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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-02-04 - Orange Coast Pilot•••••• DRUSI CUii Ylll HllllDlll IAllY PIPER IHUnS OAY FfBH U AHY 1 19H/ OH ANGE:. COUN l Y < AL IF O~~NIA I', Lt N l '-) Air Florida pilots erred; 'aware of ice' I WASIUNGTON (AP) Tape source close to the National One "°urce told the newspaper commuter bridge and smashed I' recordings from the Air Florida Transportation Safety Board that their words suggest they at into the icy Potomac. Four jet that crashed into the investigation told the one point looked out their peopleonthebridgewerekilled. Potomac River last month newspaper. windows specifidrtty to check FAA regulations state that support theories that ice or snow NTSB spokesman Ira Furman for snow on one of the wings, ·'no pilot may take off an on the wings made it stall -and and Francis McAdams. head of noted there was some, but took airplane that has frost. snow or strongly suggest the pilots knew the NTSB investigation, couJd off anyway. ice adhering to" engines, of !he problem before taking off, not be reached for comment on About 30 seconds later, Petit's windshields , wings, control accordingtotoday's Washington thereportWednesdaynighl. final words to Wheaton surfaces or, with piston-engine Post. According to a preliminary reportedly were, "We're going aircraft, the propeller. The cockpit voice tape transcript of the tape, pilot down, Larry," and Wheaton Ice or snow can reduce the suggests the pilot and copilot Larry Wheaton and copilot Alan responded, "I know it." I if t Ing power of w 1 n gs had seen a buildup of ice or Petit spoke to each other Seventy-four of the 79 people Investigators have said that snow on the Boeing 737's wings repeatedlyabouttheheavysnow on the jetliner, including about 43 minutes elapsed but went ahead with the ill-fated falling Jan. 13 as they prepared Wheaton and Petit, were killed between Flight 90's last de-icing flh~bt anyway. an unidentified to take off, the Post said. when the plane hit a busy and the takeoff. As the plane sped down the runway at National Airport, lhe pilots' words indicate they were worried they were not accelerating fast enough, according to the Post. One source was quoted as say ing that preliminary electronic analysis of the jet noise recorded on the tape indicates the engines were producing only 80 percent of normal power The flight data recorder r ecovered from the Potomac showed it took the plane 47 seconds to accelerate to takeoff speed, rather than the normal 30 or so seconds. Sources told the Post that the 737's ·•stick shaker" -a device that rattles to warn of an impending stall can be heard on the cockpit tape. The rattle began as the plane reached 166 mph -some 24 mph fa ster than the craft's normal s tall speed supporting theories that ice or snow bad reduced lift and made the plane stall at a higher speed than usual. the newspaper said. Reagan plans action ICEMAN COMETH Firefighter Gene Carson's hair, eyelashes and mustache are covered with icicles after battling a condominium fire in temperatures dropped lo near zero as an Arctic front passed through Colorado Midwest socked in; more due Seven Ohio counties declared snow emergency, areas By The Associated Press Wide areas of the Midwest were immobilized by up to two feel of snow that crushed roofs and forced sch oo l s and businesses to close in the second heavy snowfall this week. More misery was in store as a third storm began moving in from the Rocky Mountains. Seven northwest Ohio counties were declared snow emergency areas with travel limited to emergencies. In Georgia, meanwhile, record floods sent homeowners fl eeing, and the Northeast was pelted with freezing rain. The Midwest's ·second storm, which turned into sleet today over the eastern Ohio Valley, caused fewer problems than Stranded on roof 'Snow shoveler marooned all night GOFFSTOWN, N.H. <AP> -Tales of people stranded by snow and lee are becoming familiar this winter -but Rodney Upton may be the only one marooned all night on his own roof. Upton, in his early 40s , said he saw cracks in the ceiling or his split-level home and went up on the roof about 9 p.m. Tuesday to shovel off some of the 21h feet or snow to relieve the stress. As he shoveled; lt began to sleet. then rain, and around midnight he decided to come down. But his ladder was encrusted with ice and he was afraid to climb the 10 feet to the ground. . He yelted and banged on the roof but said he couldn't attract attenUon or rouse bis wife, who was sleeping ln a room below. To keep warm, he kept shoveling. By 4:30 a.m., he. spotted a workbound neighbor. whose son, a fireman, called theJ\re department. Firefighters took him down by ladder. I earlier storms that have pasted the area this winter. "1 think everybody learned his lesson," said Monroe County, Mich., sheriff's dispatcher Betty Miller. "Most people took cover this time." Experts were called to the Eastern Missouri Correctional Center in Pacific. where the roof of the new $25 million facility began to sag under nearly two feet of snow. Jn Indiana, 15 members or the Ball State University men's baseball team and six members or the track team escaped Utju.ry when a fieldhouae roof caved in. The Howard County Civil Defense maintenance garage in Kokomo collapsed and snow nattened the roof of a commons area at Eastbrook High School near Marion. In Georlia. forecasten said Sweetwater Creek would crest at 12 or 13 feet above fiood state today at Austell near Atlanta, forcing residents to nee 100 housea and trailers. The creek's •realest fiood on record wu Nov. 21, UM9 when It created at 7.4 feet above flood atap. Tbrouput northern Georpa, roads were under water u drtvlnc raina forced bomeo-.. to nee and school otnclala to canceJ clUMI. Ruideintl of AUanta auburbe •ere ICOoplna mud out -of their esPenllve homel toda.)' • to . cut mterest rates WASHINGTON (AP> - President Reagan will announce in the next two to three weeks a plan lo brio! dn'¥n !nte:-e::t rates. a top adviser said today. Edwin Meese III, counfflor to the preslden t. made the comment ln regard to a question on wbat steps Reagan would tau to spur bouM.n9, one of the most depressed sectors of the economy. He dld not explain whether the plan would be aimed at mortgage interest rates or at au interest rates. Meese's comments came at a breakfast speech to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce oo the administration's legislative priorities for 1982. "We have a series or measures that are under consideration now ," be said in regard to housing. "The main thing we have to do though .. is do everything possible to bring down the inter.est rates. "This is why you'U be seeing some specific action on that in the next two or three weeks by the president." The administration has been openly critical in the past few weeks of the actions by the Federal Reserve Board to restrict the nation's monetary supply. saying the Fed's lack of precision in meeting its growth targets was responsible for currently high interest rates. The prime rate jumped again 'l'uoaA<av AC hAnkc resoondM tn ;~~~~~I;-p-;.essures . such as increased borrowing by the Tr eas ury to finance tbe government's growing deficits. Meese earlier said that the high interest rates were the result o! a "lack of confidenee" b y 1 n v es to rs t h a t "Sn government can hold to · course.·· And he said the Reag administration had no intentiot or deviating from its tax cut aDi budget cut plans. · 'Thls administration will st.a on course," he said. "We not be giving in to t.he vagari~ of the stock market. " Victim's death wish related I l Defendant $ays mother. asked him to help end her life • ~ Murder defendant Herbert Barclay Baetz., who is standing trial for the poisoninl death of bis 87-year-old mother, says she asked him ii he would help her end her life about nine months before she died. Baetz, called to the wiln~ stand Wednesday by defense lawyer Stuart Grant, said ber request to him "came out or the blue" but he realized she wu ~erious and that, "Yes, I felt I had agreed to something, but I didn't feel l would be called on lo carry it out." Baeu's mother Janette Baetz, died on Ser. 10, 1981. Baetz is accused o giving his mother orange juice laced with deadly potassium cyanide. The prosecution ls seeking a murder conviction a1alnst the Newport Beach resident, who shared his mother's home at 1211 West Bay Street. But the defendant, a 57-year-old chemist, told jurors and Superior Court Judge Everett Dickey's courtroom that his mother diacuued the subject or death with him on several occasions. He said she asked him as a chemist what the best way was of ending her life. and they agr eed that cyanide was· "certain and painless." The defendant, balding and bespectacled. said his mother first brought up the matter of her Qwn death by telling him, "I'm thinking that I just don't want to live much longer." That was in early 1981, he said. When she brought up the matter again in the spring, be said, he asked her when he would know "lbe time has come." She said, 'you'll know'." Baetz, who lived for many years in Jamaica, moved in with his mother in 1977. About six months after he began living there, he said, sh e began suffering from a painful nerve disorder known as shingles, which caused blisters to form on her forehead. He testified that she was annoyed both by the lingering effects of the illness and from a nightmare she had in early 1981 in which she dreamed she was lost. First Lady's china survives banquet W ASIUNGTON (AP> -Nancy Rea1an'1 new china set survived its White Houae debut intact. Nary a .. cup wu broken. And despite Ila $209,000 price ta• -paid with 1 donaUon from the non-profit Knapp Foundation -there didn't seem to be a crttlc ln tbe bouH. E ven the butlers loved lt, acHrdlnl to chief uaher Rex Scoute. The 4,m.~ Ht, which tbe first taay bad utd waa 10 "b•dJ!d badly needed," waa WlYe Wednelday m•bt It I ltate clblDer bon0rin8 ~ HciUl-.t ;r( It was the first thing he mentioned in his after-dinner toast. "Detore I start, let me first con1ratulate Mrs. Reagan for the new cblna which ls very elegant," Mubarak said. The 120 dinner 1ueats applauded and the first lady lauibed. • Mubarak wun't the only one with compliments. Tb• butlers ••are mithly proud of l{," Sc:outen said. 0 Tbey are thrilled lO death. It's beautltul. •• Vice Pre.idlnt Geor1e Bulb called It ftne ~. and said It <S..CllJNA. ··~A.I) I t What actually happened on tb,t night that Janette Baetz die4 must still be explained by Baet.a du ring continuation of hit testimony today. He did say Wednesday that he had purchased six bottles of cyanide from a Tustin chemical firm for $53 an 1980. No decision about his mother's death had been made prior to his buying the poisonous chemical. Previous witnesses ~alled by the prosecution testified that Baeti, who is twice divorced, argued loudly with his mother on many occasions. Baetz admitted that be was an alcoholic and that his dri.nkinc problem was a factor in cauaiot one divorce. r When he moved in with his mother, he said, he didn't worry a bout arguing with her. Asked by Grant if he had been close to his mother, the defendant responded, "I would say we were always close." ORAIGI COAST 1111111 Va rla ble cloudine'ss today through Friday morning, becomint fair Friday afternoon. Hiabs both days 62 to 66. Lows tonight 46 to 54. llSIDI TIDIY Boz tOpe, tradinQ 11.amps and CoupcN • a,.. i,.. latest promotWM being vHd bv atrUne• to win ~·· A6. INDll "1 I " A Pacllh.~ 1Soutbweat A•rllnn 11 billboard that ha• ralJtd the 1 ... f Oran&• County SuSHtrvllor 1 hOmu lUley becauae It does ot. refer to John Wayne Airport ,.t\lf'UI 1oon be cban1ed. . , , John O' Malley Jr. • the 1idtrllno'1 1overnment atrairs ~119trector , said the billboard, '"which makes rererence to Oran1e County Airport, Is '( Jcheduled to be repainted within 30 days. 1 He said the airline has no j .. ff>lans to either remove the sign ,,,.Pr have it repainted sooner i""'.because or contract provisions ' 'with an outdoor advertising q firm . ~·· Riley, who proposed that , '1 Prange County Airport be ·"~enamed to honor John Wayne, •,nhbjected to the billboard in a <•1Jan. 2'1 letter to O'Malley. A ~:''similar protest had been lodged :' by Riley in October when the •"""billboard was located on Main ( St reet n ear t h e S ant a Ana-Orange border. O'Malley said the billboard ecenlly was moved to the new ocation alongside the Santa Ana reeway at Valley View Avenue In Santa Fe Springs. BY STEVE MARBLE °'*~ .......... If I never hear the word "canary" a.iatn, l'U be happy. Real happy. . . You might say I've been eating canary l mean crow -most of the week: I've endured what can only be described as a relentless attack of bird calls. blrd jokes and general bird humor. Alfred Hitchcock would have had trouble directing the sort or bird scene I've been facing in the Daily Pilot newsroom . A zoo keeper should have it so rough An expla natio n is in order. It all s tarted when I wrote a short feature about a Costa Mesa woman who sells reclaim ed a luminum cans t he n divides h er profits a mong four charities. At least that's the way I wrote it. I'm positive or that. But that's not the way it came out in the paper Monday. The stor y. as it was printed, had the can-collecting woman dividing up her profits among fo ur canaries. That's canaries as in birds. little feathered things with wings. The following morning, the jokes started. I should have seen them coming. Steve Mitchell, a fellow reporter. wanted to know this: "What happens lf one of the birds dies Do the others divide up the m oney or ... More louahter, more bird calls and bird imitations followed. 1 couldn't escape it . "What has eiaht leas and wel1hs 1.000 Pounds?" one of my colleagues wanted to know I wasn't sure. "Four 250-pound canaries," he laughed. slapping his knee. Then a curious reader gave me a phone call "Are you Steve Marble"?" he wanted to know 1 told him I was. "Well," he continued, ··about those canaries Even he was laughing and I didn't even know the guy. But that was just the start. My boss took to fiapping his arms like some kind of out-of-control bird (a canary , r guess> and several others started cutting out bird stories and lecfving them on my desk. I tried to explain that it was some other bird·brain that made the canary goof. That only brought more bird whistles. Even in the restroom I heard the bird calls But I figured m} wife would understand I was wrong. She read the article. doubll'd up in laughter and immediately called several friends to share the Joke !:)he said they laughed too But being the good humored. thick·skinned guy I am. I didn't get my beak out of shape over any of this You might say l didn't even get my feathers ruffled But someday . Suspect denies - killing 81 DAVID IUJTDIANN a.-.. .,.., ....... A prt vlou.aly convicted HI oflendel' char&ed with kUllq a l2. year-old Ana held\ boJ admltted to police laat AU(Ull that. he sexually molated the child and eventually ''bo,u.d" him before leavln1 hlrn In a remote area In Los An1elet County. But, according to Oran1e County Grand Jury tranacripta released Wednesday, Robert J ackson Tilompaon.. 35, denied that h~ killed youn1 Benjamin Lee Brenneman, whose body was found in the Rancho Palos Verdes area a day after be disappeared Crom an Anaheim apartment comple.x on Aug. 25, 1981. The you.opt.er, a newspaper delivery boy for the Orange County Register , died or strangulation. Thompson was scheduled to be arraigned today in s uperior court on an indictment which accuses him o f murder, kidnapping, sodomy and sex perversion . Special circumstances also are alleged which could lead lo imposition of the death penally if Thompson i5 convicted. PSA offtcials said tn a recen&. letter to Riley that use of Orang~ County >.irport on the billboar~ and signboards on Orange County Transit District buse~ was short-term in nature anq was aimed at persons who might. not be aware of the airport's name chan@e, such as tourists. 0 ·Malley pointed out that the u lk or the airlines other Kennedy secret tapes revealed In testimony before the grand jury last month, Anaheim police detective David Tuttle said Thompson asked to speak with investigators several days alter his arrest Tuttle quoted Thompson as saying· ··1 didn't mean to do it . .. When I left him he wu alive." dvertising about its service lo r ange County makes reference Conversations with world leaders, family members recorded Tuttle said Thompson went on· "He <Brenneman> came into my apartment. I ma<le advances and he got scared. I tied him up. l didn't want to hurt him . I just drove around. I got scared. I didn 'l know what to do.'' o John Wayne Airport. For example, a recent edition or PSA's inflight magazine <'Ontained a centerfold ad that reads, "Now PSA presents smile service from John Wayne ( Orange County Airport lo the Bay Area." PSA operates two Orange County-San Francisco ' Hay Area flights daily. O'Malley said the airline was ·· not trying to "a ntagonize" anyone by using Orange County '°' i rpon in seieClea ad v~1 i.1:.i11g. Asked 1r he felt Riley was being antagonistic over the issue, O'Malley replied, "I get that impression " He noted that it is common ror airlines to advertise destination locations rather than airport names. "No one calls Las Vegas McCarran International ," O'Malley said BOSTON <AP> -President John F . Kennedy secretly recorded conversations and telephone calls with world leaders. congressmen and aides while in the White House, the director of the Kennedy Library said today. · · 1 have no reason to think they knew they were being t aped," Dan Fenn Jr., the library director. said or the people recorded in 100 to 140 hours of taped meetings and conversations. The tapes are being eiusu1in;:d in Boston at the library in preparation for their release to the public, possibl y thi s summer. Fenn said 250 tele phone conversations and 325 meetings in the Oval Orrice or Cabinet Room in the White House were recorded from mid-1962 to Nov. 7, 1963, 15 days before Kennedy was assassinated. .~ ......... NEW CHINA POLICY -Sheila Tate. Nancy Reagan's press secretary (cente r ) ta lks to reporters at the White House a bout the new china settings for the White House. The plates were introduced at a state dinner for Egyptum President Hosni Muba rak Wednesay night. ORANOI COAST DlllJ Pilat ,.., I ~ I I I CIHtlfled edvertl1ln9 7141142·5'71 All other cs.panmem. 142-4521 MAIN OFF1Cl DI WeM 9" M .• C:06ta Mew, CA. Mell......_; ... IM,CeltaMeM,CA.-. Among those recorded in telephone calls were Marshal Tito of Yugoslavia, Gen. Douglas MacArthur. evangelist Bill y G raham and Adlai Stevenson, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations under Kennedy. The llst Includes members of Co ngres s, according to an index of the tapes that Fenn had. The Washington Post said today that an index of the recordings it obtained also sho w s Kennedy taped ccnv~!"!atic~ ·.:;!th rr.~mbi:rs ui his family, including his wife, J acqueline. ·T h e s u b j e c t s o r t h e conversations included Vietnam, the Cuban missile crisis, the integration of the University of Mississippi and civil rights in general. "I haven't the vaguest idea why Kennedy used the tapes or saved them," Fenn said. From Page A1 CIDNA ••• ..,.was outrageous to criticize the first lady since she acquired it at no cost to the taxpayers. "I think she should get some credit," he said. Lyn Nofziger, who recently quit his White House post of political director, said it was "about time we had some new china here and I don't know what all the fuss is about." The 220.place service was ordered seven months ago and arrived by truck Tuesday in time to be band-washed for Wednesday, night's dinner. The ivory china with a red and gold border was the showcase for a dinner of filet of mountain t rout farcie with fle urons, supreme of chicken with red peppers and white rice, green beans amandine, port sal\lt c h eese, watercress a nd mus hroom s alad , chocolate mousse and petits fours. Each place settin& consists of 19 pieces, but only seven were used Wednesday: service plate, salad plate, dinner plate, fish plate, dessert plate, demitasse cup and saucer. The other pieces are: soup plate, finger bowl plate, butter plate, tea cup and saucer, bouillon cup, <!ream soup cup and stand, berry bowl, cereal bowl, ramekin, and cocktail cup. In addition, 60 extr.a demitasse cups and teacups were ordered, along with 72 laree platters. O bvi ously sensitive to criticism of the china purchase, Mrs. Reagan's press office put out a chart showing the cost in 1981 doUars of dishes purchased in the administrations of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Harry Truman and Lyndon Baines Johnson. According to Sheila Tate, Mrs. Reagan's press secretary, the only other White Houae china that was not paid by taxpayers waa t he Johnson 1ervlce, contribut.ed by an anonymous donor. Mrs. Tate made the followtn1 coil cornparison1 with other White House china: -FD& -$t,301.20 actual cost; $74,108 ln Ul81 dollars. -Tnmaa -$28,271.40 actual cost; $86,100 ln 1881 dollars. -,...._ -'80,028.2' actual coat.; $JJ15,000 ln 1981 dollan. -a-p a -$208,508 actual andtm~. .. I thouaht It would be la.t~reiatlnc historte&H)' .'' Mn . Ta l&td ol lbe compari.lon. , Material from the tapes was and never once went back and not available listened to one " "When they're available, The taping syst em was they'U be available to anyone, installed by the Secret Service in junior high school students , the summer of 1962 and was Arthur Schlesinger or an yone." taken out Nov. 22. 