
01 SAP POINTED.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22>: Privacy may
be a necessity -you 'll be .doing
confidential research. Emphasis also on
administrative tasks. hospitals . temporary
period of confinement.
VIRGO <Aug. 23·Sept. 22 1: Special
com mend a lion cou Id be fealu red.
Emphasis also on ability lo win your way
through ch·arm and persuasion .
Communication or call relates to business
decision or investment.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22>: Life style
changes in connec:Hon with community
project. added responsibility and career.
Familv member makes gesture of
conciliation. 'Financial picture· is brighter
-you can recou1> recent toss.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23·Nov . 21 1:
Conclusions are reached -final answers
favor your ambitions. Goals are not far -
terms will be defined and you'll know who
is sincere or otherwise.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21> '.
Payments for services. products wlll not be
as much of a burden as originally feared.
Individual who had been absent will meet
obligations. Relationship is more than
ships passing in the night.
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19l : Avoid
s hortcuts; some persons may have
prepared legal traps, hoping you wlll be
snared. Key now ls patience. peraistence.
wUltneness to .do rHearch and to check
with experts.
AQV~RIUS (Jan. 20 · Feb. 18 >:
EmphaalJ on employment, health, new
ways. of accompllahlng basic tuka-. Study
move.
HARVARD YARD. CAMBRIDGE.
Mass. <AP> -This is our first seminar in
Obverse English in the winter term. Class.
please come to order.
Obverse English. as you may know. is
the splendidly individualized speech form
that turns every cliche mto a verbal
banana peel. so that we end up with a fly in
the oatmeal and a monkey wrench in the
cookie jar
From Canada . we be gJn t oday ·s
lecture with a really world class entry that
fell twisted and broken from the hps of Bob
Thompson, a much quoted politician '"H
this idea ever catches fire. it will snowball
all across the land ...
Thompson. my Canadian sources tell
m e, had an original way with words that
threw even the Royal Canadian Mounties
off the trail of his logic. His style is
reminiscent or Sir Boyle Roche. the
logician in the old Irish Parliament. who •
apologlz~d for missing a committee
meeting because of a prior speaking
engagement. "Not being a bird." he told
the Dail, the Irish Parliament. ··1 can't be
in two plac;es at once." He brought down
the house one day with ··The cup of
Ireland's sorrows has been overflowing for
centuries and isn't full yet."
IT WAS SIR ROCHE who t hundered
out the memorable .. Damn posterity.
what's posterity ever done for us?"
Or. as a member of the Louisiana
House once phrased a similar question.
··what will our future forefathers say? ..
Last week I heard or a stern old
German nun who made her parochial
school third graders clean off their desks
every morning with a damp paper towel.
"First. ve viii make dem shpick:· she
ordained. ""unt den ve viii make them
shpan."
Dr. Lois De Bakey. the sister of the
famous heart surgeon and a lecturer in
speech at the Baylor College of Medicine in
Houston. devotes considerable time and
energy to the tiresome. often unresponsive
task of teaching physicians and surgeons
and laser b eam s pecialists how to
communicate in the En1lish language
Their speech forms are often more difficult
to comprehend than their handwriting.
Ms. DeBakey, a frequent contributor to our
museum of mangled mots. has isolated this
fine specimen from a s urvey published in a
prestigious medical journal·
"11fE PATIENTS IN nos sampling
were broken down by age and sex ... Yes.
Aren't we all?
HUGH MUlllGAN
MULLIGAN STEW
In the glory days of Yogi Berra. the
Yankee dugout was often littered with
fractured phrases as well as ·broken bats
from his habit of lunging at a mot juste as
1f 1t were a low sinking curve
When the loudspeaker announc~d one
day that only 9.000 were in attendance for a
double·header against the last place club.
Yogi philosophized: "If fans don't want to
come out and see the g ames. you can't s top
them."
He is supposed to have said of his
favorite steak house near Yankee Stadium.
··you'd have to go a long way to find a
restauraht this close · ·
Irela nd. of course . remains an island of
startlingly original speech Since the day~
or Goldsmith. Sheridan and Swift, the Irish
have taken the Queen's English hostage
and beaten the starch of snobbery out of it.
STILETro·SHARP Irish tongues hav~
a way of puncturing pompQS1ty with a flick
of wit that is seldom as innocent as it
sounds.
Charle s Laug hton on ce proud!~
announced m the Gres ham Hotel bar that
he had come to Dublin to do a one·man
s how
"That's grand ... said the barman
"Who's in it"'"
A newly ordained pries t . fresh out of
the seminary al Maynooth. asked the old
pastor at his first assignment in a remolt.'
County Mayo parish how far he could go in
pus hing the theological reforms of Vatic<1n
II .
"Hew the straight and narrow between
good and evil, and you'll be fm e :· the old
man assured him.
Then there was the voung l ris h
missionary. back from his first three-year
tour in Africa. making an emotional appeal
in his home parish m J'1pperary '"for shoes
for the footless children or Swaziland... "'
The total take in the colle ction
indicated that slipping on a verbal banana
peel often brings s i zable ins urance
compensations.
Yogi winds up on TV talk shows more
often than the last Rhodes scholar to play
in the majors, whoever he was Probably
one of thos e intellectual types who·d talk
the ears ore a fence post. Or was it a brass
monkey?
GOlfN ON lllDGf
BY CHARLES H. GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF
Both vulnerable. South deal•.
NORTH
•14
cv &H
O&U ..._.
•AJ9U
WEST EAST
• QHU • Jl05 -· ~ Q 101 cv.4"&4 o A4 6 1onu •tu •&1
SOUTH
•Akt OAUI
OQJt
•QJ07
The bidding:
S.11&.11 W..t N~ Eut
INT P ... SNT P ...
PUI p ..
OpenJnr lead: Three of •.
So 101> art ratb•r proud of
JOI.II' dumm7 play? Well,
btN'I JOW' thane., 1.0 plq
COITl Y? -WUUam Van Cleave, who Jed
Prealdent Rea1an 'a
tranattkm team, ••>'9
hta oppoeltion to the
MX ml11lle1
deployment plan la
costtna him Job aa
bead of the arma
control advtaory committee.
1 Orange Cout DAILY PtLOT/Wedn .. day, February 3, 1882
Veteran ·worker
SAN MATEO (AP) -A ZS.yeer th• company alnce 1m.
nteran employee of a rqanacemeot Deputy Obtrlct Attorney WUUam
con1ulUn1 COl!Jpany wbo roH U'Ren 1ald "tber. are lndicatJom"
tbrou1b tb• rank• to beeom• an that mooey becan d111ppeartn1 from ualltant treuurer bu been ~ar1.t th• company ln 1m. wltbembeullncmorethaq~mlllloa U'Ren U 'ld Mra . Urbantkl
ln 1• and 1111, county pl'OMCut.on all•ledlY ~ company cbecka to•
bave dllcJOHd. herHlf, processed them tbroulh bet
Roae Urbanik! 51, of MUlbrae, penonal account and then deltro~ wu arrHted .ian. 5 after an th• recordt.
lnveatlaation and releued on '25,000 Mrs. Urbanski baa denied all
bond. She 11 charaed wltb "lr•nd char1es throutb her lawyer.
theft , for1ery and araoo ln Tbe company and police are 1Ull
connection wttb the f'undl miulnt lnve1U1at1ng to determine bow far
from tbe URS Corp. back the cash loas eoea and to WbU~ the cbaraes deal wttb U.t determine what happened to the
past two yeara, attorney• for the ftn:o money, he added.
and tbe cllstrict attorney'• office ••Y URS attorney Robert Goodlna bu
Urbanaki Ud ..,....,band, WWlam.
The 1ult1 ftMd Iii S.. Mat. COUlllllty Superior Court, baa .,... kept
coaftdenUal "r a NCUoG t.l tJ9il dYU'I
code. That law allow• the •ult to
remain unreeordH and Haled until
the pla1ntlff I.I able to "attach" the
uatta ot the ateodanta or for ao
day1aft.erit11 tlled. he aald.
The 1uit allecet that Mn. Urban.Id
em beuled more than S2 million from
the eompanyi Goodin& aaid, addJq
that flaure may be upped "ff ~·
determine there were further or
hlaher amount.a taken."
for d 1ean at UU, Ill J;1 ...
m••ctment COMUltla; .. ~ -a vtriM)' ol lbduttritt, El .. W ;ltJ
110, sbe waa aamed ~·• ... t treaturer.
The AtlOll char,. 1t.em1 from a f'ln
tbal burned accountin1 1.q.n and
lloanclal document., -~ra.n said.
Proeeewn all•• •be "' tlM n... tn November, 1bortly after the
company wu a\adited.
U'Ben ta.Id the 12.oee ... that bu
been dlacovered mluln1 came to
llCbt after that audit at the end ot t.bl
company's flacaJ year in Nowmb*.
fund.I may bave been drained h'om also filed a civil lawsuit aaaloat Mn. ..... ~~~~~===~AiiifiiiiHFiiiim=
She la charaed wttb three count.a of
ff and theft, one of foreery and one d
anon. She worked as a bootkeepet
"Certain mooJn appeared to be
mi11ln1," be aald, but tbe tlre
deatroyed the pertinent reeordl. ·
I• ..
·'
M .1
SEMINARS STARTING
WEEK OF FEBRUARY 22nd
P1CT1nou1 MllUtHI PICTl1'0UI aullMHS
MAMll ITATaMaMT •AMII ITAnMllNT
Tiie lollowlftt ""Oft h doing Tiie followlng per1011 Is doing -. ...... : .......
INCLUDIS:
oetor vltltt with eatebUlhed femlly precttc•
M.D., medication•, per.q_nal dleta. _ •
Allergy Te.Ung With Simple Blood THta
-No More Scratch Teats, Allergy
Deteneltlutlon.
Medi Cal, Medicare, lnaurance
No Contrecta, No Hypnosis, No Self HypnoaJa
73 llA.IORll
, •g== --:::'
~~r
NUTRITION
THOMPSON
C .CHEWABLE
WITH ACEROLA.
90 TAB LETS. REG. 3.7S
THOMPSON
LECITHIN
CAPSULES
90 CAPSULES. Reg. 4.95
$2.15
$2.79
SOUJH COAST PLAZA
COSTA MESA
557-6161
LOWER LEVEL CAROUSEL MALL
.,
PRODUCE
FUERTE
AVOCADOS4/$1.00
.19c lb. LOOSE
CARROTS
VALLEY COVE
1 INVl!STMEN'T MAHAGl!MEHT HUltlH MAHOP'ACTUltlHG AHO
ORANGES
4 lbs.
$1.00
tGltOUP, 2'• MM11 SC,..1, Sllflt 1•, OllTltlSUTING, U Oraku lay
HuntlngtOll llHcft, C.llforftla "'41 Orlve, C:O.-del MM. C:.11~
25 Oleft J ........... ,,_ MM"tme aruce H. 11-. JA Or&kn a.., !;::· H""41""°" .. ach. C:.lllorllla Drive. c..-*' Mar, CallfOfflle
Tllh lllltNM 11 <-lad by .,.
'""lvl-
GIMJ ..........
Tlll1 •IM-1 -II-wltrl , ..
Cou11ty Ci.<11 ol 0r..._. COfMty 011
-J ...... ,., "· 1'12
Tlllt IYollwu K c--.S by .., ,., .. IN!.
a.,_H.lt-
Tlli. -., .. lllect wltll IN
ounly CIWtl ol Or-Goufttv on
...... ,.,is.1m. • '1... P111m
PllOll-Or..._. Coesl Dally .. llDI. "'*IMICll Or-~ Delly Piiot,
'Jan. u. 2ID. 21, l'ft. J, 1m ao1-a. .... 21,,..... J, '°· 11, tta .-..
·-'
-. MOTlfS OP TRUITa •'I IAL•
T .$. No. 7101
T.O. leltVICli COMPANY •• dlll
_..,,... TNllM .,.., ""' lol-
.... ,,,,
P1.1bll"'9d Or-Coal Dally Pllol.
J,!_'!;, 13, 20.~ >. 1"2 ™~
, NU l9m
"ICTITIOUI SUll•aU NAMa STATaMaNT
Tiie lollowlng pereon 11 .ioine
!MnlNhM:
(A ) ECONOMY OPP'ICE
EOUIPMENT (I I 50UTH COAST
OP'P'ICE EQUIPMENT, 9" So11lll
Orllftd A-. s..ta AM, Cllll ........ mos ....-.c-~ .• ~
,.,,......, "' .... OnM, 5eMa AN, CM ...... ft'm
Tllll ...,_ II ~tM 1ty •
c..._. .....
t.#IC.-~. J.C.~ .......... TMa....._.._,... ......
c-ty a.ti "' Or-.. ~ .. OK.JI,"". .. ,..., ....... er..... c-Oel'Y .......
JM.11, .. 17, ..-.1, t9I 2-.a.
""'"' ... w .. ..... fl'ATPlllllrT
Tiie ,_ll-l11e .,.n.tt 11 Hine .......... : o•••N ~TOH Sl\IOIO, -.a Cetell11e Drive, Hew"rt •••ell, ~..., .
Mlc!IMI L .. 11 OrlrnH. no-e
C•lelll•• Otilve, N•wport leecll,
C.."9ntleftMI
TMI .......... It c--.1 ltY WI lflcllvlduel.
~L,Grl'"" Tlli. .......... wasfl ... wllllti.
c-ty Ci.rt of <><•noe CDUfltY on J-ryll,lta.
dnc:rlbed -.ct ol 1rW WILL SEL ~ l9lC(
AT .. U8LIC AUCTION TO THE "tc'TITIOUSSUllNa• HIG Hl!ST SIOOElt P'Olt CAS • -• MMMITAT•MllMT
lp.ayaMe at u,... of MM In lawfl>I PICTfT'tOUISUllN.. Tiie fellowl11e perMn Is doing
_, ol -Uftl .... SUC.I all rlgM ........ ITA1WMaMT llUI'-•:
lltle end ......... <oriveyed '° -,_ Tiie lellowll11 peraen It ••Int ACCU WELD, 114 Wot lttl•
held "' 11 ....... .-Deell of TnlSt "' ........... M: 1r .. 1 C-MMe c..-. ftU1 .._~......., .. rel __ -.Ulmd: HUMAN It£ I 0 U It C £ <OllM WIN._;~. Jr., IJ02 S.
TltUST<>ft: CARL J . KYMl.A,Jlt. & COHSULTNO'S, DIDI ~ ~. Setter St....._ s..ta AN, Gel'"""-
TERESA L. KYML.A. IMMttd & wife .._ ........ 9-".~9*'4' ""7
-CARL v. KYMlA, Sit. a ,,,.,.. J.,11e1 Miiien Wellece, UHi Tlll1 .,...._ 11 <elldl.lc1IM by M
_., ...... _...., ... ,,_""· MellbY La .... H .... 11 .. 1ton ... ,11 ................
SEHaFICIAltY: MAHMOO ~--O.W.U.,Jr.
I H A H A NG I A H & SH A H L Tiiis ....,.... It ~led by WI Tllll .......... -lllect _.,,, IN
SHANAHOIAH, ...,_ & wife .,._,,..... C-ty C1er11 ef Or .... CwMy M
llff<-111111Aat & ~IN -'-M'"'°" W-.C.. J-ry 11. tm.
H . PAltO & IEVEltLY P'AltO, ni.,........... WM fllad wtltl -. ; P1111'1
llulNftd & .... ·~ ......-. C-ty Cler1I flf Or•"" C-.., ., ~ ..... Or....-C.... Delly PIMC,
.. ..,..... .iw. '°· tW .. JMtr. Mo. J_,., ti. 1•. ..-.. JM. ae. 27, ..-. a. 1e, 1m i.a "12 In -.. ,__ ..... 11 ol Offkllll ,.,
ltKOr'dl lo\ .. flfflCa of .. ltecordlW ,.,....,.. Or-c...i Delly ,.,...,
ol Or ... C-.C.,; ...., -tll .,_ JM. 2', J1, ...... J. It, 1'11 ....,
r ...... .......,,.~, -..-----..... ..------' Let It Of T'9d Ne. mJ, In IN City PICTITIOUI SUStMalS
efC•teMIM,Qll.w>tyefOr..... MJC .-JICl MAMSITAT .... MT
et C.llforNa, u .-.. .., • rna;1111oo---------,,... Tll• lellowlne ,.,..,. 11 •o•ne
b1.11lneu a1: BOHO PIHAHCIAL
IHVt!l'TMENTS, J1l'I Slrcll Stnet.
Plrat floor. Hew11ort •••<II, C.lllornle t2IMO
PICTITIOUI 8UllMHI
.. .MIMllTAT ... MT
Cert W. lolld, Ne. t Le S.-,
lrYIM,Gel ....... 91715
T"lt bullMsa la ~ 11Y 1111 l ... hlldl.lel.
CM1W.lolld
Tllla ....,_ -fl ... """ ... c-ty C""11 flf OI' .... CelMtY ., J_,,, .. ,.._
""'"11 ......... Qr .... c.... Delly "9c. J•. "· n.,.. a."'·,., .....
THOMPSON
VITAMIN A
10,000 1.U. FROM
LEMON GRASS 01 L
100 TABLETS. Reg. 2.2S
RICHLIFE
ZINC CHELATE
75 M .G. 100 TABLETS
Reg. 4.9S
RICMLIFE
E 1000 NATURAL
d-A LPHA TOCO PH E ROL
30 CAPSULES. Reg. 8.70
$1.29
$2.85
$5.03
GROCERIES
ARDEN .
RICE CAKES
ASSORTED GRAINS
NET WT. 4 OZ.
HAIN
DRESSING
THOUSAND ISLAND
ITALIAN 12 FL. OZ.
SLIM ETTI
SPAGHETTI
NET WT. 32 OZ. (2 LBS.)
JOHNSON'S
PASTA & PIZZA
SPAGHETTI
SAUCE
NETWT.160Z. (1 LB.)
HANSON'S
75c
$~.23
$1.50
$1.59
NATURAL SODA
MANDARIN LIME,
LEMON LIME,
GRAPEFRUIT,
12 FL OZ.
(
35c
LUNCH COUNTER
HALF& HALF -
EVERYONE'S FAVORITE-Your
choice of HALF a Sandwich from the
following: Egg Salad, Cream Cheese,
Grilled ,Cheese, Liverwurst, Chopped
Liver, Ham or Tuna .
PLUS .
Your choice of HALF a Potato Salad,
Mixed Green Salad, Cottage Cheese, or
Mhted Fruit Salad. $2 • 15
BULK PRODUCTS
·PaP ·coRN 41c lb. ·
BANANA
CHIPS $1.35 ~b.
HEAL TH &
BEAUTY AIDS
COUNTRY ROAD
ALOE .VERA
CONDITIONER
TREATMENT $2 75 18.36 FL OZ. REG. 3.95 • .
· MILLCREEK
JOJOBA
SHAMPOO
WITH KERATIN
P .H. SS 18 FL OZ.
REG. 6.50
VIVA VERA
$4.50
ALOE VERA GEL
128 FL. OZ. REG. 18.SO $9 50 LIMITED SUPPLY •
DELI
ALTA DENA
RAW COTTAGE
CHEESE 95 16 oz. (1 lb.) c
. ALTA DENA
I
11
I:
1'
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by Brad Anderson
"You wanted something?"
.llDGE PARkER
641sn't ..... tfit guy who won ..... yea,.. Cherly Pit
Spitting Contelt?" I
............
~ ~T SAVS 9E ~EMe!RS WHAT IT
LOOKED UK£ ~ rr WAS W41J(W ON."
,
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
LQRD P.
MUST NOT
BE DISTURBED.
PUNl:TI
GORDO
I .. "
by Tom K. Ryan
AUNT FRITZI
MAKES THAT
EVERY TIME
ITSNOW'S
.,... ____ _
f'AWl'RIN1HIM ANl7 HAVt=
HIM ~t:PbR'f ~f61.J!.AR1-Y 1"0
A P'PtOM110N OFFICER!
by Jeff MacNelly
by Ernie Bushm1ller
™AT'S WHERE SHE GOSSIPS
WITH THE NEIGHBOR
by Gus Arriola
by Tom Bat1uk
AR5T AID -( PREREOOISliE ~ ~D AID)
1N AR.ST AID, <,IOO'U.. LEARN ABOUT ~ 1HIN65 P6
tmlJTH-lO-MOUTH RE5USCJ11mm.I. l'OOUTH-10-MOOTH
RfS(J501ATION I~ &5T OONE WITH Tu.JO PEOPL.E &JTUW
Bf DONE ALONE. WrTH A HAI~ ()R(J€R IF N€Ce:b5AR"t'.
C,lOO'U.. ~ LEARN WHLJ 1HE HEIMU~ MANBJVE~ 15
VIR'TUAU.CJ USEL..E.55 AGAl~T Arnl.Elt'.5 FOOT.
1£ ~ ~ VARI005 t'\€0006 Of ~NG
<illl>N06 ALONG WllH HOW lO 0P£N UP ~ BAND--AIO ~
lHqf rf OOE5N'T STICJ< 10 t&L..F !
OM,SU«f., MOM\ 11M
ft.UtC:f\..-. r1llf.~ I 0\0'411'
~£.A ~U1'"'~ 11"
WAS JVs1 A 1UM'f 'ftttf
rtttQ£.R·eEMOt~~ ~u.'f \
MA'fet ~ CNl c,o rtttP
A J06 ~ SO '400 cAN
PA'f rotl 1\l£. ~ 1'0
l ~ c.».. r---....,
Z-J
by Kevin Fagan
1 e.U.\..'4 Esa"'o \)11'~
~ urE 1"~tS MO«l&IM&,
AelO -.01) E~~Cf N!f. TO "° i.oo.c1t.MJ AA WOAK? 10 ft? ,_.,,........____,
I
1 .
. . ,
.
' .
' • •
..
BJ IOB &DWAaDI ._ ...............
NASHVILLE, Tenn. -For ~e patt
couple ot yean, Randy Parton bu wanted to do aom~ for b1a b'-slater Dolly -1tyJ1 Hr tL&lr.
Parton, wbo la lbout el.Cbt yean youqer than
bla f aD)OUI slater. spent 15 molllbl atudyia1 to become a halrdreaaer, and tbea atyled balr
profeulonaJly for a year. 11U you're uldn1 ti I'd Uke to do her hair, yes
I'd Jlke to 1tyle It," Parton, 2'7, aaid In an
Interview.
But there are three pl'Qblema: 1. Mlaa Parton,
a 1tn1er·actre11, nearly always •ean a wl1,
which bu beeome one of her trademarlu. 2. She'a
had a personal halr stylist for 15 yean. 3. LitUe
brother Randy has decided on a music career of
bla own, 1ivtn1 up the 1claaon and hot .. t ... blower
for hia bau pltar and recordlq 1eu1onl.
Rand Parton, the eilhth ot 11 Partco albllnp •
-Dolly wu the fourth -baa bad three moderate
country music bita duriJlc the past year -"Hold
Me Lille You Never Had Me," "Shot Full of Love"
and "Don't Cry Baby."
Parton is one of the few people who have seen
Mias Parton's real hair, wfucb be said la blond like
bis.
"But sbe keeps it blended with her wigs," be
said.
Speaking as a professional hairdresser, be
said be thinks the wigs are vital to her ima1e of
flamboyance aod flash.
"Taking away her wies. would be like taking
away the gaudy clothes of Elton J ohn or
Liberace," be said. ,
Parton, who was born in the Smoky Mountains
and still bas a mountain accent, said Dolly has
helped him, but that be has still carved out a
career mosUy on his own initiative.
CLEO'S COMING -Cleo Lane, called "quite
simply, the best s~ger in the world" by the
London Times, Wlll appear at the Golden
Be ar in Huntington Beach tonight and
Thursday along with John Dankworth. her
saxophone-playing husbal\d and arranger
Miss Lane, a native of England, is famous for
her remarkable vocal range, which can span
several oct~ves in a single bar.
"I've golle.Jl help from Dolly -she's very
supportive," be said. "Some people may think I've
gotten apeclal treatment because I'm Dolly
Parton's brother, but I've gotten ln a van at 2 ln
the morning with five guys I've never seen before
to go play someplace on the road, too."
THt-Pf/QI IHi.-t..rRr
I••,
'-.. -. ---UGO TOGNADJ .;-
(Si.t ol 'la Cep Ava ........ ) I
Parton said be still bristles at media reports in
tbe mid-'70s that Miss Parton bad fired family
members, including him, as ber band and
replaced them with musicians more accustomed to
playing pop music.
In
ORANGE COUNTY1
PREMIERE
"She bas band changes all the time because
s he's off the road for eight to 10 months and bas to
find new ones," he said.
plua
"Cousin·
Coualne" {.PO)
,', • 0 , • I I •i • ...... , t • 0 ~ i' o I
II.
Ill.
George C. Scott In "TAPS" (PO)
"BOOGENS"
"ARTHUR" Ptu•
"TIME BANDITS" (POI
Midnight Shows Frt.-Sat.
If Ws got wheels
you'll move it
faster in a
Daily Pilot
classified
ad. Call
642-5678 and
a friendly
ad-vlsorwm help you turn
your wheels
1ntocash.
...... COMMUNITY
OPEN HOUSE
·to inform you of Improvements Being
-Considered for Rt. 1 /Rt. 55 ·
INTERCHANGE
TllPIO.ICla
"'---STUDY ll#/1$-----
The California Deportment Of Transportation (coltrans) Is
Sponaorlng A Community Open House To Inform The
Public About P.roposed Improvements To The Newport
Blvd. (rt-55/poGlflc Coast Highway (route 1) Interchange.
The Improvement a To Be Oiacuased At The Meeting Will
Tie In With The Rt . 55 Transportation Study And Will Be
Evaluated In The Draft Environmental lmpoci Statement.
The Rte. 55 Study Will Compore Transportation Alter·
native• Along Newport Blvd. From Bristol StrHt To
Pacific Cooat Highway.
The open houM will provide on opponunhy for In·
dMduat1 fo exprett their views retarding Mverol alter·
native .olutlon• to Improve the Rt-SS/Rt. 1 Interchange.
The Improvements whkh ore being studied Include the
fotlowlng types of construction activities:
• ~nlng roocfwap and bridges
• Placing troff k 1lgnol1
• Modifying ramps
A short rreMntatlon will be given at 7:3> p.m. Cakrons
staff wll be on hand to answer queltlon• about the pro· PoMd lmprowmenta. Maps a,,d other Information wltl
-----~b•cwollobt• for the public to rev~. -
Publlc and open MUM meeting• are conducted aa an 111·
tegrol port of the continuing Cltl1en Portlclpotlon Pro·
gram for the Rout• 55 Transportation Study. Thi• at'fdy
wtU produc• o Otoff Environmental Statement evoluot1"9 hW!waY and trantft ~ltemotw.t and ft*r r..,,.ctlw Im•
pocte. YOU ME EN~ED TO STOP. IY ANO EX·
PIUS YOU. CONCHNS.
~ 10, 19'2 (WlONfSOAY)
3:30 p.m. to 9!00 p.m.
N IJEAOt.CtD\~..___..--
I I
Orange COlilt DAILY PfLOT/Wednnd•Y· February 3, 1982
NOW PLAYING
IMA n TillO _..,. llAal
llrll Ptm Edwlrdl Saddllbld< Edwwds Clrwna 529.5339 511 5aao 14H311 134.2553
~TA MIU ,..,. I
Ectwlr'ds Soutti Coast Pllll 646-2711 EdWm Wooclllndlll 551 ·0855
'"°'--'°"'""-....-i' I
*BARGAIN MATINEES•
Mond•y t"ru S1turd~
All Perto~s befOfe 5:00 PM
(be911t Sptelll fngagementa and Hollcl1ya)
-c:~-----,.,.: ·~.':it: t:-__ _...._...,._ ... , __ , ... " ___ , ------·----__ .,., -AIE.OS" ,..,-.-
-o:...n·---.. TAN" ....
.... 11:11. ... -.~ ...
LAKEWOOD C£NT£1r
SOUTH WAllC IN
--·--"MIDeRI 0, THa &.091' Aak" ---,.. .., .. -.... -------''wt«)M UR IS IT ANYWA'fr __ ..._ __
1111
--· ··~m llMcttu•·· .. ,.., ___ _
---·--·-.. _.,. __
-----I -----~OI" Tl9 LOST AllUt" ........ -,_,_.. .. , ____ ,,,. __.. ............ Me
~,,.._....,
~ lo111t1COCN11tfwoy) rn==;
-......... -e·16 •• ... ~oo 1-. ...... e:•s IMPORTANT NOTICE! Ctt511 OR N IHIOER 12FRHI MM"'..., • .,..,,. .. '"•Jn :30• S.. -4.30,.
CM.fl -·-....... ~ llMll IS -ll'lMIJI t1I 110 UI CM -1111111 OflOI ACCUO'I _.
..... 11111 l'QllTMll l•AU Cl!ll.ll ~ D Oii 11111 ..,._
A"4•Ml M
ANAHEIM DRIVE-IN
,_ .. ot~ll
179-9150
''THIE M.DUCTIOM ~· ... -
---·--·-llL_,. __
"VUeow·,. -"MIOKT ICHOOL" ...
''NX AHO ntm L.OMn.Y WOMA .... "' -"ICMC>Ol.GIN. ~" 1111
p I ~A l-45'1
BUENA PARK OllM IN ---·-··· "THI 900QE.MS" .. -llnco4'1 "'" w..i ol llllO• "THIY CAMIE FROM WITHIN'" "'
121-.-070
kl t t4 /I. I ... ,
LINCOLN Dl'llVHN -·-·--''THI IBIUCT10N" ... -''\.OOKIDt'' .. ---·--· _llL __ __
·~ ...
"MMIKT aatoOL." ..
C..•HIOUllD
I
·1
I I
HEADS YOU WIN ... -New York Judge Alan
Friess drew a great deal of criticism when he
allQwed an 18-year-old youth to flip a coin to
det.,rmtne the length of ~his pJekpocketing
sentence. The youth won the toss and got 20
,.,. .........
days instead of 30. Friess ls the same judge
who allowed a remale murder suspect to
spend a night in bis Brooklyn home in
November 1980.
. .
! ln$ulation battle erids in tie
Both goose down, synthetic material provide warmth
WASHING TON CAP) -With
Americans. trying to stay warm
during one of the coldest winters
of the century. scientisU; joined
the debate over whether 1oose
down or synthetic insulation
works. best. Their conclusion:
It's a draw.
Researchers at the University
of Wisconsin in Green Bay
tested the thermal insulating
propet'ties of goose down ,
matted wool and polyester and
polyolefm fibers normally found
in the cloth or nylon shells of
jackets, vests and other
the insulation and it doesn't
make much of a di!fer~nce what
you use to trap the air. .
"There have recently been
a.d v erUse men ts f or thin
ili'rulators, the polyolefins, that
say they are twice as warm as
goose down," Kaufman said.
"Like the claims for other new
materials that periodic.ally come
on the market, they are simply
not true.
. outerwear.
"We were not trying to shoot
do'wn anyone's c laims," he
continued: "We were simply
tryine to put together sc!entJ.fic
values to use to compare
claims." "It wu found that all provide
1 very similar degrees of
hm1tatt0n," said their report,
published in Selene& maga.zine.
Down prQVed to have slightly
higher insulating value than.
polyester, while polyo1efin fibers
and wool fiber batting had
;value~ in between the others,
the study found
The Eddie Bauer Co., •
nationwide sportio1 1ooda dWn
based lo Redmond, Wuh.,
sponsored the atudy. But
Kaufman said the company sells
clothing using all the filla tested
and had no influence on tbe
study's outcome.
However, "these variations
are unlikely to be detectable by
tbe ·consumer'." the report
added.
'f.be study was done by Or.
William Kaufman and assistants
Debra.Bothe and Steven Meyer.
Kaufman saJd in a telephone
interview that the results
confirm the long-held belief that
enclosed "dead" air provides
Kaufman said he comiden
goose down the beat fill matslal
becaus~ It is lighter and more
durable than the others. But
these soft, fine feathers have
become very expensive and
som e people don't like the
bunching the down produces in
clothing, he added.
"If en individual is strapped
for money and can't afford
down, he can buy a very good
1·111n1mas i .
~
) ;
GAllVIS McBeth both of Huntlngt.on
HELEN OARVJS. age 89. Beach. Ca. and Norma
a resident of Huntington M'Bl iniak of Riverside, Ca.,
Beach, Ca. Pass~ away on also su rviving are 10
8\lnd•y. J anuary 31, 1982 at g r a n d c h t I d r e n . 1 6
Pacifica Hosplta1. Mra. ereat·srandchlldren and 1
Oarvia wH the widow of areal-great-grandson.
Arthur J . Garvis, wbo Friends may call at the
pused·away In ~cember of mortuary rrom 2:00PM to
197'1.SbewubominLyons, 9 .00PM on Tuesday,
N'braska on April 23, 1892. February 2, 1982 where
Beloved mot.her of Jeanette funeral services will be DJerknes of -Escondido, Ca .. conducted on Wednesday,
Norine PoweJI an<S Evelyn February 3, 1982 at lO:OOAM. ----------~Interment will be in Good
1ALn1a•110M
SMITH & TUTHILL
• WISTCllff CHA"1.
427 E 17tr'I SI
Costa Mes•
646-937•
NaCR lltOTI4as
SMrTm' MOlrTUAAY
627 M .. n SI
Hu1'11ndton &ach
536-6S39
Shepherd Cemetery. Pierce
Brothers Smiths' Mortuary
directors. 538-6S39.
NELSON
IVER EDWARD
NELSON, resident of Santa
Ana. Ca. Pused away on
January 30, 1982. H.e 11
survived by 'his wlre
Pauline, brother Victor' of
Minnesota, silllel'!I. Vletori1t
Thompsod of Iowa and Irene
Dennison also of Iowa,
jacket with synthetic fibers ·that
will keep hio:i warm," Kaufman
said. "This is the bottom line of
our study." •
In the study, the resear chers
put different amounts of fill into
nylon shell squares and placed
the squares on a heal source. A
copper heal-sink plate wu put
on top of the material and the
researchers measured heat
transfer through the filler.
Judge paroles
eiderly pair·
COLUMBUS, Oblo CAP ) -A
Judie bu paroled ao elderly
couple Jailed on drul charges,
aayin1 be ii aure they will not be
repeat off enders alter bavlne
spent seven weeks in prbon.
Franklin County Judce
Clifford Rader ordered tbe
paroles for Luther Beaver, 74,
and bis wife Audrey, 63 -
kDO't,n as ''Grandpa" and
''Grl'ndma" to young drug
cu.stomers.
The two bad been convicted of
aggravated drug trafficking,
which they acknowledged using
to supplement their Social
Security income. UO, hashish
and marijuana were seized at
their home.
Veterans
benefits
denied
WASHINGTON (AP>
-Men who served in
the U .S . Merchant
Marine durltllJ World
War II wi 11 not be
f ft .....
Nc•-O•ATMo• NOTIC•OflMATMOfl ~--·-vr ~ L0 .. 8TTA THUOIU,. llAMSITAftMelfT 'i A•O 0. Wl•INa-:; Tllll t1111w1111 ,.,Mfl 11 •••111 llCt<•LHAUfll'T AND Ofl Tiie ,...._.,.. ,.,_ .,. 4'1H
A R I C H A R ...._.. fl' I T I T I 0 fl T 0 T .. riATUT THINO, 11'1
I 8SNI .. A Nb 0, 0 ..!,.•AOOUCl_(IT~ .. ~~ ADMtNllT•R •STAT• ~-OK•.""'····~ • :r I T I 0 N T 0 ,;;;t v ttP * · T --NO. A·'1a17. __ ,._
OMINllTIR llTATa .J,....., .._. ~ '*'" T 0 • 1 I n t 1 r s 1(1"' MlllM, UN 11-.11• •tt o. A111m. c •·°""'91• ..., beneficiaries creditors ~·r.':'~~:,-:,., T o I I I h t I r • , 1,J.~:.,..----.. CMIMllM " • •nd contingent' creditors of ,.,....IG Clfcllt, ..._.._, IMcA.
1neflclarit1, creditors ·a..,..,tt... Lorett a Thud 1 um c.i,._..,...
nd contingent creditors of ''"' .......,. -nlM •"" 111t Blcktlhaupt and persons Hid• W110a111t. ,,., ..._...1e:1s
lcherd 0 . Wiesner end ~=~•~.'=--' o, ..... C••11••Y who m•y be otherwise cwci. • ....,...,,....,'*fl.~
trsons, who rney be ,..._ Interested In the wlll ni. ...._ 1t ~" •
therwlM lnttrffted In the ...,...,..,..a.-.... c-.e °'"• """'-and/or estate: .,,.,._ ....
tit •nd/or estate: Jfllli 1*· •· •, ~ •• '44ll. A petition tt.1 been flled TMt ..=':! :•..., ..
A petition has ~ flied 1>Y Allen A. Slgel In the ' C*1I " ._ o..._ c:-tJ •
y Suwn A. Wittner In the -.I 9111 Superior Court of Or•nve ,.,...,., 1· 1•·
Superior Court of Orange County requesting th•t ,._.....,.or ~ Oell~=
County requesting that ...,.... Allan A . Slgel be ,...,,tt,l11 M~ ,,._,
u1•n A . W iesner be 11tCTmOW•v .... ,.. appointed as personal------~-----
ppolnted H personal Tll• ,=1:•:::: .. "1. "'"' represent at Ive to P9JC 11111 rep res• n tat Ive to ......._., administer the ,state of~---------dmlnlster the estate of IOWMIOI RNGINH•INO ANO L 0 re t ta Thud I u m l'IC'Tlnoutl&IU•UI Richard 'O . Wiesner cONIULT•No co .. nu v1111111 Bickelhaupt <under the NAMlllTlTlMaWY (und~r the Independent Aw::;.r:-::;.~~ v1111e11 I n d e P e n d • n t w!1';!.;:•,ow111e ,., .. ., •• cl•l111
Administration of Estates ,..,.,_,c.e-...cA....._ AdmlnlstraUon of Estates •M1Lv o••L L11111T10, ,.,,,. Act). The petition Is set for T"" ......,_ 1t ~ .. .,. Act). The petition Is set for si.ter A-."~ hKll. c•
he.ring In Dept. No. 3 at 1M11r.._-.~ hearlnv In Dept. No. 3 at .,..,a1111LY co• wvnT, u•
700 Civic Center Drive, Tfi1t .......--f'hM '"""u. 700 Civic Center Drive Pwtet1MA-.P.t11.c.u......_
West, In the City ol Santa CeuM'tCllft•0r .... ~111 J•. West. In the City of Santa cuui..
Ana, California on Feb. 2 .. , "· ,.., ,. .... Ana, Callfornla on March ...;:1:...,..~ 11 --..c ... " "'
1982 at 9:30 a.m. 11v11111Mc1er .... c.110et1y ....... 3 1982 at 9·30 AM Em11yc.w,.tt
IF YOU OBJECT to the J111.rr,,.1.io.11,1m 4st.a '1F YOU.OBJECT to the "''' .--t •• .. ,.. wtt11 .. gr•ntlflV of the petition, granting Of the petition C-yCltftltl0rM18CtwltYtlflJM.
you should either appear Pia.I 1111( · you should either appear "· l"2. P .....
•t the hearing end state at the hearing and state ""*".,..Or.,. eo.11 Ot11y ,..., your objections or flle your objections or flle , .. 1,10,11.t•,tm ~,...,
written objections with the "=~=::' written objections with the ,_ __ ........ ____ ....._ __
court before the he•rlng. Tiie 1011•w111e '~' .. " I• 1101111 court before the hearing .. PIU19111 Your appearance may be ""'' ... "'" Your appearance may be
In person or by •your e .. ~~~"~==·u1111 In person or by your NCmc10" attorney. 0.,,.11 M.111, 1• .._..,, eo, attorney tavna•-sSALa
1 F You ARE A """",,,_...,,.c.i,....,...tM47 1 F v o u -AR e A "-........ , .. C R E 0 I T 0 R o r a 1..;~·:.....~ " ,..,._..-" e.. C R E O t T O R o r a u ..... ,,_.1
contingent creditor of the o.rMt Meu contingent creditor of the s E "'s 1 o E , 1 N "'N c 1 "'L
eceased, you must fll-e T"lt ·--'"" w1"' u.e deceased, you must file c~POttATIOH .. cMy •"''"' .. your clalm with the court c...11-. cttt11 of Or..,.. c-y .., your c laim with the court Trvatt. --...... ..,. clet<rfflW
r present It to the J-••25•
1*· '""" or present It to the ~c~1~'';1~\'=iL~~!~~L~~ personal representative ,,,....,_er...,. CM9I o.11y "'"· personal representative 1100Ett 11'<>1' CA$tl c~ •I u-appolnted by the court J .... n. , ... ,, , •. 11. im 4tNI, appointed by the court of .... "'....,.._,, .. 1919 Ullt•
within four months from within four montM from St•• .. 1 .,, ,..,,., "' .. -l1tter .. ,
the date of ffm Issuance Pim& ll1ll the date of first Issuance =~ton;:~':.";:;::;
of letters as provtded In of lette~ as provided In ._.._...,._,..:
Section 700 of the Probate Section 700 of the Probate TttUSTOll: JOHNW<JuTT..._.,.,
ctlod• ,of fc,,allfornht. llhe ",.tC!!..Y.KNISTAT·.~~~ Code of California. The UM\tf'rled~-v .
I I I Ill -_,., e•HRf'ICI-. : .. lttST f'&OtEttAI.. me or ng c a ms w Tll• 10110••~• per-•• •••11• time for flllng claims will SAV•Nos ANO LOA.JI .usoc1AT10.-not eJCplre prior to four .,...,,... ... , not expire prior to four o,SANTAMOHICA.•<orpcw ........
months from the date of OllMGH iv MtMt, atJ 5-ftn, months from the date of ttecorOM O.C•iMtr "· •-..
th h I natl -bo • ., .......... callfonlle'*1 I lftJlr ..... IJI»"' ..... IJ171,. -... e ear ng Coev a ve. Mary 0 • O'tti.tM, :au ~"·· the hear ng noticed above. °' Oftklll tttc-111 .. offk• oft .. YOU MAY EXAMINE h1Ntlt1-.ca1lfomlt.S.1 YOU MAY EXAMINE RK ... .,8'0r.,..c-tv,u1c1..,
the file kept by the court. T""' ..,._. ts tlOftducwa "' "' the flle kept by tne court. •• '""'' c1 .. cr111 .. 111e 1onow1 .. c
If you are Interested In the l11c11¥iou.t.MtryG.O'Kleff• If you are interested In the ..--1•: estate, you may flle a Tiits ......,_, ••,...,.with.,. estate, you may flle a "' portion 01 Lot 11 01 Newport
request with the court to c-•v c11r1l of o....._ CouMv °" request with the court to H•ltt1u.i11 t:11e'-"Yet0r-.s1• ,~ry I ttlt °' CAlllforlllo ... per ,.... r--'" receive se>eclal notice of · · "'ma rec eive special notice of ...., •. pege a. wsc.11----.
the Inventory of estate Pvt111-er.. c-11 oe11, Pltot, the In ventory of estate 111 ""' office°' -~1y rK•-..
assets and of the petltl~s. '" J, 10.11.2•. Hit m~. assets and of the petitions. :~:.::r.::'•,~":!,·~:~:=:;. accounts and reports accounts and reports"""' o1...., LM u beln9 • ,..,.. ..,
described In Section 1200.S Nil.IC~ desc ribed in Section 1200.S 111• sou111e11ter1y ""• 01 Or•n ..
of the California Probate of the Callfornla Probate Ave-.•~"' Mkl ,...., "*-Code Code se11.111 so c1eon•• 1!111 .,..,, '"' ' l'IC'tlTlOVS IUMNRSI ' NOf"~ly........,. of .... LOI la, K •en e and 0 Ion , NAMtE STAnMSNT JU.JO 101 to 111e ""• pe1111 •• Attorney at uw, 3333 W. Tll• 1011ow1111 P•''°" h 1101111 Dennis Booth; Allan A . .,..._,,... 1-. <*ltllwlfte s.utt1 •
Coast Hwy., Suite 401, ""''r~~·+uucE ottouP,;.. Slgel, One WUshlre Blvd., =:r,~::'t:-:=-...=:
ewport Beach, CA 92663; •Pflle Tr•.1rv1M. eotllorN• nm Suite 2323, Los Angeles, Sovt11 .. ..,_ w..11•u1 i..c 1e.11 el.64S...OW. pn1c1l!.Mtrt111.s.A,..1e Tr•. Ca. 90017 ; tel : (213) P0111t;llllftee~•-..-w .. uo Plltlll.,_. Or ... C-Delly PllClt, •VIM, Callforllle '27U 624.0262 Ifft lo• Plllnt. lfWftce NOrlll «> o.tl<-Jen. 27. ts., .... J, tta w.a Tlolt llutln<m ll COlldUCted bV •11 EHi 1'1S7 1911 lo Ille true point of '"°'"kl..., ""'""'119 m Pai ..... sc .... 1 • CoMt 0.¥141(.Menlft P11b1I.-er .... Coas1 Otlly Piiot ,,., .. Ctlllor111•'2127 Tlolt lie-WM fifed wltll -Feb J,J,t,im us.a . · TM beMflcterv -wkl o..d et COUlllY Cter1l °'Or--c-fy °" J.,. -If' 19TU 1 not, by,....... of• br9K" or ""'9Wlt NOTICE OF DEATH OF u. it12 ""m . ~ 111 ,.,. oot19'tll"'' M<urM ,,,.re-. ..
BERNICE· W. Zl!LLEA IMf'etoleA HKIMll -dtllwrecl to ' l'vbll"""' 0r-. COH1 Dally Piiot, NOTIC• 01' yttunaa•11ALa -.... ~ • .mu ... OKlerelltll AND OF PETITION TO Jtlfl. 21. l'eb. J, tt, •7• tt12 .enc t.OAJOtO; iml • ot O•l•lllUna o..~ tor,.,.,_,
ADMtNtSTER ESTATE T.L .... 1110..a wr11t..,no1keof..,..Kll-of•l11Ctton NO. A-112020. T 0 SEltVICE COllll"AHY •• -~ .. C-M ... _..,.... .. NII MIC!
T 0 a I I . h e I r s • -.. -•""411tM T""69e -... lol-lfle ~.-rty to WCltfy ulcl ...... , ..... ~ -·~ "'°"'''-.... of ti .. WILL Sl!l.l. _,.,,.....,....Illa_..,_. u.-.1 beneficiaries, creditors . AT PUil.iC AUCTION TO THE .. kl nottceof Dr_....., .. elllCllOfo .. •nd conttngent crecntors of · ......, HtGHUT 1100Ett .-o .. c).sH 11e rec.ordld 0c..., •.,.. •• ,..,.,,
BER NICE W. ZELLER THE OR I 0 IN Al. 0 F TH Is , ... .,ab .. '" """ ...... '" ...... No. '"•'Ill ..... ,.,,., -flt, of
d ,......_ ........_ be "NOTICE" WAS "L.EO FOR ,_y of IN UllllMI S..Wll •IJ •l'IM. MlllOfttci.1 ltKOrctt
•n -· _.,. """' may ltRCOttO OH JAHUAltY llt ltlt IH tlllt el>CI '"'9ntl c_.,.i to --Stkl ... Wiii bf ,.,.. boll wit_, otherwise Interested in the THI o,,.cE o, rHa ORANGE ... 1e1 by 11 -.. 1c1 o.d Clf Trvst"" co.,. ... ,.1 ., w•rrenly' .. "." or
Wiii and/or estate. COUNTY .ftl!COIU>t!tt. u.;:~-===r:o~~ ............. ....,c11,. tltla. ~.or A petition has been filed ..one. OP oal'AUL. T JlllOll l'IWft e11Cumbrencn. to po .,. ,..,. .. ,,.119
by Lur1ene White In the ~=~O:~=~ •ENE·, 1 et A tt v . Hoss E 1 N .,.'"''"' """ et .. "°" -"'" bJ
Su,..rlor Court of Oranne ·~-,.... BAN l·HASHl!Mt e11c1 NAHIO Mlllo.eclofTr-.w1tt11n1....ae1lft -" -SHAHltOltHY 8ANl·HA$HEMI Miii ,.. .. Pf'O'llld9d, --. II O"J, County requesting that :"~,*'·flml 11 ... u,.. _.wt•• .... AL• uzA :'!:' !:::.':"!:':=:' :,~
Lu r I en e W h I t e be .~~=~• •AHl·HASHl!MI, 111e1r so11 •11• Trv .. t" _,".,.. inoai. <,..., ... 11v appointed aS personal lF YOUlt l'ltOll'j,,a_ttTY IS IN NEGAtt BAHl·HASHEMI, 11\elr Nici°"" of Trvtt. Setcl Mlle wlll De representative to ,OttECLOSU•E •~4USR YOU ......... ffHjolftH_..cs. Ml•MT"°'"*Y ,..,_y111tlt•t
d I I t t"'-t t , A It E 9 EH IN 0 IN Y 0 U It !tee.,.._ J-t, l"1 "Instr. No. 2·00 pm at ~ a..-n ·,..,..,... a m n s er '"' es a e o .. l'AY MEN TS. IT MAY • E SOLO ,,,.. Ill ...... MOn, ..... S40 .. Olfkl•I .;,,, ... <e io ... CMc C..ter l11lktlfl0, Bernice W. Zeller (under WITHOUT II.KY couttT ACT•ON . ....,. •ec.eN1111 • .,.ic." 1919 tt--JOO e .. , ·a--•-. "'111e 01y
the Ind e pendent vou "'•• Mw .. ._.. rllM to~"" et°'.,..~; .... -.ci of lrvA e10r-
Adtm) lnTl~atlon1 of Estates :.-:~.·~~ ~ = .!"',.!~:.,:: """''._~:"~"~• ,,., 111e ,.,,,. • ttw 1n111e1 pu1111c:a110r> Ac . ·~ pe1 tlon Is set for, plus permitted cosu .,,. .. ...,.... l'AltCEL t: Ullll .... 7 H.....,, Met of 11111 Nik•. , .. total -ot IM hearing In Dept. No. 3 at •llfilfl .,.,_ manlM '"""THE OATE -er•-lfl -CO.-...Klm Plell UllPt lcl balence ol , ... obllO•tlon
700 Cl I C t 0 · THIS NOTICE OF 01!,AULT WAS rec: .. clecl Oii Jiiiy 1, 1•.111 ·-1»52. wcurecl by tfw-deKrl-diled ol
W IV C en er 5rtve, RRCOROl!O. Tlllt •-'It tt,u.J.00 l'a .. t lltf to 1217, l11clu1ln, ti lntll -n tlmetell c~b. oa-tet. est, n the City of anta o.stfJe-vu.im-wu11"',._ Offkl•l....,..ofwtc1Ceuooev: •"" ....,MC:n 11 J1n.121a. To•· Ana, Callfornla on March llfttll ·-~ Ila<-cur ..... 1 ll'Atl Cl!l. 2• "'" ullCllvl••• on• termlne.,.. -"'119 bid."'°" mey u ll 3, 1982 at 9 :30 a .m . v ... may --.. INIY -.... ,,.. tlllr!y -11111111 11/Jtnll 1111••••• ••• (710 "7"°"'
I F You OBJECT to t .. _ -9kl portloll of -ec:c...,,.. --....... 1 ... C-lft 1fW lw llllO ...... Ill O••• J--, tJ. •m
rn:: "'°""'NII ....,.-wa -· ol>CI IO tM C-Af'N ol Lot 2 of SE AS I 0 E FIN AN CI Al. granting of the petition, 1M \'OU must...., ... -tleted Trec:I IOMO, M ,_ m• llled lft ·-CORPORATION
Y U S..,,.. ·Id e ther .. ....... .....,. 4'i, ,. ... 1J..,. 14 °' M1Ke1-••Mid'"" ... · 0 ,...,... .. p~ar l;Upt, -of MN C-.ty, .. """ •1 T.O. S..lrica Comc>cl<IY 090ftl at the hearing and state ,_::~~::=-of"':!".::::':!::~ .. ,,.. '• 4WlllM 111 .,. ,.,,k ..... 111i.ct • your o~ectlon s or f ile .... o1 ,..,...1ato ~ ...,_, "Oeflnttlolll"".,. o.c1or .. 1o11 o1 .~.~;::"',.::::;
Written J'ectlons w ith the ...,..., ""' ........... iato .... _ tor9<....i Co¥•11•11••· co11c11t10111 •11• __. ......, lt..Vkllella ........... "SUaJl!CT ON City 9MI , Wwt
court before the hearing. ~~:.~~·.~:":: TO: .. .....,c .. "DKieretlM"I; 0r..,...c...m.t
Your appearance may be ••••<l .... ur• by P•''"' tto• .,.11,.. ll'AttCEL 1· ~••wt,.,,,, 17141 m...-1 n pers on or by your _.;~11y.-c~. 111 '"• SKllOll• ... m1ec1 "C••••I" PvblltlWll 0r.,.. CM•• o.uy P11o1 •ttorney. TO l'INO OUT THE AMOUfff YOU E•~ ~., ..... -.. ~ Jiii. 20. 21, .... J, ltc JOt.11 ., S.tut"""' Mel EIK~" 9' -I F Y 0 U A R E A MUST ,.Av. OR TO AttttAHGE f'Otl Artlelt 9fillltN "E-11'' t1' ._ · PAYMENT TO STOP c R E 0 I T 0 R 0' a ,OttEC.LOSURE, Ott If' YOUtl O.ClaretMll. contll"lnAnt creditor Of t.... PttOPl!ttTY 1$ IN ,OttECLOSUltE "••C&L •: E~• ... -" .. ,... '"' 0 OT flt tta SO • ...--... ~ellt..U-lft ........ l' deceased, YOU MUSt file ~ON'\A'c;,v J....:: tlkllerf "vu.!: IM Artkll anlltlld ... _ .. ol .. OTIQMHVSTH'I~• your claim with the court tt111H.-r, •n>.~o...... 111• oec11r4t1011 •• cov ... •1111, ~•a.ow••"°-...,
t It t th CA.,... tel <7 Co11clltlo11t e1111 Rutrlctlo111 111 OA ,.,.....,, .....,_Y *" lta, 91 0 r pr ese n 0 e ; · l•l '1I..,_,, "SU8JECT TO:" betow llfl9 "~ 1t :00 •·"'·• Tre11somerlce Tiiie personal representative II you 11•"• elly •uettl..,•. you Oecleret1011"I ullftr Ifie S.'11011 1111ur•~• c-~111, e Cellfor•le tllo11l11 co111ec1 • lewv•• or Ill• ~...... •• a ppointed by the court ""'""'""'agency Wllkll m•y .... "'"'~"' tllC'll Art!<•*"'" es corp1rttlellosc1Uty._tfttec1Tf'VHM
Ith' f th f let-•: ••o-.rs Rtent.1 •llcl Dvllta, under tN --to o.41 ol Trwt w n our rnon s rom INlireclvouri-. u111111 .. t11c1 ce1t•• Televltlo11," ...cwdedMeyJ,t'1•n1.-r.Ne.. .... ttt• date of first Issuance ... "' ......... YOU MA y LOH "Sldrrercl h..-S," ""'"""1 Mel MOii 1171•. p ... "' .. OfttClll
of letten a$ provided In ~:::~,::;.,.~~.~ 00 NOT s.n•-:· "EMroec""*'I," -ttec••••. uecueec1 w: ,. .... ,. L. section 700 aif the Probate Notice 11 ll•r•h ,,.,.,. 111a1 "Cemf'IM!lly,ec:Nltiftl!~... "W•MI••.,.. S...y• "'· • ....,. •• C~de of Callfornla. The c "' v "' L c"' o e a s c tt o w ll'UCEL 5' E--4 11w ~ .,,,...,.., ,,. IN otr1ee " -c..My . COttl'O•ATION •• ca1llor11I• ..,. ....... clrtl,.... ........... -." ..... '., 0r--. ~ ....... ti e for flllng clalms Wiii urttr•llOll, I• cluly .,,Ollll•f 11\et """" .. lAt '· Trec:t 1ms. .. Ctll"""•· WILL SILL AT fOUILIC
no e vpire prior tO four S • I* mtp "Itel In .... •7, ....... 11 AUCTION TO HIG ... IT e100al\ " T ll T 15 c 1111•tr lllt ltllowl119 e11• 21, ti Ml1<ellt11Mul Me,1, l"()lt CASH( ........ ·.rllt'lle of MWlll months from the date of .._,,..,o..ctofTrue1: r.<CINI °' 1114 CtwMy. 41PkW .. 1aw1ui -..-.,. u,..... ,._.,et:
tht hearing noticed above. .,!:.~'!uC:'. :.-~~o.~u~11;1~4.: c--~ ... .....,... o o1 t11e 111e _. .,_ ....,_. .. 111e 0r.,... YOU MAY EXAMINE ~..,.i.....-.YSOH<MHtl.U,• O.ClafttMll,atuell_..,_.I•....,. c:-ity<*~ Cttyef SMle
th fll k t b t -rt I le ~-nkkll111Mtyltlll ~. ----~. -~~ AN. St• ti cal~ ell •llM. tllte e e ep Y ,..., cou . ,,.. -· .. " •11 .,,..,.,14M ~" ____ __. ... ._. -lflleNll_.,.. .. __ ...,
If rou are Interested Irr the -1111na ............ l'ETR• tt. DAI A••••H: as WlllclJtm!Mf, ,,.,, .... , .... " ............ o.. .. T--~ ..
( llMI JAMiil C. DAI, llYilMMI •NI wllt, c.t ........ • '1114 "" ·-"' es ate, you may lie a .. '°'"' ......,.., •• ..... .,...,,,.... ..111 • ...... ~ ., _ "'"'""'' lfl\Mlted lfl ..._ c:-.ey _. request with the court to ~llolnt .......... ALL AS TENANTS •ntt11•llo11 Is tliO•ll •b•"·· 110 Sttw ~ .. , Loi .. of Trtd .... receive special notice Of l .. CoMMQN. werr t11ty h 11011 u 10 1t1 caw, .. City .. C... Mate, at
the rnventory of estate and vit~."~=v:ss RICHARD c~,::~·==~·~ if=~~·:;"~:::::.::~
of the petitions, 8CCOUtlts •11cotto110 Merell t4, 1• ... Ttvtt,_.,,_., • .._.. ... .._.. ,...,,, •ec•r• o1 Or•1199 l:OllMy,
and reports descr1bed In l•tN,_. ..._ 11ca. • .... nse. 1o1"" ..._._ tKWM........, ltantMI. •
Section f 2005 f th ... ,,...,°'"' ... .......,"' ... ......,,__.._..,.....,.. .. Tloetlrfft•.-rnt•ll4•tlltr • 0 e .-Mic• .. tM it----r .. -'"" _.,. .... ~ "..,., ....
C llf I C "'" --~· .............................. o.c ........ , ••• --rt, .. ~;.. ........ ...:........ •. • orn a Probate ode. Ct1111ty; SAID J)llllO Of' TttUIT .. o.telllt ... ~ flf ..... ... ............ . --........ E.A. BouVtf'On OHC•lllES: u• ••11Let1 of Trec:t 111r1ttt11Mlic4-'"-llt!Mol••d••" ..... 14D DMwtttt, C.. 20951 Broolrlturst St Ht. ltUO, .. ..,....,__..,,..,.. • e•• .. w•-• " ... 1 Mid ~ ~ TNllN -!......._
S .. ..._ • '1 4'. "9" II tlld D .. M11C9"-~ '9 ....... .... ........... , ............ "::::: -... ---• ...... lft .._ effl<a of ,tflt CtlllltY tM ~ 1M u1• ...... <_. lllWY I.....,, ..., _, • .,.,.,._ ti H•ntlngton aeach ca ••order •f orut• cev11ty, ...,...,...,WMdl_.•--• .. ,... ..... _..._. _
_ ......,. ' ' Celll•r11la. SAID I.ANO IS MOtttE -~--~·-·"""'· ..... If-.,._.. ....... .... -ll'ULL.., OUCIUl«O IN TI4tE oa•o .... ,.. Ill ... ,..... ..... uw. .. .. .... Wiii. INl9, ......... ~· • CW TlllUST A90Vll MIN'tlOHIO. "'4f0ttk191...... Ct'lltflMt et _,.,...,, •-W Publlshed Or•nve coast a.10 DIM" TNll tK-~ · .......... • _. • ..... .,,...., ,...... .,..., , ....... 0 I Pll ~ l 4 1 ...... ...,. _..,.. .. Mlltl•l ._ ceWMllt,,,, _,......, .... ,,,, ., tMtln••ICel. ",.., .. ,_...,.. .,.!,!Y °'' .. I o .... TH~~~·-· .................. ,...,..., ..... , ......... .,_~i:r===-----== IH>~ ... ~ --...-..,_rtt -Clil'llllN-.tlJll9fllt~ .... _......_ _,._ Mid 0-ef TNll _. .... .__ Cl!NI -.... ..-cal _...... .., __.., .. ,...,...._ Ill .... ._..,, 1---------_.;..;...~ ...,..........., ... ......, .... ., .... 0..0. .. ~·--I'*"". ......... ........... """-.. .. .,, ... ,.... ... THAT t "'-".. 9* Miit ........ _.... M .., IMll Dll9' .. TM, .... C..,... ... * 4efwtt Jft,' tM .......... ._: ................... DIM9f n... .....-. tf .. T,,.... -..... ~--DIM ef Trwit .. _.. tMt c._...1 -....... flf .,_. ___, W .... Deel .. YNIL Ma KC.,,.,.. Ill IMt...,... ..... ~ ... fl ........ (..... ... -..... -d:Jre .....
._.. ~ f/11 T• lllttalllMftt .. ..W 0... .. ~ ........ -._ .. , 14'.11!-11·
........... ~ .._ wa Odlllet .... "'Ale&~;,~ M. T'flltf111t";,a.,.1ttillel..!!'*',_ ... .,,~~ t•. 1 '• •11• •II 111•u4111e11t 1t 11• •.1n.; ..... ~a-" •••• . ... -llllUI....... • ..,._. ••CMt~ ......................... c .. , •• ,.....
THAT: M n .. H Ulertef, tlle ..... ·~~ill.. · *--.... .:: ~-~ .__..,....,_, ........ ~,.,, ~ I flH ' • _..._. -... .., ........ , .......... At ....... _....., .................... ftot. ................. ~_..... ... .:~ ..... ::=-Jbt4i:AO I_... .... ._ .. TfWI ... , • ~ ._.. ..... flf 141 el !'le ye-......... -_... ........ .. ........... ..._ .. _,__ ....... ___.... .................... ..
~................... .. .......... ...-.. "':::.·~ ... ',..~..,:..-:.n::.=..: ti •=•:.::.:.•w.-;:· 'h T• MUIClo TITU ..,.,.,....,.,_._..._... ... c~-n
----------1. ~ ...... L 111;_.. T'ftQ ~""::."".. ·--;~z·~~·d··;~~~~~i!li~~111111~~~
-~.... , ...... ' CtWU'e=. ==--Uonll .... ~On .......... l *WM~ ...... WOlllT
ci. .....
Aec ....
N9CNIW
MOVlt
••• "MoOM'lbO" ('9114)
Clwt! 0etMe, Ava OerdflW 1 When 8 plilfttatlon CWW•
..., ,... 111 1ow wttt1 tt1e I
.... OC M ~. oon-I
fllctt ltlM .llMWll
• • • ..,.,.... AJmy"
(1171) 8~ Stllltone,
Annenct ._... Thr ..
8CNmlng llro4flet9 from
the ....... Kltdlen MCtlon
of New Yot11 City ooml>IM
their 11.,.. or bfelnl end
~ In tNlr effort• to
c;rMI• better llvu lor
them..._'PG' l:IO. wm.co.. MCK,
KOTTa
• l<CIT NIWUIAT:
CAUFOfNA
IXIHCJNlllOIW.
NJIOf'T ··---~ (J)QtNEWS 9 ININIY -.&.a
®HANlaMnAN
AHDeJ •rl MAGC
ADYEHTUM
Animated. A boy Md girt
llnd •dv«ltv,. with •
--of _... .. orytell--ltldudlno ttM ,_
end belo¥9d H-ain..
ll8n Andllr..,_ 1•1<* .... N9CNIWt
HAPP\' DAYa AGAIN
Fonzie It eoddtncally llllOt.
I Aec..we
YOU A1e<1D P'Oft IT M•A•t•H
Nur98 Cooper can't cope
wttn the aoeratlnO room •
Md RlldM oeta • 18UOo.
I .K*Dr8M.D
OYWtlMV
G.-t: tlt'OW Vic Dmmone.
(R)Q
• DO(QAVET'f
G11et1: B1rbar1 Cook.
(Pen 21 • ()) nc TAC DOUGH
(J) ENT'MrAINMENT
TONIGHT
""' ............ tl\8-y OIMIJf 8 THI t.U'f'ET9
0.-t. Lou Rewta
(C)MOW '** "The P-a It Couraoe" (tH31 Dirk
&ogarde, Merte P~ A
Wodd War II 8fttllfl ~.
Ctlan. C-d, r..,..ieo.
1y ovtwlta th8 HUit ~
a119mP1 to hold Nm ... ,.
-prltoner
CD) THI WAY IT WM
'' tNI Oolleg8 Ba.tketbell
Analt: Hou9lon Vt UCLA"
CZ)MOVW • * "The lncredlbt•
Sllrlnlllng WOtl\8n" (tMO)
Lily Tomlln, ChtflM Gro-
din. A ~ llndt It
hard to c;ope ""'*' the
IUddenly begin• to tlltlnk
In tlze. 'PG'
7:30 9 l ON THI TOWN
FMlured; a tocMt at how
today'• rodt ttart dltl•
from the_., IMlf r-d
cornpen._ Ilk• 10 l)(ornot•
them: "'911 Mexico <:tty;
Cencun. the,_ pende
born In c.ptMty. a tocMt ,,
the a.ca Detll8 Mwder
C... of 1947 llwl rernelnt
UfllOlved.
I • ,MaY llBJO
LAVPNl&IHR.r(
&cetl#A#t •
~end~tflar••· moeel room wlttl the gllr1a.
• IYIONL.A.
CHANNEL LISTINGS
• KN)(T ICBSI 10:
8 kNBC (NBC) fl)
• IC.TLA (Ind.) Ill'
e KABC (ABCI ICJ
eKFM8 CC8S> (J)
D KHJ·TV (Ind.I «7J e KCS T CA8C) !t i
FIOHTINO -Bette Davis stars as a widow
who rights to regafn control of her Ure in
.. A Piano for Mrs. Cimino" to air at 9
tonight on KNXT (2>. See story below .
A~ onilleLD.~
-Pob~tvtoe
SQulld; 8 IOc* at ~ I
WNl1hy g9l'll eolleatOtt
b4wi. tNlt ......... ,,....
to a adlOOt tor 81""1 peo-
ple: an Interview with
"P1ntnouae" and "Omni"
pvblllflet Bob Gucdone.
• CIU!MTY
IUU.UYE • M•A•S•H
R8dlr getll. "C>Mr John"
letter -on a record -and
the dootort try to come to
hi. aaaistanc. with a -
i . nc TAO DOUGH
MACHIBl-1~
MPORT • NA1'0NAL
QEOQMpttC P£CIAl.
"Egypt: OuMt F0t a..-N-
ty'' The~· of A--. II
-.... "'9d In • looll at
tome major lrcheeologlcal
prc>jec;U wftldl .,. -
er1ng end pr-WICJ the
ieoacy ol the Egyptlerl
pl\lreoM.Q
()) P ..M.. MAGAZINE
p .......... looll •l • dtl)'
In the life Of .,, mcir-. 9 YOU AltCED FOft IT cm ..,,. llA8ICETBAU
Loe Moelee ~ ,,..
N9w Yot11 KNcb
1:00 9 (I) WMP ..
ONaNNATl v-and Herb almulta-neot-'Y undergo Mplratll
Identity er.._ and boCfl
edopt-~ .• 8 (8 MAL NOflL.I
,,...ured; • pr~
dog walker, • man wflO
bullt a fUll.4cll'8 r..,ilce ol
t Viking thfp; a docior wtlo
" al*> a •tend-up cornedl-.,,, .MO\W
• • • "Pwycho" (tteo)
An~ Petk!M, Janet
Leigh. A young womM
encountwa •~le
kller after ~ e. !:t;s
"""" ol money from ,_ ..,.,..,
89 ntlGMATDT
AMENCNt HIN)
Rlllpfl and ........ -._._.flfld .......
edly ordlnely doMI ~ •
lrewllng c:lrcua.
• MOWf
• • • ''G8ttlng StrligM"
(1170) Eliott Gould, c.n.
daBetgaft.
• P.M.MAGADll
An lnieM9w wtttl lunofttll
Etma Bornbedl: • loolt ..
ll'ledlclne'a progr•H
agelrl8C -In the '*' decade: M81la 8Mver
-how non-wrblll ~--.,. lldded to -.id-
tradla; Of. GtlllMch on
thr ........ lng.
• MOVIE
*'-' "Slly 11e19t" (1975)
Don Meredith, Stefanie
Powe re.
• MATIOMAl.
~UECW.
"Egypt· au.t For Eterni-
ty" The wortta of~ II .,. ,..,.,,eel In • tocMt at
-major lrCh-*>gk:at l)(Ojaell wnlc:h -IA'lCO'+'-
•lng end Pl-vlf ICJ the
legacy of the Egyptian
pf\ar80ha. 0
®MOYIE **'.'I "e.c:.p.From~
II &t" ( ,..,., Clnt EMt •
wood. Patrtd< Mc0oonen
A hardened convict.
retvmed 8'ter his mt
On·TV
Z·TV
HBO
(ClnemHI
CWOR) NY., N .Y.
CWT8Sl
CESPN)
.....,. ffQm "Ule "-di,''
ptww to brMtl out flOllrl
'PO'
(I) MZAMI )(VII
John '¥* "'°""' )'OU "*91 atr11nger th8n trvlh.
~ Ulan .... and l.anler
than enythlng yau•,,. -
-1n thll encore pr-.
latloft lrom the Showtlrne
Ba.ar,. llbfary
.MOW!
••'-' "Fatao" (19'0) Dom
Oellliae, Anne Bencroll. A
portly ~ ....
llndt that nothing can
dampen hi• dealr• for lood
vntll he falls In low. 'PO'
UO. ()) THIE TWO°' UI
A Ylall by BrenlwOOd'a Plr•
.,,.. ,..,. .. In • decler•
llon of~ by
Namottw.
• Al.l .. ™-,MM.Y
Olorl8 .... °"' her frua-
1r811one tbout beirlQ 1>'99-
nant on M*e 8D ntlMOIT ~INCIE8~.
OEOWAD+MION
John Houeton narrat.. a
proflla ol George Adam·
ton,• man who hM "*'' rnoe1 of hit llf• ~eel to
the Clr9 and ~ of
wlld e-In EMt Alrlce
Cl)MOYIE * * ·~ "Fatao" ( 1080) Dom
OeLUIN. Anne Bancroft A
portly compulllw .., ..
llnd• ltlat notNng can
dMIPM hit de*e lor lood
until lie falle In IOW. 'PO' CZ>MCMI
• • ·~ "Foua" (1080)
Joelle Foetw. Sally Ketler-
"""· The vicllme Of broken
hofnM and -ino Piii·
ante. four t-.ege Olflll try
to IOOlhe !hell emotional
wound8 through drvg• end --·~· 9:00. ()) MCMI
"A Pter>o For Mn. Ctmlno"
(Pr9mier•) Bette Devle, p.,;ny ~. ,...., ~
-~·'*home Md~ -acMcl .......... -In.
-..... ~horM-
.,lng trom • """• ~I hi. ..,,. ,AOTaOI
LR
TO-. )eopeidW Mr _____ ... ,......
..... -. .. """"" to ...... ..,...,,.. ...
•• ntSMU..,., om. .... Coll tfwt lie
... • ,., bul ctoeen't
nientlOft tfl•t fie ...
~--tM-of .........
1 .-v ..... . ,,...,.,.
INDANGIND ........
GleOMI N»t-..ON
Jotvl Hou.ton narrat.. •
prolllt of George Adem·
ton, a men who hat epent
moet of hit IHe devoted to
the cere and eurvlvlll of
wild 1>8"119 In Eaet Alrlc;a
CC>MOYll
a * * "The Olangeting"
(1080) 0-V-c Scof1,
Trlth VM 0.-. A wld·
owed music proteaaor
renU .,, old IMll.IM ltlel
~· to be llellnted by
• ~ tplrtt with a 5()..
~-old ac:«e to atttlia. 'A'
t:a0 •a LCM. llONIY ~ cionelder-. ttwowlng
Sldney~d~
of "" conetant COfT191alnt• about every upec1 or their
v..:a&loncrulea
• IWINCJIH' THI kta
(Prernler9) "Gdn' To Kan-
aaa City" Covnt BNle.
Mary lou W*'-and
othera !*form and ahlr•
their re111tnlecencee ol
~ City ""'"h jla pie-,., 8lllY Teylor.
(a>MOYll
•ttTTV Clnd.I (11 csnow,1me1
• * "High Country" ( 1N 1)
T1mottty BottCHN, Linda
Put1. An tec;epad ~
end Illa hendiMpp8d gln-
lrtllnd n. to the moun-
talna. 'PG' e KCOP·TV (Ind.)
• KCET CNS)
e KOCE 1"'51
• Spottlght
• <Cable N~ H~rworkl 10:GDB a QUINCY
Quincy ln"*tlgal.. the
deelh Of .,, Infant wtien the
. ....................
·i·1L--........ °"' .. ""
......... Wtlo blncled
him, ~ Jo P'Ot• ..... Nlfl • .,,., l(t)tttl
ltl\IOOlel ~ low ....
-~'° ..... ..... "'*'-· • .,..,...,
-..,., et tt.t ~ Md 408. pertonN "'°" ... illOa .... ~. "--
... IMd,'' ''Ca.,.,..,.
Mt1 ''The LMY• In LOYe . With You.'' f.c:'lMT AWAADe
~~hoet•an ~ l*'ody of ..... ,,...._... ..... .MCMI * * "&et>ar•te W•yt" (tNO) ~ 8*11, Tony
Lo llenoo. A young oou-
pll'a lalute to OOINTIUt\l-
c:11t• ~ ,..,.., In the
~ Of their mar•
~-..· to: 11 (%)MOW! *. "~AM l.W•" *80.lem&IDINT
MrlWOfl( N9W8 . ...,.,
The ~ of der1netlat
_.... Fovntain la treced
trorn Illa roou In OhOaland •
to Illa iw-t 1tatue .. top
tourtet •ttrec:tlon of the
Cr_,.Clty
(J)MOYIE •'.'I "The Stlld" (1078)
Jo.n Colline, ~ Tobi·
aa. A wlll1w adv9"Cea his
c;.,-by ateep1nQ with N1
boM'awlfe 'R'
11:00 •a 8 Cll o a NIWI
• SATURDAY NIGHT
Hott: Anthony Perkin•
Gveat: Betty Carlw. 0 t(OJN(
Kojall trlea to help a defec-
tive who ec:cldentllly allOt
• young boy during an
.,,... ltternpt. ·THI~ Puraq ,_ leallng that
the m11y hlYe w1tneaMd •
murder, l.oulM landa In
deep trovbte. (Part 2)
.IAWON>AHOION
A bUrglar ..._ his gun In
lhe Sanlord tio... eller
Umont and Rollo -· lllmoft
• DO(CAVETT
G~ Williar'n F. 9uctcley
Jr.
(t)MOVIE
....... "Bananu" (1071)
Woody Allen, loulH
~ A prOduc:t teat•.
'-eel with hit ._yday
rovtlne, goea to a llNlll
Lalin Amerlean country
arid ~ • dictator
dutlng • polltlcal uphMval'
'PG' ®MCM& • **.,. "Scannera"
(1081) Jennifer O'Neill,
P•trlck McGoohan A
lethal conrttct arl•••
'*-two ernall groupe
ol peop9 ..,._ utr80f'dl-
nary oeychlc pow•r•
lftca.de tt1e et111ty to kill
~~.~
11:11• MCMI
•• "'lntlmet.e St.-anoera" c ttn) sa11y Strvtn.a.
~W-.A~
__.. -·· IW"'8I ... 19 • tee.le .......
""'~---•• TONl8HT
Hoel: Joflnny Ceraon. au.: ...... Cook. e& MCNIW9
NlllHTUNI
eTHIODDCOllll.E
....... llroetler, l'qld, I*·
..... Feb lhet hit ~
Ii nol In hectic Manflettan.
buC Mc* home In Floyd'•
r.:tory.
•ww.~ ITYl.I
"love And Thoae Poor
CNNder1' Wtvea" While.
Wllltlng for their honey·
moon tult•. Steve and
~M visit •n antique llhoj>.
"LoYa And The Phonlel"
Boyd and Daphne return
from a lormat party
• KCET NlWUEAT:
CALWOANIA
OONGWllONAl
""'°"" • CAPTlOHID .A8C
NEW9
~ :::!. WHrT'F. ESCA~
• • "Mt!Mn And Howerd"
( IOIO) Paul LeM•I. Juon
Robards. An otllenortM
unkno•n o•• •l•llon
attendMt c;1a1mt to be the
rlghttul .,.... to Howwd
HvghH' bllllon doll.,
eatate 'R'
12:00. IHA MA NA
0.-ta. Fifth Dlmenlion
•9 LOWeoAT
A perlorll'ler O•llChH
~. a gambler 11 .. to
oey har debt• and a tlcti
'::_ iow. (R) * ..... "Aoea High" (tin)
Malcolm McDowell. Clwie-
lopfler PMnmer. Ai_.,, of
well-tr-'"9d Brltllh llleta
-• Into _.., 8Ctlon In
the ell._ -Europe dur·
ltlg WOf!d War I.
• '*IDOUGLAI
Orange Cout DAU. y PfLOT/WednHday, Febr'uary 3, 1982
Colloet· Andr• Crouon.
O~att: Reb• Aambo,
Dotly MoGvlre, .,..., Dbl·
on, Olly & fWna..
• LOVI. MtlNCM
I'm.I
"i-. And The hklrno"
An oll c:ontr'Gt ~ on
.....,,., hoepitallty, .. dkl-
taled by the court.-. of
Ille north
()) WONOEllil WOMAH
(j) DOTT1I WUT
"Special Oellvery" Oot11e
W•t and Kenny Roger•
perfor'" tome of her euper
hlta, Including "Sorry ...
"Leuon In Leaving" and
"Amerlce-Trllogy "
OTHEOOOM
"Ho One Het• Gell Ovt
A!Ne· A Ttlbut• To Jim
Morrlton" Int.,.,,._. with
Ille eurvtvlng mernbera of
The Doore • •• John
Denemore, Robt>le Krleo«
and Ray Manutell -and
Nve perform-of the
bend. IJll)ed during the lat•
1IHIOI ar• combined In thlt
tribute 10 the lat• Jim Mor-
rteon \
CZ)MOVll * * "Percy' ( 197 1) Hywel
&.nnett. Dwlnolm Elllott A
man becornea .,, Instant
<*ebrlty aner a oon11ovw-
a1a1 ttanepqnt ot*atlon I
'R'
12:30 0 (8 LATE NIGHT WfTH
DAW> LETTEAtMN
au.t: c:omedlen I writer
Terry Giiiem
8 MOW
··~ Of The Demon
l-" 11071) Jeff Ch-.
Jerlnlfer Hartley
• INDUaOIJfT
NITWONC NIWS
(C)MOVW
* * e y, "Day For Night"
(1972) J~ BlaMI,
Valentina Cort-Direct·
ed by Francois Truftavt
Tlla 11vet and IOllM of fllrn
performers .,. ttvdled In •
movle-wltntn-a-ll'lovle
'PO'
12M<B)MOVIE
*•IA "Zulv o-n·· ( 10IO)
Burt 1.anc11ter, Peter
O'Toolt The EnglWI ....
• ~ '1rvggle ..
the ZUiu netlon In 10th-
oantury Alr1ca 1•• MOW! ••• " '"Tiie AuNIMa ,.,. CornlnOo ,... Ru..iana
,.,. ~ .. (1tee) c..
........ ~-MIWI Stlllt.
•. MOYIS • *" ''The 11eak OnlHd" 11159) Sophi• Loren,
AntN1ny Ov1nn A lew·
tbldlng ~ end
the ~WldOW of.~
ltW tall In IOY9
Cl)MOYW
a ••'A "er.ekW MorMt"
( 1080) EdWerd Woodward,
, Jadl Thompaon Avatr ...
-con.atptect to fight on
Englllnd't lkle In Ille Boer w., dliclde to light the
Boer goer1llaa on their own
term• ,.; 0 BLONDIE: EAT TO
THEIMT
Deborah Herry and the
membera of Blondie I*·
torm the aono• from "*'
album "&I To The lett"
!ft Ihle llldeo 1)(-tatlon
1:108 MOW
...... "100 Rll ..... (1Mel
Jlrn Brown. RaQvel Weidt 1:aol :rAMmll'
TOMQHT
An Interview wttll;&lmmy
O.WJf OINEWI
,,..,=
••• "The Big .... 0ne·
(1Mt) .... ,...,.., Matti
......... ,. tougfl Nf'NI ..,.
ON"I IMda lour pOung. ~ r.ctulla Imo
the ~,.... ~ of
Wotld War II 00tnbm. 'PO' ~1=
•*•'A "Soldier Of
Orange" ( 1070) EdWlrd
FOii, S-Penhallgon
Sl1I c:llaarnatea at • Ovtch
unlveralty go their aecie·
rat• W8)'1 wf>erl war brMll•
ovt In Europe. 'PG'
2'.20 8 MOVIE * • • "ThoH Daring
Young Man In Their Jaunty
JalOplet" ( 1969) BouMt .
Tony Curll•. Monte CarlO
la the -tor an lnlerne-t!Onet car ,_ In which
dtMIA •llempl to aabo-
~MCh other 2:ao• MOVIE
* * "The Fighting
Chanoe" ( 10551 Rod Carn-
•on. Ben C0()9W A )oe-
key and • l'torM ,,._
cl••h over a beautlfVI
wom.an
(.C)MOVI!
a a 'A "The FrlllCO Kie!'
(1071) Ger>e Wiider, Hartl-
aon Font I< P011911 rabtM
llnd• hill'INff invollled '"
wlkl lrontler mlMdV8'1·
1ur .. 'Mlh a dllrtng IJenk
robOW ""'*' he IT...,... to
San FIW'Ci9CO to tall• over a,_ congregmtlon. 'PG'
2:408 NIW9 ~CID~ * • ~ "Bordeftlne'' (1990)
Cllarln Brontl<ln, Bruno
Kirby A poliCe oftlc:« dla-
c;overa > amuggllng ring
operating along the M811l-
c:ar1 border llnd ,,._ to
keep Incoming ailen9 trom
becoming all\I .. to Nlh·
ie.a •-lahop owner•.
'PG'
l.'00 (I) INZAME XVIII
John Byner allows yov
thlngl tlranger than lfvlh,
larger than Ill•, and zanier
._, lll1Ythlng )'Ol.l 've -
_.,, 1Na -·i>'--tetlon from the ShO#tlma
Biz.an• llOr'ary a:20• MCMa * * * ''W .. On The Wiid Side .. (""21 Ulftnee
Harwy, capudne. A man
IMr1W tNt hi• ,_ gln-
friMd ..... moved lntO •
ho<-. of• ,.ne.
• S:IO Cl) OOTT1E WIST •
"Spec181 Delhwy' OOttlt
Weat and Kenny Roglrw
perform tcM'9 of ,_ 9"I*
hlta, lnciudlng '"Sorry ...
"\._, In L•vlng" end
• • .Arner1C6-T r1togy ...
S:A6 (1) MOYIE
a a a v. "The Howllng"
(1'181) De• Wallace.
Patrlek M~ A woman
reporler Is men.ced by •
kHler ""'° 9MmS 10 be I
-ewoll 'R'
4:000 MOVIE
a 'I\ "Duel Al Apac;ne
Walla" (1056) 8et1 Cooper,
Anna Marla Alberghanl A
yovng man auempts to
protect his fl1her't ranch
lrom 1he lntrullion of out· .....
D'M<>VIE
**"High Country" (11181)
Timothy Bottoms. llnd8
Pw1 M ~ convict
and "" hendapped gl,..
ltilnd ti., to the mouf'-
talnt 'PG'
JOHN DARLING
r,;:;:=:=;;;;;;;i
. ~
-~ \\ ,: I ....
PO VOU 'THPll< "THAT HALF-~ WOMEN ~~~
UTTL.e Gfl&.Df'liN ~~I
in film
._Cl:)MCMI
• •• ''Thi~ ..
(IMO) ~ 0. loo«,
Ttletl Van 0.-e, A .wt-owH ~ ptOl...ot
,... llfl C6d --lllet _..,.IOl:le'*'"4edby . ,....... .,... """ . .-..
lJi"'.:..ecoretoMttM 'A'
*••lot "8aa1111ert"
(1tlt) Jennifer O'Hellt,
Patnctr M cOooha11. A
letll•I 001111101 erlHt
M1ween hwO ernell ercupa
of Peoc* ..,_ utr-d6-
nuy peychlo power•
lnclvde lhe llblllt~ 10 11111
l~'R' OOMOVll * ~ "The StUd" ( 1078)
Joen Colllne, Otlver Tobl-
la. A welter adv-his cer-by lllMPlng with hit
boat'1 wife 'R'
'f''llMr•da•'•
Da,,flllff' Meelr•
5:IO {%) * •'A "On My Sun-
day" (10711 ~tar(
Steve MoOueen, Merl
L•-IH. The -Id of
motorcycle racl"11 la -
trom v8tylng pointe ol
view
t:OO 9 * * 'h "Falto" ( 1980)
0om Del\llM, An"41 Ban·
croft. A portly eompulalve
..,., find• that nothing
c:an dampen 1119 ~· for
food vnlM he lallt In lolle .
'PO'
t:ao (C) a a * 'l't "Part 2 Soun-
der" ( 1978) Harold Syt-
IW, Ebony Wrtght A rural
black lamlly of ahar•
cropper• tlrvggle 10 build
a IChool an Lov111ana Our·
~ the Oepr .. aton
7:00(SJ •a "TheAmamg
Advenllif.. Of Joe 90"
Pupp9ta A meglc;8f lllven-
tloft enablea • ~,..,-old
boy 10 beCorne • ~
agent for the Wb<kl lntelU-
~ Networlc G
l:OO Ui) a*• "The ldolmak·
er" (1080) Ray Sharkey.
Tov8h F91dahuh A mM-
pulatlYe manager u-var-
ious ployt to c;alaplllt two
•~aow• 1n10 pop ling·
I~ ttardom 'PG'
liJ * * "High CO\lntry"
(t981) Tlmochy 9ottom1,
Linda Purl An MQPeCI
convict and ht• handi-
capped gll'llrlend nee 10
tP\e tnount•Jnt 'PO' ..ao e • • "Jin• Money"
(19481 eo-y Boys, Leo
Goroey The Boyl remove
S50,000 trom a deed gang·
llW •nd gM1 It 10 Charity
It) a "Ktond1ke F-"
(1080) Jell Eaal, ROd
Steiger The young Jedi
\.ondon ... , out to tM6l
hia lortune during Ille Go6d
Rush 'PG' ~® *** "Popeye"(1N0) • Robin Wll_.,.,,, S"-lley
Duv• Wiiiie -d!lng tor
hit''"*· the~·Ing aallor vt.111 • 4ueint
harnNll ...._. lie plclttt up •
foundling end • aklnny
....C'-1.'PO' 0 * * a "Brother, Can
You &pare A Olme?"
( 19751 Oocull'lentary
Olrecied by PnlHipe Mora
The ltnpect pf It.a ()eprM-
11on upon different MO "*'" or NI• In Ame<'lc;a
dlllera lrom the average
•Ming m8n to btg·tlme
crlmlnala
10-.30 CD •'"''"Three TeMH
Steere" ( 1939) John
Wayne. Carole L•ndla A
cowboy rid•• to trae rescue
of a young wom8n wtao haa
~ lhtHlened Witt! the
Iott or her raneh
'11;00 (SJ a a 'A "AMI Any Gin"
( 1959) Sntrley Mac;l9l"41,
Dallld Ntven Job and hua-
barid-hunllng oc:cupy the
time ol a gl<I newly amved
In ,._ Yortc Clly
11::30 It) * • *'A "The C•t And
The Canary" ( 1030) Bob
Hope, Pavlette Ooddmtd
In order to collect their
tnfter1t-.• t-rv ,., ... ,
~the ....... lrlt ... .... 1t:t0••••"~" (tMS) Lani and I/Man fllaN,,....,,.
elf on a..-,-.-and
yp ltMIMd wfltl OI
Weot1.-t1at1 • * * \t "Tflof·o.111,_,_
Don't CtY." ( 1t'7)
Gattend. Mlclcfl'I
A tcc*fl'l'I fe!Nt lttea
'°"""-'*" 10 b Important-
• ... " ''Oclug# o-.;
tty" ( 1171)
A OOt.IOflt 1*'*' Wllll* "'°"' from Clll:I 10 nwt 081 In hie Nlur81 hebttat.
CH) * *.,. "Pmpillon ..
( 1173) Steve MC'~'9'111
Dullln HofflNWI A pair
Devit'• ltl•nd convict
epelld 11\eir' •• !)WI
tlleW eac:ape.
g * • "Die Lavglllng"
( IOIO) Robby hnaOI'
Cheri•• Ourntno
ac>ngwrltlng cab drlYw
lllded by • _.
In provMg '*'-"
ol • IN#der ctwge •
(%) ••• "Tlle9ig~
One" 11990) lM
MllfllHMlll A~A
eero-nt61adaf-
~,ecrulta
the~ lr9V
Wotld WW •-»et·'
1• (C) * * •OWy Of A T ~Hffdlht''
(J) •• '>\ "eedlaoed•
(tM 1) Sally Field. T
L .. Jonea. A lloc*er
down-on.hl•·lv<:ll bo
,,_. and head ... "' aeardl ol a,_•"'!· 'R'
2:00 CI> ••• ~ "'"'-Howling' :
( 198 tt Dee Wall•
P•lrlcil M~. A
reporter I• menaced
klller whO -· 10 --olf 'R'
S:OO G ••'A "W1ttard" (1071JE
Stuc• Drvlton. Erneal
Sorg~ An IH\b~
young man train• an 8l'fjJy
of rat.a t.o delaroy hla ~
mlet •
(C) ••*"""Part 2 Sov11·
der" 11111111 HarOld syM4.
ter. Ebony Wright A ru41
black f•m11y ot sh.,.._
c;toppe<a struggle lo Wlc:t
• ac;hool an Lou•.,.,,• du<·
~ the OepillSllOrl •.
0 * aw "PinchOlltl ..
G•and Prbi ' Anlm•IWd
Alter h•f cat design rs
llolen by .,, .. ~...u.
a brllllant mec;hank
decld .. to build .,, even
better r actng machine and
compete with 1119 neme:"!
'G'
a:aG CJ)*• "The Amazing •!>
Adventw• Of Joe 91f'.l'
Pupp91a A 11'1aglc81:J• lion enables • o.,...,.'
boy to~.
-eertt lor tile World Int ...
Q!'>Ce Network 'G' I l
l!M CZ) * * "The lnc:redlble
Shrinking Woman" ( 1~)
Liiy Tomlin. Ch•rln G'.q.
Oln A hOllwwtfe finds '1
l\atd 10 (;op4I When ...
IUddenly t>eg1n1 to ah1S/91
In .U.e PG' ..j
4:30 00 * • ·~ "Plncticllft '
Gr•no Pri... Arlffnill6"
Al1er hla car OMigt'I \a
tloten by an u~
• bralltant mechanic:
declcMI to bold an _..
baiter r~ "'90Hne 8f1d
compete with Ilia NmllW
'G
D • * ,,., Sc>NrtA" I ::;j
Frank lllngella. L •
Anne Down'. A rul,,._..
bl.ad! markat MtiQllltita
rtng •nwnptt to lloP fr'
i:QyptoloOlll trorn diacer-
erlng the whereebolltt df' •
prleeleU Sl•lve 9fle WU
l>ermltted to view. 'PG' 4
&:06 r?i •• ·~ 'Carny" (1980,
JOdle Fotter. Gary 81J14t1
An •dv•nturout young
11rom•n 10tna a cam~I
trou1>41 and learns abdiJI
1ne hldoer> emotion• IJ.o
lrullratlons behind the
au1rac;e happj,,... or life
performers 'R' 1 5:30 I CJ • • .,., "Seven Womer)"
t 19661 Anne Bancrofl, sGe
Lyon Wornen wOh varying
bltOkgrounds· and )
Ilona lnterrela .. In •
,_ rnlulon ac:hoot. CI> • * • '>\ "The Eleph
Man" (1080) Jonn H •
Anthony Hoplcms A dedi-
cated phy1lc1an takH
llnder his wing a hornl>ly
deformed men WhOM i.te
vntll then Md been ~I
in c:hMp ,,.. .. hlblt ...
'PG'
.by Armstrong a Batlu~:
NISW6 "' "PtRl!CTOR .a..._.
-:'''-~
1 ..
WE'LL ~L.Y USE THE PROMO :5A:J15
Al SIX!
CORNIU ''200''
Z8 SERIES neas ILAClll&is
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GLASS BELTED SllEL BELTED
SPORT RADl~l SPORT RADIAL
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• ..,. UMnQ MMA#JY•
f>ttlCE flD,IJC.
StZf ,...
\S5Sltl3 '4'·" $1.5"
165511\3 ~·" $1.65
175170Sltl3 ~··" $1.73
l a5/70Slt' 4 IM." $1.87
195170Slt\4 ..... " $2.22
··--.. ... ...IJIC. _,.Maaa IA&. ""/751114 Ill." $2.16 "205/7»14 .... " $2.30 ,., 15/7511 14 .... " $2 ... ,
,., 1'/7 51t" .... " ff.57
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"215/7» " '"·" $2.93 .
cp,ftP'"
FOR COMPACTS, DOMESTIC,
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·23~!
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HO UC ,,..
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'OI CARS. TWUC1C, TRACTORS,
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UMIT6 U0t
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l'Oll9lilA RD TO:
·""'"'-• your ocnor-burn -· completely and deanly.
•H~t k"P CorburetOI' Clear!
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WAllANTY WA.Ill tnY
~34:.~
.. .,,,.,
=1~·~,_,, .. ,., . --
1 S/a" PEIFOIHWICE
SHOCKS
47~
1.
~ I
Wedneactay, February 3, 1982
SLIM GOURMET
OUT OF THE KITCHEN
MICROWAVE
SUPERMARKETiSHOPPER
C2
C4
C5
C7
Their bt!gel business • IS
By MARY .JANE SCARCEU..O .,..,, ........... _
There's this story about two
Easterners, see, wbo were tired
of their jobs. One, a market.in&
vice president, sat taltin1 with
his brot.ber·in-law, a· dienawear
salesman, at a family wec:kUna
in Chicago.
"Listen," tbe first one said
over a glass of kosher wine,
"how'd you like to go into the
bagel business with me?"
"Sounds like a rreat ldea,"
the second responded. "I put
myaelf through school working
in a bakery." ~
The story has a little more to
it: but that's baaically how
Larry Max and Charlie Comins
now find themselves at Bqe1a
Etc, a tiny store in Costa Mesa,
productnc about 2S,OOO dozen
bagels a month. (That's 300,000,
if your calcula~·a full of cream
cheese). .-
And just so they won't eet
bored, the partners have created
new taste thrills for ba&el
connoisseurs.
Any bagel factory can produce
the crusty, round gems with
poppy seeds, sesame leeds or
onion, but Comins and Max
make chocolate chip bagels,
blueberry bagels, banana nut
bagels, cinnamon/apple/raisin
ba&ela and whole wheat/apple/
walnut ba&ela, to name a few
variations on the theIQe.
"We mix douO 100 pounds at
a time," says Max, wbo bandies
most of the production. He spent
a year learning every angle or
the bagel business in the East
and Midwest before the shop
opened 10 months ago.
Prepared dough ls fed into a
machine to form the bagels.
First the dough is cut into
portions of 3 'Al to 4 ounces, then
pieces are taken aloni a
conveyor belt under a slide
where they're formed into a
f/f '4 • , ,~
"
Pretzels take. a new twist
· with peanut butter ClO
Morning to night. Simple to elegant. With a
flip or the spatula, pancakes make excltin&
meals morning, nobn and evenina.
· Traditionally an American favorite at the
breakfast table, the pancake enjoya popularity
ln other cultures at all meal.a. TIM Mexican
tortilla ls probably the cloaeat to the orlelnal
pancake: a simple pounded meal and water
mixture.
In Russia, it is the blintze, a folded pancake
filled with cheese or fruit. And leave it to the
French to create the elegant pancake, call it a
crepe and wrap It around delicious ft1Un1a .
The history or the pancake 1oea back
centuries, predatin& leavened bread. It is
thought the earliest pancakes were baked on
stones outdoors.
Today, pancakes can be fried on the
griddle, 'lwirled in a crepe pan or baked in the
oven. Whether they are covered with syrup,
wrapped around fillings or amothered with
sauce and cheese, pancakes have become an
around-the-clock favorite.
PANCAKES
2 cups baking mix
2eggs
1 cup milk
Beat all ingredients with hand beater until
smooth. For each pancake, pour scant 114 cup
batter onto hot griddle. (Grease lriddle if
necessary.) Cook until pancakes are dry around
edgea. Tum; cook other sides until &olden
brown. About 13 pancakes.
Tbbmer Pancakea: Use 1eggand1~ cups
milk.
Smlle Pancakes: Reserve \4 cup of the
batter. Stir 1 teaspoon maple-navored syrup
into reserved batter. Drizzle maple-navored
batter from teaspoon onto Criddle to form eyes
and mouth. Cook until bott.oma are brown <do
not turn). Pour batter by v. cupfuls over faces.
Coot unW dry around edees. Tum; cook other
sidea until golden brown.
Graaola Pa•cakea: Prepare batter for
Thinner Pancakes as directed except -stir ln ~ cup eranola. Continue u directed. Top with
maple-fiavored syrup and granola.
Saaaage Paacakes: Cut 1 package (8 /
ounces)· fully cooked brown-and-serve lint
sausages into thin slices. Cook until brown;
reserve. Prepare batter for Thinner Pancakes.
For each pancake, pour 114 cup batter onto
griddle; lightly press sausage slices into batter. .
Continue u dl.reet.ed.
'-wat.iiN-... AiMe
Tortillas (below) l cup cut•up C!lllC*ed cbickm ....
v. cup chopped ripe olives
114 cup chopped onion
~ cup shredded Cheddar cheese
1clove1arllc, finely chopped
1 tableapoon •e&etabM oil
l can (15 ounces) tomato sauce ~cup water
1 to 2 teaspoons chill powder ~
\4 cup shredded Cheddar cbeele ~
Heat oven to 350 deerees. Prepare Tortlllu.
Mix ebicken, olives, onion and 114 cup cheffe;
reserve. Cook and stir garlic ln oil over low beat
unUI tender. Stir in tomato sauce. water and
chill powder; heat through. Place 2 rounded
tableapooofula cblcken mixture ln center of
each tortilla. Roll up; place tolls, Mam aides
do~n. in ungreued rectaneutar baking dllb, 12
x 7'h x 2 inches. Spoon remaln1D1 chicken '1
mixture over rolled tortillas. Pour hot tomato ~
sauce over tortillas; sprinkle with \4 cup .
cheese. Bake until hot, 15 to 20 minutes. 4
servings.
TorWJu: Mix 1 cup baking mix and~ cup
cold water lq small bowl. Tum ~&h onto _.
lightly noured board. Knead 1 minute. Shape
dough into 8 balls. Roll each ball Into S·inch
circle on board dusted with cornmeal. Cook on
ungreaaed griddle until light brown. Turn and
coot other sides until light brown. Stack
tortlllu, covertn1 with damp towel to keep
them soft.
MAPLE-TOPPED OVEN PANCAKE
~ cup packed brown sugar
~ cup margarine or butter
lh cup maple.flavored syrup
l ~ ~ups baking mix
2egga
1 cup milk
114 cup pacted brown sugar
Heat oven to 3:50 degrees. Heat ~ cup brown
sugar. the margarine and syrup in 1-quart
saucepan over low heat until melted. Pour into 1
uo1reaaed rectangular pan, 13 x t x 2 inches. •!
Beat remalplng ingredients until smooth. •I
Carefully pour batter over syrup mixture. Bake I
until top apringa 'back when touched ll&hUy ln I
center, 30 to 35 minutes. Cut into about S-lnch I
squares; invert on serving plates. 12 aervinaa. '
HOMEMADEPANCAKESY&UP
l 'h cups packed brown sugar
~cup water .•
1 tablespoon margarine or butter -!
Duh of salt • .•
~ teaspoon maple flavoring
c Mb ~ auaar. water, marsartne and
salt in 1-qoari saucepan. Heat to bolllq over
{See 'Paaate,• Pate CZ>.
.
rolling merrily along
rope and sealed into the familiar
circle shape.
Workers collect bagels at the
other end and arrange them on
large trays, where they 're
stacked on carts and froUJ'l or
refrigerated until needed.
two minutes th dry the top crust,
and then we turn them over by
hand," Max says. "It's
time-consuming, but the bagels
come out perfectly round and
without a flat side."
the 100-hour weeks they were
putting in. Now a small c.rew,
mostly Spanish speakin1, worts
under Max 's careful
auperviaions and Comins talk.a of
expansion. ~ ~{
In a complicated cooking
process, the raw bagels first are
dunked into bOillng water briefly
to set the crust and then quickly
rinsed io cold water.
Then the ~gels are put on
burlap-covered wooden boards
where condiments are added to
both sides before they're put into
a SOO·degree oven.
"We bake them for just over
Arter baking another 10 to 13
minutes, the browned beauties
are ready to go.
''About 50 percent of our
business is wholesale now, but
soon it'll be 60 percent," Comins
says. In addition to shop sales,
the business supplies
restaurants and hotels as far
away u Long Beach, and plastic
bags go out to supermarkets in
the county. Comins says the
crew 's record bagging
production was 1,900 dozen in
one day, "and that almost killed
us."
The partners began as a
two-man operaCion but quickly
realized they needed relier from
"We're not working qifile up·to
capacity here," Jte notes. ··we
start baking at 5 a.m. during the
first part of the week and are up
to 24 hours from Thunday
through Sunday. The operatioo
could go 24 hours every day
except Sunday.
"But ~e only have about 1300
square feet here. I'd like to keep '
this and add a satellite opera
if we need more apace." '
He attribUtes their success at'
least partly to good timing~
"Southern California was readf
for good, ethnic breads," h
says. "The bloom ls off donu ,
and people are cuttinJ down O!l
<See 'Bagel,' Paie Cll).
11
.i ,
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/WednHday, February 3, 1982
B18A&MaAGl880N ta1le and t.exlure, than
M ldwinter la the thou lo combtnatlon
season when veaglea saucea.
from the freezer are tod4Y we look at 1ome
most •ppr e c I ate d . qult• ~ eur ways to
Properly stored and dr•H up pl•in froien
lma1lnatlvely served, vecetalUtl, without
rroien veaetablea can ad.dinl r.i••utar:
add a taate of summer JllNRD PEAS
to winter-weary menus. AN9 ~oo•a
P I a i n f r o 1 e n 10.ounH paekace
veeetable.s are chea~r JroHn peas
In calories AND cost 8 . o u n c e c a n
than the commercial mushrooms, undrained
co~tnations and l teaspoon dried
auceCf·up varieties so mint reave!(
popular now in your Combine ingredients
supermarket rrozen food in a covered saucepan.
case. . I What's more, the plain
veg1tes have more eolor
and crispness, better
.Pancake
From' 1ra1e Cl
medium heat, stirring
constantly. Remove
from heat; stir in ~aple
flavoring. Serve watm.
1~ cups~rup. OVEN $&1LL£T
t ri E
11.t Cup water
11.t cup water
11.t tablespoons marg
arine or butter
t,.; cup baking mix
2eggs
2tab~!lugar
I/• I ~n 1round cinnamon
1 can CZl ounces)
peach pie filling
Heat oven to' 400
degrees. Generously
grease 10-inch ovenproof
skillet. Helt, wale[ and
margarine 'to boilihC in
I-quart saucepan Add
baking mix , all at once.
Stir vigorously over low
heat. until mixture forms
a ball , about 1\-'J
minutes; remove from
heat. Be~~ eggs, 1 at-a
time:, coattnue beaOog
until smooth. Spread in
s killet Cdo not spread up
side>. Bake until puffed
and dry in center, 20 to
25 minutes. Mix sugar
a n d c-'i n n a m o n
Immediately afte r
baking, spread pie
illing over pancake;
spri nkl e with
sugar · cin nam on
mixtu~e ; Cut i nto
wedges . Serve
immediately. 6 servings.
CREPES
1 cup baking mix z eggs
~cup milk
Lightly grease 6· or
7-inch skillet; heat until
hot. Beat all ingredients
with hand beater until
s moo~h<.. Por each crepe,
pour z 't ablespoons
batte r into s killet ;
rotate skillet untll batter
covers bottom C\:>ok
until golden brown .
Gently loosen edge with
metal spatµla ; turn and
cook ottler side \IDtil
golden brown. Stack
crepes, placing paper
towel bet~een each .
About 12 crepes.
VEGETABLE·CHEESE
CREPES
Crepts <•hove)
l ~ilium onion,
sliced ·
Simmer 2 minutes,
Uncover; cook and stlr Ju.at untll pea1 are
tendtr. Maku four
servln11. 85 calorie
eacb... ,
OVEN METHOD -
Combine infredlenta ln
• covered cuHrolt asad
bake 15 '° ao minutes al 425 degrees.
WAX BEANS
AND TOMATOES
9·ounce packaee
frozen wax (yellow )
beans •
8-ounce can stewed
tomatoes, mashed
e6
PACK
12-0Z.
CANS
1.4 cup margarine or
butter Discount Liquor (J Wine
llll llURllT
Pinch ot dried ba ll bake ~ to ~ minutet at
Co mblne ln1redient1 '~ dtcreei.
in a covered saucepan. ITAUAN PltPP8U
Cover and simmer 5 2 cupi frOsta
minutes. Uncover and chopped Nd and ,,.een
continue to simmer until peppere
tomatoes are thick. 8 tablespoo111 frozen
Makes five servings, ZS
calories each
OVEN METHOD -
Combine Ingredients in
a covered casserole and
(or fresh> chopped onion
8 -ounce can
tomatoes, broken up
Pinch of dried
oreeano or pizza heTbs
Optional : 4
All EKCE" IEEF
teaspoons 1rate4t Italian
cheese
Combine inaredlent.a,
except cheeae, In •
1aucepan. Cover and
ti m mer 5 mi nut••.
Uncover and continue to
••mmer untU uuce ii
thJck. Top wtUl cbffse
just before Hrvlaf, If
dutred. Makea our
aervio11. 35 calories
each. (Cheese adds tO
calories per servlnf. > OVEN METHOD -
Combine ID1redlen&.1,
except c heese , in
covered casserole. Bake
ln a preheated
425·dearee oven 20 to 25
minutes. If desired,
aprlnkle with cheese ju1t
before servln1.
PIMIENTO, coaN
ANDOUVE8
10·0UDU pack•••
troaen cut corn
(kernel.I>
8 Spanish treen
stuffed olhes, thinly
sliced
• t tablespoon water
(or ollve liquid from
jar>
6-ounce can spicy
tomato juice
99!
11' c up frub or
frozen minced &rffl\ bell
pepper
Combine Ingredient.I
in saucepan. Cover and
si mmer S minutes .
Uncover and continue to
simmer just unW mOlt
of the liquid evaporates.
Makes five servln11. 65
calories each.
OVEN METHOD -
Combine ineredients in
covered casserole. Bake
in a preheated
42S·degree oven 20 to ts
minutes.
LB.
LIMIT 4
Red·X Gen. Merchandise Red·X Grocery Prices Red-X Meat Prices
2 cups s liced
zucchini
1 c.up s li c ed
mushrooful
. ""' '1+ Scoresby Scotch •~ M;or Oil :0 4.97 36-WI
~ .79 ........ -.. '!:1.35 FnlM-T"'-1 llc:M .69 '~Spam 'ff Beef Liver "
1 tiedpoon salt
~ teaspoon garlic
powder
1 cup c hopped
tomato • •
3 cQps shre~ded
Cheddar or Swiss cbeese
(a bout 12 ounces)
t,.; cup alfalfa
sprouts
. Prepare Cre~s; keep
qovered to prevent them
~rom drying out. Cook
and stir onion in
margarine until tender;
stir in zucchini ,
mushrooms, salt and
aarlic powder. /Jook
uncovered over medium
h e a, ~.1 t t l r ~ l n g
oc c 4JMA11Y, llnlil
iucchini is tender, about
5 minutes. Stir in tomalp
and 2 cups of the cheese.
Spoon '1' cup of the
veaetable -palxtur.._ onto each crepe; roll up.
Pta e un1rtased
reel (UtJr bakinl dlah, u x t 'i 2 Inches .
Sprtftll .n.h remalnlft&
cheese.
Heat oven to 350
desrees. Bake until
cheese 1s melted, about
20 minutes. Sprlnkle
with alfalfa 1prout1.
Serve Immediately. e
aervinp.
CHEESE BLINTZl8
~~~'cTat11e ·
Chee.le ~ . ~ cup da.lty aoua'
cream .-......-•-·1"--· . L.1--
'°"' .......... 'J~ Ancient Age 7:4.99
''ij Ai"' llttd llltlltt, C•IMi• Or 8~rgulldf 2 9 9 Ima en Mt. Wmes :ir~ •
CMll . ._ 0r v1u... :Hr 3 9 9 ~ Carlo Rossi Wine . • •
R e d -X Produce Prices
:~ 1. 29
" . 39
llt4 Or c.w Wllll l'llmp ,...,, '~Air Jug :~9 4.99
Mtrkll ltlktl Mllll Clltdfer
'ij Longhorn Cheese :' 2 .49
Aul Aw .. .43 ;_ff Johnson's Yogurt Hl
ctll
Health (J Beauty Aid Sale
Cllplt, Ret 0• Wi<lltrtl•tlt &ti ffi Toothpaste
1~: 1.59
41!:.1 1.09
5.~. 1.19
Al GllftOI ~µ, Folger ' s Coffee 1
::
1 2. 72 ..... c.1llM Wlltle ,_. ...
'ff Boneless Ham " 1. 89
~ff cii"~up .55 ~ Pn ltlft SllcH l111t
14·11 'ff Pork Chops -" 1. 49 •n
Liii.., I .75 C.-c.t "1.99 '~ Tomato Juice ...., ,_.. Ham Slices Cl•
Servke Sca f ood U Hot Deli
• .. t •o • • I I • f I• Red-X Meat P rices
, .. A'~v°'P-artv Trav 3.oo OFF !i'! t~0r;;rct1oi:~ t°" Ftntt ~ FAMILY PACK W1111111 F$t . '~ Rainbow Trout " 1 . 39 m' Chicken legs
I• 1.59
" . 79
W1tllt Or""' 89 FAMILY PACK"'' LAM ~i• Pink Salmon • 1 . ~ Sirloin Chops .. 1 . 5
lntrocluelns Our New Four Point ProSram
01 Complete Nutritional lnlormatlon!
WOllKlllG CLOHl Y WITH t1011 OEUTICM. Oltl Of TN£ llATIOM'I RIMMO$T llU~ITIOllALISTS W( HAVE OEVHMfD WMAT WI IUUEVf TO IU IOUTNUlll CAUAllllllA'S MOIT COMPUTf NOGIUM Of MUTMTIONAl INFOllMATION
Qi~
-I
The \ery Finest
SMOKED SALMON
Lucco Nova Lox
Reg $12.95 lb
Our Own Fresh
·WHIPPED
CREAM CHEESE
Reg$3.491b $2•98 lb
Rich's
SMOKED
TURKEY BAM
SUcecl u you like ltf
Reg $3.29 lb $2.981b
Marie's Fresh
ITALIAN DRESSING
16 oz. Reg. $1.39 $ l. l 9
Aged
NEW·YORK SHARP
CHEDDAR CREESE
Shelf-cured. Best for cooWna andanaddng.
Reg $4.98 lb $4.49 Jb
Vie de France
CBOCOLA~
&ALMOND
CROISSANTS
Package ot 2. Reg $ll5
Generic
APPLE JUICE
95~
64 oz. Reg $2.29 $ l. 69
Deluca's Kitchen
NOOD•FS
15 oz. Reg $1. 79 $1.59
Whole Wheat & Spinach
NOODIFS
15 or.. Reg $2.29
.
$2.09
PHENYLALANINE
5001111
Supr and Starch Free
30Capsulea
Reg $4.90
Reg $9.05
L-LYSINE soomc
Reg$2.99
100 Capsulea
Reg$5.23
Umit ~Reserved No DeaJir Sales;
•
$4.17
$7.69
$2.53
Stort Ho1m: JO am to 6 pm. ~wn Days
• . .
.Orange Coat OAJLV PfLOT/Wtdnesday. February 3, 1982
I
f : I
~ I :
..
I
, -FROM THE IRVINE RANCH~ ._
FRESH STRAWBERRIES AND ASP~GUS . NEW YORK STEAKS.
AVA~LEDAILY aeges•lb $4.9811>
Local
BU1TON
MUSHROOMS.
FrahDally
Hawaii's Finest
PJemlum
PINEAPPLE
.
Minneola
TANGERINES
39~1b. {f
'1./(,.-f,
~
--
RUSSET POTATOES .
29~ lb.
Farm Fresh
TABLE CARROTS
SIJNIUST NAVEL
ORANGES
Sweet and Locally Grown!
3 lbfor$1~00 ·
4 lb for $1.00 ' ( · ;i
Pure & Simple
SALSA
Miid or Hot.·
12 oz. Rec 81.49
Mother Earth
TAMA.RI CBIPS
95~·
RAW ALMONDS
16 oz. Reg 82.59 . $1. 69
BANANA CHIPS
Bulk Only. Reg 81.65 lb . $ l. 29 lb
4 OZ; Reg89( 49 ~
Nutty
NUTMIX
Bulk Only. Reg $3.29 lb $ 2 • 69 ~b .
Celestial
ALMOND
SUNSET TEA
24 e.p Rea $1.89 . lbuted, Routed $1.09 CORN KERNEl.S
Bulk Only. Reg $2.10 lb $1. 39 lb
Chico San
RICECAJ[ES
Rice, and 8uckwbeal. Salted or
Unaalted.
4 OJ. Bea Rea 89(
Butter
TOFFEE PEANUTS
55~ Bulk0nly.Reg$2.
79
1b $1.891b
Marinated
BEEF BACK RIBS
Reg $l.7D lb $1.39 lb
Italian, German, and Polish
SAUSAGE
Reg $2.29 lb
STUFFED PORK
CB OPS
llei-SZ.29 lb
BarM
BACON
~$1.98• •
smEOP'BEEF
Aw.nee weipt 375 lb.
Cut and Wrapped FREE!
$1.491b
, .
$1.69 lb '
Fl"dh SALMON
Whole or Half
Reg$4.49 lb
Fresh
$3.891b .
SALMON STEAKS
CmjerCut
Jlec85.891b
&AUBUT FLETCH
(N()SKIN NO BONE)
Reg$5.98 lb
Fresh
CATFISH
~$2.981>
TURBOT
Reg $2.98 lb
$4.98lb
$2.191b
$2.491b I
Irvine Ranch Farmers
Marketa Homemade
1009' Nataral
Sproated ·
7 GRAIN BREAD
24
oz. Jo.I $1.29
Store Hours: 9 om to 9 pm. ~n IJ.ajs
I
I
•
Orange Co11t DAIL V PILOTIWtldnMd 3, 1982
, z.,. • fa'lhiliel • .._.. _. ,. a Nt
Ume, tbil .-u.na ........ A WOIUa •81 bl lqaacial vlee prHldeat of a ••••otll
'l*Miaa, but around the-.. ...... ldU ta.. httf Cook and b(lttJe WU .....
Neftr ii lb.Lt more erid.t tbaa wbtn the
at.I~ 1.U alck. Women la tMM rolll ren't ~to Jet alck, and fC)Odbaa knowa
oet ol them try not to.
Al. otber. family mem.,. fall vtcUm to
ter'• playful 1•~•· abe tenderly ~
them thrOuO their crilea with ~roverblal
Ql.ck• IOUP. •plrin and vartoul dMI. · On11 wben the lut ol the patlenta w
recovered doea lhe admit to benelf U.at ber
Hbaustion lln't Jut from plafin1 Florence
Nl1bt1n1ale.
The rlnlinl Ip her ears beeomel tbe Aavtl
Cborus, aad eomeone baa replaced ber
kneecaps wttb JeUo.
She bowl to the inevitable, takea the qnly
aaplrlo tablet remainln1 in tbe bottle and toes
to bed. .
Af flrat the family l.a't tOo worried.
Sometimes, in a flt of aelf·lndul&enee, lloJD bu
been known to lie down for a while lo the
afternoon. But u the day wears oa, tbe natives
become restless.
Shadows len&then. evenlq clt'awa. aear and
aMll she Ue. la bel' bed of pain. Slowly, in her
eriab but, llom la aware ol tbe family
erina around her bed.
Sbe amo. tbe scene well -It'• been done
u.ndredl ot mo.W. -and reallsel abe must ready to meet her maker. Sbe en'fllton.a a
thbed scene of tenclfmeu ud drama, with
Uy members ao= on the counterpue u
bldl tbem all an1 tarewell ..
\ ' Ju.J u ...... U'jtDC to '#be> lbould
lllbertt .her lfaDd1DotMl''1 cameo broocb, a
famili member .i..,. forward • apohlman.
It'• ...al)'. -butbUd. altliciilCti the eldest ~bUd ll an• adequat:tP~ •.¥fllltttute. Sbe 1row1 mlltJ~ at ~.a.votlod. .;
"Say i..': be aaylf llauftlln1 bla feet and cleartq D.11 tllroat nerwualy, .. bow do you
feel?"
l Her amwer ll aa UDlnteWClble croak from,
the deptha ol U,. blanbta.
"Well," be continues with real coneem,
''we were jut WODdertnl JI JOU were 1oln1 to 1et up ud cook dinner, or lbould we tend out tor a plua?"
It ii, at th1s point, fortunate the woman bu
no etnnath left, or 1be would leap up and
1tran1le ~ f~ member wttb her electrie
blanket cord. It's depreMinl to reallse )'OW'
neartlt and dearett felatlvea are primarily
eoccerned wWa their own hullnent starvation.
But a wife and mother ls, above all,
practical. Sbe knows that abe al.Bo needs dinneP
Just to keep up her strenath in the battle •1alnat
the germs.
f If she's or1anlud aa well aa practical, 1he's
bidden away• eUMrOle or IOUp ln tbe freeser
from a geoerout recipe cooked w..U •So·
Even the llllOlt inept tami1Y t.boWd be •ble
to drag lt out and beat it 1n the oven Of a
mlerowaw oven.
A hearty Vt&etable IOUP tastes lood In
winter, Is euy fO ••allow .... IOOtbea raspy
throats, If pl••'al to fNeat a dilb, lt'a bett to
leave o.-t potatoes, tbo••ll. ltecauae tbelr
texture sulfen la the thawlftl tn Due.
Here's a reetpe for a .. ut.1 vegetable soup
that's easy to fix on a weekend or eomeday
when you're around the bouae for a few boun.
Like most 80UPI and stews, It can be lpored to
• Cluelfied l\ds are the
answer to a successful
garqe or yard sale! ll's
a better way to tell more
people!
tlmmtrr for ._ periodl of Um• while you 10 oft
•tad do other thin ...
Wltb • roll or cnuty ptec. of rreneb br•~~r aoup can be • wooclertul meal. It may not IWI
tbt 1vim, but It makt1 &Mm keep U.tlr
dbtance for a while.
V&o&T.UUIOUP ltabl•~ salad oU .
I pcM.ada ~,;boit i1bl, but cut ld a.J.Dcb pieces , •
· 2 farlic clovt1, ml.need
1 t4*1DOC)D salt
l WI' oruoo, chopped
J qlW'tl bot watAtr
3 beef bouillon cubea
21talb celer')', cut into l·lneb pieces
4 carrot.I, cut into l·incb pieces
4 succhlnt, cut.f.nto '1\-tneb piece. lbay}~Vtl
~ eup red wine
Optional: nee or noodles
~ aalad oll lo a Duteb oven or lar1e
teUle. Add meat aad brown oo all 1tdel. Add •~rue and oniOQI, 1tJr and cook 2 to 3 mlnut.. ~d ..aet and boulllon cubel and slm1Der ti.ii
boun or unW meat ia Just teder. TbeD add salt, celery, carrots, wine and bay
leaves. Cook, covered, 15 IDlnutea. Add iuccbiol
and cook 10 mlnutes. Add rice or noodle4 lf used
and simmer just until tender.
Serve in laree soup bowlt or refriaerate (or
freeze) until needed. Muea e or I 1eneroua
. betpinp. ....................
I In ""' a... CGelt-. : DAILY PllDT
CLASSIAED 'I ADS
' [ 842·5e7a ) !
One Cal s.mte · I
faatv..t~
-~t
ST ART 1982 WITH OUR
RESOLUTION AND BOOK
I NEVER
PAY RETAIL
I fl2 SICOMD IDITIOM
The only comprehensive guide to
otscolllt Soopping in Orange County
ll'J Soe lee nl Starr PMkps
251 stores in 31 cities ~INl-ort-OI Ooli,l'ilol. ...... M 10 tW)
S6.50 plus S1 .15 postage, tax.
and handling charge. S7 .65
--------------------' Pie ... tend me .. , copies of I NEVER PAY RETAIL. I I enbioled Is • check tor s . .. . .. .. .. .. .. . . . .. . . .. . . .. I
I 1 Name •..•.•..••••••••••..••••••••••. •· ··•••·•· •· I
: Addr.... ... .... . . .. . . ........... I
I I
1 ~'!t• ·c'*:i« P&v&i:i.e .• c> , ·NevER. i>Al~Er A1L a~ci ·,n··,i io I I 369 E 17th SI . Ste 1~~86800. Costa Men, Ca. I
L--------------~-----~
~ !" ERA LIQUID
~LAUNDRY
DETEROENT
3!~
1~~
!"COMET ;~CLEANSER
Uquld
21 oz
!" BOUNCE 132
~FABRIC SHEETS
IOCt. 40Ct.
311 219
!" DASH
~LAUNDRY
DETERGENT
Famlly Size King Size Giant Size
211 oz 100 oz 49 oz
736 369192
POWder
21 oz
.65
........ soz.52
OUr Pnef Procectton POiiey gult;ll'lt~ l'IWW
prle" ro !If ~fife w.onesoa., ~Y s
tllru T~y ~ 9 1912
!-IVORY
~LIQUID
DETERGENT
48 Oz 32 Oz 22 Oz
279187 131
I
Mkrmoave overu "•rf-in·polfJer, co
• LOS ANOELEI (AP> perc...,. ot time the Httln1 may be called manually b)' turnlna' tbe
" CCIGlumert ·~ 11atet0wavea are belDs 'defro1t.• •tow,• or oven on and of1 at aJ'OU.D4 fw a t1me-1avlD1 • Dl'Oduled while the oven • • t m m • r . • I!: v e n a 1pectftc lntervala. Tbil
microwave oven 1hould ll'o;.tadnt. 'defro1t' Httln1 l• doe• requJre, however, be aware of bOw thln11 "•or nample, •• 1be lnehaded on aome Of the more tlnae.
Ub •lM Ind electronic t&l~. "wben the o-.en la leH eapenalve models. O t be r opt ton a 1
centrol 1y1tem1 .can o,.ratiq at fWI power, and It'• a dealrable feature1 oo a microwave
affect the outcome of th-e ma1netron tube feature to hive." oven can Include 1 tbelr eullnary eftori.I. producff mlcrowavH Needl .. to aay, tb• temperature probe that
"Mo1t reclstH have 100 petQMat of the 'on' more complex the will allow fOod to be bte~ desltJ:aed for oveQ time. But Wlien tbe oven model, the more lt wlll cooked at a certain
wlth output. of 800 to MO ta aet at 'medium' or coat. temperatUN rather than
watts. TM1 size oven 'rout,' microwaves are For ovem that don't for 1 1et tlme or
often the 1reate1t prOduced only about have variable power brownin1 elements
versatility and number two·tblrdl of the 'on' settln11, the 11me which stve tbe food a
of features," said Dr. time. A one·third power pr'oceH can be done ".broMMd" appearance.
..
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wtdne1day, F.tbruary 3, 18,2
IPICl:DIHaJJIP a pound• raw 1brimp, peeled and develoed,
\4 =or marprlne 2ta nour
2 tea1PoQD1 IDlpped (retb panley ~ \eupoon ground eortander
~ teupoon lround cumin
~ teupoon •alt
\4 teupoon pepper
Karen SchnJttgrund, 1 ,------..;....-,..-.;.._.--------~:....:.:..~; ~~·~"!eLni~:~:~;·:~ FIRST IN DISCOUNT. •• FIRST IN LOWER PRICES OVERAL£1 California in Riverside.
Microwave ovens in the 450-to 500·watt ,·
c·1te1ory cook slower
aQd may not have the
eJttra features of lar1er models, but they coat
less and are ideal for
those who have a llmlled
amount of apace in their
kitchen, she said.
Lar1er ovens with a 600· ·
to 700-watt capacity are
capable of cooklnc
things as large as a
20-pound turkey.
Other features to
consld4=r are the
electronic control
systems which affect
bow tborou1hly food ii
cooked with microwave
i>Qwer. Some microwave
ovens have variable
power co,ntrol, Dr.
Scbnltt1rund said,
which ls used to cook
foods that overeook or
toughen under lull
microwave power. This
feature regulates the
Bubbles
aid ,eggs
By ROBERT LEE
ZIMMER ............... """'
In the hen houses at
the University of fllinols ·
it's fiu, fizz, plop, plop.
These chickens are
drinking carbonated
water, then layine
better egg.s.
Scientists have found
that the bubbly water
seU up a chemical chain
reaction that makes
more calcium available
for eggshell production.
That, says researcher
Ted Odom, means esgs
with stronger shells.
"When they drink the
·carbonated water, th•
amount of breakage ii
significantly reduced,"
said Odom. "It's very
inexpensive."
.T h e m o n e y e g g
producers save by
reducing breakage
should more than orrset
the cost of using
carbonated water, said
Odom, but he said
specific economic
studies will~ be done
later.
Most of the nation's
comme-rcial poultry
O"Peration. are in the South, and for years,
scientists have been
lookine for a solution to
the problem of
aoft·sbelled ens durine
periods of hot weather.
Chickens cool
tbemselve1 by pantin1.
but that cb1nge1 the
chemistry of their blood.
Carbonate ls lost and
less calcium ts available
for e1pbell production.
•'The egeshells are
thin and there is more breaka1e, •• aaid Odom.
"That creates
substantial le»ses durine
times wheh it is hot." Replacing the carbon
dioxide lost durin&
pantinl seems to
reverse the process.
Odom, wortlnl under
·the direction of
animal scientist Paul
Harrison, examined the
effect• of carbonated
water on the e111 of
more t.ban 400 chickens.
They were compared
·with the ep1 of an equal'
number of chicken•
stven plain water.
•'They drink tbe
carbonated water H
readily aa normal
water," 1ald Odom.
Carbon dioxide 11
bou1ht &n tanb and
water ll cU'boaated at
tbe unhera tJ'.. A
_..., .. •lliiPb' tor -cbl.., COMll alloUt '8.
saldOdom.
Tb• atudJ tndlcateCI
tbat dartna pertoda of --+~----•• atrua. dalcteu • ~ DOl1iia1 water
prod1*il .... UaM wwe
a Uttl• more tbaa I
ercent 1bell. aald
!CHICON OF THI sEA 1 ss TUNA
Ullflt Mitt 1 m OI. Clft
..., .... ~ Oii Pact
CROSS
RIB ROAST
BonellSJ Bonded 8"f ChUCk
.. 198
PACIFIC Lb 1· .59 . RED SNAPPER
Net,,....,,
BORDEN'S
CHEESE FOOD
Slctd Al'Ml1Cln. 11 Ot. li'tcg.
199:..:
,.
FRY INC
CHICKEN
wnole IOO'(, Crade A
SOUthlm
d49
i LADY LEE ... 89
I POTATOES
C1'nlllteut • ...-n oa. ... •
LAROE END
RIB ROAST
lllOndlO lltf
TOP SIRLOIN
STEAK
IOnllN IOnOICI ..., lOln
NAVEL
ORANGES
lweft Ind MCY
... 25:.n
I -
t1'J •A'
''" Of
HOFFY · 1101
SLICED BAC<?!<! .;._ ~ i
~~~~~~~~~~--··
~177 . QUARTER
PORK LOIN 1 6~:
Lb ~I : lo'.
~228
I
WHOLE BEEF 12Ki I !!!.S!!L.MlbJ Ut ~I :
.,i.1 I ·
RED
YAMS
U.LN0.1
d39:.n
·a~NA.
SOUA'SH
"""-Tlltv L-
~ 1.:
---
,
Orange Coalt DAil V PllOT/Wedneiday, February 3, i982
·New tortillas less tedious
P'e,t countrlH can plec ... Form lnto balls. Hcondt loo1er . Cover Heat .,., to l lnch of
boaat of a culaloe built Cover Md let stand for with towel and hep ve1etable oil ln lar1e
around a alnsle ty" of 20 mlnutee. •arm until Hrvln1 frypan to 375 de1reea F.
tbr •ad. In Mex l co Roll out balll of dou•h• time. Serve with 01elt.d Lower 4 to 5 tortilla
'tboush, a flat bread on lltbtly floured butter or use to make l>lecea Into bot. oU. Fry
ealltd "tortJlla" ncures surface to make circles E n c h l I a d a a o .-tor 30 1ffOl'lds or untU
ctato almo1t every meal. l /lS-lncti thlck (u Udn Toatadltu crtap and aolden brown.
., Wben fresh and hot, u poalble), about e to 1 Yield: 18 tortlllu Keep turntna pieces
tortUlu are 1erved with lncbee In diameter. NOTE: Cook tortlllu over ao they will fry
•butter like · any other Trim off uneven edtea. until edaea Just bestn to •••nly. Drain well.
•bread. Preheat very llfhtly dry out before lumlftl, Sprinkle with salt, lf
fl They are tranaformed 1realed electric fr'ypan When done, tortlllaa de1lred.
lnto taeot when wrapped to 350 de1reH F . or appear evenly bUatered ENCllUADAS
around meat, cheese or re1ular frypan over and dry, but not criap. Ualn1 fresh or day-old
ve1etables while other medium heat. Cook i or TOSTADITAS tort i 11 as , prepare
cull nary c b a o 1 e ~ 2 tortillu •t a time, 45 Allow 6 tortillas to Enchiladas rollowine
S>roduce a long llat oC aecood1 on one side. stand uncovered untll directions on l ,,_·01.
dllhes. Turn and cook 1 minute. dry but pliable. Cut each p a c k a g e o f d r y
J
VER8ATILI! -
Tortillas made with
corn rt ake crumbs
are good with melted
butler or can be used
i n M exica n
casseroles. .