1963, the day Any potentially classified Kennedy was assassinated, material will be referred to the accordin g to "an o rficial originatine agency. which will familiar with the system," the decide whether lo keep it Post said. classified'or allow the museum The Post said that it obtained to release it, Fenn said. a 29-page log from the library "There was no attempt to hide that shows the recordings were the existence of this material," made from July 1962. until Fenn said today in an interview November 1963 11i his Lexington, Mass , home. EA1:.tt:r1.:<: v: Slime Kemu::u y "We said those tapes did exist. tapes but not their extent "I thinll one reason for all the had been known ever since a excitement is that some people statement by Fenn in 1973 The expect great big secrets to be Kennedy family turned over the exposed. But m y experience tapes in 1976. with the world of research A secret taping system materials is that they are gotng Installed by President Rieh'rd to give nuances, dimensiona and Nixon lied lo bis resignation interesting insights into the 1974 during the w-a tergate workings of a political process. scandal, when it was revealed but nothing really surprising or that the recorded conversations revolutionary." varied from his statements on Evelyn Lincoln, Kennedy's the a ffair. Nixon's system. unlike secretary, was quoted by The Kennedy's, was voice.activated, Was hingto n Post today a s and contained about 4,000 hours saying Kennedy threw a switch of conversation. to signal her lo start taping. She President Lyndon Johnson's would activ:\te either a recorder library in Austin, Texas contains attached lo his telephone or many tapes given by a former microphones lo the Oval Office secretary under a restriction or the Cabinet Room ir he were that they be kept secret for SO in either or those places years, the Post said The Post said the most Americaft Heritage Magaztne frequent names listed among re ported I ast m o nth that participants wer e Attorney President Franklin 0 . Roosevelt General Robert Kennedy, lt\e secretly recorded seven or eight president's brother, Secretary of conversations and 14 news State Dean Rusk and Defense conrerences in the Oval Office in Sec:etary Robert McNamara. 1940. The Post quoted her as saying · that Kennedy made the ERA Setback recordings "for history .. RICHMOND, Va. <AP> -A "He was very conscious or legislative committee voled 12-7 history," she told the Post. "He today not to report the Equal was always wanting to get Rights Amendment to the floor exactly what was said to o f the Virginia House of pinpoint precisely what was Delegates , almost certainly said. These were for history and killing ERA's chance or passage he wanted to have them for that in the General Assembly. How to avoid Young Brenneman, who would have started junior high school last fall, was going door to door at t he Oakwood apartment complex see king new subscribers lo the newspaper. The apartments are located at the corner of Broadway and Brookhur5t in Anaheim Other witnesses who lived at the apartment said they saw the you ngs ter iaikiu" w itn Thompson al the doorway of his unit. During his interview with officers on Aug. 30 at Anaheim police headquarters, Tuttle said Thompso n vo lunteered information about the case. At one point during the interrogation. the investigator said, Thompson "broke down, was crytng, was very emotional, was upset." Tuttle said he asked the s u s p ect, "Did you put <Brenneman I in the trqnk?" "Yes, God forgive me. He was alive when I dropped him off," Thompson responded. Tuttle said Thompson admitted putting the boy in the large blue t runk at bis apartment. Witnesses had seen him moving the trunk out of his unit. Earlier, the defendant bad told police h e was s imply moving clothing back to bis mother's home in Bellflower. Thompson , according to Tuttle, said he drove down Brookhurst Street to Pacific Coast Highway "and drove around in an area that was secluded " At this point. Brenneman was apparently removed from u.e trunk, tied up and then put back in the container. · the costly mistake of buying the wrong diamond. In the world of precious gems. true quality 1s never synonymous with "cut" prices or "discounts." The best and most economical place to shop for fine diamonds is always a fine jewelry store. We are diamond specialists. We've built our reputation by offering only the finest quality gems at fair. competitive prices. Every day. Year after year. We urge you to ask questions. Compare price and quality. The more you know about diamonds. the more you'll appreciate the difference between fine quality stones and inferior grades. Our experts will be happy to explain the "Four C's" t.hat make up a diamond's character and determine values: color, clarity. cut and carat You'll see. a diamond "bargain" is no bargain at all if you sacrifice the qualities that make a diamond beautiful and valuable. Whenever you shop for diamonds. remember the "Four C's." And the "Fifth C." Confidence. That's the most important thing we sell. SLAVIC K'S '1ne J9Mllrl Slnce 11U7 Whm w oor sufjmses btgin. ,...,., Wind {7\4) ~·-.Newport INch -GtutM Los~. s.n Diego.!--'4tlg8I ' I I. SOME DOLL Brooke Shields, movie star. and Johnny Carson of "The Tonight Show ." share a laugh over a new Brooke Shields doll Af'W ........ during her guest appearance this week. The actress says the doll was constructed mostl y from photographs. Pregnant mom wim contest A pregnant mother s aid she will use $50,000 won in a sweepstakes to buy a car pay bills and add to her hom~ to accommodate an expected fourth child. Joan Walker, a technician at San Leandro·s Vesper Memorial Hospital, said she and Michael Walker have been enterin~ contests since the y were married but, except for a Lake Tahoe ski trip, have won only trinkets The Walkers said they learned about their wm in a Ho s te ss Cupcake sweepstakes the same day they found out about Mrs Walker's pregnancy Fred Silverman, former. programming boss of all three major television I\ network s, may be <'Onsidersng a political career · "i\:: :;k~ to ~c :~t~ the publi<' se<'tor," The Wall Street Journal quoted Silverman as saying "I'm interested m public service I'd like to think maybe there is .something else besides television." Sil verman 1s running loterMed1a Entertainment Co., a joint venture with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Film Co .. and United Artists Corp . which is developing programs for network and cable television, the Journal said Gov. Hugh Carey, father of 14, was honored by a planned parenthood organization for his support or state financing to help pay for abortions for the poor and for increasing financing for family planning clinics. "Yoit had the courage or your convictions. When the chips were down we knew we could count on you," Mary Lindsay, president of Family Planning Advocates of New York, said in presenting the Margaut Sanger Award, named for the pioneer in birth control education. Carey, a Roman Catholic, has been a staunch supporter or state financing of poor women's abortions although he has said he personally Is "morally " opposed to ~~!"t!o~. Mayor Llo•el Wllaoa of Oakla nd ~hould earn SG,870 -four times as much aa he's making, members of a C harter Review subcommittee say. The Charter Review Committee. appointed by the mayor and approved by th~ City Council last May. has been considering changing the city's form of government by shifting most decision-making from the city manager to the mayor. The 17-member committee has failed to reach a consensus on the extent of the change, but most agreed the mayor's salary should be increased from the $15,000 set out in the charter. City Manager Henry Gardner earns $64,896 a year. Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands wsll visit 12 American cities this year in two trips celebrating 200 years or diplomatic relations between the two countries, the Government Information Service said. The agency said a "state visit" from April 19-24 will take the queen to New 'York. Washington, Philadelphia, and Princeton, N.J . On a second visit from June 16-29. she will travel to Atlanta, Hous ton, Los Anaeles, San Francisco, Cblcaao, and Ann Arbor, Grand Rapids and Holland, Mich. Tbe aaency said the queen wlll be accompan ied on both trips by her husband, Prtace Cl•••· Mercury to drop Coastal Wot lo --111w9ol .. 1,,.,. 11 IO 10 'nots ln afternoon d•< r•a\lng IOf\lglll, ucept north to nortlluat wind• ts to H knob belo• p ..... , ano canyon• lonlQllt b~lwttn 5ante Barbara -5anta Monica Bay Qnp to l 1001 ... 1 ... 1y •••II• Ctearlno Dy aflernoon tf\Ow '"""'" O••• 11orllle1 11 Ca lllornla and ustern 1lo1>tt ol \1 .. r•t-y. Extended forecast V .S. summary F•lr Windy 11'1 mounte1n, end Delo* panes mo•ll' ending by Mon<lay Much t-on -k•n<I Coastal •••• 1111111• s2 10 n ano ov•rnlQM -. In Jiit to fl -laln .... hlQl'a JD lo 4l ano lowt 12 to n TemperetUfn all •DDuC J to S 0.Qnn lllQMt Dy Monday ..... , .. .,. .... _,, .. , ., ... ::,~ H•••' tllOW 1•11 In IN central United Stale• on Weclneway whlla ------------------rein pelted lfW Ea\t Tll• •now 1111 1rom sou1111u1 Smog Missouri IO IOU1'••" Ml<lllQ8'\. •nO N •HIONAL WfAfMlt UIYl(f NOAA US Oe•• et (•••••«• ,,. IJJlem -•ed a mi.lure of rein, The •Ir Quality Manaoemenl •le•t, lreerl119 r.in ancl '"°'"' 0 .. , Olttrlct predi<ft ~air Quelllv '"" northern -England llaln atto lell • WYOIW tn tN Soult> Coast air -In o••• ,,... rut of IN '-111 All8'\tl< ,C:,., Coast, •"" lrom nor1Mrn Florlda to Th• A.OMO au lgned Potlullon Ke11tu<llY. Olllo ano lnM> Ill• St ndanl tndla CP5ll rall"91 o1 41 Vlrglnl.. • In,,. West,• wlnttr tlorm loo,,,.., lor all •eoloM over Ill• <""••I Ro<kle• --------------------Te>Oav ••-•st u11e<1lor1110ww1 T trom ,,_ ... ,.,n Ca<olln" end IN emperatflres VlrglnlH to oouthern New Enolancl Snow wu In 1tore lor the Great Lal<t1 a...i nortlwrn New Eno•ano Snow &Ito WH UPKted lrom lllt central --..tMm R0<klH •<•Ott the Pl•lns Into '"" mld·Mlu lulppl 11•11•• TemPef•lurts arou...t lhe nation at midday w.dnetdaY ,.,9"1 lrom U below aero In Ole.,_ Mont .. to 16 In "°'t Myert, !<la California A.IDuQue ""'-"'"• A.llanta A.t11nl< Cly Ba1t1m0<-. Blrml119M1 Blsmar<k BolM 80tlon Buffalo Cl'larl•tn~ Cllarlttn WV CheY•-Clll<avo Clnclnn .. 1 Cle•ela...t Cotumbul Oal·l'tW.- Oenver OHMolNt O.lroll O..lulll El Ptto l'alrbenll1 HertfMd Hel~a ~uh• HA.TIOH HI L.a 40 ,, •• • SA • •1 0 41 JJ ,, -OI lJ • JO " S4 n 1S ,, )4 ,, » u 06 2t "°' H ,, l1 10 H .. lnclnaplh Jac-1111•lla KtM City Las V99M llltl• 110(- louls•llla -mP"h Miami MllwauU. Mpls·Sl.P ......... 11 .. N_O,.._ NtwYO<'lo o-1a c11., Omtlla Plllltdpllla P'-nla Plttlbu'"911 P1ttM,- P11and, Ore Rapid City "'"° Rl<hmond S.11 LOe Seattle SI LOllll SIP·Ta~ SI Sit M¥lt Spollane Waslllfl91n Wlchllt (ALl"OlllOA A.PPltVali.ot .... .,.,leld .. ,.,_ .. ~ Ilg l ear lltl\Op 11,!M ,. ll Celallna 1' " Cul•., City It °' Euro a ., ,, ,,,._ lS J2 La-•••-ao .. JI Lancatter » J2 L""9 IMC!\ 1t ,. lotA .... te. It IJ Marv••Mla OS ,. Monrovia jCJ 0 Montebello s• M Mo11lerey SI S4 Mt WlllCWI " t4 NffCllH ~s ·U Nawp0r1 heel\ St » Onttrlo ., ,, Palm S!llrlnot 4J M ......... JS ,. Peto llotllat •• 4J lltventd9 '°' .. "" llu" ... 11 II-City ,, » St<, .,,,.,,to u JO 5allnH ... ,. Ian l•rnerdtno 1• " StnGtbrlet eo " S.110 ... It 06 St11 l'ran<h<o ,, " StnJOM 4l » St1Ha Ana ti 10 Stnla Ban.ere Same Cnir Saftl•-le "' I.a Stftll Mollie• 60 ,. '*"* ... • TaMeVelt.y .. 40 T~"'at " » Torrenm .. IJ Yuma .. ,, CANADA ., II .,.,.. ____________________ _.....;~--------~--...;-Ctlga~ ·d-"" Mtttlf'ffl IURf REPORT n We're Listening ••• 11 .. ln• T-nta VllllU..-WIMI,.. ~ ,.,,,,uele ...... Clll'tCIO :: .. . Ou ... ...... HhllM I(~ f'AMAM 10 •S Sl St 4l ., .. 70 70 10 10 u M .. 6S u .. ., ... u 70 •• " u ., 11 " ... .. " ., 6l tl 14 ~ .. n n 11 HI OJ 00 " ·12 ,. ~ ·II Ml .. " 70 .. .. " ~ .. .. , What do you like about the D11Jy Piiot? What don't you Uke? Call tht number below and your mttu,. wtll be recorded. tran11cribed and deUvertd &o tbt appropriate tdttor. The ume 24·hour 1nawtrin1 aervlct may bt uaed to record ltt· • ttra to the editor on any toptc. Mailbox conlributort must Include thtlr name and telephone number for vertflcaUon. No clrculaUon calls. please Ttll us what's on your rnJnd. --------- .. .. ., ,. ,. u •I so » ll .. 4l " u ... '1 •I " " ,, ., ... n • u • u .. 0 Q ,. 4l M •1 » I) JO '1 ,. L.a ... ·10 ,. ti tt " ·It I.a ,. .. ,. 1S 70 ,. ,, ,. 70 Ora"99 eo.t OAJLY PtLOT/Thurtday, February 4, 1982 s Inflation hits inmates Fee hiked for prisoners on work furloug~ program 8 y JEFF ADLER Of ... o.ly ........... The 1t1n1 of inflation may be a bout as painful for Oran1e County's work releaae prisoners Ill it la for everyone else now that the county ha1 decided to double the fee It charaea such inmates. The county BOllrd of Supervl3ore voted un•nlmoualy this week to raise the fee It charges prisoners enrolled In its work furlouah proaram from $5 to SlO o day ror each day of work. 'rhe increase, which will become effective thi.B week, will mean a prisoner enrolled In the program will have to pay approximately S50 a week in fees to help pay the cost of administering the program , established In 1972 Selected prisoners admitted to the work release program are permitted to leave the jail each day and maintain their regular work schedule. Each night and durlnt wtt"kend1 , however. theae prisoners are required to return to their cell• and 1cirve their sentences. The fee I ncrea se wa1 req·ueated by the county Probation Department becauae It now Cotta Sl6. 78 per prtaoner pt!r day to run the proaram, more than 6'7 percent more than is to be collected from participants. The projected $216,000 that will be collected in 1982 wlll be used to pay for the six probation officers assigned to the proaram on a full-time basis. The six s upervise work release prisoners and process applications from those hoping to join the program. Probation department officials did not ask supervuors to increase fees to cover the full cost of the program because they were concerned it might deter prisoners eligible from applying. Jay Hynds, the program Fund delay pushes OCTD to borrow By GLENN SCOTT Of, ... O•ly l'llef Sia" For the first time in its 10 year history , the Orange County Transit District plans to borrow millions of dollars to pay for its annual operating expenses The distract trad1llonally has use d a · pay as you go" Truckers urged to look for child LOS ANGELES <AP ) Sheriff's d e puties were searching for a 3 year-old hydrocephalic child who may have gone hitchhiking with the babysitte&: who had been caring for her whHe her mother was out of town. Missing was Natelee Jae Cochra n of Hawthorne, who needs regular medical treatments to stay alive. said her mother, 23-year-old Cathy Cochran Shenlfs Deputy Willie Miller said investigators hope tru<'k drivers will be on the lookout for the woman a nd child. as the babysitter has "a reputation for hitchhiking with truck dnvers .. Mrs. Cochran said her daughter. who stands three reet tall, weighs only 27 pounds and has blond hair and brown eyes, was scheduled to be hospitalized in two weeks for her next treatment. Mrs. Cochran said s he left Natelee in the care of an acquaintltnce, Jody Ly nn Finkle, on F'riday while she went on a weekend trip to Las Vegas. The two women had roomed together previously in nearby Corson. Mrs Cochran said. However, Mrs Cochran said that when s he ca lled Miss Finkte·s home Saturday night to check on her daughter. the landlord told her the woman apparently had left Sheriff's deputies said Ms Finkle is described as 5-foot-6 and 155 pounds "She has blond hair and blue eyes. She uses the nickname Hagan, and she has a citizen's band radio handle of Blonde Bomber," Ms. Miller said. approach to fund its public bus system by spending its federal su b sidies, state sa les tax reimbursements and fare box revenues already collected But administrators said this week an anticipated $13 million needed for operations this spring and summer has not yet arrived from the belt-tightening federal government and probably won 't until August or September. at the end of the federal fiscal year Thus, Finance Director John Beatty outlined a program this week to the district's Board of Directors in which they could se ll so -called ··revenue-anticipation·· notes beginning next month. He said although OCTD has never employed the measure, other large transit districts. including those in San Diego and New York, have borrowed funds :>im iiu.-iy. An optimistic General Manager James Reichert added that the sale of notes would be timely because the district can establish a solid credit rating before it begins in the next several years to investigate ways of funding a proposed mass transit line through the county $30,000 grant goes to NB man A university researcher from Newport Beach has been awarded a $30,000 grant from the American Lung Association to examine the impact of an anti-s moking campaign he helped create. Brian Flay, Ph.D., will use the grant to assess the effects of a program aimed at educating about i.l,000 Southern California seventh-graders how to resist peer pressure to smoke. Assistant director of the University of Southern California's Health Behavior Research Institute, Flay will evaluate the anti-smoking program that begins this month and includes classroom Instruction and exposure on the .. Feeling Fine" segment of KNBC·TV news shows. The new Seiko Lassale. dire ctor , c1lled the work furlOUih protrem I "Vtr1 1ucce111Jful one." He said approximately to county prisoners, with sent.GOH r11.ngln1 from 30 days to one year. participate each montb. Hynds added that there has been a very low walk·awa}' rate Uc said the department strives to place as many willlni prisoners ln the community t.o earn a wage as pos1lble. In other action Tuesday, 11upervlaors: Approved purchase of a 22-foot patrol and rescue boat ror the Orange County Harbor Patrol Cost of the new patrol boat Will be $31,959. Voted to maintain at 15181-82 levels the county share of funding for social service programs <34 percent) and directed the Human Service• Agency to make discretionary cuts tn its 1982·83 budget ao It can stay within its prescribed funding level. CANDIDATE Rancho Santa Fe attorney Stan Legro has announced he will seek election to the 43rd Congressional District. Attorney announces candidacy Cl aiming to be the most experienced candJdate seekin1 to represent the 43rd Congressional District, Rancho Santa Fe attorney Stan Legro has announced he will seek the office in the June 8 GOP primary election. At a press conference this week in Laguna Hills, Legro, 45, stressed his background In Was hington politics. He said he 'Aa s c hief en f o rcement officer for the Environmental Protection Agency during the Ford administration. Legro is running for the congressional seat or Clair Burgener, who has announced he will retire Legro, a rormer U.S. Marine Corps officer. said be bad about S32 ,000 m campaign funds, and expects to raise as much as he needs lo win The dJslrict includes portions of northern San Diego County and southern Orange County including San Clemente, San Juan Capistrano and El Toro. To own one is to possess the dream of perfection. Oesigntd lo ~al the hurt and al.W the lntell«L '«bndrousJy slim. Supttmt'ly ~fined \bu couJd seek yet Mwr £lnd their equal ln tltgant buring and quarn t.tthnology. Bom-t~ beautiful bractlets cap<Urt the light and tncloSt cias.'>lc fonns ln gleam .-ind gUt M~ls o( thlnntss SEIKO LASSALE 1 : · 1 11·<' 1 ,. -·1 -.- • Orang• Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Thureday, February -4. 1982 fBffiU.~00~ Di'd von Bulow lidmit affair? 'r NEWPORT, R.I. (AP> -Claus C. von Bulow ~dmttted 1hortJy alter hia wife lapsed Into a coma fJ'•l he wu havtna an affair with an actress. his 1tepaon hu lealllied at von Bulow's attempted 'ftJ'Urdtr trtal. '<.• Prince Alexander G. von Auersperg said his ,_11ter, Ann.le-Laurie Knelssl, confronted von Bulow *bout rumors ol tbe love affair as their mother ~aa beina transferred from a Boston hospital to iolumbla Presbyterian Hospital In New York in '1anuary 1981. 9• "He said after my younger sister (1 4-year-0ld ~sima von Bulow> was born, my mother was VJD&ble to have sex," and that he went elsewhere to '\atiary bis needs, von Auersperg said. }P. Tbe actress was identified by von Auersperg rfll Alexandra Isles, who once appeared in the *levision soap opera "Dark Shadows ." PATHOS TRAGIC There was water all a round but 1t proved to be a hindrance, not a help, dunng house fm.• at edge of Poplar Bluff, Mo .. city limits . A tractor had to pull fire engine bogged down in flood waters from the Black River. The home was destroyed b y ~ .............. the fl ames . Flooding has inundated thousands of acres of farmland in the area ~• T he prince said be was upset at his ,.atepfather's admitted love affair and suspected 'that von Bulow may have caused his mother's 'f!lPP•renlly irreversible coma Von Auersperg J;aunched a private investigation that led to the ~harges. ~ The state contends von Bulow caused the coma secretly injecting his wife with insuJin during a hristmas visit to their Newport mansion in 1980. Iran sees no hope of renewed U.S. ties NEW YORK <AP > Iran's new foreign Sunni Moslem leaders of countries on the Arabian Penins ula have become increasingly concerned about alleged attempts by Iran's Shiite Moslem leaders to foment revolution among Shiites in the Arab countries. The Bahrain gove rnment said in De cember it crushed an incipient rebellion, led by Shiites directed from Tehran. water as they listened to the low-voiced VelayaU, tieless in a drab blue suit. f. e defense says Mrs. von Bulow caused her own . ndition by overindulging in alcohol, drugs and wee ts. minister, firmly rejecting eventual reconciliation with thl> United States, says he sees "no hope" of The foreign minister said he came to New York to meet with repr esentatives of other Third World countries on various U.N issues. < The 22-year-old von Auersperg, whose title 'Ytems from his wealthy mother's first marriage to restoring diplomatic ties with Washington. a penniless Austrian nobleman, s aid his nagging suspicions led bim lo hire former Manhattan prosecutor Richard N. Kuh in January 1981 . "We have not seen any good will from lhe United States toward our people," Ali Akbar Velayati said in an interview with.The Associated Press on Tuesday, midway through a four-day Velayali countered, however , t h at "our revolution is not exported with guns .... Because of its cultural and s piritual values, it exports itself. . This 1s a revolution that belongs to humanity·· One of the first he met wu Syrian Foreign Minister Abdul Ha lim Khaddam, renewing s peculation that Syria might be trying t.o mediate a peaceful end to the Iran-Iraq war. But Velayati sa id the s ubject was not discussed , and be reiterated the Iranian eovernmenl's "simple. n atural and humanistic" conditions for negotiations. Under questioning from defense attorney Herald P. Fahrineer, von Auerspera said Kuh had been paid between $70,000 and $100,000 for ·.investigating the case. He said the fee has been ~ared by his sister and his grandmother. Mrs ltussell Aitken. visit to United Nations headquarters. "ln the past we did show a lot or good will toward the United States Since we have never seen any reverse good will there 1s no hope for future relations " Velayat1, who ~came foreign minister Dec. 15. compla ined the United States 1s not honoring the "spirit .. of the Algiers agreement that ended The bearded, 36-year .old minister, who studied pediatrics a t Balt1more·s Johns H·opkins University in 1976, spoke with a reporter in the frayed elegance of the Iranian U.N. Mission, an ill -kept mansion on Manhattan's Fifth Avenue. "Iraq should return to its origmal position, of before the war, and pay all the damaaes inflicted on us," he said · The prosecution contends that von Bulow, 55, \ad also tried to kill bis wife a year earlier, during \ Christmas visit to the Clarendon Court mansion. the hostage cris is a year ago Iraq has captured about 8,000 square miles of southwestern I ran s ince the w ar began in September 1980. Tbe state contends that von Bulow was driven ~Y love for Miss Isles and by greed for his wife's ..fStimated $30 million utility fortune, half of which he stands to inherit if she dies . He also denied Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeinj and other Iranian leader!> are actively trying to .. export·· their revolution to the pro-Western Arab In a high-ceilinged drawing room where Princess Ashraf. the late shah's twm sister, once entertamed diplomats at glittering receptions, somber young revolutionaries sat and sipped Velayati said he supported the takeover of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran bv militant young Moslems on Nov 4, 1979 state!> on the other s ide of the Persian Gulf. The n.•volut1on exports itself," he said. Abortion opposed But Americans favor kee-ping it legal NEW YORK <AP) A narrow plurality of Americans say abortion is wr~g, but n€orly hCiii oi ihem nonetheless say it should be legal. according lo the latest Associated Press-NBC News poll. The poll also said strong ma10rities continue to favor organized school prayer and oppose busing to achieve racial integration. The telephone poll was a scientific random sampling of l ,599 adults across the country Jan. 27-28. Proposals on abortion, school prayer and busing head the social issues on the domestic agenda for this session of Congress. In answer to the question, "Do you personally believe that abortion is wrong?" 49 percent of the respondents in the latest poll said yes, and 44 percent said no. Seven percent we re undecided. The 49 percent who said abortion is wrong were then asked, "Do you think abortion should be illegal?" and split 27-22 in saying abortion should be made illegal. Those results -44 percent s aying abortion is not wrong and 22 percent saying it Is wrong but should be legal -are consistent with the AP-NBC News poll results in Septe mber, when the same question was asked The results are also consistent with several AP-NBC News polls over the last two years reporting that 3 of 4 Americans agree with the statement. "The decision to have an abortion s hould be left to the woman and her physician." In the latest poll, Protestants and Roman Catholics were equally likely -65 percent of each group -to say abortion 1s either not wron~ or s hould be legal even if it 1s wron~ Cathohcs. however, were sitghtiy more iiK~iy than Protestants to say abortion is wrong.but should be legal The U.S. Supreme Court legahzed abortion in 1973 But proposals before Congress would restrict federal court Jurisdiction in abortion cases. outlaw abortion at the federal level or allow states to impose further restrictions Supreme Court decisions also banned organized prayer in public schools and led to busing programs to further racial integration in public schools throughout lhe country As with abortion. proposals before Congress would hm1t federal court jurisdiction in school prayer and busing cases or otherwise all ow school prayer and ban busing at either the stale or feder al level. In the latest AP·NBC News poll, 67 percent said they believe organized prayers should be allowed in public schools , while 26 percent said organized prayer~ should not be allowed and 7 percent were not s ure In the AP-NBC News poll tn May, 73 percent said they favor an amendment to the Const1tut1on that would permit prayers to be said in public schools In the latest poll. 73 percent said they oppose busing or pubhc school children to achieve racial integra· lion Thal compares with 76 percent in May and 73 percent m September 1979. White respondents were 4 l in opposition to school busmg, while a slim majority of blacks said they favor 1t LEARN ... Interior Design Valentine's Art Show /Sale Taught by our professlonat tn our elegant design 1tudio. Great gifts from Huntington Center daily thru Feb. 1 o. Men Win Lacles Days?. 2,000 lldlee win s.e·a candy°' _. .. l\lanta. Men can win other prizet up to *500 Jackpot at Huntington Center'• drWer lkl. IMIPlt.ekea. 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IUll. 11 llOOll-I P.M, -'!I __ ........ _____________ _ ITVJTI~· ~gal gambli"1f .bid tried for 17th, tiine SACRAMENTO <AP) -A Sbera>an 'Qab man bu betun bl• 11th effort to qualify a le1all!Mld 1amblln1 ln.iUaUve for tbe California ballot, and tbla time he ••ya be'• really lr>'inl· s,cretary of State March Fon1 Eu 1ave Robert Wibon the 10-abead this week to be1ln collecttnc the necessary 553,790 1i1naturea of reatstered voters. Ms. Eu also announced tbe be1lnnin1 of a clU&en.s' effort to provide affordable bouain1 by rai1ln1 certain personal income and business taxes. On 1amblin1, Wilson said be qualifted the only aucb initiative ever to appear on a California ballot -a state lottery proposal in 1964. It lost by a 2-3 ratio. trylna to keep control of tbe idea. . Wll100, • contractor wbo build• coocnte bulldlnp, 1akl that lf bis meuure puaea, be will try for an off-track betttna license and a culno licenae at Clearlake. "Thia one will qualify. We've cot the flnancin1," he Hld. He estimated that it would cost $1•,ooo to mall petitions to a mlllloo voters. He said tbe first mailer would aak for contributions, which be hopes would finance a second mailinc. He aald be bu raised money from doctors and lawyers, and bas had offers of help from many labor unions. Orange CoMt DAILY PfLOT/Thuraday, February 4', 1982 8 .............. Groups seek . - SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -A coalition of community 1rou111 that 1ucceufully spearheaded a ma11lve cheese &lveaway for CalUornla's poor sald that President Rea1an abould reaularly release bllllona of poundl of surplus dairy product.a to the needy nationwide. Robert Gnaizda, an attorney with Public Advocates, a public lnterest law firm that represents the poor, said Wednesday a petition wu flied with Rea1an asking the president to release surplus cheese, butter and powdered milk on a regular basil by March 15. The petition was signed by the National Gray Panthers, the League of Latin American Citizens and Consumers Union, alon1 with 12 other local consumer and community groups. [ warehoulea by the end ot d alone wtth a bUllon pounda powdered milk and more 500 mUllon poundl of butter. · The lurplua 1oodl are part al a $2.1 billion reported dalt't 11 U baldy approved by lit. president for 1912. .: Currently, about 700 ml.Wdh pounds of cheese are stored b1 the 1overnment becauae di federal farm laws that auuAt dairy farmers a minimum p= for the products. The produ were originally put into Ito because producers could 14'.l more money by seWn1 them tb the government than sellln1 them in the open marketplace. . Shortly before Chrlstmu lut year, President Re•r•'h authorized the release o 3b million pounds of a urph~s processed American cheese tj> the nation's needy. . His new initiative would le1alize off.track horse bettin&, permit cities and counties to conduct lotteries, and authorize caainoe in tbe San Bernardino County town of Adelanto and the Lake County community of Clearlake. M ucb of the revenue would be earmarked for public education. His most recent cenulne attempt to qualify the proposal was ln 1978, be said. He collected about 200,000 si1natures then, nearly half enough to qualify at that time, but be said it failed because the circulators wbo were paid 2S cents a signature brought in many names of non-registered voters. ROOSEVELT HONORED -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. mans shovel in Capitol Park at Sacramento, joining other officials in planting a Japanese Flowering Cherry tree to commemorate the centennial birthday of President Franklin 0 . Roosevelt. Roosevelt's grandson. Michael, left. looks on. · The groups want the president, through the federal Agriculture Department. to create a National Surplus CommodJty Plan to administer the giveaway of surplus government food products to the poor. According to Gnaizda, about 1 billion pounds of cheese is expected to be stored in federal California's giveaway of~ million poWlds, administered the state Department of F and Agriculture, was completq! in January, using volunteers 8" charitable groups. . An additional 18 millidn pounds of cheese is stored lb California, but cannot tie released without 'autboriza~ from the president. i; A proposal to allow casino 1amblinc along highways leading to Nevada and another to authorise a state lottery are pending in the Legislature. A Sacramento woman , Peggy Hoskins, bas been authori&ed to circulate a state lottery initiative. The affordable housing initiaUve is sponsored by citizens from the Loa Angeles and San Francisco Bay areas. It would earmark revenues from increased taxes for the state Department of Housing and Community Development to provide rental and ownership opportunities for middle, moderate and low ·income households. q Written arguments sought for ballot I ,, opposition arguments for: cases; · -Propositions 5, 6, repeal (f slate inheritance and sift taxes, -Proposition 7. requirin• indexing of state income ta" brackets; Wilaon said be really tried to collect signatures on only four of the previous 16 times he s ubmitted the proposal. The other years, he said, he was just As an initiative statute, it requires only 346,119 signatures. SACRAMENTO (AP> - Secretary of Stale March Fong Eu said that she needs opposition arguments for six measures on the June ballot, including some or the moat controversial of 12 ballot proposals. Ms. Eu said Wednesday she did not have opposition arguments for three tax·cul initiatives, one by Howard Jarvis , and a sweeping anti·crime measure by Paul Gann. Ms . Eu said s he needs -Proposition 3 , barring reassessment or home bought as replacement if owner displaced by government purchase or in verse condemnation; Proposition 4, permits denial or bail in certain felony -Proposition 8, sweepi~ anli·crime package. @feli.do is now serving Lodi, Diller & fAKtWls for reservations : 675-2968 Ample Parkin~ at Z9M NewPort Blvd. (COl"Mr ol 21ut ud Newpor1 81¥11.) Newport Beach 1HI AlllY SCHOOL A Clilholic Boerdlng H!Qh School kw boys. CltW HOLY CIOSS A Summer c.rnp tor boy9 9 to 14 ~okl. Q>nducted by the Benedictine Monks of Cok>rado in Southern Rockies, Country E~ vironment near ski areas. c.1 •• ,..,...,.,..a '" .......... tt.r... • .......... c11i1 .. 141 •~Hl-....•Al,...huftd ,. .... a_. .. DlllCTOll Oil ADMISstOMS THI AIRY SCHOOi. IOX HI c•MOM cm. COLOIADO 11212 , "-c IJOJJ Z7M6JI -oa-,., ................ ..._~ .. MIWPOIT ..CH ./I 17141 t6Nt4 ,,. Annual Clearance Sale ·'SaviRB• From 20. JOC/c _.. Decorative Hardware By DOORS, B"TH, ~J1p,.HEN, · BARS, CABINET ANQ... . BATH ACCESSORIES .. (714) 642-4184 a..IM11lt;1 Take the bus to Tahiti next year. Wouldn't it be nice to have an extra $3,000 next year so you can take that dream vacation you've always wanted? Well, it's possible. Because that's how much you could save in just one year by riding the OCTD bus to work each day. • Here's how: Most of us think the main expense of operating a car is the high price of gasoline. But there are many hidden costs that quickly add up. Like depre- ciation, maintenance, insur- ance, even parking charges. In our area, that totals more than $13 per day. And that's for a car driven only 20 miles round trip to work. The bus cost.sjust 75¢ during morning and ~vening rush hours and 60¢ at all other times. And we offer the option of either taking one of our regular routes that cover Orange County, or our express routes specifically planned around large employment centers. (Fare on express routes is $1.50.) 1b help make planning yout trip on the bus conve- nient, we offer a free Ride Guide, which most major em- ployers have available, or you can call OCTD at 636-RIDE for a copy and a personalized route schedule that fits your specific transportation needs. And, since 75% of the Orange County population lives within 3-blocks of a bu8 stop, it's very convenient. So take a ride to work on the best bargain around town. And have a vacation on us. Cost of operating a car for one year. • • Daily Round trip miles 20 30 40 50 Standard Car $3392 '3898 $3999 $4304 Compact Car $3309 $3594 $4186 Source: Runzhelmer and Company, Inc. Coeta a.re aa of August l, 1981: ... .. I ., I I I 1 t ------. - •• Orang• Coatt DAILY PtLOT!Thuraday, February •• 1882 Refinery work · ;pl~n rejected • VENTURA (AP> -Ventur a County aupervilon have blocked the expansion or an oll refiner)' ln the Ojai Valley after opponenta clal{ned lt would create exceaalve alr pollution ln the area. Tbe decision by the Board of Supervisors to order a study by the county staff came after a som etimes-stormy •~·hour heartn1. The staff will recommend whether to permit the expansion, deny it or call for a costly and time-consuming en vironmental impact report. At issue wu a proposal by USA Petro Chem Inc., which wanted lo add hydrogen and thermal cracklna equipment, a sulfur recovery unit and new storage facilities to its plant to allow it to refine high-sulfur crude oil. The company obtained a conditional use permit to go ahead with the changes from the county's planning commission in December, but opponents led by a group called Citizens to Preserve the Ojai appealed to the supervisors. Opponents or the expansion claimed that it would create large amounts of air pollution in the Ojai Valley, which is a cul-de-sac among mountains 70 miles northwest of Los Angeles that would trap pollutants and not allow them to disperse. .. I ·~......,... HAD A GREAT FALL -Army Pvt. Terry Bennett, 20, recuperates in a Fort Bragg, N.C .. hospital after falling 8,000 reel with a disabled parachute. The Golden Knight parachutist hit the ground at between 60 and 70 miles an hour. dislocating an elbow. breaking wrist bones and chipping an ankle bone. Refracting Preacr1btng Or. Lou Elder . OPTOMETRIST 642-0720 1124 Irvine Ave. Newport Beach Cuisinart DLC I OE s 13(1>0 $ 9999 DLC BE s 18500 S 14999 DLC 7E S2WJO s 19999 CROWN HARDWARE Westcliff Plaza Harbor View Center Corona del Mar FASHION ISLAND ....,.....__ ~-4030 WESTCLIFF onJI , PLAZA DAILY l10 .... In·-,_...,..., - 642 0972 ~ mlmm TMIRllMllT ... NIT 'i>UA&.ITT SIAJI009 FOi LISS H llf4Dl Y Sll..cl NO ASHY DEAL HERE! WhoW or hatf frozett pink Salmon s... RecJ. Sl.49 per lb. $1.60 i-.. How Sl.89 per lb. Fnsh Rm..bow Trout s... ltecj. $2. 91 per lb. $ t.H i-•· How S 1.39 per lb. Newport leach Starn ORiy Two Mewporl LocaffoM l I 00 ..... ll•d.. ... ~ ._ .. 1150 tr.• ... ~ .. ....,.. ...... nlhon'J .1 SHOE SERVICE for Handbags Luljgag.e & Zipper Repair Regional Repair Center\tor SPERRY · TOPSIDER Don't throw away your comf ortabl• old tennis shoes We repair •nd resof• au major br1ncts. Airlines try gimmicks • ,tQ .. win m~re passengers By The .Ueoela&ed Pren Box tops, tradln1 stamps and coupons sound more suited to the supermarket thlU\ the sky, but are amone the latest weapon• being uaed by airlines in the war lo win paasenaers. RfpubUc Airlines has joined rorcea with the Ralston Purina Co. lo offer free tripe to children who send in proor-0f-purchue seals from cereal boxes. Air Florida Is giving S&H Green Stamps. New York Air has a "Valentine Sweetheart" plan which lets two people travel for the price of one - plus a Valentine card. And Pan American World Airways is winding up a "two-for-one" coupon deal. The promotions add a twist to the· price-cutting in highly competitive markets, which has led to fares as low as $77 between New York and Florida, for example. Air travel is down because of the recession and so me consumeT reluctance to plan flights in the aftermath of the controllers' strike. Major carriers also have been hurt by the growth of airlines which opened or expanded in the wake of deregulation. Aviation Week & Space Technology says a survey or 11 major U.S . airlines showed a combined traffic loss of 6.4 percent during 1981 To boost travel, the airlines have turned lo new marketing techniques and elaborate advertising programs. Republic, based in Minneapolis, launched a $20 million ad campaign, which includes its first national effort on network TV. Redmond Tyler. Republic's public rel ations director , also said Wednesday the company was gearing for increased promotion of its box-top offer. Any child, ages 2 to 16, who sends in five seals Crom Chex or Honey Bran cereal can fly free on Republic, anywhere in the United States where the earner operates. Each child must be accompanied by a rare-paying adult. Seals must be mailed before Aug. 15 and flights must be taken before Nov 15. Tyler said Republic had distributed more than 5,000 rree·fligbt certificates as of last week and added: ''The campaign is really JUSt breaking now " Air Florida s tarted giving certificates worth 400 Green Stamps each to passengers on intrastate 1'1!-L.•---..... _ 11 T h A -------... --aUf>ll..._, VU ., ..._.. •• • • • tn .. fl& v51 Giii WO:t expanded on Jan 28 to cover all flights between Florida and New York, Boston, Washington, Chicago and Toledo, Ohio. The value of the certificates was mcreased -to 1,200 stamps, equivalent to one book. Stamps can be redeemed for merchandise at S&H centers or by mail. You also can use the stamps for travel on Alr Florida -four books aet you a $12 travel vouc.ber. '·We were surprised by the response," said Robln Cohn, an Air Florida spokeswoman. "ln January, our traUic in Florida wu up 10 percent above projections." T he New York Air promotion began Feb 1. Anyone purchuin1 a ticket on a wee,kday flight can take along a "sweetheart" free of cbarae. simply by presenting a atore·boutht Valentine card at the boarding gate. Passengers and their "sweethearts" must make reservations and travel on the same flight. "We're able to oCfer this because February is CDllUllR traditionally a slack month for airline travel," said Don Peppers, staff vice president for New York Air. Passengers flying Pan Am to Florida from New York or Washington from January through \Feb. 5, however. got a coupon good (or a free ticket to any of 13 foreign cttiu. The coupon must be used by a member of the family o f a fare-paying passenger. Western Airlines, in Los Angeles, offers a round-trip ticket lo Hawaii for only $100 to anyone who buys a full -Care round-trip ticket on a 400-mile route. Western spokesman Glenn Bozarth says response has been overwhelming. N uc'lear plant accUknt •till unexplained ONTARIO. N.Y <AP> -Utility officials said they cannot yet explain why a tube ruptured al the Gmna nuclear power plant, leading to a s light release of radioactive steam into the air and the plant's shutdown Jan 25 Spokesmen for the Rochester Gas & Electric, Corp.. which owns the power plant 16 miles northeast or Rochester, said a single technician e ntered the plant's faulty steam generator late Tuesday and found a five inch "burst '" sn one of its 3,2ti0 111tu>s The rupture apparently was not due to corrosion. which has plagued, tubes at nuclear power plants across the country. or to design naws, the spokesman said. No weakness was found when the damaged tube was checked last spring during a refueling shutdown, he said ·WE'RE A LOT MORE THAii A BELL Oii YOUR •LL Behind the bell Behind the famous Seacoast strcker Behind all the state-of·!he art protectt0n devices we make and install. 1s Seacoast central slalion. When an alarm goes off on your property, we get the signal in a nearby. 24·hour·a·day central station If the signal indicates fire, burglary or hoodup, we call the police or fire department Since our central statron 1s UL ltsled, our cenlral slal1on customers can qualify for a slzable discount on tHeir insural')ce. And to increase our reach, make response time even faster and Improve efficiency we re .computer121ng our station But Improvements aren't new to Seacoast. We've been getting better for 21 yeara. And today we·re the leaders in the security business in the harbor area with <>Yer 10,000 customers 1ne.