Wllb 1uc:h potenUal for Turn "Cain, cookin1 45 lnt.o 6 trianeutar pieces. enchilada aauce mlx. ,variety, even day-old•~~~~--~~_;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
\ortlllu have their uaea.
TortJllas are cut tnt.o
little 1quares to make
·croutons for soup. Or
,~ey take the place of
1p as ta l n Mexi c an
cuaeroles.
1, The trad itional
.method for making
1~orUllas C;ln be a tedious
1 rocess. In Mexico, corn
, emels are cooked ln a
me and water solution.
The cooked corn ls
,~oaked until it can be
Mround into a dough
,called "masa."
Patting this dough into
,small circles o r
)tamping it in a press .'i> r o d u c e s t h e
"ready-to-try tortilla.
Now y'eu can make
tort.lllu with com nake
,:rumba and other
itaplea 'right off your ~'kitchen shelf. You'll
have tortillas to eat ~w h e n f r e s h p J u s
leftovers lo use ln dishes
ready for any fiesta.
For instance, try
~saucy Enchiladas. Using
a convenience sauce
mix , the result is an
easy and deli cious
entree.
Or cut day-old tortillas
\ tnto triangles and deep
fry them to make
Tostaditas.
These extra·cris p
snacks are s ure to
"appetize" when served
1 with guacamole dip or
refried beans.
TORTILLAS
'h cup corn flake
crumbs
3 cups all·purpose
flour
I 2 tea:,-poons salt
~ cup shortening
114 c ups warm
~water
r· I n med i u m · s i 1 e
t~m ix in g bow I . stir
l to1etber corn flake
crumbs, fleur and salt.
Cut in shortening until
mixture resembles
, coarse ct;Umbs. Make a
1 well in center or crumbs
l.rmixture. Add water all
, at one time, stirring
Lwllh fork just until
• dough holds together.
o On lightly floured
~•urface , knead dough
\,genUy 10 t.o 15 strokes.
i-Divide dough into 16
·cooking
,with class
c SHERMAN LIBRARY
, •and Gardens in Corona
1•del Mar will orfer a
r• brunch class at 11 a.m.
, Feb. 16. Registration ree
as $20 , and
•·Pre reg i s t r a t i on i s
, required.
A & e .r i e s o f
1 internationa l dinner
, claases will begin March
2 featurin& Italian,
11 F\'ench, Mexican and
, Chinese cuisine. Fee is
1 $20 per class. Call
.6 1 3 · 2 2 6 1 f o r
: r.rer e gl stration
t: n!orsnatioo.
rl WI LLIAMS·SONO· MA in South Coaat Plaza
?'will offer instruction in a
'<Valentine candlelight
" dinner Feb. J . Call the
store al '751 -1186 for:
'of information.
'> FASSBao·s
I'JntemaUonal Cookware
l•tn Corona del Mar will
!>offer a courae in
'>•Nouvelle cuf1lne at 1
'> p.m. 'lbunday. Fee ls
·*•'20. and information ls ~~available at 673-2343.
S Ma. STOX restaurant
l 1n Anaheim will be8in a ~ 1 Hriet '11 California wine
m CIUMI at 7 p.m. Feb. 8.
J aCo•t for: the four claues
, j1 NO. ilDd lnstnu:tor ii
,Cblck llanbali. ~,. Goumet cookln1
cl.,.. at the reataurant
contbme wtth a Mexlcan
ft theme ~ 10 a.m. Feb.
!t11 l . F o r m o r e
n<taformation and clus
.11e • r o 11 me n t , c a 11 .l ~... . ,I .
..
Here's your chance to win Somethin'
Extra at Vons. And what a chance you've
got to win one of our fabulous prizes. In·
eluding $50,000. S10,000. $5,000. And
$1 ,000 cash. Plus hundreds of shop·
ping sprees. 5000 $ J 0 gift certificates.
4000 Hams. 6000 Turkeys. And mil·
lions more. Over 2,700,000 prizes in all.
And the winner could be you!
To play, pick up and save your free
Somethin' Extra game booklet. Then
pick up your free Somethin' Extra game
stamp every time you visit Vons. Match it
against the pictures and numbers in the
game booklet If you complete the entire
picture, or if you get an instant winner
stamp, you may be a winner! That's all
there Is to it There's no purchase neces·
sary. You must be 18 or older to play.
Complete rules and details available at
166 Vons Stores in California and Nevada.
So come in and play today. Because
there could be Somethin' Extra waiting
for you at Vons.
Over 2,700,000
Instant Gash and
Food Prizes.
Vons $2,000,000 Somethin' Extra
~ ends May 5, 1982 or when all I ~ieces have been distributed.
~ Odds: The following odds are ~ ~ in effect until 30 days a~er
~ ~ February 4 1982. Thereafter, ~ ~ updated Odds will be posted in ~ participatir:ag Vons and appro· "
~ pnate newspaper ads.
~ vw•a,ooo,ooo••amrthh'ktn
o... a.rt mec:ttn ••~ '· tHa
~
•!lOOOO"
110000" • ,000-. ··-· I 200-~-0ICW.'• • '°_.._,. ..... c-.
• 10-Glll~ -.,.c..---191>•1•1\o1'1-T~ ...... ,i..c .. ~1 .. .....,.,
-· 1.1. c:...uroc-1 ..... ..... _,
Vontl• ........ T..-~ v-1 •"'""""'"""....., ,_~,
2 I ., 1'000.000
l I In 1$000000
6 I'" 'UUJlJ
lO I °' 14'tAl61
200 I '" 1'0 OOI
lOO 1., l'JOOOO
,000 ·-6000
100000
)00000
.00000
l.8•0000
, .. ... ...
I ., ... .... ... , ..
10.000 • ,, ..
Ull no
111
ID •
"
l
Or-. CoMt DAILY PILOT/Wednetday, February 31 1982
' " •1 •All'llNILOAN'B 1Jai"'9al Procluet ~ 1111•11111111,111 offer and the 'l:lel·alr markeUne people are Bertton aavtd more Atfund offtn are 1ym.bole from 1ueh llem1 whole proofa are 1llUn& back and walUn1 than '1,000 tbrouafl
made •b oa advriHd ltema u Bel-air froua requlted lnclude some of to aee ii my ldea will coupan,ln1 and refuDdlnl
aatlooal and retlonal oran,. and •DPl• juice, our most popular work ,•• say1 Ms . last year -and wM'
brand• and never on aJplt cf!•, pllaa, com produci.." Bertaon. promoted by Safeway tj:> :;:n:.°i~:h~;t bouu ~r.!en.reat Ea cap~ :i~!:s~\!~o:Jnfoct~~~! tb:·a~;a~!r!!':J ret:U,d!r'! ~hot!'~ ~it :~~n:' t~":u,b':;
Wroql Tht Safeway Bel·alr aupermarktt ahoppera form la beinl diltributed It wiU work. We would division. 8ecomlo1 •
8 a few a y store 1 r e f u n d e> f f e r I s are takinl advanta1e of to all Safeway 1tores like nothlnt bett.r than aucceuful refMdtr c• recently Introduced a note~ bffauae tt p ftbuld often. that request It. Shoppers to aee supermarkets certainly lead to blc
refund offer on Ila amajordepartunfrom ''Thatdidlt.Aftertwo cao'uk the store promotin1 their house tbln1s1
Bel·alr frosen·food tbe policy of mo•t' year1 tft•y finally mana1er for a rorm or brand• ... Ith Iota of
product.. Now 1hoppera 1upermarket chalna. decided to ;ive my ldea can request the form by refund ofhsn. It would CLIP 'N• FILE ,
can reeelve coupon• which rarely U ever a tty. S!nce we wanted aendlnt a self-addressed surely add a whole new REPVND8 •
wort.b $5 on thelr next make refund offers on to eet the beat poulble stamped envelope to the m one y . a a v I n 1 8e11oala11, Sauce,.
Safeway purchase of S20 tbelr hoUle brands. reaponae, JN• made the address below. dimension to refundln1. Sa1ar ' or more in return tor 14 The offer la alao of refund a bl&b·value SS • ' T h e S a f e w a y By t be way • M 1 . Syrup, Salad Dre11a.1 ~~~~~......_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-;-~~~~~~-=;...._~..;;_~~~~~..;,..;...;;...;,.;;._:_,;.::.=~....;,,;..;_,;..;_~~~~=-~~=-~~___:~~~__;:.._:__:...:,.:_ (Fiie$) I
DELICATESSEN
~~~LlNI 185
~"1inv.::. RQla • 79
~.l"&CD.Ll.P-4~"""-•""°' 2 29 Monteley Jack cneeM LI.
~~'t:' }65
~~~--129
lt:f~,... .99
~--r...~~ 198
FROZEN FOODS
~~~Hl..cM .99
~-Topplno .55
259
]05
MlATS
=.,~s::-~IDIA }97
TAll.LKN> IUJ', ~ 259 Slrtoln Tip Staks I&
~~ UL 248
i:A'Su~ UL l 69
1,8, }49
UL l 99
UI 188
UL .89
~~Rolm La 149
~,...... 249 ~LI
~~1::.8'0lll> LI. J 29
PRODUCE
~~ L.9 .19
...-SG:t
U1 .29 Ruaet Potatoes
on.ICAT!: l'V-llOA lA .39 Oii. Kiwi Fruit
IUHlllOM.o (\) Freeh Lemona fA .15
T10HT ~ C1.UST!lllS
U1 .49 Fresh Brocc:ol
rc:-~Oll out uta UI .99
f~~VMIET'Q • 99
LIQUOR
139
699
1299
~99
899
599
499
GROCERI ES
~;C IUJ' Ill• .55
~Ml~ ree op AppleJuk:e 191
~cr~euna .47
~er Potato Buds 1~
J:i~sweet P1c1<1es 169
~·~ • nnet g } 75
GROCERI ES
.N~iehfi=~ .72
S~ Cheez·lt er.cken ) 21
~Bags 239
~~soned s.tt } 82
~Softener 229
~~~Towels .80
Clip out this file ~ lteep it with almilar
cash-off coupons
beveraee refund offe
with beveraee co •
fo r example. Sta t
collecting the neecle\:i.
proofs of purchue whlfe
looking for the requlr~
refund forms at the
s u p e r m a r k e t • i~ newspapers an
magazines, and whe
trading with friend .
Offers may not be
available In all areas of
the country. Allow t-O
weeks to receive each
refund.
The following refunp
offers are worth $9.18.
This week's offers ha.Je
a total value or $25.98.
BAC'OS-WISH-BONFf,
General Mills Inc;.
Receive a $1 refund.
Se nd the required
refund form, on~
"freshness seal" froin any size Bac'os, one
neck band frQm any
bottle of Wish-Bone
Dressing and a register tape on which you have
circled the price of a
produce purchase or $1
or more. Expires Feb.
28, 1982.
8 ROOKS BarBQ Catsup Refund Offer.
Receive a $1 refund.
Send the required
refund form and five
Universal Product
Codes symbols rrom
Brooks BarBQ Catsup.
Expires June 30, 1982.
FRENCH'S , The
Chili-0 Lover's Choice.
Receive a package of
French's Chili·O Mix.
Se r.d the requir~d refund form and the top
thirds of any three
Chili·O Mix packages
<C hili·O, Cbili-0 Coo
Corn-E, Chili-0 with
Onion). Expires April
30, 1982.
HENIZ 57 Sauce 'n ' Honey Coupon OUer.
Receive a $1 coupon fiir
chicken or meat, a
25-cenl coupon for Hein
57 Sauce, • 25 -ceat coupon for honey and
r ecipes . Send the
required refund form
and two front labels from any bottles or
Heinz 57 Sauce. Expires
Feb. 28, 1982.
HUNT'S Meatloaf
Fixin's Refund. Recei'fe
a refund of SO cents,
$1.50 or $2 . Send the
required refund for*1
and labels from Hunt's
Meatloaf Fixin's. For 50
cents, send two labels
from any flavors. For
$1 , send two labels from
different flavors. For
$1.50, send three labels
from any flavors. For
$2 , send three labels
from different flavors.
For $2.50, send four
labels from any flavors.
Expires March 31, 1982.
KRAFT Bullermijk
Creamy Dressing
Refund Offer. Receive a
bottle of any Kraft
Creamy Dressing. Send
the required refund
form and three complete
back labels with
Universal Product Code
symbols from any
combination of Kraft's
buttermilk dreaaings.
Expires May 3~. 1982 .
MORTON HOUSE
Sloppy Joe Recipe
Sauce. Receive a $1
coupon for grouad beef.
Send the required
refund form and the
front panels from ~
cans of Sloppy Joe
Recipe Sauce. Expires
July 31, 1813.
MR. MARINADE Refund Offer. Receive a
$1 refund. Send the
required refu11d form
and two net·wel1bt
1tatement1 from the
front label• of Mr.
Marinade. ~ee June ao.1•.
What'• a beplf ll'• a 11101 .... and.mar11rtne Punch dou1b down. cook 1 minute mort.
Oermaa word Uterall7 to •• to 110 detffft. Cover; let r••t 15 Drain on towell. Repeat meaDtq braeeiet, wblcb Add to dry lntredlenta mlnutet. Jn a lar1e 1bapln1 and cooklnt
became tbe name of a and beat 2 mJDutu at akWet beat l·lneh water rest of doutb. popular roll. A bapl LI mecllwn apeed of mixer. over medium heat to a
erutt)' on the outaldt Add YGtWt and YI cup almmer; add rematnln1 Place on ~eased ancl cbew)' on Ule l.ntlde. flour. Beat at hl1b •PHd auaar. baldq 1heet. tx •II
It II abaped 1D a ctrde, 2 minutes. SUr lD •~th' Dtvlde doulh into 12 white and 1 t.a espcion
with a bole in the center. mort nour to make a pieces; shape a pleeea wat,r; brush oo baCtlt.
In the 17th tentury, aUff doutb. On floured Into smooth balls. With Sprinkle with a mixture
tbt bqel wu re1arded b o a rd • kn e • d 8 · l O noured fln1er, poke a of 2 t•blespoona su11r
•• a lymbol ot lUe, by m l n u t et . S • t In a 1-lnch hole m eacll. Drop and ~ teaspoon 1round
tboae of tbe Jewiah 1re11ed bowl; turn to baaels Into slmmertns cl9'namon if detlred.
faith. 1reaae top. Cover; let water. Cook a minutea. Bake at 375 deerees 20 to
9'0LLINQ ALONG -•
Take a baeel to lunch
this week with a
tasty filling of ham
or cheese.
G lven to pre1nant rise in warm draft.free Tu r 0 and c 0 0 k 2 25 minutes. Remove
womenbeforethey11ve ·p~l~a~ce~fbo~u~r·:..........~~~_jm!i!ln~u~te~s~.~T~ur~n~ai1!a~ln~;~fro~m~1~beeta~~·Coo~~l.~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!lllJl!!ll!!l~~~~~~~~~~~-~:..._~~~_:..:.i....:;._ blrtb tbe ba1el was,-
be 11 eve d to be a
miraculous Ufeaaver.
~lthe>uab this roll baa
much le11 grave a
meantn1 to peo111e
today, It ta still considered the staff of
Ute for many Jewish'
,people.
No matter where you
Uve, you can learn bow to bake these special
rotll yourself .
Oranp-Oatmeal Baeets
have a sweet, delicate
ligbtneaa and a golden
color.
Yogurt Bagels are
JDade with all-natural yogurt, for a creamy,
moist texture.
Try both of these
wholesome treats
toasted with butter and jam at breakfast, or make dellcloue chicken,
ham or cheese
sandwiches with them
for luncb.
ORANGE-OATMEAL
BAGELS
Mablldoaea
4 to 4~ cups
unsifted white flour
1 cup old fashioned
oatmeal
3 tablespoons sugar 1 tablespoon salt
1 tablespoon grated
orange rind
2 packages dry
yeast
Water
2 tablespoons
margarine
1 tablespoon sugar
2 teaspoons salt
1 ell white
Combine 21h cups
white flour and oatmeal.
lo a large bowl mix 2
cups flour mixture, 3 tablespoons sugar, l
tablespoon salt, orange
rind and yeast.
Heat l 'h cups water and margarine in a
taucepan until very
warm (120 to 130
degrees). Add to dry
Ingredients and beat 2 minutes at medium
speed .of electric mixer,
scraping bowl
occasionally. Add 1h cup
flour mixture. Beat at
high s~ 2 minutes.
Stir in remaining flour
mixture and enough
additional white Oour to
mate a stiff dough. On a
floured board knead
until smooth and elastic,
about 8 to 10 minutes.
Set in greased bowl ;
turn to grease top .
Cover; let rise In. a,
warm place, free from
draft, until doubled in bulk, about 1 bour.
Punch dough down.
Cover; let rest 15
minutes. In a large
skillet beat a l·inch
depUi of water over
medium h eat to a
simmer ; stir in
remaining sugar and
salt.
Divide dough into 12
equal pieces; shape 6
pieces into smooth balls. With a floured finger,
make a 1-lncb bole In
each. Cover and let rest
5 to 10 minutes. Drop 3
.ba1el1 Into aimmering· water, Cook 3 minutes.
T u r n a n d c o o k 2·
minutes. Turn a1aln;
-cook 1 minute more.
Drain on towels. While
cookiDI firat bateh of
baaels, shape 6 more
and let rest 5 to 10 minutes. If necessary •1 add boillnl water to'
aldllet lf level drops
belo• tAnch.
Place bagels on
1reaaed bakln1 sheet.
Klx e11 white and 1
tabletp00n water; brulb
OD baaell. Sprinkle with:
oatmeal or aesame teed tf dtllred. Bake at 375
de1reff for 25 to 28
mbl\MI. Remove from
• . SUPER SEAL , , ... ••v-·
U.S.0 .A. Cholu ..., ... Clwdl Cut I 9 U.S.D.A. Choice '"'"' Oludi Celt I •9 0 -BONE ROAST.. .................... LI. .6 7·80NE ROAS1 ....................... LI. ••
U.S.0 .A. Choice IMf ... lonelftl Oluck Cut 2 _.9 ROLLED SHOULDER CLOD ..... ll. • .. -U.S.0 .A. Choi<-9 a..f ... Center Cut 9 BEEF SHANKS ......................... LI. I.•
U.S.D.A. Choice IMf...Ce11ter Cut I 39 CHUCK STEAKS ...................... La. •
•••• llBOBI
~LOIN l~·~·
El Rancho Sweet & Hot
ITALIAN SAUSAGE ................. LI. 1.69 E.R. Mo11ture Added, C.mer Cut
HAM SLICES ............................ LI. 2.•9
El Randlo Pofil, S.010nlfl9
BRATWURST S~USAGE .......... lt. 1.69 llllk & Pottiet ea.t Not ExcMd 22..., Fat
LEAN GROUND BEEF ............. LI. 1.69
E.R. fat Chill, ea.t Not bceecl 30~ Fot
COARSE GROUND BEEF ......... ta.1.19 U . Owtl ~ WJ'mh ~ ... 8-01. ea. ff STUFFED BEll PEPP~RS ............. EA. •
GUDl'M'· CAlrfON OF ONI
DODN
UMIT 2 -
Comotlo11 ... I 2-01.
HOT COCOA MIX ......................... 1.39 12-01., """'· "-9 .. Diet L19ht, "''"· o.w I 99 PEPSI COLA ................................ •
H~hes ... 32-4n. I 19 COTTAGE CHEESE...................... •
22-01. Uquld 0 DOVE DISH DETERGENT ............. I. 9
~Crocbr ... 13.75-01. I OI POTATO BUDS........................... •
11.5-o,.
NABISCO WAVERLY WAFERS .......... 93
26-oi. '
SOFT SCRUB CLEANSER .............. 1.61 P11rl110 ... ~. Vori.ti...:, 12-01. ,9 TENDER VITT LE~ ............................ • . ~
i~e:a1J~ ~ ... .. .. ......... ........ .... .. I .a9 Gold.., Grol11 Allt. Vorletlet. S.01. . 69 RICE·A·RONI .................................. .
-~ ..• 45
WASHINGTON
EXTRA
FANCY
l·lb. loa
AJINOMOTO ...................... 2.71 FRESH ... 19·0Z.
U.IMIW. ""'14. H9f it.t .• \._a-, loo -89 CURRY ROUX ......................... •
TOFU
.65EA.
llodo Me<.,._,...,,... 71
SWEET RICE FLOUR .................. •
Col ...... 441.l'ltg. 69
SHRIMP CHIP ..... : ....................... • ...
Mot.lonw ... 2' . ....,1.
RICE VINEGAR .......... . ............. M
•ci•.~-... ~ •. s.. .. ~
SOY SAUCE .............................. 1.61
.
19-0Z .•• OllONO . •
Ff91h Eo11et11 •tlllOVn V9flbe1t, .. 5"'oll Sin
PORK SPARERIBS .................... LI. 1.39
El Rancho I 39 RANCH STYLE BACON ........... La. •
fotlef Farm• frou11 1 •
GRADE A GAME HEMS .............. La .• 89
I ·lb. Roll Hot or Mild
RUDY'S SAUSAGE ................. E•. 1.89
GllADIA
TUFFID CHIClll
t.AltGf MfATY FRYERS ... fOR ltOASTINO
-'5 •• 69
1.5-UIWC::..W.• ............ ~. ~
TAYLO• 2 98 UGHTWINI_ •
llcWev "'°' ... 1""""· 6 99 NAPOLEON BRANDY ....... :..... •
.......,, ,JO.<tll, 99 OlD SMUGGlER SCOTCH ....... .
Jbeeta.Cool. .
IWBST YOGt1&',1' "J'C·~~
MGSLI
...... 1 .....
·4 ~ to 5 cup1
un1lfted Gour
I tablespoon aalt
2 paek•lea dry
yeaat
Wlter
\6 cup Clar• mot.-I
I table1poonl'
Orange Coat DAILY PtLOT/Wedne1d1y, February 3. 1982
Frozen Concentrated Orange Juice
10Kpur•-
Alw•ya N•tur•lly SwHI
11A first clan glau ~ Juice"
J
20¢0FF
ANY WEIGHT WATCHERS FROZEN MEA LS
c.,..,"" ,,w,h ...... ~r-111 r kt\.'P°".l\\''Al9'1'.a.t ''' "4Jr."'l'i•'" • ~,.,4 r', f\., 1;!,.. u ... , .,, ", •; ... , .. ._ ....... ,.'""'''' ... .._ •• ,,...,.,.r&-,;•hn\Jl11'6.: 1,_._,.,f""'•\10..:1· t.I. • • 1..11 ... 1v 1 ... l..• ~
\\U.11t \\ "lt ftl tf .. tr.•:"'-'"_.& .. h• ··~•'. •·'1'•· .. n ... th .1.., ... , ·~ U~'f\ h r"-... • U~lt• I•• Ju•• •tll \1•J .. u ... ..,.f'n.. l • ....,....,. t•'"'f t..-.k't .... 1. t 1 °""''" 'I" 111 U1•t ~ f, ot~C..I 1f t'h~nt, J tht. .. 1d1 • ...,........ ;~, f, h-.. .. n4o.•"' "" 11tltt-t-....... ''' '"' ftl ,,f J1 .. 1ut"''" ,, , .. ,, ,,.,,.11 t..,11, ., "'"'"1"•· .. 'h •• ,h •••• J .. " ... X"'"' '-'.'""'' ... " .. ,,.,.,, ...... ,..._. •o
:'!':.1 ~.r:·~ t,~ ·1Rri':t'1 ~;""i~:~~'i\~·~···~;~.\'rTJ-~+~·;·,i~.:1
FRL'7L' Ml.\1' '-A\UP\'Y\ ~\,)'·r'\' A1" '"'"' u .. ,,.,,""••ttt4 ., •1kt t ~rutl, ~rt•• ,,, '""'! t. ..,k, 111mh··' ''''"''"" ...... , .... , ,", '""''h .....
TRY IT. YOU'LL DIET.
4501
RlT4.it..lf4 A6.!IMl~"""""-"-.C ..... 0~4/flll)IA HO"' ,._.. <-~t O"'ty _...,. e
~.,,.,._."""',......,Pl'~''~·· • • •......-c>. ·w "°" ~ ,._.. , ... "'•...,. DI: ...,_. '"""°'.,..~' 't'at'~"U .. "tflft'\t .. .IW~•
""""''"' .. ''~ ~ Ofoof C;.11 Polll.."-9 """"'"'' ~ ""~ n..a ~ ·~,.,, l.~••1.1""4'• Ooh-'~""·'""'·~·"'°'°"" ....... ''._, •"'91•<0 ,.,..QOi...C.O ... .,o < ...... 1 ..... ,,
_. ui •' ..-...... or""'Clif'M by '-"" ort.f ....
Ol"lr 11'1 U SA M'd """'°~Y '°""'""'.,.. ... #l'tlJ •a<.n~ '-""""'-OOlC ~,....,..ftlvJ 0....... -..tf'C>rJl:MC..."'O "Oulft MnG ta ff'W
0.-... 0.oaC-. PO 8oo •lei& 0.0 -ll6000l
TEAM& O< OHEA --°"' ffW~~vftoeiC11_,11'00w("l&t1 AIW_...
.. ~ ... QIO .. (()I.,,.. ...,...,..,..,,, ~
"""'°""'"~,..... '*"~~ l ~• Ol'W oowoon ..,.,~,'°"
11:.: s a 'VE 15 Mr Grocer WESTPAC wHI relmtlvrw ir. ~ ¢ on one r,: ~~·1:~::::::3 pt~ro!n~
Carton Or poly bag conaumt r purcllt1lno ~. ptOld..ct
'41£STPAC • -Frozen Vegetables
or Potatoes
epeclfled Coupot> Will bt honored only
11 aubmltttd b\I a retallar ol °"' PfO(IUC11
ln¥04caa rovfno purchtlt of 9Uftlclant atoc~ o lllfft ptoducta to -, ~ ptt -tMI IOf 1'9darnptlon ITIUtl bt allown upon reqUHI M y MIH w
mu11 bt peiO .,,_ the c:on.umar. Coupona
•a void wllara PIOhlbittCI, llceriMO,
Seel Of re11ttc1ecs 11y ltw. Cuti "81ut 1/20tll Of 1• limit OM Coupoll per
IMC'-·
Miii ooupone ID WESTPAC, do ""*1clr'I
Old Fashioned quality ~~ ~9 P 0 eo. 19487•
/f1 your grocers frHzer EXPIRES o.cem11er 31. 11112 JOIO
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. . • Bagel
From Pa&eCI
sugars and sweets.
Besides, a lot of
transplanted Eaatemers
missed fresh balela." Blf. apple hna al Dage Etc. can buy the
New York Times, Dr.
Brown's IOdaa and e11
creams to accompany
their ba1el1. For
non-dieters, whipped
cream cheese la the
flnlabln1 touch and la
available plain or with
chives, ripe ollvea,.or
lox.
The partners are
proud ol their approval
by the Orante County
Board ol Rabbis but are
quick to add, "Betels
aren 't just Jewlah
anymore.''
ComlDa sums It up:
"It'• a old technique
that's found a home in
Oran1e County."
You Always Save At Stater Bros. You Always Save At Stater Bros.
• • • • -• • •• I I
1 I I 11
.
Nftl90M IM:T,TQlllDL.iM *CT°" IX-AD OAn.1-.CT
PAMPERS
DIAPERS _,.
HU l.Oltl lllM PorterboaM ........................... : ............ La tS;M ... ,... k . Speaeer et.. .. ........ : .......................... •s.s• ---CM .. .a .... _,.,....,... •.sr ... ... m--• llUT .... e.N.L ...
•llUT -----.. lfll&ST
UIAPT
MIU CLE
WHIP
l90I
.~II' m.; ~'1.11 Ran t L.9•2.• ~ :~:II·~·· ·~··
StefW .._. ..... ,.
·~....,~#.---.... .... ,,_. • ..-i ..... ,..,., ___,., the
-'e<iiii!ISie.
.. ,,... Mew ...,,,,,. °" to
,_ by fllffltet ~ -_,...., ---.. ,,,.. °" ~~~~,..,_.. ol -......, ~ ,_ .... .-_,, ....
w. -.. lilll"ll to"'* °' ....... .,__.. dllllll9 or ,..,. . . &
--------.
I I I,
IETTYCROC!(P
IYAN!Tm -HELPER MQl'll
lllQUICll. IUTTIMIU
BAKING
MIX
... ~~-~~~=····················· 15.~87°
I AMERICAN BEAUTY •
-atrhettl ................. ·; .. 2..oz 89• •~It~
Cheerios ........ , .......... 15-0Z •1..59
I BETTY CROCKER, 11 VARIETIES
Cake Mlll ...................... 1a.a.oz n•
'
tquo~
. ---'1.9 ... 92.11 ... u
.. 'lll
i ~~
EU SIU •.
~··1.01
MIMITE llAID fROZIN
APPLE
JUICE
ttoi
111'1 bk c:ir •
WttOlS ..,.. PflODM
f'flOM l"LOM>A
ORANGE
JUICE
,
You Always Save At Stater 'Bros.
Sttak,
r#Saladl
,. i·;
~ --
DICOllATIYE WHna 0.. COL.Ofl
GALA II
IOWELS·
MIGU.
PRINCE EDWARD
I
••
~A ,.--· '"6 ...
I ffl/ff~~ ~ JJLlll ; ••.
l'90ZDI IMOW caoP . ,--e>NG.w.
FIVE
ALIVE
t9il7.11p s~ ............. ~-51.&5 ~ 111111111r Jl&T.fS_...--I .. •1JJ
f
t
Orange Ct>ut DAILY PILOTM'edntaday, Feb~uary 31 1982
uf fins
Mlllloal ol penona ln ape4!Jal U..t. the elf; eUr In melted
th1t coun~ never Jt llmt I.I a factor for lhorttintnc. wJOJed a baked preparlac breakflat, Meaturt and mix aaUtftn for bna ut. m • a au r • the d r y dry hl1redlent1. SUr
T II• Y ' v e n • v • r ln1redlent1 the nl1bt ln a pol• and ral1ln1.
obeerved butter me1Un1 before. Add U. bquJd mlltture
and dlaappeartn• Into The ne~ momln1 add and tdr just unW moat th• fr .. rant crumb, let the apples, ralslnl, milk, of tbe dry inaredlenu
alone bltlnC Into the aborteninl and e11. are mohtened. Do not
warm, aatiatytn1 bread. If lbt apple ls a firm over·mlx: the batter
Jt almost roues you feel '<..artety, eut the plecet abou!d be lumpy.
lt'1 1otna to be a 1ood quite •mall ao they wlll Line muffin Una with
day. be cooktcl when the paper cup1 or 1rease
Perhaps there would muffilll aff, well. rw eac~ cup about
be leu puahlng on ThlsUmeofyear most % full Bake at 400
buses , train s and apple peels are lender, degrees (holoven) 20to
elevators if fresh so leave them on and 25 minutes or until
6 .. ' fl
D • 1 • ,,
• "muffins returned to the add a ruce neck to the golden brown. Makes 12 ,, II
breaklut table. , crumb. mufnns. Muffin makln1 was ,..:::..::.:.::.:.:.. ___ -:------=..::..:.:_::=.....=:::.....:::.=~:::_.:.:.:'..::..:::::.-:-------~~~~~~~~=:!!:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:_--_:_-..:___:i_ b
.} one of the flf'St lessons ln
old fashioned cooldna
classes.
Students leanted 'bow
to measure insredients
and the differen,ce
between ballers and
doughs.
Muffin batter was
supposed to be lumpy
and the cooking teacher
would purposely
over-mix a small batch
lo illustrate knobs.
peaks and tunnels.
Students pro udly
sampled their results
and promptly went
home lo teach mother a
thing or two about
proper muffms.
The acco,mpanyina
recipe for .Fresi. Apple
Muffins ia a good one lo
use when introducing
the uninitiated to this
Filled
crepes
F or a speci al
breakfast or brunch,
serve Spiced Grapefruit
along with Apple and
Sausage Filled Crepes.
Ose your favorite
crepe recipe and then
fill the crepes with the
following apple and
sausage mixture.
To make it even more
convenient, the bome
economists s uggest
fr eezing the filled
crepes.
A bc!.!t !S m!nute~
before serving time,
remo~e tile ~ Jrom the"tteeur:
Pour pancake syrup
over them, cover with
plastic wrap and heat
through in the
microwave.
APPLEAND '
SAUSAGE
FILLED CREPES
1,; pound pork
sausage
1 pound apples ,
peeled, cored, sliced
'14 cup raisins
2 tablespoons;
pancake syrup
2 teaspoons corn
starch
VJ teaspoon ground
cinnamon or nutmeg
VJ cup pancake
syrup
12 crepes
Crumble sausage:
place between paper
towels. C.ook at Rig.h 2-3
minutes or until 11usa1e
is cooked. In larae glass
bowl or casserole, to.a
together apples, ralalns,
2 tablespoons pancake
syrup, com starch and
·cinnamon. Cover with
waxed paper; cook al
Ktgb S.5 minutes or until
apples are tender and
aauce thickens. Mix In
••cuaee. P1ace '14 cup or
apple mixture down cent~r of each crepe and
roll up. Place 6 filled
crepes seam aide down
In 10x6x2-inch g)ass
dis'b. Pour IA cup
panc•ke syrup over
crepes; cover tightly
with plastic wrap. Cook
at Hip 3-4 minutes or
until heated. Repeat
with remaining crepes.
Makes 12 ftfled crepes,
To freeze 6 filled crepes,
place in bating dish.
Cover tltbtl y with
plasUc wrap, and freeu.
About 15 m!nutes before
aervln1 time, remove
from freezer. Pour \<a
cup pancake syrup over
crepes; cover with
plastic wrap. Cook at
Hlth 6-8 minutes or until
heated tJu:ou1h.
SPICED GMP•fttJIT
2~ ~ cup p•ncake
syrup
~ t.eupooo IJ'OUDd •
clnnamaa
~ teupoon 1round
1101er
Cut 1r•perrult
cro11wll• ln balf; cut
arou•d eacb •ettto•.
Pt.ce ln Individual
lervln• dl1bea. In
'mea1urln1 cup, 1tlr
~ pancake 11rup,
ct•~ and pa1er.
Powr 1 tabl••P'M>ll of
• 1ynap mlsture o"" each · p_apefJ-qlt ball. Cook at Hlth Mm..,.. or UDtll •tect.1 .........
8
.l
I
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1
II
A Storewide Celebration ot ·Super Low· Pr.ices! ~
And this week, you can double your savings with (3) Double CouP<>ns in this newspaper Ad plus (3) J
Double Coupons in Ralphs big Anniversary mailer ... that's SIX DOUBLE COUPONS! If you don't 11
have a mailer,* stop by your Local Ralphs--pick one up and join in the month-long celebration with
.
Doutile Coupon
P1esent lh11 cou~ ••ong w•tt\ lllY one Manulacture11
cents oil" couoon and oil double lhe savings when you
pUtChUe the 11em Nol to 11lCIU011 relaolerf ttee or g1ocery
pU•Chase coupons 01 e•ceed lhe •alu~ of the 11em E •ChlOes
liqve>r, tobacco and dairy prt>cruat•
µmlt One Item Per Manufacturer'• CQupon and limit
3 Newspaptt Double Coupon•~ Cu1tomer.
Coupon Effective Feb. 4 thN RP 10. 1982
super coupons and super specials!
*While Supply Lasts!
Double Coupon
P1es4'nl 11\os coupon a1ono "'''"any one Manufacturers
ce,.1s ott couoon and~ oouble 1"e U••nos wllen ybu
purcnase Ille 11em Nol to tncluOe •elll•ler lree or Q•Ocery
purchase couoons or e•ceed the •alu• ol 11\e 11em E•cluOes
hquor tobacco ano oairy prooucts
1.lmlt One Item Per Manulec:turer'1 Coupon and Limit
3 New1paper Ool;ble Coupon• per Cu1tomer.
' Coupon ElfectlYt Feb. 4 thN Feb. 10, tt82 J
Dou bl~~ Coupon
,resent this i;oupon a1on9 will\ 91\y one f1 .. 11ylKtu1e1s
i:ents off couoon ano Qtl c:lilJ;Jble the n••nos wl\e., you
purchase 1ne item Nol 10 tnClude retailer f1ee 01 9ro<:try
putehau coupons 01eac..O11\e v1lue ot lhe ttem Eacwoea
liquor lob.icco and oa11y prooucls
llmll One Item hr Manut~tUftr's Coupon and limit
3 New1paper ~uble Coupons f!:i Cu1tomer.
~pon Effective Feb. 4 thru eb. 10. 1982
:1
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I Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednelday, February 3, 1882
1FL YING HIGH' -Sir
.Freddie Laker s ays
)te has raised SI 11
million in loans.
~!-Jin ' ~-es
~~
c;ash woe
ended?
:LONDON <AP) -Sir
P.reddie Laker, pioaeer of cut-price air travel,
spld he has succeeded in
raising loans that will
eon d h i s a i r I i n e · s
casb-fiow crisis.
··I am fly log high
today and couldn't be
more confident about
the f u't u r e, ' ' t be
chairman of Laker
Airways told reporters
Tuesday as he boarded a
Britis h A ir way s
supersonic Concorde for
New York with a free
courtesy ticket, worth
$2,030.
He said he raised $111
million ilollars from
Mc Donnell Douglas
Finance Corp . and
Clydesdale Ba nk of
Scotland.
That will permit him
to extend the time for
npayment of loans from
a consortium of 13 banks
headed by Britain's
Midland Bank and from
a banking group headed
by the Am erican
Export-Import Bank
which is backed by the
U.S. government .
.. Tht: deal I have
done," the 59-year-old
Laker said, "has altered
tbe whole equity basis of
Laker Airways."
He gave no details.
L aker owes the
)Ji d I and consortium
$126.91 million and
$226.44 million to the
Eximbank group. ·
The debts wer e
incurred for the
purchase of planes for
his . fleet of European
Airbus, DC-10, Boeing
707 and BAC 111 jets.
He claims his troubles
ftem from the strong
dollar. For example, he
bought three Airbuses
when the pound was
)\'Orth $2.41. Now the
British currency is
worth only $1.85 .
• In addition, bis
company's operating
expenses -like all the
pther airlines -have ~ared with the stron1
$foliar. Aviation fuel has Jo be paid for ln dollars .
~ Laker sald he was
ying to New York on
oncorde under an
agreement under which
Jlirlines provide free or
reduced prices for top
officials of othe r
Jlirlines.
The Concorde was
,poly two-thirds full.
~ants
temain
-WASHINGTON <AP) •~ Nearly half tbe
'cnisrant farm worlren' ·~hildren ajdeil by the
'286 million federal
.'.91l1rant education
»ro1ram in 19'1 were
~nrolled ln the same
acbool district all year,
'• ceordlnt to a 1tudy
llpooaored by the
1>•partment of
r.'41ueatioll.
. ' Tbe itUd1 lboWI taat
.,., pereeat of U1•
O,m l • r. D t c b 11 d r. D
twlteMd ICbooll durln1
the irt•r; 41 percent we~ ear.Jled ta &111• 'lame~ all,..,~ and • percent were
t 1arolled lD oaly oae
f'dt1ll1d but spent 1 ...
. \baa a hall year In
'tcbool.
SALE OF JUMBO SIZE
HOUSEHOLD PLASTICS
=o~m~99c ~.-otlCMngal
YOUI CllOICI
'DUllS Of HAllAID' OI 'PWIU'lf\,
COL"IMG IOOIS
~~·3SJ, .. u. FOi CllOICI
Populor choroct.,.. c.ome
oliw In It-. 321'099 bcdm I
NEVIi
CASIO ALARM ·
WATEI SPOITS CHIONOGUPH 24'5
Wot.r-t99latoftt olorm1 •port• wo•ch. IW·10.
ART SUPPLIES SALEI
BG. I .ff TO 2.H
5~;:.-•r· 8TOU19CllCMClc ...... a..""" -...... ...... ,..,,, 1U,.' .,Ml••-.... ClllmtMUY
Stock up on quolity ortlatl 1upplie1 today!
SUNSHINE BUND
COOKIE SELEalON
YOUI 99c .
C1101a
l rlf\9 o pock toworlt, echool, enywher•I
~
''LA PARISIENNE''
LIFELIKE FLOWERS
YMCMOICl1 llG. Ht IA.
====TICMI 2 s1 •DAffCIOIL•llllUllGIA ._..A-. LAO•IOSI
•_..DABY•&STOI fOI
1t.oli1tlcolly d.toil.d. Gothet o bvnch I •
LADIES' COLORFUL
LEG WARMERS
SOLID COlOI, STllnD. MITAWC mu
Anlll1Ho·thlgh l•ngth 4'' Str•lchea to fl t oil
alz••· Sup•r 1tolu• I '
"" c...a
CANOtPPORTABU
PALM PRINTER
MEN'S OR
LADIES' INIT
CALCULATOR WATCH CAPS
llG. 39'5 FOIMll1Y96c 44.tS I .29
10-dlgll printout or Mony colors& prints!
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I
CANADA-80UND -Former
Estancia High coach John
Lowry will coach for the
Hamilton Tlgercats next
season.
lPacific
suspen~s
Andrade
Guard Jeff Andrade of the
University of Pacific bas been
"suspended Indefinitely" by
Coach Dick Fichtner. school
officials announced Tuesday.
Andrade, a sophomore, will
miss the Tigers' games this
week Hainsl Cal Slate Fullerton
and the University of Santa
Barbara. A final decision
concerning his future status with
the team will be announced
Monday.
Andrade, who prepped at
Ocean View High, baa been
averaging better than 10 points a
game this season for the Tigers.
He apparently dropped out of
favor with his coach after
criticizing the way Paclflc had
played lh1s season In a recent
Register article, Andrade said:
"When they recruited me here
Oley said they'd push the ball up
the court (fastbreak). l only saw
one game and they ran then. But
. we're not running now . . I
understand coaching but you
have lo give players a little
freedom."
Fichtner reportedly read the
article Monday, was Incensed,
and called Andrade Into the
office. He was suspended from
the team shortly after the
meeting.
"He said I had said things I
shouldn't have," Andrade said
Tuesday, "which hurt his
recruiting.
''He told me, 'Tell me what
school you want· to go to and I'll
call the coach, but I can't play
you anymore'."
Andrade Indicated he may
leave Pacific but would "slick it
out'' tmUl the end or the year.
Lake rs
r11n out
of thne
CLASSIEIED 0,
Lowry: FPoni Esta.neia to CFL
~ A lot of kickoffs have takfn place
since be was leadin1 E1tancia Hilh'a
football fortunes durin1the196.WI era,
but John Lowry la provtn1 to be one of
lbe more durable (and succeuful)
coaches around.
And he's provlog won-loss records
don't always indlcate.1 coach's ability.
When Lowry left E1tancla for
Antelope Valley High be left a four-year
record of 10-24·2.
Today he's busy packing bla ware. ln
Las Vegas with the next stop Hamilton,
Ontario, where the Ticercat.s of the
Canadian Football Lea1ue will be
employing rum as their offensive line
coach.
Between those two stops were n.ine
years at Antelope VaJley in Lancaster
where the Antelopes lost two league
l{it"1es in his last seven years, qualified
.. the playoffs seven straight times
and posted back-to-back CIF crowns.
From there it was to Nevada-Las
Vegas where Lowry was the offensive
PREP SPORTS
ROGER
CARLSON
colleae> becauae the 1taff1 are
smaller."
Lowry became acquainted wltb
Canadian football durtna a couple of
gue1t appeb'ancea at trafninl campe lD
Saakalcbewan, and the decision to 10
north was easier because the family la
crown and on tts way.
the lesson from the Viklnp have been
sUghUy exauerated.
Coach Don Mahl uy1 hl1 team
finished 7·5 overall, wlnnlnt the
Eastern Dlvlaon with a 8-2 record, tben
being eliminated in the slate finals b)'
Radford.
line coach and recruitin1 coordinator,
before Hamilton beckoned.
"Physically I'm a 1001 way removed
from the hip school level, but I saw the
last Lwo playoff games for Ant.elope
Valley this past fall, and I got a UtUe
home sick,'' admits Lowry.
Radford went on to the "Prep Bowl",
defeaUn1 St. Loul.s Hilb of Honolulu.
Asked if Marina may have been bia
team's toughest OPPoOenl, Mahi said,
"It's hard to tell. Marina was one of the
better teams we saw. We really didn't
have a chance to move the ball as weU
as we could because we were very weak
on our offensive line."
A lon1 time since Estancia'• first
year of existence in 1965 and a few steps
up, but Lowry says not much has
cbanaed.
"There's better athletes and more
dedication as you go up," says Lowry,
"but the qualities that were pleaaurable
aod alJowed you to win at the hi1b
school level are exactly the same.
"It's probably more fun at tbe high
school level, partly because of the
larger staffs at a college.
So, another week packing and
clearing up Jut-minute paperwork with
immi1Tation officials is about all that
separates Lowry from Las Vegu and
Canada.
* * *
&UMOa8 THAT CaaUe High of Oahu
(the team which was crush'-d by·
Marina, 28--0, a week before the relular
football season) went undefeated alter
Marina whipped Castle by a 329-115
margin In yards rushing and pualna
and Castle's numbers In the pualog
game were 3-17·4.
Punahou, which failed to make the
· playoffs this year and finished with a
"I think I'U like the CFL better (than (See CARLSON, Page DZ)
...........
·Mulvey's gone,
problems stay
Kings send non-fighter to minors
INGLEWOOD <AP > -Paul Mulvey, who refused to leave
the .Loe Angeles team bench to
participat:e in a fight on the ice,
cleared National Hockey Leaaue
waivers Tuesday and was sent
by the Kings to their New Haven
farm club of the American
Hockey League.
Tbe Kings' decision to send
him to ·New Haven was
announced after a meetln1
between Kings General
Manager George Maguire and
'Coach Don Perry.
Mulvey's departure leavee the
Kings with 24 players on their
current roster.
NHL PRESIDENT John
Ziegler was conducting an
inquiry into an incident
involvina Perry and Mulvey
when the player refused the
coach'• order to leave the bench
during a game Jan. 24 aeainlt
the Vancouver Canucks to join in a fight.
The 23-year-old forward had
been acquired last year by Loa
Angeles on waivers from the
Pittsburgh Penguins.
"When we 1ot Mulvey we
were down to 16 players,
because we had a lot or
injuries," said Wolf. "He
(Mulvey) had been playing lesa
and less in recent games."
Wolf paraphrased an earlier
Maguire quote, saying that
while the incident regarding
Mulvey's refusal to enter the
fight atainsl Vancouver did not
help his cause, It probably
expedited the situation whereby
he was put on waivers.
"I 'm not going to be a
designated assassin and come
olf the bench and fight," Mulvey
bad been quoted as saying. "Doo
came to me and said, 'When I
tell you to go out and fight, I
want you to.' He told me to go
out and faabl and I didn't."
SENT DOWN -Los Angeles
Kings forwar d Paul Mulvey
cleared waivers Tuesday
and was sent by the Kings to
their New Haven farm club.
-He said Perry told him three
times to go onto the ice and
fight, and each time he refused.
"I didn't want lo do it," he
said. ''I've spent 20 years trying
to become a professional athlete
. . . a professional hockey
player. No coach has ever asked
me to do that."
Mked about a report that the
Kings were going to put him on
waivers anyway, he aald, "I
don't believe that."
Kings captain Dave Lewis
said of Mulvey: "~ needed
some of his size (8-4, 220
pounds). He started pretty well.
But the last couple of games he
was only getting a shill or two. I
guess be felt he was eetting into
the role of a goon, and be didn't
like that."
Prep
rematch
time!
By ROGER CARLSON
ottllleOelly ...........
Costa Mesa and University
high schools try to stay cloee to
third place while E stancia
attempts t o keep pace wltb
Corona del Mar.
That's in the Sea View League
basketball race toni1ht while in the Sunset League, it's just as
goofy.
Marina and host Fountain
Valley enter with 3-3 records
and Ocean View tries to protect
a 3-3 mark against visiting
Edison (5-1), while Huntington
Beach (4·2> tries to avoid the
upset bug at winles s
Westminster.
It's all m a ni&bt's work ior
these Orange Coast area prep
basketball teams as the
campaign grinds toward next
week's final salvo. Tipoff ln ea.ch
instance is billed for 7: 30.
In the Sea View League it's
Coat• Mesa (6-"4) al Estancia
(9-1), Univer sity (6-4) at
Saddleback (0·10 ), Newport
Harbor (7·3) at Irvine Cl -9) and
El Toro (2·§> at Corona del Mar (9-1).
IN OTHER ACTION, South
Coast League leader Capistrano
VaUey CS-2> invades La1una
Be ach (2-5>, where the Artists
have upended San Clemente and
Laguna Hills ; and Bishop
Montgomery C3·2> visits Mater
Dei (2·3 > in Angelus League
circles.
While a few are thinking
c hampionship, more are
thinking CIF playoffs, which
begin Feb. 19 and culminate at
the Long Beach Arena March 6.
To qualify for the 4-A <Sunset
and Angelus leagues). 3-A (Sea
View) or 2·A <South Coast), a
team has to finish among the top
three in league. There ls also an
oulllde chance for a playoff
be.rtb as a wild card team,
reserve d for the better
fourth ·place teams with
reputable records. ·
BLOCKED -Houston Rockets ' Major Jones (left l blocks
a shot by San Diego's Michael Brooks Tuesday night in
NBA action at Houston. The Rockets llsed 53 points by
Moses Malone to beat the Clippers, 122-106.
TUESDAY, ON the nationally
televised Good Morning
America 1bow on ABC, Mulvey
said, "Never in four years ln the
NHL have J been instructed to
fliht ...
A spokesman for Zie1ler had
lllid the NHL president felt
there had been 1ome
dlscrepancles in report.a about
the incident.
Costa Mesa's resurgence after
a 1-3 start has included victories
over Corona del Mar and at
Newport Harbor, and if the
Mustangs can reverse a decision
with Estancja tonight, they'll
stay in the hunt for third. place,
along wtth University, which ls
exp~cted to handle winless
SaddJeback. Bill Walsh: He is football's subtle genius
And San Francisco was willing to pay the price for coaching brilliance •
It now comes to pass that when Bill
Walsh goes to mark X's and O's on that
great blackboard in the sky, bll brain will
be preserved in alcohol on a abelf at a
major university. Yo~. following the Sm Francisco
t9en' dispatch ot the CincU..U Bensall
in Super-Bowl XVI, Walsh wweatabllabed
as professional football•• fe>re'IDCMlt teniua.
The National Football Leap therefore
departs on a new era aa franchise
proprietors dispatch memot laltructlnl
their people to bedn a\ once copJin1 the
formula employed by the coacb of San
Francisco.
"Wallb iJ a 1enlu1." aays tilbt end
Charle Young. "He dreams up plays and
plays are aent to him out of the 1k7."
He ts particularly fond of the play• 1ent
from the heavens which call fOI' the ball to
be thrown to Charle V CMUll· When ta. wu
a clla~ed member of tbt llaml, ID1
plaJI floatln1 down tbroucb tlie
atm•pbere called oa Charle to block. •
W Ala_, WITll PULL lmowledle ot a
ilood t.biU, clc* Dot O• from GM •miua fabel, bUi ......-la priill&e': aw Uae
1ame 11 not reiD1 all that complicated!
"Wbat I try to do,'' Bill 1a71, "Ii UM 1DJ
peoplatotbeMl&ol ........ allllit1. If•• .. ,., .............. u ....... ..
UH bll ~ Jf ba II I~ ...... Ida
brain • . . u.M." •
SPORTS COLUMNIST
In ma, Bill Watab was the otrenaivt
co-ordin.tor of the San DielO Cbar1en.
Apparently leas than a .1enlUJ at that
particular point in tlme, Walab'1 olftnae
was abut out four tlmet durinl the N"1lar
aeaaon.
Walth followed the tnnalmt exiltence of·
a football coach punutn1 wbat moat ol b.ll
Uk re1ard u the ultimate lD Ute, a bead
Job in the profesaionall. Walab'a 1enlua
went undetected f~a quarter ol a centuey
before IM landed ln San l'rm'dleo and the
rut lls now bl.ltory. ·•
TBB DETECTION of brUUanee In
co1ebln1 la aot an art wttb diat&net
1uldell•••· For ln1taAct, aa.. bud
coach Ray llalavul ftnd ftft memtien ol
what b'e''had prftlouly ......... u ''tbe
most capeble Mn In tbe Nn.;. ••
A mona thoee with wlao• Mala.ail
dneloped dllQNtmot.e WM ..,_."
tcH»Hinetor a.ii Canoe wbo eame to tbe
Ram1 from Pttuburp WMii a.I wu ~rplJ 1'9~bae for UM.~" bltJta
of the Steelers during their dynasty
le~IOQI.
. M al~vaat and Canon could not a1l'ee
between a .a and a 3--t , although It would
1eem U... wu plenty of time to try out
both alilDJDellta to determine which wu
moat effeetlve. .
Followtn1 tbe departure ol tllle ft.-,
Malavaai hired a former def.Wve liiie
coach ol tbe New Eniland Patrioll named
Frita Sburmur who, like Bud Canon, la a
dlaclple of the 3-4.
CLEA&L Y, llAIA V A81 noticed traca
of aenlut in Sburmur wblcb were not
preHnt In Canon.
F"rt.ber enamored of the promlntnt
cerebral truat at New EnaJan4, Malavul then cowted the braln of ROft Sl'bardt who
waa tbe leader ol ~e lnteW,ence GI the
Patrlotl. UabappUy, llalavul'• owaer1
bave a Umlt to ,.Ut tbeJ wUJ paJ fat
tenlua Md tbe N-. Yort Gllmta IDadt a maJot ecore ln lanatii1 Crbardt u ._ olflllltve~toi. . rort•nately for tbe Giant•, Mew s..land owner Bllly sum .. deel not
appr•ciate •ealu and fired Brba,.t
becaute be won only ~o ,.._ ad ..._
• 14.
Al aD.Y rate, everybodJ' llil1I Oftl'.;'.af
t.bty .... the new era -the OM IUptnG
:?i.BW Walila+ who hal to-t tie a..-.~ It
ESTANCIA GOT past Costa
Mesa the first time, 82-58, when
the Eagles beat Mesa, 24-0, al
the free throw line .
As for individuals -Meea
relles mostly on 6·4 Ken
Bardsley (18.l average) wltb1n
Its 11neup, whlcb includes three
~era al 6-4, and the trio ot lobn
Rllbebarger, Jim Pellcbowti
and 8-2 Dave Palmbhde
comblnin1 for 30.3 poinu a
1ame.
Estancia answers with tu
(See PREPS, Pa1e De>
OLYMPIC POLO
'4T PEPPERDINE . .. -.
'·
:
.. , ..
•• .,
.
I
Orange <?oatt OAJLV PIL<?TJW9dneaoay, ftbruary 3, 1982
;.-.-.--.. __ ....... __________ ,,-------------------------------------------------------..
NCAA reclaMifiee
three PCAA &ehoole
From AP dlapatclla ·
MISSION, Kan. -Padftc Coast Eil Athl~tic AssoelaUon memben Cal C t
State Fullerton, Lona Beach state
and San Jose State are amoai 31 acbooll wbtcb
have been reclaaaltled to Dlvlllon I-AA ln
football competition, the NCAA announced
Tuesday.
The action. the result of a declaion at a
special NCAA convention ln ~mber, reducet
the number of major, or DtviJloo l·A, ICboou
from 137 to 92 and increases the number of
Division I-AA schools to 89.
Among those dropped from DtviJlon l·A to
Division I-AA were all Southern Conference
schools and all Ive Leacue members, except
Yale. All. but three of the 10 Mid-American
Conference achoo~. four of the six Southland
Conference members and five Miuouri Valley
Conference members were also dropped to
Division I-AA.
The reclassification, effective Sept. 1, will
force some schools that are still classified
Division I-A but are members of Division I-AA
leagues, to make a decision, said David
Cawood, an NCAA spokesman ..
Those schools -such u Yale, Wichita
State and Central Michigan and the remainine
three football-playing PCAA teams -muat
drop to Division I-AA if they want to continue in
their conferences.
Quote of the day
Roa Shmate, Southeast Missouri State•
basketball coach: "We've been shooting so·
poorly that the players are giving each
other high fives when they hit the rim."
Whalers hand KJngs 5-3 aetback
INGLEWOOD ~ Rieb Meaeher ~
and Pierre Larouche struck for goals '
in the final 43 seconds to snap a 3.3
tie and give Hartford a $-3 National Hockey
League victory over Los Aneeles on Tuesday.
With the score lied 3·3, Meagher skated in
OD 8 breakaway against Kings ioUle Mario
Lessard to drill a 10-footer for bis second goal of
the night at 19: 17.
Twelve seconds later, Larouche &Lio tallied
an unassisted goal when he beat the Kings
goalie for his second goal of the evenine and
23rd or the season.
The victory gave the Whalers a 5-0-2 record
in their last seven games. The setback makes
the Kings a 1-4·6 since Coach Don Perry took
over Jan. 12.
Hartford jumped out to a 2-0 lead In the fint
period on goals by Warren Miller and Meagher .•
Edison gets caught • ID a
........ outa.t Clpftall
limes aftd ..,. .. Tretder added two ' Roolde ._. Sau.r 1cored thr.e m·
1oal1 u tb• New York lllaodett
outlasted the Wuhlncton Capitala 7-8 ln a. wucf
National Hockey Lt11ue conl.eat Tuuday ala.ht.
The Ialandera 11ve Coach Al Arbou hJ1 40ottl
victory u a coach ... In other 11mea, Blah
Dualop and hl'J')' Turmbtall combined tor nve
10111 and two aasi1ta to lead St. LcM4ll to a 10-t
thumplnt of Wlnnlpe1. Tbe toa1 production, I
club record, cemented tht Blues' erip on aecond
place in the tbe Norrll Divilloo 1tand1Dp . . .
Mlrotlav Frycet eeored three goals aod &eal
Clouder provided ~ 1ame-winner at 18:08 of
the third perlod to ctve Quebec an S.7 victory
over Colorado . . . Montreal's Pierre lloadoa
scored two rlrtt·Rtriod 1oals to •park the
Canadlena to a 5-3 victory over Catcary . . .
New York's lllb llo1era scored his third 1oal
of the eame to break a tie with leu than flve-
mlnut.ea to play and 1ive the Raneert a 4.3 ~
victory over Vancouver
NCAA sleuth knew of UCLA charges
NCAA invesitgators knew of but ·• could not prove many of the charges
a1ain1t the UCLA basketball
proeram that was the subject of a recent Los
Anaeles Times probe, the NCAA'• top sleuth
said Tuesday. "There was really very little
there that would be useful for our purposes,"
said David Bent of the NCAA's enforcement
dlvtslon . . . The Los Aneeles Strinas signed
the bi11est name in BUUe Jeu &Ja1, but the
hi1heat-ranJted players chosen in the Team
Tennl.a Ul82 draft were 14th-ranked Aue Smida,
who joined Dallas, and No. ~ VUay Amrltr-.J,
who also signed with the Strings . . . Running
back Biiiy Sima of the Detroit Lions was
awarded the $10,000 prize in the annual
Seagram's Seven Crown of Sporta computer
based competition which singles out the "most
consistent and most producUve" player in the
NFL ... Left-handed pitchex Tommy Jolua of
tbe New York Yattkees is t.alting bit contract -dlapu~ to arbitration
Television. radio
TV: No events scheduled.
&ADIO: Basketball -New York Knick.a at
Lakera, 7:2i> p.m., KLAC (570). Ski Report:
Snow conditions in Southern California
mountalna, 9:43 a.m., 12:43, 3:43 and 7:43 p.m.,
KNX (1070).
Webb
552 tourney
now in limbo 1 ,
Crosby Southern to continmf.
Now that the Crosby Southern Clambake
over, oo~ ha.a to wonder at the future of the ev
especially with the TPA statine it would e
Monday qualifyinl rounds next year.
If the 552 Club, support group for Ho
Hospital. is to continue the 38-hole, two-d
tournament, it has several directions to eo.
Perhaps the most loclcal would be to conta
the TPA and to staee the event at the aame time
the Hawaiian Open. Tben the young eolfera who
not make the field for Hawaii or feel they do
want to spend the money to travel to the l1lan ,
could be contacted to play at Irvine Coast Coun
Club.
If the TPA would allow a letter to be sent to
thes'e younger pros. the results might tie
worthwhile and a field comparable to those of t11e
past could be envisioned. But it would almott
certainly need the cooperation of the tour aroup. I
Another avenue open to the eroup would be to
get the newly-formed Golden State Profeaaio~l
Golf Tour to play at Irvine Coast on those t o
days. Th.is is a group of yoWlg pros who, for o e
reason or another, have lost or never did attain ,a
card to play the TPA tour. ~ Lan')' Margison of Westminster and g
Beach sports writer Doug Ives are direcUng e
destlnles ot this group. They opened thelr seuqn
this week at Costa Mesa Golf Coune and will pl~y
at Mlle Square, Rancho San J oaquin arid
Huntington SeacUff in the next two weeks. ! c .
SOME OF THE PLA'\'ERS from the area wlJo
participated in this year's Croaby Southe;
including Ray Carrasco and Art Schilling are al
listed among those who will participate on the n
mini-tour. 1
When G:1e looks at the list of players who fail lo
make expenses on the tour, it makes sense th1t
they might not want to put out the extra money bf ~
traveling to ffawaii for a week in the spring if they
had an alternate tournament. :
Fountain Vatiey takes Sunset lead.as Ocean View upsets Chargers ; Huntington in second
According lo the best estimates, it takes
$40,000 to break even on the TPA tour. If this is the
case, ooly 94 out or 250 card holders were able to
break that barrier in 1981. 1
Fountain Valley High, with a Uttle help from
Ocean View, took over sole possession of first
place in the Sunset League women's basketball race
Tuesday night.
The Barons had little trouble disposing of
M a_rina while Ocean View was buay upsetting
Edison to drop the Chargers into a second-place tie
with Huntington Beach. ·
flere's how It went:
Ocean View 58, Edlaon 49
The Seahawks came into the game wilb a 2-4 Su~set League record and slim hopes of beating 4-2
Edison but somebody apparently forgot to telJ
Ocean View's Tamie Webb that.
Webb had 30 points, including 10 in both the
FromPageD1
CARLSON. • •
4·5 overall record , hosts Edison High this
September.
* * * MARINA IS STILL searching <near and farl
for an opponent for the second week of the
non-league football season.
•• *
BREA-OLIN DA 'S upset bas ketball Joss at
Anaheim last week was an eye-opener. Anaheim.
you'll recall, was beaten by Melodyland in
tournament play in December.
CH'l:CKING AROUND -Former Corona del
Mar High assistant coach Jerry Jelalck, who was
an assiatant in the football program at University
High under lllck CarUs, has been named
University's varsity baseball coach. The Trojans
open their season Feb. Z7 at San Clemente with a
double-header as they tune up for Sea View
League play, which includes defendine CIF 2·A
champion Corona del Mer ... Former Fountain
Valley High and Golden West College star BUI
Lunt has been named Buena Park Hlgh's new
baseball coach.
SdlolutJc Coacla has released its 1981 Adidas
i\ll-American blgb school football team consisting
of 100 players. It includes Edison High linebacker
a1ek DlBeraardo and Mater Del linebacker
Kennedy Pola . . . Former Westminster High
basketball star Mick DeLnallade ls averaetn1 3.3
points and 1.7 rebounds a game for Colorado State
. . . Thin&s are tough enough for HunUnston
Beach football. The Oilers have lost 33 alraleht
league games and now their coach, Gre1 Beary, la
on lbe verge of being whisked off by either Vista
High or the fire department. Seema no one in the
Huntington Beach Unified School Dlatrict can find
a teaching opening tor Henry. ..
Rustlers stopped
by Santa Monica·
MUte Oerreo scored 24 po\nta and teammate
Cliff Hodlet added 22 Tuesday nl1ht to apark
Santa Monica Ctty College to a 101-81 victory over
boat Golden West In Southern Callfornla
Coolel"mCI baaketbaU aC'Uoft.
Tbe lou left Coach Jim Qreenfteld'a Rustlers
wjth a M t'Oftference mark and a lf.8 overall
r~ord. Tbe wln, meanwbllt, helped the Corsairs atay
w\thin 1trtldn1 distance of f1rat·•lace and uodelHttd Cypre11. Suta Moahta, 1-1 la
conter.ce lftd U-1 overall, meeu tbe Claaraers
Feb. 11 at ..,...,
'heldaJ m&bt, I.be R\<len found tbemMI••
down bJ l'I at 1M bAll • pard Tndett Hatton Just couldn't ftDd tM bukfl __ and tommat. Darin Bow• Dia* iWl tour toua. la ta. ftnt balf, limlUIC,.-oPPOl'tunlU• . .,.. ft8laMd tbe nllbl wttb 11 aad ffaUOn u. TM• .... ~ O..tl llUtid la adiDJrably wttJa • ,_. WlllJe 81 win Durta.m eMMt off the
•• to ..... u.: owe Ntw• to acUoD l'rtdQ·~ • .._ tbe a...u., &ut Lo1 ADIM1<'f:•>· ~
I
WOMEN
first and second periods, and grabbed 19 rebounds
to lead Oeean View to the upset that scrambles the
tight SWlSet race.
With Webb dominating play early, the
Seahawks got out to a 30-21 halftime lead and held
on In the second half to drop Edboo to $-2.
Karen Chase and Pam White played well in
s upport of White , with 11 and 14 pointa,
respectively. The win improves Ocean View's
Sunset mark lo 3·4
Mary Krupka led Edison scorers with 18
points.
Huntington Beach 47. Weatmlnmr 22
The Oilers moved into a tie with Edtaoo for
second, routing Westminster to up their Sunset
mark to 5-2.
Despite the lopsided score, Huntinston Beach
Coach Joanne Kellogg . indicated she wasn't
completely satisfied wlth her team's performance.
"We played well enough to win , but we can
play better," she said. "It just took us a while to
get untracked."