\Jding a wide range of big and small retail, 1nduslnal and commercial eslablishm('flts To find out more about ~asl cenlral statron write or come by our new faclllty at 2488 Newport Blvd .. Costa Mesa lii\SEACOASr \I ~Rm SYSTEMS 2488 ~ BOUlEVARO •COSTA MESA CALIF01'tNJ.A • 92827 • (714) 842·3490 ..... FIND YOUR N~IJE • 2 TICKETS WORTH S 19 8 Winners In Today' 1 Oa11ifled1I IT'S EASYI Find your name and addreaa In today's to claim your tlcketa. Winners each day, eo cheek the clualfleda In the • • - "-... \.. ... I i t I \ . Orange Coat DAILY PtLOT/Thurlday, February 4', 1982 A7 New kind of surgery gives hope in leg bone infections Road due? STOCKTON <AP> The KeyH by pas.a , whlcb woul,t, ell min.ale one of two . .,.mallllns traffic al1n1la on Hi1hway It ln the San Joaquin Valley. may be built In 1983·84, state Otflflala diado1ed. ' LOST CASE A state judge has ruled that A c-tor C liff Robertso n mu st allow limited public access to his La Jolla beach property. B~,-ON <AP> -VlctJrm of 1tubbom l•I bone Infections who ooce faced amputation are belnl 1pared by a new kl.n<l of 1ur1ery that replace• their festering flesh with fresh mwicle and 1kln from oltiewhere on their bodies, doctors H)'. Tht: healthy new fhteh -rich in blood veaaela nourishes the stagnant bone and speeds bealln1. Doctors experimenting with the unuaual procedure report a 100 percent 1ucce11 rate ln treaUna 22 people with severe lower lea injuries. One of the patients bad a dralnlnl tea wound for 14 years and had endured four failed operaUons before undergoing the new procedure. The cond.Jtion, called osteomyelltia, can result when bones are damaged ln car and motorcycle wrecks, sporting accidents and shootings. It ls extremely difficult to repair, a Ince the bone refuses to heal, and treatment often falls. The patients treated so far have been free of dJsease for an average of about 1 ~ years after their operations. "We cannot say that we have cured chronic osteomyelltis," said Dr: James W. May Jr , who directed the research. ··we may be on the right track. I think our failure rate is going to end up berng significantly smaller than any other methods currently used." Beach appeal lost Robertson must f)ermit public. access LA JOLLA (AP> -Oscar-winning actor Cliff Robertson has lost a court fight over his ocean-front property. Robertson , best known for his starring roles in "Charly" and "PT-109 ," sought to overturn a California Coastal Commission order requiring him to dedicate a public easement on his La Jolla property in exchange for a permit to build a 100-foot sea wall Gonorrhea rises BALTIMORE <AP> Baltimore i~ ranked third in the nation afle1 Atlanta and San Francisco amon~ cities with reported cases or sexuall}' transmitted diseases. accordjng to a University of Maryland psychologist Dr. Sheridan Phillips said some 21 ,000 cases o r gonorrhea are expected to be reported this year. Supenor Court Judge Louis Welsh rejected the bid. ruling the public has a right to limited use or Robert.son's beach. Under Robertson's proposal, a $75,000 ivy-covered wall of stone and concrete was to be built about six to eight reel further seaward of the old wall. which has been destroyed by wave action. The commission asked for an easement on the beach between the proposed sea wall and the mean high tide line Welsh ag r eed with th e com mission's reasoning that "since the construcllon or the sea wall will destroy the public beach but the sea wall is needed to protect the petitioner's property. the proper solution is to permit construct.Jon of the sea wall on condition lhat the public have a right to limited use or the petitioner's beach." 82 CARS '" .................... ... and TRUCKS • 1 ALL MAKES! 833-0555 Asll for Roy, LEAS£ SrtCIALIST o1 HOWARD Chevrolet c.,,.... o1 °"'4 -0..0 Stt --bl&\POffl BEA'CH IRVIN6 6)'!~020 "Eye Care tor you" With thli tecbnlque. called mlcrovHcuJar rree·U..ue tranafer, doctors promote beallna by covertnc the let wound with a plece ot neab tak n from the pat.lent'• cheat. It bu been uaed over the p11t ftve )lean by 1ur1eons at Ma11achuaett.a General H01pital, who deacrtbed the work In today's New Enat•nd Journal of Med.lctne. Or Stephen J . Mathea of UC School of Medicine ln San Francllco 1u11e1t.a ln an aceompanyinl editorial in the journal that the technique may be a "tlltnpae ol new bortzona in 1ur1ery." Tb• Bolton doctors believe lhat lbeae le1 wounO. fall lo heal aince the blood 1upply la poor in tbe tower le1, and all dead tiaaue bu not.been removed from the wound. Althou«ih the technique ia atill controvenJal, YOU . UNCLE You're in big trouble. You've just come down WILi. BE SO witha ca.seof"creep· ing tax bracket'.' , P D TO ~3r;Jon?;re H YOU Do you know what Uncle Sam and his I GOT A ~~£;~::i of that $5,000 RAISE raise of yours? $2,500~ (You used to be in the • 41% overall tax bracket, but You just got a big raise. you just got "creeped"to 42%. Whoopie! And to accompli sh that , total Your mind fill s with vi~ions taxes will be 50% of your raise.) of furrari 's, braces for the kids, But at least you've got that, right? a trip to E.urope, a bigger house. Wrong. · Inflation will take another Sl,850 (9% of last years take- home). Which leaves you with $650 in new purchasing power. Which is 554.16 a month. Sl.93 adav. 11 ''I WANT YouiSt'' \Vhoopie! AIUTA11 IAVINGI lllDMDUAL llllWllll MCOUlll. You can do something about tax-bracketitis. You can shelter some of that income. so it doesn't get obliterated. Than.ks to the new tax laws, now every worker can have a tax· deferred pension of his own. \bu can shelter $2.000 a year. $2,250 for a couple With only one of you working, or $4,000 for a working couple. And pay taxes on it when you're retired, and prob- ably in a lower tax bracket. The earned interest is also sheltered, and through the snow- balling effect of compounding interest, you can come out like gangbusters. You have Y.ou r choice of a fixed rate or a 'floating"rate which will change with prevailing market interest rates. l:RARAn5 lr4c:o::M &Mc 14W~ 14 wx. I) I)~ C&An!!!drd Yield "1197. ,, 8'h. 16i,o,. A $500 IRA balance or an automatic deposit of your pay· check qualifies you for an Easy Money Checlcing Account free of monthly service charges. And there are no trustee or set-up fees if you <>pen your lRA Account before April 15th. C.Ome in and see our F.asy Money C.Ounselor about an lRA Account, before taxes take it all away from you. Of course, inflation and high taxes may go away. And the Tooth Fairy leaves quarters under pillows. •••nan SAVINGS We're All In This Together. A memher of the Sears family. Over $3 billion in assets. st- to The Islands. $165 one~ Stand~ ll's the chance of a lifetime to save on the vacation of a life- time. Because from now until April 2-depending on seat availability-United's placing all remaining Coach seats on sale, minutes before departure. Wldebody to Hawaii So by getting to the airport early, you can take advantage To Honolulu Bede Home To Hilo BedlHome 1-ve Arrive 8 OOam II 401 m 4 OOpm 7 45pm 3 IOpm 10 15pm 10 55pm 6 OOa m 1155am• 3 20pm 4 25 D m• II 15pm of United's Hawaii standby fare for an amazingly low $165 one way, on selected {lights. With no advance-purchase or reservation restrictions to slow you down. And best of all, you'll celebrate in exclusive Royal Hawaiian style, with authentic polynesian delicacies, tropical drinks, first-run movies and more. Just be sure to arrive at the airport and sign up in plenty of time to make the flight, as seats will be put on sale on a first-come, first-served basis. Now's the tiple to take advantage of our last-minute sale to "our little comet of the world." For infonnation, call your lfavel Agent Or call United at 973-2121. Partners in ltavel with Westin Hotels. • I Orlngt Coat OM. Y PILOTIThufldey, Ftbrully 4, 1ie2: THE f AltllL l' c1aca;1 "Is one for Y""' and the other for Dolly?" "No. OM's for me and the other's for my tummy." BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) ...... "You don't lff m1ny 1kywrlt1ra nowed1yt.'' ,_ARMADl'KE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MEN 1'CE Hank Ketchum "I'd better start shovel Ing." · - ::J TM NOT Af~ \i lllf ~ ... JUST lffE 1HIN6S HID~ IN IT •• ? • by Ferd & Tom Johnson WEU., WOLJLD You PftOMISE TO LE,AVE your< S~AT ~' --- Pl'ANt'TI . _ z ti..&.~> J. /JJ,Jc ;t ~ r..:.c., ~~!.~ Tt'M8LEttEEDI SHOE ~1.1/N~ .u u,,..d. ~.~ ..k ~r.4-!!! by Charin M. Schulz by Tom K. Ryan l'W-mHIS A~I~ ------OOZIN6-l.-IKe MAP. by J'ff MacNelly WIU, 1lU~ ~ 1lm. l NO SWtAT W~ Ear ~~? ~~· N~ SERVIC.E.. Ma.LO, =? .. ~ by Ernie Bushm1ller GOOONESS --- SO THAT's "WHERE I PUT MEXICAN JUMPING BEANS MY-- Ft:NK '1 1t INKER BE1' N __ __;,._ _________ , ____ b.!,...y _To_m_B_a_tiu..,k ~ EC£NOMIC.5 - tr>ME ECDNOMK:S SIDOf E5 lM€ MANAGE.M0IT ~NIQUE.5 ~f«J R)R ~IN6 A~ FM\11$.)~! t./OJ.JU.. LEARN St04 lWIN&S A& ~ 10 ~ A FM\ll<I ~ HOW 10 PREPARE t.VTR1ll005 ftEJ4!J, AND ~ 10 (:Jtl A SPOON OOT Of 1W€ D15POSAL. ! '01\l. If .wti 1> ~-c.». ~ MiU1' ll'S AL"'-~ l#I.. ~. "'0 1\Ulf, Ac.c.ol01"6t ~ OAP! Mt. b.\C.'f, ~ ~'f ~ ~ 1\lt ~'l~,. • iso... .......~.., ...... ,....,. __ _, I . l Bf:LTON ? ~ --.~~~ ~)I ~~:;.:.:_--~~~~--.-,,.-_.;__~~ '--· - Orange Coast DAILY_PILOTfThuraday, February '4, 1982 Fonner higher tar stnokers report MERIT "Best-tas · low tar IVe tried~ Can a low tar cigarette provide the taste incentive to switch smokers from higher tar brands? Research consistently proves that MERIT can. MERITThste Sparks Switch. Nationwide survey reveals over 90% of MERIT smokers ' who switched from higher tar are glad they did. In fact, 943 don 't even miss their former brands. Further Evidence: 9 out of 10 former higher tar smokers report MERIT an easy switch, that they didn 't give up taste in switching, and that MERIT is the best-tasting low tar they've ever tried. Wlrning : The Surgeon General Has Determined -that Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous t9 Your Health. '· l. MERIT Landslide. In addition, extensive unmarked-pack ·rests confirm that MERIT delivers a winning combination of taste and low tar when compared with higher tar leaders. Confirmed: The over- whelming majority of smokers reported MERIT taste equal to -or better than-leading higher tar brands: Confumed: When tar levels were revealed, 2 out of 3 chose the MERIT combina- tion of low tar and good taste< Year after year, in study after study, MERIT rem~ins unbeaten. Th€ proven taste alternative to higher tar smoking-is MERIT. • Reg'. 8 mg "tar:' 0.8 mg nicotine-Men: 7 mg "tar:' 0.6 mg nicoliAl-100'1.819: 8 ing "tar:· 0.7 mg nicotine-100'1 Mc: 10 mg "ter:· 0.8 mg nicotine av. per cig1r1n1, FTC Report Mer'.81 ( MERIT ...... \.. ... _._ ... ___ - f I "'· 8 Orange Coa1t OAJLV PILOT/Thuraday, February 4, 1982 I Election change hit 'by legal challenge A San FrunclM·o attorney's decision this week to continue challengi'ng the right or city officials to extend their terms of office has some modest relevancy to Costa Mesa. Residents in the Bay Area are hopping mad about their city council m e mbers voting to increase their tenure. attorney Lynda Martyn contends Ms. Martyn's petition to the California Supreme Court was turned down last month And Tuesday s h e filed another petition cha ll e n ging the constitutionality of Senate Bill 230 that allowed city council members to c hange their terms to correspond with either general or primary elections . Hardly a murmur was heat·d when the Costa Mesa City Council voted last November to change its elections from April to November This means two counci l members will serve an t>xtra six months this one time On the surf ace it sounds like a great idea. The city will savt.> about $19,000 and voter turnout is expected to increase from less than~ percent to 70 percent. Ms. Martyn now argues that city officials' voting to extend their own terms of offi ce conflict~ with laws forbidding e lected officials to vote on matters that affect them economicall v It all strikes us as a bat academic considering that 1t doc~ not affect the entire coun<.'11. but only the two seats. and on :i one-time basis But it does point up the fJl'l that, in making changes of this fundamental nature. citv councils would be wise as Councilm<tn Ed McFarland suggested to put the change to a vote of the ·c it i z e n s . It avoids s o m c arguments. s uspicions und possibly court lime Oil fight launched Laguna Beach this week launched an all -out war to prohibit offshore o il leases proposed off Laguna's coastline Th e City Council unan imously endorsed a program of encouraging Lagunans to cont act Gov Brown 's office . among others. to oppos e proposed oil rigs that would be visible from the city and would pose the threat of spills on the coastline The federal government has 1 s s u e d a N o t 1 c t' o f S a I c I o Ca lif orn i a for a n out<.•r continental shelf 011 and gas l('ase 'Sale No 68 1 A number of the traC'ts in the IPase 'ale would be !or:.ited off Laguna Beach In addition lo th1.· vis ual blight <espec1alh 1n La~u1H1 Beach where man\ homes arc lo ca led on hillsides I the cit\' 1~ con cerned about the threat to its protected tidal pools and an ecological reserve off the city's s hor e The governor has two month!\ m which to evaluate the proposed lease and respond to the federal government Council members Tuesday s uggested fi ve departml•nt~ a nd l egis lators who shou ld b(• barraged with mail opµosing th<• lease sale Those include the.• state':- Officc of Planning and Research. the Coastal Com m ission. Sen Alan Cranston . S1.:n S l Hayakawa a nd Rep Robert Had ham. For addresses for the above parties. call the City Clerk at -197 -3311 Hearing may end debate The Edison Hi gh School football team an Huntington Beach h as become the powerhouse squad of Orange County in recent years . winning 32 of 33 games and two of the last thre e CIF Big F ive championships Mu ch credit for the team's success has gone to the coaching staff. But there have been rumblings of illegal recruitment of athletes from other schools The allegations have never been substantiated. Edison head coach Bill Workman denies the c h arges. He says transfer athletes come to Edison because they hear or the good football program .• Star transfer athletes began appearing at Edison in 1978 when Mike Dotterer transferred from another district. Later. running backs Kerwin Bell and his brother Dino transferred from another city to Edison Hi gh School Las t year . several top players began their careers at other high schools including C hats worth . Fon tana and Huntingto n Beach but transferred to Edison .. • Such <transfers have added fuel to allegations of recruiting. Last November, an a non- ymous 11-page letter was mailed to various news media. school district officials and California Inter-scholastic Fede ration (Cl F l authorities charging that Edison coaches had recruited athletes and given them fa vorable gr ade changes Cl F officials ordered trustees of the Huntington Beach Union High School District to investigate t he letter's charges Now school trustees have taken the wise step of bringing in an administrative law judge to conduct an independent hearing on the matter. He will have power to subpoena witnesses and have them testify under oath The h earing will be un comfortable for evervone the school district. the school. the coa ches. certainly the student athletes who will be involved, and the community. The impaneling of such a hearing certainly does not imply that the charges a re valid. Bu\ it is the only way to deal fairly and finally with this festering issue. Opinions eJ1preised in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex- pressed on tn1 s page are thosP 01 tneor author s ano art1'>t'> Reader comment •S 1nv1t ed Address The Daily Pilot, P 0 Bo1e 1560, Co<ola MPsa, CA 92626 Pnone 17 141 642·~321 L.M. Boyd I Quake wahling The Japanese back ln um noticed that catlilb tuddenly became lively ritbt before •n earthquake. The Chinese ln 1975 took 11rtoualy the yelpln1 ol dots, 1urfacln1 ol tnaka, racln1 ol rata and wakin1 ot chickens ln the nitht to evacuate tena of t.houaanda ol peopl• in time to save t.h~m from the devasteUnt HaJchq quake. Vlrtually all lb• anlmalt act.d up at Marine World/Africa ·USA In Redwood CltYi, ~· nlabt before t.he s.t-Rlchter seal• tnmor thereabout.a 1n 1'7t. Ml.D11.,.aatl.IU now believe that Just about neey animal apec:t•. exc.pt me, can foretell earthquakt11. ,,_II.._.._, ~rw ,.., •t a. Wttl 14r ' 14., ""• Mna. CM,.~. It ... ' UtO; (Kt.I Mnl.. CA .,..,. , Overall only about 8.S percent or tbe dead i n this country are cremated. So bow do you explain the remarkable 1t1U1tic1 out of Marin County north of Sen Francisco? There, 50 percent •re cremated. One ou t of 10 American householders almos\ never lock their doors. Lobst.er Thermldor was named by Napoleon alter the month ln which he wu flrst served aald dl1h. The French calendar or that lime Uated lt 111 the eleventh month from July 19 to Auaust n. Thorna1 P. Haley Pllbllsher ~~·~"•1 Editor Batblra Krtlblch Edltorllt Page Editor 'Integrity' panel data probed WASHINGTON -The President's Council on Integrity and Ef(lciency, or all things. is th e targe t or a con,1ressional investlgatlon. Its integrity and efficiency have been called into question. The council was formed with great fanfare by President Reagan to coo rdinate th e efrorts o f the government's inspectors general -the "junkyard dogs " the administration sicced on crooks and incompe~nts in the federal bureaucracy. It ls made up of the IGs themselves, plus additional representatives from the far comers of the administration. The man in charge is Edwin Harper, No 2 man in the Office of Management and Budget THE PRESIDENT himself appeared m the White House press room last December to express his personal delight with the council 's work "I promised we'd follow every lead, root out every i ncompetent and prosecutl' l'very crook that we found cheating," Reagan said "That pledge has been kept." Indeed, the council's first two reports depicted a triumphant ca mpaign against the pernic ious and the profligate. Astonishing increases in the percenlag~ or imliciments, convictions and recoveries during the previous six months were claimed. The number of telephone tips had nearly doubled, according to the reports. The statistics were so astonishing, in fu ct. that they nroused the suspicion or Rep. John Dlngell , D-Mich ., the professional skeptic who chairs the House Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations On Dec. 22, Dingell sent a confidential letter to Comptroller G. -JA-CK-Al-D-ERl_D_I -~ General Charles A . Bowser. asking that he set the General Accounting Office's own Junkyard dogs loose on the council My associate Lucette Lagnado has seen the letter "I a m concerned that the quantitative data contained in the First and Second Summary Reports . . and the (act sheets accompanying such reports may not reflect adequately the performance or the Offices of Inspector General." Dingell wrote. He asked that the GAO "determine the accuracy of this data so that Congress gives it appropriate weight when evaluating the performance of the Iv u1i1ces anci in aliucaiing i>udgeiary an d personnel resources to such Offices ·· He re are some or the specific points that Dingell asked the GAO to look into: The possibility that thf' statistics were mistakenly or knowingly inflated by "double counting" when pH>re than one agency's IG worked on the same c ase. Dingell wants to know if the results claimed by each IG on a pa rticular joint investigation were combined as they s hould have been, or were added together as if they were separate cases. -THE LACK OF ha rd data on which the glowing percentages were based. Dingell noted that the ract shee t accompanying the second repo rt claimed "a 46 per cent increase in recoveries, a 59 percent increase in indictmenL'i and a 28 percent increase in convictions over the past six months " But the congressm an complaine d: "Unfortunately , o n e ca nn o t Independently verify these percentage mcrease f1f{ures · · The second report's claim that ··phoned·in tips of possible wrongdoing we re up 80 percent" over the previous six months Dingell wants lo see some documentation to support this assertion. Footnote A spokeswoman for the OM B said "The council welcomes the GAO auJ1t " Sh"' aJJ"'u that . ti anything, the council erred on the side or caution , and its figures were "too conservati ve " Legislation can't force responsibility To the Editor· I would like to express my view on your Jan. 22 editorial on "Bill Defeat Costly ... First l would like to thank you for your ability lo observe. You definitely should have doubts about the concept of requiring a refundable deposit o n drink containers . The MAILBOX environmentalis ts have once again missed the important fact Individuals have to be responsible you can't legislate responsibility 1 The individuals who htter will still litter an act of legislation certainly will not deter these people YOUR POINT 1s well taken on the cost However. we the consumers in addition to paying the deposit will even pay more if this legislation is enacted Who do you think will pay for all the additional handling of these containers? The consumer 1 I suggest that we take a hard look at t he states which already have this law they are experienc ing storage , handling, health hazards and are only taking care of 15 percent lo 17 percent of the litter problem. Educate the people, encourage the recyclers and eact\, of us can set good examples and not litter DOLLY STOKES Gestapo tactics To the EdJtor Re Sen. John G Schmitz vs Senate Rules Committee: The issue in this case ts not a matter of what Sen. Schmitz said or didn't say. The big issue is that Sen. Schmitz was not given a fair hearing by an impartlal group. as Is usually accorded to even common criminals. If Gestapo tactics can be u.