Tammy Buckles led the Oilers with a
game·high 16 points while teammate Betty
Mendoza had 10 points and nine rebounds.
Fountain Valley 43, Marina 27
Sam Arledge, Deanna Davis and Lisa
Basketball scor.es
cc::r
Soull>e"' C.I Coll•oe '°· Poi"1 Loma ..
Cllko St 'O, Wllll"*' 1• kt! Frenci.:o SI. ... Haywwd St
'3 ~St. 71, UC OaYK.,
St11t1lt'-St. IOI, S.Cramento St
14 ... ,,.,._. '4. Felrfleld Jt
HeN-63, St. Al!Mlm Jt ....... ~,.,
0.0"9t W......,.O, N..,y SI Mrtt•••ma. a-r• Vermorll .. , F.+nftoll 06cll ... IOl\ll ....
Am«'kofl U ~. W1n1et11 & Ne<y "4
(ol) ,....,....
~ rQllllttt '1 •... c . .o.ortott• ..
NOi,.. DMte 7.l, USI' ..
II. x ... i. 77, Clik4lel St. 70
Community co1te9e ---eat~· .. s-i. Moftko CC IOI,~ WHI
Los A ...... CC 56, lllo HClndO 54
LA Hertior 47. LA...,..._,* (1111
Cyllr'Hl 107, lest LoaA.,..IHtJ
~~ S.1111 ...... ~ ... ,.
lit US DI Dir Tltll Fitllu ·
TW11 fw YOU
·Ginsburg combined for 32 points as the Barons
rolled to ao easy win that puts them all alone atop
the s~et standings at 6-1.
The Barons started out slowly u Marina got
oul to a 6-3 lead after one period. From that point,
however, Fountain Valley broke loose to outscore
the VUdnp, 24~. in the second and third qu:irters
to teke e=t.-01.
Marina (2-S) «iot eight points from Sandy
Corbett while Alene Anderson contributed five
points and 13 rebounds.
Meter Del 13, St. Paul 31
Tbe llonarcba jumpe4 out to an early lead and
kept the pressure oo to improve their Angelus
Leap record to 5-2.
Mater Del outscored St. Paul, 1~·5, in the first
· quarter and enjoyed a 31>-10 halfUme lead en route
to tbe easy win. Kathy Gorman led the Monarchs
with 14 points and 20 reboun~ w~e Eva Szmurlo
chipped in 11 points. Peggy Baker and AM Barry
added nine points apiece.
Capo Valley 41 , Laguna Beach 39
The Artists had plenty of opportunities to take
the lead but couldn't take advantag.e, missing their
last seven free throw attempts and hilting just five
of 15 foul shots on the eame.
Senior Maryelle Leeds led Laguna Beach with
17 points and teammate Elizabeth Kuyper had
nine points and 13 rebounds
Mlaalon V..Jo 58, Dana Hiiia 45
The Diablos remained unbeaten (7-0) in South
Coast play as Mary Madigan, Jane Harre and
Cindy Rohrig combined for 41 points. ,
Mission Viejo now bouts an iltlptesslve 19-2
overall rtt0rd. •
SOUTBEaN CALIFORNIA
For the young players, the odds of aurvivi,g
are slim. Out or S3 who earned their tour cards n
the spring or fall or 1980, only Mark O'Meara of
Laguna Niguel , Fred Couples and Vance Haefdr
earned over $40,000. And 34 of the S3 lost thdr
cards for earning less than $12,000. •
It's a long-shot gamble for those who gain la
card despite the exhilaration they experien4e
when they are one of about 50 out or 1,200 to g~t
such a distinction each year.
WITH THIS THOUGHT in mind, it wou
certainly seem that there is a place in the sun f r
such as the Crosby Southern tournament to ta e
place.
Every tour pro this comer talked to last w
felt there should be more such events, not few .
They feel it is a way they can help make expenses
if they are in the top money group in such a
satellite event.
And even if they don't make that money, the
opportunity to play in such an event affords them
the chance to play and perhaps correct a flaw or
two in their game
And if y~u think the money paid here ($25,000)
as peanuts, Just check the San Diego Open payoff
There were only 20 players who picked up more
than the winner here, Ed Dougherty ($3,900). And
checking the LPGA event in Florida, only five
players earned more than Dougherty did at Irvine
Coast for half the work (36 holes compared to 72
for each or the other events).
Notre Dame upsets USF
. SOLJTH BEND, Ind. <AP> -Senior guard Mike Mitchell scored a career-high 19 points
Tuesday night, leading Notre Dame to an upset
75 ·66 college basketball victory over
seventh-ranked San Francisco.
~~~~~--~~-
OUTSTANOINC
VALUES!
S•o• deptWlacbff CoadJUou 18 • pow /pp
Llfta/claaln
4C
· N1W lt12 VW
IAlllT "L .. SID.AM
aJper economy with this onel Fully
8Qlipped Including a
4 IOeed tranamrssion. tinted glaH, radial tires and ,,_,,., !Stk. so1n co1&13>.
Mountain High
Holiday Hill
Mt. Baldy
Kratka Ridge
Mt. Waterman
Snow Summit
Snow Valley
Goldmine
18 pow /pp
12·U pow/pp
38 pow/pp
36 pow/pp
36-S> paw I pp
60 hp
36-48 pow/pp
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
June Mountain
Mammoth Mountain
China Peak
57-80 pow/pp
111 pow/pp
60 pow/pp
84·100 pow/pp Dodge Rid&e
NORTBEaN CALJFOaNIA
2C, lL
4L FO
3L
FO
FO
FO
4L
FO
FO
FO
Ml. Reba 102-138 pow /pp 7C
Kirkwood 144·26' pow /pp FO
Sierra Ski Ranch 105 pow/pp FO
Heavenly Valley 90 pow/pp lSC, SL
No~tar 48·1Jt pp FO
Squaw Valley 68·132 pp 2JL
Dooner Skl Ranch 86·14'> pp 2L
Alpine Meadows 90·218 pp FO
Su1ar Bowl 18'-252 pp FO
Bor•al 168·190 pp ec
Homewood Ski Area 72·108 pp TL
C<lndiUons: bp -bardpack; pp -packed powder; pow -
powder.
Liftl/chalrs: L -Ufta; C-cbatn; FO-full operauon. t-------
SALIPllCI s5
V.AHA.oH"L• 'Fully •Quipped with
IHtherette Mlltl, tlnr.d
glaa. de4uxe P9Ctuiae & morel (Stk. 3028).
(10721118).
Ll•t ...a-SI 1,190
D..._,-Slltl
,1 ~JlllYW
t.oadedf Equipped wtttl &
speed t~ elr
cond,, etereo l P'99 CSttc. 311111~ (4T 47'12).
Ult ..... ,,.,.
Diii i I f $1040
Ul.IPllCI
f~tc
'
NU ~••CONHla•MC• ,.......,. ..
W L
11 " " " u 17
24 " u " ,, 11 ....... DI.,..._
""o• ,..,_
.... I
.JIS tll• . .sn • .. S71 I .m It
IMA11toNe o. ..... ,
~
K-Cltt
Utatl
tt u ..,. -,. •. "5 w. nn.-"M u • ,,,. 1t\lt
IS 2t .JM IM
0.11 .. I) .... ,.
•MT•aN CON"•a•NC• ..... ow .....
:n " • M rt 11
20 M
2G u
C4Mr910 ....... MHweukae
Alltflto
l~ia-
0.troll
Cllk ...
Clev...,,.
2' I•
" n It 1S
It »
11 » ' ,. T_..Y'•k-0...... SI.Rt 11'. L.llMr't 1 11 Oetrett IOi ......... 1115
....... 10t,l ........ IOS Cle.,,....toO,W~tt s..i A-.. 10). DeNas ti
N-,,.,..Y "'· c111c..-111 How-122, SM 0-.. IOi
Oef\Wf' 1-.,... y-111
io.r11end 102. "-City t1
T.......-10-
N .. Ytni .. Ullln Atleftta• New.J«wy
We~ at ,._l__,,.e ........... , ..... ....
.......... o.t .... t
Cllk4191>1i1Mllw-•
Safi Ole9o 111 0.tlH
f>ortl .... Ill U\111
Goldlin s-.. "*"'• Ka11sat City 111 SNttle
.uo -Mt, .SU ,..... .. os I) ·-'""' ,,,. --
.AJI M ... '°"" .m" .. """ JOtJO
Wenton 111, l•kel"I 117
LOS A....UI -.,..,,_ 11. WllU1 ». Abdul·J•Mlar 1', C-r is. Nl•Ofl 11,
lre-r 1, JordM t , Mca.o 4. TOlell. 41
l:>-26 117.
OOLO•N IT•T• -Klnv 16. Sm"tl J, Carr .. I tt. Fl'M JJ, G ... 6, Parker I , 9,_
4, ~ I, "-10, H-0 T.UIS• 51
17-21 "'· lc.n"O.ftltn LotA,..lel :n n a n-m
Gol*n StMit 12 M JO l>-1 tt
Fewled aut -a,.._, Tot•• lovl• -u.
""99 ... 2A, Goldln SC.le 24. Te<llllkel -Gol4ltft SC... C.cll AnlH A -IJ,nt.
COllMUNnY COLLEGE t•m. lloNca 101, GWC H
IA#TA ... tea -Oernln 14, ltkll 6,
........ 12. J~ s. w-•. w-tle 11,
W .. J, ~ 12, C.....,. 4. Totelo: M,..
101.
OOLDU W'alT -........ 11, De•ll IS,
Kint t, Myles •, ._.., 11, Jecotts •.
°""'91ft 1J, IE...mart t. T ... 11: JO,._,..,
H•lftlme: ,_,.. Monk•, .....n.
Total ...... , Sama Menke tt, Gel..., Wetll
24. Fa;,lld oul: ltlell (Sant• Monlcel.
J ec: U.11 Cs.nt. MIHlk •I, &ow.n I GG6dllll
WMll Teclrical· t+odQiH ISMU Monk el
Souttt.m Cal Cont.renc:e
Cyp,.u
Sant• Molli<•
LAS.V0.-
9'1oH-
Golden w.st
Eell LM .,,.. ....
Lot A,...._ CC
LA Hertlor
~· o-911 W L W L
' 0 17 s
• ' •• 1 S 4 II II
's 1111
J • " • J 6 II II
2 1 • ., 2 7 • ,.
CONSOLI DATED
,
~ ... o-Nn ....... • ... 14-M s...ti... 14 ,. It ,..... T.Vl~1·-.... .... 11.$Mtl"9t
HIGM ICHOOl. WOMIH
Hunt. h9ch 47, W•.cmlne .. r 22
NUNT•••TON •••cN-C•rr •• cw ...... T~ t, Pec:llle t, H_...., •. c ..... r •• -.......... euchl• .. ICll,...,._,.,4, Totat.: 111-1141 '
W81TMHllT8._ "-s, Glllllrle 1,
S.r.u" I, .llllte!\ t, 11.-1 t. J-t Tatell: •!Ml ti . ._...,._.....
"""" .......... " u 1J " ......, WHtml....., • 0 • ~
Tete! fellh Hullll"tl•ll IHCll 16, w. ............ ,,
Ftn. Ya ... y 43, Mertn .. 27
POUNTAlll VALL8Y -ler1011 •.'
..llCllel•lil S, Ar ..... IO, HuhCllll'IHlt t ,
GllllMt 14, 0.¥11&. TotelS: 11 .. lt'*·
... , ... -..,,_,_, '· Lollr• J, l.or• ••
C.orllon ' lloilemy >, Cran i. T .... 1. 12 M 21
k-lllyo.fttn
Founl•I" ve11ey > n n 1~
Marin• • t 4 U--21
Tol•I Jouls: F-1alll Velley II, Marine u
FoulecJ out: LO¥• CMerNI
Oc.an vtew 51, Edison 41
•OllON --Krupke 11, 8 lt111er 1. ~7:;-;:~~ t, T-IS, Ucll4-7
Oc•AN Vt•W CtlaM 11. Webb JO.
0.011-I. Wl>IW 14, Slme41 t Total•: 22 , .... u~.
k-."-..-n Eolto11 t 12 n ,_
Oc .. 11 View ll It 16 It-ti
Total fouls: E"'-17.0c_V ... U.
C•Po Yelley 41 , Lag. B•ach 3t
CA"ISTRAMO V~L•Y -Cllerlet 6. ltoct111r S, ~ II, Hiii 4. NerMM t.
Aldfldtl. T4Ult: ltf..1141.
LAGUNA ••ACM -McK•o•11 ••
Wllllema 0, K_, t, Smltll 6. '--It.
hlelt: t1 ~1Ht.
lcere"~ Ceplllr-Vllley 1 14 U 7-41
LatUN e.ctl 1 !I It 6 ......,.
Total tcu1: Clipbtr-Velley 16, i._..
hacllll.
Mner o.t 83, St. Paut 31
MAT•• Oat -Kenw1 •. leli•r t.
Gorme11 14, Slmurlo 11, J--•. Gii,,.., •. lerry t. o.g. ~-Totals: 1t 1·12 u.
IT ... AUL -Gullen1 JS, Row ... t, 11811
HOii-4, ~ 0. FIORI 0. TOCAi. 14 ).11 )1.
le-."°"""" Meter Del It 11 17 1.......a
M. Pa;,1 S S U t-JI Total lolAls: Meter 0.1 11. SJ. p..,1 21.
FoulecJ WI: UIQaclle ISi. Paull. TecMkll:
Mal ... Del llelld\.
MIHk>n ~ 51, Den• Hine 4S
DANA NI Elland 10, ._I,..,, I,
LarM11 •. Mtn11 • ... _ t, CNtney 6.
Totalt: 17 IMUS.
MIHION Via»-H.,.,.. 12, '"'Ml .... It,
lt-'911, llum S. Stftlttl I. C""Pltl 4 T.UIS 221•.11• lc-.11¥0. .......
0.neHlllS t II It ..._.,
MIUloftVlejO U It 1 I.._
Totel fouls: oar.. Hiii• 11, M'-Vltje
1'; Fouled out· Ell•nd CD•n• Hllltl;
TecMIUI foW: Mluloll Vie to beftcll
WOMEN
SunMtlHr:...
Fou,,.•lnllel'*Y Edlto11
Huntlnvton 8M<ll
Oceenvi.w
Merine
W.ttrlll-
W L
6 I s 2 s t
J ,
0
o-.. W L
IS 1
16 4 ,, .
4 ,.
2 IJ
1
•
0..... • I. " . 14 •
It • " . .. .. 1 ..
1 " t M
Mett'• toume1Mnt
IMOW-1 ..................
l'tlll Oerll *f 0-Ma.,..., W , 1·S: Ter""
--... Sit,.. ~ , .. , ...... w · ec .... 111 ~Wl'efl ef. Vlcler Alney•, M .... 7, 1•: Jff'I U.lcN1 ... !"Mui l'orWt, M , M ; &enoy
MaYH *"· 11\Rr Motlr-, .. ,, .. I ; T-
SMld Clef. •Oii o.llrlll& M , M ............ .,......
,rlU ~in.""*" 0..-• ... Mal Pur<ell·YM Wlftluay, ,... "4, w : s.....
Oe11to11-1Cevl11 Curren Cltl. J•H·Luh Clerc.Ille ........ 6-J. M .
Cenedl.n ChaHene-
le4 T ...... I p ........ .......
lven ~ clef. C!llal 'l'elhe,.r, .. ,, .. 1.
,._.., McN9'1Wt *'f Jimmy C-1, .. ,.
J 6, •·•: VltH Oerul•lll• -· Adriano p.,.., ..... 2.w .
Men'• tournament 1 .. 9-Alretl p ....... .......
Gulllermo VII• .... G...WYO Tlllertl, M.
M . Ykw "-<<I clef. C•IOI C•l•llen. H.
4-4. 6·2; Gulllermo Aubolle Clef lt~o
Ar11uello, W, W ; Poter FleQI clef. Cla-
fl'enelle, ... 2, 1-4. Rollin K11re111y clef RkereloC-.. , .,_.
Wom9n'• toumament c .. ~, ................
Ann IU.,.._a *"· llllle,,.... Kiiie, U, ..a. clefauft; ......... J-*'· ... Pfelf. M , .. ,; Mime J-Clef. Kew La"'-,
.. 2, .. 2; ,,,..,_, Lau Plelek clef. La'9fl 4-
Thom~ .. 1, I•, .. 1. ~le Allen dlf
Kim J~ (l.,J, .. ,; llonnle c;.,._ -· Helefla S..ov• ... ,. M . ~ Mtt• Otf.
Betsy ~. M . M , lt-yn l'el-
del N.ancy YMrvtn. 6-l, 1·5
Wre9dlna
HIONKHOOL .......... , ...........
100-Sudllenl CSI p1.-R'Mlltl, J•4j
IOl-Orte1Sl ........ LA..-,S:14.
HJ-SMID ISi .,.._ Klbn'. I .ff
• tn-.-cwietc.~.21-1. 1:i.-Qwll CW!~ L.,, 1:23.
I»-,..,_ CWI clec:. AIVerado. IM.
141-G-CSI plnllld Sleltr, S:a4. I,.._ L-CSI plnllld Kraft, :IS.
I-"-'CW) -Dy lorlell.
170-,. ...... IWI P ........ Waclo., J.n ·--•-1w1 _...,._.,_
JO)-Nlctel IWI -by ~1.
H•t..-Garcla ISi plMH lt-y. J IS.
W.A t• a ,E._'1
ti-H-1 (W) dee. G.,.,, IJ..S.
IOJ-Mcl..9u111ll11 (El cllK. Die&, 11-S.
112-Altall (El o11V9d Paruf. :»
lit-Cwry IEI Ok Tl-, M..
1»--A"'9r11E)dec:.~,, I ttt-Almire IWl _..., toA11t t»-HOltor' IEI de<,"°'*"'" U·I. Id-~._, (El ptnnec1Gleb91, J:S4.
IU-ltlley IEI Ok. Smith. M .
161-Karwy (WI .iMad H«rkll, S SO.
llS-Wer9I (Wl ,.._ INwr. J IJ
~0....IW)-.fl'--.11-1
Hwt.-T-(WI _, try lcw1911.
REPORT Ofl CONDITION
l'ICTITIOUI 1u1111a.11
NAMa nATWM•NT
Tiie followt110 Pe,.011 Is delno
-IMUH
.. ..,..,
"tCTtTtOUIM.IAN ... llAMll ITAT•-.WT Consolidated Report of Condition of "AMERICAN
STATE BANK" of Newport Beach, Oranoe County,
and Domestic Subsidiaries at the close of business on
December 31 , 1981.
Stat• Bank No. 1072
ASSETS
Dollar Amounts
In Thousands
· Cash and due from banks . . . . . . . .......... S,"4
Investment securities .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . S,S36
Federal funds sold arm securities
purchased under agreements
to resell In domestic offices .................. 8,300
a. Loans, Total <excluding
unearned Income) & leases .... 48,000
b. Less: Reserve for
possible loan losses .............. 480
c. Loans, net ................................ 47,S20
Bank premises, F.F.&E. etc ..................... 336
Real estate owned other than bank premises . . . ................ 2,l:M
Other as.sets .................................. 1,996
' TOTAL ASSETS .............................. 71,466
' LIABILITIES
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC OFFICES .......... 63,813
Total demand dePoSlts ........ 14,297
Totat time 6 savings deposits 49,Sl6
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC
AND FOREIGN OFFICES ....•............. 63,813
Other llabllltles ................................ 2.537
TOT AL LIABILITIES
(excluding subordinated notes
I and debentures) .••...•..................... 66,lSO
Subordinated notes and debentures . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,000
' SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY I 1 Preferred stock
· No. shares outstandlno -NoM
I Common stock
•· No. shares authorized 1,200,000 • b. No. shares outstandl~ I ,004,423 1.2ss
! • Surplus ............................... l ,4SS
: TOTAL CONTRIBUTED CAPITAL .... : ....... 2,710
Retained earnings ............................ 1,406
TOTAL SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY .......... 4,116
TOTAL LIABILITIES ANO
SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY ..........•....... 71,466.
•1 The undersigned, S.R. Whitfield, Sr. Vice
President/Controller and Jackie Lee Ek, Vice '
President, Op•retlons & Personnel •of the
above-nef"f'td tMH\k, each deetares for himself •tone
and not for the other: I have penonal knowltdQe Of
the matters contllned In this repc>rt (lnctudlnn the j• reserve aide ttereof), and I believe that°'~ach
• statement In said report 11 true. Eech bf the undenlgt~or himself atone and n~ for the other,
certifies PtNttY of l*'IUtY that the foreoolno
Is trve and correct.
EX9C.uted on January 29, 1912, at Newport BNch,
Callfoml•. /1/$.R. Whltfleld
l s/Jackie LM Ek .......... Or-.C.-0..., ............ "9
THE CEltAMIC FACTORY. Mlt
#est M•cArtllur, Sent• Ane,
Callfonlle '1100
Lie ... .,... 8e4tl Sm""· J1l4 OellotA
•-. Clllte -... CellfOf'ftla 916» Tllh -411Mt It <-led by en
llllllvld,..I·
ue-ynSmltfl
Tiiis "'9,__I ••• lllecl wltll IN
County Cler k Of Or-County on
o.c-wa.tw1 "'"'71 Publllllecl Drenet Coest Delly Piie!,
Jen 21, Fltl. J, 10. 11. 1"2 ~
l'ICTITl°'-1$ 8USIN8.IS
·-• ITAT•MUIT Tiie to11owln11 persan It doln11
butlneun.
MICHAEL KAY'S OF NIEWl"ORT
Ttle tollowlnQ ""°"' an doing 11ut1nes1n.
80WIAR JOINT VENTURE,
tl002 Skf Pull Clrcl•. lrvlne
C4ftfornl• m14.
T"9 kit.le Cornp-.y, 1 Cellfomle
CorPOf'8tloll. 19002 S-y P•rk Cir< ...
1,.,,1 .... Catlfornl• m1•.
lowd•n Con1trutllon. Ille .. •
C•lllornle corPOr•llOll, ns East
Wulllft1llOll Boulevard, PuaClene,
C...llernle '110$
Tllh IMlllMU I• C~l•d by a venerel par1,,.,....,p,
Tiie Barlll< ~lly, A Gorp,
Jemes L. 8erl1lc. President
Tiil• -I wa flied wltll -County c11r11 Of Orenoe COOll'lt'f on
J-ry tt, 1"2
1'1111ta
P11bll.-DrM91 Coelt Dally Piiot,
F.O. 3, 10, 11, 24, IC SS741.
IEACH, 410 W. Coest Hi..,.ey, Suite 1-....... ----------A. N-fl0<1 e.adl. C.tltwnle t2MJ
Ml<llNI G Sln<lelr, .h1'1 Vie,
Ll11ar11. Mlnlan VleJo, Celltornl• -------------
mtl
MlcNol G. Slll<lalr Tlllt ......._. WM Ill.., wllll 1"9
County Cler'tl Oi Or•-Coo;nty on
0.C•m-It, 1WI. .. ,,,..
PvtMlllwd Or-Coat Delly Piiot,
JM!. 17,,,.. >. 10. 11, 1m 440-42
"ICTITMIVI IUll•UI
NAM8 ITATSMWT
Tll• toll••lno ,.,.on Is Clelnt ...,_ .. ,
M081LE SMALL ANIMAL
V8T81ttNA•Y SIEltVICE. -.....,.,, LA911M ._,., c:atlfOrllla t:lll.S 1
AM M9rtoft L..CM, 0 .V,M , -~ter, ~ S..Ctl, C.ltlernC•
.. 51. Tiiis "'9llleM It Ulnclllctff by Oii
IM1¥ldllal: AllllM.L-,0.V.M
Tlllt ....,_. Wet 111«1 #ltfl IN
C-ty Clertr Of Ore1191 C-ty on
Ja11 ... ry u . tm
""'"' PW!..,., Dr...-Ceelt Deity 1'1191, ,,,.. f7. ,,.... J, 10. 17, 1"2. .....,
M•n·1~r
NIGNKHOCM. P ....... V .... y4,M ......... hec:lll
Fo11nteln V•l1•Y tcorlftO · N11uye11, Andnws. 5ulldy Smith
~l.Ck_V_t
M~,::•n .. ctk>ne MU. a-tc...ue.-CMICAGO-ITE SOX -$loMO ltkN,..
Douon, pltdler, 10 •_.., • .,contract.
l'OOT8ALL ................ ~
CHIC.AG() 8U.ltl -N-Ed HutMt
otNMlw~
NIEW ENGLAND PATRIOT$ -N-
Tolftmy 8ra.,,.r, Cleleftslv• 11 ... coactl; lw" ,_..I, tlllftecker coacll. encl s-
Wet'9ra, *""91.-bec:li u•acll. SAN DIEGO CHARGERS -Acqulrocl
0.•kl Lewk. l.,.._11.er, from Tempe Bay
tor lllldhc-fvl..,.. tlrefl Cllooi<ff.
HOCJ(•Y __ ....,LM9IOI
QUEIK NOltDICIUU -TraClecl Lee
NOnorood, defltllM,...., to Ille WHlll"9t0ft
Cec>lt•ls flW Tim T-ev. , ... .., •
soc:ca• Nerei~-L...-
JACtcSONVILLE TEA MEN -s..-
0.1111ls Wit. forwarCI, lo• ono-yeer contract SCQMd Nino Zee, -11 .... r, to e lwo-yeoar
c:onlrec:t.
TOltONTO BLIZZARD -H•f'llld a_., .......,..,_coecll.
COLUIOE
GEORGIA TECH Nof'llld Alo lMll.l
euln.111--.1 coecll.
quJckll' 11me, led by playmak r
Jeff Gardner and burly Steve
Kt1J.a1 on the boarda, whoM e-1
atat~ Hems to equaUu most wU.h ~ beipl.
At fl'ountain Valley It's a t.esl
for survival ln the race for third
place (at the moment) and ita a
rem1ttb between t~ Barona'
Jett Ru1bea and Marina
defender John Berry.
Berry held Hu«bel to OftlLJ~
polnU as t.be Vlklnp ed1ed "fV,
42-41, ln the nrat round, and tt's
antlclpated that the Vlkln11 wlll
•mploy almil•r
dtamonct..a.nd-one tacUc1 11ain4
in an attempt to slow down H~ghes, who is avera1in1 20.8
points per game ror the season
NB~Cable
sign TV pact
NEW YORK <AP ) -The
National Basketball Association
bas signed a contract with two
cable networks to televise too
games in each of the next two
seasons, NBA Commissioner
Larry O'Brien said Saturday. It
was learned the contract was
worth a total $11.2 million.
The NBA, whi~h announced a
four-year commercial contract
with CBS-TV last December.
signed contracts with the USA
C abl e Network and
Entertainment and Sports
Programming Network, O'Brien
said .
The contract was worth $5.5
million a year, but it was not
known what portion of that
amount would be pal<t by each
network.
Santiago out8hoots
W arrion, 68-34
Woodbridge High's Mark
Foringer led all scorers with 17
points but It wasn't enough to
keep Santiago from rolling to a
68-34 wio in non-league men's
basketball action Tuesday nl&ht
in the SanUago gym.
Forin1er, who came into
Tuesday's game averaein1 15.3
points per pme, bad a typically
strong offensive performance to
give him over 300 points on tbe
season ~t the Warriors found
themselves outmanned by a
tough Cavalier team
"These guys (Santiago) are
the best team we've played this
yea r , without any doubt,"
Warrior Coach Bill Shannon
said.
a.ad bu ~ for • JQi11ta or more 11x Um•.
WBSN HUG&-SI ll eOD•
nectln1 wltb bl• Joos·r••••
aboll, Fountain V all•J't interior
comet to lif•, too, wblth wu the
case Jut week ln a 7J-e'J vietor)'
at Hu.ntincton Beacb. O~an \*iew WU bnta by 15
In Ill lut meettn1 wltb .ldltoo,
but this thne the SH~awka
flcur• to start 1oln1 to &-9~ Jlm
Uaevltch earlier, rather than
waltJnc WlW the aecood ball (be
Onlabed with 23 polAt.a> ln t.be
ttnt meet1n1.
Edison enters with an 18-2
overaJI record and tbe No. 1
ranking ln Oranee County and
the CJF 4·A, behJnd 6-3 Richard
Cban1 and 6-4 Rick D1Bernatdo,
alon& with a eood set of tuuda
(J e ff Stephens and Mark
Goudee>.
Elsewhere, Huolinstoo Beach
I.a a heavy favorite behind M
Jim Lane and 6 -1 Billy
Thompson; Corona del Mar
dealt El Toro a '3·point defeat
earlier; Newport Harbol' wu
al.so an easy winner lut time,
.sh elling ,Lrvioe by 30; and
University is considered a aolld
choice to stop Saddleback •ta.in
(last time out was a 40-25
verdict).
Laguna Beach (Neil Riddell la
the Orange Coast Area's lead.Ing
scorer with a 22.8 average) bu
been tough at bome; and Mat.r
Dei's CIF chances are on the
line. Mater Dei is tied for tbird
(2-3) with Bishop Amat in tbe •league standings
Vanguards
need a rally
Southern California Colle1e,
down by six points with 1:22
remaining· in the game, reeled
off 10 straight points to band
visiting Point Loma a IO-M
se&back Tuesday niabt ln NAIA
District III basketball act.ion in
Costa Mesa.
The Vanguards improved
their Southern Diviaioo record to
34 and their.overall mult to lU
with the victory, but t.bey had to
scramble to overcome pesky
Point Loma.
Two free throws by Rick
Porras and a single fr~ throw
by Paul Hohmann geve the
Vanguards an 88-86 advaotap,
and teammate Mike Roberts
added a 15·fooler at the buuer.·
Mark R oche paced the
Southern Cal College attack with
24 pointS, while Roberts added
20 and Porras chipped in 16.
The Vanguards return to
action Thursday night when they
host Hawaii Pacific (7:30) ..
"ICTITIOUI IUM .. •U N,,_. ITATR,.._NT
l'ICTITIOUI 8UStllEU
MAME ITATRM•lfT
"ICT1TIOUI 9UllMHI
NAMll ITATRM8NT
Tiie lollowlng person h doln11
11u11nwn1 es·
PAM.ENTERPRISES, 1002
St cr•lerl•I Cir<le, ( .. le MeH,
Celll'Omle '26a
l'•m•I • Jo Delto.,, 1002
l•cr•l•rlet Clrcle. Cotl• M•H,
Cal llomla 9261'
Tlllt busilllff II 'ondllctllll try -lllcllvld ... I:
Peme1e Jo O.lton
Tlllt -· wet fll«f wltfl -County Cler1l of 0r'"'91 Cavrtl'f
J e,....ryt, 1'12
"' '11'11't Publllllecl Dr-Coe1I Delly Plfo4,
TM folt-1119 ,.,_, .,.. .......
llu\lfteU M !
M.C. PAltTY PRODUCTIONS, U.S
P8111•r1no, a,ic. H41. H• Cotta Mew,
Calllonlla~
P•11t H11berl Molbru<lier. HS
..... lerlfto. ""' No H206. Coate -· c.11 ......... ,,.
TllcHn .. Pelrl<k Curr•"· 1ttfl
Bonser A¥tnue, G.,d•n Grove ,
C•lllorllle..,..., Tlllt blltlneu II conducled by e
oener•I~
P .... H Motbrvc•lf
Pvblltlled er-. c-DtllJ Piiot. Jen u. 20. 21. Feti a. tta , ...
Tlllt 11-1 •M lllecl .... -County Clar1I Of 0.-C-y 111 De<•m-14, 1'11 "'71119 Publl-Or-CMl1 Delly Pltot.
"icr111ous ausn••u
ll ... ITAT8MRNT
Tiie lol19wlllo _._, •r• C1e11111
blni llMI M :
ADVEllTUltE TRAVEL, UI
Farett A¥enu•. L•11une •••ell,
Celltor111anu1
Ad"""f..,el, Inc., • C•lllornla
corporellon, U2 Forut A.,,.,. .... 1..av---.c.. ......... ...,1.
Tiiis llusi!IMI It COllChKted by • corporetlon.
Vk•·Prts.
..,.,_,., ..... , Ill<.
MICllNI J Pll'llO, Presldtnt
leUy W. Freelftell,
I ... ..., ...
"'IC1l'TIOUI •u.t••ss NAMll ITATSMmNT
Tit• lellowl1111 oerun h e1ot110 ....,_, .. :
... O .. IE•TY MANAGC!M8NT
SIEltVICES. m s. Tuttlll A•tn11e. o ....... c..llfortll• .....
WerN!I fl. a.11, !tit It-L.aM,
AMlltlm, ~I,.,.._ t*2 Tl1h lluelMU II UNl\KtN 1rt en
IMM...-i. w_, .. 11
'tlllt ... _, .... !lie.I ..... "" Ct1111t, cter11 ot Orli!IOe c_.., M
OectmMt Jt, IW1. ,.,_,
ftlllMI .... Or-. CoeA O.lly "!let J~: u._•. n. ,., a._·~ _..l. m.-
J111.U .,ett.J,10.11.1t12 ~.
"ICTITIOUI IUIO•dl. NAM• ITAT•M8N1'
T ... IOllOWlllO -IOllJ ere cloln9 _ ....... .
EQUITY FUNDING I, 5120
Cemp11t Drive, Newpor1 l eacll,
Celll'Omlat..o
Lyle Mee Len1odell, 22 U1
Calftlnllo Amor, L•tu11• Hiiie, Celltornlt n.st.
"""' M. ......,.11 •• ,u '-""'"· Alt• Loma, c .. ._. t1101.
s.ndy LAMdell. 1775 • .,~
Pl.,:a, w. ... ,._..,, Celllomla,..,_
Ttllt blnlnetJ Is c-..Ctad lly e
..... r•ll*t•IHP.
Lyle Mac Lan90ell
Tiiis .....,_, wa fllael wltll -
Cou11t, Cler-Ii: of Or•nee c:.int.-"' ,....,,,..,., 1. 1•.
Ptmu ~i..... Or ... Coelt o.tly Piiot,
r:... i. tt. "· "'+,.., -s..i.
PIC'TlTtOU. 8UltNHI
MAiile ITAT•MaNT
T lie follow Int P•rton It dol1111
l>lltlMHM:
ALL ENTERTAINMENT TICKET
-T"AVEL SIEltVICE. 12141 V•llay Vlew,O.,...~. Cat-.... .,..1
0Way111 .... 10ll6 IE Jnl Strwe.
LOll9 a.-11. c.llflnll• tOIOf
Ttllt MIMu Is <-led by .,.
1""1¥kNtl. 0...,...8-11
Tiiie ...,._ -lllael wltll IN c_.., a.. .,. OrWlfO ~ .,
J-.ylS,IC. """4 ftuDlltlled Or .... G-.t !>ally l"ti.t,
'""· 21, Feb.J, IO, 17, 1"2 401-42
Jen. u. 20. ti. FIO 3, 1'12 UI~
.... ,,.,,
"ICTlTIOUS au1t"•• MAMRITATl ... "1'
Ttle foll9wl1111 P9n0ftl .,.. M1119
bUlllleHM'
VIE OLDE CLIE A .. ING
ESTAILISHMENT, U7t1 Allele·
Pertlw..,, II D. ~ Hiits. CA ND
EflGO SUM, INC .. e Celltemle
corporetlari, DD A-.... ., •-
8N<ll, CA tw71
Tlllt ~' It c~ _., e <«por atklft.
IElllOO SUM, INC..
0.¥1111. CIMll, ......,.,
Tiiie ~ •• lllecl .......
Collflty C~ flf Or-C--, Ill JM. ft, Hit.
"ICT1TIOUS IMlltMa• ..... " M~ ITATUYNT Pub!.._, Or ..... C:-Deity l"tltle,
Tll• tollowt111 penon b c11111e,.J_""_1_7_·~ __ s._10_·_17_·_1•_.._,__.-__
l>ullMUH~ •
Ill' EHTERftRISE.$, S6J Yvlln.t
Cen'°" WllY, ll'M, CA tt.21.
ALLAH EDWAltO ~LLEfl, t6J
L_on_w.., ......... CAfH.21.
Tllh """'-' II ~ted .., "" lncll¥1dllel.
Allen l!clWarct Miiiar
Tiiis -~ Wft llled Wltll -c_., """.-er-. eeu,,.,.,. , ...
u. "'l. .
'
.
the Orange Coast ... 642-5678 AmortQ ~ looltfng for 4 rental , 10%
reod reaJ 11tate ck111ifi«l Olla.
t: -E'=-'·. == .. UUTJTI ==~ i : I€tti: --==-15...=,, =-=I!:: E?E-a. ES
BrllS
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY..,
P\M.a.w41 Motlct: All rul estate ad·
verllaed i n t h is
newtp1per II 1ubject to the Federal Fair Hou1-ina Art of 1968 which makes It llleaal to ad-vertlse "any preference,
limitation, or dis-
crimination baaed on
race, color, rell &Ion,
Till YOUI PICK llir:-n n2.ooo Z'Br. C.M. 'lOM OO
38r, CJI. $11.S,000 38r, C.M ,118,000
2Br, C.M ,129.500
3Br, C.M. ,129.500 38r. S.A.H. l1S7 ,000 AU ol these Cine pro·
petties are boluea with aood f101nclna • ownen
att nl>tlvated. Call now.
TlnDl 11( l\ \I
r<I \I I '
Id I 7 37(")
.. sa, or national ori&in, a. or an intection lo make ,_ ______ _
t: any 1uch preference,
• limitation, or dis · ~ crimlnaUon." -: Thia newspaper will not
: knowinf ly accept any
-advert 1lng for real = estate which Is In viola· rrmaSTO ocir.•o.1 -tion ofthelaw. ~...... '"""" --'""'" .......... --=='-'-----i ~ ..... J ... z = " ........ ..... -lllOIS: Act.ertfMn c6t Mt •t.-to .._.. dlecti .. ech oct9 ..ct ...., I Z EE 5
MIW Dcumft -H•l90I YaW Fint time offered. Quiet part-like
1euina. Huie rear yard l79 ft wide.
Rm for pa(ldl~ tennil and pool. or
1rut for an orchard. Picturesque col
de aac atnet. 8 Bdnm and Family Rm. $379,500 Including land . See-= 6"..eto
M. TAYLOI CO .. llALTOIS
JlllS-~ ......
w••WM"llfOITW'I' CIMra M.I. 644-4t 10
LAfi>UESTA
Slll,000
Blttrs. l.e'5f option. 2 br,
wide ll'ffllbe ft 1139 ,500 8kr I 644--0J.31, A areal oprortunity
pdced we I betow ------... -1 marltet. Owner w11nts
rast sale & will help
finance. 3 Br llr• 811.
charmln& rloorph1n
;.
~-· .... · .. ,
OCIAM I ILOCk Extra lar1e R·2 comer lot. Seller will help
finance! 12 LS.CICIO! .... ~,,..,. .........
•675-7060•
c..+nt&n Uef ,.
-Pion --""' -.,......"""' -
~ _, -~ ..,. Y"9"I oW. G,_. i.
;: ... ~ • .,.. ......... ,.. ...... If
DAILY PILOT ..... , n• •• r re• h cl . $ AXER 11pp(IS $ VIEW TOWHHOMIS l.rilllty fw tile fl~ Owatr wlll carry "'U . Master suites. Vl~w or
•-correct 1-1ertlo• I 0 •• f 1 ••• c I• CJ JZ ...... eo,... Or~ • NiJht lights. .. .. · --v C ~et Area Paru, open ..,. SZff,000 v A AMCIH spaces. 1137 ,ooo. Xlnt =-1.1111 = -~ -..... u. -COLS OI' ....-oeT' Far below market For I FiD.. Halor Pat Aats
MAL'°"' set; up ca II R 1 r k , 751-9905, m -1300 -. -........... -.. _ ... _ ... __ __ == :: == : ...... tww. HULc...t...l,,. anytime. 714/760·7292 .
_.._...,... cm •••••••••••••••••••••• -c... .. _ PllVACYrLUS .. 93/40/oLOAM
-..Ced SI 00,000 ...._...... -~ 100 Ol1ltw --::... --87A41t 1 with this 4 Bdrm. fenced
-----__.;;.·__ II\, pool home on a qwet =---....................... . :::S : flnd out about the high _ .!."::" : earning real estate ule~
.-lllftt MftSl· career opportunities --. wi\h T H E R EA L IDT, JIAllC[ ~ATERS. Licensing ::t::=: : • school rees completely ·-~·, IMJ I refundable lo school or =-:"'a--: your choice Extensive .._ .. _ -sales training For tn· ---~ -formation, c,11751·6191
POSlll&.S&
ltST&FIM &r QtcWM&
~ --~ ,. .....
, ..
JUI -----
MO QUAUFYIMG
87.SOO neat JBr. + ex·
ercise bldg, wallt to Mile Square Park, shopping.
schls • cl11Se to rwys
Less than 10'. down
M U RC HI NSON ENTE R PR I SE~
566-1732
COLDWeu
BANl(C!RO
...,.., ..... MntA.tt1"11•11..n
cul-de·sar in Easts1de
Costa Mesa A beiiutlrul ,
back yard with l'OVered patio 11nd a rozv
fireplace m the living
room ~re's morr• f\1>·
sumable loans and an
anxious seller Only
Slt8,000 Call 9'79·~0 lo
dav
ALLSTATE.
REALTORS
ali:e tboae 1000
SPYGLASS IYOWMER Full Pnce $.S75.000 Monthly P11yment 12999
SOUTIIPORT MODEL
6brt412ba 4100srr ft
2.S Bodega Bay Call owner 7$9 0737 __
BLDRS CLOSE-OUT
Fantaslll' larae tri·level
l-u&om designed l'ondos
nr best be11ch areas.
From $78 .500 wit h
speeial low int finunr
ing. HURRY t·ull
897 ·2849 Bkr
SOSES
-~ -Or a lot of cull?
Then call
CIUalfled. ThoM
thlngt taking uc>
~lnyo41r
tlom9. Item• ~ M\ltn'tuNd ln
Igel, may be Just
What IOIMC>nl
elN neec!I.
~!Mldd items you·re Lale aometb1n1 vatua· not uaillg availabt. to hie! P'.:~ :n ;~f l.n our HAA•co;t'RIDGI 101De otlMr family by ad· Lott and r ound col-
INVISTOI vertiain& them for u le UDllll. 11aat'1 where peo-llfttYllOO&
Pll1AUTJIM ----.,.._. ,.,, -·-••r ....
Bl*E =----IMS' =-----~ .. ·~· --~ .. v .. ----~--= -......... a.. -=:.. = ='°'..!.. --..._._ ...... ----.. -~ ..... ._ -..... -.... = -........ -~ ....... --t T....H.".-.. --•ts&llAN[
E9100
a-al -...... ---::J::''-= ........ °"""' -Ii&°'= ----tumftlllnll ---= ----
DBJGHT In Clu1ified. Ca II pie look wben they've
Lureme model 3 BR+ 1...;IG=.::5171:.r.z.. ______ 1 foundanltemolvalue.
So give ua a
call .. It'• euy to
uM ci.aitled to
get YOU' l\end9 on
IOfM caatt.
~~
ram1ly Fabulous
rorever ocean virw.
Reduced $100,000. Good fmandng & owner may
consider lease option. Terririr buy S675,000.
Fee
-644-,060
Pladn& a Clualfied ad ls
-. eal)' u dlalln1 your
pbane. Give 111 • call.
We'll do tbe r u t.
IQ.
IATSHOllS
Prime Bayfront View. Pier, Dock.
Quality 5 Bdrm In Desirable Gated Community. Private Beach.
Beautifully Upgraded. Only $975,000
Leasehold.
G:r· --...........
759-91• uc..,_ ... .._ ... .,..c..e.r
SfA IUfFS
Just lilted 3 Br, famll.Y rm, 2"' Ba
tutefUlly decorated family home
wttb dramatic pool at spa complex.
Offered at $m.OOO
LUXllY PBmaJSE II IATEI
......._II rW .. ., A.idllaclwlll ............ ·~...-,..-. •: i:u1s,.~.._2 w. + .. ""
..... 111111.1111, It_._ .....,. ..... wa fll place. w-. ............... ..... ......... aa,,. .. ~..,. ...
.. , ... , 'S7JUM.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC.
llfAl. EST A TE
S.., ~. ,.,._,y M.lo+Ae•
2436 w c-Hwv 315 ,_.,. Aw
NHpcw1 Buch 8llboe i.nd
'11·1411 671o6ttt
I OOING BUSINESS
. . UNDER A
*ICTITIOUS NAME?
If· rou h•ve )ult flied rour new
Flctftlout 8ualnH1 Neme and
heve not yet tubmltted It for
publk:don, pteaM don't forget
th•t tM llmltation 11 30 dlly1
from dllte Of ftllng. The DAILY
P.ILOT wttl publl1h your
1tatement for ~.to.: Our
clrculatlon lnduclff dt9 eatlre
Orange Coalt aru and .... I
• notlcet appear In aH Mllton1. In
order to aubmlt your .......,.
tor publcatlOtl Mnd epproprlltt
copy and a check to lHE DAil Y
PILOT, P.O. Box 1seo, • .C01t• .:
MeH, CA. t2e21. We'l 'do .._. ,
· rHt. For lnformdon •1Jot4 iepl \
adver1111"9 ple1H calJ MMl21 4 .
!~.-
UGHT HOLDERS
... -.. HOMIS
Remodeled. dicorated 3 bd,rm.L .~bath,
m.ltr bdrm .with ocean 'view MJ::),000. •.
West Bay bayfront. SllP.S for 2 boats,
remodeled 3 bdrm, 3 bath $1,200,000.
Ocean & jetty views. Marine room, 4
bdnn, 3 bath, 3700 sq.ft. Sl,38.5,000.
LIDO ISi.i HOMIS
Prirne Lldo Nord ba.vfront. 5 bdrm, 5 bath. {4e L. R. 2 boafalipe $1,500,000.
Remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath + large rec. rm. beam ceilings, $420,000.
&MA Ill.I IADIONT
· Lagoon view from 6 bdrm, 5 bath playroom, dark rm, den. $1,350,000! '
CAIMATION COYI
Spect4cular bayfront view 4 bdrm, 4 bath, 2 boat slips Sl,900,000.
BILL GRUN DY. RF.Al TOR
' t ' ' I I f~
VllWLOT
COIOMA Da Mil
(,11ofce location with bay
and ocean views 75'.
finanttn1. $llt95. 000
A Division of
Harbor Investment Co
llVNT81ACI
4IDIM-FU &&ony ll&ht n·bri&bt and new oo the marbt with
brick front. aide and re· ar patloe, hardwood par-
' Se I floor l n & • bout. Excel. loca· tioo · eu than 100 paces
Sllll,900 will make it yours C harmin~ 4 Br --------wBktrlrep!!~ all now $5,000. DO"WH ~~ -IYOWMll
SUMSIT l"IM Terroce
()PIM HOUSE 2 Bdr. + Conv den, l'•
Come • enjoy the sun Ba. cnr lot. pool+spa.
settan( over Catalina Isl immed occupancy As
from Spyglass Hill Fri. sume ei1st rinanc1n11. 4·7PM . 23 Half Moon OWC.955-007=..3 __ _
Bay. Bruce " Vickie si Owner Blomiren . Good
Properties. 760--0297 DM ~lex
........... 1006 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Earn 16',t on Balboa laland trust deeds Over
Pnde ol ownership Ex
tra wldr lot Best loca tion Pri red under
ma rile! $339 ,500
1·9'2·8.W>
•••••••••••••••••••••••
DESPllATll Woodbrid&e 3Br 2ba, I
yr new Low down as-
sume loans Need Cast
sale. SOCCES.5 REALTY
549.7991
Uruversity Parlt 4 BR. 21, BA. Fam room . ereen·
belt location. cobble
stone drive " entry. · many xtras! Must see!
1175,000. w1 min dn
0 WC at l 2 '• '• Owner/agnt 552-8046 or
(702! 588-812.3
U...~Portl
. 25°' 50'...equity. Short or long /0 t.enn $5000 minimum •••••••••••••••••• •• ••,
• umts Three 2 .. .._.sty, IUr MEIDOM HOUSE
Cotta Mftcl I 0 24
2BR 2ba, 2 car 1arage.
cozy (rplc, nr schools.
shops, Cwys Vacant. re
ad y ror occupancy
SW.000
644· 1.395 644-6397
_.... Bdrms. assunublt> loan 675-28'6 38r I Ba 1 d -H~ 1 -0 n I y $1 1 5 . 0 00 (.'a II I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!! I a rge Y ar ISLOCATIOH
IMPORT£HT7 You bet lt"~f So settle
YOUI fUW ~9161 $95.000 . . 641·0763, Agt
What could be• better lallOoP .. Mlla I 007 ------• la•ettmeat ha f11tvrt ••••••••••••••••• •••• •• MESA VElDE your ram1l y into
Uuversity Park This 2
bdnn. 2 ba has central \ C and a covered patio
Wilh1.11 walking d1stanre to pools. Hhools and
sho!>l>1na. Sl39.SOO.
doUanandt.betoodllfe Penln Pt home . 2bdrm. 3bdrm,2bath,frplc.dbl
tban an attractlYe 2•:rba, den Xlnt cond. farage. A I ro nd dupln la tile moet new rrpt Owner will 134,500 Owner wall as
d ea I ra ble area of corulder long escrow sist in financing
C oron a de I 11 ar. wm••B!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!l'll Will finance $415,000 lloy McCordlt, RJtr. lmaalne lbe beach Owner1AJ!: 675 5134 _ 541-7729 r.:!'!.oe::tiei~nl;:! TENNIS? I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~·
ftuDce It. lm,ODO. The ooly Lot m Cyprus CoroM .. M• I OZ * MESA VERDE * Cove S11n t'lt.'mentt' •••••••••••••••••••••• WlntPOOLANDSPA
4'rrc& Crom both Tenn1b 3 Prime DtmleXH Spacious 3 Bdrm. 2 ba
Couru " Clubhoui.e l~I 3 Bdr + J Brdf Auume Beautiful area S~.000 time of(rn:.od ' firm al $290.000 mloans Asking dn Asking $240.000 $185.000 Penni mun & S389 000 $1605/mo pymt PP. 1\gt
Companv 851 1000 2 Br + 2 Br. Ko of 700-7~
baYl11deS389.000 NlWCOMDO SO DM •a:.'h ,. ........ "'""-I 4Br + 2 Br. Jumbo _·_r :,l(lent~l5737 w'~~~~ ~.so orh .. \ $449.000
' ~-------Cllll ror mon: detutl~. E+ 1~~~· ::t:lm ~ LCllJ!lm leodt I 041
Dirrell. Pui.h . agt $10.000 d wn Ca 11 ••••••••••••••••••·•~==
-- -
Re/Max 7~·1221 Chnstina 557-2783. A Lot.
WANTED. 2 3 BR in ;;;;;;; ... _;;;,,.-... _ For A Uttl.
Shorerllffl,, Old t'tlM. LIASE/orTIOM I arre + bldg site. gent· 8.tl 1.sle Fee on" P P h ~loping parrrl short
644 1184 Or~ Eqlity dllitanre from tennis &
* ~ • I t
00 • s::: •(J)
~
• >< Q)
•
~ • , t
WTSlDECOMDO be:u·h o .. nr.h as In 2 master Mitff rluded plans ror custom S 119,500 \ 11111 sm.ooo Spec
6 75-1771 tacular \"le.ws ~ MIS.SION RE \LTV
DAllLING !
This rlawle11s Easts1dt-Cctita Mt'!>a home o(fers
3 Bdrms. 2 baths and 1~
•in excel l"Ond PerfcC'I
for 3l1lve family hnng
or entertaining An out
st anding \alue ,it
$159.9~0 o .. ner .. 111
f1nanre Call J ohn
Campbell for rurther tn
formation
ROGHS •EALTY
67S.231 I
~0731
M1n1 Resort \t o p
Portofino's Peak Spec tarular view honw with
pool & property 2 BR. 2
BA . d e n. lib rary ~.000 Superb owner
financing. Call owner
direnl~-. d~s. 54S 1166.
~-s .t99-~
8~ Owner l.aguna
Beach 2 Ston Ocean Can\On \"1e w~ IBR.
38,\ 2 (rplt"s Complete
t1ld lnlaw ,\pt Lr.: Lot
$350,000 Owner o1i.~1st
Financ1.11g 494 4819
La1J1M HicJ-t I 0 52 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •OCEAN VIEW•
Niguel Shore s townhouse . la rgest
model 1289.000 ownr
63-9-Ul
•VIEW HO SE•
J br.2ba $139.500 Super
term'I Owner, 495.5701._
L* FoNst • I 055
MESAYHDE 4BR. JBA. Fam Rm .
Pool. Spa OWC Assumr
Ex:lstin& Loans Equity Sharing Straight Note « Trade. $185.000 R~ ••• .. ••••••••••••• ••• ••
Owner fm.5814
*VA 111/JO/o * JBR+ l ':ba. 76K a ~I w1J>OIS S5500 dn prinonly. Bkr667-3863
ONE YEAR YOUNG: 4 bedroom 21 2 bath home
near South Coast Plaza
Ideal for the rrowing familv Form11 dinfog
room. f11m i l~· room. crackling rtreplace.
Prore111onal l ~·
landsraped yard
S204,900 and owner will
help finance Call for de·
tads m 2390
~
LWEorTIOM
$4,000
Pnvate 4 bedroom. 2
bath hoov that shows
llke a model. O\·cr 1000
SC\Uan! feet of del'klng
wtth spa O\erlooking
secluded crre k a nd
woods Formal dining
room . Z c u i.toin fireplaces. plush r11rpel-
ing, wood plllnk nooring
In ltHc hen and nook area, and atrium orr the
Camlly room mttke this home a true delight
1314.000 with assumable
fil'll loan o( Sl59.453 "t 1212' •• Submit terms to
owner.
a;roz~ i:· J!e';4::.i,
48r. 2t"~ patio.1 .. •••••I!!!!!! f~. dbl lllr. bltns. I"!!
dshwsbr, etc Graduated If Yolf'N bl llile .. "et payme nts 13·, rtxed fora~elt,l»eRlft
rate. 1139.500. 2960 Ro~ttl toe'-' tJio •llJ •lllOI
Palm Or Owner1bu. ad¥trtiMd for Hie la
&a.774.'f -Qllllfted.=="-----'""" ..... ..... ~ ............... .
__ ....__, ---.
l I
. ,
REIM~
~
Walker & lee
Re11l lt;tnte
I \q I~ J
~Sat/S.• 11·5 New 3 sty lieachhouse 1911 Court Street
WalJt In ot call. 87~2291 or848-3133
TAICEOVR
811/t't loan al 1786 per mo or $25,000 down,
OWC balance S BR 3 Ba,
lovely 2 sty, $245,000
S46-Sllll0 or 631-7215 evs
Vince
•. HERITAGE t
REALTORS f -~ --~
llACM con AGE
<:oiy 2 Bdrm home with
fireplace. Just a block to
ocean. Formal dining
room\ bulltln kitchen and aundry roo m ~
1 wlth new plumblnf Own«wtll finance. On y
SIS5.000. Ca l l An n Petm.
64i.s200
J PETE
BARREn
REALTY
7.1 XGIOSS!
8 UNITS in high demand
rental area. Assume ex·
isling financing of
1150.000 al 1 0'~ and owner will carry Full
price $240,000. Ca II ms3'1o.
ALLSTATE
REALTORS .
5 unit, C.M. Apl. 1980
priced.1258,0(IOOWC.
$45-207 s 548·5 7 63
MIWPOIT HEIGHTS ii!!~!ll!lll-!!!!iii!!Mf TRI· PLEX owe 12v.·;. 10'"-1mprov
,... 1076 to the value ratio S.-1•• SZS0.000 BYCO. INC ....................... scs-ps1
• -P C ' " I .. ·-... "'"'
Oldest & largest agency.
All cbents screened 'll'ith photos & references.
l.'rt!dils : Cog mo poli tan. Good Morning America,
The Tomorrow Show.
~
. •
J~~~I; Olilelliwn• rit11 .., e ·, tti O.ebl ,.. •• ,, .. •••••••••••• • ....................... .; •••••• i. ....................... ................. ............. •••••••• ~ .............................................................. . • -lll!!l!~ll!!lmllf......._.li • .iQ Mill ·-~1 Crow1 mo1ld1a1 TUii 1••'9AUAl1.I '"WUC&'tuAM1 •aar·-'I• ..._..1 ._. ,..,.....bflkMH ·,.;tu.-...aJw.a1rt1 <* ~~ ... u .... .,.11 Hit•' 1 peel 4 PROM'Pi'"n11ar. inVJC1.ain.1 w~i.o.a1 ·~i:!t...-11r ..... Ut,r.. •hnot ••CMiMl·M ~ .... aAa. ca~lattt. aardwHd op ~rtmolt ' ti· ALMOSTIVllY Owatrw. llWflttvt AD1)1!!1 IQ.'\UI n..-......a."Ms..lM .....,loraJ~n. tU I ·' llil. llY/4'11 . .._au: ......_to WtOd pro-Pllt_..J ... ~1 a•wur• IEPAllN£!DD. ._ ~i.......-~1eut.n1 ---~ ::=. n:.iik at~
Ill:. Gu.r tllm.. WHYN01'0N&or ~. •. Pie ............. _..........2 •11 - -UC p 11 lYI m•; ... --.,Gl·JUI nor-•on·MT DAVltu-475'1 -r· • -,_ t II I ,,._...__, .... Neff:"................ P1t1edar. ,..&tr. D-• TBJ;BEITI Slmmoa.a Hi14HMflMn call C:.rel. NMIG3 aft. PLAITZR PATCRlNO iVDon•ttAmiU:~d· IS rn tsp, Ue. dttl. MAMIOATSllY. u 1ft ~· Do worll -.................... a...,,...._. ....................... 4:00. a.tuccoe. Ja&/eat. ao LO.mm lml.JobtOIC Blll*d. IDI. U.. Color
l1ft' /D:T Q.IANJNO ... . SU.0101 ~~. ~r.-u::u:~··, DD Ludtcape Malnt. HARDWOOD n.ooas Elper D11 W4d m . N.at. PayJ "5-Jm no.ea. iu. t4Msit aprt. -..u Diel
SL•lfl. lap'd • dtpea. Moa..m1Noaampoo ,.,.._., 8.,....,t ..0 "-kl/Comm. c&eai,·'*P· _ __.ae.~ued. c~.. OUAUrY Nai&petdM!lttnwra c-A.o.J"'" 111 I'm lmall-Mf 9rtce1 dllllt.Allo~.Ttdor 1ta111-..i11ttPut ...-...., i:-. uH ... "-i•ff.,,._ 111111 --a <Uta.rtqul'9d) .....__ .... n•1 .. 39 ...... ...,--Ill are1m1UICdll,NB. ' lftaaW .._ ~ · ,,_,_ ormttrvlow. ...... • -·-n..... · Ev11 ~r • _,................... Elp'd. Rent11-14'11 . ..., ... ..-t1t.•J.111 IW.fl!l. (llJ)!fl•Jm, FormlDI On BUS'lnet1; ...... .,..,. ID'SPLAST!BINO INDU91'1UALHWINO -...,. c:-.t/c..u.tt .......,. 4 Yn ~p. Ll.Qdacapln1, ...................... , IQ.Dlf W-42$9 AU 1'>'Pel lat. or Eitt. #JCt!l'TING al fabJ'te• ~~ J#'=f. ....................... -.... ~~· .. ••: ..... , ::I."::............... OrdQa ' Brick Patl01. •=::v°t:Joba ~. exper. r•· 86a2:!I Freent. h.Umatet ~-0450 Im.,,_.. 731.ml ISMCI •SOM THOllPIOH I DRYWALL/AOOVSTJC Gnt4. Prof. Strvict at M Ua.-' rtfcr. Call Jodi PLASTEA 4mrcco ..... , -
.......... ctlM'I OONCUT&~!'J1l· M~exp.f\&U1Mc'd6 ~~&lb re .toJ~•H. c.an IKl141-11t1 IGtl.8' Bepljr.HojobtoOlml .•• :.................... CU9TOIUNT/!XT AMMio..remoclellns Uc.... ....1412 ......... •·'541 -.11.5 (1-9 :ri/r.. HAUUNGADUllP lloultdHDiDI •••kly, ~~ ••llYU6HTS•*" EXPEATS!RVICE
Doon, w..._., paUo DRYWALL'l'APP''G Gudtnla1-Compl. JOM,uUO..Randy, bl·mollWy, reU1, reu. .. 1 · II d LOWRATES ecwen. 1rettlt. a.... ,.___._,.. ""•-·-••....!:ti" c.leao "I)• free ballli.na Ml-1427 rat11. Stacey 648-llU ft •• • All Shu I Ht• e . N\J.BftOOK 54S-11'15
,,_.,...,..,.. ~ 1\11....,. ... ._ "v...." f ·--.. •-t ref •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• GreatPri.te1Ul--t2S5 G .......... -Ml-ll70 -............................ lttvlnff5-IOll or ..... .c tem1. QIAMUPYOUIACT · Dn.lnadearedtrom•10 ,.· ' HEUIONSPAlNTIN
rtNEHOll! 8-1'1CenmlcTflt Nicb,.184.5-6134 TODAY! YIJ'd/11ra1t ... ,. PlwnbAniRepaln Int/Eld Resld/Comm
lllPROVEllENTS l'loan·sa.owen·Tuba .......... Oudtnln1W1.11ted cln-up, etc. 1 ton truck. ••••••••HHt•tt••••••• f'l'eeeat.KUS42--t033 ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• Atouldc mll.n11. Reta, 'r I I Addltiaail6Remodelina Call!!l,)'tim!fJZ..4131 ~.tt;ii••• .... •••u•• llow\nl.edaiol.raklnJ, ps.G1·11D(2'hn) EXPU.Pl!PARER ATLASPLUMBJNG• A11LEU"'-~S'rG•~~~~~__. llc'd.Freeest.U7·21U7
.............. ,....... . rt-f~.u;:~c:: 1 weep In I · Pree HaullDi/cleu-up, dirt, lllrolltd to practice BEATING-BEPAJR ..,._ _......._.. PAIN'tER NIEDS
P/IQ&rles-l)o.8*mta -.....,._ -estimates. 645·4372 or •ht"b/t ..... t"'-, etc. blfelft the IRS. QuUty Ida Jolm8'C)..'211 WORK-30vnn:lftlllt Oamfl.Set·-6Serv. I TK _ _. 1 larltottmaUjobl. ~ '" ·~" Jiau ... -• ·-""lt REPLACE MS-J.Sll ,.. .... _Cer•-l"Tile _. .. _ . ..:, · .,__ ..... 1un co11t 010· ............... ••••••• j Uc.tWll l'Ts-G351 . Jl!lk.traah.841-49M .reu . .,_.._.,.. ~ --~ 1._..-ct p .
-==----"-UO..;;;;;..;:;SIM=· camera Chlldc1r-e, run Tlmt. D ...... /COllll'L CUSTOM GARDENING uun n.in ~-~-11l b.u FEDERATED • Prom!ltlH'V. FrHat. O.vilPalDtillcMf·5111 ~ ...__._ .. _. .. _ II ,... ~ D-'.l'l/Co 'l ....,. ............. ~-·~T e-I ri ;utyN••• .,.. dluckf7$.140I ... _G
Uc. --Tl ....... ~ ~-.. Br~ .... '1· 1'-9 1 a rn uo. Do mv own .._ 111111 Ip truck Lowett rate ._...... u_.rv ce ............. •••••••••• PaiallaC'•UJC ame, .............. -.,.._ ....., .. 1-.:r, 1 CA·Q1!.m.15'1'1,X4.J Pnlmlit.Cau75f.ma. · 611-C71for1pet. 25Yrabp.Free~t. Pedenm'1tbeName!
AU.81'ATEPAVJNG · "MskWCOMSTI. . MW1G 1 ~0U~~~ THEORASSHOPPER 'Ifiankyou,John. tim• r =~ ~~~Goar Lic.m5S4 S42--01112 ~-~Jt:es C\lltom bome1, rram· Qui. wort . Reu rates Complete lawn ma~t. TREJS/SHJlUB TRIM ....................... Onnp Co aNa 1S 1 Hie palntill1·coll.1rad
Uc. ..a.z m.~i Int, realOdel, Freacb a. mb 1 Senicft f\-ees. as.son Tom Indoor plant specialist GAraaefl Yd Cleao·upe BRICKWORK : 81111 II a:perience. Call io itl,n rr... s.r.lc• 1'" ap, quality work. ~. lt)'tit.btl 6 paUe ...................... , Dominlcl(Z..~l Fl'eeest. 557-8271 Jobs, Newport, Co1ta andrata · r 0• 1 ...................... , Lowrata.DanaM&-119 ~"""a:=~ t'O¥Wl.tta.31SZ PEP ouu.s clea,1111 'IOPQUAUTY Demolitioo·Gradlll1 ::~is. Irvine. Reh. t6u112 •EKpert'l'retPnmlns• L.J.8. PAJNTJNG "'f:sAapbalt c:........... M'Vlce. Jlomea.Offtca· Electrical work at ._... Strtlcn Transport. Aipbalt, Con· CommerdaJ t..odtcape QUAJJTY. REAS. Uc -4111 -.................... Aetl-~ .Reu.rata. U1·505S ....................... c~ fr tree remo·val. ClatomBri(kMuoory R.E.bnlterwillmanase Services 851·8388 L.amN.S-1313at\.i
CUSTOllCABINETS ElectrlcourSptclaltyl TreeTrim•Removal Soil pre9 • plaotlns. Compl. yard con1truc· your olftce bid& lo rt· JAY!TREECARE ~ty Palnlint at nas .
....... ,. . IOt.,ban,Jar.Wlill. C1 Jeadwa. .... r.. Oelll, quick, depend•· HomeRepaJrs ()peratedequlp.Comm'I tion, pool decka •,tum for office. Bkkpc Complete 1ervlce and rates, Int, ext, ru.