~ed by the state Senate to "purge" themselves of oppo1lUon , with no consideration given to the con!ltiluents who voted the politlclan Into office, then this state Is in blg trouble. Terms such as "unusual" and "unprecedented" have been used In arttcle11 to describe this actJon. Sen. Schmits was stripped of the followlna important positions by the Senate Rules Committee : Chairmanship of the ConsUtutlonal Amendment.I Committee, vice c hairma n of the lnduatrlal R el a tl on 11 Co m m l tl e • I n d h I 1 membership In the advllory Commlulon on lbe Status ol Women. Thia la a pretty steep penalty for reapondln' oeaatlv•ly to &be humlllat1n1 tncld1Dl of f1mlnl1l attorney Gloria Allred11 publlcb throwine a chutity belt 1t the Senator. She set the t.rap and b1 l1U into ltl Qut Uberty and Jutlc1 dee.re. lbat , tbU blatant vtolatlon of clvU Ubertla 1bould not au unchallen1ed1 FiotitJcta.na t ,r= I or ordinary citizens s hould not be silenced and intimidated if we are guaranteed freedom or speech under the Conslitutjon. All viewpoints deserve to be heard, otherwise are we no difrerent from Communist countries? JACQUILINE STUBBINS Precious lettuce To l he Editor: I had to say this signs or the ttmes I really don't know what is more expensive, a head of lettuce or a stack of dollar bills. At a dollar a head I expect to see an engraving of George Washington on the next head I buy. Perhaps that kindly old father of our country looking up at me with those big sad eyes will do something to control my diet. OC course I don't enjoy eating alone. I wonder what George would like house dressing, Roquefort. blue or Thousand Island dressing? Finally I was wondering what kind of dog eats lettuce? I s aw a lady ask for a doggy bag and then stuffing it with her un eaten salad. Oh well , as my daughter would say, "let us" get onto something else' JAMES DELMONTE Fight fairly To the Editor: The so-called Committee of 4000 urging leaseholders to dishonor their contracts with the Irvihe Company after enjoying smugly the benents of their low lease rates for 25 years in skyrocketing land values is disgraceful. but to ·be called (Pilot, Jan 211 "selfless" U! almost amusing. The Los Angeles Times rightly denounces the Committee or 4000 for a "s habby scene '' Jn resorting to "political blackmail" ln an unrelated action agaimt the Irvine Company. But the personal attack on Jim Wood by Louls ~. Scott, CPllot Jan. 21 ) Is in my opinion, even more shabby. I have no connections with either the Irvine Company or Jim Wood, and (mercifully> with the Committee of 4000,. but I do know that Jim Wood h11 1tven his Umc to serve the Clty of Newport Beach and pet110nally h11 liven money and service to various cultural actlviUet for this co~D)unlty, without reco1niUon or reward. FOR TWO DECADES I have watched tho popular tuset, the Irvine Company, 1lvt l ,000 acres ror a unlveraity. offel' 10 acres tn Newport Center for a Cultural Center, otrer park and road 1erea1e, make welJ.planned commWllty vUlace1 -and pay hufe t.axe1. Thelr main d.ra•back aeem1 to be that they dalf'9 to make a proftt for ' ·-.tJ t.ttl••• ,,.,.. ,_,. .... 1e..,., '"' lltM .. , ........... t•" tt 111 .,... tr •"ll'l!llt .. t!MI It ,._,,.. 1.ttWn ti .., .. It , .. •Ill • ti* ~· M .....,_ Jlllllll IA! cw.,.,.....,. •M m•lllfll ,_.... "".-. ,,_., • •llllflelf' till,.,....., ti lilfhC1911l rHtitll '' ~~ •Ill HI .......... wn"'' -· ....... _,.... .. HtlN _ _...,. llWIMef el tM ,.,.,,_., ,_.. • ..... '9 n•!li{ttltfl ,..,...., their investors. much of which goes back into worthwhile endeavors by the Irvine Foundation, to this community and others around us. If profit making is so repugnant to the Committee of 4000 and their supporters, the r e are places like Russia lo go , whe re "profit" is still a dirty word. Free enterprise and contracts made Amertrn great If the com mittee 1s unaware of escalated land values over the last 2-' years. and disagrees with the appraisers who have much more lan<t comparisons than leaseholds on which to base their values, then let them fight honorably and rairly and not try to s mear all those who disagree with their tactics, and try to get recognized\ certified appraisers to revalue their leased land LADJSLAW REDA'/ Housing sales To the Editor Jerry Collins of the Irvine Company has been quoted as saying "Newport Harbor Board of Realtors figures show that 2,200 residential properties were sold in Newport Beach In 1981." Hal Pinchin, executive vice president of th~ Newport Harbor Costa Mesa Board o( Realtors, reports a total of 2.250 sale- for all me mbers . a figure whictf includes sales out of the area oC Newport Beach property, such as Costa Mesa, Santa Ana, Huntington Beach Lo ng Beach or a ny other areau Certainly this information is availabl• lo Mr Collins and the Irvine Company REALTORS su pporti ng th~ Com m1ttee of 4000 made a lhorougtt study of all reported sales published id the sales books for 1981. The realtori considered sales only for the Newport Beach area. They found the following: 1 Total sales 850 minus Income units Of 72, reported sales. lease options would be again subtracted, 27. or a total or 7Sf sales for 1981 ! The Irvine Company waa only off by 1,400. But then again ~ company has a tendency to eXJHeTat numbers and manipulate figures. Th Umea the actttal llgure ... doesn't th seem famlllarl ANIELLO DI CJUSCf 1 Afttr -recent trlp throuah a ahut -down auto plant In Detroit, I stopped for a drink wlth a hiend who bad lont with me. "You know,'' he uld. "I have a theory. All of these layoff a, all of this talk about reneaotlating the United Auto Workers' contracts. t have a 1tran1e feelln& that what It's really all about la robots. • ''Do you think t hat the auto companies are just waiting until they can aet rid ot most of the workers and put ln assembly lines full or robots ?" JVST A FEW years ago, you could have assumed that he was kidding. But It is 1982, and he wasn't. Talk of robots ln American industry is everywhere. in Detroit's Westin Hotel , where the big-money people stayed during the Super Bowl, there was a robot ln the lobby to serve as a kind of official welcomer . Franklin Delano Roosevelt · may have been on the cover of Time magazine last week, but two other magazines looking toward the future instead of the past -Industry Week and Black Enterprise -featured robots on their covers. The reasons are obvious. For the executives who read Industry Week. robots a re a potential ans wer to ORANGE COUNTY'S • URGEST • VIDEO •OUTLET • AU NAME BRANDS DISCOUNTED RCA -SANYO -GE MGA -JVC -SONY QUASAR -HITACHI PANASONIC -ETC. • 6 hours ol recording • Program one "on" and one "oft" cycle tor unauended rec0<dlng • Electronic Clodt and TIITI4lf • Remote Pause/Edit Control • Teipe Count« with memory UNeOXED SPECIAL OFF!R : $498 *PORTABLE * VHS SYSTEMS INCLUDING CAMERA $988 YISI You Read Right $988 MOVIE CLUB RENTALS WIDE SCREEN HEADQUARTERS * MGA *RCA * GE • s.y • Hitachi ·~ $).995 produotMty pr<>blttma. The cover Une: "Robot.a Com*' of Aa•." For the readers of Black Enterprtae, robot.a al'CI aeen a.a ~threat to financial 1 curtty. The cover llne. "WUI a Robot Tak• Your Job?" Mor. and more, the people who run Amerlcun Industry are becomlna BOB GREENE Infatuated with the Idea of robot&. Some of the reasons: -A robot does the same task over and over again, perfectly each lime. A robot never asks for a raise. A robot is not a member of a labor union -A robot never calls in sick. -A robot doesn't ask for a vacation. -A robot will work all night if you want it to, and never complain. A robot does not gripe about tedious work routines A robot does not ask for a pension. A robot does not require a salary or benefits. A robot does not talk back. A robot does not have good days or 9 mg. "tlf. 0.7 mg. nicotine ev. per cipr1tt1 by FTC mfthod. 'Orange Cout DAILY P1LOT!Thuraday, February 4, 1882 solution or job threat? bad daya; a robot only h11 perfect daya. Like many aweeplna chan•u that become apparent only after they havt taken over the world, the Idea of robots ln manufacturln1 la currently beln1 discussed mainly by expert. who are familiar with the field -which, by the way, Is called "robotics.'' BlJT IT IS becomln1 so apparent that robots will take over an increaslna amount of the American workload that even those of us on the outside are be1lnnln1 to understand that we'd better be thinking about robots before we wake up one morning and find one In the next workspace. General Motors at the moment has 450 robot.a at work in its U.S. plants, but 1t plans to have more than 14,000 robots in pla~ by 19$1. It is not difficult to understand why; as Black Enterprise reports: "Typically . an Industrial robot purchased for $50 ,000 can be paid for and operated at less than $6 an hour. compared to a minimum average cost of $20 for a human worker. This fact alone could be at the heart of the prediction that by the year 2000, a total or some 45 million factory and offi ce jobs could be affected in some way by automation." · A more vhscenl perapecUvt waa provided by an auto worker who was quoted: "Robots -I don't trust any of them." ALL OF THIS would be vaauely funny Ir the threat weren't ao real Industry mana1ers are caught• in a seemingly answerless crunch. Inflation and rlaing waae demands are mak1na It more and more difficult to run a manufacturing plant at a profit. Robot&, from a botton-llne standpoint, l\eem to be an ideal answer But In a country where jobs -or, more specifically, the lack of them - are becom ing a main topic of consternation, the idea of robots taking the place of millions or humans, la not a palatable one Even th e most profit·mmded executive realizes that efficiency m Industry might not count for all that much in a nation with millions upon millions or people who have been thrown out or work as a result or robot technology. One or the great ironies of the coming entry or robots into industry ls that much or the perceived need for robots stems from fear or the capabilities or Japanese manufacturers. Realizing that Japanese eCCi c1ency has caused great problems for American industry, executive. look to robot.a 11 the natural way *'° 10lve lbe productivity problem and brln1 the l1nited Stat.el back on even footina with the Japanese. But who are the world'• moat soph latlcated manufacturers of Industrial robots'' The Japanese. , SPEAKING AT an American Management Association meetint lut year, Dr. Harley Shaiken -a aclentlat who works as a consultant to the UAW -said, "We are seeina a ma11ive introduction o f hlshly productlvti technology with little reaard for impact on individuals or tbe community.'· Executives even now are lsauin1 soothing words desl1ned to calm workers' worries. Industry Week says: "For all their positive attributes, robots are still only machines. They must be cost-justified, correctly used and properly maintained. They can be inflexible. They never do more than they're told to. And no robot has been known to contribute an innovative idea." Still . . . workers are beginning to worry And in a world looking for the cheapest and most emcient possible labor. it's impossible to tell them that they're only deluding themselves. Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarene Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. ""·. Salem ' SMOOTH LOW TAR lOOs .. • -!loot ... -..,.r -----~------ I Al8 Orengt Co11t DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, February•. 1982 Senate argues opening to TV WASKlNGTON CAP> -The Senate bolled down over wbelher to put ltaell on television, wilh opponenta clalmln1 cameru would turn a creat dellberaUve body Into a rorum ror "one-liners.·• While backers ar1ued that It was Ume for the Senate to enter the television aae. roes contended that senators were more In need or protection rrom the temptaUon to ham It up. "Senators will reel under a burden or being where the cameras are," saJd Sen. Russell Long, D-La .• who ls threatening to filibuster to keep cameras out of the Senate. While the House has been televised sin ce early 1979, cameras are still forbidden in the Senate ch amber, even though many Senate committees allow them. Majority leader Howard H. LONO Baker, R-Tenn., is leading the move to change that rule and permit installation of five to eight television cameras. Although s pecifi c plans haven't been ~ormulated. the system most likely would be installed by the Senate itself and run by Senate em~loyees, with the broadcast signal then made available to commercial radio and television - the procedure now followed in the House. The House coverage 1s carried on cable television in all 50 stales. Baker called televising Senate sessions "extending the public gallery electronically to all the nation.·· ·'We're commissioned to debate public business in a public way,'' Baker said. "This is the best step we can take to restore to the Senate the quality of a great forum for public debate." But opponent Sen. John C. Danforth, R-Mo., asked. ".Are we increasingly going to be propelled to more frantic activities, to one-liners and to over-simplification?·· Critics also cited the cost or purchasing and installing television equipment, estimated by the Senate Rules Committee at between $2.S million and $3.5 million. Late Tuesday. the Senate put off the matter until today after getting nowhere. At that time a test vote will be taken lo see if the Senate even wants to debate the measure further. If the Senate decides to, Long is nearly certain to wage a full-fledged filibuster against the TV proposal , llUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY ............... s.... ltZ2 HAllOl IUD . . ccsn. MESA -sca-11 s61 Ladies Win See's Candy ~~~~ •• .,t,..-.. ,,,,. ... 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It'• good leoking. walaut tlnlah. M8f to cuMmble. (Didn't mean to bock It. oaly rock It) FYJUm'ICS LIFESIYER BA'n'ERY POWERED SMOKE Y2" DRY WALL 4X8 \ I Got an addition ln mind (contractor• anort. "addltlon? I got a whole houa• to aave onl") One aectlon or a truckload, dry wall at a price. ... DECTECTORr;:;::;:;:::;=:::;::::;================ll; I a•7 lhaYetwodetec:tonandlal.-pbetter.belle.-·-~----------------1111!11----------------.. me. Paid 111.99 each for them a while back. Now ~ aa-.. you more. battery Included. •• 601 RECORD A CALL WITH FREE DESK ROTARY DIAL PROBE 13488 Really flexible. choice of 20 or .0 .. conda for 1.ncomlng mHaa.g• Um.Ing. Set lt to cmawer anywhere from one to 10 rlnga. Twin caaNtt• syatem. boldaupto 120meHagH . GTE FLIP-PBOIE I 3288 Maha you feel like Captain Kirk on Star Trek (and Spock alway• geta the gtrla). CHALET STYLE DOG BOUSE KITS 151/, .. x 18" I 7•• 231/4 ' x 30" 3 7 88 311/t' x .., .. 5 7 88 Redwood atabwd. ready to aaMmble. I read the lnatnactlons and I mow you CC1D do It. You get the aaila t0o. (Thought fOU' d like that). . --- 1 CORRY'S SLUG 81 SIAD. DEATH I 6 9 2v.LBS. The title I• ao grim. but what IDalh do to your plant• I• pretty grim alao. Ra:ln or aprlnkllDg doesn't make it 1oM Its potency. • • AMFAC GARDEN PERRY'S Flowenand atrawbent ... Wbcrt cou.ld be better? POTPICI CboiceotVlolaa. PclM!ee.and llartgolda WOOD LADDERS 2 FT. 4 47 6 FT. 1597 4FT. I I 9 7 8FT. 2797 U I bad a penny for e..rytlme .,.·.,.. ecdcl. "Buy a a.w kidder and get up lD the world" I could buy a new typewriter. ~later· ~II #< IJrl~ !fAf'•l f'l•V 3&" ZERO CLWwlCE FIREPLACE 199!? IEITILITOB PIPE 24"29!.? S6" 39!! BIRT YILULllE BIRTBGLISS FIRE~ 29!? Qnat ftreplacn, DO IDOftarfDg, DO big •irpen.al .. IDatallatioD. y OU c:cm do It f'OU'Mli and frame It ID. f,.. atcmdlng model. -- We're llmJted oo th\s one ao come ln earlf eo aaDOttobe dbcrppolDted. Palllt.t antique braaa ttaJah. KIDDE 10. 240 FIRE EITllCUISllER 1444 Puta out ~latlle llqulda. gaa and oil tu... elec:trlcal and paper fhes. ClaH A. B. and C. CG appl'OTed with pwduue of opUonal mouutlng bracket. I lb. GUMOUT CIBBURETOR • FUEL SYHEM CLEAIER 87•aoz . • .. ·--~ - Clecmdlrtyc:arbuNton. lDtab.a.lfttl. PCV amog .a.t .... Hey you can't get good mileage wt th a dirty carb. uae It regularly. • • • CISTBOL liTI 20/50 WT. llOTOB 00. 89!. • • 0uy aabd .. bow much moeer 1 had ID the bank. I~~ I didn't llmow. I bad.D't Uabll lt lat.ly. (Ccmtrol .. oU '°' ema11 bot-engine can.) BLACK • DECKER 1Yt'' CIBCUUB SAW All pwpoee acrw with 7v.'' comblDatlon blade l.Dclu.ded. l t,<, HP #7308. OB DOIL ICTIOI FlllSHllC SIDEB Switch from orbital for fa.at remoTal to atraigbt llne for U.U. HDlsb aandJng ln MCODd.I. Hcmdl .. 1tcmdard 'h sheet. #7'36 YOUR CHOICE 2597 TEAi PARQUET FLOOR TILE I!~ latherewoodouyourOoor. real wood? Would you lib to baT• real teak pmquet floorlug? Okay .... theM 12xl2 Inch beautlea today. ENERGY SAYER WATER BEATERS 0 Some dealgu chang" to get more out of tbe gas UMd. flTe par wa:rranteed. Fully glau l1ned auto-abut off. temp control. 30GAL.GAS 11 777 OR ELECTRJC 40GAL.GAS 12777 OR ELECTRIC 50GAL.GASOR 16977 52 GAL. ELECTRIC 0urOWD bland. (big deal). The way a oeUID8 Neb tllle up JOU Meda low pnc., ttgtaL Pll•MllC COBDUllEBID 15! llllJPDal THURSDAY, FEB. 4, 1982 CAVALCADE 82 TELEVISION 84 STOCKS 87 Anthony Hopkins portrays the Hunchback of Notre Dame in television remake of Victor Hugo classic. See P.age 84. D 0 Questions about honesty shake house of ·science Researchers confront problem of faked experiments By PAUi. &AEBlJRN A-•••"'""" Wr'lllr NEW YORK He was a 1raduate student, al 24 regarded as one of Cornell's most promising r esea rchers. a standout in Prof. Richard McCarty's biochemistry se<:tion at the university. What Mark Spector had done had set scientists engaged in cancer research agog. And for a long while. Prof McCarty looked on Spector with the pride of a coach in a star quarterback. Then last spring , McCarty's concern gave way to unease Evidence was mounting that Spector might have committed one of the cardinal sins or science -doctored dala. Two Corne ll professors , Efraim Racker and Volker Vogt, had been trying for a year-and-a-half without success to duplicate Spector's Scientists arc a fiercely com pctitive and s keptical lot, and they are con s tantly c hallenging each other's findings In fact. that's in-bwlt in the sc1enllfic method. In the past two years, the house of scien ce has been shaken by at least five cases in which questions were raised about honesty in research. The latest incident occurred in December. when a 33-year-old heart researcher at the Harvard Medical School was suspected of fal s 1fy 1ng data He was s uspended and an 1nvestigalton was begun In January 1980. a cancer researcher at the Massachusetts General Hospital resigned after other scientists concluded lhal he had fabricated research. Six month s later, the chairman of the Department of Medicine at Co lumbia "To be first is the only game in science.'' experiments . They nervously joked that Spector had "golden hands." Spector's 16-hour days in the laboratory had produced, in a very short time. evidence for a cascading series of chemical changes in ns>rmal cells of the body. The c h anges might explain how n ormal cells b ecome cancerous a discovery of great importance if true: Last summer. Vogt made a pain ful discove ry . Spector had used a rad1oacti ve isotope of iodine as a tracer 1n an experiment where he s houJd kdve use<i phosphorous. Spector was isolating proteins , from various cells. to identify t~e chemical changes in the cells. The isotopes . which cbmbine with certain proteins ~t not others, were used to identify the proteins that were tfeing isolated. Use of the wrong iJotope completely alters the ~perimentaJ results. •Vogt told the others what ~ector had done. He couldn't t\elieve that the wrong isotope t s a mere rpistake. The data d been deliberately falsified. ector strenuously denied it. • In the scientific enterprise. absolute reliability or data is the first Commandment. r(laybe 10 ~mmandments wrapped in one And for a researcher. honesty of IJSUlts would seem elementary wudence if not a m o ral i'1perative. U ni ver s ity 's College of Phys1c1ans and Surgeons was as ked to resign after two months in the post when it was di scovered that a junior colleague of his at Yale had fak ed experim e nt s The chairman had co authored papers wilh him. A Jordanian researcher who was dismissed from laboratories several times amid allegations of plagiarism disappeared in April J9RO , after publishing more than 60 sc1ent1fic papers, many of th e m apparently plagiarized. A J:$ostor;a Umversity cancer researcher who resigned under fire in 1980 resurfaced a year later to deny that he had faked experiments and to pl~ad for a oew hearin~. Arter the questions were raised about Mark Spector. McCarty reluctantly called tum into his office He hoped that Spector could give the professors an explanation. But Spector gave no explanation, except to hint that perhaps somebody else in the lab had switched the isotopes McCarty asked Spector for a written response to the evidence against him. but received none McCarty asked Spector lo stay out of the lab for a few days , while McCarty, Rac ker and Vogl decided what to do A short time later. Spector was asked to witndraw from the university. Many of the nation's leading cancer researchers had dropped their own work to pursue the tantalizing leads that Spector had turned up. Those researchers spent part of their precious research grants running down a blind alley Racker. who supervised Spector's research and had co-authored some of Spector's sc ientifi c papers , had the dis agreeable task of writing letters of retraction to the Journals where the research had been published. Spector still maintains his innocence, but he has been banis hed from further scientific research This case. caused particular distress among fellow scientists. In an interview, McCarty tried to explain. "Cancer cells differ in some wa y from normal cells," he said. "There are a number of characteristics that distinguish these cells "Spector's findings provided an explanation of how a normal cell could be transformed into a cancer cell That is why it provided s uch a terrific stimulus to researchers in the cancer fi eld.·· The th eo ry Speclo r 's experiments suggested seemed to fill a gap that had troubled researchers for some time, McCarty said The discrepancies in Spector's work were eventually unveiled precisely because his work was so i n triguiog. "The more important the contribution, the more likely 1t will be round out if something isn't right," says Harriet Zuckerman. head of the Soc i o logy J>epartment at Columbia University. "Where there is a great deal or competition. the pressure for not living up to the rules of the game 1s s tronger." says Ms. Zuckerman . one of the few people to study the problem of fraud in science. "One of the most important things ror scientists is gettmg priority for their work To be first is the only game in science. Being second is nothing." Now. when scarce research funds are be ing cut by the f e deral government, the pressure of competition is at its height. Some see the recent rash of trouble as one of the res ults Philip Handler. late president of the National Academy of Sciences, believed. with a lot of DEALING WITH FAKERY ln lht• pa'>l l wo \ea rs. sc1ent1~h ha Vl' bet.