•-•"............. ML MS-ml/549·1AS ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ble. Wedo any 11lejob. •989Sor87S.9CM3 6Restd1. 842-78311 mclolura. Loe1I refs. 'aerv. avail. 548·192'7 lt1amf.i 1rindtn1. 10 yrs comm, reh. M Ike , ~~~ Lf~:~f· C:.,.•11 Hw ~ •IS.11·2345• 14/hr'Labor. JU·SZO MMl512 I ....... exp. c. Ina. 840-9308 ...;4'7::.:...:·*'=-----ft:";b;; ~ ....................... All pbues, Uc. bonded, Toc>Quallty/Reaa. Ratel Gii u& g Mov•Haulln1·Dumpln1 Hart Muonry. Brtclt, .:.!:!!.! ............ TreeTrimln1, clean upa, 00/EXTPAJNTING • · 'FINE rtN1SH WORK ellJU. Free est 6 adtlce Pril. bachelor bome1 ....................... 754-98CM/9M-OOM Martt Bloc:k, Concrete. Ref. · J.D. ffolon..Relinlahin& Month,y aervlce !rH est. Quality work. Reu. Wt.... . . Remodelhll/Doonbun1 AlleftC:C.SHllike) (2U)43M807 TRACTOR, Ideal for Uc. 3118214. 846-1597 in 848 7558 Tony a Tree ..... -.,._ u7 ·-1
R....a..-•wcdll -. ...-1----...... u ac-s ar•as, ff" If •*• .. I Antiques, kit. cab ell. · , rree-•. """'ve.,,. ·-.-_................ ~·.,.,.~ _,,,.... __ ._. --'"""' "' ..., -MuonryourSpeclalty! Jlnepaintia&.645-0664 Servtce BOGDANOVPAINTING TllllOM TOUI CAI QIAR RENOVATING. ADD'NS/UllODEUNG .... C..-'--w1de Kubota d:iploader. ....................... ae1n. ~ck, depend•· --·-~ ..I Pl Ll 'd G ... ..., p>hr. lnl'f1. 1142.5009 Wam a REALLY CLEAN blie w I job ,...... 1B yn o.c . Top qualitJ. _._ .. wu. 41 mo. Int/at, cablneu, boat au. c . eor1e .... ••••••••••••••••••• llOUSE? can Gl.nlbam . e any• ze . ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Neal St. lie. 334950 .
. 1SNll07/7SJ. dos;b.25m.M5-3Td Pllmer'6SoGl,S5'1 .. 32. CarpetHo 6VUnol!"°' Ftor H ... Girl. Pteeett. N.S-51Z3 •831-Z3i5• ....................... VOYAAGEea l'RANCE? ~/0.1116 me an 6 'Mo or• ~,111111 -..... ... _ _._ II PBOP.POUSHING CUSTOllADDITJONS Addltiona, remodel1, • aonnttS""E""''"'G EXPERTBRICKAND c-.u.•-c•.t.L --.-•pvt t_...&, a QU"'"""INT/EXT a.vtceatjourbome or Kitchen remod .. bome improvement, lloml.IC7'""'6Dave. ....................... _. .. " ... "' .. u-. lluonry. Small Jobs' ucw-"" levels, llex. time. Call "'-"•'
...... Rlckl'T~ Skylltet. Rell. Bill wtndon. doon. paliol, Carpentry .Muonry Servi~athof'O'llbl.J repaln. Frplc facLn1s . ~L 558-7255aft 5Pm Uc'd.hfs.f'reeHt.
~ r v e • a ya , r e · ~ _.. nal ..... 1._, ..... v•4 _..,.. a.-•• • related skills d I ....__._ ~ I Roall.n1 · Plumbln~ dellllbol&M. 540-GISi n.J •• ~··· 7/U\7...,. -. ... ,,.1 • •*t41-1087• •
....... ----------• plumbin1. etc. Lie. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Drywall·SWcco·T e ExpertiaelloUlekeepln1 T\ar11 lo1t or unused ·-· · ~ty Pt& Low winter ............. •••••••••• ••••• Pb •f'RENCHOOORS• Renx>del. J.B.846·9990 &lipptielfu.rn.1ahed UNDSCP/lllASONRY space into a worttable Cndmbaltd, esp, car· nl.el in eifea Honest l~,oarClilbomea,1 1\reddPlal.nWalla?ln· :mm. MO-OU5 10 Pl1Mt lnatalled, 6'1 GeneralMaintenance -....._... .. ~ 1157-111« Concrete Llc,i.Ds. area.rooms d1'v'd•d, ·~SpecialirJn11rades reliable948M ' ___ ,_ b v I ' _., .. __ • ... .. --....,,. • 2IO ....... Free eat. 531-0114 • "' 1 (. rH ........ • . yr .,....,..._. crease t e a ue JM1!1d9Sws9-.... ._opeoaq,.,$0com·. RepairsfrDecor1tin& ~ drywall, drop ceilings' """'""
sa.MBZ,648-S75' Beauty ol YOW' Home Fteedesip]freeest pt <galDted)&te).1085 I •Q!Wity• Ray840-51« ........ trim Ul)lenlf')'·t.o co.m·
8abJsit. our CK.homes, 1 With The Rlcbne1s of Room additions, tenant .. HOME IMPROVEMENT IMMACULA Tl ••••••••••••••••••••••• pletiosl. Call Tom or Jeff
,, • ..,,uytlme. "Sotl.dWood.--1 i m pro Yemen t, in · PaLMe ltflnl1lllng I REPAIR· PLUMBING a. ... S..lcet *A-I MOVlMe * at86H9U orf93.3886
ww.wca.rb1 ,...... ....................... . .................... .
''Let I.be SUnshlne In'· HANGING SlO/RO LL
SO. NS-575' Custom Carpentry By IW'IJICe work, decks, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Heating. carpentry , Homea~$5ottica Top Quality. Special
8aby11ttle1 Mon·Frl. "Jay" <Jormica ' petD •SPECIAL• , elec:, tile. Free esJ. No care in handlin1. 25 yrs ....
Call &tnshine Window Slrippinf-diac on paper
Cleaain11 Ud. 548·1853 Visa/MC-645-9325
Newbern to z .,,.. 6 to Tile) 642·ll09 or Call 1'7CMI067 Uc 313174 Any chair band·stripped jobtooamaU. 645-2811 Home cleaner. I'm relia ap. Competitive rates ...................... .
5:311. Cll.80-21115 · ::=,'a.A.!.1620 •t RDIODEL/ADD-ONS or reslued, S19.75. A Rep al rs Pa In tin & ble. lhorouah• have ref. Noovertime. 730-1353 REPAJR.SFOR LESS
•RESIDENTIAL• UC. PAPER HANGER
Ave 1 sty ~; avg 2 sty lk>nded • iuar. No job
TenderLovl.n&Care · &Carpentry.Uc'd. Touch Of Cius Jn. c.arpentry'.Clutstian,re'. fB/hr.96M8l8. SJ'ARVINGCOLLEGE Sbinllea, flat. 30 yrs
Bab)'llttina.anytlme. e.petS..ke 25yn. lnrin548·2719 terien, 111 W. 17th St. liable887·9262 HomecJeanin&:depcnda STUDENTSMOVlNG exp.Pteeest.n~2725 $45. Chris 957-83118 too SIDI Dor too Large.
ClearVlew Wlndows Free est. Tony 898'2728
Refa. C.M. m. ....................... IA2, C.M. 642·1'112 JACK OF ALL TRADES b&e. booest. Cleaned le 00 Uc. IT124-436. BALBOA ROOFING CO.
INFANTS 6 UP cared WeCareCrpt Cleaners c:c.,.onitlw . Call day or night your aa t la fact I on insured. 841-8427 'Ibeonly roding co. with
Xlotservice, free est WALLPAPER Km 673·11618 All kinds. Free est.
• C .. h Stumclean•upboll. .. ..................... h ..... , •JacltS7S·30l4.. 554-4454 WAreHUSGROW! conatruction rebates. '°'• 111,1 ·•· ome 11 Tnlcltmo1111tunlt CO..OIATIOHS ....................... m.67431673-8229 SJ'ARVING ACTORS SU/roll. Uc. 330M6
MOVINGOOMPANY Norm645-0880 :is-:.Placentia; C.M. Workl\&!f. 845-3716 6PARTNERSHIPS Landscapln&·Yd Clnups Muon.ry·Caryentry.Tile HIYUOalethin1J0Uwaru SELL idle llems with a lilbel'Rocllin&·alltypcs.
wbat you want in Form.!d by Attorneys Treetrim·Expert malnl. Plumb-Roo<1ng-Remod to sell? Cluallied ad• do Dally Pilot Cl111ifl\d Nft·recover·declts. Fut • Careful. Lowest nlE PAPER HANGER
Ratel Law Allow1. M /C Prol .• qua.lily wort. Sell idle lte!D.9 Dall PUot Cluaifieds. Real. rates. Ml-5700 Jim 851-0129 Stucco-Orywall 536·8'700 It well.~. Ad. Uc ffl1802. 548-9734 Vlaa. Uc 111. 613-0IW P'1'ft est. Steve 54?-4281
....... _.. 4300 Offkea..t• 4400 l....,.alR ... al 4500 Mart1111a. Trwt Lost&Follld 5100 Lolt&'-d ....................... ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,.. 5035 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Shatt 2br apt w/pool • 'l B .. 3975 Birch 8860 sq ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------·OSt . Pl-a"il r eturn --"'mo.G .. :.&wl1 vJ v.c. ... Mo-Pnvaleorrice/ ft.orl~ Mll\tc:ie.50< SaltlerM~Co. -"'""' -__, r A ··ROSIE". sn:.is:d Sllll " 642-5073or645·3026. parlung tkitchenettespc per sq l gent FOUND ADS ,..-F Rmmt sbr Spacious Ul600MainSt Hunt Bch. S41·S032. AU types 6f r al estate pepper Fem hnauil'r
2BR ZBA FuU Fae CM Datly Jantr All ut.tl pd Industrial bldg. 6000 sq. 11111estmenu since l!M9 ID( fl(( t.aken from l..A.'i!ptr's t\n
Apt. 'po. Ellen, 545·435§ Avlll now! (714 )848·3133 ft w/sprinklers. Ir" rear Speci.!:'..,t' a NI :\'i:.1·~ lj't~1Wi~A
Reep Matur~ F 25 JS . overhead door & en«d &all Dog needs medication Needed to sbr 2BR. 28A Newport Beach. pn me ~djoil11ng paved park· 64 171 54 061 64•5s;678 Owner be1rt broken
inCdM S325 + 11 util Peninsula location, 300 IN Comer of Redhill• ..-Generous reward 0)"S 7~3873 sq ft 2offictsultes.S300 Paularino . C .~ .__Ills/ 631-6190. eni. arts.
Proto .,.. -w/ JOb •o perm> Marte 673-6606 SG-9671. PtnMlflls/ ., .--a. d '-oy 1198-3543 shr~in~ Ava~t tlficeSpaceforLease 13X>-3000 sq rt by Npt Lost&FoW U:.fc';:h ,.Palm
M 1 1 'MS.61126 Corona del Mar fwy & 4«> fwy · From ••••••••••••••••••••••• Huntington Beach. Sat Lo& Sia me st Cal. ma It. I ar ... , 67~9510 rso4 Mr 0 . Keer e ·~--Ao. s I 00 I Jan 23rd gr .... n collar M/F 30-50 to shr w F ~1·89?.8 -"" n ntutued. &nay Cross ONE BUC TO BEACH f'riw. tt..t. ltoch loc. •-=~~-----••••••••••••••••••••••·, REWARD 536 ·3286. iryed ··Marsbmellow".
Balboa P.eninsula Pt X Luxury office suites for Rent-5.ooo sq rt •n· PREGMAMT? S36-47S8 Trad ew1ndr. Ln . lg2Bdr. 28ath Apt 1700 avail.1mmed just south dustrial bldg. Avail &m· Pregnancy teat in&. Z '\ewanl $50 for lost c·at. Baycrest. NB REWARD ~ft. $3So1mo yrly, util of 405 Ftwy on high ex· med For more in fo call min. slide or early deter Gray lblk iwht Tabby. 646-
673·5622 aft 6P M posure Beach Blvd. Full .6§§68l tioo. All methods of birth I', yrs old Lost in CdM Found dog on pu bit c Ol62ex312AJln service Ca ll agent Industrial Park Units for control Abortion. 24 hr 4l.h&lris.640-5008eves. bearh. M1wh1te lblk & c:~c. view sec. gate. IMZ-6636 :rrteaseoo sq. 1500ft.' ulru~ts' 3000Ava1·'1 help tine Conridential -1e who are seeltins grey. call to desrnbe ..,..... ~1 i •-Ch oc Women"sCenler, 1125 E • .,.,... f" SJ6.0476 pool, Jae. i-. B S245/mo Attract ve .,. eap for immed. occupancy 17th St., llllOEaat ~apartment l~lt irst ---± lt.hsekpg. 760·9307 Airport 760-1694 eves: Office & warehouse 547_o.aoc in Cluslfled. Will your F'ound· Ba~r.ett Hound 966-0644dus space with carcets . ___ '!I.11..Jl_ ad be there? To place Puppy. Baycrest arl'a
-646·100 hwt HEWPORTIEACH drapes & wet ars WantAdttelD'I 1>4;:-5§18 yourad,call642·5678
far'l...t 435 ,AJRPORT: Custom of· 36•·38' a sq. rt Cati
...................... fit'eS, 600 to 1800 sq ft. 64i-4463, Mon-Fri 8-5.
Garage, storage only. rull From 90' per slf. Storage 4550
or partia I. Mullan RI l . 540-2960 ... • •, • • • • •• • •• • • • • • • • •
891·141Sda sonl -------• itorage·R. v .·tr ailer·
......... eo.c ...
F\&11 serv1ce/cu:l!m
office & desk space Nr 0 C Airport "See to Apprttiate ! · · 7S9-8978
boat. C.M $35/mo Kirk
631-0900.
!bat, RV. Auto storaJ!1 fenced. secure. CM 1251mo M6-1668
tlllfall Wcmhd 4600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -lelen"s Home for retlred
Blimp Pilots needs new loc. C.M. &N.B. 2bdrms,
$400 or Wlder 642·530S eves bt wn 6-8pm .
••••••••••••••••••••••• lllMneu .. ~ .... ?~!~
-------:DSING LEASE quit· ting business, sellln& out MEWPOllY CEMTH
&celewt OHJc.
SOOt=sqft
Available for Lease
ALL s1.11>plies and fix· haes inclilding :
Display cases. waiting room cbalr$, Beauty
• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
What a neat way to send a Valentine message to your
sweetheart, wife, husband, parents, grandparents,
boss, teacher, or fri.erllb ..
Your own personal meuage wiU awear in our
special Love Lines columm Wednesday , Februart1110.
Mail the coupon below witft your medage & payment
to: Cla.slified Love Lines, Irvine Mirror, P.O. Ben:
1560, Costa Mesa 92626 or call 642-1667, and we will
bill you.
------------------------------Pleas. publish my Valentlne messaoe as wrttttn below on
Wednesday, Feb. 10. (Write one word per space. 3 line minimum.
Compute char!M at tnd of line.I
I
..
.19 '
---1.32
____ 1.85
____ 1.11
---"""2.a1
Addltlonel llMS 1t 33' per llnt.
Name ............................. ·-............... .
f
8-DA Y· WEEK SPECIAL
8 Days • 3 llnH • 8 Dollars
It s easy to place your 8-0ay Week Class1f1ed by mail and 1t
costs 1ust S8 -thats only a dollar a day1 To ouallfy for this
special offer. you musJ be a non·commerc1at user o ffering
merchandise for sale up to $800 per ad . and the price must
be in your ad The cost stays the same whether your ad
needs eight days selling time or 1ust one
Use one word in each box. About 4 words make one
class1f1ed line of type Mt rnmum ad is 3 lines Please print
plainly • ·
I r-~~~-+-~~~-+-~~~-+-~~~...po;.,,.......,.~
I
1r-~~~+-~~--i~~~--4~~~----1===
I S 1.00 1i--~~--t--~~-+~~~-+-~~~4-..;_;,...._--4
I 10.90
I jS.JD \r--~~~r---~~~i--~~-t~~~-+-------t
I 11.IO lr--~~~~~~~~~~--"~~~--"~--~-4
I Add $2.90 tor·each addttlonat fine for a tfme1
,.__~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---J
I I Publish my ad for 8 days starting _______ _ I Classification _____________ _
JName _______________ _ I Address ______________ _ l City Zip __ Phone ___ _
1 Check or M.O. enclosed O l Charge my ad to: ID # _________ Exp. __
l 0. #-----~~----Exp .___.__
L--~--------------------~-----~ r····-··· WE 1LL PAY THE POSTAGE
I
I I I
i BUSINESS REPLY LABEL
............. ,
NO ~TAGl NECESSARY
tF ,_.AILED
IN THE
UN!T(O STATES
I
I
I I I
5)00
,
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II t '. -...... P .... •nt N.I . otflct, .,,... llllHIDkr, ..,.,, • x.
C+ltmPlflTOll RIJ ~~q. Salary "'-· 5/llll a dal. I MU-,:1:r"' , . da,,law.-.AltorPll. MwVerdaC.v.ll&p. U...a.rt.LocW. ,..... ...... DINPAL SaWy opeo.W• req. 111c:..ra,,c.11. l1MDI
....-~ ,,,_ Gffte• , rr. cau <TI4~d111 . NS.a
CllltCertJMt-.r Ill tntat. bJ. ~ ~r1 1l•t1DforS Part'ftmt .... from 1 :10 to pat (frtbo, up. MlptUJ: yr boy • r.a!ttr. &an. DD;. idloboaualla s~us
1:10 UIJ 6 a 4111 wk IL lllDl.!09! NB Iii• olf. Non·1moller. Ccllt YoufU NW call oa 1111181dlaa.aopaaiftt for a ~~ ... !! olfw !~· ~ .•. as b; -·• ............... • ~~o~~ bAo111ard52•3•,,•JOI. pUl1IQM • oc Patdll l full·tlm• rudtt·•d ~-7,04alttaau· +U.CCllLlnq..ireaft -·--••'"'"' .,,.,..,.., • • Be..._ f.tPll &ma ·~WltldHforluldt tq baellta • .. rom TJ!!!!.~ laper'd RDA, f/tlme. PM. ,_,.,111,w .. 011>-.-PClllkklD. llu1t be
lilwtae. Por fOOlldto· .e,!•IT Nr.8.C. P!u.. 54Mlll. HOOSIXllP£R/AIDE 1119".eT.ull}!tt uaertlwt PfrtOCI trlth U.-....._,lad,.. Drlft'ALAU!'/RDA FareldtrlyAaiancouple PMttelepbone1akl U · ... ,/or,_•: Oood m1notr1 to UJllJ', Jm)(raJJve pre. bllW. Beb. Part/Ume. perience. Antr In ..:...:iicu..::;.;..;=.:...---
LOTllAN J~llV.P. wilt cNdlt mu11er veotatlve practice. IG-'1341aft. 7pm. S*'ICID. lllO Placentia -===-------
fGr ..... lmportedear .UmtCAM wtlb collectlooa. Ac· NB/lrVh1ure1.1S2·1320 _A_ve..,. ..... c_.11;..;.·----
dtalori•lp, M•ll ba ~IAlll .::::~.··ii:::: -Ol•l!r ~·-·-· ....... ~,L111SIADY mature and ti • 500,_.._.c.nterDr. llOIQPQY beoelltl. Ex· Datu. lftldeot Ii or· ·-"..__ n ...... ""' oo, T11ea •
l*tlHtd. lactlltat NIMNJetlO! M/F eerreoee preferred. I• •ibkPI exp. 'd17 USOI 'Ibara, 5pm-lpal 'S~t.,
;:.tdlcClllDdtU0111.CaJJ Good 1tartlo1 aalary. wt.Pdvtt.frMUdaya. Ruponalble, ulf· tSo:~-4J>m. E~pe1 fd, ~oo So. Cout Hwy, 1:cups Toy WO to
"'at ~ltbac• -··PIR P\lbU1bln1 trrrn Gear C.11..Ml-llOO. lltaltUIC ladlv., to pro-u Co11t au ~ 8eJeh. II.WI Peta eOarde.d ~...,.,,=~o.JCZl=LL..I I I( I S U BAR U _,.,_ .. ., Jobn Wayne AlfP.Ort. Dedilt '*' luwuce-annul 56'7-5'1M. WAJTRESS/WAITER ~cl. SM-ZM -"•=-=*--=•;.._. ____ , Pamiliar •~ taxallao Calllln. Eva,54Mas4. Ow .. IO... ty 1pplleatioD1 for Salel, p/Uma, TM Mole •/w foe wicker buket Ga.-b__. _.
&....&.-. M h I • 1«ret.ari1l Hrvice. l'\.JI Drt ' a • ti ,"d Flllbion Ill. lnvestmeat Hole, Udo Villa1e ell· J·-...... 11 "" .30pu ....... ., J>U,. •-PUN-llWIV tC an c Uaiqll.t b911DtU OP· ._very YU, O¥tr l ' .. oerp caper Assis· fl s ... ·-· ' ....... Ht'V ....... 1. -· PartDll frODl Cmnr w f/Ume, bri.n1MVll.190 ta.nt needed for buay rm. tatlatkal •P· PAITTM JW.!'!Q.v•-· Mon-Fri. Eam $150-1175 Fmle 12 •kl *UO ."l!\..~l~ ·~~ porta!!!x.~. ~C.M. pncttee. ptltude, b'PLD1. 10 key Upm. ElllUdiD.Uoatb SIWISl'llESS (Espert) wkly. lfuat be neat. ~ • .It
""comm. HUNT .. ,... Dltiverymeooverllfor 546-51'10AakforTonl =~~~~· coun11tto1 firm baa towortathoml."C.UC. pttlOllable•eneraetlc AXC Golde R &Ii
Atrl'O CINT!R, 1825 nallablt. Opportuntty LA T\mea to homes In OOMlSTJCS • . CIPIDIDli for J..S tlaarp AlU.lQ &G-3Mt for ln· 9'11·0'm art IOAM for Cb n e lleW
l..q\aoa Cyn Rd. Lac foe pr0cD90• to food C . M a am . 8 am . FUii-Time Position in cUICiDa mature people terview. lfflt, =· 6 w~Je4 $i\t "'wtn• M4M-lm,13Mt6f .-vfcer. PlaH loquire Economy car reqllired. Haebld Mana1ement. Journey Man/Skills to motivate ambitious SICU1' · ,
....................... betweeo ta.. boun ol 2 No co 11ectIn1 . NB Area. Dullea lad Malnt.enanet Mu with ~~oldl. CaUJ.SpGI. P.R.-•-.iev!i'.!.itloo Mlrrh•dlM S6-761S4. r!!l ~ ttnO:l!'r =p~~~~D =»ae:., Dove St., =/mo. + bonua. :::!ruif n1 D ~I S~nr:~ =~: ~~u:eb:1, ~· ut. SU. Aatror with 0.c. adv:rt"tatn1 ;;;:•: ......... iOOS ~~moa::r:if VS2fil ~/a~iweek band tools. Apply 1sz•o Dent.al Coll C'lertcal. Salary lncldl ~. l\aU time .M//. ~.t::[· Xlot lYPinl re· ....................... tolovin(bome.847·173'!
69 Gorceous !Iris to NetrDort Tire Center, Cabinet Worker Wanted -eetloo ie('y. Benef!U. EhlliahSpeak· 7:3MPM. S..lary: com· .._ m.7ooo. Cllaln. aet • cane seat ir........toy td45
eam I lllDOl:.CoutHwy,Cdll. •A Sbr Fully •-·"'pped ._...r.req. P/tJme,hrs. in • Rf R menaurate with U • ladder batll S200 Oak "°"' • Sa per you. acuu . -· .., .,...... flelt. N.8. area. M2·68110. I e • equired. perience Approx 18-110 ,......,. P~ l bk W , ••••••••••••••••••••• ..
1 una.11..ocals u ;en as Ba~itta' Sbop. 64MS21, Mt-1685 Dental ance Maniier. szt-21112 per br A ly . · Needed, par{ Ume . Work SICllTAIY /IXIC. a at <i,iSYJ., alnut cane Lovin& companJon, Jud¥, A':n~~1c'a~t' Ma'sre~ Loviqladytocarefor8 NB, restorative prac-Danutahop,p/time,AM , btwn iA~~12~::s~~ l.5t.o2Sbounperweek, PUIOllllel/Advertlalo1 :k~$50An~~~,2sLi!~ 5yroldCoc:kerSJ>aniM
Charge, American Ex· m>. old baby in my CdM MOWIS TMITIMI Uce, aeeb uper. ~am ooexper. necessary. Ap· send resume to· '111 W evenings and possibly Dept. hu openlnc per bench-MO II Steve646-9046 ·••
preu , Diners all home. ,,u mom. bn, forjobHekentocltick ortenled lndlv. looting ply In penon: Dippity 17th.St.UnltC·4.Costa Saturday.Esperiencein ~~ -~wpt,~ch. extr.·•"J.~PG:!nkif: F....._.. Hio
WelAAme 11•16•• 3433 H "'·-per w~ Refs th D ti Pll H I , hi bl lbl Doouta i••• Newport u -Ca .........., d b lldi rw .. .,;uu ae~v1ces arm. " w . , ,.,. . ""'1• """"'· • e a :y r11 ot e 1p 1or a I y reapona e 81 d. CM...,.. ....... a, . """"'. • u ng or pa1e Good typin& shorthand fiy , never uaed·S250., .................. ••11f•
2112 Harbor Bl. CM llCID·amour8'13· 7901 Wanted dasalflutJoo. If Po&ilioo returnln& a blch v • · · l..andacape, exp. rnaln· makeup dealrable. A bill· uper req. Non-smoker d1.n tbl·S25.. t wn bed * * I BUY * ...,-:
For total relaxation with Babysitter Needed. Tues, t.be job you wut la DOl level ol esteem . Xlnt fr. Editorial tena.nce personnel want· ty to won faat and ac· Call 6.,. ,.123 b t set·SYJ 751·0178 """' a proteaalonal massage. 11Ms 6 Fri. Hrs "es. there you ml1ht COD· in&e beneflta. 111100. + Experienced Editorial curately under pre11ure w-v e ween · Good uaed Furnifure. 4s
Steve lM, $<9·2817 Cll area. (Child a mo) alder orrerln1 your l.nceotlve if qualified. penoo, edltin&. rewrite, f 1io.eau call, •93·0935 neceaury. Salary de· •2· Beautiful Duncan Phyfe Appliaoces--OR I wtll
Lonely Toni1bt? Need ..,. ltl'Vk:es with all ad lo 631·a.I read 1a1te11 plus wide or 1 · peoda on uperlence. Dlninc room Table, 4 sell or SELL for You
Compaoy?CollMonlca the Job Wanted SefllhtnpfastwlthDilly ranceolrelatedtasb.2 LANDSCAPE The Da.ily Pilot la an SICUTAIY chairs. Antique gullded MASTBSAUCTIQQ
953-1822 · ... = . .Plaoad42·5'71 PilotWantAda' days per week. Non Esperlenced land· equal opportunity Mort&aie Company in ~:...::::536.1508 or 6464616,UJ.tUS" ~~-:~'\~~ec!~ ~.~c1~10:.1p1t1tan Ml• Pil·at ............. : ....... ·.: d;~~ef'd Call ~·":~-.~";~::·~~ :':~1:me~~~ !~ ~:r/or~e::c~et~~ Halltree. dll wood 1150., 20adtas !!:ws$981 . LM·
Leslie or Sylvia .........., ,,._ ~crow/Home loan ell· landscaping. Salary ccur.,edtoapply. with cood or ... nization stdf'r~!,~.,=1w/nlte ~a;ACTORY::f.;1'!&
AnY!.lme. 761·90.16 perience. Pitt time -to commeDIW'ale with ell ~bmlt 1pplic1Uo111 at sldl.IJ, eye for accuracy -==..::::~=.;:...;.;:~;..:..-==----...:z:_=.;:....:....:..:.=..::...:::.;:..::..;.;..;...:;.:.,Qa ~prof man desires WYSITTll C · A.iluer+Hi.Mr t'AI-· swt.15/br&»l20l perience.~1. rrootcou.nter. •attention to detul SpoolCabloet~ KING INNERSPRING ~y~nsuallady 18-lS Person needed to : Ufltu•rg ~ . , LEGALS"'"'RETARY lie.eat Non·smoker, salary Amer Looml:J00/080 EXTRA FIRM matlreM ~/Qlt~720-G296 bebJU Id . t hr A. ~Office ~ Piiot suoe.CaU : K&ue. 964-41111 set. never used. wor\tl -------•I .. _6.frro ~ 1/ : •£1tper. ne..p.per display 1ale1per1on-to • La1u.n1 Hills. Recent l ....._St ~ AMERICAN s,s30,sac 1248del.Never
1-..... & v1c1.:•s ewry""", Mon· . Will : haDdle ~81 aceaunta for Oraftce Cout Daill f\ill·tlme, permanent Calif probate ex -r • PLAYER PIANO used queen sz, wo~ UAMI II have to meet child after : Pilot. Salary, commission 111d txctUeat employment for am perience nttessary Ex C ... W.... CA. :::~ -1080 964 •""1 SJl8, cub only, $218 d~ •ISCOITS• ldool llt 1:55pm 6 keep : beneftta. Growth opportunltiet for peraon bltiou pe"on, 40 br ceUent t7pln1 6 S /H t -· ~ Usually home, 75''"7350
BACK•8 ETTER mitil approx. 2:4Spm. • •Ub career ambitions Send complete weet,aomenlctits6S.t akiUa req'd. Call Mrs iM•H-x Newp pro 'IWOOAXANTIQUE
.,... .. ..,c.oVER RS MUST BE DEPEN·: raumetollarjl Fendel Po Box 154!0 eo.ta ' Boott..nln1 exp. pre· Wlnalow for appt, Wo ....... _..tempor•ary jobs fesaional office desires DRESSERS,S12Sea '"'"'"" ! 24H DABLE. MUST. live: u-·CA.-No.....:.. ........ p'·:... ... --..-m•-•• u .. ,,_,,, MUSTSIU 669 0207 w1tJUa .1t.1... •--...-,....... .c--.. no ferred. Apply in person: ·-clOMto bome. versatile secretary with ~--( 0:tcill) lO ~ :':~~ ~ a',qual Opportunity Employer. • U:GAL SECRETARY. VICKI HF.STON xlm t)'llina akilla. Salary :i~=~tr~':'!~leM ~~ ••••••••! tary School, Wood· ;__ : ..._..lvJoe.... Trainee. Prr. l :U to •MSOC1ATES open. -"cnlmcea IOIG shaped mirror on bead· For women only-total brtdJlt Irvine Plea SOUTHOOMT PUZA 2:» dal11. Mesa Verde S40<040Q 8*2112 ....-..... ..... ' · se • ORANGE COAST DAILY Ptt..OT • COSTA KESA area. '5.00 per hour. • .. •••••••••••••••••••• ......... tl ~.:rtl:.~~J::t ::!!!..!52•0411 after: 330W.MYIT. •COITAMHA CA.ta• Good akilla, accuracy. PIUOM4IL --------1 HARBORAREA 9500080 831-'7797
-- --..,..... \ •NEOU•LMP'OllTV111tv1111Mvu •• fiotMNIOHlct ilnowted&eot ieneral of. ASSISTANT SemUry APPUANCESERVICE I'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ '1.•:1--• _..__ ............. ~ .................... '.:-" Typin1 , fllin&. ftceprocedures6bual· Pe"°Mel/Advertialnc Sl.SECIEJAIJ Weblquedappliancea Couch, 8' 1oldt1relft
_ .................... llianldne • time Mon-Fri. Salary quired. Call Marilyn expamloo . NpL 8cb/. tlon opportunity toces. · ._...psi5.646-2279 ·-n.p...._ EXECUTIVE telephone, mall. Full neu letter focmat re-Dept. bu openln& per no is Ill excellent poai· zu recond54r~7 ~bed velvet. xi.Qt
W..& TRlfl and benefit•. Local Dun1er 157 ·1414 for F\nwlat 1entte1 firm. l.Ciliu your secretarial c.onvettion Oven Broiler Movin&! Love Seat, szW
luliallw Hff Qlrpofateoffice. Good appt. Goodtypln1,1bortband, bactcrouod to this llQO.Callal\er6pm Kla1 Bed w/Beddillf • .. -•••••• .. •• .. ••••• rvu. TIME SECR'ETARY woridn1 tondltioca. Call _Uf...,e ... Guardl--.-W-1-te_r_S_af-e aper req. Non-smoker. cballenting position in 646-22M $150 Oat Hall T~ree 131.90/WI PmiUoa available in our 1112-JZM ty lut.ructo" wanted MMll2'3betweenJ·%. our plush offices In SearT Colds]IO( froeUeu S350 10' Bench, $4 ~
Hot 1UndL t' . .M: Chria· ~oey office. Ex· GENEJlALOFFICE for tht City of Hunt ~-school Teacher ror iWportBtacti upridrt freezer, white, Oak Dbl Bed Set. ,.
liaDPrescbbol. Ne-5'23 tad.=n ret:uirec!. Co!i. LOCATED IM,FAStlOM ISLAND lbllleeplo1 exp, Utt lo1ton Buch. Call ff 8. school Esper. IS 3 cu I\, pert runoinc Almire, ~.6'5-6355 -
: JoctyLove t7pln1, p/t Ou. Call __.forinlormaUon. pref. Over 18. Call Ideal candidate should cond,S2'15or bestorfer K1ngs 11e waterbed ./ ~~. m-m-•i Big 8 CPA farm located in J.JpmM147G MAIL ...,.. have es c e 11 en l 6'0-5434 wlbeadboard. s belvei.
./ rv-•tN'IVVI" FaslUon Island is seekin& PIOCISSOI prr reatnrant help ~1l 1tllb mclud·f Refncerator. Washer very nke cond Sl.00
'f:VWNG I'll 1m111 -J ionaJ .....tePV TOO YOU.. ro1 Wlded, apply In peraoo !QI shorthand and d!C· Dryer, Freez.er • 01S firm SJ6..f632 ./WEEKENDS WILlfV 3 l'avaess 5eca~ ..... ,. -........ ., Pllbllabial firm oear Tbe T\&mm~ Stuffer. t7 bwuber. SlSO Each. DAVENPORT Ii ft'KalJll · T · g 7 5 w p ,..._,__~ l .W. AU,ort baa ID lm· ~ 0 tapbooe uperieJ1ce and eood typio1 akills. Bank·
Trainina daases for:
Dr'1AWltmt
c.tftl l1t ..... ....... u.A ..
CAI.&. Ht-6631
Calif. Paramedical 6
Tl!ch. Q)Uqt, lff.S Lobl
BeadaBlvd. Loy Beacb
... w..w. 7075 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Retired GenUeman non·
smkr will ncb lite
dut.lel<> for reduced rm
rental (aleepln&)
S.-'1D7
Compaoioa/ounea aide
available any ahJft r.
IDlorm. can ~11
HtlpW..W 71 ......................
A.ccilml Payable
flB.llHL Y p 1 D m • lmmedLlte ..... for mediate optaiDI for So. Bristol II 75l·SM7 WV~EAT. $150 inc backaround pre· shorthand 100 wpm, JO lbarp Glrtl Is G1111 llri&llt aelt-lt<er u 1 ~part time, S REFRIGERATOR. very lJUMW 6'Ulfl fen'ed but not reqwred. ~·"-caiable of worka'ng wbutel71tover•Fr~ man prou11or/baD· da11. alr1>ort area, no cleu.2dr.aulodefroat lounge chair w/caster~. lOl*IL.M:lnoodBlvd. to Travel Houston, dymaa. 111e rl&bt ln· ,tniy.?Sa.SlU. 9J.9060 blue Down baclt
Downey,CA.902'0 iD ependently, well Miami, New York l diYidlall lbould be able' Ma&Jc Chef Gas oven rushioa.112:5.979-9933 , ~=WlitJ . Ord!ftized and venatile. '!1nulboutt!leUSA.NO t.owaltweU~people ~1!;>~,1 ~111 ranee IZGO/btt 6 17 c/f SolaS1S0,2cbairs
Ollr success in the In·
I dUltlY allows us lo pro-
.....
COM511UCTIOM LOAM
PIOCISSOI
&-.1 EXP Nl:C! WitJ12 wed •lane a wllllapes1 to leial firm Sequlres Kenmore refri& frr.r ~.new upholstery Competitive starting npenae paid traioi.D1 leuu. Some uperieoce 1 ;· till 1225/hlt Bolh xtnt cond 96B-&5%l salary and excellent pro Ir am . A I I in mail proceHlnl ot ~~~~-~ wp!, 54J..~ . 8 Piece Oat Dining set benefits t.ramporUtion 1uaran· handyman work LI de· mloirnum. Calm Mrs 19 cu ft G-E rerna. It Sl300 new, sacrifice MOO
I • ~~.:. ~u!t,_!>e N1eat, slrable, but not W7n1low for appt pink, good cond, SUO. cash SJH399 eo.oe 1 CALL FOi APPOIMTl'•IT -· •-~to ean neceuuy. Good benefit ID71ClllO 964-.W Lmmedia~ or Do Noe p1cta1e 6 pleuanl l--6/C--~~""--------•Bltfet. fruitwood, mapl~
1714) 64"9200 Apply. Hie Pay. Plus wortincCUldlU0111 Con· ~ --r,o1...-n· .·-c' t COlDSPOT Dnish 60 x 20 x 36 $14$ V-$1000 Yearly Cash t.actMn.Evea549·4834 . ....,.,,ons cem osa frost/reel.S cuft upnght Dining set fruitwood Award. makes this an ----~·--, -Mesa needs • non freezer $210. red maple finish, 2 arm EXT* 2 4 7 Ideal Opportunity for MAD A IUCI S111)11er II • front office 675-2490 chairs. 4 side l'hrs 37 x ~
vide bi&hJy competitive
salaries and beMfils m· cllllinc Mldlcal, Dental.
:j
paid vacation and more
Apply Moo-Fri JO lo 12or
2 to 4 or call: Personnel
I
Dept. (714 )76CMIOOO
~ PoeJtloo requirea loan
documentation ex·
perknce, some escrow •
ttt.le btck1round desire· EQUAL OPPOATUNITY EMPl.OY£R
ble. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
~Bank Young People For STAIT Hiii girl. Pleasant. and w/10 in leaves. S23Jl
Personal Interview Call Tiit Loa Angeles Times ITllture peraonabt~ a 646--010'1 :i~port I ' ...•.•......... ,
• IMMIDIATIOPBIMG •
: Mqtor route in Prime Newport :
Beach area. Low miles : ap· e proximately 35-0 customers. e e Weekday hours 2:30-5:30pm. e
Miss Barnes al 750-1000 is looking for well· ml.Wtfortbilbusyorlic.. ..=c.=.::..:.___ ____ _
ext. l« (Tues.·fri.I Uo<>tned, enthusiastic MultJple duties, !11USt be
General
IMMEDIATE
OPENINGS
Geuinc bacll into tbe job
nrket?
•Ute Industrial
people to earn up to orpniaed. Medical ex-
•1110per d1y for a few per preC'd. legible houn won .. p/thne handwriting, spell·
aalea rep. Hours are Ina/lite typin1 nee. 35
from •pm-9pm • train· bra per week Prefer re-
ing will be provided. lident ol eo,ta Mesa.
Your earninr s u a _55&e---'R4 _______ ,
llC9'T·TYPl
EOE M/F
Rebert P. Warmlaa\OD
Company oeeda
~ PenoD ID AC·
count1Jl1 Depart meat,
Erperteoced ~\&ired. l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!l!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!~ RMI &i.te Preferable.
Sat & Swl. 5am·7am. Minimum e amount of collecting. For de· e e tails call Bruce Carty or e e Foster Ouellet at 642·4321. e
• Mecban.ical
Aasemblens
•Electronic Assemblers
~ •Paclrln1
•Warehouse
VICTOI
Temporary Service
S56-IS20
Times sales rep. will be
baaed Clll • suaranleed
bourty wa1e ot SUO +
1eoerous commll1ions.
Since thil ii a aew pro. cram opportunlUes for
advancement are es· c~llent. Call now for
rmre information •bout
t.bia 1reat opportunity
Call Moo-Fri, 951-2361,
SA ftrm bu opening for
reception ls t /ty p Is t.
SSWPM. pleasant
Escellent Salary, tm»tan
Bmefttl • wortilll coo· $nelftoa c1i1iam ID eo.t.a Mesa Of. Hledion of nee. cau SaUy for Ap· I RoDefulsT •••••••••••••• r.IDtmnt. tH·UU. IDdltDAILYl>lLO ll&LP WANTED ADS D>. ..., ______________________ .,. __ .... ____________ .....,.
...... '11111
Tet.c.Y.I.
love1tmenl Plrm,
Newport Beacla, re·
qatru atronl Ad·
mlnl1trathe Ea·
ecuthe Secretarl al
blct1rouod. Good
atilll/experteoct. Ix·
tremely heavy wort
load. Put·pactd ; 4•·
adlDHrieattd job. Noo·
1mobr. Call Carrol,
~
{ l ) )
( ( ___ <CS ___ ) )
'tfewspaper
Ccirriers tor l'outes
In Huntington Beach,
Fountain Vallly & Newport Beacll
..... .,...
ctn
• days per Wed, 10 hour
lhlfta. Experience with
front detk proceduces 6
NCR 400 preferred.
Mature aWlude 1 must.
..... c .. ,,.....
ext. 1204.
MAMl.611
TIAIMll
General deaning plus
tennis courts m1 in·
tenance. 3 morninc
,.... '2evenln& ahlfb.
SALISPIOPU
Loc*inl f~ IJI escltln1 career In the retail
clothlo1 field T Tbla
rapidly npandlD1 retail
clotblnt dlatn II lookln1
for brt1ht. motivated,
reliable people to fUI the
position• of M 1n11er Trainee It SalaP«19le.
Xlnt employee beoellta
lnchldlol mercha.nd••
dilccuDta. Apply at:
' U you are q uallfied for
11111 al t.be above posi·
ticnl pleue call for ap-
pmntmeot at, US·SOOO txs 521 between tam 6
t :llpm
...... = =~'!terDr.
lntot,CA. wm 1tart accept.Inc •P-
plicaUona Feb. 11t..
Npm.
Girl P\'iday: Health/Pit· Medkal/Back office
Dell minded. Typlo1. Ptr exp'd ID EKG,
rma1. An1werh1 IN.IS Vtnl·Puncture
pbaptl, t1"1t bookkeep--"M6..;...;..;.~;:;;.:.----
llCB'f~ST
E1tabllllied uport
marbtill1 firm Aeeds
R«ilpttr1p11t to auwer
telepbone fr 11"t Vlt·
lton. Var1oua typto1
..... IKICW'lq I IDl.lll •
PleMaDl lllrn*odlop.
X1at benefttl • salary.
ID&.' Orplllu Hew ol· .-C:A&.OMCI -=='-----'~
ftct. PmTlme. Kourt £1p 'cl front offl et
Open. Sell Motlvattil. penoe for buy u.~1 ~"· offtct.. Some back otflc-e --•464S33for appt. exp. Nttd lood ref a. ®i rrtd.ay for O.velop. Ooo4 '*1eftta. 1\allUme. rntntl'\rm. Mu•tbueff· 8.8.atae.tfl.-..
llarter • cood wltb ..,,. 6 llcoON. ftm ft ....... 8aod Employ. ODlY' ........ ment blltory to '114 eo-Aftu Adalll atlte 2G Hu.nt· •
....... dl
1RAllDRISS!a net •lieWt wtlb eltb•
.... flflloe .... ~111. Tu Hatr ~ .......
SbldentJobs
HEYi
IOYs-GllLS
-~ -----
"18 Sevtl ... all extru ! Lo
mi, xlnt ~ 01·3114 am 1-12 Mon-f'ri S?J..4220
aft 12/wtncb.
7tfltetwood Brou1ham Ex tra
ahaipl Must 11criflrt.
Btlt olfer over 1"·*· ~sal allttl pm
'71 Seville, xlnl eond,
iUot ml, hall elee w/aorf, RR front.
Gl.as4l °' $49-4 lAI.
'9C'PE de VILLE 8'd1 ,.. ... nllll ok.
.. '1$. ... l
Hit
•
Riley-PS4-feud .bOi~
Airllile's billboard says 'Orange County Airport
.,. PaEOnacx SCBO&MBBL
Ol .. o.-.......
A 4-inoatb old a.rsument between Oran1e
Oounty Supervisor Thomu Riley and Pacific
Southwest Alrllnes over whether to un the
name John Wayne, ~lrport or Oranp County
Al11M>rt ls Oartnlf UD uatn. Klley, who was lnltrumental ln cbanstn1.
the airport's name to honor tbe late actor, la
unhappy because a PS.A billboard ak>n1side the
Santa Ana Freeway in the Santa Fe Sprln11
area refers to the ldrport aa Or&111e .Co\a.nty
Airoort.
"Isn't it possible for you to ctemonstrate a
bit more cooperation ln this matter?" Riley
asked ln a Jan. r7 letter to John O'Malley,
•PSA 'a director of government attain.
PSA beaan service Oct. 1 to Orange County
with two nights daily. At the aame Ume, the
airline beaan advertisin1 ita new service oo
sianboarda on Orange County Transit District
buie1 ud on a billboard looated lA Santa Ana.
Riley objected in an Oct. 14 letter to PSA;
O'Yalley responded in an Oct. 21 letter in which
be aaid, "l want to auure you that the reference
to the county's faclllty u Oran1e County
Airport, rather than John Wayne Airport, waa
meant neither u a 1l11bt to your elforta to
effect the name chanae nor to the memory of a
1reat American."
O'Malley said the blllboard would be
cban1ed; it wu. Al for the bul advertising,
O'Malley said it was seared to only thole
portion.a of the county where towilta mi1ht be
present and would end ln November. It did. All
other advertiain&, be said, either uaea the name
John Wayne Airport or John Wayne/Oran1e
County Airport.
O'Ma.lley could not be reached this mornin&
for comment on the newly discovered billboard
cited in Riley's letter.
"Since your advertising continues to be
<See BILLBOARD, Pa1e AZ>
* • * • • J
\ -lllEllll llllY NPll
OH ANGl (OUN 1 v f\ L II OflNIA :.?5 CENTS
FROM WHERE? -This sign, located on the
Santa Ana Freewa:v near Valley View
....................
Boulevard, is raising hackles because it
refers lo John Wayne Airport by its old ·name.
Airlines push for more Wayne Airport flights
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ If the commercial a1rl1nes the date airline s chedules
serving or desiring to serve change because or the start or
Airlines, based in Phoenix.
America West in a recent letter
lo the county asked for four
departures. It wants to fly to ill
base city using Boeing 737s or
DC-9-308.
GOING OUT ON A LIMB? -Springtime is
blooming early on evergreen pear trees
along coast.al community streets. Iva Lewis,
...., ............ '--.....
·a clerk typist in the city clerk's office,
inspects a branch outside Costa Mesa City
Hall. The fragile blossoms last two• weeks.
Phony TV number busy, busy
15,000 try .to call toll-free 'vacant code'. after, appeal
"It wu clearly a drama," be
said. "But w•ml1ht comldel' It
in the future."
Scboepe lald that tbil WUD't
the f1nt time a ftctltloua phone
number wu tnundated by calla
beeaUle of teJ.vlllon. He said comedian Pat Paulsen JDade a
reque1t for aupport for bt1
prealdenUal bid HYeral yon
a10 and more than 15,000 calll
were U.. made to vacant de
numben. .
AheeDtee higli
V18ALIA CAP) -Two Vilda
bl•h ldlooll apparently bll wlb an outhreU OC UM , llOal KoaC
flu re~rted abHltH, ratt1
1'4>•• • perent.
Orange County had their way, at Daylight Savings Time.
least 57 jets daily would thunder C on l i n en t a 1 A i r I i n es ,
out or John Wayne Airport by according to a letter sent to
June 1. supervisors Chairman Bruce
Nestande, wants four fli1hts There are now 41 flights r r om orange County .
permitted dally. That limit was Continental is proposing to serve
imposed by the county Board of Denver and Houston.
Supervisors to reduce noise Both routes would involve
exposure to residents leaving Intermediate stops to comply
under takeoff paths. with a county regulation that no
But Paci f I c South weal commercial carrier fly non·stop
Airlines, which now operates to a destination. more than 500
two filgbll to the Sao Franc.l.aco miles away. <Salt Lake City, !502
Bay area from Orange County, miles away, is,an exception).
wants four more departures Continental is propo1ln1 to fly
effective ,\pril land another two Boein& 727 -lOOs. The carrier
departures June 1, accordlnl to c l a i m a t b e a i r p o r t ' s coun~y offtciala. . 5, 700·foot·k>ng jet runway can handle the additional welJlht ol
Western Airlines, wblcb the 7r7 and that the alrcrah can
operates two fillbts daily to Salt meet county noise requlremenll.
Lake City, w1mls two more Another airiine seekina entry
departures, effective April 2S, to the airport is. America West
Supervisor Wieder
to seek re-election
By .JEFF ADLER
Of .. OIMY,.....h91'
Harriett Wieder has
announced -as expected -that
abe will seek re-election to a
second term on the Orange
County Board or Supervisors.
Mrs . Wieder , 61, has
represented the county's second
supervisorial district, which
includes Huntington Beach, Seal
Beach, Garden Grove, Cypress
and Los Alamitos. since 1978
when she first was elected to the
board.
Involved in politics for the last
25 years, Mrs. Wieder was a
member of the Huntington
Beach city council prior to her
election as supervisor.
In announcing her inlention to
run, Mn. Wieder said, "I have
been especially encouraged by
the reaction or mayors,
councilmen, police chiefs and
civic leaders throughout the
district to my record and level or
service. Virtually everyone has
a greed to join the campaign
effort."
Mrs. Wieder's supporters
have formed a campaign
committee in her behaU, the
Friends of Harriett Wieder.
Ray Maggi , Cypress , and
William Schroeder , Garden
Grove, have been named
co· chairmen.
The Butcher-Forde consulting
firm of Newport Beach has been
<See WIEDER, Pa1e AZ)
County officials said AirCal,
which operates an average ol
23.S flights dally from the ·
airport; Republic Airlines,
which operates 11.5 and Frontier
Airlines, which operates two,
are not particularly interested lD
increaalnt fight levels at thia.
tlme. l
Officials said lt la vlrtuallJ,
impoaslble to aueu tbe•
ramifications or the atrlin.-'1
requests in light of lltl1atioo now!
surrounding the county'11
atte111pt.a to develop a plan that}
would re1ulale wblcb alr carriers have acceaa to tbe-
airport. ·
The county's intention baa
beq to develop a plan that,
wbne permittin& acce11 to
carriers not now serving the
airport, also would control no1.se
impacts on residential areu.
Asked lf It was conceivable the
57·ntgbt per day level would
occur, an aide to one county
supervisor commented , "T~
chances of that happenina are
very remote. But there's that
sliver or a chance, and t.liM'1
what's 1ot us worried."
. Supervisors. meetlng Tuesday
in Santa Ana, delayed
indefinitely consideration cl an
airport access plan pendin1
resolution of the issue by th~
U.S . 9th Circuit Court of
Appeals.
The appeals court Friday
granted an emergency stay
sought by AirCal that
invalidated a lower federal court
ruling prohibiting the county
from implementing an access
.plan. Critics claimed it would be
unfairly beneficial to AirCal and
Republic. The two airlines now
control 86 percent or the flights
<See FLIGtrrS, Pase AZ> Between 1963 and 1973, she
·served as an executive assistant
to theq Los Ar(geles Mayor Sam
Yorty. More recently. she was
appointed by President Reagan
to an ad hoc committee studying
block eranta.
Mrs. Wieder, her husband.
Irv, and their two children
mo¥ed to Huntington Beach in
1970.
Kidnaps, r~pes get
lengthy sentences
Uhya claims·
U.S. fighters
buz~e~ plane
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -
Libya state radio said today that
two U.S. jet fighters buued a
Libyan jetliner over Greece, and
called on the U.N. Security
Counctl to condemn American
"terrorist practices."
In an Arabic -lan1ua1e
newscast monitored in Beirut,
tbe ·radio aaid the F·1' U.S.
flabten intercepted the Libyan
airliner Sunday while it was a
re1ul1r fllat\t from Athens,
Greece, to the Libyan capital,
Tripoli. It said the American :•J•tl ltapd provoeatlve Ida"
a1almt tbe comme'rcial plane.
The radio did not explain wby
th• incident wu not announced
earlier. There wu no immediate
comment from Wa1btnctoo.
"Tb• American Jeta, which
took off from an American
aircraft cam.r in Ule area. flew
over the Libyan · alrllner ancl
cbated It for more tban aenn
mll• lD Greek alrspace aome ao mu .. IOU&beUt o1 AtMnl," tbt
broadcalt 1Ud. It uld th• lncldent •aa ~ to tM attentkxa ol the
, S.CurltY Council in a Llbfan pvemmenl .-.. that 1"-111 p~t.d "tble barbaric act by
UM ~c edmlnJl'1aU.."
Orange t;ounty Deputy
Dis trict Attorney Richard
Toohey minced few words
Tuesday when it came Ume to
sentence a 27-year-old Downey
man on 31 felony counts
stemmine from the kidnap and
rape of four women, three from
Huntington Beach.
Speakini of defendant Ronald
G. Russell, Toohey told Oran1e
County Superior Court Judge
Ddnald A. Mccartin:
" (Mr. RusseU ) representa the
worst in our society. If there was
a hall of fame for cowards, I
think Mr. Russell would be a
unanimous vote. I hope hla dytn&
breath la ln prison."
At another point, Toohey told
the court, ''Without mentlonini
any more word1, this man
should die in prison."
The prosecutor's commenta
. broucht immediate prott1t1
from Russell'• lawyer, Deputy
Publlc Defender James P .
Spellman, but JUdle llcCartln
took no acUon. • .
Moreover, McCartln 1ave
Toohey what be bad aoupt: a
suarantee t.bat RUIMll probably
would never llain be a free
man.
The !\Ide• MDliDced tbe Loe
Ansel• area man to a tt-year
stat• prison term and Uaen
added a llfe term. to run aft«
tbe ftnt HDtence. TM D1t itteet II t.ht RUiliMll
would nit beeom• •ltslbh ft>r pa1oW tailkWaUoiD~ '8atll 119 la
at leut M ,.an Old, "ud dlM amoUIU'9alot~ da11 ID die Join~•• Mid..,
RQilell wu cae.t Iii 1• . . ... .
December with two other
defendant.a, Robert L. Tilfin. 21.
and John A. Krom, 20.
The jury which beard the cue
convicted all three men on 79
counts in all. Russell was found
guilty of one count of kidnapping
for robbery, two counts of
kidnapping, three counts ot
robbery, 11 counts of forcible
rape and 14 counts of forcinl tbe-
women to commit another aex
act.
(See llAPIST, Pase A!)
IRllll CIAll 1111111
Considerable clou4lneu
late tonieht and Tburtclay
morninl, becomln1 partly
cloudy Tbur1day
afternoon . Cooler
Tbunday with hi01t of a
to 86.·Lo"' tonilbt from• to 48.
111111 TUAI ·
1111~
.1
~ . "
.
· Judge to rule on •El Torro ranch co't8Piracy charge
~ ,,,
PAECARlblJS PEACH -A Philadelphia trash 1 collector leaps from cab of garbage truck
into arms of fireman after vehicle crashed
through guardrail stopping short of what
would h ave been a 120-foot plunge off
Schuylkill Expressway. A total of three men
were rt>scued and one charged with drunken
driving in the Tuesday incident
·Woman buried under· debris
Widow, 78, found dead in Balboa Island home
-By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. o.ty,... .....
Grace E. ~ was a familiar
face on Balboa Island.
Neig{tbOA say she was tht
friendly sort who would go out of
her way to greet everyone when
she set out for her d•PY wallu.
The 78-year-old widow also
was a private person. Neighbors
rn tsay tbey were never Invited into i~ her ·'~ral' Street home where
lu sbe1d Uvecf'for nearly lS years. ~ I But Newport Beach police
~officers went In T'\lesday.
al 'eoncemed that nobody bad seen
the woman in almost a week.
9v They found her. Sbe was dead,
dJ buried under several feet of
trash that inspeC!tors say
covered her entire house.
Police believe she likely died
!'f °*tutal causes •nd probably
.-vW•s •buried when she fell lo the
floor and caused a pile of llUcr
.,,to topple on top of her. ,.,..,
The Orange County Coroner's
t>ffice bas been asked to
determine the exact cause or
death.
• It was a week ago today when
the woman was reported
"> misaiut by eoncerned neighbors.
.-Police entered her home at that
"""time and discovered what one
_...officer said was a "mountain" or ....
••. From Page A 1
'""' .w.RAPIST. • • ..
; Sentencin& proceedings for
,. Tiffin were delayed' !JAtil Feb. 9.
i• 'K r o m i.s u n d e r g o i n g
·pre-sentencing diagnostic study. '° The men were accused of abducting and sexually
.... assauttinc lour women in three
-,separate incidents in northern
!OraD19 0aunty I ast ~year. The-
Ii n c i deots took place between '
!February and June.
I Two of the victims were
jU -year-old Huntington Beach
.girls out bitchbiklng on Pacific
jCoast Highway.
From Pa9!. A 1 : J
FLIGHT ...
permitted daily from the
I.airport. ~
. The Jaws~~was initially filed lby PSA, w~eb steadfutly bu
maintained tbal lt. wants to I operate eldil. d•pa.rturea per ~ay from ~e COunty. The
.¥r~~1·i:~ ·• .in tbe laws in •1 ~,
:0Jalmin1 • •~• pl-.a. iapproved ••Upe n w~
~anU-compeli · e an trary to
:erovl1looa of tbe Alrllq._,
:i>ereplaUoo Act of 19'18.
I
I
trash. But they did not see the
woman.
Tuesday, police finally got
pet"m.issiort to remove the trpb
which was determined lo be .a
fire and heaJth hazard.
Officers say they removed
several tons of Vlaterial before
they found the woman, slumped
in a comer near a wall heater.
The refuse, estimated to be
five feet bi&h in so~e rooms of
the house. had been there for
years, police say. Officers claim
they found old news p&pers
dating back to the early 70s,
hair -eaten food and dozens or
empty boxes
The odor wis so strong. police
say, that i nvestigator s were
forced to wear masks while
shoveling out the debns .
In all, police say they took five
tons of tras h out of the house
during a several-hour cleanup
period.
Office.rs and neighbors were
unable to offer any reasons why
thP woman lived sis she <lid.
Floodwaters hit
along East Coast
By Tbe Aaaociated Presa everywhere." said police ctuef
A New England ice storm R o n a 1 d L e P l a n t e i n
caused blackouts in aeveral Ashburnham, Mass. ·
Massa_chuse~ts cities today while.~ Tuesday's storm left six-foot poun~g ratns sent noodwaters drifts ln the Texas Panhandle pourio~ through other and frustrated road cleanup
communities along the E~stern operations in Oklahoma, where
Seaboard from Georgia to many highways had only one
Pennsylvania. lane open after a snowfall of up
In Oklahoma, farm tractors
wer e pressed into service to
rescue travelers stranded in
fender-deep snow left by a fierce
Gulf storm Tuesday.
Snow continued to fall today
from eastern Oklahoma to the
Great Lakes s tates , with
northern Arkansas getting four
inches, as temperatures dipped
more than 30 degrees below zero
in parts of the upper Mississippi
Valley and northern plam..
Rains of up to 6 inches In 24
hours closed scores of roads in
GeorJia. The F11k River bloated
by night-long rain and melting
snow surged 04t of its banks in
Maryland and police c losed
much of downtown Elkton which
was awash.
Flasb·lloOd watches were
posted a~ the mountains of
the Carolinas. in eastern
PenPS)'lvania ,...northwest New Jer~y ~nd Jftuc~ of Obi~.
A second ice uarm 111 H many
days lore down tree limbs and
powe r lines in western and
central Massachusetts, leaving
entire communities without
electricity.
M aasachusetts Electrlc
estimated 6,000 customers wete
w i t h o u t p o w e r I n l tt.e
north-central p.,-t of the stale. A
spokesmur for Wester'n
M a11achusett1 Electric Co.
could not eaUmale how maliy
·customers lost power. but saijl.
"lt'1 int.he thouunda.''
---• •
to 18 inches.
Tuesday's storm hit northwest
Kansas with up to nine inches of
snow and splashed Arkansas
with freezing rain.
··Anybody in a two-wheel
drive vehicle can't navigate at
all -and a four-wheel-drive
can't because the road·s blocked
with s tranded two -wheel·
drivers.'' said Woods County
s heriffs dis patcher Beverly
Yadon. ·
Teen testifies
to sex offer
ATLANTA <AP > -A
16-year-old boy testified today
at Wayne B. Williams' murder
trial that Williams once offered
him $2n to perform an oral sex
act.
Williams. a 23-year-old black
free-Unce photographer aad
aspiring talent promoter. is
c harged with murde ring
Nathaniel Cater, 27, and Jimmy
Ray Payne, 21, two of 28 young
blacks whose deaths over a
22-montb period have been
investigated by a special police
task force.
Today's testimony from
Andrew Hayes marked the
s~cond time prosecutors have
tr~ed to suggest that.
homosexual lty may have.
fieu-d In the slaylnes.
From Page A1
BILLBOARD ·
A U.S. Dlatrict Court Judte la TofO iD 11'75 for $2 mUUoa, 8Ad Attorney Percy Anderton and
acbeduled to 111ut vercHcta bi• .mon>ey, Jacob PeUte, were defense attorney• Kettb Monroe
Tburaday on whether two accuaed in an ll·couatt of Santa Ana and Norman
Oran1e Ci:ounty men violated lDcUctment lasued by a federal Jamea of Los An1elea.
federal law 1n not U1Un1 the arand Jury of con1piraey to Mon.roe aaid in an interview
2,700-acre WbiUnt Ranch u an defraud and defeat federal Tuesday that be conaidw~ the
aaaet when a firm controlled by banknJptcy laws. prosecution's cue without bull.
one of tbe two men flied Judie Matthew Byme Jj>. tooll Monroe aald Roe.ere did
bankruptcy in the mld-1970.. the case under 1ubm\11lon nothing more than tr&Qftr bla
Kent Ro1ers, who purchued Tuesday after bearin1 final interest In the Whltin1 Ranch
the sprawling ranch near El ar1umenla frocn Asst1 U.S. from one firm to another when a
• bousln& devek>pmeot venture in
Riverside County we'$ Into
bankruptcy. Economy to come
'roaring back?'
By Tile A.ta0elated Pren
Despite climbine interest
rates and mixed 1ienals for the
m anufacturlng and housing
Industries, Treasury Secret.ary
Donald Regan says the slueelah
economy will come "roarlng
back in the late sprin&."
Regan said Tuesday the first
widespread increase In the
prime lending rate since July.
VOlCKER SHOULD
RESIGN -Edttorlel, A10
prompted by a two-month surge
in other boirowlng costs, was a
"temporary phenomenon" that
was ''discouraging but not
unexpected.'·
The prime rate, the base upon
which banks compute interest
charges on short-term business
loans to best.risk customers,
bad lingered at lS.75 percent
since Dec. 1 before spurting
higher Monday.
But Tuesday. most banks had
raised their prime rate to 16""1
percent, while a few banks held
the increase lo 161/•.
Rates also have increased for
long-term borrowing, shutting
out many corporations from a
bond market dominated by the
U.S. Treasury. This week. the
Treasury is selling $20 billion In
bonds, notes and bills to help
finance the federal deficit.
lo an auction of $5 billion in
3-year Treasury notes Tuesday,
the average yield rose to 14.63
percent In heavy bidding from
14.43 percent al the previous
auction Nov. 2.
Some economists h&ve said
the resurgence of Interest rates
will delay a recovery from the
recession, which was brought on
by high Interest rates.
But Regan told the National
Press Club. "This la a
te mporary phenomenon and
should wash out over the course
of the next four to six weeks."
He said that in the past, interest
rates have increased briefly lo
the early stages of an economic
recovery, only to decline as the
recovery takes hold.
FromPageA1
WIEDER • • •
retained to handle the
campaign, according to a
spokesman for Mrs. Wieder.
The incumbent supervisor has
collected a $226,010 campaign
war cheat to date for taer
re-election bid, according lo
reports oo file with the Oralil County Regillrar of Vot.r.~ ..
Office.
Pope John Paul
:prays for Poles
VATICAN CITY CAP> -Pope
John Paul n today deplored the
loss of freedom in bis native
country and urged Poles to
persevere in tbe.lr faith.
Kil speecb 1n Polish came on
the eve of t.be first visit to the
.vatlcan by Poland's ·Roman
Catholic primate since martial
law was declared in the
communist country Dec. 13.
The Riverside project was
beln1 developed by Global
We.tern Development Co., a
firm solely owned by Rosen and
M•S Develo11ment Co. Global w ea tern acted .. a reoeral
partner, M"S as l mlted
partner.
Only an hour before the
pa~rnershlp declared
bankruptcy , Monroe said,
Rogers transferred title of the
Whiting Ranch from Global
Wea tern lo a separate entity.
KFR Inc. KFR Inc. also was
entirely owned by Rogers.
Monroe said the case never
would have existed had Peilte,
who drew up the bankruptcy
petition, included the statement
that Global Western was acthlg
as •·a joint venture" in tbe
Riverside project. · 'Thla case is
only about three little words.''
Monroe asserted.
Anderson. the prosecutor.
declined t-0 discuss the case
~nding the verdlct. He nfened
inquiries to a press release
issued by the U.S. Attorney's
office at the time the indictment
issued.
Global Westem's ownenbip of
tbe Whiting ranch was dlaclosed
in bankruptcy court about 10
months after tbe bankruptcy
petition was filed, Monroe said.
At that time, be explained, it
was "advantageous•• for Rogers
to list the ranch as a Global
Western asset because the ranch
. property was facing outside
legal actions. Monroe said
Rogers at that point wanted to
"protect" the property by
bringing it into the bankru~y
proceeding.
The bankruptcy proceeding
notwithstanding, Monroe
ma inlained that both the
Riverside conatruction venture,
and Global Western were both
"solvent estates" and that all
creditors received "100 centa on
Uie dollar."
Winter Sale Continues
Now is your chance for the best values from
the largest stock in the area. Tremendous price
reductions on the most famous lines of quality furniture
\
lAQUNA llACH
141 Nofttt CoMt ...,._.., - -(71•>* ... , ...---COtTAMllA
1• NHjjl!Oli ...._ (71•> .......
., .......
Ll!NA HORNE HONORED -Singer Lena Horne chats with
actor James Mason after she was honored by the Dance
Theater of Harlem. Miss Home is currently starring ln
her own one-woman show on Broadway in New York City'.'
..........
TAKES·THE CHAIR -Prince ~harles of England carries
chair presented him as he opened the Crafts Council
Gallery and Information Center in London. He was given
the high chair Tuesday for the child he and Princess
Diana are expecting this summer.
Marp,..TnMle•• aaldto
bt ''unprepared ior th•
d1vattaUn1 effect of the
on•·•lded media reacUoa" to btr new book, ''Conaequeocee," poetpontd a aebedule of lnttrvtewa that
' were to bave taken bar
IC ... Oll Canada ln th• ~ext
tbrffweeb, .
A apokeaman aald that
Mra. Trudeau decided abe waa aot ready to conUnue t.be
promotion tour after aeven
interviews ln Ottawa.
Mn. Trudeau aald abe wu
dlamayed 1t the way 10me
interylewera, book reviewers
ind newapapera which
publlabed excerpts from the
book centered on the more
UUllattna pHHtH. Tbey
overlooked m1oy of "the
substance of the book ahd of
my own feeUnp of ahame
. . . and the human emoUooa
th1t make sense of what I
WIS saylna.''
Comedian FUp WU... filed
a $2 million false
imprisonment suit atalnst
the city and county ol Los
Aneeles over his arrest for
alle1ed drug possession.
The Superior Court suit,
also seeks damages for civil
rights violation, ne1H1ent
and intentional infliction of
emotional distress, and
invuion of privacy.
Wilson was arrested March
10, 1981 at Los An1eles
International Airport after
authorities, actln1 on an
anonymous tip, said they
found 2~ grams of cocaine
and a quantity of hashish oil
in Wilson's lueeage. Wllaon
contends he was the "tClctim of
unconsUtuUonal search and
sei1ure.
Reid Sbeltoa performed
Daddy Warbucks for the
2,000tb time in the musical
"Annie," and says he's still
delighted with the role.
Shelton, who originated the
role in the summer of 1976,
was given a hu1e red, 1reen
and white cake witb •n iced
replica of the orphan girl in
Boston, and sajd, "All 2,000
performances have been
wonderful."
Arter the performance he
was joined by other cast
members , includlne bis
present Annie, Krll&l
MeArdle, 9, of North Cape
May, N.J .• who first played
Molly. the smallest orphan,
in the show. Also on hand
was Annie's dog, Sandy,
whose real name is
Buttercup.
Cloudy days ahead
California
Coaatal
A turn lram lelr to pertly <IOudY •••1"•' over 5ovtl>em Celltornl• tonltM and TJ\ursday wllt II•
a<<Om--b'f ln<rMslfl9 ....,,_..,
Conslderalll• ctoudlneu •••• wlftCls -....,.,.,... 8"d ..--
tonltlll and T"ursd•y morning. PA•M•
lle<oml"' pertly cl-y T"urlday Cooler -elto wHI lie t¥1ng aft.,_ NortMftY wlndS of 2S to 40 owr T"ut'lday -'"""IN ,.,..,_,and m.p.11., dewtoolno In ereet llelow wi ndy condlllont ••P•ct•d to <•nYOft ...., -••In .,., .. , late continue ..,...., ,,,. -Mncl -IN
Tllursdey ..._. c-rrw..-y Natleftel -S.....k• Mid.
with hltM of " to.. L~ '°"""'t :II Winch --. torec.a1ll lo • -.. to•. -~to lo JO mllft --Ito ,...,, ...
CllllJ .... .. ~~:!ii.
~ .......... , o.c1 ... •
El.....,.. lrom Potwll Concept'°" duerl er••• today. llecomlnt to the Meal<M> bDr*r ...., out tO nortlMrty Tllurlday 8"d lncrMM"I to
mllH: Wot to southwest winds. to to U mph In-• below cllft~I
bee.Of'rllno I to IS knots 11111 • ..,.,1n9 end mountain peues by l•I•
encl w"t lo -t 12 lo II -T""tMSay. -wtndl uP lo e mpfl lft TIMI,._.,~. Wind •-of 2 -UIM. 111111111 ---••• NOAA. U I ..... •' Ce•••rce ~
to 4 ._. w.Mrly •-Is of 1 to I Hlgt\ '--IONy ._..
fMt. COMldil< ..... douflMu llDn'9M te lie ,,_.,y Ito h ... end !ow 1'11.
encl Th<1'1day momtno, 11Koml1'9 Tiie '°"'reno-out,_ lftcludH flltlts
pertly cloudy T"""""' after-. mostly Ill IN SOI fJrlday tl\r-"
Sunday
V.S. aummary Temneraturea Thu~ ............ --'r G 11 II c 01st and mwclt •• lh•
Nit-Cantrel r9li0n of Ille 11411111!1 goil
rein toclly. wNle ,,_ *Mel the
Mlctwett a"9r a~•-fltft a ,_...., • ....,.,,._lnpet1aof
Okle!WHN.
Relto _..., -... lool9I .,_ ...e centrel Gulf c-t to ..,..,n
NATION
"'Le~ JO 21 ..,
JJ 2t
2' 6 M • 11 a.tt .... ,.. •• ...... ,
Cehnnllw
Olll-fJtWWI Den,,.,
De1Mo1Nt O.trolt
°"'""' Ell"ato
H11'1t«d
... letwl
Honolulu
Hovtton ,.....,. ..
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U t1 .IJ 2' 12 ...
24 ' .Cl' tt 2A IO ·n
41 ..
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PllMld,On lleplcJ CllY .. _
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SHnle StLwlt
Stl"·T•.._
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WHlll""" Wklltt.
4"e 11 .JA CAUPOllNIA
61 • 42 JI .ll
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l"1nn1ylY•nl1, IM• York end Wftttm .... Enolend.
.... ,.,.
JtKklftyfte
"-CllT usv ... Utttolt«* Uy!"""' ~ llllleml • • .ae llellenfltld t1 a ,
s.--.-~._......
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Mellon• ef Ne~11u end S...th
OHeta
Muell of Cellfomle end ArfUM. Ille
Ftorlde penl!tMa --.ene ...CS Mln.....U Md felr -Iller tocley.
Scatt--·· pndlc .... ...., In "'-...., ,,..,. the C...V.1 .... .. ......... ,,,.. ........... ,,.....,
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Extended
forecaat
IOUTHa•N C,t.L.,OlllNti'
COAITAL AND MOUNTAIN Alta.ti
-Ce1111•rei.1e cteuel~" e11d' eel,.,. WI...,_ 111 ~•Ill• eltd • .......... c.....-~11 ...... _.... ....... 4 ....... _ ................ ......
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.... Or-. .... v.-
NOrto• Ollle City
OMAN
on.fide ............
11 u .a a1yttie o 21 1f llU...... W 42 17 .,, .t1 .. ,...,. ff •
47 Cl .. .__ • ..., ,. • n wua LMA,.._ 1'
JS M ,7t MlwytY._ '° e
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tJ .. ~-........ .. J2 J7 .. ,.. ltM •luff 7t ..
'·.J· -........ City .. ff ... ...... --~-------------------------------,.,.,,...... " -__ __. ... ,_ ..
11Rf REPIRl ·: ~? ~
' ~lef\ ..
.. ..
" ' ,. .
What do you like •bout"" Dally Pilot? What don't you, llkef
Call the, number bflo" and your mn111• will bt recorded, ·,
tranatribed and dellv.,.... to UM appropriate elttor.
The aarne lto..OUr UIWeriN MnlH ma~ b9 uMd to tweird '* ters to the ~tor on uy topfc. )lallboi eontri.utoln mat U.Cludit
their name and telephone numhr tor •eriflcet.ICJft. "o tlmdMIGe calls, plet.e. ' • ' •
Tell ua wh1t'1 on your mind.
' Orange eo.t DAILY PtLOT,Wldnnday, February 3, 1982': I .. ,,
•
A TRIBUTE TO KER.M IUMA
Kermit Rima
• Notietnbtt 12, 1912 _ ,,__, ~l. t98i
• ~ • ~
1
I . ' 1
I
He will be p.dy mUled.
County judges stick together
Seventeen j~rists file papers in re-election drive
I
By JEFF~DLER each judge's individual $632.67
Of .. D.it9,......,.... filing fee only minutes after the
ln a well-0rgani1ed dbplay of flllng period for such documenta
solidarity, all 17 Oranee County opened Monday morning, a
Superior Court judges seeldnf spokeswoman for the registrar's
re-election together have filed office said.
the first batch of election-related Ca 0 did 8 t e s f 0 r 11 tat e documents with the Orange County Registrar of Voters legislative offices and judldal
Office. posts must file declaration.a of
The declarations of intent to Intent by 5 p.m . on Feb. 10,
has not been deterred from
filing for offlce by the dilplay «
solidarity. William Farria, Of
Oran1e. is tbe sole
non lnc~nt who so far hM
filed papers declarin1 bh
intention to seek office.
Candidates who already have
flied declaratiom of intent to
seek election are:
ct1 nl d I according to the spokeswoman. seek re-ele on were e ear y OttAMe c:owwrY ..,,.. ... C*ln
Monday morning by Orans• The lncumbtnt Jud1ea, who -0Mce1--.-.o .. , • .._.,,..._a...
County Superior Court may even form a formal joint -0tncet-.,_._, .. ._c---.
Executive Officer Alan Slater, campalp committee, collected ~~ J -u.. c---."' ... 0
who said he delivered the sheaf close to $54,000 at a "solidarity -0Mce•-P'lll11i.c-.etueA...,_._
of documents on his own, rather night" rally on Jan. 19. All 48 ==s·~~::.U...:,
than on county time, on his way Superior Court judges are listed 1eac11.
to work. as advisers to the Committee for ==~==.?:=::.!:"~!;.~· "I've done it in the past as a Preserving a Responsible -0tt1c: .. -wui1_,,..,.,.,.,0r.,,...
ni .. SI l 1-•-.-.1 l -Office 1'-JKlt Mendltl, .. """"""-conve ence, a er exp auK:U. Judie a.ry. -0tt1uu-wiHi-Motrrey,et0r-..
"It's no big service, it just One judicial hopeful, however, -0tt1u1a-,,.,,....01Mr,ofL11...,...
makes it easier for us. This way, -0ttic.1J-....,....o-...•0r-.. -Offlu u -J-,,.,. .. "',......,..._ when you have so many Judaes Mayor 'har88 __ _., -0tt1u1s-,....•~.-~ ...... running you can keep them on B"'1 -Off1ce1•-PN111t~flf...._,.,.._
the bench," Cfreeint them from ~ L~~1u 17 -"•'"*' kwtt1e, • v-
filing papers themselves.) by anti-gun law -°""• la -Slwll• ..,,.,_,,.., ., ~
Slater added that the joint ~~~TU&. OIWtM couwn MU*CIPM. filing by the judges has MORTON GROVE, Ill. CAP> C041H
"absolutely'' nothing at all to do -The mayor of Morton Grove v; .. ~1a1 1 -Reew e,...lll'Wtwl . .,......,
with the fact the 17 incumbents bas received ao many haruatnc -0tt1ceJ-A1enMc1t_,.,..._.....v-.,.
are seeking re.election as a slate telephone calla as a result of the -0H1a1 • -K-a. """"· 1111 ~
In 1982. , villa1e'a toueh antl-haod1un ~~1ces -Ment11..,_.,.,"--......,·
Judae James Perez, who ordinance that he bas asked MOHMOUMNllW•ic:•PAL.c:ovn
11 hia ho phone -Offb t -U.... Mc~flf ..... ~ admitted the i1 ·were "trying to po ce to tap me • -Offk.ea -.-..~ ... ....,.1--.
stick together" throu1h tbe 1982 authorities say. -0tt1c&•-o-1t111......,.r,et..,_a....
campaign, also said the joint Mayor Richard Flickinger ~~~!::i'~.ri1me11wK•'-•l '*'-'M,
flllna was handled by Slater as a smaii~btTuesleaddapoUy ~ toboth~ cde~. ~C:::=.,~: ltlltl• IMltllet&. o-cna.., convenience. • ""' nATeAllUll9L.Y Slater delivered the judges' wbo be said have been barualn( -Of*td 11 -0er1e ~ ,......._., .,
declarations of intent to the him efer since the ordinance ~~n-~v·"-Y·"~·
re 1tstrar' a office a long wlth.(iiiwiaisipiiaMediiliiiiiniiiJun_.e •. liiiiliiiil••iiiiletii1e11iillteiilAM.lililill•••ililiil•lfl-
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Certifwa GemoW.iat, AGS
THE SPIN~L
... en undet ratild .. "'
FOR " YOUR
~
VALINTINE
• "
I •
lJ.S. seeking return
df Cuban hij~cker
c .. tral ~)Qerlcan country "ea~ ID extremes." But Haa,
declha•d to rule out tbe
potllbWty.
aeaaan sent " non-combat mll,tary advlsert to help tbe
Salvadoran mWtary last year,
but Hid at lbe Ume he bM no
Jntentlon of 1endin1 combat
trooP1.
.snUJlon Iii mWtary aid approved
by OoqrtM 1n December. The
AdmlnlMrataon also 1111 tt wtn
ull CoQarela for ao addltiol181 ·'100 mUJion in aid thlt year.
Be.,.an bu claimed that the
Ltftllt lDlur...., ln El SaJvailOr
are 1upplied and cllrected by
Cuba and other Sov\•t bloc
countries. The 1uerrl lu NY
their revolution ~tem1 from
decades of harsh military r-m..
MIAMI CAP> -The United
Stale• hu be&~ nee:::_Uou
for the NWl'll d a • ldc
Cuban" who hijacked a Jet with
a cl1An!ltY liCIMr and a bottle
of 1allOIJM, &ivlDC the fe odMr
people aboard a chance to
"PlrtY" in Haven.. sijme ....-.ers on the Air
Flllda Boelnf 737, which wu· hl cited on a flilht from Miami,
re med to t.be United States
c r~l•I C11t ban ~i1an,
P •encen said lbey spent two
ho a oo the 1round TttesdaY
aRID'nl~, eatinc at lbe Havana
rt terminal-' and drlnklnc
D ..... and toft d.rinb.
e bJjacklnc, tbe first vinl a U.S. airliner ln more
aix mont.ba, was called
eventful'' by Leonard
Pt erson, ctilef of lbe Federal
"'-~tion Administ.ratton'a
8efjrfty operations in Miami. %:hnev urge•
' ieftl talb'
l'oscow (AP) -In a new
· ap-pea l to the Reacan
administ ration today, Soviet
President Leonid I. Brezhnev
urged ·~patient, constructive
taJks" to limit the growth of
nucle~ weapons. . ·
He aJso rejected Waatwicton's
decision to link the .resumption
of Soviet-American strategic
arms limitation talks with other
a•pects of international
relations, saying "diplomacy
requires deno'-ments apd not
linkages."
Reagan give•
anti-leak mlea
WASHINGTON <AP)
President Reagan issued new
a nti-leak guidelines which a
s pokesn;ian said should allay
media concern over a Jan. 12
, order wblch barred officials
from '1Hu•aing national
security matt.eri witb report.en
without prior approval.
Commu.nlcatlons Director
D ii vid · R . Gerg&n a aid the
revised approach refll'Cts "a
very det.ermJned effort by all
concel'1'ed to draw a nr_r;::r balance between the U., te
needs of the .,Ublic's gbl to .
know •nd tbe need• of tbe
government. lb protecting
clusified information."
Shuttle moHd.
/oraaembly
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(AP) -Preparations to make
the Columbia ftady for ita lbitd
orbital miaalon continue "ahead
of the game," after the space
shuttle waa moved from lta
han1ar early today to the slant
Vehicle Assembly Bulldlnt,
NASA oftldala Hid.
ln1lde the assembly buUdln1.
the shuttle orbiter will be raised
to a vertical position for workers
to be~ attachinl the external
fuel tank and booster rockets.
I
PoU.la official..
•tripped of job•
WARSAW, Poland (AP>
Tbe Polish ne~ agency PAP
said today that about 780 Polish
officials have been ousted h'om
their poets since martial law
was declared
And a director of the Polish
national airline LOT, BronisJaw
Kllmuzewaki, who was at the
cent.er ol a heated controversy
over worker aell-mana1ement
last July, lost hia post, airline
qrtfc-als confirmed today.
Jobleu office•
wiU •tay open
WASHINGTON <AP) -Two
months after moving to shut
some unemployment offices and
dismiss thousand.I of workers,
the Reagan administration is
telling the slates to keep the
offices open . while Congress
works on a $2.3 billion measure
for jobless benefits.
"We instructed them today to
close any office," Assistant
Labor Secretary Albert
Angrlsani told a House
subcommittee Tuesday. shortly
before th~ panel approved
Reagan's request for the money.
Mobil annou~e•
steel buy plan.
NEW YORK <AP> -Mobil'
C.Orp. ha.a announced tta pJan to
_buy a major ini.reat tn U.S.
steel Corp., which defeated tbe
No. 2 all concern ID a recat
takeover fllbt tor M aratbon OU
Co.
'
Meaawhlle, Hali said Reacao "bu made It very clear" he
would be reluctant to commlt
U .8. combat troops to the
Thll week, the admlnlatraUon
s aid, it wtll send $55 million In'
emer1ency military equipment, a bout ~ rnillion of It to Nptaee
aircraft destroyed last week lo·a guerrilla raid.
The new aid, supplied under
eme rae n cy presi dential
a uthority, ls ln addlUon to $218 ,
TeaWyln1 before t.M SeGate
Forelan Relations Commttt.e,
Rall said the dandeatlne
infiltration of communll( al'IDI
Into El SaJvador "ii a1aln
approacblnl the hll~ levels
recorded just before last ye~·s
final offensive."
Angry pa.rents exit meeting with author.
~ ,
GIRARD, Pa. (AP> -Aari
parenll who dail't want the book
"Worlfnc" to be ''forced on"
vocational education st'9denta
walked O\Jt of a meeUn1 where
Studs Terkel tried to explain
why his book contains "dirty
words."
"I want to know what impels
people to go through 700 pages to
find what are called dirty words
rather than read the book
se rious l y,'' the author ,
red-faced, said Tuesday night at
a meeting or 300 parents and
sll.ldenll at Girard High School.
The best-seller is a aeries of
interviews with more than a
hundred working people, Crom
movie critics to cocktaU
waitresses. who talk about the
joys and frustrations of their
jobs.
The book was assigned by
teacher Karolyn Nichols w 14
vocational education students ln
two English classes. Eight
students o bject ed , and their
parents asked the school board
to force the teacher to assign an
alternate book.
The board is scheduled to
decide Feb . 13 whether
"Working" should be required
reading material.
Principal Walter Blucas said
he believes the students' initial
complaint did not stem from the
crude laniuage in "Worklna,"
but from a deslre to test the
teacber'f authority.
Teacher Susan Willia aireed
with Blucu ..
•'The teacher involved is not a
winner of a personality contest.
That's the issue that's at stake
here," she said.
Terkel, who arrived from
Chicago on Monday nlght, said
he wu visiting the town of 8,000
people on the edge of the factory
city of Erie because he waa
curious and "a little bi~ angry."
"I want to find out about these
bard·worktn1 people," Terkel
said. "The funny thing is that
this book la about them."
During the day Tuesday,
Ter~el was cheered by students wbo twice stood and applauded
him at an asseo\,bly. He met
privately with members of the
school board before his evening
seiaion.
One passaee the students
objected to was a narrative by a
Brooklyn, N.Y., firefighter who
told of the drama of saving a
baby's life. He c1.1rsed as he
described his view of the world.
The stocky. white-haired
author and radio talk show host
was challenged to read the
passage, and he said "dash" in
place of the profanity. "What do
..........
JUST WORKING -Studs Terkel. a uthor of the book.
"Working," speaks to student assembly at Girard, Pa ..
High School.
you remember most? The words I dashed or the thought (the
fireman) said? I leave it to
you.''
A bout 30 parents walked out of
the boiate roua meetin1 .
Protesters said they would await
the school board's decision.
For a non-event Bush incident was 'big'
WASlllNGTON (AP) -"I am
not used to all this attention,"
said George Bus h, modestly.
.. Really, it's gotten out of
hand."
And so it had. What happened
to the vice president Tuesday
waa the biggest non-event to
excite the nation's capital in a
long time.
Morning commuters fuming in
traffic jams learned over their
radio that "a projectile" hit
Bush's armor-plated, escorted
limousine as be was being
driven to work. It made a loud
bang.
The object that struck the car
was determined to be made of
clay and cement, substances ln
plentUul supply at the
construction site that the ·Bush
car was passing at the fateful
moment.
The limousine speeded up an4
drove to the Executive Office
Building. By the time it got
there, cops were rushing to the
scene of the bang, looking for
the sources.
Helicopters hovered.
Riot squads assembled.
Cops trod roofs. · •
The FBI mobile crime lab
lumbered into view. Agents with
gold badges pinned on their
business suits swarmed around.
···Nobody was injured ;
everybody is safe," said Jack
Warner of the Secret Service.
_At the Pilot, people make the difference .
• • . ~people like these in the p:r.essroom . ,
"I think tM work ii
intereltlng and there is a
lot to learn. You're kept
bulfl. and l likt that. And
the people art nice to
work with "
The press is probably the single most important piece of machinery at
any newspaper. But any printed piece is only as good as the people who
print it. That's why we're so proud of these seven guys. Working under
constant deadline pressure, they perform the final step in the
manufacturing process, producing a folded newspaper from ink. plates
and paper. And our press crew takes pride in what they do. They know
their won is reflected by the paper's final appearance. That's why we
have the cleanest, brightest color photos of any newspaper around.
Getting good people who enjoy their work environment may take longer
and cost more, but at the Daily Pilot we know it's wDrth it because
people do make a difference.
.. , tliink the Pilot is an
enjoyable ploct to work.
They treat 1JOU right here.
I wouldn't lNvt. WhJI
leave ldien 1'(>U 're happy
where you are?··
··Even though this pa.per
has been around /or a long
time. the new
management maka U a
young paper. I like
wor.king in the ·go get it'
atmo~ "'" poJ>fr . ho• ..
. '
!
ti
I I I
4
~illU~
..4.ttorner general'•
' post eyea lJy Rains
SAN DIEGO CAP> -State Sen. Omer Ralnl, a mOderate Democrat best kn'owe u the
1ponaor of a bill to require
deposlta on bottles and cans,
WH to enter the race for state
attorney 1eneral today.
R•hw, 40, WU elected to the
Senate from Ventura In lt'74 and
re-eleded tn 1978. He wea
named chairman IHt year of tbe
powerful Senate Judiciary
Committee, and formerly
chaired the Senate Democratic
Caucus.
Meticulous about bl• dret11 a'l'oomln1 and cbolce of words,
Raina bu been a bard·worldnC and productlve committee
chairman, but ha been called
self -Important aad
publlclty·aeetlU bv hll crltlct.
A member of numerou1
en vlronmental or1anlutlon1,
Raina bu tried umuccesafully
since lt'75 to 1et the Lertalature
to require a ftve-cent depoelt on
bevera1e contalnen. SpoolOn
aay they DOW wW try to •• the
law enacted by lnltiaUve.
-
.~ ........
Hil chief opponent In the June
8 primary ii expected to be Loe
An 1elea County District
Attorney Jobn Van de Kamp.
The two most prominent
Republican hopefuli are
A11emblymal'l Dave Stirlin1 of
Hacteoda Hellhts and Assistant
Attorney General George
Nicholson.
Rama a.ll'eady las attacked
Vu de ICalDJ"' for hla efforta to
drof. murdel char1es a1almt
HU 1lde Stran1ler defendant
Ancelo Buooo. Van ,de Kamp
said he made the decision after
bl1 eblef witness cban1ed bis
story twice, but Attorney
General Georee Deukmejlan's
offtce ha since taken over t.be
pro.ecution at a jud1e's request.
A former deputy district
attorney who re1ards hlmaelf u
•·something of a coutttuUonal
scholar," Rain.a presided over •
Judiciary Committee that
produced a steady stream of
crime-related lecialatlon in the
last year.
Bills to 1reaUy lncreeae
sentences for repeat crimea,
ouUaw the dlmlniabed·capaclty
defense, narrow the Insanity
defense and tou1ben the
drunken clrivlna law wu palled
with bis support, and he was lbe
author of new laws lenlthenlnl
prison terms for cblld molestlnc
and requiring mentally
disordered sex offenders to go to
prison Instead of a hospital.
MAYOR VINDICATED -Benicia Mayor Warren O'Blennis
strides confidently lnto city hall chambers amidst applause
and smiles from his supporters. O'Blennis, 41, can keep his
job, a jury ·voted Tuesday. despite the city council's claim
he had moved out of town. Benicia. one of California's first
capitals, is a city of about 12,000. some 20 miles northeast of
San Francisco.
'
Fruit fly pesticide
• • spraying to resume
l:L MONTE (AP> -Weekly
pesticide spraytnc resumes over lbe
eastern San Gabriel Valley tonllht,
Los Angeles County agricultural
officials said, to 1uard against the
Mediterranean fruit Oy's resurgence
after several warm days.
A a&.-sq\.fare-mUe area of Covina,
West Covina and La Puente bas been
doused with malatbioo at least every
other week since the produce-hunlfY
pest was discovered in nearbv
Baldwin Park last Aui. ~·
The 37·year-0ld Holmes, who could
face the death penalty if he is
convicted, bas refused to name the
killers, the detective said.
·'The totality of the record . . .
leads the court to believe there is a
strong suspicion that Mr. Holmes did
com mlt the crimes charged,"
Municipal Court Judge Nancy Brown
declared in ordering that Holmes be
bound over for trial.
Senate GOP leader
to head Bird recall
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Senate
Republican leader William Campbell
says be will bead a GOP committee
to study the possibility of trying to
recall Chief Justice R06e Bl.rd.
~ I
N ·EW!
Fish Sandwich
Platter 8 1. 99
You'll love our crispy North Atlantic fish fillet on a warm
bakery bun with shredded lettuce! Comple:te
with fresh cote slaw and golden fryes. It's
great for lunch or anytime! Try our
Chicken Sandwich Platter. too!
........ Ctlll ... .................... ,,...., .__ ........
· NofliesbavebeentrappeoslnceOct.
28, county a1ricultural commissioner
Paul Engler said Tuesday. But the
aerial 1praying schedule is being
doubled because warm weather
makes malathion degrade faster and
tends to increase chances that any
Medlly pupae would batch.
Nuke prote•ten
in court today
Committee approved a resolution at e11m us The Republican State Central __ J~;~~~~~=:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~ Its weekend convention in Monterey
calling for such a study.
PLEASANTON (AP> -The last of
170 anti·nuclear protesters who
blocked the gates of the Livermore
weapons laboratory were to appear
in court today after 154 of their
compatriots pleaded no contest to
misdemeanor charges. ·
In a lengthy, mass arraignment
Tuesday night, 154 of the protesters
pleaded no contest to blocking the
path of workers at the Lawrence
Livermore Laboratory. tbe nation's
premier nuclear weapons research
c e n t e r • d u r I n g a M_o n d a y
demonatration by more than 400 .
people.
Another three asked for a
continuance today. when they
probably will plead nol eulltY and
have ball set, said BUI Cooper, a
1pokessn~ for the Livermore Action
Alliance, which organized the
demonstration.
Ponw film •tar
ordBred to trial
LOS ANGELES (AP >
Pornographic film star John Holmes
ha1 been ordered to stand trial In
four bloody Laurel Canyon murders
after a detective said Holmes
admitted be "sel up" and wtt.nesaed
last Jilly's blud1eonln1s but clalma
be killed no one himself.
State GOP chairman Tino del
Junco appointed Campbell to bead
the committee. Campbell said
Tuesday at bis weekly press
conference.
Copa aei~e evidence
in 1mpec4'1 home
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Evidence
seized from the home of a teen-ager
accused of kllllng the Turkish
consul 1eneral includes am·
munition , a receipt for a aun,
practice targets and a manifesto
from an Armenian youth 1roup, a
police document Indicates.
The document, stapled to a copy of
the criminal complaint a1ainst
19· year-old HanplJ .. Harry'·
Sasaotinlan shown to reporters
Monday. was removed by authorities
when they found It.
During their search of
Sasaounian's Pasadena home, police
found a .357-callber bullet In his um
Chevrolet and a Nov. 18, 1981 plane.
ticket from Los Aneeles to BeinJt,
Sassounian 's birthplace, the
document aaid.
Sassounian, an Armenian wboH.
family said be was raised with a
berita1e of bitterness aaatnat Turks,
bas pleaded innocent to cbar1es of
1bootin1 diplomat Kemal Arikan, 54.
WE KNOW HOW A WOMAN
FEELS AFTER A MASTECTOMY
SUPER
SHIE .SALE
• • • • • • •
• ••••••
NATURALIZER ••
LIFE STRIDE ••••
HUSH PUPPIES • • • • • • • •
CHEROKEES
.. to 40°/o OFF
MEN
FLORSHEIM.
, ..... 71
WOMEN
11'1 -.:
17'1 -.:
17'1 -::
30°/o-40°/o OFF I
HUSH PUPPIES ...... ,.
19'7·27'7
• • • • • • •
It
I') I
• li.:
·fl ! <J
;,i1111 ,,,,,
'I'" I .foll
I I
NYSE COMPO ITE TRANSACTIONS
CMIOJAYl<*t INCUIDI HAOU o• ., ....... YCMMI, MlfWlll'. """'"'C. "'"· MS'O., HtllOtf AtlO CINCl'tl .. nt UO(fr &K~t Ate• ••"Ollfl P •-f Tl41 •&10 AND •tt1tllfU1
Natoma• earni"I!' up
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The.
Natomas Co. bu announced t•t
earnlnp of $232.5 million for $Ut a
common 1baro, calllnl lt ~be
company's sixth consecutive rtt0rd
year.
Revenuea tor the year we ... llJll
billion, 12 percent over i.·1 at.a
bllUon. the 'l'Ueaday ata~mmt aatd.
Fourth quarter earnlnp lut year.
'"" ta.a mlW°" on reveauea ol $'41.4 mlllion, eompa~ wtth "'·1
mlllloa cm revenues of '333.8 mUllon
tn th• fourth quartet of 1980.
H /F ~·
Buatneaa people are auppoMd to be hard-beaded
nallstl. But that reall.am t~tl)' ,eta cbutbd ~ut
when lt comell to the motion picture bualQeH.
People's beads are quickly turned by the prospect of
beln1 involved tn movies. So they for1et all about
financial prudence. It's a scenario that bas been played many limes
over many years. Ttte lat.es\ epi~ ii the •tu.Min&
$790 million otter that the Coca-Cola Co. hu made for
Columbia Pictures. Coke bu made a lot or money tn
soft drinks, and lt has used those profit.a to buy its
way into citrus juices (Minute Maid) and wine
(Taylor, Sterling and Monterey Vineyards). It bas
done well 1n both of those areas. But tnoviea? and
$790 million?
It takes Coke nearly two yean to earn $790
million. At the rate Columbia is malting money, it
will take more than lS years for Coke to 1et Ill
money back. And even that's not certain given the
volatile nature of the movie business. In three of the
past 10 yeara Columbia has loat money.
That Coke wants r ~ to get into thli;
business was clear y «»
from the pre-emptive '\ · ,
bid it made for 4'/! Columbia : $74 a .-_-._...., ........ _______ ,
share. That was ll(Jll IB .. m; altnost twice what
.Columbia shares
were selling for on the New York Stock Exchange.
And the price they were selling for, $41 .75, wu close
to an all-time high.
It's enough to validate a one-two foolproof theory
of how to make money in the stock market: (1) look
for a company that's about to be bought up and (2)
make sure it's a movie company.
Movie companies always seem to be up for
grabs, and there always seems to~ someone around
who's ready to buy, no matter how bad the movie
business is -and 1981 was not a good year for the
industry. Two other big film companies chaneed
hands 1n the past year.
One was 20th Century.Fox, which had been
pursued by a number of companies, including a boat
manufacturer, Chris-Craft Industries. In the spring
of 1981, Fox, which hit it big with "Star Wars."
disappeared as a publicly owned company when all
its shares were bought for $722 million by one person,
Denver oilman Marvin Davis. Sitting on Fox1s board
now are two of Davis' friends, former President
Gerald Ford and former Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger. Yes, everyoneioves the movie business.
San Francisco's financial octopus ,
Transamerica, bought its way into the movie
business in 1967 by acquiring one of Hollywood's
oldest companies, United Artists. With the purchase
came the two men who had built United Artista into a
formidable presence in the movie business: Arthur
Krim and Robert Benjamin. In 1978, chafing under
Transamerica 's rule. Krim and .Beaj1u1\lrt tried t!)
repurchase their company from Transamerica but
were told: "Nothing doing." So they left to form
another movie company, Orion. \
Last year. after taking a terrible beating on a
film called "Heaven's Gate," a $36 million Western
that bombed with the critics and movleaoers,
Transamerica decided it had had enough of the
movie business. FOr l38(r niffi'cln~ if pedaled United
Artists to MGM Film, a company that's controlled by
one man, Kirk Kerkorian.
Where are the other big movie companies?
Warner Bros . now belongs lo Warner
Communications, which makes most of ill money
from Atari video games. Paramount Pictures
belongs to the Gulf & Western conglomerate. Wall
Disney makes much more money from amusement
parks than movies.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT ..
NEW YOlllC (APJ-S.las, r ..... price
Md Mt dW19t of Ille fiflMn ~· Kif ... ..... Yon. •S•oo E1tC'-9f '"""· ,......,. nattaNlly at,,_."'-''' O.tet11tt u 116fG •1 ~ =:',' ~.~ =. o~ ·teM 61lnCIOO 43 ~ '!ti
BNMWll 00,100 16...., -"" ~l·"-l == :~:: ~. ~ Amer T~T m ,eoo 51~ -v. 'SoMt. 411.«IO 21~ _,
WemrCom «!)MIO '1'!tl •Wt StiOOl 11 llCI ,,.,,.00 .,._ -"
DPJt JYJt~~PAY!Mi~ ·~ •for T ~. Fat>. 2
STOCIU. N 0... N.... a.-CIMa 0. lO Ind Ml.22 '60.lt ... _,.. ISUSO OM 20 Tm uo.so d.:M >It.It us.a+ •.1s U Ull IOy.82 107.9' .0..34 101.SI + 0 .. 1 •s Slk ell.07 .. 7 .'3 e3•.•S Jet.11 + '·· tndul • . II .. , •.MS.IOOo Tran • • . .. . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .. • . 1,142,'CIO
Ut111 .. •• ... .. • • ... m.-65 Stk ... .................. ... .....
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YORK IAPI Feb. } OfemShm >9'2,IOO 2~ + 1141 ·t.-.. • .. ,Q U 14 + ..... "'-·
COfa Palm JI0,109 17 • ~ SCill11mtwv 1 HI.MD SI + ~
AMERICAN LUDERS
T-y *J, Ac!Van<td 121 OecllMd '°' 1US V.:t.-i': , u. ·= ~ ll10
.... highs ,, ,.
Haw lows JI " WHAT AMODIO -HEW YORK (APl Fl't>. 2
"'-'·
AOYa11cad T...,{s ~ Oecllnad * 41• unc::r._i 1'4 ~ 'Tota I•~ m m 'Haw lllQM J 1 ..... o.n " ti
METALS T ..... y
C•1111ar 1'·11 <ellll a pou"d. U.$. dfttl".ttons.
&..Mn cents a~-
ri.c n-a unb. --· cNll ......... Tiil t7 ... MIMIS W--~ Ill . • ....,.._,..nc ... uapowftd,H Y.
~.., .... _11 ....
.... .._..UM.OOtroyoi .• H.Y.
SILVER
;
GOLD QUOTATIONS ·-. .
..
-
.. ,
'I
Q
'
r
........
WEDNESDAY, FE8. 3, 1912
CAVALCADE 82
COMICS 84
TELEVISION 87 lllTlllTll lllCI If 1111111 lllllY
By PHIL SN&IDEaMAN °' .. ..., .......
Fountain Valley School
Di1trtct parents have 1lven
mhtM NViewa to a propoul to
cl'eate a middle scbooL system
<•radel six tbroulh eiaht) In the
efementary dlaU1ct.
Tho declalon on whether to
deal•nate separate middle
scboolt or to conUnue with the
current kinder1arten throqb
el1htb 1rade arran1ement la
scheduled to be made Thunday
QETIING SOME KICKS -The Huntington Beach High
School drill team captured first prize in its division during
the Arroyo Orm Tearr Festival held recently in El Monte.
The Huntington Beach performers edJ{ed out teams from 11
nltbt by dill{lct trw1t.ees.
Durtn1 a 3~ hour public
hearin1 attedded by about 150
peoj)ie Tuelday nl1ht, parenta
and a few teachers expreued
their opln1om OD middle 1cbooll
to the lrulteel.
Oppooenta claim the middle
school coavenioo would COit too
much, create trantportaUon
problems , destroy the
neiahborhood achool concept
and miabt ro1ter blab
school-type social problemt auch
..., ......... .., .............
other Southern California schools. The wlft came despite the
absence of the team's captain and co-captain. Senior Guard
Cari Buell directed the team in its win.
Huntington arcades regulated
City rules sites of games must be more than half mile from schools
By PATIUCK KENNEDY
O( .. o.Hy ..........
New electronic game arcades
In Hunli.nJton Beach have to be
at least one half mile from
schools becauae city official•
don't want youn1sters cutUna
Health seminars
set in Huntington
Free blood pressure checks
and seminars on 1eneric drup
and auto safety will be offered at
open house of Kaiser
Permanente Medical Offices
Thursday al 18081 Beach Blvd.
in Huntln«iton Beach.
The event la from 4 p.m. to
7:80 p.m. Refreshments will be
served and Kaller Foundation
Health Plan representatives will
~!er questions.
class and putting their lunch
money into the machines.
City Council members also
ordered that new arcades be
located only in commercially
zoned areas at int.enectlons with
traffic atop lighta for safety or
the children.
The new ordinance also stat.es
that arcades must be separated
from homes by a "buffer"
includin1 buildings, street.a, or
open apace of at least 100 feet.
.Mayor Ruth Finley says ahe
has "mixed feelings" about
re1ulatina arcades, but she says
police officials contend children
1et "addicted" to the electronic
screens and sometimes commit
petty crimes for coins.
·'The police department
absolutely awean there are
more petty crimes committed
by children who use those
thin1s ," Mrs. Finley said.
·'They say that some of the kids
who hang out at the arcades also
are the ones developing records
for petty crime.
"Somewhere down the line,
it's up to parenta to tell their
kids not to spend all their money
on these games," she said.
Councilman Ron Ptttlnson
said, "I see klda puttln1 all their
lunch money Into these
machines and I want to reat.rtct
them."
Councilman Jack Kelly wu
the only official opposed to the
ordinance, which defines an
arcade u a bullneas wlth al
least four machines.
Kelly said arcades are
supervised by adulta, but be
objected to machines placed in
liquor ltofta ¥ar alcohol and
adult ma1azi.nes.
He suqeated the city abould
put controls on each macbine
and that a fee could be levjed to
generate revenue for the cfty.
Valley gives
approval to
campaign law
The Fountain Valley City
Council baa liven preliminary
approval to a campai1n
contribution law revision,
raisln1 the anonymous donation
limit from $10\o $50.
The council bu scheduled a
1peclal meetln1 at '1 p.m.
Tue1day for the requited sec!GDd
readin1 of this cban1e. If
approved at that meet1.n1. the
revision will take effect
immediately.
Durtnc the ftnt CODtlderatJon
of tbe revision Tuetday nltbt,
councilmen Al Holllnden,
Eu1ene Van Daak and Marvin
Adler voted in favor,
Councilwoman Barbara Brown
opposed the chaqe, and Mayor
Ben Niel.ten abltallied.
Bette Davis portr~ys
widOw fighting to rejoin
life in TV movie tonight.
See. P.age 87.
D
0
udrucuae.
Mtddle acbool oppooenta urted
dl1trict offtclala not to tamper
with a local klnder1arten
tbrou1b ei1bth 1rade
arran1ement that baa a proven
track record.
Supporten of middle acboola,
however, aaid the separate alt.el
for older students would better
prepare them for hllh achool,
allow additional elective counes
and permit teacher• to apend
more Ume in.atrucUn1 in their
particular field or expertlle.
Dlatrict officlala aay decllnln1
enrollment baa left fewer upper
Intl 1tudenta -and thus fewer
upper level teachen -at eacb
elementary school.
District officlala Hy thil bu
reaulted in more combination
cla1111ea (sixth and seventh
graden in the same room, for
example) and more teachers
, tmtfUC!linl outalde their area of .xpertiH (teacben with strong
En1Ulh backcrounda forced to teach math).
A dlatrict advisory committee
ha a made the f0Jlowin1
recommendations for the
structure ot middle schools if
they are approved:
-All 1tudenta would be
required to take three yean ol
readin1, math, English, science
and history/ geography. Sixth
1raden would be required to -
take one trimester of art and one
trimester of 1eneraJ mualc.
-All seventh and eltbtb
grade atudenta would take one
elective courM per trimester.
electives mlebt include typln1
forei1n lan1ua1ea. art1 and
crafts, wood abop, motor
mechanics, home economlca,
1peecb and drama, chorw1, band
and orchestra.
The committee eaUmated that
middle schools will COil '50,000
more per year to operate than a
K-8 school, JI a result of
additional personnel required.
Also, the committee said a
one -time outlay for new
equipment and remodeling
would total $115,575 per new
middle school. Three to four
middle schools ml&ht be
designated.
District officials also Hid the
middle school plan could involve
substantially Increased
expenditures for busing studenta to the proper sites. .
Some parenta auueated the
trustees delay a decislon on the
middle school proposal until
more concrete financial detalls
are available.
But the trustee& have said
they wilb to settle the middle
school question before decldlng
in the comln1 weeks on a
schedule of four anticipated
school closures throu1h 1985.
Superintendent BUI Fisher will
give tht: board "is
recommendations ·.1·:. ··-day on
whether middle schoo.l5 1bould
be created, ho·:: llOon 11.atl
whether th'!y :;h "u ~d be
mandat.or)' Gr OlJUO.Ual.
Grove officers nab .
gang chief suspect
Garden Grove police have
arrested a suspected
Vietnamese gan1 leader who'
w11 the tar1et of an
aa1a11lnation attempt lut year
In which a woman wu killed
and six others injured in a
rataurant lbootinl auack.
Police s,t.. Bruce Beauchamp
said officers arrested Tai Huu
Nguyen, 39, on Tuesday as he
was leaving a store on Bolaa·
Avenue.
Nguyen, also known simply as
··Mr. Tai'' in the Vietnamese
community, was taken into
Bandit hits
shoe store
Huntington Beach police are
lookinl for a bandit with a new
pair of boot.a who robbed a shoe
store Tuesday at gunpoint.
Police say the suspect entered
the Boot Barn, on Beach
Boulevard near Edinger
Avenue, at 12:40 p .m. and
robbed the store of $270 and a
pair of boots. Police say be fled In a waiting
yellow pickup truck driven by an
accomplice. He was described in
his 40s by witnesses.
custody on a $50,000 warrant
issued by the Los Angeles Police
Department followln1 a shooting
incident In Chinatown last
month.
Beauchamp aald Garden
Grove offlcen bad been loolr.ing
for Nguyen for about 1 week.
The Loa An1elea warrant
concerned a shooting attack on a
Vietnamese man in that city's
Chinatown district In January.
The man was not Injured and he
Identified Nguyen as one of
three men he saw In a car
waiting outside a restaurant.
Nguyen was booked Into
Orange County Jail on separate
char1es of carrying a concealed
weapon at the time of hlll arrest.
He offered no resistance ,
officers said.
With him when he was taken
into custody Tuesday was a
woman identified as Julie
Quang, a singer. She had been
with Nguyen on the nipt lut
October when unknown
assailants burst into a local
restaurant and opened fire with
shotguns on diners at two tables.
Nguyen, believed to be the
target of the asaallanta. was
uninjured, as wu Mias Quan1.
He faces charges of attempted
murder ln the Loe Anirelea case.
·•Snow trip planned for kith
The Boys Club of Fountain
Valley ~ plannln1 a snow
trip Saturday to Holiday Hill
in the San Bernardino
Mountalna.
The trip, which ls open to
younpten •1es 6 to 17. will
laat from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Tbe S5 char1e will cover
bus transportation and
supervision. Youn•sten are .
asked to bring a 1ack lunch.
Partlcipanta may brinl snow
playing equipment such u
Inner tubes, tobog1ans,
saucers, etc. Parents are
welcome to attend the ouUn1.
Interested younpten can
call 988-5252 or can re1later
in person at the club, IMO
Talbert Ave .
•College of/en excursioru
Famlllea are lnvlted to
•l•n up for varlou1 trlpa
beln1 offered tbts 1~1
Uarou1ti !b• Oraa1• 1t Colle,. COmmUDk1 hntce
Offlce.
Feb. 21, and San oteco 7.oo
on March 7.
And Dlaneyland OD Mattb
,!4, Su Ditto Wild Animal
.Park on ~.Pril 24, M..eum ot ~atural H1ltor1 OD May 4,
San Onofre Nuclear Power
Plan' aad Palomar
ObffrY.._, OD 1191 and SM
World Oft May•· ' Prloel vaey for eaell tnji.
l'or NMrV'UOnl IDd dallilt lafonutloll call Al 1111,
I
\ ..
...
., .
Orange C~ut DAILY PtlOT/Wedneldey, Ftbru~ 3, 1982
·HEADS YOU WIN. New York Judge Alan
,. ...........
days instead of 30. Friess is the same judge
who allowed a fem ale murder suspect to
spend a night in his Brooklyn home in
November 1980.
Friess drew a great deal of criticism when he
allowed an 18-year-old youth to flip a coin to
determine the length of his pickpocketing
sentence. The youth won the toss and got .20
• in :Insulation battle ends • tie
:Both goose down, synthetic material provide warmth
•
WASHINGTON (AP) -With
. Americans trying to st ay warm
during ~ne or the coldest winters
· of the century, scientists joined
· the ·debate over· whether g-Oose
· down or synthetic insulation
·works best. Their conclusion:
ll's a draw.
Researchers at the University
of Wisconsin in Green Bay
tested the thermal insulating
proper.ties or goose down.
matted wool and _polyester and
po1yolefin fibers normally found
in the cloth or nylon shells of
jackets , vests and other
outerwear. "It wu found that all provil:te
v~r7 aimllar dearees pf·
imulation," aald their report,
.. published in Science magazine.
Down proved to have slightly
higher insulating value !ban
'polyester. while polyolefin fibers
and wool fiber b atting bad
~alues in between the others, ule study found.
·However, "these variations
are unllkely to be detectable ~
the consumer,'' the re.port
added. ·
, The study was done by Dr.
William Kaufman and assistants
Debra Bothe and Steven Meyer.
Kaufman said in a telephone
interview that the results
confirm the long-held belief that
en~losed "dead.. air provides
t·1U111mas $ . ,
~ • BLAKESLEE
CODY C. BLAKESLEE.
former resident or Costa
, ¥eu. Ca. before moving lo
I Oklahoma. Passed away on
11 t ebruary 1, 19112. She was a
x
I former IJ'aduate of EStancla Hilb School, CWI of lln2. ~ Sbe hu been a Federal
' Court Reporter ,ror 8 ·years
She is survived by her ~rents Paul and Wayneta ' vine of Cos.ta Mesa. Ca ..
· aters Casey Cargill or ~ ulslane and Courtney .
•A.L Tl UttGlRON
SMlfM &. NTHtL{
• WftTCUff CHAP'll
•27 E 171'1 SI
Cosla Mesa
8•6-9311
the insulation and it doesn't
make much of a difference what
you use to trap the air.
"There have recently been ·
advertisements for thin
insulators, the polyoleflns .. that
say they are twice as warm as
goose down," Kaufman said.
"Like the claims for other new
materials that periodically come
on the market, they are simply
not true.
"We were not trying to ahoot
down anyone's c laims ,·· he
continued: "We were s imply
trying to put together scientific
values t o use to compare
claims ."
The Eddie Bauer Co., a
naUonv.;de sporting goods chain
based in Redmond, Wash ..
~pon so red the s tudy . But
Kaufman said tbe CQmpany sells
clothing using all the fills tested
a nd had no influence on the
study's outcome.
Kaufman said he considers
goose down the best fill material
because it is lighter and more
durable than the others. Bu(
ttrese soft, fine feathers have
become very expensive and
some people don 't like the
bunching the down produces in
clothing, he added.
"lf an individual is strapped
for money and can't a fford
down. he can buy a very good
jacket with synthetic fibers that
wUl keep him warm," Kaufman
said. "This is the bottom line of
our study."
In the study, the researchers
put different amounts of fill into
nylon shell squares and placed
the squares on a heat source. A
copper heat-sink plate was put
on top of the material and the
researchers measured h<:Cit
tran~fer through the filler
Pot found
in nuke plant
NEWPORT NEWS. Va. <AP>
-A bag of marijuana was found
in the control room of the Surry
nuclear power plant in
November, Virginia Electric &
Power Co. and the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission have
confirmed.
The NRC also received a
report from a former guard that
personnel at the plant have been
tlrunk while on the premises,
NRC spokesman Carl Alderson
said Tuesday.
NRC rules prohibit guards and
control room workers from
being incapacitated on the job
by intoxication.
.~
' ftlCTfl'tOUI autlllla .. ITAT&MllMT
Tll• l•llffllll .. , .. II •• Mllll .....,.._
ftltOOUCI <;IT'(. IMI .. .,, .. ~ • T • T ' 0 .. T 0 °' .... ·-· .... AN. C:."IWlll.a DMINIST•• etTAT• me1e11Mi1 .._. .,...._..::1 ... ,." NO, A1U•. c .... -.Onl!9t.C•H "'6t.
T o 1 I I h t I r ' TM• ...._ 1t l*llM• "' • tntflcl1r1es, creditors ,,..y...,.a.w, ..... k.MI
end contingent creditors of "'" ......._. ... ,. ... ,,.,."' .,,. -Rlcl'11rd O. Wlesrwr end C•1111•1 c1er11 •• Ote11 .. ce11111y • rsont who may be J-ry 11• 1• .. ,....
thtrwl• lnttresttd In the "" ... .,,... OrlMt CMtt o.11y "Met.
I II Ind/or estate: """' 1•· •· "· ,..., •·"" ioe. A petition Ml bMn flltd ,..... _____ ....., ___ __.
by Susan A. Wl"ner In the Nale Illa Superior Court of Orange,.._ ________ _
Count~ requesting that .....,.. usan A. Wiesner b't ,1CT1T1ouuut1HM ppofnted IS r•rsonal MAM81TATl•MT
r e P r e s e n t • I v e t o ~::,:.11""'11' ,., .. 11 1• 1101"1
dmlnlster the estate of IDWAflOl l~tNHltlNG AND RI chard o. Wiesner CONSULTING co .. ,.,. v ..... .
(under tnt •rutependent ·~ .. c:-':=lt~.":t v ... ... Adrnlnlstratlon of Estates •-.c.i.MtM,CAm». Act). The petition Is set for Tiit• ...,_, •• <OftductM " .,. hearl!'.19 In Dept,, No. 3 at i...iiv...._,__ u..:..
700 Civic Center Drive, rt111 .....,_. ... 11 ......... ..
West, In the City of Santa CAlun'Y c•"' o1 °'"""" c_, ... J•.
Ana, C4tllfornla on Feb. 24, '°· 1•· ,., .. .
1982 at 9:30 a.m. .. .. 111tillelf 0r .. CM.tt o.i11 "..._ IF YOU OBJECT to the J111111.FaJ,to.11.1• 4'MZ
granting of the petition,
you should either appear PlklC l9nt(
at tl'lft hearing and state 1----------. your obJectlons or file
written obfectlons with the ":;::=;:::::' court before the hearing. Tu ..... ,.,,,, "".,, 11 •01ne Your appearance may be _, ....... : In person or by your so-P..o.1u w .. 111u.st.-,u1111
tt a .. Cot .. MIM, Cellfomta ~ a orney. oerreu NWu, 1850 si. .. r. ao,
I F Y 0 U A R E A H11ftll,.,.....9eKtl,ce1tton11•'1W1.
C R E 0 I T 0 R o r a "'" _._ '' ~-..., e.. contingent creditor of the llldM•...i·oar,..1 NWr.e
deceased, YOU must file Tlllt ......,_\ WG 111..i wlUI llW your claim with the cour1 cov111, c1e..-of 0r.,,.. c ... ,,,, on
r pres e n t I t to t he J.,,wart u. 1*· ""1 ..
personal representative Pueu.-0r.,. coasc Deity, • ..,.. appointed by the court JM.21,F«>.1.10,11.1m uwa.
within tour months from ------------the date of first Issuance PlaJC l9ntE
of letters as provided In 1i----------~ Section 700 of the Probate Code of California. The f'1CT1Ttouuu1t••n NAMtl ITATIMl•T time for flllng claims Will Tl!• 1o11owl11o P•''°" I• •01110 not expire qrlor to four .,,,,,.., .. months from the date of DESIGN ev M1M1. >ts 5-fllre,
I i ed bo ... -·-· c.tlfom4a'*2 the hear ng not c a ve. ~a. O'Kl.tf•, su ~··•· YOU MAY EXAMINE BalllOe Isl-. CMltor?>I• m4) the fil e kept by the court. T111, INSIMM '' '-'" .,., .,,
If you are Interested In the inc11viouai._...0 <>'Klelfe
estate, you may flle a '"'--1 •• 11i..1 w1111.,. request with the court to coun1y c .. r11 of Ora,... '°'"''' on
receive special notice of "•""'•"'· '"' ,,111111 the inventory of estate PublltNd 0r-c .. ,, Del1v P11o1,
assets and of the petitions, Fee >. 10, 11. u. '"' uwi. accounts and reports
described In Section 1200.s
of the California Probate
Code.
Keene and Dion ,
Attorney at Law, J333 W.
Coast Hwy., Suite 401 ,
Newport Beach, CA 92663;
tel. 64S-4044.
P11bll\NCI Or.._ Coet;t Delly PllOC,
J911 21, .. ""' >. 1"2 462-42
"° ..
MOJIC• Ofl''
TllUSTl•'I SAL• ~-~ .. T.L..._1,_.,
NCAA reclaMifiee \
three PCA~ echoole
,ro..-AP dllpa&elMa · M~ION, Kan. -Pacific Cout EE Athletic An~iatlon memben Cal • •
State Fullerton, Lon1 '"'acb State
and ~an Joee State are amons • tcbools whlcb
have been reclaaslfied to Divltlon I-AA ln
football competition, the NCAA announced
Tuesday.
The action, the result ol a deciaion at a
special NCAA convention ln December, reduces
the number of major, or Division 1-A, schools
from 137 to 92 and increases the number of
Division l·AA schools to 19.
Among those dropped from Diviaion l·A to
Division l·AA were au· Southern Conference
schools and all Ive League members, except
Yale. All but three of the 10 Mid-American
Conference schools, rour of the slx Southland
Conference n\embers and five Missouri Valley
Conference members were also dropped to
Divlsion I-AA.
The reclassification, effective Sept. 1, will
force some schools that are still classified
Division l·A but are members of Division I·AA
leagues, to make a decision. said David
Cawood, an NCAA spokesman. .
Those schools -such as Yale, Wichita
State and Central Micblgan and the remaining
three football.playing PCAA teams -must
drop to Division l·AA if they want to continue in
their conferences.
Quote of the day
Ron Shumate, Southeast Missouri State• b~ketbaJI coach: "We've been shooting so·
poorly that the playert are givi.ng each
other high fives when they hit the rim."
M.,,_ 100tf9 ~for Houltof)
....,.. MalilM scored a career llUt~ Ja l*nta and pulled down 11
rtbOU!Mk 'l\ieiday nl•bt to power the
Hourtoa Rock.ta to• 12a·lOI YidOi'Y
onr 8ilri OtelO ln NBA acUan . . . IA other
11me1, aa1 WWtaa1 acond 31 pomta before
ltaviD1 tbt pme wltb a badly twitted ankle
with •ix mlnuta rema1.nio1 Tuelday nitbt, but
b1I etrorta were enoulb to pace New Jeney to a
I 118·112 victory over Chica10
. . . Mlke MlkMU scored
ei•hl potnta in the laat ftve
minutes and r111led San
AntonJo to a 103-98 triumph
over Dallas . . . Geoff
Haatoa hi( a foul •hot with 13
seconds remainina and
Cleveland went on to a 100.99
victory over Wubinrton
. . . Robert Parrlllt and
Larry Bird combined for 55
polnta as Boston outscored Indiana by 17
points at the free throw line. beat the
Pacers, 100.lOS . . . Detroit's la1all 'l'lle•a•
scored 34 pointa and completed a rare fo.tr·point
play to belp the Pistons down AUanta, 106-105 ..
. Alex 2alll1b, KW Vudewe&he and T.a. Dana
comblned for 72 points to lead Denver to a
128·117 victory over the New York Knicks . -..
Portland's Calvin Natt scored 18 of hia 27 point.a
in the third period to help the TratJ Blasers
record a 102·97 Nictory over Kansas City.
Whalers hand Kings 5-3 setback
INGLEWOOD Rich Meagher li.;1
and Pierre Larouche struck for goals '
in the final 43 seconds to snap a 3-3
tie and give Hartford a S-3 National Hockey
League victory over Los Anceles on Tuesday.
With the score tied 3-3, Meagher skated in
,on. a breakaway against Kings goalie Mario
Lessard to drill a lO·footer for his second goal of
the nigbt at 19: 17.
Twelve seconds later , Larouche also tallied
an unassisted goal when he beat the Kings
goalie for his second goal of the evening and
23rd of the season.
The victory gave the Whalers a S-0-2 record
in their last seven games. The setback makes
the Klngs a 1-4·6 since Coach Don Perry took
over Jan. 12.
Hartford j umped out to a 2-0 lead In the first
period on goals by Warren Miller and Meagher.
Edison gets caught • ma
j
Um•• and ar,u TreUler adc*l two , ' Raokle .... 8--aeoted Ulne ~
1oal1 u th• New York lalanden
outlasted t.be Wuhlnston Capita.la ,_. 'tn aw
NaUooal Koc•ey 1Aa1ue cont.t Tuei'di1 nlabt.
The lllandera 1ave Coach A.I ~ bit .oot.b
victory u a coach . . . In other l&mH, Blale
Oulop aod hrry 'hna..,. combined for nve
1oal1 and two uailta to lead Sl. Lou1t to a 10.f
thumplftl of Wlnnlpe1. The 1oaJ product.lon, a
club record, cemented the Blues· 1rtp on 1econd
place ln the Lbe Norrta Dlvllton atandln11 . . .
Mtro.lav Frycer scored three 1oa1a and aeaJ
Clo•&W provtded the aame·winner al 18:08 of
the third period to 1tve Quebec: an 8-7 victory
over Colorado ... Montreal's Pierre Moedou
scored two tlrtt·perlod 1011s to apark the
Canadlem to a 5-3 vtctory over Calla1")' . . .
New York's Mike aoaera scored bis third 1oal
of the game to break a Ue with leas than five<
minutes to play and 1tve Lbe Rangers a 4.3
victory over Vancouver
NCAA sleuth knew of UCLA charges
NCAA inveait1ators knew of but :.
could not prove many of the charges
against the UCLA buketball
program that was the subject of a recent Loa
Angeles nmes probe, the NCAA'a top sleuth
said Tuesday. "There was really very little
there that would be useful for our purposes,"
said David Bent of the NCAA's enforcement
division . . . The Los Anaeles Strings signed
the biggest name In BIDie Jeu Kla1, but the
highest-ranked players chosen in the Team
Tennis 1982 draft were 14th-ranked Anae Smltb,
who joined Dallas, . and No. 20 VIJay Amrltraj,
who also signed with the Strings . . . Running
back Billy 8lm1 of the Detroit Lions was
awarded the $10 ,000 prize in the annual
Seagram's Seven Crown of Sports computer
based competition which singles out the "most
consistent and most productive" player In the
NFL ... Left-handed pitcbex Tommy Jolla of
the New York Yankees is taking his contract
dispute to arbitration .
Television, radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: Basketball -New York Knicks at
Lakers, 7:20 p.m .. KLAC (570). Ski Report:
Snow conditions in Southern California
mountains, 9:43 a.m., 12·'3, 3:43 and 7:43 p.m .,
KNX (1070).
Webb
Now that the Crosby Southern Clambake
over, one has to wonder at the future or tbe even
especially with the TPA 1tatin1 It would e
Monday quallfyin& rounds next year.
U the 552 Club, support group for Hoa
HospitaJ, is to continue tbe 36·hole, lwo-da
tournament, it hu several d.lrect1oos to 10.
PerhaPI the moet 101ical would be to conta
the TPA and to stage the event at the same time
the Hawaiian Open. Then the young 1olfen wbo
not make the field for Hawali or feel tbey do
want to spend the money to travel to the blan
could be contacted to play at Irvine Coast Coun
Club.
If the TPA would allow a letter to be senl ~
thes e younge r pros , tbe results ml1ht b
worthwhile and a rleld comparable to lhoee or lb
past could be envisioned . But It would almoef
certainly need the cooperation of the tour poup.
Another avenue open to the group would be ~ gel the newly-formed Golden State Profeaslon
Golf Tour to play at l.rvine Coast on those tw
days. This is a group of young pros who, for on
reason or another , have lost or never did attain ,
card to play the TPA tour.
Larry Margison of Westminster and Lonk
Beach sports writer Doug Ives are directing lbl
destinies or this group. They opened their se~
this week at Costa Meaa Golf Course and will plat
at Mile Square , Rancho San Joaquin an(l
Huntington Seacllff in the next two week.I. • i \
SOME OF THE PLAYERS from the area whb
participated in this year's Crosby Southed)
i!lcluding Ray Carrasco and Art Scbillinl are al.sO
hsted among those who will participate on the ne•
mini-tour.
When one looks at the list of players who fail l9
make expenses on the tour, it makes sense that
they mJgbt not want to put out the extra money Of
traveling to Hawaii for a week in the spring if ther
had an alternate tournament. ,
Fountain Valley takes Sunset lead.as Ocean View upsets Chargers; Huntington in second
According to the best estimates, it taltel
$40,000 to break even on the TPA tour. U this is the
case, oniy 94 out of 2!;0 card holders were able ti>
break that barrier in 1981. l
F?r the young players, the odds or survivin.
are slim. Out of 53 who earned their tour cards ip
the spring or fall of 1980, only Mark O'Meara f#
Laguna Niguel , Fred Couples and Vance Haefner
earned over $40,000. And 34 of the 53 lost theit
cards ior earning iess tnan $12,000. '
Fountain Valley High, with a little help from
Ocean View. took over sole possession of first
place In the Sunset League women's basketball race
Tuesday night.
The Barons had little trouble disposine of
Ma.rina while Ocean View was busy upsetting
Eduion to drop the Chargers into a second-place tie
with Huntington Beach. ·
Here's how it went:
Oce•n View 58, EdJ1on 49 .
The Seahawks came into the game with a 2-4
Sunset League record and slim hopes of beating 4·2
Edisoo but somebody apparently forgot to teU
Ocean View's Tamie Webb that.
Webb had 30 points, including 10 in both the
From Page 01
CARLSON •••
4.5 overall record, hos ts Edison High this
September.
• • • MARIN-' IS STILL searching (near and far)
for an opponent for the second week of the
non-league football season.
••• BREA·OLINDA'S upset basketball loss at
Anaheim last week was an eye-opener. Anaheim,
you'll recall, was beaten by Melodyland in
tournament play in December.
CHECKING AROUND -Former Corona del
Mar High assistant coach Jer11 Jelakll, who was
an assistant in the football program at University
High under Rlcll C11rt11, bas been named
University's varsity baseball coach. The Trojans
open their season Feb. 27 al San Clemente with a
double·header as they tune up for Sea View
Leaeue play, which includes defending CIF 2·A
champion Corona del Mer ... Former Fountain
Valley High and Golden West College star BW
Lauz bas been named Buena Park High's new
baseball coach.
ScbtOlattlc Coacb has released Its 1981 Adidas
All·Amerlcan biih school football team consisting
of 100 players. It Includes Edison High linebacker
Riek DtBeraardo and Mater Dei linebacker
lt•nne4.Y Pola . . . Former Westminster High
basketball star Mick DeLavaDMle ls averaging 3.3
points and 1.7 rebounds a 1ame for Colorado State
. . . Things are tough enouah for Huntington
Beadl football. The Oilers have lost 33 straight
league games and now their coach, Gree Reary, is
on the verge of belne whisked off by either Vista
High or the fire dep•rtment. Seems no one in the
Huntin,ion Beach Unified School District can fmd
a teachinl openlne for Henry.