>n '.')haken b' at least API_.._ five cases m ~h1ch questions were raised about honest~ in research o ther s cientists, that the problem of scientific fakery had been grossly exaggerated F'akery. he said. 1s perpetrated by minds that are ··temporarily deranged.·' John Pletcher, a specialist in b 1oeth1 cs al the Nation al Ins titutes of Health. disagrees ·'These events point a finger at the sys tem . not the ind1v1dual," ht• says "There are real problems caused by the intense pressures and rewards given to young individuals doing innovative work .. The line bel ween fraud and sel f deception can b e hazy. Fletcher says. Once researchers become convinced they have found something . they can inadvertently overlook contradictory evidence I "It's the hardest thing to disavow their own ideas ," Fletcher says. "H 's like disinheriting one's children." In an interview s hortly after the allegations against him became public, Spector said he wa s certain he would be vindicated. "Right now, there isn't any way of saying whether it was malicious rraud or not, on anyone's part," he said. "That radioacllve isotope should not have been there and could give a misleading result ... Was Spector bin ling that someone else in the laboratory might have switched the 1sotope,s? He wouldn't say He only insisted that the experiments would check out. "I'm confident that everything will be reproduced," be said. Shortly after that interview, Spector left Cornell. Since then, il developed that Spector had not received either a bachelor's degree or master's degree before entering Cornell as a Ph.D. student. and that he had once been convicted of forging checks. E :fjusiness booming, but wages stay depressed • in Laredo LAREDO. Texas CAP I This iJ a boom town for some, a bust fwn for others. and a paradise rr smugglers Despite a per capita income of 6nly $5,109, the second lowest in Jexas, Laredo has the nation's ~cond highest retail sales per usehold -$20,149. The disparity can be explatned y the volume of sales made to th rich and poor Mexicans ho jam the downtown area and alls each day to purchase oods. which are shipped legally r smuggled into Mexico. Businesses in Laredo, across the river from Nuevo Laredo, M exico, are e n1oying an e co no mi c boo m Ii n ked to new.found prosperity in Mexico. while at the same time many of its 93 ,000 residents live in depressed conditions. Mexicans come by plane, train . car, bus. bicycle and on fool to pack millions of dollars worth of goods across the Rio Grande. creating a dichotomy of wealth and poverty. Each morning, streets and malls are littered with discarded sacks. boxes and labels where Mexicans have bought new • clothing. stripped out the brand tags and worn them back across the bridge to avoid paying taxes when they return home Some Mexicans can be seen d o nnin g new s hoe s and purposely scuffing them to make them look worn, or stuffing clothing into empty suitcases. Others s imply bribe Mexican customs officials to look the other way when they cross the border with U.S. products. Other impoverished Mexicans can be seen at used clothing stores oicking through six-foot .,,.......,. boom town ror some merchants. but lls per capita income is just SS,109. This amounts to the second lowest in Texas. piles looking for something to wear While so many Mexicans coi'ne to shop that parking and walking space 1s at a premium on the narrow streets of Laredo, others cross the Rio Grande each day to work at minimum wage, helping depress wages There's a short supply or affordable goods for people m Mexico. which has a 30 percent inflation rate And there's an overs upply of people looking for work. because unemployment ranges up to SO percent in some areas of the country Smugglers have profiled in such an environment Each ni~ht five or s ix converted military cargo planes laden with television sets. stereos and other goods destined for Mexico fly out of the Laredo lnte rnat1onal Airport The planes are back again the next day, empty ''They <s mugglers) are moving Japan lo ~xico." said a local U.S Customs official, who asked that his name not be used. But the US . Customs Department says it is the responsibility of Mexicans -not Americans to stop the smuggling. Raul Gonzalez Galarza. the Mexican Consul General in San Antonio. said It's illegal to import electronic equipment into his country without payln& duty. "The importation of televbion sets is prohibited by the Mexican Department of Commerce," Gonzalez Galarza said. "That ls the reason the prlei! in Mexico ls hither than ln the United States. Knowln1 the dlfrerenc. in price, they take advantap of the altuatlon and they s muaale not only televisions. bqt all kinda of electron1c tqulpit.ent." Merchants in Laredo have come·Lo rely heavily on sales to Mexicans ·'Without them (Mexican shoppers>. we wouldn't have bread and butter," said Amelia Cervera, manager of a women's clothing store. •·If something happened between our two governments. I don 't know what we would do." "Practically everybody who comes in here is from Mexico." "They (smugglers) . are moving Japan to Mexico." said Federico de la Garza. a clerk at a shoe store. "They don't buy anything in Mexico because of hlgher taxes there and higher quality here." Laredo's business boom began rour years ago when Mexico discovered huge petroleum reserves. From 1977 to 1979, accordin1 lo Chamber of Commerce figures, Laredo's retail sales increased by 41 percent -the highest Increase lo lbe atate. During the period, automobile sales In creased nearly 35 percent at a time other areas reported drastically reduced sales. Laredo, founded in 1755, is the busiest U.S. port of entry on the Mexican border and is a conduit for 26 percent of all trade between the two countries. said Lee Gardner of the Chamber o( Commerce A recent survey of 802 Texa!i cities by state Comptroller Bob Bullock s howed border cities like Laredo are running away from other Texas cities in retail sales and sales taxes collected. Laredo's l percent sales tax produced $6,884,210 during 1981; up 32.4 Rercent from the yeaf before. twice the state average. : Mayor Aldo Tatangelo said bl is optimistic that the relai prosperity in Laredo wil continue. However, he's unsure if anything will happen soon t.f change the depressed wage structure because of the s:tty's proximity to Mexico's cheap labor supply. "They <Mexicans) make t80 a week in Mexico and U30 minimum here. It pull th' employer in a posltton to cbocle his employees," he aald.:t• don't see that much ch an&• prevail ln a tong, Iona Um because of simple economl~ the supply of labor is blthef than th~ demand." 1 Ex-wife gets, settlement SPRINGFIELD, Man. (AP) -n.l orthodonUst's ex·wlfe WU awarded $120.000 by• Jude• who ruled that ~ause •he put her husband throuah colle1e and dental school, 1he deserved aome of his eamln11. Hampden Coun\y Judt• Rudolph Sacco, rulln1 tb1t Or. Thomas Reen't achoollna and Ucenae to prat!Ucc 1bowd be coosldered property of lb m~rrla1e ln dlvore• proeeedlno, &ranted the hamf sum to Ileen'• former wU Martame. The two were married for 10 yeau. Tb• aettlenlent fll\U"t was arrived at tbrou1~ teattmollY of an actuary wbf> found that Reen cowd U1*l tO .m11le $1.IS mUUOI\ ov•r lbe MX\ 20yean. - - •ANN.LANDERS • ERMA BOMBECK •GOREN ON BRIDGE Thousands of Valium junkies seek assistance · DFAR READERS: Th.ls MalJgram will be of ln~reat to the thousands who have written lO say they are booked on Valium. It Is very reassuring. DEAR ANN LANDERS Your VICTIMS? Parents concerned about birth defects in some of their children gather at a San Jose home near the Fairchild Camera a nd Instrument Corp. They fear problems • llOIOSCOPf BY SIDNEY OMARA Gemini ready 'for discovery f'riday. Feb. 5 ARIE.S <March 21 April 19 1 ~aantaan an independent s tance Some persons. who lack your intuition and imagination. will •lttempl to discourage ~·ou Your pos ition is stronger than original!~· anticipated Kn ow 1t . hold your ground TAURUS (April 20·May 201 lntu1t1vc intellect is honed · to razor ·sharpne~s . Last-minute call or communication will provide needed information. Short trip could involve relative You are on right I rack , des pite outward appearances . Cancer, Capricorn. Aquarius natives figure prominently GEMINI <May 21 .June 20 > You 'll be at right place at c rucial moment. Financial prospects improve and cash flow could resume. You are on brink o f important discovery. Know it. proceed accordingly. Key now is versatility. ability to diversify and willingness to make intelligent concessions CANCER <June 21 -July 22 1: Trust your own judgment. Som e persons. who mean well. may not be in tune with the times. Emphasize independence. originality and determinahon Your views are on target and your efforts will s ucceed. LEO <July 23-Aug. 22 1 Look behind .,,.,,. By PHIL INTERLANOI of Laguna:Beach syndi~ated column brought international attention to the Valium problem. An avalanche of l~tters has been received from people throughout the United States and other countries pleading for help These letters more than substantiate Ar ....... linked t o chemi c al s us e d at the semiconductor manufacturing pla nt a re responsible for .. an apparent cluster" of birth defects in the neighborhood 1 rOT SHOTS BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT · \ N O~DER. F"OR US TO BE CL.OSER ro EACH OTHER, I AT LEAST ONE OF US MUST MOVE. s cenes for answer s. solutions. Open lines of communicat ion . make inquiries and be in touch with one whose movements mav be t e mporartl) restricted You could rec.e1\'e invitation to 1om !:>pec1al group or club Virgo figur('s prommcntl~ VIRGO !Aug 23-Sept 22 1: Stick clos e to home base for best results. Win rather than force your way If diplomatic. ~·ou gain alli es Emphas is on domes tic e nvironment. family structure. des ign and remodeling Taurus. Libra and another Virgo figure in scenario LIBRA !Sept. 23-0 ct 22 1. You 'll be in contact with s uperior!:>. authority figures and community leaders You can perfect techniques and m ake room for yourself at more elevated position Cancer. Scorpio. Pisces persons play important roles SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 211 You are capable now of completing project. What had been abstract will now become clear you·11 get green light from superior. Motives and cos ts will be spotlighted. Keep long-range goals in focus Capricorn native figures prominently. SAGITl'ARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec 211 You gain wider appeal, more persons cons ult vou and vour views will be vindicated. Prospects· for financial backing improve . Markel survey wil l s upport your contentions. Young persons will now be willing to li s ten and ~on yo u r s uggestions. f CAPRICORN I Dec 22.Jan. 191 Delay works in your favor . You'll have chance to gather forces. to become more inde pendent in thought and action. Be aware o( costs. legal requirements a nd need for cooperation. You make contact which results in favorable publicity. AQUARIUS <Jan. 20-Feb. 18>: What starts as routine tas k can be transformed into exciting project. Creative resources s urge to forefront -intuition is on targ~t. You'll rise above petty 6 bjec tions and office r><>litics . Cancer. Capricorn and another Aquarian figure In scenario. PISCES <F eb . l9·March 20>. Popularity increases. members of opposite sex rind you attractive, you'll make necessary changes and could be Involved in• romantic liaison. You receive unusual invitation and thl could lead to t parUcipatlon ln creative projed. the statement of the National Consumer's League in Washington. D.C .. that the consumption o f Valium has reached epidemic proportions. Thousands of victims tell us they have tried everything without success. Many say their doctors have put them on Valium but can't get them off. Countless numbers are pinning the ir hopes on o ur group . Valium Anonymous. Thank you ror telling them a bout us. Ann. Every le tter will be answered. Please ask those who wrote to bear with us. -LELAND AHERN. Box 404 . Altoona. Iowa 50009. DEAR ANN LANDERS: This 1s a second marriage for both my husband an<J me. <We are in our 50s. l I was aware from the s tart that he had a low sex drive but was certain he'd perk up when the pressures of premarital sex no longer existed. I was wrong. Al my suggestion we have gone twice < 10 days each tim e 1 to one o f the best -known <and most expensive l sex therapy clinics in the country . Not much was gained. We then went to see the foremost sex therapists in Canada 1 six trips in all l . Still no results. My husband is a wonderful person with many fine qualities. but the sad truth is he has very little interest in sex. I've tried being seductive. aggressive, shy. playful - nothing works. He is definitely NOT a homosexual. in case you are wondering. 1 've asked myself your question. ··w ould 1 be better off without him·> .. The answer is NO. So. dear Ann. how do l deal with t he devastating fact that my husband does not care f or me sexually and I am "undesirable'.'" SELF·ESTEEM ZERO IN TORONTO DEAR S.E.Z.: A husband who would agree to let his wife schlep him eight times for sex therapy cannot be accused of indifference. So get It through your head that be· would love to please you sexually but he just can't hack it. When you accept the fact that the problem ls HIS, not yours, you will no longer feel ••undesirable." DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 am the mother of two Jillie girls under 8 years of age. They are both in bed today with terrible colds and hacking coughs because m y nitwit cousin brought her 10-month-old baby over here yest e rday morning, wrapped in a blanket. She said. "Suzi must be coming down with something · · When I saw the poor thmg. I asked my cousin if s he had taken the baby's temperature. Her reply: "I don't need to. I can tell by feelin g her forehead. She must have about 103 ... My girls love babies and 1 couldn't keep them away from her So now they are both feverish and coughmg. 1 a m furious. Please. Ann, say something in your column about mothers who drag sick kids around. If they don 't care about their own. they should give some consideration to other s. FITTO BE TIED IN TROY DEAR FIT: No mother can protect her children against the germs of other children. If some visiting kid doesn't cough in your children's faces, a youngster in school will. The best you can do ls make sure your two get enough rest, are well·nourlsbed and properly clothed. Don't flunk your chemistry test Love 1s more than one set of glands calling to aoother If you have trouble makmg a dz.st met ion you need Ann's booklet ... Love or Ser and How to Tell the Differenc e · Send a long . self·addressed. stamped envelope unth your request arid 5() cents to Ann Landers P () Bor 11995 . Ch1cago Ill 60611 ,....,~ ~ .1ney get younger every aay Elizabeth Taylor and I have a lot in common. We both agree that old age is inevitable and we welcome it . like an old friend. flMA BOMBECK AT WIT'S END To be sens iti ve about a few wrinkles and a couple of laugh lines is nonsense After all. beautv comes from within As a matter of fact: I rarel~· think about age a n vmore. · Some days I don't think about my age at a ll. Like today. I didn't give it a thought until I woke up Lying in bed. it occurred to me that l wasn •t growing older. it was JUSl that people are getting ahead faster than t hey used to didn't tennis champions used to be a lot older than they are now·, You never see anyone serving· to a silver·haired opponent at Wimbledon anymore TAKE MY PRIEST, FOR example . We used to get them right out of the seminary from high sctiool. But the other day. I saw a BISHOP who smelled like Clearasil. AND ISN'T IT SORT of scarv to know that today's skyscrapers. s hopping centers and condos are being built by kids who will have to return to s chool after the summe~ 1s over" Luckily. I don't give a thought to age or I'd have been terribly upset when I met a full colonel who was young enough to be m y son. Remember how the interns used to be the youngest doctors on the hospital staff" A doctor who wears Calvin Klein jeans on rounds a nd can't be a day over 20 is a local chief of staff'. And what has happened to education"! l don't know how they do it. There was a time when the stewards on planes looked like they had landed the ir first job. Now the men piloting the planes are looking forward to shaving for the first time. My teachers were ~tra ight from the Stone Age. My son has a teacher whom I swear has a picture of himself aging in the attic while he looks like a pre-schooler. Maybe Liz and I would feel diffe re ntly if we were older. but to me she·s still as beautiful as whe n s he appea r ed in "National Velvet" last year . or was At firs t I thought 1l was my perspective. but, correct me if I'm wrong that two years ago'! Time flies when you lie to yourself. GOif ii 011 BRIDGE BY CHARLES H. GOREN ANO OMAR. SHARIF Neither vulnerable. South deals. NORTH •A.JO IV 98' 0 1(79 •QJlO WEST EAST • 5 •IOU IV AQJU <:?IOU 0 AJO o lOtU +KU +UI SOUTH • &Q81f <:? IU OQ8 +AUJ Tbe bldd!nr: ...w .. l • ow. P ... IC::? S• p .. ... p ... NewQ Eu& .... ., .. ...... , .... Openln1 ... d: Ftve of •. Pq · au.oUO. lO tbe aue- Llon. The lllformaUon to be cleaned trom it could be all 7ou Med to make 7our COil> tract. Aftfr N~'• redoubh. South cofrectl1 paMtd to ... •h•thtr hlt parteer .tpt want lo pul\lt• u,.. op- ~·"· Wlten Ncrilt ,.....,.. eel a • .,.. nt, So\ita. 1boftd he waa better than minimum by raieing to three spades. and North elected to go on to game. Weet did not nliab leading from hia aid .. uit holdlop. IO he choae his lone U'ump u the openios lead. When dum· • my appeared. declarer realil· ed that Weal wu a favorite to have both red acea for bia takeout double. and that he wu ln daa,.r of loalng two heart trielta, a diamond and a club. But South found a pret- ty eolutJon to Illa problem. Dec1uw WOD tbe ldq of ,.,.... croeMd to U.. Mii of apacla &oil ~ tbe dub nQttlt. Wen 11• DO adna-ta,. hi ltold1a, up, eo ht woo tbe 1r1~= on pa., witb a dub. "OD \be Jack ta dl&Dla)'. Ntu.naed to ~ hpACI wltll a &namp. dnwta, £ut'1 lut \tWllp, and D09 led a low diamoDCl. If WHt roet wiU. lbe ue of cilamoeda. cleduw would later be ... '° pt. a Mia.rt dlacard OD th kl11 of dlamonclj Ud U.u Will Wt Mart IOMn &o ooe. h Wtet ~1 pla,.d" .... dum1D1'• ~ °f dlerjoMj won. But declarer bad prepared a neat ripoe&.e. He cuhed tbe ace and nine of clubs, aJufflnc a diamood from dumm7, ud DOW p .. Wfft Illa diamond triek. West did not &pPnaate having the lead. U be led another cilamond, dec:la.Nr would ruff OAl tlM &aw. and • diaeard a btatt from ~ hand. But pa.,tq bean. wu no bet&.er, beeaue dedarw held the lt.iq. Two ac.. aad the kins of dube were aJI tbe trick.a that tbe defenden' could ma.u,.. I t t • ··t •do ; I ' 'Deer Hunter' hearing postponed . LOS ANGELES (AP> -A heartn1 on a Salt manuscript, ''The Fields of Dlacontent." Lake Ctcy man's 115 mllllon pla1tarl1m ault In hla deposition Kl eku said he wrote hls atalnat tbt malura of the Academy manuacrlpt between November l9U and Award·wlMln1 mm "The Deer Hunter·• waa February·March 1970, and that a year later he sent 'po.tpe>ned Wednesday for alx monthl. a copy of the work to Anthony Flato, who Is also 1 The hearln1 wae scheduled after principal named aa a detendant In the case. defendantJ in Harry Kleku' lawsuit -rroducers In 19'75, Klekas said Fiato told him he was EMJ FUms lnc., dlatrlbuton Unlvena Pictures taking the manuscript to Hollywood. Klekas heard Inc., director Michael Ctmino and others who nothing rurther of the matter, but after seeing worked on the mm -submitted a motion for ·'The De¥ Hunter" a few years later was summary Jud1ment aaalnat Kleku. convinced t)lat it was based on hia work and that But Superior Court Judge Leon Thorppaon the tUmmakers had obtained access to It through agreed to continue the hearln1 to July 7 In order to Fiato. ~llow Kleku' attorneys more time to prepare their Klekas • suit accuses all the defendants of 'Case aealnst the motion. plaeiarism, breach of tmplled .contract and Klekas, a court ballllf, claimed In his suit that constructive trust; Fiato additionally Is accused of "The Deer Hunter" -which won five ~cars In breach of confidence. *BARGAIN MATIN••I • Monday thru S1turd1y All Perlorm1ncH before 5:00 PM (Excepl Speclll fftl'DllftlRll llld Holid1y1) UI M11/AIJA MAii a M11ae1a al ta1ec1a111 LA MIRADA WAUC ·IH 99•·2400 1979 lnc1U'41"''" best picture and, for Cimino, best However defense attorney Scott Handel&man ~ ..,...'6 .. IHAAKY'I llllACtttNI" a 1 dlrecto~ -was based on his unpublished described Klekas' alleeations as unfounded. -..... ,,., ..... ,---.-·••• ""-"'·-~~~~~~-~------:....:..~~~~~-=---~~--....:..;;.;:..:;._,;,;;.;_:__~~~~--=:--.--~~-~~--------1"1 ...... ~~~~~;:i., .... ..~~~~==..- The creators of "The Black Stallion" present a whimsical tale of youth vs. the establishment. TOMORROW NIGHT 8:1 ~· edwards CINEMA HAUOll IOUUV AID 546 3102 AT ADAMS • COSTAMISA Ladies, free Houseplant 1.000 winners of 4" plants during Huntington Center Ladies Days thru Sun Just check ycur driver lie. number MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE ,,.. oe,.crw °'""' '•""Ot 11 to "llDtm -'"""' .... -·~"' 'Pl».W cxn.tW '°' ""9'"'0 o~ ,_,, c~ R£STRIC'!l;O Ut\09' 11 'eQul'" eecomp.a"Jing '------------------· P-1tnl ot Aovtt G,,,.,d .. I'\ LAKEWOOD CENTER WALK ·IH .. --·-..-"ON OOLD«N ~NO -'~ ...... , . ..-.. _... (; ICIOn • f..OntY ~ ·TAN ... , tl.M •• _.. ........ .. LAKEWOOD CENfER SOUTH WAl lC IN foculty At 0.1 A.tnQ 21S/614·9211 facull'f al Candlewaoa 213/531·9580 I ___ :1:;_ ...... _ =·.::::-:=-: --'=' C'.:: -flEOl"1"' I •iut ""'·'• I _...,. __ _ ··tHAflKY'I MACHINl".,.. ,.._. '*1 ...... •tt~,... ._,_., ........ _._ llL-ft·- M.AA-0. '°"° .