Rustlers stopped
by Santa Monica
Mike Gerren 1cored 24 potnta and teammate
Cllft Bodies Jdded 22 Tuelda)' nllht to 1park
SaAta afonlca City College to a 101-88 victory over
hott Golden WHt in Southern Callfornla Cont~ buketball •eUon.
The ~ left Coaeb Jim Greenfteld'• Ruatleri
with • M confer.net mark and a lM overall
record.
Tbe wtn, munwhlle, helped the Conalra atay
.... within 1trl-•n• distance of fint·place and Q-1defeate4 C1pren. Santa llonlcal.. 1 -1 lo
coaf•nncle ... 18-7 O'ltnll, ftMilC.I t.be \;n:al'IOrt
F,eb. 11 at bolnt.
-.•n.dal ..... t.be lluat.t,n found themMlnia
cllJft by lT at tie haJI H ·ruatd Ttule.tl Hatlo6 Just
coulda't flDd Liit Malial IDd tum.mat. Darla
BOWe plated dll Mr ball In tbe ftrlt haU, ltmJ~ 1dl QIPl1UD1Utl • .... N±W tM QIOt With 11 Ud Hatton 11. TM•=••~•...,., Dana fll*I ii adftllrabb' witJ. .... WMiil Ila I I •liii DuitaUI CMM off the ~·--· · owe ...... • eetioa Frida¥ ..._ wMD t.b•
.......... 1'111111 a.at Loe Aaillef• Cf:•>. \
WOMEN
first and second periods, and grabbed 19 rebounds
to lead Ocean View lo the upset that scrambles the
tight Sun.set race.
With We bb dominating play early, the
Seahawks got out to a 30-21 halftime lead and held
on in the second half to drop Edison to 5·2.
Karen Chase and Pam White played well in
support of White. with 11 and 14 points ,
res pectively. The win improves Ocean View's
Sunset mark to 3·4
Mary Krupka led Edison scorers with 18
points.
Huntington Beech 47, We1tmln1ter 22
The Oilers moved into a tie with Edison for
second, routing Westminster to up their Sunset
mark to 5-2.
Despite the lopsided score, Huntington Beach
Coach Joanne Kellogg indicated she wasn't
completely satisfied with her team's performance.
"We played well enough to win, but we can
play better," she said. "fl just took us a while to
get untracked.'·
Tammy Buc kles led the Oilers with a
game -high 16 points while teammate Betty
Mendoza had 10 points and nine rebounds.
Fountetn V•ll•y 43, Marina TT
Sam Arledge, Deanna Davis and Lisa
Basketball scores
~
Sovt"4rft CAI COll•ee "· Pol"t l.om•l6
Cllko St. ... WM,,..,. 1'
S... l'rW1Cltc• St " Hevw•d 6t ..,
5eflome St. 11, UC Oe•lt ••
St.,.lll-SI 10), S.C"1memo St .. ....
l'onr!WWll .... I' elrflelcl ,.
H.....,erdt.J, St. AftNlm" ION1 .. ,~,.7•s o-.. w • ......., ... Hevy '1
Hort~l2. 9,_7.
Ver~"' l'elrt.iOll Olcll..._ '2 ....
A.....,.IC., U 65, Wllllenl .. Hety M , .. , ,..._
Mer"'*"9•7.H.C..Qllnon.'6
Not,.. o.tYw 7S, USPM
St. Xe11M n. CNuto Sl.70
Community col'-Ve ...... Cal~
Senta Moftke CC IOI, 0-W"1 ..
L.-A"091ft CC 56, Rio H"'* So
LA He,_ 0 , LA """"-t 46 (oO
CypreM 107, ew LOil A .... IH 11
~hldloof ••111 S.nll-.06' ~,.
HIQh 9Choof women .-cw..-,_ .. ,,. v•1ev a , Merlft• 21
O<e•n Vn $1, Edlton ••
Huftlll'Vlon 9Mc:h 47. Westml111ter
tt
..... C. .. L.NIW a:=.::':.''•"• Ve\lo 41, L•vwn•
A ....... U..-
Met.. Oii 'l SI, 1'~111
Lit G DI Dir Tlti fltllSs
Dill f• YOU
·Ginsburg combined for 32 points as the Barons
rolled to an easy win that puts them all alone atop
the Sunset standings al 6·1.
The Barons started out slowly as Marina got
out to a 6-3 lead after one period. From that point,
however, Fountain Valley broke loose to outscore
the Vi.kings, ua, in the secood and third quarters
to take control.
Marina (2·5) got eight points from Sandy
Corbett while Alene Anderson contributed five
points and 13 rebounds.
Meter Def S3, St. P•ul 31
The Monarch.a jumped out to an early lead and
kept the pressure on to improve their Angelus
League record to S-2.
Mater Dei outscored St. Paul, 19-S, in tbe first
quarter and enjoyed a 30-10 balftime lead en route
to the easy win. Kathy Gorman led the Monar~bs
with 14 points and 20 rebounds wl\ile Eva Szmurlo
chipped in 11 points. Peggy Baker and Ann Barry
added nine points apiece.
C•po V•ll•y 41, L•gune BHch 39
The Artists had plenty of opportunities to take
the lead but couldn't take advantage, missing their
last seven free throw attempts and hitting just five
of 15 foul shots on the game.
Senior Maryelle Leeds led Laguna Beach with
17 pointa and te ammate Elizabeth Kuyper had
nine points and 13 rebounds
MIHlon Vielo 58, D•ne HUia 45
The Diablos remained unbeaten (7-0) in South
Coast play u Mary Madigan, /ane Harre and
Cindy Rohrig combined for 41 points.
Mission Viejo now boasts an impressive 19-2
overall record.
SOUTHEaN CALIFOllNIA
It's a long-shot gamble for those who gain a
c ard despite the exhilaration they experience
when they are one of about 50 out of 1,200 to get
such a distinction ea ch year.
WITH THIS THOUGHT in mind, it woul•
certainly seem that there is a place In the sun fat'
su~h as the Crosby Southern tournament to take
place. r
Every tour pro this comer talked to last wee~
felt there s hould be more such events, not feweit-
They feel it is a way they can help make expenses
if they are in the top money group in such a
satellite event.
And even if they don't make that money, the
opportunity to play in such an event affords them
the chance to play and perhaps correct a flaw or
two in their game .
. And if y~u think the money paid here ($25,000)
ts peanuts, JUSt check the San Diego Open payoff.
There were only 20 players who picked up more
than the winner here, Ed Dougherty ($3,900). And
checking the LPGA event in Florida, only five
players earned more than Dougherty did at Irvine
Coast for hair the work (36 holes compared to 72
for each of the other events l.
Notre Dame upsets USF
. SO~ BEND, Ind. CAP) -Senior guard
Mike Mitchell scored a career-high 19 points
Tuesday night, leading Notre Dame to an upset
75 -66 c ollege bas ketball v!ctory over
seventh-ranked San Francisco .
~~~~-..,~~~~-
OUTSTANDING
VALUES!
· Snow de~/IDclles Collcll&loaa Llfta/cbaln
4C
· tif/EW I HZ VW
RAllfT ''L .. SIDAM
SUper economy with
thl t onel Fully
eq\ipped including a
4 toeed transmission, tinted · glats. radial !Ires and rrorel (Stk.
30rn co1e13J.
Mountain High
holiday Hill
Mt. Baldy
Kratka Ridge
Mt. Waterman
Snow Summit
Snow Valley
Goldmine
18 • pow/pp
18 pow/pp
12·24 pow/pp
36 Pow /pp
36 pow/pp
36-«> PoW /pp
60 hp
36-48 PoW I PP
CENTRAL CAUF\lBNIA
June Mountain
Mammoth Mountain
China Peak
57-80 pow/pp
111 pow/pp
60 pow/pp
·84-100 pow/pp Dodge Ridge
NOllTBEaNCALIFORNIA
2C.1L
4L
FO
3L
FO
FO
FO
4L
FO
FO
FO
Mt. Reba 102·1.31 pow/pp 7C
Kirkwood 1'4·21M pow/pp FO
Sierra Sid Ranch 105 pow /pp FO
Heavenly Valley to p0w/pp lSC, ~
Northatar 48-Ut pp FO
Squaw Valley 18·112 pp 23L
Donner Sid Ranch M·144 pp 2L
Alpine Meadows 90·216 pp J'O
Supr Bowl 188·252 pp FO
Bore al 168-lJO pp IC
Homewood Ski Ana 72·108 pp 1L Cmdltlou: hp -bardpack; pp -packed powder; pow -
powder. Ltftl/chaln: L -Utt.; C -cbaln; FO-full operaUon.
SAU PIUCI I s5
I YAMAt.OM~· Fully •quipped with
leatherette ...._ tin~
glus. deluxe ~ &
more I (Stk. 3028),
(107219), ust....a-sea.ato
D..._.-SIJtl
~JR1 ·VW
l.oededl EqutllPld wltb 6 •PMd tranem'-'on. .,
, cond., atereo I PNP·
(SIL Di6). (474712):
Liit Mee SfOH
1*1 ISIMO ·
IALIPllCI •
$_7QC~
.
Riley-PSAfeud b·oils
Airline's billboard says 'Orange County Airport
)Sy raEOEaJCK SCUOEMEBL of .. o.MJ ..........
A &-inootb old arau'Pent between Oranae
County Supervllor Thomas Riley and Pacific
Southwell Airlines over whether to use the
name John ·Wayne Ai~rt or Ora.nee County
AirQOrt la ftartnr UD HI . Riley, who wu Im mental in ehanlinc,
the airport's name to honor the late actor, la
unhappy became a PSA billboard alon1slde the
Sarita Ana Freeway in the Santa fe Sprin1s
area refers Lo tbe airport IUI Oran1t County
AirPOrt.
"Isn't it possible for you to demonstrate a
bit more cooperation in tb1a matter?" Riley
asked In a Jan. 27 letter to Jolu\ O'Malley,
•PSA's director of government affain.
PSA becan service Oct. 1 to Ora.n1e County
with two ftights dally. At the same time, the
airline be1an advertising its new service on ~ignboards on Orange County Transit District
buaea and on a blllboard located 1n Santa Ana.
Riley objected in an Oct. 14 letter to PSA;
O'llalley responded lo an Oct. 21 leUer in which
be aald. "I want to assure you that the reference
to tbe county'• faclllt1 u Oran1e County
Airport, rather than John Wayne Airport, was
meant neltber as a allgbt to your efforts to
effect the name chance nor to the memory of a
great American." •
O'Malley aald the billboard would be
changed; it wu. >.. for the bwl advertlaing,
O'Malley said it was geared to only thoee
portions of the county where tourists mltht be
present and would end in November. It did. All
other advertising, he said, either uses the name
John Wayne Airport or John Wayne/Oran1e
County Airport.
O'Malley could not be reached this morning
for comment on the newly discovered billboard
cited in Rlleyls letter.
''Since your advertising continues to be
(See BllLBOARD, Page A2)
.. ,
...
• • • •
-11111111 lllll Nl'll
FROM WHERE? -This sign., located on .the
Santa Ana Freeway near Valley Vi ew
....,,.. ........
Boulevard, is raising hackles because it
refers to John Wayne Airport by lts old flame.
Airlines push for more Wayne Airport flights
·.
GOING OUT ON A LIMB? -Springtime is
blooming early on ever1reen pear trees
along coastal community streets. Iva Lewis,
i
Deity ................. ~ ....
·a clerk typifJt in the city clerk's office.
inspects a branch outside Costa Mesa City
Hall. The fragile blossoms last two• weeks.
Phony TV number busy, busy
15,000 try to call toll-free 'vacant code'. after. appeal
operation, which, when called,
sets a computerised ~pome:
"We're sorry. Your call
cannot be completed aa dialed.
Pl••M check tbe HIDbtr Md
dial apta. or uk 1"I' ~a&or
tobelpJOU."
Harry Scboepe, tbe tele,boae
company'a atart supervisor for
/ "It was clearly a drama," be
said. "But we mlaht consider it
in the future."
Scboepe said that th1a •ua't UM f1rlt time a ftctitloue phone
number WM inundated by calla
tiecaUR ol television. He ·~ eomedian Pat Paullen made a
requHt for support for bla
preetdmUal btd several yean
.. o ... ._. U..n 11,eoe Call
were then made to Yacant code numben.
If the commercial atrhnes
serving or desiring to serve'
Orange County had their way, at
least 57 jets daily would thunder
out of John Wayne Airport by
June 1.
There are now 41 flights
permitted daily. That limit was
imposed by the county Board or
Supervisors to reduce noiae
exposure to residents leaving
under takeoff paths.
But Pacific Southwes t
Airlines, which now operates
two nights lo the San Francisco
Bay area from Orange County,
wants (our mor.e departures
effective April 1 and another-two
de,Partures June 1, according to
~..!.!!!.!' ~..!!d~.
Western Airlines , which
operates two flights daily to Salt
Lake City, wants two more
departures, effective April 25,
the date a irline s chedules
change because of the siart of
Daylight Savings Time .
C ontine ntal Airlines ,
according to a letter sent to
s upe rvisors Chairman Bruce
Nestande , wants four flights
from Orange C ounty .
Continental is proposing lo serve
Denver and Houston.
Both r outes would involve
intermediate stops to comply
with a county regulation that no
commercial carrier fly non-atop
to a destination more than SOO
miles away. (Salt Lake City, S02
miles away, is an exception).
Continental is proposing lo fly
Boeing 727·100s. The carrier
claims th e airport's
5,'roO·!~-~ ;~ :-.::O .. ii7 \.-.0
handle the additional weight of
the 727 and that the aircraft can
meet county noise requirements.
Another airline seeking entry
lo the airport is America West
Airlines, based in Phoenix.
America West in a recent letter
to the county asked for four
departures. It wants to fly to its
base city using Boeing 7371 or
DC·9·30s.
County officials said AirCal,
which operates an avera1e ol
23 .5 flights daily . from the
airport; Republic Airllnea,
which operates 11.~ and Frontier
Airlines, wbicb operates two,
are not partlcularly interested ln
increasing flight level:s at this
time.
Officials said it is virtually
i mposs ible to assess the'
ramifications of· the airlines'•
requests in light of litigation now,
surrounding the county's
-~ ... lU~ w UC!veiop • pian mat -
wou Id regulate which air
carriers have access to the
airport. ·
Supervisor Wieder ·
to seek re-election
The. county's intention bas
been to develop a plan that,
while permitting acce11 to
carriers not now serving the
airport, also would control noise
impacts on residential areu.
Asked if it was conceivable the
57 ·flight per day level would
occur, an alde to one county,
supervisor commented, "The
chances of that ba.ppenin& are
very remote. But there's that
sliver of a chance, ~d that's
what's got us worried.'
By JEFF ADLER Of .. Deity~,...,
Harriett Wi e der ha s
announced -as expected -that
she will seek re-election to a
s econd term on the Orange
County Board of Supervisors.
Mrs. W ied e r , 6 1 , bas
represented the county's second
supe rvisorial district, which
includes Huntington Beach, Seal
Beach, Garden Grove , Cypress
and Les Al amitos, since 1978
when she first was elected to the
board.
Involved in politics for the last
25 years, Mrs. Wieder was a
member of the Huntington
Beach city council prior lo her
election as supervisor.
Between 1963 and 1973, she
served as an exttutive assistant
lo then Los Angeles Mayor Sam
Yorty. More recently, she was
appointed by President Reagan
lo an ad hoc committee studying
block grants.
Mrs. Wieder, her husband,
Irv, and their two children
moved to Huntington Beach in
1970.
Libya claims
U.S. fighters
buzzed plane
BEIRUT, Le·banon (AP) -
Libya state radio said today that
two U.S. Jet lighten buued a
Libyan Jetliner over Greece, and
called on the U .N. Security
Council to condemn American
"terrorist practices."
In an Arabic-lati1ua1e
newscast monitol'ed in Beirut,
tbe radio said the F·14 U.S.
fighters intercepted the Libyan
airliner SW'Klay while it •u a
regular fli&ht fro111 Athens,
· Greece, to the Libyan capital,
Trtp0U. lt ••Id the American ~'Jell stapd provocative acts''
aaainlt the comme'rclal r.lane. Tbe nd.k> did not exp a1n why
tht lnddent was not announced
earlier. 'lbere wu no Immediate
comment from Wuhtnston.
"Tbe American Jetl, wbleh
took off from an Amerlc:an
ilrcraft cii'rier lD tht ana, Otw
over the Libyan alrllner and
cbaHCl lt for more Ulan """ mllM Ill Onek atnpaee eome ao
mUes _. ..... of Albeal.'' ta..
broadaiilt .-..sr . It uld tbe lneldent WH
broulbt to &be att.tntt.oe of the Security c.ouncu ln a LlbJu
IOftl'IUDlll& .-.. tlaat .._.., ~ '"* a.rt.ene Mt 'by UM ~can 8dmlniltratioa."
"J 4 ..
lo announcing her intention to
run, Mrs. Wieder said, "1 have
been especially encouraged by
the reaction of mayors,
councilmen, police chiefs and
ci vie leaders throughout the
district to my record and level of
ser vice. Virtually everyone bas
agreed to join the campaign
effort.''
Mrs . Wieder's supporters
h ave forme d a c ampaign
com millee in her behalf, the
Friends of Harriett Wieder.
Ray Maggi , Cypress, and
William Schroeder, Garden
G rove, have been named
CO· Chairmen.
The B'utcher-Forde consulting
firm of Newport Be9ch bas been
(See WIEDER, Pase A2)
Supervisors, meeting Tuesday
in Santa Ana , delayed
indefinitely consideration of an
airport access plan pending
resolution of the issue by lb~
U.S. 9th Circuit Court of
Appeals.
The appeals court Friday
granted an emergency stay
s ought by AirCal that
invalidated a lower federal court•
ruling probibittna the county
from implementina an acceu
.plan. Critics claimed it would be
unfairly beneficial to AirCaJ and
Republic. The two airlines now
control 86 percent of the nights
<See fi.IGlll'S, Page A2)
Kidnaps, r1:1pes ·get
lengthy sentences
I
I
I.
December w1tb two otber
defendant&, Robert L. Tiffin, 21,
and John A. K.rom , 20.
The jury which heard the cue
convicted all lhTee men on '1't
counts ln all. RuuelJ wu found
guilty of one count of lddnapplq-
for robbery, two counts of
kidnapping, three counts of
robbery, 11 counts of fordble
rape and 14 count& of forcin1 the
women to commit another sex
act.
csee aAPIST, Pase U> ! I ....................
lllllf cml IUTlll t
Conalderlhlt c1ouc1tM.1 ! . 'J
late toalCltt and TbundaJ. • f
momma. becomiDr partly I . c loudy Tburaday j
aft,rnoon . Cooler ~
TbundQ rib blPt ot a • 'J ::::Lowt""'1Pl-• 1
•
--,..--
·------·---------.. ~---.. ----·· .. --·· -·--.. /-
T
Judge to rule on El Toro ranch conspiracy charge
I
I
I! I I
.1 1·
I
I ... (
PRICARIOUS PEACH -A Philadelphia trash
collector leaps from cab or garbage truck
into arms of fireman after vehicle crashed
, through guardrail stopping short or what
-~-...... would have been a 120-foot plunge off
Schuylkill Expressway. A total of three men
were rescued and one charged with drunken
driving in the Tuesday incident.
'Woman buried under debris
I
! Widow, 78, found dead in Balboa Island home
I
-By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. ....,""' ..... Grace E. Lee was a familiar
face oa Balboa laland.
Nel6bora say she wu Ute
friendly sort who would go out of
her way to greet everyone when
she set out for her dally walks.
The 78-year-old widow also
wa• a priv,ate person. Nelebbors l ' SIQ' Ibex. were never invited into ,~~ h•r; .. O>rM. Street bome where sh~ d llvfid for nearly 15 years.
trash. But they did not see the
woman.
Tuesd1cy I police finally eot
permission to remove the trash
which was determined to be a
fire and health hazard.
Officen say they removed
several tons of material before
lhey found the woman. slumped
in a comer near a wall heater.
The refuse, estimated to be
1ftr1e teee l\igh• in solM 'f()O'IMa of
the house, had been there for
years, poiice say. Officera ciaim
they found old newspapers . _,.
dating back to the early 70s,
half.eaten food and dozens or
empty boxes.
1'he odor was so strong, police
say, that investigators were
forced to wear masks while
shoveling out the debris.
In all, police say they took five
lQ.DS of trash out of the house
during a several·hour cleanup
periad.
Officers and neighbors were
unai:Jie ib oiier any reasons why
the woman lived as she did.
9 But Newport Beach police :i;. officers went in Tuesday ,
concerned that nobody b,ad seen
the woman in almost a week. 9" They found her. She wu dead,
ot buried under several feet of
trash tbat inspectors say
covered her entire hOU1e.
PoUce believe 1be likely died
of natural causes and probably
,.,,,,.. wa1 buried when 1he fell to the
Dozier back lwme
after near crash
~ "'"' c.-ed .a ,Ue of Utter ., to .,....atop ofJaer. · ,_
1'e Orance County Coroner's
office jias been asked to
determine the exact cause of
death.
It wu a week aco today when
"· the •oman was reported
. ml$1lnS by concerned neighbors. ~ Police entered her home at that
...a time and discovered what one
~,,. offioeraaid was a "mountain" or
_,,--; From Page A 1
I• RAPIST. , .
Sentebclnc proceedln11 for .•a Tilfin were delayed until Feb. 9.
1o Krom is under1olng
pre-1entencin1 diagnostic study.
Tbe men were accused of
abductin1 and sexually
,,. uHuJtiftf four women In three
-separate incidents in northern
Oran .. County last year. The
incldenu took place between'
February and June.
TWoO-vf the vlttihls were
H-7ear-old Huntinston Beach
,Uls out bltcbhiking •n Pacific
Coast lf18bway.
:n...IGHT. • •
W.ASllINGTON (AP) ~ .11n1.
Gen. James L. Doder NWibid
to a hero's welcome today, after
42 days' captivity In Italy and a
tense landinl at a suburban air
base, and declared that "it's
doggone good to be home."
Leading the welcomine
ceremonies at Andrews Air
Force Base, Md .• for bls arrival
was Vice President George
Bush, who said, "I can't imaslne
a happier job'' than greeting the
general. Dozier wa s
accompanied by his wife Jud1th
on a flight from West Germany.
Dozier's plane encountered
trouble on its approadl to the air
base. The C-141 Air Force
transport came into view from
tbe chill fog with its left wing
nearly scraping the ground. It
rolled sligbUy so that the right
wing went down, and then'
roared skyward again.
A few minutes later, Dozier's
plane landed without incident on
another nmway.
Air Force Lt. Col. Robert
Thate~ bl~med the t.-ou~e on
a faulty in•trument landine
system in Dozier's plane which
prevented \he gUot from llnint
up properly with the run ... ay OD
the first approach.
Dozier was safely rescued
Thurs~ by ftalian police after
he was l)elcl by Red Brigades
terrorists 42 days.
Bush called attention to
Do%ier'1 many decorations
wlrtcb include the Silver Star p,rmltted dally from the andtb.reeBron1estars.
airport. "I don't think there are any ' 'the lawsuit wu lnttially tlled ribbons for valor in the face of
by PSA, wbicb 1tHdfutl1 bu kidnapping," Bush said, "but if
maintained tta•t it wants to there 11rere one,.aomeone would
, ope rat. eiOt departures per be plnbiq it on h1m today."
dllJ ttom 0r.,e CoUao. 1be And In a reference to Dolier's
U .S . Depart*• D t o I comp!~ thatlda captors made
TrauporUtjoa lMer · llltenened him li.sten to rock mu.sic at bigb ' m U.. lawsuit·ln PS.\•1 --.Ul ~ volume tbrou1b headphones,
claiml•I tb• ae4lll• P all Bush aald:
4ron one fort.bat, too."
The crowd included Mr. and
Mrs. William Stimson, the
1eneral's sister and
brother-in-law, who live in
Washinaton. The general and bia
wife almost ran across the
tarmac to embrace them.
Bush said Dozier's safe return
was "a sign of hope and
encouragement for a decade
that in just two years has
already witnessed enough
terrorism to last 10."
But the vice president also
saluted Lt. Col. Charles Ray.
shot and killed on a Paris street
two weeks ago in a terrorist
attack. "He was not as lucky as Gen.
Dozier and aU we could do then
was watch his coff1.n come off
the plane," Bush said.
Ray's father lives in Newport
Beach.
Utility •orry
for dead air
DENVER (AP> -There were
apologies aplenty after the
state'• largest uWity pulled the
plug on three Denver radio
stations in an effort to collecl a
bill for one or the station• -a
bill that already had been paid.
"There's no question Public
Service Co. made a mist.eke.
We 're awfulJy sorry," Mark
Severts, a company spokesman,
said T\leaday.
A "lack of communications,"
be said, caused KBNO, KVOD
and KOEN to be off the air
between 8:30 a.m. and 9:20 a.m.
Tuesday, Severts said.
From Page A1
BILLBOARD
aPl)l'0"4 by .Jupet'fWDR wu "ll there were a ribbon for ut.t~" Ud ~ td. belnJ made to liaten to rock • pro•l1loo1 of t~lrllne. muafo u ~ a day -what a o.n-.attoo Aet of , "' borrlblt torture -he'd bave
wront, I can only conclude that
PSA wtabes to conUnue aloq a
path that cannot ultimately be
very prodUctlve," Riley sakl.
Relat.loni between Rlley and
PSA have not bee~ the ~t. It
was PSA whlch lnltlally ftled a
lawsuit ln U .S: District Cow:t in
, Loa An1elea that led to • court otder ovtrtumlnl a Riley plan
to tel).llate whlcb commerdal
carrtera MrVe the airport.
That low.r court. ordU lat Friday wu stayed by a federal J
appeal& oourt pendln1 a hearinl
on th• nMrtta of the acce11 tdue. ·
A U.S. Otatrtet Court Judie la
1cheduled to laau• verdtet•
Tburaday on whether two
Oranae County men violated
federal law in not lllllnl th•
2,700-acre Wbltlna Ranch u an
uset when a firm controlled by
one of the two men flled
bankruptcy ln the mld·lt'10s.
Kent Roaers, who purchued
the sprawllna ranch near El
Toro in 1915 for S2 mUlJoo, and
bla <omef. Jacob Pellte, were
aceu11d in an 11-couat
indictm41nt lssued by a federal
1rand Jury of con1plraey to
defraud and defeat federal
bankruptcy laws.
Judie Matthew Byme Jr. took
the case under 1ubmt11ion
Tuesday after hearln1 final
areumenta from Aul. U.S.
Economy to come
'roaring back?'
By Tiie .bMClated Preas
Despite climbing interest
rates and mixed slanals for the
manufacturtne and houslnc
industries, Treasury Secretary
Donald Regan says the sluulsh
economy will come "roarlne
back in the late spring."
Regan said Tuesday the first
widespread increase lo the
prime lending rate since July.
VOLCKEA SHOULD
AESION-Edltorfel, A10
prompted by a two-month surge
in other boirowina costs, wu a
"temporary phenomenon" that
was "diacoura1ln1 but not unexpected.··
The prime rate, the base upon
wbicb banka compute Interest
charees on abort-term business
loans to best·rlsk customers,
bad lin&ered at U . 75 percent
since Dec. l before spurttna
hither Monday.
But Tuesday, most bank.a had
raised their prime rate to lSYa
percent, while a few banks held
lhe increase to 18~.
Rates also have Increased for
long-term borrowlne, abutting
out many corporations from a
bond market dominated by the
U.S. Treasury. Thls week, the
Treasury is selllnl $20 billion in
bonds, notes and bills to help
finance the federal deficit.
In an auction of SS t>UUon in
3-year Treasury notes Tuesday,
the average yield rose to 14.63
percent in heavy blddiD .. from
14.43 percent at th• previous
auction Nov. 2.
Some econo1Ubts have said
the reaur1ence ol interest rates
will delay a re~ver:y from the
recession, which wu broutht on
by high interest rates.
But Regan told the National
Press Club, "Thia is a
temporary phenomenon and
should wuh out over the course
of the next four to six weeu."
He said that in the past, Interest
rates have increued briefiy in
the early stages of an economic
recovery, only to decline u the
recovery takes hold.
FromPageA1
WIEDER • • •
retained to handle tbe
campalen1 according to a
spokesman ror Mrs. Wieder.
The Incumbent supervisor has
collected a $226,010 campaign
• war cheat to date for tael"
re-election bid, accordin& to
reports on ftle with the OralA
County Registrar of Vot.r:·.,
Office.
Pope John Paul
: prays for Poles
VATICAN CITY (AP> -Pope
John Paul rI today deplored the
1011 of freedom in his native
country and urged Poles to
persevere ln their faith.
Hi• speech in Polish came on
U.e eve d tbe fint vi•tt to tbe . Vatican 'by Poland'll Roman
Catholic prima\e aw\.'ir UJ.n.iai
law was declared in the
communilt country Dec. 13.
Attorney Percy Andenon and
defense attorneys Keltb llooroe
of Santa Ana and Norman
James at Loe Anaelet.
Mon.roe Hld In an interview
Tuesday that be conaldered the
proaecuUJ>n's cue without buil.
Monroe said Rosen did
nothin1 more than traalfer bla
interest in the WlllUnl Ranch
from one firm to another wben a
boustnc development venture ln
Riverside County went lnto bankruptcy.
The Riverside project waa
belna developed by Global
Western Development Co., a
firm solely owned by Rosen and
M"S Development Co. Global
Western acted as a 1eneral
partner , M&S as limited
partner.
Only an hour before the
Cartnersh i p declared
ankruptcy, Monroe said,
Ro1ers transferred title of the
Whitin1 Ranch from Global Western to a separate entity,
KFR Inc. KFR Inc. alao was
entirely owned by Ro1er1.
Monroe said the case never
would have existed bad Peilte,
who drew up the bankruptcy
petition, included the atatement
that Global Western was actine as ·•a joint venture" in the
Riverside project. "Tbls case ls
only about three little words,"
Monroe userted .
Anderson, the prosecutor,
declined to discuss the cue
pendina the verdict. He referred
inquiries to a press releaae
iasued by the U.S. Attorney's
office at the time the indictment
lssued.
Global West.em's ownership of
the Whiting ranch wu diacloeed
ln bankruptcy court about 10
montba after the bankruptcy
petition waa flied, Monroe said.
At that time, be explained, it
was "advantageous" for Rogers
to list the ranch as a Global
Western asaet because the ranch
property was facing outside
leaal actions. Monroe said
Rogers at that point wanted to
"protect" the property by
bringing it LrW> the bankruptcy
proceeding.
The bankruptcy procee~g
not withstanding, Monroe
maintained tbat both the
RlversJde coutruction venture,
IUld r.lnhal WesU!rn w.-beth
"solvent estates'' and lhat all
creditors received "100 cents on lbe doUar."
-..;' Winter Sale Continues
Now is your chance for the best values from
the largest stock in the area. Tremendous price
reductions on the most famous lines of quality furniture
LAGUNA 811ACH
... Nofth Coeet ...,.
(714) ..... , . <..
COITAMl•A ,. Nl•t*t .....
(714JMl·IOIO
Dlilfr NII Pllllle..., ._., ....,_
AGE EXPLORER -UC Irvine researcher Dr. Daniel
Hollander sits in lab where he unravels mysteries of aging.
Mysteries of aging
probed by UCI prof
iiy KICllABD GREEN ot••o.r~ ...
Mysteries of the aging process
which have baffled man since
the beginning of time are being
unraveled in the UC Irvine
laboratory of Dr. Daniel
Hollander.
Why do our bones get brittle
when we get old? Why does our
susceptibility to cancer
increase ? How come our
arteries tiarden with age?
Hollander of Newport Beach,
a professor of medicine and
gastroenterology at the UCI
College of Medicine, is leading a
team of researchers trying to
solve these questions by
investigating the nutritional
consequences ol agmg.
He has discovered that rats
Ridtlle 1 OOth
party planned
Jesse Riddle , mayor of
Laguna Beach from 19~ to 1962,
will tum 100 years old next week
and the town is holding a
birthday party Monday for the
new centenarian.
-His friends will gather at the
clubhouse at the Lawn Bo\IP.tling
Club in Heisler Park beeinning
at 11 a.m. to help celebrate the
occasion.
Riddle, an eight-year council
member, was instrumental in
acquiring Boat Oanyon Park for
the city, aa well as the softball
field which is named after the
Laguna pioneer.
absorb mqre and more fat u
they age, a discovery that may
have far-reacblng Implications
for people with arteriosclerosis
<hardening of the arteries). Fat
is thought to be a factor in th1a
disease.
If it turns out that man abo
absorbs increasing tamounta of
fat with age, thia could explain
another condition which bedevt1a
old people: obesity, Hollander
said.
Hollander said absorption al
certain types of fat may abo
increase suscef.tibility to
cancer, bone fraglllty and other
age-related disorders.
So far, his research has been
limited to rats, but Hollander
said he's anxious to begin
human testing to see if his
findings apply to man.
Changes in the diet of rats can
increase their life span by 50
percent, he said. Hollander said
it is conceivable man's life span
could also be increased 50
percent if it is known how to
properly adjust the human diet
to account for age-related
changes in absorption or
nutrients.
The research team, which
includes six undergraduates and
a technician, is now trying to
determine the mechanisms
which account fer changes in
nutrient absorption with age.
The research team is funded
by a $60,000-per-year grant from
the National Institute of Aging
and a $40,000 per year grant
from the Veterans
Adm lnlstration.
I_., ...
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 3, 1912
CAVALCADE 82
COMICS 84·
TELEVIS,QN 87
Bette Davis portrays
widow fighting to rejoin
life in TV movie tonight.
See. Page 87.
Sy~amore payll)ellts in def a Ult
·Laguna claims. newport Beach company ha$n't paid $400,000
By STEVE MITCHELL
0( .. 0-. ..........
Laauna Beach city council
members ordered their city
manager Tuesday to notify the
Baywood DevelOpment Co. that
the firm ii Jn default on
payments to the city for
purchase of a portion of
Sycamore Hilla.
Baywood, a Newport Beach
development firm, wu to have
come up with about $400,000
toward the $S.4 million purchase
price for about 62 acres of
Sycamore Hills at the end of
January.
The company was unable to
come up with the money. and.
City Manager Ken Frank told
council member: the firm "is
technically in default .
Technically, they have no rights
to the land at all."
At issue i.s the purcbue of a
parcel off El Toro Road near the
Leisure World developm~t by
Baywood for development of up
to 300 townhouses.
The $5.4 million morteage,
which wu to be paid to the city
over a period of years, would go
to the former owners of the
S22-acre Sycamore Hills parcel.
The ell¥ purchased Sycamore
Hills from the Rancho Palos
Verdes Q>rp. ln lt7t for M.'B
million ln order to end years of
law1ult1 between ltaell and
Rancho over development ri&htl
on the l)arcel, located between
Laauna Canyon and El Toro
roads.
The aale of 62 acres of the
entire parcel to Baywood wu to
help the city complete lta
purchase ol the entire acreaee
to Rancho. But despite some principal
and interest payments to
Rancho, the city ltlll finds tt.aelf
with liabilities totalin& S7
milllon -countlni att.orney1
feea , con1ultant coats ,
environmental reporta. and
interest paymenta.
Frank told the council it oow
needs to "start lookin1 at
alternatives to Baywood for
(pur~base) of the Baywood
site."
Council members and the
company 1tUl hold out bope
Baywood wilJ be able to continue
with the purchue of the land.
"We've been staying with
Baywood becauae they're
intereated In the ait' and
Interested in our concerns," said
Mayor Sally Bellerue.
"I hope things work out for
them. But we need to take a
Detty ......
SYCAMORE HILLS -
Laguna Beach city officials
say the Baywood
Development Co. is in
default on payme nts for
purchase of a portion of
Sycamore Hills.
bard look at it.'·
Councilman William Wilcoxen
•freed, saying, "It 1eems to me
we have an obl11atlon to
Baywood, if not legal, then at
least moral."
· He said part of the problem ii
a lawsuit flied by the Le1al A1d
Society a1alnat the city ,
asaerlin& a lack of affordable A •
housing in the propoaed 1 I
Baywood development.
That suit la now before the 4th
District Court of Appeals in San
Bernardino, and a declsion 11 not
due for a month to six weeks.
''The hold ttp ls the litigation,"
Wilcoxen said , sug1eat1n1
Baywood iS caught up ln the
middle of it.
Should the city win ill appeal
in San Bernardino, and Baywood
''does not jump back into
negotiations" for purcbue of
the city land, Laguna will belin
looking elsewhere for buyers,
said Frank.
"Baywood is still intereated,"
he said in a telephone interview.
"But it has unsold inventory
(houses in other projects) and
these are bad, bad economic
limes for developers."
But, he said, the city bas
received queries from other
builders interested in the
project. In addition, the city
owns the tract map approved for
the development, which would
give a new !luyer a leg U'1 un
developing th~ l.owai!°'"•aaes.
• .
~~I
-. )
~
..
'• •! • .. ,.
'"
tJ
·Rancho against airport ..
Firm's president denies support for San Juan project
OPP08ED -Anthony Motso.
president of Rancho Mission
Viejo, says his firm does not
favor a private airport on
ranch property.
~ Rancho Mission Viejo bas
announced its opposition to
construction of a new private
aircraft airport on ranch
property alone San Juan Creek
eut of Sao Juan Capistrano.
r--....... ft n ••• CllA rnemtv Su;,~7 ~~RU;, .-iUicii
Prealdent Anthony Mollo aaid
peraons who are un<11r the
lmpreulon the ranch favors the
airport site "are simply not
dealln1 with the truth."
Tbe Su Juan Creek 1lte,
located about five miles eut of
the city, emeraed as the leading
choice for a new general
aviation airport at a recent
meeting of the county Airport
ComDUSSion.
· The creek site bad been
ranked third behind a site in ·
Santiago Canyon east of Oranae
and the Armed Forces Reserve
Center airfield in Los Alamitos
by consultants hired by lhe
Samaritan killed
by car on freeway
A man lend.Ing assistance to a
stranded JDOtorist-on the San
Diego Freeway in Laguna Hills
was killed today when an
alleged drunken driver swerved
off the roadway and crushed
him between two parked
vehicles, accordtne to the
California Highway Patrol.
Officer Bud Rooks said Wayne
Dayts, 31, of San Diego was
pronounced dead at the scene at
about l : lS a .m . near the
southbound Alicia Parkway
freeway exit.
Also injured ln the craah wu
Peggy Nelson, also of San Dieao.
Rooks said. Miss Nelson
suffered two broken legs and is
listed in satisfactory condition at
Saddleback Co mmunity
Hospital.
Rooks said Miss Nelson's van
had broken down on the freeway
and she had telephoned Dayts
for assistance. He aaid Daytz
·was hitching the van to his
pickup truck so It could be towed
when the two vehicles were
struck by a car driven by Diana Sereno, 32, of Costa Mesa.
Both Dayts and Mias Nelson
were pinned between the two
vehicles when Miu Sereno
struck them, Rooks said.
county to evaluate potential
general aviation airport
locations.
The County Board of
Supervisors is scheduled to act
Tuesday on the various
recommendations by th11 al~
commlaalon and the consultants,
CH2M Hill, of Costa Meaa.
In the letter, Moiao said the
goal of the ranch is to preserve
the' San Juan Creek valley as
much u possible. He termed it
the ''heart of the ranch" noting
that the area includes "the
historic Cow Camp, the farming
areas, our two campground
sites, the thoroughbred farm,
the ranch house, and some of the
most beautiful scene ry in
Orange County -all visible
from the Ortega Highway.
·'It has always been our plan
' to preserve the open land and
the beauty of Um area. While we
are currently opening up the
lands northeast of Mission Viejo
-the Trabuco and the Plano -
to higher densities, we want and
foresee a very rural and very
low density type development in
the San Juan."
Moiso said h e was
"disappointed" that some
community members and some
persons who participated in the
site selection process believe
that the ranch supports the San
Juan Creek site.
"Neither the members of the
ranch'• staff nor representatives
of our consultants advocated
thia position," Moiso said.
Meanwhile, the San Juan
Capistrano City Council has
State college
• mstruc tors
back unions
acted to express opposition to
supervisors to the proposed San
Juan Creek site. That acUon
followed a s tormy meeting
attended Tuesday night by about
200 residents , most of them
::.!:-.,vrt upponents.
The council is asking
supervisors to delay for 45 days
any decision on a 1eneral
aviation airport location.
The county launched Its
search for a slte or sites for a
new general aviation airport
because of lhe lack of tie-down
spaces for private aircraft at
existing airports, including John
Wayne Airport , Fullerton
Airport and Meadowlark Airport
in Huntington Beach.
Parking
·costs
argued
,.
Murder admission asserted
By DAVID KUTZMANN
O( .. Dlllfr ..........
An Irvine city employee's
murder trial baa o-pened in
Oru1e County Superior Court
wltb a prosecutor'• assertion
that defendant Patrick Fo1arty
admitted be aluhed the throat
of a ~ Ntcuel man dating
So1a.rty • eatranaed wife.
In 00ftlln1 1tatementa to the
six-man, six-woman jury, Chief
Deputy District Attorney James
Enright quoted Fogarty as
lelJing a friend:
• "He was doing lhe chicken
and I cut bis throat.''
The defendant, a 32-year-old
Newport Beach resident, la
charged with kUUne Donald
Frank Coot, a Bechtel Corp
enfineer who had been seeinJC
Student /ees hike
backed by Aldrich
tremendous rrowta an women'•
lnt.ercoUqiate atbleUcs."
Sucb acttviU11 art aow
accommodated tn 1,IOO·H•t
Crawford Hall.
--
Fogarty's wife, Andrea.
Cook's body was found by a
roommate sprawled on a
bedroom noor on Feb. 2, t•t -a year to the day preceding the
1tart of Fotartv's murder trial.
h rebuttln& Enrl1bt's
contentions, defenie lawyer
Thomas Szaltall a11erted the
evidence would 1how that
Fogarty was returning bis
dau1bter to bis wlle'1 Costa
Mesa resldence at the tJme be
said that Cook waa fatally
•tabbed -about e o'clock on a
Sunday eveolnl.
In veaU•a(ora, however,
belle" tM de.ab occ\il'red later
in tit• nllht. SzakaD alao aald he would
1bow that bla cllen~ rtturned to
hla panata' .,... ........ tM
1ame clothel that he. ·left la -&ftd tMl DO bb;il lll6fta OC' odier'
lllnt OI' a I~ Would be
•vldent. Cook, wbo worked for BecbteJ
at tbe Sen Onofre Nuc&.ar
Gen1rat1a1 Station after
retut'a.lial ftoin a Job 1Uat ta
Saudi Arabia. 1ufl1ud num.-It.lb ....... • tbe
UPMf pert of bil ~, lDcludlnl a alUW tbroat.
Though -no murder weapon
was found, lnvestlaators
d11coverecl a apeot bullet cutni
in the ea.rage of biJ La1una
Nt1uel home.
Enright a,Ud Fo1arty told a
friend, Chuck Miller, of the
ldlllnc, after wblch Miller ~
out to find a newapaper which
reported the death.
Wben lllller .,ain talked with
Fo1arty, the proeecutor aald.
the Irvibe city emplDJ'ee said be
bad a ftPt wit.b c.oot at the rront door ot Cook'• bomf and
that be "cut b1a throat."
Another friend of Fo1art.f '•
alao la expected to lelUfy that
the ..,_,,.nt med b1a to a11ai.
for him on the SundQ tM ktPtnc
oec.-..cl
1
l
llllJPllll
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 3, 1982
CAVALCADE 82
111111. COMICS 8~
TELEVISION 87
.
Bette Dams P;g+trays
widow fighting to rejoin
life in TV movie tonight.
See. Page B7.
$400,QOO Sycamore payment said • ID
•:t STBVB lllTCllELL °' .. ..., ........
Lacuna Beach clty councUr
members ordered tbela city·
manalll" TuMday to notify the
Baywood Development Co. that
the flrm la lo default on.
payments to the clty for
purchase of a portion of
Sycamore Hllla.
Baywood, a Newport Beach
development firm, was to have
come up wlth about $400,000
toward the $5.4 million purcbue
prlc.e for about 62 acres of
Sycamore Hilll at the end of
January.
The company was unable to
come up with the money, and.
City Manager Ken Frank toldt
council members the firm "la
technically in default .
PITCHING IN When 20
Fluor Community
Involvement Team
members from Irvine went
to The Guidance Center in
Huntington Beach. Karen
Rowden handled the hose for
mixing cement while Rosie
and Steve Mitsuhashi and
Mike Mcq rackin built a
bench that Charlie Rowden
and Steve positioned in holes
for concrete. Outdoor
seating and two classroom
tables were made for the
center's developmentally
handicapped students. The
team raises funds and seeks
donations for one civic
project per month.
Technically, they have no rtpts
to the land at a,11."
At luue 11 the purchase ot a
parcel off El Toro Road near the
Lellure World development by
Baywood for development ol up
to 300 towrtbouaes.
The $5.4 million mortgage,
which was to be paid to the city
over a period of yea.rs, would go
to the former owners of the
522·acre Sycamore Hllll parcel.
The city purchased Sy~a1DQ1"9
Hilla frqm tbe Rancho Pal04
Verdes Corp. ln 1'78 for ... 75
mWlon in order to end yean or
lawsuits between itself and
Rancho o\ler development ri1hta
on the parcel, localed between
Laguna Canyon and El Toro
roads.
The sale of 62 acres ol the
. Mysteries of aging· unraveled·
I UCI professor leads probe of nutritional conseqt.iences of process
87 &ICllAllD GREEN Of ... ....,Nle....,
Mysteries of the aging process
wbicb have baffled man since
the bestnninl of Ume are being
unraveled in the UC Irvine
laboratory of Dr . Daniel
Hollander.
Why do our bones get britUe
when we get old? Why does our
UCI center gets .
amhuliltory credit
UC lrvme·a ~udent Health
Center baa become the flrat
1tudat bultb ca.re faclllty oo
the Pacific Coast to be
accrecllted by the American
A11oelatlon for Ambulatory
Health Care 1ccordln1 to Dr.
' Cbarlel Pbaillpa, center medical
dlreetor.
recording vital information
about patients.
-An insurance system the
center ha instituted for atudentl
not otherwise covered by
insurance.
The Student Health C4iater la
funded t~rou•' stu•ent
re1l1tratton feta. Students
receive aervie4'I at mu. or no
char1e. Tbe cente~ bu U.bour'
emer1ehcy care, X-ray
facllltlH, a laboratory, a
pharmacy, pbyalcal tber•PY and an et&l*·bed lnllnD•rr. It .-..0 alfera medieal ..me.a
ln 1peclaltlee aucb aa blrtb
control, dermatolocy,
11necolo1y, .mental health,
Oollitbahnok'O, ortbOpedlC IDd
""' .. eoalrOI Mt tie.a. "We·Jos aboUl •ii!"' mtta per
,..,., WWcb =...,. mu. •
s u sceptibility to cancer
Increase? How come our
arteries harden with age?
Hollander of Newport Beach,
• professor of medicine and
1astroenterolo1Y at the UCI
Colle1e of Medicine, la leadiq a
team of researchers trytn1 to
solve these queatlona by
lnveat111t1n1 the nutritional
couequences of aitn1.
He baa dlacovered that rats
ablorb more and more fat u
they qe, a cUacovery that may
have far-reacbinC tmpllcatiom
for peopa with a:rteno.clerolia
(hardenlne of the arteriea). Fat
J.a tbouebl t.o be a factor in thll
dlleaH.
If It twna out tbat man alto
abeor• IDcre-.tnc amounta of
fat wltb .. e. WI coWd eQ>laln
another ooDditJon wbieb We~
old people: oblltty, HoUmder
aald.
Hollander nkl ablOrptlon of
"rtaln trPll of lat may IJlo·
tncr••H ::alblllt1 to caocer, bone fr• '1 and oCber • ·••-related .
SO far, hlii ~....eireh bu been
Umlteid to rm, but Hollaader
Hid Ill•'• anxto• to be1ln
human t.1tl•1 to aee· ti bl• ftildt• aPl9, to man. -· "" tM t ouCp~ cllalH ta Oru1e Coant1 ;' • Pla1Wpe1a1~~~·~--~ ........ ~---~·~
increase their life span by 50 ·
percent, be lald. Hollander said
it la conceivable man•a life 1pan
could also be increased 50
percent lf it la known bow to
properly adjust the human diet
to account for age-related
changes ln abaorptlon of
nutrtenta.
The research team, wbleh
lncludel dx underlf aduatea and
a tecbniclan, la now trylq to
determine the mechanisms
which account fer cbaqes in
nutrteDt ablorption wWt 11e.
The felearcb team JI t...sid
by ...... per.year craat llom
the Natiooal lnlUtUW ot ~
ud a S«>,000 per year •ant
f r o m t ·h e V • t • r a n •
Admbdltratlon.
''We an tr)'tn1 to att man
mone1 IO that •• can bepa
tetti•C wltb buman1,' • 11ld
Hollander. "~ll'1 •e cu Jaer ... beaJU. amoa1 oa.r· ~:.~ bOPefullt ........
entire parcel to Baywood wu to
help the city complete Ila
purchase of the entire acreage
to Rancho.
But desplte some principal
and Interest payments to
Rancho, the city still finds Itself
with liabilities totaling $7
million -courtting attorneys
fees , consultant costs.
,
environmental reporta, and
interest payments.
Frank told the council It now
needs to "start looting at
alternatives to Baywood for
(purchase> of the Baywood
alte.'1
. Council members and the
company still bold out hope
Baywood will be able to conUnue
with the purchase of the land.
Irvine
staffer
on trial
~ j
' I f
. ~~I
~ ,
By DAVID KUTZMANN
O{ .. IMltr ...... IMW
..
i· I\
An Irvine city employee's _, \
murder trial has open•d in · 1 Orange County Superior Court · ·
with a prosecutor's assertion t ~
t.bat defendant Patrick Fogarty
admitted be slashed the throat · ·
of a Laguna Niguel man dating ·1
~garty's estranged wife.
ln opening statements to the
six-man, six-woman jury, Chief j 14. Deputy T>Ultrict Attorney James
Enright qun1ett Fogarty as
telling a friend :
_"He Wfil' doinll th .. chicken
and I cut his u .. "":. ·
The d.-fe11c.IA1it a ·~·year~Jrl
Newport beach resident, is
charged witt. killina Donald
Frank Cook, a Bechtel Corp
engineer who had been seeing
Fogarty'• wife, Andrea.
Cook's body was found by a '1 roommate sprawled on a ..
bedroom noor on Feb. 2, 1981 -N
a year to the day preceding the ,
start of Fogarty's murder trial. '
In rebutting Enrigbt's
~un i.entions, <iefenae iawyer
Thomas Szakall asserted the
· evidence would show tbat
Fogarty was returning bis
daughter to his \ wife's Costa
Mesa residence al the time be
said that Cook was fatally
stabbed -about 6 o'clock on a
Sunday evening.
Investiga tors. however,
believe the death occurred later
in the night.
Szakall also said he wouJd
show that his client returned to
his parents' home wearing the
same clot.hes that be left in -
and that no blood stains or other
signs or a struggle would be
evident.
Cook, who worked for Bechtel
at the San Onofre Nuclear
G e nerating Station after
returning from a jdb stint in
S a u di A r a bi a 1 u tf ere d
numerous stab ds on the
upper part of his , including
a slashed throat.
Though -no murder weapon
wa s round , inves tigators
discovered a spent bullet casing
in the garage or his Laguna
Niguel home.
Enright said Fogarty told a
friend, Chuck Miller, of the ..
killing, after which Miller went
out to fmd a newspaper which
reported the death. .
When Miller again talked with
Fogarty. the prosecutor said, ~
the Irvine city employee said be
had a fight with Cook at the •
front door of Cook's home md
that he "cut b1s throat."
'By STEVE MITCHELL 0( .............. L••un• Beach city eouncur
memben ordered their city ..
mana1er Tuesday to notify the
Baywood Development Co. that
the firm ii in default on.
payments to the city for
purchase of a portion of
Sycamore mu..
Baywood, a Ne~port Beach
-
development ftrm, was to have
come up with about S.00,GOO
toward the $5.4 mUUon purcbaae
price for about 12 acres of
Sycamore Hill• at the end ol
January.
· The company was unable to
come up with the money. and.
City Manager Ken Frank ~
council members the ftrm ''ii
technically in default.
WEDNl;SDAY, Fl!B. 3, 1992
CAVALCADE 82
COMICS 84'
TELEVISION 87
Technically. they have no rights
to the land at •II."
At iltue ii the pun:bue of a
parcel o(f El Toro Road near the
Lellu.re World development by
Baywood for development of up
to 300 townho\lles.
The $5.4 million mortga1e.
wbicb wu to be paid to the city
over a period of years, would 10
to the former owners of the
522-acre Sycamore Hilla parcel.
The city purchued Sy~amore
Hill• from tbe Ranctio Paloe
Verdes Corp. ln 1978 for •.'7~
million ln order to end yean of
lawsuit• between itself and
Rancho over development rl1hts
on the parcel, located between
Laauna Canyon and El Toro
roads. . The sale of 62 iacres of the
Bette Davis' portrays
w fighting to rejoin
Zif e in TV movie tonight.
See. P.age 87.
entire parcel to Baywooct was to
help the city complete its
purchase of the entire acrea1e
to Rancho.
But despite aome principal
and interest payments to
Rancho the city still flnda itself
with llabilities totaling $7
million -counting attorneys
fees , ·consultant coats .
environmental report•. and
lnterelft payments.
F'rank told the oouncll it now
needs to "start looklnt at
alternatives lo Baywood for
(purchase) of the Baywood
site."
Council members and the
company still bold out bope
Baywood will be able to continue
with the purchase of the land.
Office term lnw fought
HELPING HANDS -Members of the North
Costa !ff.es:: Kiwanis 1 t:ct:niiy heipea it:csehets·
in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District
build physical education equipment for use
by special education students. Scott Watson
sands board while Gary Montooth. special
education program specialist. looks on.
Rancho against airport
Firlll's president denies support for San Juan project
· Rancho Mission Viejo has
announced its opposition to
construction of a new private
aircraft airport on ranch
property along San Juan Creek
east of San Juan Capistrano.
In a letter to Orange County
Supervisor Thomas Riley. ranch
President Anthony Moiao said
persons who are under the
impression the ranch favors the
airport site "are simply not
dealing with the truth."
The San Juan Creek site,
located about five miles eut ol
the city. emerged as the lead.Ina
ch<1lce for a new general
aviation airport at a recent
meeting or the county Airport
Commission.
The creek site had been
ranked third behind a site in
Santiago Canyon east of Orange
• Meaan elected fraternity chief
Costa 'Mesa resident Brad
Kelso has been elected
president of the Alpha Kappa
Lambda fraternity at the
University of the Pacific in
Stocktoo.
The Estancia High School
graduate is a junior
majoring in business finance.
The college was founded in
1851 and was the first
ch a rte red uni versily in
California.
• Coaatline art fair planned
Tbe CouUine Community
College Artists Association
will present its annual art
fair and sale Friday and
Saturday at the Mesa Verde
Learninl Center. 2990 Mesa
Verde Drive East, Costa
Mesa. •
AdmiPion to the event ii
free. Art works may b.e
viewed and purchased from 1 to 8 p.m. Friday and from 10
Tb• Coata Mesa Clty
CoaacU ba• approved tbe
eo~1tructlon ot 21
eoaclolilalama on Cabrtllo
Street and Or-.e Anaue.
a .m . to 3:30 p.m. Saturday.
Participatin& artists are
donating one-fifth of all sale
.earnings toward
development of a new
gallery at the learning
center. Wow on diaplay will
include oil paintinp. puteil,
ink drawings, fiber arts,
needlecraft, cereamic
sculptures, photoaraphy and
stained P!W·
• AuxWaey wlunteers Wort
ill tbe ~all iifl jbop ud btlp Taae money for
community pro)ed9.
and the Armed Forces Reserve
Center airfield in Loe Alamitos
by consultants hired by the
county to evaluate potential
general aviation airport
locations.
The County Board of
Supervisors is scheduled to act
Tuesday on the various
recommendations by the airport
commission and the consultants,
CH2M Hill. of Costa Mesa.
In the letter, Mollo said the
goal of the ranch is to preserve
the San Juan Creek valley as
much as possible. He termed it
the "heart of the ranch" noting
that the area includes "the
historic Cow Camp, the farming
areas, our two campground
sites, the thoroughbred farm,
the ranch house, and some of the
most beautiful scenery in
Orange County -all visible
from the O~ga Highway.
"It has always been our plan
to preserve the open l~d and
the beauty of this area ... Wblle we
are currently openint up the
lands northeast of Mission Viejo
-the Trabuco and the Plano -
to higher densities, we want and
foresee a Vt!ry rural and very
low density type de~elopment in
the San Juan." ·
Moiso said be was
·',disappointed•' that some
community members and some
persons who participated in the
site selection process believe
that the rancb supports the San
Juan Creek 1lte.
"Neither the members of the
ranch's at.aft nor repreaentatln1.
of our conaultanta advocated
thil pomtlon," Mollo said.
Meanwhile, tbe San Juan
Capistrano C!\y Council baa
acted to e~ oPPOllUon to
1upervtlora to tbe propoeed Sen
Juan C.-eet 1lte. That action
followed a 1tormy ineetln1
atteodlld TuMdaJ nltM bJ about
200 r•ldenta. moat of them
airport OllCIQDeldA.
Tbt county lauacbed Its
H&rCb fol a Ille or lltet tor •
new 1.uraJ avlaUoa airport
becauae ol t.be lael ol ~
.,."' tor private a&reraft at UUClal alnortl. llleludlq J0M W•F.H : Airport, Pullerton
AirDort aDd Ketldowlark Alr1*t
bl lluntln,ton Bneh.
Mesa one of~ cities to change election dates
87 JODI CADENHEAD
Of .. Deltr ..........
The right of city officials to
extend their own terms of office
was challenged Tuesday by an
attorney in San Franclsco who LI
aeeldnt a bearID1 before the
state SUpreme Court.
Costa Mesa LI one of 54 cities
in the state to take advantaie of
Senate Bill 230 that allows city
council members to chante their ·
election dates to coincide with
state primary or general
elections. ..
The Costa Mesa City Council
voted Nov. 16 to change city
elections from April to
Adinission
to 01urder
asserted
By DA VII) IUJTZMANN °' .. .,...., ........... An Irvine city employee's
iiiUTdC& tr!a! hGi VvciiC.1 In
Orange County Superios Court
wltb a prosecutor's assertion
that defendant Patrick Fogarty
admitted be slubed the throat
of a Laguna Niguel man dating
l'otarty'a estranttd wife.
In opeoing statements to the
tls·man, lb-woman jury. Chief
Deputy Diltrict Attorney James
Enright quoted Fogarty as
telling a friend :
. "He was doing the chicken and I cut his throat.··
The defendant, a 32-year-old
Newport Beach resident, is
charged with killing Donald
Frank Cook, a Bechtel Corp
eneineer who had been seeing
Fogarty's wife, Andrea.
Cook's body .was found by a
roommate sprawled on a
bedroom floor on Feb. 2, 1981 -
a year to the day preceding the
start of Fogarty's murder trial.
In rebutting Enrighl's
contentions, defense lawyer
Thomas Szakall asserted the
evidence would show that
Fogarty was returning his
daughter to his wife's Costa
Mesa residence at the time he
said that Cook was fatally
stabbed -about 6 o'clock on a
Sunday evening.
In vestigatora, however.
believe the death occurred later
in the night.
Szakall also said he would
show that his client returned to
hls parents• home wearing the
1&me clothes that he left ln -
and that no blood atainl or other
signs or a strugale would be
evident.
November, thereby extending Citizens in Pacifica, Garden
the terms of all five members, Grove, South San Francisco and
two of whom would have been up San Bruno have joined the suit.
for re-election in April. Costa Mesa City Attorney Tom
Attorney Lynda Martyn of San Wood said Tuesday it is unlikely
Fran cisco said that the ..... .that the state Supreme Court ~xtemions are unconstitutional will decide to hear the case after
and deny voters the right to having denied the petition·.
vote. Assistant city manager Allan
"I think it goes a1ainst our Roeder said that the city wU1
whole democratic society to save about $19,000 by holdinf tbe
bave elected officlals in office election in November instead of
vote to extend their own terms April because of reduced
. of office," 1be said. printing costs for ballots.
· Ma. Mart>:n contends it. ~ ln Orange County Registrar Al
conflict with the Pohllcal Olson estimated that voter
Reform Act of 1974 that forbids turnout in the city could
elected officials from voting on increase from :.·1 >1vef'>: or l<lls
financial matters affecting than 20 percent to a1o _.,i.lm.lted
them. 70 percent.
UCI center gets
ambulatory credit·
UC lrvme's Student Health
Center baa become t-he first
student health care facility on
the Pacific Cou1t to hP
accredited by the American
Association for Ambulatory
Health Care, accordlng to Dr.
Charles Phillips, center medical ~director.
The accreditation, which
extends through 198', recognizes
compliance in several areas
aloni with quality of care,
facilities and environment, said
Phillips.
He said that several
innovations at the health center
led lo the three -year
accreditation, including:
-A Special fire exit ramp
constructed for emergency
evacuation of bedridden
patients.
-An improved system of
recording vital informat10Q
about patients.
-An insurance system the
center has instituted for students
Seafood lover
raids fridge
More than 250 pounds of
seafood have been reported
missing from the large freezer
at Sally's Restaurant in
Newport Beach.
Owners told police Tuesday
that someone had slipped off
with 140 pounds of cod. seven
pounds of scallops, 12 pounds of
shrimp and 35 pounds of cheddar
cheese as well.
Owners of the 2931 E. Coast
Highway restaurant !laid the
food thieves also got away with
ham, bacon, hamburger patties
and an armload of squid steaks.
The loss was estimated at
'524.
not otherwise covered by
insurance.
The Student Health Center is
(unrl o,.I •"-•-•••I. -•·-~--• ----·-·-weu O ~YU ~M~ registration fees . Students
receive services at litUe or no
charge. The center bas Ubour
eme rgency care, X-ray
facilities , a laboratory, a
pharmacy, physical therapy and
an ei(hl-bed infirmary.
It also offer; medical services
in specialties such as birth
co ntrol, dermatolofy,
gynecology. mental heath.
ophthalmology. orthopedic and
weight control services.
"We log about 35,000 visits per.
year. which probably makes us
one of the busiest outpalie'1t
clinics in Orange County,"
Phillips sai(;t.
Monday park
ban in north
Mesa backed
The Costa Mesa City Council
has voted to uphold a Traffic
Commission recommendation
banning parking Monday
mornings in the north section of
the city for street sweeping.
The ban. which begins
Monday, will prohibit parking
between 8 a.m. and noon on all
public streets between Fairview
Road, Sunflower Avenue. Bear
Street and South Coast Drive.
A North Cos ta Mesa
Homeowners Association survey
of residents living in the area
found that 80 percent favored
the ban for street sweeping.
Signs will be posted this week
at the entrance to all tracts
affected by the ban. Violators
will face a $10 fine.
2
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l
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• rJ
r
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11 ,
\
Airline's billbOard says 'Orange County Airport.
'9y t"aBDDICK SCHOEMEllL
0( .. ....,,.. ..... . .
A C-QIOQtb old ar1ument between Oran1e
County SUpervtaor Tbomu Riley and Pacific
Southwest Airlinea over whether to use tbe
name Jobn Wayne Airport or Oranee County
Atr@.rt Lt narinr uo ualo. Riley, who was tn.atrumental lo cbancma
the airport's name to honor the late actor, Lt
unhappy because a PSA billboard alonpide the
Santa Ana Freeway lo tbe Santa fe Springs
area refers to tbe airport as Ora.nae County
Airport,
"lan't lt possible for you to demooatrate a
bit more cooperation lo tbia matter!" Riley
asked lo a Jan.-rt letter to John O'Malley,
•PSA 'a dlreotor of government affaln.
PSA beean service Oct. 1 to Oranae County
witb two ruabts daily. At the same time, tbe
airline beaan advertlsinl its new service on ~lgn~ds on Orange County Transit District
OOINO OUT ON A LIMB? -Springtime is
bloomfng early on ever1reen pear trees
along coastal community streets. Iva Lewis,
bulea and on a billboard loeaWid ID Santa Ana.
Riley objected in an Oct. 1' letlet' to PSA:
O'Malley reepooded lo an Oct. 21 letter in whlch
he 1&ld, "I want to aaure you that the reference
to tbe county's faclllty aa Oranae County
Airport, rather than John Wayne Airport, wu
meant neiUler as a all&ht to your effort.a to
effect the name chanae nor to the memory of a
areal American."
O'llalley said the blllboard would be
changed; 'it wu. As for the bus advertta!nc,
O'Malley aaid it waa geared to only those
portiona of the county where tourists mlcbt be
present and would end lo November. n did. All
other advert.lsin&, be said, either uses the name
John W~e Airport or John Wayne/Oranee
County Airport.
O'Malley CQuld not be reached this mornln1
for comment on the newly diacovered billboard
cited iJa Riley's letter.
·'Since your advertisin& continues to be
<See BDJ.B()AaD, Page A!)
....,,.. ........ '-~
· • clerk typist in the city clerk's office.
inspects a branch outside Costa Mesa City
Hall. 1be fragile blossoms last twoiweeks.
'
Phony TV n~r busy, busy
15,000 try to call toll-f r ee 'oocant code'. after. appeal
...., ...........
FROM WHERE? This sign, located on .the
Santa Ana Freeway near Valley View
Boulevard, is raising hackles because It •
refers to John Wayne Airport by its old11ame.
If the commercial airhnes
serving or desiring to serve
Orange County had their way, at
least 57 jets daily would thunder
out of John Wayne Airport by
June 1.
There are now 41 tllghts
permitted daily. That limit was
imposed by the county Board of
Supervisors to reduce noise
exposure to residents leaving
under takeoff paths.