• ,.. ... AU.Ill I ··RAIDERS 01' THE LOIT AAK .. ••• ,, •• &.:ti, ..... ' •• __ & __ _ '"CHAfllOTI Of' ""'I'' 1N1 ' , .. t:AI, &ltl, •At. ttftl "' ~GUNA so . COAST WALK·IN Soul~ Coatl ~lway al lroaClway 494-1514 ~---.. THE BOtU:>IR"' 41111 _, __ &At ................... . -·~·-­.. ,0\M "'....,. .. 1111 ---..... -...... __ _ rAClflC THUTllU OlllVf·IN sw•r MUTS ',.,.,,,. '"'' ·~" "' ... , .... , t f HAlllOll l l'IO 0111'1( IN I OllANG( 0111'1(·111 1 a.• •o >,. u•wao•• • SWtttA• flfl "AIHtG Su• .. U Af ..._,.It• STU.U• .. e 15 •• •. 6 .00 ._., ....... e 45 IMPORTANT NOTICE• Clut OREN UNOUI 11 fltU! "''~ •H Wlf«litf ... '"'• '" 5 30. Stt s •• K111 4 30, .. C*ASOUllO•~ AM 1.o• llAOIOtS 'IOUll ~ ' "° ... CAii 'IAOll) "'"" tGo«!Or llCC(~ l'QS/TOI '-MOC AM IQITAIU i•Al.l ~~Ill Gii * llAOIO AIMHllM ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN ___ ....... --.-Ill_"' __ "VUtOW'at ....... ff•••oy 91 at l•"'o" St "NIGHT SCHOOt.0 ..a 179·9150 CIJH fl SOUNO ------..... --. .... '"'iia~ ··ntl llDUCTIOftGAMI'" ta1 ,,..,.,..." -.. TIMI BAHOITS .. -"SEX ANO THI L~LY WOflllAN'" 1111 - -"IVIL INAICUI"" "SC..OOL~llU. Hn'CtM41KUI .. llll c 1111 " - 9UI NA PA Ilk BUENA PARK DRIVE IN l1~atft ••• W•tJ nl I N°'ll 121·~70 . 8Ul"A PAii• LINCOLN DRIVE·IN LM"ICQtn /.we We\11 Of l "OH 121·•070 ''·'"'•"" --~-­"THI llOOGINI'" 1111 -"THEY CA• l'flOM WITHIN" 1111 -·--·--'"THI .oucTION" 1111 -.. LOC*Dt"1111 ---·----·-"'·-••Vbt()W' ... -Son Ooeoo ,,...., 01 lfooU••"'' (Jo I .. NIGHT ICHOOL".., 962·2•11 CWI fl 9011110 _.,. "'f.,~;f" J ...... --c ...,on·---. STRIPES' ftll I .. fAN" -~~ -''STIA CRAZY"' 1•1 "ntt! CANNONaALL flUN .. - COil " sou-o :1tlf ,, -liifiiijl~---- .. OH OOLOEN ~NO" -··T==·~1111 ...... -··THE CONCOAOEr-....... ,_ ............. - AIRPORT ·n ·· -'"""'"""""" -· l.INt ~I 5UUN0 lA HABRA LA HABRA DRIVf ·IN 1,._0o91 l(lo Ort'-11 liHc:f'I IAO & "'OfOOI l••O 871-1162 ORANGr ORANGE DRIVE·IN HUNllNGION 81 "t >< WARNER DRIVE·IN wo1"•' Av• weu 01 leocn11•0 H7·35t1 ----...... -. _\&_ft __ .. VfNOflr'1111 -·"HIGHT ICHOOl.00 .. \Ol"llO 4r'IO frwy • Sto•• c OH•o• 558·7022 _... __ ··MOOfflN "'°9UJllS"" 1N1 -..NINE TO l'lYf"' 1111 ... ----VIACflUClt ~aoMALU NOA NOA f.4.00 "' CAILOAO A SPECIAL VALENTINE'S JEWELRY SHOW FEATURING: CLOISONNE IN GOLD BY MARJORIE SAWYER & PAM SPURLOCK I AND THE WORKS OF SEVERAL OTHER FINE JEWELRY CRAFTSMEN • RECEPTION FOR THE ARTISTS f:RIDAY. FEBALJARY 5th, 5:00 to 9 :00 P~ • I GRE&ft&DICis I Soun~ COAST Pl.AZA )3J3 8AISTOL STAEiT COSTA MESA 171•1 7&1·0~10 ; "• .·..i.!. .. .. ~ . .. -~----- -~...-..-... --p flll t l ~· .. , •• - '" "'' •'1 I •" .. II• ,. ., ... .. ,,. •• ·'' u 1n h ·" u ·" H I ,IC rt I I ~ I H '"· •11 .. ... •• •• .. -••• ••• .. ... ... .,. I •I ""' ••• .... . .....-1Vmea--. ~---..-c:::= ;:;::c:::..t ... , ...... I =~ fHIMVC_,.. 1:.:.~~ 15!-IUCK~AllO~ CaYl.ON htem J•YMlnthe and fllredl1dl lleyne ltM In IN8 ~ .... In c.yton, of • hOty "*' '*"° "*'* a laopard GUI> frOft'I a ttopl- '*pool (PM t) ... Wl1.00M& Mae. KOTTIR • KCaT NeWIMAT: CA&JPOllMA OOHQWltOHlil. ~ I ·····~ (llNEWS ~MUM .MOVll • • •;, "The Man Wno Sew T <>morrow" ( 11181 l Oocu- menl ary. Nerr•t•d by ~w ..... Foo111Q41 of _,., he predicted end dtemetlc: -eatlone of "" !IN ~ , ..... lodt .. lhe 1711M:ientury Frendl ptlyeldan, aat.tologet and ~lk MtcMI de Noelre- o.me, known • Noett• ~·PO' 1'lDO I C8I N!WI N9CNIW8 ~ Do\"9 AOAaH I A8CNe#8 YOU AME> fOR IT w·A·e·H Col. Pot1er .... WQl.lnd.- ed peydllelrist to oounMI -oflhet&MI~ their~ .. '°'* I JCIKP'I WllD OVMEASY G~t•. Joeti Logen end nks wile Ned<!• Herrig41n (R)Q ml OQ< CAVETT ~: Wiiiiam F Bude~ Jt. Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH 9 EHTERTAANMEHT TONIGHT Part 2 of an Int""""°' w1111 Richard &lrton QI THE UUPP£T8 Gueet: Cleo Laine (C)MOYIE e "Klondllce Fftet" ( 19801 .-.1 c..,. ~ S•-v-r in. YolM'll Jack London Mii OUI to Mell 11.ia fortune dur- ~ Iha Gold Ru8I\ 'PO' CID DlCOYa: POUCe UHDERCOYER Geotge Kennedy IOOlll at N9w Vorti Clty'1 undwoo'I· ., poltlt Ct1rne unit• Cal M<>'llE • • .... "Lal The 8eloon Go" (11178) Rober1 BettW. Jan Klnglbury. A pollo- ltrlelt.,, youll'I ttrugglee 10 PfOW !NI the c:rlppllng di-Ilea not robbed him ol Illa pot.,,.., {%)MOVW '**'"' "Beck Roads" ( 1118-1) Selly Flel<I, T omtny LM JonM, A llOOk• and 1 down-on-hie-tuck boxer ~t end head -t In -ch of e new llte 'R' 7:to 8 2 ON THI TOWN FMllwed: vlel1 Egypt tor • tour of the pyn1mld1, the agelM• Spllln•. crulH along Ille Niie and -Ille mooern m9tropolia DQl,NIM..YRUO • MO'ltE * * * "Fllmlly Plot" (111781 Berbara He,,11. Brue.a Dem. A lplrltualllt and her unemployed t>oylrlend -di tor • rnlMlng heir who ... ptofeealonel kkl· "8'lC*· 8 EYEONLA. A r eport on women bO.-; • proflle on movie ulrM; • looll •t Loe Ange- BELL AINGl!R -Anthony Hopkins plays Quasimodo, the. deformed bell ringer at Paris' Notre Dame Cathedral. in the .. Hallmark Hall of Fame" presentation of "The Hunchback of Notre Dame .. lo air at 9 tonight on KNXT <2> See story below !ff' 10 _. OOdy ,.... '*-; en Int~ wtltl "Huetlet'' publilfler lMTY a"'au. • ..,,, IUUaY'I • w·A•a·H H•-11'19 an<I Trapc>er, wltll en Malal lrOfl'I Rader, mall• UC> • flc:11tloul cap- lllin In order to dona'9 1111 ulwy 10 .... orphanage. I TIC TAC DOUGH MACND.. I L94MR AIPORT I~ ThrM men who ltruoll II rlotl In IN TMltlan llot .. bu1tne11; new dantel br-that llllOttc "lfwlaj. l ''vou AIQD '°"IT W 1,~,P.I. 8'uno , ... In love with • glf'I who, unknown 10 him, hmM~~­•o MOMAHO ....,., MOf1I mleteller'lty belieVM Iha ...,,._ ..ig,led to gift him • drMng 1911 ... ~of me devil. 1J MCMIE * e ..... , "Tan T... Men" ( 111511 Burt Unc:Mter, °"" bert ROlerld. • ,..._ MAOAZJNE A becll-.tege looll al tile LOI ~ Film Cr111C1 Award•; lNM -wl'IO 11ruca 11 rich In Ille T ehltlan llotel bu1lne11: Joan Ernt>wy lntroc1Uc:91 "" .... pl'lent: llOuMftold or9f'llZ-a •.::::ont <IOOI' • • • "Flrel" ( 111771 ErnHt Borgnlne. Vera Mllel • THll olo HOUSE Bob Vile oiacu... p&an. i. ...... ;.mng • wooO-~ Ing atove and Norm Abtem oheclols Iha root. Q Ii) tNIAK PAIMEW8 Roger Ebert en<! Gene Sltllel review --4 fifml tMt ~ -J1>ocfy mt1Nd Ille flrat time wound lndudlng "F"lt\- gers," "0.IM Of HMv9n an<! "The Onton Fiel<I " (R) ®MOVIE * * • "The l<lolmalcet' (11180) Ray Sh"'11ey. Tovllh F~. A menipuletiw manager u... varlou• ploy9 10 C&lllPUll ""'° 1 ..... 11Qet1 Into pop llr'9lnll •lardom. 'PG' Cl)MOYll • ••;, "Back Roads" (1118 11 Selty Field, T ornmy LM ~. A hooll• and a down-on-Ille-luck boHr mMl and heed -t In -Ch of a MW llte. 'R' CtMOVW ...... "8'1181<• Mor.,,, .. (1980) E<lw111<1 WOO<lwlll'd, Jeck T"°""*'" Auslrelj.. -conecr1pted lo ligl'll on Engtend'• Ilda In the eo. w. dedOe to ftgftt ... Bo. guer-. on their -terma. a:to • 0 eoeotoit IUDOIE8 Herwy Md Kip IOM • bOx they wwe ~ding tor an UI Ide! wof1d figure. Q • ALL .. 1>tE fAMILY It ~ 11\at Glorle may hew lw tint baby In an llallen ~t (Pert 1) • tNIAK flMVllWI Roget Et>ett end Gane Sllkelrevlew_,_, """''"''~~ mlH•<I Ill• llrll time wound lnc:ludlng "Fin· geB." "GalM Of HMven" end "The Onion Field "(R) G "°"11WTI IN PASTB..I "The Cowboy" 1:36(11) p~ 811CKI AHO tnllHG (Z)MOvtE ** *"" "Tiie HOwllng" (1118 1) Dee Wall•Ce, Pllrlc:k M~. A woman reportw ii meneoeo by • killer who -10 be • ~·A' ... Cl) ,.... HUNCHMaC ~NOTM~ Anthony Hoplllna. o.r. .Jecot>I and lMMy·Anne oa-..., In • ,_ adao- latlon ot IN dMllc: lela by Vlc:tor Hugo. D(llDff'MHT ~ Arnold'• dlNbled friend Kathy helpe """ --Illa ... fngtlt. Q • 0 ~ tiiMU..11' Berney 1n<1 hie men ecremble 10 ~ '*''" gang ww1we In Chinatown when the mayor demand• K119f' (Part 1)Q • MERV GM'FIN • 8HOCK CW THE NEW "Trouble In Ulot>I•" An cr111e Robert Hug,,.. looh at modern arcilltKtur• In ln<lle. Brull. the United Sm• and el-'*& (Al Cl1) MAaTERPIECa n.ATAE "Tiie Fleme Tr-Of Thi· k•· A Reel Sponaman" Wiien a ~d lnv.0- llle Palmer llOn>e, Here- wer<I ln11111 II mull be llunted <I own 1n<1 Cfti.r~ (P.,... 'i)Q (C)MOYIE ···~ "Shool Tiie Sun Oowrt.. ( 11141()) Christopher Wllllen. Mwgol l(jd<lef In 113&. lour dl•Pf"•t• mle- flts UM an Ol<I map 10 Mardi for buflecl gOl<I 'PG (())MOVIE * * ·~ "Flnel Exam" ( 111811 Jc;iel s Ric. Cecile Bagd•- <11 A klllet 1telll1 1111 vie- lltnt on • college cempu1 'R' t:aO D QI GIMME A llMM Tiie ruaon tor Kalle'• -gency trip to Ille llOl- pltel oomM ... lllOCll 10 Nell end Ille Chief D iii TAX> L•tke'• glfftrlend from Ille old country le bomt>at<le<I by rom•nllc overtures from bOlll 1~ of Latka'1 split 2f'aon.tllly. Q 10:00 a a H•u aTIIUT BUJE8 Caplaln Furlllo anti Joyce O.wnpo<t get In 1 court- ~ room t>ellle owr Ille poNi· b4e entteoment or • .u .. pec:t, Md Sgt &lfr'llaul ...,,,. lie INl'1 eoon be • l.; •• NlWS 0 20120 • 'AW\. TY Towal Ball Fllwlty. Iha moat lnc:omp9t.,,1 Innkeeper In Englend, le ull'ad from ruin by 1111 ellldent wife (Plll'I 1 of 8) (B)UOW IOI thll .,.._ te f °'*-«It! ..w.wty '° ttlfllr .... , .. ~~..,.,,... . .,.,.,~·,io· 10! 11 CJ) MCMI ·~ "Upelllall" (tt7t) ....,. 0--l._.19ay, AMe ~A-~ modet II humllatltd tllld INettated by lw -. oeetlUI ~ to ..,,_ ~ the ft'lllfl wllo rllPecJ lier to ptilloft. 'A' tO'...IO .... • IOINT NITWOMNIWI ."1mM9 ..,, decld9 to r'*""I COIMIUNcallon wftll ""-- ... ; INI All Mel to Leon· •d about lier •· ID TMa LAWMAl<PI CorrHpondente l1naa Wertheimer ena Cok .. Rot>wt1 )Oln Paul Cull• fOf an up-to-t~t• eum- mary ol Congre .. lonel K1Mtlea. (C)MOYll *** "Which Way le UO?" I tll71) Richard Pryor, lonelt. Mc:t<M . A Mll- ltatY9d fruit pleker la caught In • comic ~oaellr• ~ Illa Ulllon Ind the Mob. and • hypoefl&.I pr..0-lindt '-""" In • i.dlee' choir. 'R' CalMOW • * e "The EUtoqeana" ( 111711) l• Remlc:lt, LIM Elc:MO<~ A wealthy Boa- ton ramlly ~to wel­ oome two Ytaltlng coueina who .... Klually Meklng • wily 10 cean In on IN CW'!'• ronuoe. CJ) ..,.,..._THON A comedten ho9I end tour comlC cont•tanw who compete agetn11 one anotl'ler are fMIUfed In !Ille uncieneOfed comedy game allow. 11:ooeDDCl)ltla NlW8 • IATUNlAY HtGHT Holl. Burt Reynold• Gueet: Anne MUtrily. IJ KOJAK K~ turns to an ex- eddlc:1 tor 11e1p -'*' lie IMrna that Illa nac>Mw la on dNg9 end may be lnvol\oed In a mutder. • ~ .IBffMONS A ~ to a balling INllc:h llurnblM Geotge'• big mouth Md matc:Nng • aAHR>AO AHO ION Fred ecllemet 10 get Lamoni 10 merry • distant c:ou9in In Ula llopM QI obtaining lw dowry • DICK CAVETT Gueet. Tho Puente. ID 1H11DE WA8HIHCJTON (l)MOVtE * *'"' "Tiie Shining · ( 111801 Jeck N1Cllot1on. Slleltey Duvall Olrected by Stentey Kubrick. A fOfrnet acll<>Olteeclw hired u a wlnl., caret8ker !Of' a remote. an<I apparently llaunted, Colofado hotel, 11 snowbound tlw• wllh hi• wf'I• and c:leinloyw\1 young eon 'R' ~ ~~ e (I) Q'_l!MC'f Qulnc;y triM 10 prove INI • •omen'• d••lll we1 cauaed by lier llu.O.ncf a rf9Mled beetlnga (RI D QITOMOHT Holl Johnny Ceraon o-.ta. Franklyn Ajaye, Lynn Redgrave, Tom Henka e o A8CNEW8 NIOKT\JHE CD THI ODO COUPLE Fell11~•-• c... of lnaomnl• and Oecet ltlM 10 llelp him • LOw. AMINCAN l'TYl..a "Love And The Gelsh•" Nom>en · • wife walk• out on lllm, then return• une•- pectedfy • KCET NEW88EAT: CAUFOANtA CONQMS8K)NAl AUOAT ID CAPTIOHB> A8C NlW9 , 1:46 {%) MOYE" * e • "Tiie Big Reel One" ( 1980) LM Marvin, Mane Hem1M A tough Anny --OMnl leads lour young, lneJIPerlenced recruit• Into Iha "'°* IC»-fllled Irey of l(orid WW II <:Oml>e1 'PG' 1~· SHANANA GUM11· The Couters •o YEGM A get>g of kllen plan lo u. 45 be1Nng l!llli rno<lels In • hldeoul adlefne (RI 11 MOVla TUBE TOPPERS KTLA 8 7 : 30 -.. Family Plot." Tonaue·fn·cheek thrillt!r directed by Alfred Hitchcock. KN BCD 8:00 .. Fame." Bruno falls in love wiili a girl with an incurable Illness KNXT B 9:00 "Hunchback <>f Notre Dame.·• New adaptation of the classic Victor Hugo tale See photo at left . KNBC D 10 :00 "Hill Street Blue& ... Captain Furillo and Joyce Davl'nµort get into a courtroom battle. bailff ptff)8fM a IUfprlM celr• Ql) 8IJC 18 A THMl!.- L.ETTE1' WON> Man-on-1he-11ree1 re1ponNt and ••pert opinions •• UMd In 11118 documentary lo 11n- -of .... rno.t-Nked QUMtlOnt on Ille aubfeet ol MJluelity OMOYIE • • • ..... "l • C-oe Aull FOllM" ( 111711) UgO Tog· nazzl, Mlc:hel S«tlllllt A nlghlclub OWn« lrlee 10 P<ec>et• "" lr--211• IOY&r f()f 8 Ylltl by Piil IOft'I llenoee' 1 fetller , th• mor.,. c:ommlMloner ot Franoe 'R' 11:11) D QI l.ATI NIGHT WITH Do\VIO l.ETT!.AMAH G~ll. Jolln Canoy. Joe Flaherty, Don Herbert (Mr Wlutdl. 8 MOVIE • •..., "The High Comm11- eloner" (11188 I RO<I Taylor. Chrlltopner Plummer An Auetr•ll•n policemen encounlera lntrlgu. and murder .mile on uaign.. rnenl In London • IHOEPEHOENT ~NlWI (C)uow * * * 14 "T"' Cet And The Cenety" ( 111311) Bob Ho9f. Paulette Goddard In Of'<let to c:o4lect l'*r lnl'letllanc. e fllmlly muat eperwl Ille (It~ haunlad llOuM **'Ao "Paplllon" (111731 s1.... ~. 0us11n Holtman A pelr of Oevll's lllend convict• "*'° 1helr ume _J*nnlng their eacaoe 12:40 8 (I) THE &AINT Simon'• -Ch tor • glf'I'• mlaalng b<otller leads him lnlo the wOff<I ol Intern•· tlOnel <lrug smuggllng 1:00 ID MOV1E * e * "Tiie Secret OJ Sen· I• Vl110f'la" ( 111611) Anll!ony Oulnn. Anna Magnani Itel· Ian Vlllegt<1 band loOflllel lo Pf-I ,,.,. occupying NuJa from conf11e1111ng one million bOlllel or wine • MOVIE * • "Manhunt In Tiie Jun· gle" ( 11158) Robin Hug'*'. lull Al\lere:z "" .. p1or., ICOUr'I the IUngiee ol 8r az11 In -Ch of • milling eiq>ed!Oon of go1<1-..--.,, M08 MOVIE * * "Twlijglll People' {tll75) John ~. Pit Woodell A meroen8')' II ebduc:le<I by • pec:ultar L~people 1:26 {'i) MOVIE •**'I\ "Tiie Eleph•nt Man" 11980) John Hun, Antllony Hoplllnl A dedi- cate<! phy1lcl1n lakH under his wing • llorrll>ly <lelOfmed man wtloM Ill• untH tllen h.O l>Mn span• In dlMC> trNk ••lllbltlona 'PG' 1:3011 EHTERTAIHMENT TOHIOHT Pan 2 of •n lnletVlew wllll Richer<! Bun on QINEW8 1:46 {%)MOVIE • • "Tiie lncredlble Shrinking Women" ( 111801 lily Tomlin. Chlll'IM Gro- din A houMwtte finds 11 herd lo cope when IN 8Ud6enly beglnl to thrlnk In Iii• 'PG' 1:508 NEWI 2:00!= * *'°' "Portnoy 1 Com-plalnl" ( 11172) Richer<! Benlarnln. Karen Bladt. 8aMd on the "°".. by Philip Roth A young J.w.. 1111 boy recounts 11111 oft., llllartou1 and al'llorou1 ad\lenlUtM to 1111 pey<:hie- 11111 OMOW * * •• "Altered Stal•" ( 111801 WllHam Hurt, 8lalr Brown A Hlll'Yar<I ldfn.- lltt'• genetic t1NC1ure ia lltwe<I wMtl lie oonduct• mlnd ... •P•ndlng uperl- rnen•• Wltll leol&Uort tank• end ~ llalluclno- 2'..21 ·~ "Terrllorl•I Women" (11178) :t:IOD MOVIE * • ·~ "Affair In Havana" (111571 Jolln c-ve1 ... Raymond Burr. A trl•ngu- lar love atfelr reaull1 In murder. .., MOVIE * * "8100<1 Mania" ( 11170) Peter Carpenter. Mat1• Aregon A grM<ly. iplteful glrl wl'IO 11 an•lou• lo col- lect lw deoeaMd father'• money ._ lw ph~ boyfriend In tile ptOCMI 2:408 HEWa S:OI (JI) DICOY8: flOUCE UNOIJt COV8'GE.OME QNNE.DY L.DOK8 AT NEW YON< CtTY8 ~IJll«a CNMEUNrra. a: 18 (%) MOYll * * '"' "Cerny" ( tlllO) Jodie Foat•. Gery ~ An •dventurou1 young -join• • cemlvel trouc>e and lellfM abOul t,,. hidden emooona and tru11ratl0n1 behind ,,.,. -1-11~ Ol IN performer.. 'R' 1:30 (_I) lllZAAAE Jolln B~ thaw• you tilings •l•enger then truth. larger than Ille. 1n<1 zanier than any1111ng you've eYer -S:36 CD MOVIE * *'I\ "Tiie lefl·Handed Gun" (111581 Peul Newman. Liii Miian A yOU111ful BOly lh• 1<1<1 avenges his emplOyer'• 0..111 end '"'" MC8PM 10 Maoero 4:008 ..ov1E ''l'M Sell My life" ( te.1) Michael Whelen, Rose HOl>llf1 (C)MOVIE *'*'A "Shoot Tiie Sun Do.om" (1N0) CN111apn. Wellcan. M•got l<l<lder In 18341. ~ dilpetwt• mis- "" .,.. .,, def "'8'> 10 -Ch tor burled go1<1 PG' •*~II• Shining" ( 11180) Jeck Nlcllolson. Sllelley Duvall Olrec1ed by Stanley Kubrick. A ronner ICl!oofteecher hired 81 a winter c.retaJt• fOf' • remote. and apperentty ll1unted, Coloredo llOtel. 11 lnowbound lher• with 1111 '*''• and clalrvoyant young '°" 'A' DMOVIE • • "Olll•n<:e" (11175) Paul Ben)1mln, Jam" Woods An Army "'V9llfll suffering • mid-lit• en.II lindl 1111 Ufe complicated by an unhappy marrlege . R' 4!08(8)MOW • • •.,., "BtNk• Morent" ( tll80) ~ ... o WOOdwwd. Jedi Thorrc>aort Australi- an• c:onacrlpled to fight on Engtand'I Ilda In Iha Boer W 111 decide to fight t,,. Boer guerilla on ,,,... own letml ~· "" . .., .... ... ,,, CHANNEL LISTINGS * * * "Popeye" (111801 Robin Wllllema. Slleltey Owlllt Wlllle -Ching fOf Illa la!'-, Iha ap!nadl-eet- lng ullor vlllt1 • qulllnl llamlel where he plc:k I up I loundllng and a lklnny ~,_,'PG' Cl)erzAAM '* * 1~ "Wiiiard" (1971) Brue. Oavlaon, Erneat Borgnlne. Al\ unbalanced young men train• en """Y of rate to deatroy 1111 _. mlM JOHN DARLING •o , ... t;.: - , .. : 8 l<NXT ICBSl D l(NBC <NBC> 9 KTLA (ln<I I tD KABC (ABC) D l<FMB <CBSI I) KHJ·TV (Ind I e KCST (ABC> • ICTTV (Ind I e KCOP TV llnd.I e KCET IPBSI • ICOCE !PBS> •· 0 Hunchback ,fl ... ... . ' .... ..... .. to air tonight. onKNXT 0 On TV ! Z·TV H HBO C IC1nema•) •JI IWQR) NV , NY llll (WTBSI t IESPNI S (Showtlmel 0 Soolllght • John 8ynet llhoww you llllnge 1tranget tl\an lrutll, larger tllen Nie. encl ianlfr then anything you'119 ....., -· DMOVIE • • • •;, "Soldier Of Orange" (111711) Edlntd Fo•. Suun Penl\allgon • .... OOUQlA8 Coho1t· Tom Wop11 GUMta: L.cMM Mandrell, R.C. Bannon, Ptll O'Brien, Katen Henoer.on. Mu Maven. The Big Blue Wreciklng C<-. • LOVI. AMINCAN l'TYLE "Love And Tiie Comedy T..,,," A deadline conlllct1 wllll • wedding date. "Love And Tiie Cake" A By at 9 tonight Anthony Ho pk ins , become the c hurch's FRED ROTllENBERG Tbl5 classic book, set Em my-award winner bell-ringer. ,,. .. T............ . 1 h p I f h ' l d f N E w y 0 R K 10 St century ar a or is portray a or Hopkins nee ed Ive Passloo, injustice, good and written by Victor Hitler in "The Bunker," hours of make-up work and evil _ infred.lenta H u c o , b a a b e e n la the latest Quasimodo. be f o r e ea c h d a y • a aoap operas create produced for the movie Abandoned Ha baby at shooting to achieve the t b r 0 u • h e v e r ., theaters three times. the gates of Notre Dame n e c es a a r y d i s . ~ Lon Chaney, Charles Cathedral, Quasimodo Ugurement But it contrivance lma11Dable Lauabton and An•""on was taken i n aa· a t · t th -are the euential w Y you can ee pas e elements of "The Qulnn each played self-serving public ugliness -and this tale HUDcbbac"" of Notre Quasimodo, whoae 1eature of charity by Is certainly not for Dame,'' ; televlaton 1ro11ly deformed body Dom Claude FroUo, the everyone -then the sensitivity and kindness. ~ belles the 1entleneu mo v l t '1 v l l la l n . beauty of the beast liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaidiiiaiiiplltioniiiiiiociiKNXTiiiiiii( 2ii>-_•.ndiiiiico•m•pa•ua••iooiiiiiiiilnaiiiiiildiiieiii. iiiiiiiiiQiiiuiii11mlmmodoiiiiiiiiii:IJ'Oiiiiiiwiii1mu~p~toml'lhllinea throu1b ln h la Norman Rosemont, maste r o f the TV remake with bis . "All Quiet on the Weatern Front," "A Tale or Two Cities" and "Les Miserables," considers his · "Hunchback of Notre Dame" closest to Uu10'1 ori1lnal 1811 epic. For example, when Laucbtob'a film waa shot In the late ieto., tbe· 1 f 1 t J 1 • , 1 1 • 1 t 11 r. r 1i1 uaot~ .. I (549r tf '\e C..,. A11a ....... , 1 I " .. ORANGE COUNTY1 PREMIERE ptu1 l'rfda11'• ,o.,,, .... ,,, • ., ... Ul(Z)••""e...i~ (tttt) a.., "91d, Tf#fttffli lM Janee. A ~and a Oowft-on. .... ludl boXff ,,.. ...... hMd .... In Mllfdl of • ,_ -... . lclO (I) ••• "!Ong lolo- mon' 1 MlnH" ( IHO) Deborah Ken, 81-art Otano-. A ~ ...,.,.., "'** • petty ""°""' OWkeet AIYlca In ...,di of • -·· huetMlnd. e:oo ~ ..... "Ounoen'• World'' (11110) Lany T*· M, Don Monti!. A youne boy wtlo loYM ..... enco ... nlert Ot>•lfCIH '*'*' clMllng wtlh humenl U he 111\IMtlgalM Iha '*-of M exploelon Mel' •net~~"'' ........ Plnctdfl Grand Pn.11" Anlmeted A,_ ,_ CM deelOfl le .... ~ -•.«iMaaQI•. • t>rllllff\I ftlffhtnlc declde9 to build en ~ better redf'CI INChlne and ~ ....... .__.. ·a· 7:30 (C) • * "OMth Car On The Fr-.," ®••· ..... ··n..~1 ...,. .. (1980) John Hurt. Al\thony Hoplllna. A dedi- cated phy1lclan Ilk•• under Illa wing • llOrtll>ly d9tormed man '*"°" llfw untll then had been apftlt In CtiMp freak uhlblllon• 'PG' D • •• "Brotller, can You Spera A Dime?" ( 11176) Documentary Olrec1e<I by Phftlloe MOf e The lmpec:t of Ille ~ llOl'I upon different Mg- ment1 or Ill• In "'-Ice <Iffier• frOfl'I the everege -111ng """ lO blo-•lme Ctlm6nell. t:OO(I) *** "T~ToA Bed Man" ( 111641) J- ~. W.. Peci-Two coooei n.o people •ltffn91 lo oon\llnce a rcincflet to ltoP """° "**- t:aO • • • "JungM Gents" ( 11164) Bo•ery Boy1. Pet11C* O'Moore When h ta ~eo 11\at one of IN Boye can lc>c9te dle- mon<b by wnel, tlley W• _,, 10 Alrlce CC) e * • "Tiie P-d la Courage" ( tllel) ~ Bogatde, Maru Pettchy A World Will' 11 Btttlall officer, Cherlel Cower<!. repeated· ly OUtwfll the Na:de who •1ternp1 10 hold him .. • .. ., prieonw D • *'"' "S9Nrl.1" ( 111811 Frank Lartgella, l aatey· Anne Do.om A ruthleU bleck market antlqulllM Egyplologilt frOl'l'I dlacov· eting tile wher"eaboull of • ~ ltetue Ill& ,... permitted 10 ...._ 'PG' tC>.00 (JI) ••• "The Competi- tion" (1MO) ~d Orey· lua, Amy IMng. Two pl.en- 191• at • San Frandeco musk competition find 111a1 lheit io... for MCtl ot'-conftlc:I• with ,,_ prol•ulon•I ambitions 'PG' ())•••"C~" (111410) 8111 Murrey, Ro<lney Oengetflel<I. The clement· ed orounOe-«aeper or a •••nky c:ounlry club Wll9fl wer agalnat Ille gophers Inhabiting his turt. 'R' 10:30 e • • "Santa Fe StampecM" (11138) John W•yne, Rily Corrigan Tiie TlvM Meeqult-1 try lo a..r • oowt>oy eoouae<1 or murdering • gold l>'oepec:. tor. 11:30 CC) * * "[)eye Of Fury" Nerreted by Vlno9nt Price An ~Ion of Ille cHllng --of dMtll and ~ -ltud-led. . .............. . Mcnnl" (1M0) Edwetd Woodwwd. "-* Thornp- times would not permit a priest being the villain, so another character wu created. No such limitation exists in 1981, and Roaemont's production prov i d es greater emph1ai1 on Dom '°" .............. _ _.... fd .. """ .. .,...., • llldt "' .. ._ WW ......... lie ... ~ ... a...., '*"'-· 1JlOI ...... ''Ccwlllot Of Wl1191" (1tll) KlefOll ¥oote. Jotwl GreiftOn. A O'GUPof ........... ' to prOMIOI a pn1C1iout bH ~ "°"' ... AA'. wNdl _ .. tO -tM ~ •• rodltl·telttnf .... •••• ''Ttlll Pirate" ( IMI) Judy Gartand. O.W l(4lly A ~ w.nd g9f ,... In lo..-wtlh • Mnd- -fCltOt wtlo .. the pert of her llcwo, M.adc The II.cit • ··~ .. Nof1Nm~· IUll" (ttMa) EnOI '¥In, Jule 81eho9. A lftOUfttle relellt .... ly combe the Cenadlall wildltl'ftf tn ...,di of 1 Had.....,._ CZ>••·· .. ~ .... (1M0) AoOet1 De NWo, ~ Morierty. 