But Pacifi c Southwest
Airlines, which now operates
two flights lo the San Francisco
Bay area from Orange County,
wants (our mor:e departures
effective April 1 and another two
departures ,June l , according to
, county officials.
Western Airlines, which
operates two flights dally to SaJt
Lake City, wants two more
departures, effective April 25,
Supervisor, Wieder
to seek re-election
By JEFF ADLER
Of .. Delly ...... SUfl
Harriett Wi e der h as
announced -as expected -'-that
she will seek re-election to a
second term on the Orange
County Board of Supervisors.
Mrs . Wi eder , 61, has
represented the county's second
supervisorial district, which
includes Huntington Beach, Seal
Beach, Garden Grove, Cypress
and Los Al'Bmitos, since 1978
when she first was elected to lhe
board.
' Involved in politics for the last
25 years, Mrs. Wieder was a
member of the Huntington
Beach city council prior to her
election as supervisor.
Between 1963 and 1973, she
served as an executive assistant
to then Los Angeles Mayor Sam
Yorty. More recently, she was
appointed by President Reagan
to an ad hoc committee studying
block grants.
Mrs. Wieder, her husband,
Irv, and their two children
moved lo Huntington Beach in
1910.
lihy a clailll8
U.S. fight e r s
buzze d plane
In announcing her intention to
run, Mrs. Wieder said, "I have
been espe<!ially encouraged by
the reac tion or mayors ,
coun cilmen, police chiefs and
civic leaders throuahout the
district to my record and level of
service. Virtually everyone bas
agreed to join the campaign
effort."
Mrs. Wieder's s upporters
have formed a campaign
committee in her behalf, the
Friends of Harriett Wieder.
Ray Maggi, Cypress, and
William Schroeder, Garden
Grove, have been named
co-chairmen. /
The Butcher-Forde consulting
firm of Newport Beach bas been
(See WIEDEll, Pace ,U)
Kidnaps, r~pes get
lengthy sentences
December wltn two other
defendants, Robert L. Tiftln, 21.:
and John A. Krom, 20.
The jury which beard the:J convicted all three men OD
counts in ~I. Russell wu fi
gullty of o~count ot lddnappiJla,
for robbe y' two counts or kidnappin three counts of.
robbery, 11 counts of fordbltt
rape and 14 counts of forctq tbe-
women to commit another aez
art.
<See RAPIST, Pase AJ)
---
PRECARIOUS PERCH -A Philadelphia trash
collector leaps from c:ab of garbage truck
into arms of fireman after vehicle crashed
through guardrail stopping short of what
APW"'-9
would have been a 120-foot plunge off
Schuylkill Expressway. A'total of three men
were rescued and one charged with drunken
driving in the Tuesday incident.
Woman buried under debris
Widow, 78, found dead in Balboa Island home
By STEVE MARBLE
Ot .. C>ally ...........
Grace E. Lee was a familiar
face on Balboa Island.
Neighbors say she waa the
friendly sort who would co out of
her way to greet everyone when
she set out for her dally walks.
The 78-year-old widow also
·was a private person. Neighbors ~·say they were never invited into
CJ her Coral Street home where ,(, • hP' it lht._. ,,. .. -••••1•' 1 c •• ..,,.,..t..0 ._ --_,. __ •Va. ._.'°"-.. •J .&"' .J~9A • ~ But Newport Beach police
cl:lofficera went in Tuesday. 1 : concerned that nobody bad seen
trash. But they did not see the
woman.
Tuesday I police finally sot permission to remove the trash
which" was determined to be a
fire and health hazard.
Officers say they removed
several tons or material before
they found the woman, slumped
in a comer near a wall heater.
The refuse, estimated to be
five feet hiab in ~mer~=: c!
the house, ha~ bffn there for
years, poUce ab. Officers claim
they foun.d old newspapers
dating back to the early 70s.
half-eaten food and dozens or
empty boxes.
1'he odor was so strong, police
say, that investigators were
forced to wear masks while
shoveling out the debris
In all, police say they took five
tons of trash out or the house
during a several-hour cleanup
period.
OUicers and neifhbors were
unable to offer any reasons why
the woman lived as she did."
the woman ln almost a week.
9'' They found her. She was dead, 0 'buried under several feet or
trash that inspectors aay
covered her entire bouae.
Police believe she likely died
or natural causes and probably
no..was· buried "hen sbe fell to the
floor and caused a pUe or litter
Dozier back lwme
aft~r near crash
• .co topple on top or her. ,.,.,.
The Oran1e County Coroner's
office bas been asked to
determine the exact cause of
death.
It wu a week ago today when
11 tbe woman was reported
mlsslnc by concerned neicbbors.
.-:•Police entered her home at that
""-time and discovered what one
,,..officer said was a "mountain" or
•. From Page A 1 ...
• • ...
WASHINGTON (AP> -ams .
Gen. James L. Dosier returned
to a hero's welcome today, aft.er
42 days' captivity in Italy and a
tense landing at a suburban air
base, and declared that "It's
doggone good to be home."
Leading the welcoming
ceremonies at Andrews Air
Force Base, Md., for bis arrival
was Vice President George
Bush, who said, "I can't imagine
a happier job" than greetine the
general. Dozier wa s
accompanied by his wife Judith
on a fl1gbt from West Germany.
Dozier's plane encountered
trouble on its approach to the air
base. The C-141 Air Force
transport came into view from
Sentencin1 proceedings for the chill fog with its left wing
, l'ifflD were delayed until Feb. 9. nearly scraping the ground. It
"' K r o m i s u n d e r a o i n g rolled slightly so that the right
pre-sentencing diagnostic study. wing went down, and then '
,., The men were accused of roared skyward again.
a bd u ctine and sex u a II y A few minutes later, Dozier's
·" assaulting four women in three plane landed without incident on
separate incidents in northern another runway.
Orange County last year. '!be L Air For~e Lt. Col. Robert
incid\nts took place between ' Thatcher blamed the trouble on
February and June. a faulty inatrllment landln1
Two of the victims were system in Doziec's plane which
14-year-old Huntington Beach prevented the pVot from lininC
girls out hitchhiking en Paclfic up properly with the runway on
Cout Hlpway. the first approach.
From Page A1
FLIGHT. • •
Dozier was safely rescued
Thursday. by Italian police aft.er
be was held by Red Brigades
terrorists 42 daya.
Buab called attention to
DoJie-r'a man)' decorations
which include the Silver Star
the and three Bronze stars.
"I don't thlnJt there are any
ribbons for valor in the face of
kidnapping," b ush said, "but ii
there were one, someone would
be pinning it on blm today.''
And In a reference to Doder'a
complaint that b.la capton made
him llaten td rock music at bilh
volume tbto-.1b headphones,
Buab said:
"If· there were a ribbon for
be na made to Utto to rock
mule 12 bo,an a day -what a
borrlt.M tortur,s -be•d have
........... ........_._ ____ . ·--
won one for that, too."
The crowd included Mr. and
Mrs. William Stimson , the
ceneral 's sister and
brother-in-law, who live in
Washington. The general and his
wife almost ran across the
tarmac to embrace them.
Bush said Dozier's safe return
was "a sign or hope and
encouragement for a decade
that in just two years has
a lready witnessed enough
terrorism to last lG."
But the vice president also
saluted Lt. Col. Charles Ray,
shot and killed on a Paris street
two weeks ago in a terrorist
attack.
"He was not as lucky as Gen .
Dozier and all we could do then
was watch bis coffin come off
the plane," Bush said.
Ray's father lives in Newport
Beach.
Utility aorry
/or~ad air
DENVER <AP> -There were
apologies aplenty after the
state's larcest utility pulled the
plug on three De nver radio
stations ln an effort to collect a
bill for one of the stationa -a
bill that already had been pald.
"There's no question Public
Service Co. made a mistake.
We 're awfully sorry." Mark
Severt.a, a company spokesman,
said Tuesday.
A "lack of communications,"
he said, caused KBNO , KVOD
and KDEN to be off the air
between 19:30 a.m. and 9:20 a.m.
Tuesday, Sevens said.
From Page A1
BILLBOARD
wron1, I can only conclude that
PSA wishes to conUnue aJoai a
path that cannot uJUmately be
very productive," RlJey 1ald.
Refatlona between Rlley and
PSA ha" not been ithe belt. It
" waa PSA which lnttlally ftled a
laws ult lD U .s: Dbtrtct Court lD
X.O. Anaelea tbat led to a court
order overtumln& a RUey plan t6 ,eiul.te which commercial
carrien serve the airport.
That lower cou"' onMr lut Frida)' wu stayed by a federal ap~all ~ pedlna a bUrtil1
on tb• merltl of the accaa liaue.
Whiting verdict due
Judge to rule on El Toro ranch conspiracy charge
A U .s. Dlatrict Court Judi• la
scheduled to t11ue vercflcta
Tburaday on whether two
Oran1e County men vlolated
federal law tn not Uatina tb•
2,700-acre WhlUnl Ranch u an
uaet when a fl.rm controlled by
one of tbt two men filed
bankruptey tn tbe mld·lt'IOI.
Kent Rosen, who puroh&Md
the sprawlinC ranch near El
Toro tn lt75 for sz mWloo, and
hll attorney, Jaeob PeUte, .,.,.
accU'ltd ln an 11-count
Indictment tnued by a federal
1rand Jury of conaplracy to
defraud and defeat federal
bankruptcy law..
Juct,e Matthew Byrne Jr. took
the case under 1ubml11ton
Tuesday after hearinl ftnaJ
ar1ument1 from A11t. U .S.
Palestinian Arabs
backed by Mubarak
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Ecyptlan President Hoani
Mubarak declared his support
today for Palestinian
self-determination and ur1ed
President Rea1ao ''to make it a
living reality."
In his debut here as Anwar
Sadat'• succeaaor, Mubarak
studiously avoided a direct'
reference to tbe 1978 Camp
David agreements which Israel
insists is the only basts for
settline the Palestinian dispute.
But meeting privately in the
Oval Office, the two leaders
reaffirmed a commitment to the
accords "as the appropriate and
only vehicle for addreaalnc the
Palestinian problem," a senior
U.S. official said.
The Camp David Partners -
the United Stales, Eeypt and
Israel -have pled1ed to try to
accelerate the stalemated
nesotiationa over the
Palestiniana' future, said the
official, who declined to be
identified.
Mubarak's quiet style and a
heavy rain siphoned away the
kind or excitement that
surrounded visit.a by Sadat, who
was assassinated in Cairo in
October. The red-carpet arrival
ceremony for Mubarak wu held
indoors, in the Eaat Room, and
he spoke in a fiat monotone.
A White House aide,
an nouncing bis arrival.
misproaounced the new
Egyptian leader's name as
"Miraback." ~ hA? 9"-vd with
Reacan ror photographs before
a cheerful fire, Mubarak cut his
I a ze upward to the tall
television lipt.s.
.
They met alone for 30 minutes,
then were joined by adviaen for
another hour and a half. 'lbat
was to be Mubarak's only tallt
with Reacan, except for a cbat
before a White House dinner
Wednesday night.
An admlnlstration official said
"pressure on the president's
time" would limit his meetlnp
with visiting government
leaders.
But, in a switch, another
meeting between Mubarak and
Reagan was scheduled for
Thursday morning. The official,
refusin1 to be identified, said
"we always hold open that
possibility.''
In his arrival statement,
Mubarak 'insisted that the 1.3
million Palestinian Arabs llvinc
on the West Bank of the Jordan
River and in Gaza ''have an
inherent riebt to exist and
function u a national entity free
from domination and fear."
Mubarak did not call for
statehood for the Palestinians,
whose leaders insist they wUI
settle for nothing less.
FromPageA1
WIEDER • • •
retained to handle tbe
ca mpaign , according to a
spokesman for Mn. Wieder.
The incumbent supervisor has
collected a $226.otO campaian
war cheat to date for her
ro·•leetlon bid, accordinl to
l'flporb on ftle 1'ltb the Oranp
County Registrar of Voters Office.
Attorney Percy Andenoo aod
dtfeme attol"De19 Keith Monroe
of Santa Ana and Norman
James of IM Anaelea.
Monroe aaid in an interview
Tuesday that be conaldered tbe
proaecutlon'a case without buil.
Monroe aald Rosen did
nothtn1 more thad tranlfer bla
Interest in the Wb.lttna Ranch
from one ftrm to another when a
bou11n1 development venture in
Riverside County went Into
bankru~y.
Tbe Rlveraide project wu
bein1 developed by Global
Western Development Co .. a firm aolely owned by Ro1era and
Mf&S Development Co. Global
Western acted as a aeneral
partner, M&S aa llmlted
partner.
Only an hour before tbe
partnership declared
bankruptcy, Monroe said ,
Rogers transferred title of the
Whiting Ranch from Global
W eatem to a separate entity,
KFR Inc. KFR Inc. al.o was
entirely owned by Rogers.
Monroe aald the case never
would have existed bad PeUte,
who drew up the bankruptcy
petition, included the statement
that Global Western was acting
as •·a joint venture•· in the
Riverside project. ''Thia cue la
only about three tittle words,"
Monroe asserted.
Anderson, the prosecutor,
declined to dlacuaa the case
pending the verdict . He referred
inquiries to a press release
issued by the U.S. Attorney's
office at the time tbe indictment
issued.
Global Western'• ownenblp of
the Whitinc ranch was dbcloaed
in bankruptcy court about 10
montba after the bankruptcy
petition was flled, Monroe aaid ..
At that time, be explained, lt
was "advantaceoua" for Roeen
to list the ranch u a Global
W estem auet because the ranch
property was faclnc ouuide
legal actions. Monroe said
Rogen at that point wanted to
·'protect" the property by
bringing it into the bankruptcy
proceeding.
The bankruptcy proceeding
not withstandinc . Monroe
maintained that both the
Riv~'"!!~ ~!!!t. ... .!~t.U)!! v!!!t~.
and Global Western were both
"solvent estates" and that all
creditors received "100 cents oo
the dollar."
Winter Sale Continues
Now is your chance for the best values from
the largest stock in the area. Tremendous price
reductions on the most famous lines of quality furniture
,
..
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DoW Jones Final
OFF 7.5.l
CLOSING 145.03
Business people are 1uppo1ed to be hard·beaded
realists. But that realism frequently ceta chucked out
when it comes to the motion pldure bu1lne11.
People's beadl are quickly turned by the pro1peet of
being invo1Yed in movlea. So they ror1et all about
financial prudence.
It's a scenario that has been played many times
over many ya.rs. Tbe latest episode LI the atunnlnf
$790 million ofter that the Coca-Cola Co. baa made for
Columbia Pictures. Coke bu made a lot of money ln
sort drinks, and it haa U5ed those proftta to buy Ill
way into citrus juices <Minute Maid> and wine
<Taylor. Sterling and Monterey Vineyards>. It hu
done well in both of those areas. But movies? and
$790 million?
It takes Coke nearly two years to earn f190
million. At the rate Columbia is making money. it
will take more than 15 years for Coke to aet lta
money back. And even that's not certain ·1iven the
volatile nature or the movie business. In three ol the
past 10 years Columbia has 108\ money.
That Coke wants ~ to get into this ,,
business was clear ~; c:.
from the pre.emptive \ ,
bid it made for 4 ,. ! Co 1 um bi a : $ 74 a _. _ _,_..._,.. _______ _
share. That was ·lllJll .. llllTZ almost twice what
Columbia shares
were selling for on the New York Stock Exchaqe.
And the price they were selling for, "1.75, waa close
to an all-time high.
It's enough to validate a one-two foolproof theory
or how to make money in the stock market: (1) look
for a company that's about to be bought up and (2)
make sure it's a movie company .
Movie companies always seem to be up for
grabs, and there always seems to~ someone around
who's ready to buy, no matter bow b8d the movie
business ls -and 1981 was not a good year f<>r the
Industry. Two other big film companies chan1ed
hands in the past year.
One was 20th Century-Fox, which had been
pursued by a number of companies, including a boat
manufacturer. Cnns-Crait industries. in the spring
of 1981, Fox, which hit it big with "Star Wan,"
dlaappeared as a publicly owned company when all
ill shares were bought for $722 million by one person,
Denver oilman Marvin Davis. Sitting on Fox's board
now are two of Davis' friends, former President
Gerald Ford and former Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger. Yes, everyone loves the movie business.
San Francisco's financial octopus,
Transamerica, bought Its way into the movie
business in 1987 by acquiring one of Hollywood's
oldest companies, United Artista. With the purchase
came the two men wbo had built United Artists into a
formidable presence in the movie business: Arthur
Krim and Robert Benjamin. ln 1978, chafin1 under
Transamerica's rule, Krim and Benjamin tried to
repurchase their company from Transamerica but
were told: "Nothing doing." So they left to form
another movie company. Orion.
Last year. after laking a terrible beating on a
film called "Heaven's Gate," a S36 million Western
that bombed with the critics and movte1oers,
Transamerica decided it had had enough of the
movie business. For $380 million, it peddled United
Artists lo MGM Film, a company that's controlled by
one man. Kirk Kerkorian.
Where are the other big movie companies?
Warner Bros. now belongs to War n er
Communications. which makes most of its money
from Atari video games. Paramount Pictures
belongs to the Gulf & Western conglomerate. Walt
Disney makes much more money from amusement
parks than movies.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
UPS AND DOWNS
AMERICAN LEADERS
METALS
MEW VOIUt IAPI -5"' _ .. "-
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SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
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CA~ADA-BOUND -Former
Estancia High coach John
Lowry will coach ror the
Hamilton Tigercats next
season.
Pacific
suspends
Andrade
Guard Jeff Andrade of the
University of Pacific bas been
"suspended indefinitely" by
basketball coach Dick Fichtner,
school officials annnounced
Tuesday.
Andrade, a sophomore, will
miss the Tigers' games this
week uainst Cal State Fullerton
and the University of Santa
Barbara. A final decision
concerning his future status with
the-team will be announced
Monday.
Audre1u~. woo prepped at
Ocean View High, bas been
averaging better than 10 points a
game thla season for the Tigers.
He apparently dropped out of
favor with bis coach after
criticizing the -way P•clfic had
played uus 5euon. In a recent
Register article, Andrade said:
"When they recruited me here
they said they'd push the ball up
the court (fut break>. I only saw
one game and they ran then. But
we're not ll'Wllling now ... I
understand coaching but you
have to give players a little
freedom."
Fichtner reportedly read the
article Monday. was incensed,
and called Andrade into the
office. He was suspended from
the team shortly after .. the
meeting. •
"He said I had said things I
shouldn't have," Andrade said
Tuesday, ''which hurt his
recruiting.
"He told me, 'Tell me what
school you want· to go to and I'll
call the coach, but I can't play
you anymore'."
Andrade indU:ated he may
leave Pacific but would "stick it
out" until the end of the year.
Lake rs
run out
of thne
0 0 6 3
llllJ Plllt · N
WEDNl!SOAV, FEB. S, 1992
D~ '~
-~owry: F:r!oill Estancia to . CFL
~ A lot of kickoffs have taken place
since be was leadin1 Ealancla W.b'a
football fortunes durln1 the i-.. era,
but John LowrY, la provio1 to be one of
the more durable (and successful>
coaches around.
And he's provinc won-lou recordl
don't always indicate, coach'• ability.
When Lowry left Eatancla for
Antelope Valley High be left a four-year
record of 10-24·2.
Today he's buay packlnl bil wares in
Las Vegas with the next atop Hamilton,
Ontario, where the Tiaercata of the
Canadian Football Lea1ue wlll be
employing him as their offensive line
coach.
Between those two stops were nine
years at Antelope Valley in Lancaster
where the Antelopes lost two leape
games In bis last seven years, quallfled
for the playoffs seven straltbt times
and posted back-to-back CIF crowns.
From there it was to Nevada-Laa
Vegas where Lowry was the offensive
PAEP SPORTS
ROGER
CARLSON '\
colle1e> because tbe staffa are
smaller."
Lowry became acquainted wlth
Canadian football durln1 a couple of
1ue1t appearance. at train.lot campt in
Sutatcbewan, and the decision to co
north was euler becauae the fatnUy la
crown and on lta way.
the lesson from the Vlkinp have been
sllcbtly exa11erated.
Coach Don Mahl aaya blt tHm
finished 7·5 overall, wionin1 the
Eaatem Divilon wlth a &·2 record, then
beln1 eliminated in the state ftnala by
Radford.
line coach and recrultinl coordinator,
before Hamilton beckoned.
"Phy1lcaUy I'm a 1001 way removed
from the high school level, but I saw the
last two playoff sames for Antelope
Valley this past fall, and I got a little
home sick," admits Lowry.
Radford went on to lb~ "Prep Bowl",
defeating St. Louis High of Honolulu.
Aaked if Marina may have been b1a
team's toughest opponent, Mahi 1ald,
"It's bard to tell. Marina wu one of the
better teams we saw. We really didn't
have a chance to move the ball u well
as we could because we were very weak
on our offensive Une."
A long time since Estancla's first
year of existence in 1965 and a few atepa
up, but Lowry says not much has
chanited.
"There's better athletes and more
dedication as you go up," aays Lowry,
"but the qualities that were pleasurable
and aJ)owed you to win at the high
school level are exactly the aame.
"It's probably more fun at the hlCb
school level, partly because of the
larger staffs at a college.
So, another week packing and
clearing up last-minute paperwork with
immicration officials la about all tbat
separates Lowry from Lu Vegas and
Canada. • * •
RVMOa8 THAT CaaUe High of Oahu
(the team which was crushed by
Marina, 28--0, a week before the regular
football seaaon) went undefeated aft.er
Marina whipped Castle by a 329-115
margin in yards rushing and pauln1
and Castle's numbers In the pasaln1
game were 3-17-4.
Punahou, which failed to make t,be
playoffs this year and finished with a
"I think I'll like the CFL better (than (See CARLSON, Pa1e •2)
Ar .........
·Mulvey's gone,
problems stay
Kings send non-fighter to minors
lNGLEWOOD (AP> -Paul
Mulvey, who refused to leave
the.Los Angeles team bench to
participate in a fight on the ice,
cleared NaUonal Hockey League
waivers Tuesday and was sent
by the Kings to their New Haven
farm club of the American
Hockey League.
The Kings' decision to send
h im to .New Haven was
announced after a meeting
between Kings General
Manager George Maguire and
Coach Don Perry.
Mulvey's departure leaves the
Kings with 24 players on their
current roster.
NHL_ PRESIDENT John
Ziegler was conducting an
lnquiry into an incident
lnvolvina Perry and Mulvey
when the player refused the
coach's order to leave the bench
during a game Jan. 24 against
!l}e Vancouver Canucka to join
lri a fight.
The 23-year-0ld forward bad
been a~uired last year by Los
' An1eles on waivers from the
Pittaburgh Penguins.
''When we cot Mulvey we
were down lo 16 players,
because we had a lot of
injuries," said Wolf. "He
<Mulvey) had been playing leas
and less in recent games."
. Wolf paraphrased an earlier
Maguire quote, saying tbat
wblle the Incident regarding
Mulvey's refusal to enter the
fight agalnst Vancouver did not
help bis cause, it probably
expedited the situation whereby
he was put on waivers.
"I'm not going to be a
designated assassin and come
off the bench and fight," Mulvey
had been quoted as saying. "Don
came to me and said, 'When I
tell you to go out and fight, l
want you to.' He told me to 10
out and ficht and l didn't."
SENT DOWN -Los Angeles
Kings forward Paul Mulvey
cleared waive r s Tuesday
and was sent by the Kings to
their New Haven farm club
He said Perry told him three
times to go onto the ice and
fight, and each lime he refused.
"I didn't want to do it." be
said. "I've spent 20 years trying
to become a professional athlete
. . . a professional hockey
player. No coach bas ever asked
me to do tbat.''
Asked about a report that the
Kings were going to put him on
waivers anyway, he said, "I
don't believe that."
Prep
rematch
time!
By ROGER CARUON Of .. Del., ,... IUlf
Costa Mesa and University
high schools try to slay close to
third place while Estancia
attempts to keep pace with
Corona del Mar.
That's the situation in the Sea
View League basketball race
tonight while in the Sunset
League, it's just as goofy.
M arlna and host Fountain
•Valley enter with 3·3 records
and Ocean View tries to protect
a 3-3 mark against visiting
Edison (5-1), while Huntington
Beach (4·2) tries to avoid the
upset bug at winless
Westminster.
It's all in a night's work for
these Orange Coast area prep
ba s ke tball teams aa the
campaign grinds toward next
week's final salvo. Tipoff in each
instance is billed for 7:30.
In the Sea View League it's
Costa Mesa (6-4 ) at Estancia
(9· 1 ), University (6·4 ) at
Saddle back (0-10 ), Newport
Harbor (7-3) at Irvine C1·9) and
El Toro (2·8> at Corona del Mar
(9-1).
IN OTHER ACTION, South
Coast League leader Capistrano
Valley (5-2) invades Lacuna
Beach <2·5), where the Artists
have upended San Clemente and
Laguna Hills ; and Bishop
·Montgomery C3·2) visits Mater
Del (2-3) in Angelus League
citcles.
While a few al'e thinking
championship, more are
thinking CIF playoffs, which
begin Feb. 19 and culminate at
tbe Long Beach Arena March 6.
To qualify for the 4·A <Sunset
and Angelus leagues), 3-A (Sea
View) or 2·A (South Cout), a
team has to finish among the top
three lo league. There ia a1ao an
outside chance for a playoff
berth as a wild card team,
reserved for the better
rourlh-place teams with
reputable records.
SCORING PHENOM -Riverside Poly High's Cheryl Miller
goe$ up for two of her 41 points in the Bears' 63-42 victory
over Riverside North Tuesday. Miller set a CIF record by
scoring 105 points last week against Norte Vist3\ Riverside
Poly has won 72 straight games.
TUDDAY, ON the nationally
televised Good Morning
America show on ABC, Mulvey
said, "Never In four years in the
NHL have I been instructed to
niht."
Kings captain Dave Lewis
said of Mulvey : "We needed
aome of bis size (8·4, 220
pounds). Re started pretty well.
But the laat couple of games he
was only getting a shift or two. I
peas he felt he waa getting into
the role of a goon, and he didn't
Hire that."
A spokesman for ZJesJer had
said the NHL pre1ldent. felt
there bad been some
discrepancies in reports about
the Incident.
Costa Mesa's resurgence after
a 1·3 start bas included victories
over Corona del Mar and at
Newport Harbor. and If the
Muatangs can reverse a dec!llion
with Estancia tonicbt, they'll
stay in the hunt for tbird place,
aloftl with University, wblcb la
expected lo handle winless
Saddleback. Bill Walsh: He is football's subtle genius
And San Francisco was wi~Cing to JXJY the price for coaching brilliance
It now comes to pass tbat when BUI
Walsh goes to mark X'a and O't on that
great blackboard in the sky, bl.I tram will
be preserved in alcobol on a lhelf at a
major university.
You see, following tbe &Mi Franc:llco
49en' dispatch o/ the CindDDatl Bealala
In Super Bowl XVI, Wallb WM "'8bUlbed
aa professional football's foremolt aentua.
The National Football Leape therefore
departs op a new era 11 franchlae
proprietors dlapatcb memo1 ialtnactlnl
tbetr people to beam at onC9 ~ the formula employed by the coach-of San
Francllco. .
"Walah ii a a~ua;• IQI tJ•bt end
Charle Younc. "He dream1 up playa and
pa.,. are sent to h1m oat ol tbe 'i!" Ke • particularly fGod of die ,. MDt
from the heavens whlcb call tor bUI to
be tbrown to Charle YCNlll. Wbiii M yM ·~memberoltMaalill.•J pllJI 1Joat1n1 dowa ~rou11a Ute
atmeepbere call.cl OD Ctiarlt to bloS ..
In ms, But WaJsl) was the offenalve
co-ordinator of the San Dleto Char1era.
Apparently leu than a 1en1us at tbat
particular polnt in time Walah'• offense
was ,... out four tlmes durtq the rel\llar
1eal0tl. .
Walah followed UM tliaulellt Ulltellce ot·
a foot.ball coach punuJAc whit IDOlt of b.il
Uk r .. ard u tbe altlmate In Ule, a bud
Job In UM proleMAooala. Walab'a aentua
weat undetected fOr a quarter Of a century
before be landed ID San l'i'liiClilce> and ~
r .. t l9 now blltory. ..
of the Steeh:rs during their dynasty
seasons.
M alaval and Carson could not airee
between a 4·! and a 3-4, altboulh it would
seern there wu plenty of Ume to try out
both allinments to determine which wu
moat effe«lve.
Jl'ollowl.Qa the departure bf UM live,
Malavaal hired a former defenalve Une
coach of the New England Patriot. named
FritJ Sburmur who, like Blad CU'llC,)ll, ii a
dUcJpJe of the M .
ESTANCIA GOT put Costa
Meaa the first Ume, 62-58, when
the Eagles beat Mesa, 24-0, at
the free throw line.
Al for indivlduala -Meta
r'elles mostly on .6 ·4 Ken
Bardsley (18.1 average) wttbln
ita lineup, which Includes t.bree
others at 6-4, and the trio of JOhn
ru.bebar1er, Jim Pellcllewdi
and 6·2 Dave Palmblade
com blnlng for 30.3 polnta a
game. .
E1tancla an1wera with Its
(See Plt~PS, Pa1e De)
DiBERNA.RDO ·
PICKS IRISH
NCAA reclueifiee three PCAA schoole
Froqa AP dllpatebes ·
MISSION', Kan. -Paclllc Cout Ell AtbleUc AaaoclaUon membera Cal • t
State Fullertoa, Lona Beach slate
, and San Joee State are amona 31 acboola whlcb
bave been reclasallled to Dlvlaioo l·AA lo
football competition. the NCAA announced
Tu"day.
The acUoo, the re.ult of a decision at a
,special NCAA convention in December, nduees
the number of major, or Division l ·A, schools frot?i 137 to 92 and increases the number of
Dlvi&loo l·AA schools to 89.
Amon& those dropped from Diviaioo l·A to
Division l·AA were all Southern Con.fereDce
schools, and all Ive Leacue members, except
Yale. All but three of the 10 Mid-American
Conference schools. four of the slx Southland
Conterence members and five Mlasouri Valley
Conference members were also dropped to
D\visloo l·AA.
The reclassification, effective Sept. 1, wlll
for(e some schools that are still classified
Divlsion l·A but are members of Division l·AA
leagues, to m~ke a decision, said David
Cawood, an NCAA spokesman ..
Those schools -such aa Yale, Wichita
State and Central Michigan and the remaining
three football-playing PCAA teams -must
drop to Division l·AA if they want to continue in
their conferences.
Quote of the day
Ron Shumate, Southeast Missouri State·
basketball coach: "We've been shooting so·
poorly _that. the players are giving each
other high fives when they hit the rim."
I Ms's11 KOred a W • Ma_J,11 ..... and pulled ....
rel>oindl ~ nlabt to u.
Jlou&toD Boa• to • 122-~dorJ
OYer 8CIQ ~ 1n NBA •ctkllt .. : la Ol.btr
1•m•. bl Wlllla•• lcored 31 pOAaU before
ltavtU. U. sam. wttb a badly twiltecl ankle
with ra& minutes r•m•inllll Tuelday ntpt, but
hla tfforta wen eoouab to pace New Jeraey to a I Uf.112 vtctory over Cblcaso
. . . M.lb ¥1te .. U 1cored
el1bt Polnta ln the lut nve
mlnu(ea 1nd rallied San
~t.onio to a 103·98 triumph
over Dallas . . . Geoff
Hut&Oll hlf a foul ahOt with 13
seconds remalnlna and
Cleveland went on to a 100-98
victory over Waabln1ton
t . . • Robert Parrl•la and , .,..._. Larry Bl.rd combined tor 5S
points u Botton outscored Indiana by n
points at tbe free throw tine, beat the
Pacen, 109·105 . . . Detroit's blala n. ...
scored 34 polnta and compl~ a rare four·poinl
play to ~~.i:e Plstons down Atlanta, 108-105 .. . Alex • IU.U VH4ewepe and T.a. Dua
combined for 72 points to lead Denver to a
128·117 victory over the New York K.nicu ...
Portland's Calria Natt scored 18 of his 27 points
in the third period to help the Trail Blazers
record a 102·97 victory over Kansas City.
Whalers hand Kings S.3 setback
lNGLEWOOD -Rich Meagher ~ and Pierre Larouche struck for goals '
in the final 43 secon¢s to snap a 3.3
tie and give Hartford a S-3 National Hockey
League victory over Los An1eles on Tuesday.
With the score t:ied 3-3, Meagher skated in
on a breakaway against Kings goalie Mario
Lessard to drill a 10-footer for bis second aoal of
the night at 19:17.
Twelve seconds later, Larouche also tallied
an unassisted goal when be beat the Kings
goalie for his second goal of the evening and
23rd of the season.
The victory gave the Whalers a 5-0·2 record
in their last seven games. The setback makes
the Kings a 1-4-6 since Coach Don Perry took
over Jan. 12.
Hartford jumped out to a 2-0 lead in the first
period on goals by Warren Miller aod Meagher.
Edison gets caught • m a
Umea Ud 9'Ju Tl.-., edded two ' RoGkil ........... , ICOl'9d tbNe ~
pelt Cl the New York Jal•nckn •
oullut.s tbt Wublnstoo Ca.okall 7 .. lit a
NaUonal Hockey IA•su• coolest Tueicsay Dlebt.
Tb• lalanden aave Coaeb Al Ar'-' bl.a .ootJl
vlctory 11 a coach . . . rn other 1amt1, lllab
Du)op and Perry 'hnlMD combined for nve
1oal1 and two uaiata to lead St. Lout. to a 10-e
thumpfnl of Wln.nlpe1. Th• Soal product.Ion, a
club ...eord, cemented the Slues' trip on second
place lo the lbe Noni.I Diriak>n atandinp ...
Mlro1ln Jl"ryeer aeored three aoala and ••al aouUer provlded the 1ame-wtnner at 18:08 of
the th1r4 period to 1rtve Quebec an 8-7 victory
over Colorado . . . Montreal's Pierre M•dou
scored two flrst-perJod 1oals lo spark the
CanacUem to a 5-3 victory over Calaary . . .
New Yorlr't 1'1"'• ao1en scored bis tblrd aoal
of the eame lo break a tie with less tban five-
minut.ea to play and aive the Ran1ers a 4.3
victory over Vancouver
NCAA 8'euth knew of UCLA charges
NCAA invealtgators knew or but .•
could not prove many or the cbarees
against the UC'LA basketball
proaram that was the subject of a recent Los
Angeles Times probe, the NCAA'a top aleutb
said Tuesday. "There was really very little
there that would be useful for our purposes,"
said Darid Berat of the NCAA's enforcement
division . . . The Los An&eles Strinas signed
the bi&iest name in Blllle .Jeu KID&, but the
highest-ranked players chosen in the Team
Tennis 1982 draft were 14th·ranked A.aDe Smltla,
who joined Dallas, . and No. 20 VUay Amrltraj,
who also signed with the Strings . . . Running
back BUly Sima of the Detroit Lions was
awarded the $10,000 prize in the annual
Seagram's Seven Crown of Sports computer
based competition which singles out the "most
conslstent and most productive" player in the
NFL . . . Left-banded pllchex Tommy Jolm or
the New York Yankees is taking hia contract
·dispute to arbitration
Television, radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: Basketball -New York Knicks at
Lakers, 7:20 p.m ., KLAC (570). Ski Report:
Snow conditions in Southern California
mountains, 9:43 a.m ., 12'43, 3.43 and 7:43 p.m.,
KNX (1070)
Webb
552 tourney
now in limbo 1
Crosby Southern to eontinuet
Now that lbe Crosby Southern Clambake la
over, one baa to wonder at lbe future of the eventi
especially with the TPA ataUna it would en4
Monday qualifyina rounda next year. l
If the 552 Club, support 1roup for Roat
Hospital, is to continue the II-bole, two-dat
tournament, it has several cUrectiooa to 10. l
Perhaps the most lo&lcal would be to eoota<S
the TPA and to staae the event at the same time at
the Hawaiian Open. Then the youn11olfen who dt
not make the field for Hawall or feel they do oot
want to spend the money to travel to the islands,
could be contacted to play at Irvine Coast Country
Club. :
If the TPA would allow a letter to be aent tt
these younger pros, the results mi&ht b•
worthwhile and a field comparable to lbo8e of the
past could be envisioned. But It would almost
certainly need the cooperation or the tour group. ·
Another a venue open to the aroup would be to
get the newly-formed Golden State ProfessionaJ
Golf Tour to play al Irvine Coast on those two
days. This is a group of young pros who, for one
reason or another, have lost or never did attain a
card to play the TPA tour.
Larry Margison of Westminster and Lon&
"' Beach sports writer Doug lvea are directing the
destinies of this group. They opened their seaaoo
this week at Costa Mesa Golf Course and will plaj
at Mlle Square, Rancho San Joaquin anf
Huntington Seacliff in the next two weeks. .
SOME OF THE PLA YEBS from the area who
participated in this year's Crosby SoutherD
including Ray Carrasco and Art ScbllUne are also
listed among those who will participate on the new
mini-tour.
~ When one looks at the list of players who fail to
make expenses on the tour, it makes sense that
they might not want to put out the extra money al
traveling to Hawaii for a week in the spring if tber
bad an alternate tournament.
Fountain Valley takes Sunset lead.as Ocean View upsets Chargers; Huntington in second
According to the best estimates, It takes
$40,000 to break even on the TPA tour. If thil is the
case, only 94 out of 250 card holders were able to
break that barrier in 1981. '
For the young players. the odds of survivint
are slim. Out of 53 who earned their tour cards in
the spring or fall of 1980, only Mark O'Meara ot
Laguna Niguel . Fred Couples and Vance Haefner
eartled over $40,000. And 34 of the 53 lost their
Fountain Valley High, with a litUe help from
Ocean View, took over sole possession of first
place in the Sunset League women's basketball race
Tuesday night.
Th~ Do.rvtt5 tao'1 Uttlc trvu~l~ \!!~~~•i v!
Marina while Ocean View was busy upsetting
Edison to drop the Chargers Into a second-place tie
with Huntington Beach. ·
Here's how it went:
Ocean View 58, Edison 49
The Seahawks came tnto the game with a 2-4
Sunset League record and slim hopes of beating -4-2
Edison but somebody apparently forgot to tell
Ocean View's Tamie Webb that.
Webb had JO points. including 10 in both the
From Page 01 . CARLSON. • •
4·5 overall record, hosts Edison High this
September.
• • • MARINA IS STILL searching (near and far)
for an opponent for the second week of the
non-league football season.
••• BREA-OLIN DA 'S upset basketball loss at
Anaheim last week was an eye-opener. Anaheim,
you' 11 recall, was beaten by Melody land in
tournament play in December.
CHECKING AROUND -Former Corona del
Mar High assistant coach .Jerry J~k. who was
an assistant in the football program al University
High under Rick Cartl1, has been named
University's varsity baseball coach. The Trojans
open their season Feb. 27 at San Clemente with a
double·header as they tune up for Sea View
League play, which includes defending CIF 2·A
champion Corona del Mer ... Former Fountain
Valley High and Golden West College star BUJ
Lau:r bas been named Buena Park High's new
bf:lseball coach.
Scholastic Coach has released its 1981 Adidas
All-American high school football team consisting
or 100 players. It includes F.dilOll High linebacker
Rick DlBeraardo and Mater Oei linebacker
Kennedy Pola . . . Former Westminster High
basketbaJl star Mick DeLanllacle ls averagina 3.3
points and 1. 7 rebounds a eame for Colorado St.ate
. . . Things are tough enough for Huntington
Beach football. The OUen have lost 33 stralght
league games and now their coach, Gre1 RellJ'1, is
on the veree of being whisked off by either Vista
High OT the fire department. Seems no one in the
Huntington Beach Unified School District can find
a teaching opening for Henry.
Rust le rs stopped
by Santa Moni ca
WOMEN
first and second periods, and grabbed 19 rebounds
to lead Ocean View to the upset that scrambles the
tjght Sunset race.
With Webb dominating play early, the
Seahawks got out to a 30-21 halftime lead and held
on in the second half to drop Edison to 5-2.
Karen Chase and Pam White played well in
support of White, with 11 and 14 points,
respectively. The wm improves Ocean View 's
Sunset mark to 3-4.
Mary Krupka led Edison scorers with 18
points.
Huntington Be•ch 47, Westminster 22
The Oilers moved into a tie with Edison for
second, routing Westminster to up their Sunset
mark to 5-2.
Despite the lopsided score, Huntingtoa •each
Coach Joanne Kellogg indicated she wasn't
completely satisfied with her team's performance.
"We played well enough to win, but we can
play better," she said. ''It just took us a while to
get untracked."
Tammy Buckles led the Oilers with a
game·hiih 16 points while teammate Betty
Mendoza had 10 points and nine rebounds.
Fountain Valley 43, M•rln• 27
Sam Arledge , Deanna Davis and Lisa
Basketball scores
cc::r
So11tMtft C.t Coll._. to. Point
~·· Cllko St."· WNllT\Oft 1' Sot! Frwiclloto St ... Hayward St u Softomo St. 11, UC Dovi. ..
St.,,l.i-St toi, Socramonlo St ..
hlll FordMmM, Foll'fi.td ~
H.,.,,on:I~. Sl A,_.m '9
IOM ... MMfltt ... 7 H o_...w~.o. ,..,,, s1
.. .,,,.....,.12, ·-74 Ver-19, F-4r1elll> OIOlft.-12 ....
Amof'luft U U, W1Hlom & Nary M (ot) .......
Marqwlte 61. H.c.-QMorlott. 66
Notre Oeme 7$, USF ..
St. Xovler n, Cfllu9o SI. 70
Community college ....... CM~
Soft to llMNc a CC 101, Gel-. We1t
"' lM A'91o1 CC j6, Rio HOftCID S.
LA H Ott1or 47. l.A 5oo101wet .. ( oO
Cypteu 101, Ent u.. Anee1n n
"'.!h edtoof .. ......
S.ftllaQO ... ~ldge,.
High Khoo! women ............
l'OllftlOin Veti.y 0 , M9rlfta 27
Ocooft Vlow SI, Edltoft 4' """"""°" hocll 47. WHtmlftst•r n
.... CoettL...-Caplttrono Valley '1, Laouna
8H<l1Jt
Lit US DI Dir T Ital fitllss
Dlqfs YOU
·Ginsbur& combined for 32 points as the Barons
rolled to an easy win that puts them all alone atop
the Sunset standings at 6· 1.
The Barons started out slowly as Marina got
uui. tu • 0·3 icod aft.ea vn.: ~rlod. Fro::: th=t ~ty
however, Fountain Valley broke loose to outscore
the Vikings, 24-6, in the second and third quarters
to take control.
Marina (2·5) aot eight points from Sandy
Corbett while Alene Anderson contributed five
points and 13 rebounds .
Mater Del 63, St. Paul 31
The Monarchs jumped out to an early lead and
kept the pressure on to improve their Angelus
League record to 5-2.
Mater Dei outscoTed St. Paul, li-S, in the first
quarter and enjoyed a 30-10 halfUme lead en route
to the easy win. Kathy Gorman led the Monarchs
with 14 points and 20 rebounds wt\i}e Eva Szmurlo
chipped in 11 points. Peggy Baker and Ann Barry
a~ded nine points apiece.
C•po Valley 41, Laguna Beach 39 The Artists had plenty of opportunities to take
the lead but couldn't take advantage, missing their
last seven free throw attempts and hitting juat five
of 15 foul shots on the game.
Sen1or Maryelle Leeds led Laguna Beach with
17 points and teammate Elizabeth Kuyper bad
nine points and 13 rebounds
MIHlon Viejo 58, Dan• Hlll1 45
The Dlablos remained unbeaten (7-0) in South
Coast play as Mary Madigan, Jane Harre and
Cindy Rohrig combined for 41 points.
Mission Viejo now boasts an impressive 19·2
overall record.
cards for earning le.'l8 th.an !12,000. .
It's a long·shot gamble for those who gain a
card despite the exhilaration they experiencit
when they are one of about 50 out of 1,200 to g«
such a distinction each year.
WITH THIS THOUGHT in mind, it woulf
certainly seem that there is a place in the sun fa,
such as the Crosby Southern tournament to tak:~
place. ~
Every tour pro this comer talked to last week
fell there should be more such events, not fewet.
They feel it is a way they can help make expenses
if they are in the top money group in such a
satellite event.
And even if they don't make that money, the
opportunity to play in such an event affords them
the chance to play and perhaps correct a naw or
two in their game.
And if you think the money paid here ($25 000)
is peanuts, just check the San Diego Open pafoff.
There were only 20 players who picked up more
than the winner here, Ed Dougherty ($3,900). And
checking the LPGA event in Florida, only five
players earned more than Dougherty did at Irvine
Coast for half the work (36 holes compared to 72
for each of the other events).
Notre Dame upsets USF
. SOUTH BEND, Ind. CAP) -Senior guard
Mike Mitchell scored a career-high 19 points
Tuesday night, leading Notre Dame to an upset
75-66 college basketball victory over
seventh·ranked San Francisco.
~~~~~~~~~--
W Bill RIPOil \¥* ---------
OUTSTANDING
VALUES'
· .-W ltl2 VW u.an' "1. .. SIDAM
&Jc>er economy wtth
thls one I Fully e<PPC»d including a
4 8'leed tranamiulon, tinted glaaa. radial
tiree and rmrel (Stk. 30m co1e13).
Mountain High
Holiday Hill
Ml. Baldy
Kratka Ridge
Ml. Waterman
Snow Summit
Snow Valley
Goldmine
SOUTHEllN CALIFO&NIA
Snow depUa/IDtlaea Coadltlou
18 ' pow/pp
18 pow/pp
12·24 pow /pp
36 pow/pp
36 pow/pp
36-60 pow/pp
60 hp
36-48 pow/pp
CENTRAL CALH\lllNIA
June Mountain
Mammoth Mountain
China Peak
5HIO pow/pp
111 pow/pp
80 pow/pp
8'·100 pow/pp Dodie Ridge NORTBE&N CAUFO&NIA
Llfta/cllaln
4C
2C, 1L
4L
FO
3L
FO
FO
FO
4L
FO
FO
FO
Ml. Reba 102·138 pow/pp 7C
Kirkwood 144·26' pow/pp F0
Sierra Sid Ranch 105 pow /pp FO
Hea•enly Valley 90 pow/pp 15C, SL
Northstar '8·12' pp FO
Squaw Valley U·l.32 pp 23L
Donner Sid Ranch M-144 pp 2L
Alpine Meadows 90·210 pp FO
Suaar Bowl lfl8.2S! pp FO
Bore al USIM.90 PP ec
Homewood Ski AH.a 72·108 PJ> 7L
Ccodltloos: hp -hardpack; pp -packed powder: pow -
powder.
LU'tl/chatn: L -lifta: C -chaln; FO-fUlloperaUon.
SALI PllCI s5
AMA~~· Fully equipped with
IMttwette --. tinted
gl ... delU* peckage &
morel (Stk. 3028).
(107288).
Utt Prb-SI 1,ltO
D...._.-SIJtl
NM
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N-Jertey t It, ClllUOO 111
HOUl ... 1'2. SM 0le90 t01
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Wanion 111 Leke,.117
LOI A .... LU -J-11, Wlltl• to, AIHlul·J.-.r It, c...,.r U, Nl•on 17,
lf'tW 1, ....... I. Mc.Adee 4 Totall: 47
J>.16117.
ec>LDIM ITATI -l(lftt M, Stnlttl t. Cefnlll tt, ,.,_II, G• I, PMl!ar6, ,,_
4, Sllor1 1, R-10, H._, 0. Taub: SI 11.V llt. tc.e.., ... ,..,,
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P'w!M M -9-. TIUI flluls -la .,,..1 .. M, Gclld9rl SUte U. Tac:Mkel -
Gel*" $tMe CMch Altlff. A -tJ,J29
COMMUNrrt COLLEGE
Santa MoNca 101. owe n
SANTA MOlltCA -o.,,.,. IA, Rich 4,
~ D, J«lllon S, We,. t, WhMtle 11,
Wede J, C:.r tt, C..._., •. T.._ls: Jt ,..-
IOI.
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He"'*"'9: ~ Mllllk•, 4'-H
CONSOLIDATED
""'· Valley 43, Marin .. 27 POUMTAIM VALLIY -8erto11 '4,
Puchel1-I S, Ari.dee IO, H11hchmklt t, 01ns.11ure i.. Devtu. Totelt: 11 t-11.u.
MAllMA -Anclt,_ S. Lenu t, L.oye 4,
CorMtt t. ...._.., J, Crefl J Taula. 12 M
t1. tc.9..,0..,.,.
F.....teln Velley J 11 t2 \.....a
Merine • t • 1~v T Olal _!olltt: "-"611t V etley II, ~rlne 1S
Fouled M : l.oye (IMrlftal.
Oc.en View 51, !dlaon 49
IDllON -Krup~e It, 1111"•' 1,
0.1tHe.,.,4, T,...,it, T-be U, Uchl-1.
Totelt: -~1'49.
OC•AN VllW -CIWI• 11, w-•.
G419lle110 1, -14, SI..-1 Tot.19: ti 14-UM. tc.e"' OMlten (di-• tt 12 -
0c .... v-12 " ,. 12-91 TMat fouls. ~ 11, Oc_, View U
Capo Vahy 41 , L19. Beacft 3t
CAPllTU.O VALLIY -Cherles 6,
Rocllter s, ll«rton 11. Hiii •. N•resM> t. Al6rlcll 6. TGUh: 1' t-tt 41.
LAOUNA alACN -Mc1Ceew1t 4,
Wlllle-t , K.,.,..., 9, Smltll 6, '--ti.
Totet1: 11 ~tut.
lc9wloy~
C•ltlr-Veli.y 1 t4 IJ 7_.t
"'"""' ....,. 1 S 12 • ........ .::::11~•: c:.pislr-vet .. y "· u.-
Mmr Del 13, St. Paul 31
MATll Dal -Ke"a .. •. hhr 9, Gor""" W, S.0.-lo II, J...,....,. 4, Oelney
I, awry t, G ... 4. Taula. 2t 1·11 ~.
IT. PAUL -Gutlerei U, Roules 2. V'"''
>Wtt.nY 4, ~ G, r'°'9t O. T.c.att· M
•11 J I IC-.loy~
Meter Del " 11 11 ,...., Sl Peul S S IJ _,
Total lauh: -... Del 12. Sj Peul 21.
Fouled OWi: Lltledl9 <St. Pe1111. T~: Me1 .. 0e1-...
Mtallon Yleto 511 Dane Hitt• U
DANA Ml~ E-It. HOol!Mft t.
urMlt .. MIMI •• H ..... '· Cllrl....., .. TMeh: 11 IMl.U.
MllllC* VII.JO-H..-rt 12, MMleen It.
Retwl9 1 I,'""" S, ""491t.C ..... 6. T-: ti 14-10&
PIU ll1ll
Men'• toW'nafMftl , .. 0.-0-1 .._... ..........
0-... • l
11 •
" s II 6
II 6
It It , ...
1 u
0 M
Pllll OeM dlf. 0.. Meyer, w , M ; Terrv
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MllYff ... ...._ Mottr-. 6-1, "''; f-Smlcl clef. ltolf o.11r"'9. M , M ,.,... .... .,...,...
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Cenaclen Challenge
1.ar ...... 1 ................
h1e11 Undl -.t. Eliot Te11sc11er ... a ... 2;
!>Mer Mc,.._• Clef. Jimmy c-., w.
) ... 6·4; VII•• Ger11lelll1 clef AllrlellO
p.,..11 .... 2.w
Men's loumament
(el9-AW..I
All .... .......
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••. '"'· o..lllermo A11110N Ott 11-Arewllo, .. J. W ; ""1w r1e111 Clef. Clelldlo
Pe1talle, .. 2, 1 .. ; Rolla1t IC11r .. 11y Oel.
AIC.,.doC-... 1 ~
Women'• tournament c.eo.nft> ................
Allll ICl.,..._e-. 81llle .1M1t IC .... , ).t. w. llefeull; -... ,_ .... h• "'*"· ..... 6-1 ; MkN"-0.1. Kete Le"'-,
..,, .. 2. ,,.,., Lou Plntll Clef. L.eltft ......
Thom-... t. t• ... ,, Lnlle Allen dlf. Kim J-a. ._,, .. t; 8-le G..,_ll dlf.
Helefte SU!love, .. 2. M ; Wlllcly White Ott.
.._y N4191tl.,., M . M , R.,._ly1t Felrbenk
Otl. NlllCY YNrgln, ._,, 7·S
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29--Dullll tW) dllc ........... IM.
Hwl.-T-<Wl-loyforfelt
REPORT OF CONDITION Consolidated Report of Condition of "AMERICAN
STATE BANK" of Newport Beach, Orange County,
and Domestic Subsidiaries at the close of business on
December 31, 1981.
f'ICTtTIOUS MIMNIU
MAMllTATaMtl•T
Tll• follewl111 perso" II dol111
llllSI_ ...
THE CERAMIC FACTOl'Y, M1t
#••I MecArtll11r, Sa111a A"•·
Celltw11le ff10f
L1ewltY" 8.cll Smith. nM Oellot.
. .......,
Pl~!~•UllMHI ..-CtrATl•MT Tiie followl"9 _ _., o,. CIOl"O ........... .,,
IOWBAR JOINT vunuRE,
11002 S-y Perk ClrCle, 1rvl1t•
cei """"• m t4 Sute &.nk No. 1on
ASSETS
Dollar Amounts
In Thousands
Cash and due from banks ...................... 5,~
Investment securities .......................... 5,536
Federal funds sold and securities
purchased under agreements
to resell In domestic offices . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . 8,JOO
a. Loans, Total <excluding
unearned Income> & leases .... '8,000
b . Less : Reserve for posslble loan tosses .............. '80 c . Loans, net. ............................... 47,520
Bank premises, F .F.&E. etc ..................... 336
Real estate owned
other than bank premises .................... 2,334
• Other assets •..........•.•...•................ 1,996
; TOTAL ASSETS .............................. 71,466 LIABILITIES
'TOTAL DEPOSITS IN
DOMESTIC OFFICES .......... 63,813
Total demand deposits ........ U ,297
Total time & savings deposits 49,516
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC .
AND FO~EIGN OFFICES .................. 63,813
Other llabl ltfes ................................ 2,537
TOTAL LIABILITIES •
(excluding subordinated notes
and debentures> ............................ 66,350
'Subordinated notes and debentures ............ 1,000
SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY
Preferred stock
No. sheres outstanding -None
common stock
•· No. shares •uthorlz.ed 1,200,000 b . No. shares outstanding 1,004,423 1,255
Surplus ................•.............. 1.•55
TOTAL CONTRIBUTED CAPITAL ............ 2,710
Retained eamlngs ............................ 1,406
11 .,OTAL SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY .......... •,116
I TOTAL LIABILITIES AND f SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY .................. 71,466 l The undersigned, S.R. Whltfle'd, Sr. Vice
f I President/Controller and Jackie L.. Ek, Vice '
President, Operations & Personnel of the f abov•nemed blnk, eac" decl..-es for hlmself alOne
t l a1~ ~'!!..the ~he1~ 11 hatvhel ~1<1know1udled9e1 -°!.
I ....... , ....... con-n•v n s r.._.... nc ng u .. f reStrve side hereof), and I believe that each
. • statement In said r•port Is true. each of the
• uncs.~ for hlmsetf alone Md not for the other,
'
• c.rtlflff penef1V Of perjury thet the foregoing
It tru. and con'ed.
E-.cuted on J.nuary 29, 19112, at Newport Be.ch,
'
C.llfornl•·
/a/S.R. Whltfletd
r ......... Orlllllt~J=:L~\k-
A-. C.t.e-. C•l"'"'le.,..
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COlllllY Cler-of Or•-C°'"''' ""
Oac:ember •. t•I
.. f1t:l11
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JM 21. Feto. l, 10. 11, 1"2 ._...,
PICTITIOUI aUllN•U
NAMa ITAT•MINT
Tiie tollowl1t9 perto11 11 dol110
blltlMU M:
MICHAIL KAY'S OF HF#PORT
Tiie -ISie '-'· e Catlfo<nia ,.,..retlolt. ltam S.y Perl! Clrcle,
Irv IM, Cellfornle '7114
lowcle11 Con1trucllo1t, '"'.. • Ca lllornle corporellon, 175 IE••I
WUlll1t9I01t 8011l•verd. P•Md•M,
CellforMltllOI.
flllt l>llMMU 11 Condueled lty a
eener•I portnersNp
Tiie lerltle C4m-y. A
J-L -Isle. PrM'-'I
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Jet1uery2', HSZ
Plll111
Publls.Md Or-Coell Delly Piiot. Feb. >, 10, 11, ~. 1"2 SS7.f.'J.
BEACH, 410 W. C-' HletMey, s..He ,_......., ___________ _
A. Ntwptrt llMdl, Cell-• t*3
MlclWlel G. Sl11<telr, 2'7't Illa, Ll1terH, MIHkHI Viejo, Celllor11I• ...... -....-----------.,.. ... ,
MkllMI G. Slll<Salr
Thll ........... WM flled wltft Irle
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PICTITIOUI aUSt•llM
MAM& l'TAT11M8MT
T II• tollowl119 .,.r .. ,. II c1e1111 """""'••: MOalLI!. SM""LL ANIMAL
VITIRINARY SERVICE, -,.....,.,
......_ llMOI, CetlfOmle ftU1
A1t11 Merion L.uclH, O.V.M., -Popler, L.eeune a.eel\, C•lltor11le .,..,t.
Tllll ~ It C--Dy all
lncllv~•·
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-•'i . , ···...J
Men'• Soccer
M!Oft ICMOOL ..._..Y....., .... _......_ .. ,
P'Olllll•ll'I V•ll•Y 1corl119 Nevyell,
Allllrewn, s.-r. Smtu ..
W1• ..... rt,~Vlew1 •
Monda~':J,'~ctlon1
~ ........
CHICAGOWMITE•SOX -SiOMd Ilk"""' Oot-. pitcher, to•_..,..,. COfltrac:t
POOTUU ............... wae-
CHICAOO aURS -i..mect Ed H"9111K
~ ... ~ .
NEW ENGi.ANO PATRIOTS Named
Tommy 8re.,,.r, Otl•1tslve llM coach,
Ste,,. $1d1Wff, tlltetlMlltr CN<h, -S-Welten, ~ .. 11«11 c.oecll.
SAN 01!00 CHARGERS -Acquired
0.¥lcl ~ •• 11...0.Cker, lrom Tampa le,
tow undJtr.-...,.... ,.._<Miu~ MOCklY ............. u..-QUE8EC ltOROIQYES -Tr-lM
NorwoM, ............ lo tM Wa'111"9tlll c.tt•ts fer Tim T-.Y. ,..,.
~·· __ .............
JACKSONVILLE TEA MIEN -s..-
0.""b Wit ..,._, lo 4 --·r C01tlr4C1.
SleMd "''"° ?«. --.... lo ..... _. cefllrKI. TORONTO BLIZZARD -Ne,_ ._., ............. -coecll. cou.aoa
GEORGIA TECH -H-llk ll LMtO
... 1 ............. , .. 11
quicker cam•. led bJ playmuer
Jeff Gardner and burly ~
JCraia1 on the boardl, whole t.1 atatureo ,.ema to equallM moet.
wltb better helCJrt.
Al F«mtain Valley ll'a a tell
for aW"YivaJ in the rac. for third
place (at the moment> and tu a
rema~b between the Barou'
J err Hu1bea and M arlna
defender John Berrr.
Berry beld Hushet w oGJy 10
pointa u the Vlkinas ed&ed FV,
42-41, ln the ftnl round. and It'• ,.,uctpated that the Vlktnp will
employ sltnllar
dlamood-and-ooe t.ac:tica apln4
in an attempt to slow down
Hushes, who is averaclna 20.8
points per 1ame for the seallQft
Woodbridge
no match
for Santiago
Woodbridge Hi1b'a Mark
Foringer led all scorers with 17
points but it wasn't enou&b to
keep Santiago from rolling to a
68-34 win in non-league men's
basketball action Tuesday night
in the Santiago gym.
Foringer, who came into
Tuesday's game averagin1 15.3
points per game, bad a typically
strong offensive performance to
give hlm over 300 points oo the
season but the Warriors found
themselves outmanned bv a tough Cavalier team.
"These guys (Santiago) are
the best t.eam we've played this
year . without any doubt,"
Warrior Coach Bill Shannon
said.
Woodbridge forward David
Wise added l2 points in the loss
that drops the Warriors to 13·7
on the year.
Angels, Witt
come to term.8
From AP dlspatcbea
Right-handed pitcher Mike
Witt, who finished the 1981
season with three !trai;ht
complete-game victories, has
signed a one-year contract with
the Angels. the American
League c lub announced
Tuesday.
Witt, 21, had an 8·9 record
with seven complete games in 21
starts for the Angels as a rookie ·
last year. His signing brlnp the
number of Angel players under
contract to 26.
-------
I • • •
and baa COODeded for a pailU
or llJON ab Um•.
WHEN ffVGBSI 11 ooa·
nectlnc with l\b lon•·rUI•
abotl, l'ou.ot&ln Vallff'• ...,..
coma to Ult, too, which wu UM
CHO lut week Ul I .,,..., vtetorJ
at Runtlnltoo Beach.
Ocean ~ WU beaten .,, u
lo ltl la.J meetlnc wltll Zdi8on,
but this time the Seabawkl
ftcure to atut cotna to •·•~ .Jlm Uaevltcb earlier, rather than
waltin& wiut the second ball (be
llniabed with 23 point.a) ln tbe
nl'ft meet.lnC·
Edison eotera with ao 11-2
overall record and the No. l
rankinl in Orantee County and
No. 2 in CIF 4-A, beblnd M
Richard Chan1 and 8·4 lllck
DIBemardo, alOng with a pod
set of ,uuda (Jeff Stepbem and
Mark Goudce).
Elsewhere, HuntinjtoD Beach
is a heavy favorite behind M
Jim Lane and 8 ·1 Billy
Thompsdn; Corona del Mar
dealt El Toro a 43-polnt defeat
earlier; Newport Harbor wu
also an easy winner lut time,
shelling Irvine by 30; and
University ii considered a aol.ld
choice to stop SaddJeback •lain
<last time out was a 40·25 verdict).
Laguna Beach (Nell Riddell la
the Orange Coast Area's leadln1
scorer with a 22.8 .averace) bu
been tough at home; and Mater
Dei's CIF chances are on tbe
line. Mat.er Del la tied for third
(2·3) with Bishop Amat ln the
league standings.
Vanguards
need a rally
Southern California Collete,
down by six pointa with 1:22
remaining in the game. reeJed
off 10 straight point.a to band
visiting Point Loma a 80-88
setback Tuesday night ln NAIA
District lII basketball acUoo ln
Costa Mesa .
The Vanguards improved
their Southera Division record to
3-4 and their overall mart to 14.C
with the victory. but they had to
scramble to overcome peaty
Point Loma.
Two free throws by Rick
Porras and a single free throw
by Paul Hohmann gave the
Vaneuards an 88-86 advantaee,
and teammate Mike Roberts
added a IS.looter at the buaer.
Mark Roche paced the
Southern Cal College atuck with
24 points, while Roberta added
20 and Porras chipped ln 16 .
The Vanguards return to
action Thursday night wbenthey
host Hawaii Pacific (7:30).
. ...,...
PICTITIQUS 9UllNIH PIC'nTIOUI auMNllS FICTITIOUS IUStMIU PICTITIOUI SUltM•M
MAMalTAT•MIUfT NAMalTAT•Ml•T
Tiie followlftt per-.1 are C101 Tiie lollowlfte --· ere CIOl1t9 bus!-.. bosl-•: UNIVERSITY ASSOCIATllS OF CHRYSALIS ARTWORKS. 70>6
OREGON, LTD .. 1101 Quall Street, Me1tder l1t Orlva, Celle "'•••· New110f't lleectl, Cellftn!M nMO Cellfo""• ...,.
R_, Zllllllt, JSlS CrK• C'"41 JMMI IE. Gl!Oee, JllJ6 Meftllerlfl Le,,., Mellllll, c eiliornle to26S Or Ive, C-. M9M, Celttwni• fJiUl6
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MAMa ITATIMllMT •AM• ITATl ... 111'
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PAM ENTERPRISES. 1002 M C PARTYPROOVCTIONS,SSS
Secr•larlet Clrcl•, ,Coste Moo, Peuler'I,,., ,.,,._IM. HD. c.te MHA.
Cellhlr1tle92'1' .l Cellto<ftleftUI
Pam••• Jo O•llOll , I002 Pe11I Hubert """""cll•r, JU
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Celllo,,.laf2'» Tllomet PetrlO C11rre1t, ttti2 1,,J1~11~.,':,~1"•U It <-led "" .,. eo~ur Ave1t11•, Gerllell Grove.
P•m•I• Jo °'""' Callltrltle,,.., Thlt ... ._, wM flled wllll Die Tlllt 1>1111-It CCM\duC-Dy a
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Feb. l . 10, 17. u , 1'12. ,,...,~,,.. --.. -ICT-ITIOUS--au-.. -.-.-.. ----f'ICTITIOUI •ut•M•U
MAM& ITAT•Ma•'T NAM• ITATllMUIT
PllUC Illa
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NAM8 ITATU1Ul•T
Tiie follOwlfte per-.1 er. llCll"9 .............
AOVINTURE TRAVIL. 112
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EQUITY P:UNOINO I, SltO ALLIENTIERTAIH"°'IEHT TICKET
Cempllt Orlvo, Newport e .. ch, •llCI TRAVEL SElllllCE. 12141 \lati.y
Cellfomiet1MO. View, 0.,.,,0,....., Cet-•,_.I
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