8o1Clnog ~,,..La Mona'• aptitude for vlolenc:e brtnoa '*" -In IN mg but dW"C)I• 1111 rw- aonal life • A" 1l00 Ct> •• "O..ttl Car Oft TheF-.y'' (JI) ....... 'The Jazz Singer'' ( 1te0) ..... 0191nond, Lw- ,..,_ OIMar A Hew Yorll canlOf tirMk1 with fairnly 1r adklon In Illa <leelr• to be • P09 rnu.ic iter 'PG' Cl)*•• "Tribute To A Bad Man" (11158) J- Cagney, Ir-Papa. T..o concierned people •ttempt to cono;tnce • rancher to lloP kllllnt Nlllers 1:*> D • •,.... "Tiie Man Who s-Tomorrow" ( tN 1) Ooc:iuMentary Nertatecl by Or.on W.... Foot9 of -'-lie !>'edic:ted and dtemetlc: ~tlonl of "" Ille comptiM ttlll IOOk .. tile t 7~1Uty FIWldl phy9iden, Ulro6oger end ln)'8tiC Mldlel <le NoeUa- Oetne. knOwn -~ ~·PO· blO C'I * * ..... "Tiie Dey The FWI C-Out" (1M7) Cendk:• Bergea, Tom Courtenay. Two pllota -Cfl ror • loet atomic: bomb dr099fd ,_ e GtMll rMor1 llland Ct:J * '*'"' "The T.il&.lng Parcel" ( 11178) AnlfNllecl. A young glt1. • perroc Md a toed mu•t Ollefcome a hot<le ot ..,.. ..,,ant9 to ,,.. • waard ·o· (8) * • * • "Reeufrec- llon" (11180) Ellen Bumyn, Sem Sllepel'd All• a ,_ t11a1 auto ecdOenl. • wom- an lln<ll 11\at Ille hM IN •hlllty •(! "HI ~e !!:le:! !: J*'Mc:Uted bee-... of her refuMI lo claim • dMne ln""9nQe 'PG' II * e \t "Heidi" ( 11179) A young git! .. bnlugM "'°"' ti. orendlatlw'• Alplr'9 home 10 hi In Ille ctty 4:00 CC> •• 'it "Ounc:en'• Wor1d" {111711) l.erry T~ ... Don Marni. A young boy wtlo IOVM _,...,.. encountere ob11acle1 when dMllng wttll """""" U he lr>VMtlgetM IN ~ Of en exploelon near •neture~ 'G' 4:*> D ••• "PQP9Y9" (19801 Robin WINem•. Shelley Duvllll. WNle Nel'clllng for Ills latlw, Ille~· Ing Miiar o;lelt• a qt.ielnl hamlet where lie P'C*• up • foundling and 1 1ldnny ....._.,_,,'PG' (%) ***• "T-"(19711) NNl..... Klnakl, Pel• Arth. The d-.,ghl• of a poor Engll1h termer beootnM Ille vtc1lm ot lw len""'f • ...... lone end lw -tie.lty. 'R' 5-.30 CC> ..... Libel" ( 1959) OIMa <le Hevlllend. Olttr Boger<le A men ~ to !>'OW he hM ~ llbeled but Nina Illa -whert he llH trouble ~detella. Claude. tbe archdeacon driven to criminal and 1Qt1·1plrttual acts by bis lust for Esmerelde. Derek Jacobi, star ol ••Masterpiece The· ater11 ··1. Claudrus " lmbuea Dom Claude witb an ob1e11l•e •blacknea. ' - 11 'I I I I ' 11 ' I I ' l ~-..... -· ------_:. __ ..... ___ _ / fltnfftOUt auttMIU lfAMll ITATaMt"" Tll• t111ewl111 per1tft I• dat"t MIN .. •: D•ACO l'•OOUCTIONI, Uff lelllaAMA-.C.. .. ......_CA tlU7. DAVID ICOn GOODSELL. UJt ..,. ...... A-, C. .. MIM. CA "'"· Tiil• llullMsa •• ""91Ktecl 111¥ "' ~..-. l)olw .. s. 0..-11 Tlllt "'*"-'I wM fl led wllll IN (~ftly c: .. ,... .. Or•not ~y ... ........... ,.,..,, l"ulllt"-1 OrtftOt Coetll Deity l"itot, F•. •,ti, It, U. IW SJ.6.a , . .. ~· l"ICTtf10UI eu11••ss ...._STATeMa•T Tiie 1011owl119 pertOft Is dot"' lllltiMH•: P'ltAHKLIN •EAL TY, USO E, Co••I Hlt11wey, Coron• 0.1 Mer, Coll"'rllle "'25 c11r•1tot1Mf e .. 1 H•so"· Ult Meu Drlw. s.tlte ""'· Calltor"I• 91707 01111 ..... r E Hobtorl Tiiis ,..._ wu lllecl wlUI ~ c-ty c1tr11 of Or•nee COUlllY °" ,_,., 12, tta. ...... P'*lllNd Or.,.. Coetl Diiiy Piiot. J1n. u.11. 21, F.o. 4, t"2 2J"G 111CT1nous eus1•1u NAMa ITATIMa•T Tiie fellowlno perton 11 dolnt bull"'""' FASHION FORTY L TO .• llJH Broollllwle ._.. U, Feunteln V1tlly, CA '170a. 011¥er W. llrw., trl1S 8roo .... urtt Apt. U , F-.lrl Velley, CA.,,_, Tlllt llulllllH h <Oft .. cted bY I llmllied-1~ Oll...,.W.llrMN Tlllt '*'""*'' *" !tied wltfl trie (OUtlty Cle"'"' 0r-. Couftty °" J ..... It, lttt. ,.,.,. Pwllll"'9d Or-Coelt o.u., Piiot, !'!'· 21, 29, F.C.. 4: 11, 1'92 <. HM2 flKTITlOUt aUMHU ...... ITATSMalfT Tiie lellewlftl "rHft II oel"t .............. , AOUIWIUSI Mllftt4'11110 Co., JCM.6.a P-ll•, C-.. Mete, CA 92621. P•AHI( CHA•LES LeRUSSA, uot 1t•<11-• A"•n .... 01td•11 G,.ft,CAtlMS. Tllll ~ IS <--by '" '"""'"""'· F.C.1..111- Till• ... -w• llltcl wlUI IM c~~~~c:-:;=-~~~.; ••• ».tm. Pt11m Pv111""9cl Or ..... C..-Oelly Pftec, J•. n. ,._ 4, II, 1', tm 4fl41 ' .. • C· . - -·'. ! --It-& ".. .... -• .. -... --.... ~ •• 'I ---.--Plll----1111l-------·i-------.... ---111a------~1-----.... ----... -------1 ,~·---·-flll.C----mta--------·F----.... ~...;;;;;;; ... --.-----. • .... IKTI110111 aU1tM•A - "°"CS ttl fMd •AMI tTATIIMNf AMDPUCIOtl Tiie Ml'"'illt flWMllt ,,. ....... ~llUC MU Ott ._""' u · •ltlOllll... \. & * .. A.TNllUHll", ltt N~ ....... .n N••'41rt (enltr Ori"•• H••••rt NOTIC• II H9•Hv OIVIN 9MI htCh CA ... (llerter ·~ 1.H.11119 ~.. 1iuc A WITTINtl•O. '" Wiii 11e• • "'*" ... tf W. ... tew41\e Nt•"'''' C."ler Orio, N•w11trl -.s<tl ... ~· ....,.,,, el tM ~.CA .... ._,, tf 19:• A.#.., M ,,..,_., ti. (. "ONAl.0 1.IVINOIT°", lit 1•, el IJM ..,_,.IA 0.-.. ,..._,, NewjMlrl (efll., Ori••, New .. rl L .. A111tltt. Celller"le tOUS. hKll,CA ...... 111 ... C1WI tf n. ~ wlll Mtfll IAH09'A LIVIHOITOH, llt eU1• A.M. It Miki~. NeWf"I Ce"ler Orin, New"rl ~ tw•1 ......... teecfl.CA ..... Ml'*\1 tt1 le.II* Tlll1 llutlMtt h <'"91KtM by e MIM!Ulll 161.WJ teM,.•I ~- MIMH.•ltl ma.. Irk A. Wlt*"'t,_ Mll'IOltl 101 ta11Jnl Tlllt ......_. ... ttlM wht\ IN MlllOll• »t 1...-. C~fttY Cltr'll 9f Of'M .. ~ftty t11 MlMlt• •1 •••an ,. ... t, •• MIMltdlt 16'1,. MAU•OW, N••it, LAW Ofl.PfCU Ml...ittl• t.U.M CUllNllMMAMA OIH•, l..C. Ml...ita•tt ttitUff 0.. ~..._., ..... I• ' Mln9ttUM tQAUJ _,~ ....... .. Ml...ite 110 tUttt '--A ....... CA_, fllC'flnout •UllNI.. fllCTITIOUI •u1t•IU Mln9tld10 ,..... fllallt MAM91TAft.MtlMT ....,..,TATIMllMT MJMfte llUTC: 1'107' 1"111141"'91 Orlltl09 C..fl o.lty ....... TIW .., ........ --· •r• HI~ Tiie 1011 .. 1,. --· ... "'"' Ml ..... ell1'TC I.... P .. ,,,11,lt,U,lm jJt.a MAMM•: ""'""'" c-N~ •00..112 M<CA ..... Y WI.IT l TO .• ,... c .. w flAINT • aoov s.+o"· MIW MN> Oot"" _.,. -r Mtlft ,,, .. ,, ~·· "'· Hllftllftt\eft INC .• '~ Qlurcll SI,, Coe .. Mele. CA Miit MOO ·~ ..._ "911K he<ll, Cellfomt..,._ •Hl1. Mole11 .,.,.,. ~ .. ...,, M. lftlllft, cao ...... ttw c .. w PAINT .. t()OV lHOl>S, .. ., .. --Ill •u~ fllCTtTIOUI IUllNIU 0-rel ,.,,,.,, ~ "*"· IM. INC ... Celllonll• <~'419'1, ltsJ A .•• Oklt... 121,. MAMS ITATIMa•T • c:.i ...... --··· .... Melfi Oiiweii SI., c ... -·CA mn A .•. OklltllO •u.t Tll• lollowl"O ••no11 h dOll\t Sl,..1,t."'91M,HllMlft9111ftle«ll. Tlltf....,....ltbeinoHftdwtledlW s. .. 1111t0 t10t0'20I IMltlMu•t: Hewer• Senlt.uft, G•ner•I • corpot'•ll•n Sevin 1• JID21'1f0 CLUTCH I fNTlo•P•ISE:s. ltSJ "'''""' s.o ..... tn¥nlm•ftt•, t'11 ....... Wed$-1h, S.¥111.. J,_,_ Allenl• .llW .. Sul ...... Hllftt~ NorUI >nl '''"'· ..._.. ••• ArllOftl Pre•~dMI T-llle 10 nt OGl$6 ~ .. ell, CA '2M. lit004. Tllla ,,...,.,.... llled <Miil IM e-ty ,.,....,._. Wlel......,. Law,.n•e M•C11t •l1e•"· tttll lt...,,M.Sn\1111 Cl-el Or-G--4l' 9ft O.C. ti, "•Y•I '°"°° 4ntJ»j WHmt Lft HIMtl ... tOll 8N<ll c. Tiie. "'""'*"II ... wttll ... ,_y ,,., ,.,., .... "oyalC°'900 itff~ ~. ' ' CterliotOf-.~tftf'e-yt, • 1.9.M. · Slteclt'lc II )lfff44 Tllll bWtMSI It ~ondll"ted by Ill 1"1. Pllllllllhlcl 0r"9 ~ Oefllf AllOt, Mbc..._ "''""'"""· Pitz* J•"· 14, 21, •. Peb. 4, 1'82 HMt Elect....,dioalf'mf -0.. Mlir -l.twren':e Mc:Cllt•Morl Put.II.-OrtnQI CMll Deity Ple.t, ~ 44$1, 5'riol NO A101 Tlllt ~ •• fllecl wllll ttw Fetl. 4, 11, 11, U, t• SnG. £ C 0 Comp.ii., T • rrn I 111 I c ..... ty Clfftl of Or-Covllty °" Jeft. 1--------------Com~ MDdll MD, $iorlll NO 11. tt, tttt wlUI malllle ~ wftll r'KlllU< ... 1nclc...,...rwtt11-WQP1y. 011pllcellllr, A.8. Okk, -JIO, S.rl•I Ho. IJ113 C ull ••ttsl.,, A 0 S 20, 20 Termllltl. SKiii Ha. 21WO S.ICI ~ wlll be told '" '" "AS IS" -ttlOll. '-"'-•r Equtpm..rt LHtlno Corp. r-•"'" '"' rteht to bid °" '"Y of the OllOw llemt TIW Pl'IKeeds of -Mle •Ill be .,..iled IOWMd Ult - -u-r le-I of Mid penonel -rty, 11Wr first Oedu<tl"O 1111 ••P•"H' of ,..tekl,,., slo<lng. -P"'"' for ule. Hven•••no -wm"' ""' ",_..' pr...,y, IMludl .. 111111 Mt lltnlled ... etlorneys' ftH. en• 0111er l•tll . .,,.""" ..,., .. , PubtlMecl 0r"'ll' Coetl Delly Piiot. 1--------------Jan. 21, 29, F-. •. 11. ttt2 ~ fllCTITIOUS IUSIHHS NAMa ITATeMaNT Tiit 10110••111 PertOft h dolno bo.ttlMHM'. 11) C.OU NT•Y MUNCH'N or (bl MUNCH'H COUNTRY, ll?tt 811<11 lt¥d., Hllfllll'ltlorl IHCll. Celltornll t2M7 1•11 """ktln 81lrd. 6000 Lot Arcot, Lant 8Mcll. Cellfornl• toeu Tlllt ..... IMfl It COllOllCl9d by e geneftl -"'""'IP.. 1111 P Bllrd PIC'tlTIOUI eUllNHS N.tllliW STATSMAINT I Tiie fellowl"9 PffMllf ett 4Mln1 ~-­L • w PA•THeltSHll' II, no Newport Center Ori••· Newport IH<ll, CA t2'60. ERIC A WITTENBERG. 110 Newport Center Orh•, H••PO" le.Kii, CA '26'0. C. ltONALO LIVINGSTON, 120 N••PO•I Center Ori¥•. Hewport 1 .. c11, CA '2'60. SAHD•A LIVINGSTON. 120 Newport Ce11ter Orlwe, N••PO•t IMCll, CA '26'0 CLAUOETTE SHAW, 41 H•rbor • k19e, Newport heal, CA t2'60. ORUESKIN 6 IUNNAGE A Lew C«pwotlOfl By· ROHALOJ. GRUESKIN, Allor,.y fot Cller1er £....,._ L .. llllt Carp. Tllll tlel_. •• llled •1111 Ille Cw111y Cltf'll or Ofan .. Co11nty 011 Jll"11ery 12. lta. Tiii• bllthMU " cond11ct•d by •• ,,, ___________ _ PlllMI"'*' 0r"'ll' Coetl Delly Pltot, Feb 4.tta ~ STATaMS..,01' AtAMOOMMa•TOP UH OP fltC:TITIOUS eus111au •AM• THE WARMINGTON GROUP. 16.Sft H ... A~•""· INlllt, C1llto<Ne '2114 The Flclltlollt 8utl"•u N•m• "t.frecl II -*" flltd In Or-C-ty on~S.t ... Tfle lull W¥m1119!on C...-etlon. • Cetltornl• corpor•UOll, o" MecArtll11r 1~1.,,.,., S11lt• JIM, N .. port a.di, Clliforftla ,_ Se""' Sendllftt & AU« .. ltl, IM , • Cellfomle cor"POBllon. 16.Sft Hile Aw-. ll'VIM, c.i-..11 t1714. Tlllt ~ •• Ctftdll<IM by I ......... ~p Tiie 9uo Werml"9len C..--Mion E.G. w.,ml"tton, Jr., .. ,.,,. PulllllNd 0r"'ll' Co11I Delly Pllol. Ji n 14, 71, •. Feto. 4, 1"2 27~12 PICTITIOUS IUSl•aH NAMI STATaMIHT Tiie followl"O person 11 dolnQ bllliNU es: IAI INFO•MATIOUE SERVICES 181 FRANCOISE IMAGES, Ht Sy-y .._, eo. .. -... CA '1t27. Fre1"ol• E. Frl .. la, 341 Sy-y L-. c:.to ""'"'·<;A mv Tlllt -.neu It r:onclvted by an '""'"'""''· Francolw E. Frigo!• Thll .i.i.n-t -flied wllfl the C-ly Cltrll of Or ..... County Oft JIWI .•. ,.., ""*" P111Ml"'9CI Or"'ll' COltl 0.lly Piiot, Jal\. 21, », F• 4, 11, ttti _.., I ..-···~· Ertc;AW~rv Tllll -wet llled wttll IN Cou11ty Cten. of Or-COUlllY °" Ftb. I, 1"2. MAZI •ow. "°"···LAW Oflfllcas cu• .. IHMAM& G•O•N, ••c. OM~"-...... ,. mtC.-.,YP .... a• U.A ...... ,CA""7 fll1D11 P11bll1'*' 0r"'ll' Coe1t Diiiy Pleo., Fetl. 4, II, II, JJ, 1'92 Stt-12 fllCTITIOUI IWll•eu •AMS ITATl.Ml•T Tiit lollowlnt perso" It dol"' .............. AUTO ACCESSORY P•o. m Alber1 Place, C.U Mttl, CA "'21. Ot,,lo Hewerd Ftnkel11tl11, 2tt Al~ Plocl,Colte-.CAn.27. Tlllt bwl.-s It ·--try Ill lnclMdllll. O...ICI H. Flll!lflll.in Tlllt Ml""'*'I WM flled wlUI IM c-ty C-ofOr-c-.ty °" Jlft "· 1"2. P1111JI P\11111 ..... Or .... C.oMI Oelly Pltot. Jen. 21, a, FML 4, 11, 1'12 sn.-, • fllC'fiTiaut ..,.. .... llMllllTAffMll•T Tiit ,.. ... ,,,. .. r-ert Hl"I llteft1'1°"9~1•111 ••-•: NAM9 IT.trfeM9•T AO 'TICH. 111 W. M•-. """ Tiie tollewlft11 fl9f'tolll .,.. llOI ... .llN, GllllwN1.no1 ............ , Oltllel Hermlft ...... 211 W TH f l"•tVATe •VAULT 01' ~.'-'lel>M.CMl,...,,.."1t7 HUH Tl NOT°", 112t l"~lfk Cotti OlflMI ....,_"-'Jr., SIQ Hl91tW1y, Mllnl ............ II. C:A ftlMI. Hell AWftUI, Apl ••. HllfttlllOIOft Glellft•L. Oeal+lart, 7':21 le•worthY ... ,11. Cellferlllo""' Drive, "llftll"flOrl .... 11. Collton>I• Tlllt MlllHI h <-<l•d l>Y • .,... .. -.. ~ L-l'e<I'• 0 , ktlley, ..., Ha,_ Oenll4 H ·- l(ey Clr•te, H11lltillOlllft ••••II, CA Tiii• ---... ,. ... •1111 , .. n..e c-•" Cl-Of °''" .. COlilllY "" llll1 ~ ..... ta •ofld11•tec1 by 1 J•-'Y 12, 1"2. """"~'· '---• O. SC'"*Y oe-L.~ ..,.,,, l"ulllltflM C> .... Ceell Oelly "''""' Je11. 14, Jt, ». ,._ 4, 1"2 MG Tlllt ...,._ ... fl ... wltll IN Ctul\tlf OeftL fll Or._ C:.-ty "' Jt11. ~ lt, 1'12. .. ...... -------....,..-----~ ....... 0r-. Coetl 0.llY l"llol, -•ti Jtfl tt. n, l'A. 4, It, tm -.c lllCTITICIUI iwM•au lltAMa IT ATl .... •T ,. Tiit fott•••rie ,..,, .. 11 dol"I MltiflHttt: 111.AHGHO MIUION Vl~O. 2111 I ()rte .. Hlttw;fy, 5'11 J\Otft (lpl1Cr-• CMlforlll1t»7S .A11tllofty • Moho. G•11•r1I l'llfl--,,.. 5"' JWft eom...... .• tlmll ... ~. Ho. S L.Oal- L.one, N-19-11. Cellfornl1•as1 Tlllt .,.,.,,.., 11 Cllftdll< i.d by • llmltecl ...n-lfllp ~· Mobo '°'°"ovm· caAMe• •1•oeaatA••UM --,. 5M1 •PlllC:'lfrl'i,,J ... -• WWI-' ....... ,.. .. . TMftlll .. 1,._,..,._ .. ... ..... ... '"'J.M. c:o., .... u ..... Clrclt, ,_....,. V•flrf, Cllll ...... ""'· , ... ,...,.di ..,...., .... u ... , Cl~ f' .. •t•I" Yellly, c......,,._ """ ........ •'' rtrt .... I~ ..... ......... " "" .. .......__ ........ .. c-er °""' .,, ~ c..-• ' ...... . ~ ._ ...... er.. CMlll Dlilfr,.. ...................... t '\t• ~ ........... °''"" c.14 Deity"""" Jtft. 21, 2f: F-. 4, II, tm .. PICTITIWI tut4"1M NAMelTAftMalfT Tiit lollutlftt penon II Hllft ...... _ ... , THI~. 2tn •ov•I l'elm °''"• "'°' c. eo.u M9M. Cell....,.• .,.,. Fra..cl• L. Sc.,..., nn """ """' Dfl¥e. Ho. C. Colll -Cotltwlllt '262' Thh _ ...... It con411<tecl IW Ill l""I•'"'* l"refotlt klllet ........ ...._. ........ LMAaelt-.~_,, Tlll1 ..__ -fllld wltll tl'f C...,,ly Cttr'll of Of•"Gll C:o\lfttf W Je11111ry 7, 1"2 ,,..,.,. ........ Pt11M6 Pvbll-Or ..... Coetl Delly l"ll01, """41 ..... Or .... Coetl Diiiy Piiot, PIHMI.,_. Or ..... Coell Delly lllftec, J ... 14, 21 ••• ,... 4, _,.., 274-G J"' 14, Jt ••• '":. •• ,.., -.-a J'". 21, •• ''°' 4, 11, ,.., ~ c.:-------------•·------------- l'ICTITIOUS •uSINIU NAMa STATHUl•T Tll• followl"t pert•" h ool"I lluillllHll. t•VINE COACH ANO MOTOlt WOltKS. LTO , llMl Cowa" Ave .• S11lte l , l.,,lne.CAt21U. St•,,•n Ken11etll Kr11t~ll. 2U16 WttlmOlll Cl , Sen JUln CIPl11r-. CA "47S. Thlt tlllllrlllt 11 ~-ll"ted t>y al\ llldlvld ... I. S.K.Kr4'1tr:ll Tllll lll""*'I wet llled wltll Ille County Cltr11 of Or•nte County "" O.• 2:2, 1"1 ""*' Pllbll-Or-Coelt Diiiy PO« • J•n. 21. a..""" 4, 11. nm ,.,.., PICTITIOUS IWSINaU ~STATIMeNT Tll• follewl"t perMn It Ool"t .... ,_ .. : CALIFOl'HIA PACfftC C:O., t-• =~~ii.. • .:.... ....... "-" YAJJ. Tom c ... 1i11n, t• Ctey St.. st. N.._t IN"ll. CA '*2; P.O. lo• 11U, .. _,.,, leectl. CA~ Thia ....,..... 11 condoKled try Ml lftCll¥1-.• TomC-11" Tlllt ...,._ •• Iii.cl with "'9 c.-ty C-of Or-County°" J ... It, 1'12. flt.illt Pvllll-0r"9 Coatl 01lly l"teo., JM. 21. a ..... 4, II, 1'92 12141 fllCTITIOUI 941SlllaU MAM& STATSM«NT Tiie lott••lnt Ptrlllft II doing 11w1 ........ SC:ANOIA DOWN SHOP -A Pra11chlu of S<•ndl• Do•" CorporMI°"• J7S. E. C.0.11 Hltllw1y, C«OM 0.1 -. Calltotni. t•JS Oo•et11, G -·· 421 P-•· IH<ll l"l•<e. 1"111tertllft, Clllter"'' nw Tllll _..,. .. 11 c-ted by an '""""""''· oor.c"" G Moore Tlllt llel-... llled wllll IN fllCTITIOUI ewe .. aM NAMllTATSMaMT Tiie lollewlftt pen.,. II ••l•t -IMUM: C:OHHECTAONIC 011 aHG., IU01 ••Y•ller LI"•· Hu11l11'191eft ...<II. Celllorlll• ,_.. A"'llony Rrtlkll, 1"°1 •• .,. ..... Lene, Hllftll/ltCOll IHcfl, CallfWMI '26* Tlllt llullMlt II t-ted by en 111c11 .. 1ow1. ~·"'llCll Tlll1 stel-4 •• rited wilt! ttie ,_.., a-of Or-c_, "' J-ry12,1m c-'" Cltrk Of Or-<Aunty on Pl .... 111'•1• PliOll-Or ..... CNtl Diiiy l"llM, J..,ueryl2, 1"2 Pul>llllhlcl 0rtft0t CIUI Delly Pltot, J•ll. 14, 21, •• ,.., •. tm itl.C JU 14, tl, 8 , F• I, ltl2 f7).a 1--~~~-~~~~-~ l'ICTITIOUI tvlfftM MAMlllTA ..... .-T "" followlat "'-I• .. ,.,. _...... .. , 1.AST•tOGI eHOIHll•tNG, 1114 Atter l'le<1, CMle Me11, Cell .... ,...,.,, • Fre1tll et_.le14. JIM After r..-•. ;::.;;; ~ ~..-. ;--..:;. T"ll ....,_ It <-.dM "' "' .............. ,,_ .lllOmf .. .. Thlt ........... -II ... witll -c:ooi11ty c~ " 0r.,... c.untv .., .>--..•.t•. -f'ICTITIOUS ....... . NAMll IT ........ ,, Tiie t0Howl11t "'._ It Hl•t -'Ma•: c .o I( IHTE•l"•tsas. '141 Lembofl ortw, """""91"" -..ell. C:lll llH'fll• ftMI Oe"nlt Ollrtft Wiii•"""· t141 Lambtrt Orlw, Hu11t1""'"' IM<ll, ,. .... ~~~~ TIMt _..._ It ~led "' ... 1nc11 ......... Otfwlls 0.rlft Wlll- Tlll• .......... -lllM wit!\ -C-ty Ctwtl of Or-c.-, ell Je-rytJ,tC 399!~ • Easler to Use Then a Record Changer • Superb Picture and Sound • Quick Hookup to Your TV rv •nd atand not included See what you want, when you want-with no commerc1alsl Fully automatic-insert disc sleeve, then remove-disc remains inside and plays. No need to touch the disc or a single control. Visual Search goes forward or reverse at 8 or 60 times normal speed- w1th a viewable picture-to find any segment. With full-function re- mote control, you do it all from your easy chair! #16-301 s10 Off! AM/FM Clock Radio With Slim "Vertical " Look Chronomatlc~219 by Reallstlo --· ... - ' -, -, '-I l -•C :J ~ --- . ------- Reg. 49.95 Space-saving "waker- upper" has radio or buzzer alarm! Hi/lo tone switch, PM/ Wake indicators. auto display dimmer, snooze and S~min­ ute sleep buttons. #12-1524 Drive Home a Big Bargain! Mobile CB Radio-140 Off CTR-41 by Reallstlc Cut 20°10 4788 --. •. ~,5 • Cue/Review • Auto-l.evel • High/Low Tone Swttch a.tt.r.... ex1ra Save $1 2.07. Mike/aux input mixing for re- cording from aux and external or buih-in mike at the same time. Tape counter, Auto- Stop, jack for earphone or extension speaker. AC/battery operation. #14-841 Desktop Calculator With 4-Key Memory EC-2001 by Radio Shack Cut 400/o 59'9~ 21!5 29.95 • Easy-to-See 10-Dlg lt Fluorescent Display • Gron Profit Margin Key Get help, directions or pass the time with f811ow travelers on long trips! LEO channel display and modulation indicator. Add an ex- ternal speaker and hit PA switch for a mo- bile public address system. With mike, mtg. . hardware. #21-1502 PfllC£S M.'V YARV AT IHOIVIOVAl STORE<; ANO OEAlfll<; PIU~E PUIUC MOTICE Just in time to help figure your taxes! Fea- tures standard percent key, plus a l1% key to figure percent of change. Indicators for overflow, negative and memory. Pick one up for home or office! #65-660 Batter1e• eXlra PUIUC MOTIE A OIYISIOH Of TANO'r CORPORAi iON N5-t1UI "ICTITIOUS austN•U NAMI STATIMINT Tiie lottowln9 1>ertons ••• dolno bUtlneu as CROVINE 1.I MITEO PARTNERSHIP et. tlt•I Fiie" Avenue. lrvlM , CellfOf'.W• t21U CROW ttC E•n. ,,,.I Fiie" '-venue, Irvine, Celllornle '1JU CONNECTICUT GENER'-\. LIFE INSURANCE COMPAHV , a COflneelleut corPO,.llon, Heriford, Conneellcut o.1s2 Tlllt &utlneu It condvcltd Illy • llmlted -1ner1tllp. C~llCEAST ' T,.u ll!nl.,.i ~rwulllp ., ll't o.Mrel ~,,- Tiii• tla'-I wet flled wl"' the County Clen.. cA ~al'OI County on Jlrfl. I, Hft '1ltMt ftubllltltd Orolft09 co .. 1 o.11v Pllol, Jen u , ti. a. Feti. •. ttl) t...a County fir~ honored 26 Orange Coast compani es. among 50 fastest growing Twenty alx Oranae Cout companies, lnclud.lnt 12 baaed in Newport Beach· and nine ln Irvine, we re among thoae h onored as the SO fastest crowln1 companies In Orante County. Ten of the companies. six of them lrvine·bued and the other rou r headquartered in Newport Beach, were amona the top 15 in the 40 -company industrial cateeory. Three Newport Beach firms were amon1 five from the Orange Coast represented in lbe lO·company financial category. The companies were honored by the Sales and Marketing Executives of Oran1e County and Executive Magazine at a banquet Tuesday at Anaheim's Grand Hotel. The top industrial company honored was Petrominerals Corp. of Santa Ana, an oil and gas exploring rirm, which with the help of a 1979 merger experienced a 1,548 percent sales growth between 1977 and 1980. The futeat 1rowln1 flnanclal firm waa the Anabelm·baaed Herltaae Bank, wboae aaaell nearly tripled between 1'77 and 1980. The top executives of both companies briefly outlined their s uccesses to about 300 banquet-goers. The Executive Magazine Publisher Ed Re1an lauded what he called the plc)neer spirit or Caltrornians, callln1 at "the spark that makes the California economic environment electric." Among the industrial firms, Prlntronlx Inc. and We~tern Digital -both in Irvine plaeed second and third in growth. Printronix, a manufacturer ol computer line printers which employs ll>O people, saw its sales grow 760 percent between 1977 and 1980. Total 1980 sales were nearly $37 million Western Digital, a manufacturer of microelectronic devices and components which Resolution seeks delay for rate hike SACRAMENTO (AP> A resolution asking the state Public Utilities Commission to delay a recently approved' $166 million rate increase for San Diego Gas & Electric Co. has been introduced in the Legislature. Sen . Wil l iam C r aven , R ·Oceanside, said his SCRS4 asks that the rate hike be held orr until completion of a management audit or the utility. The PUC recently ordered an independen t audit or the company. Craven said his office had been contacted by hundreds of constituents, including councils and businesses, asking what can be done about utility rates. Craven said he thought his resolution will pass both houses. OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS MUTUAL FUND employs MS people, recorded a sales arowth of 338 percent lft the same period. with 1980 sales of $20.6 milllon Other local companJts among the raatest growin1 lnduatriea included Tranalerra Exploration of Newport Beach, an oil and gas explorin1 company. which placed filth : Rampart General of Irvine, maker of precast housing co mponents, sixth ; Newport Pharmaceuticals of Newport Beach , a dru1 manufacturer, seventh ; and National Education Co rp. or Newport Beach, which deals ln vocational home study courses, mnth. Among the fastest growing financial ins titutions were Mercury Savings and Loan of Huntington Beach, fifth ; American State Bank of Newport Beach, sixth ; Bank of Newport , Newport Beach, seventh, and Downey Savings and Loan, Costa Mesa. ninth. Ganne tt • e arrungs up ROCHE.STER, N.Y. (BW) - Gannett Co. Inc. reported an earnings gain of 14 percent for 1981, as "<'11 as gains in revenues and earnings for the full year and the fourth quarter of 1981. For the full year 1981 , net income was $172.5 million, a 14 percent increase from Sl51.9 m ii lion in 1980. Reve nues increased 13 percent to Sl.3 billion from $1.2 billion. Earnings per share in 1981 were $3.17. compared with $2 81 in 1980. DOWNS U,1 1 71, ) .. 1 J ..-.. l'" , .. 1 1 ,..,. 711 "'' 1• .. 11'> s )¥9 1\\ 1\\ 51, 14 1~ 1\<o N l J • Pc:t Oft 4l. Oft 11 1 Oft 11 , Oft 1u Oft tU Off t•.J Off 12.5 Oft ,, 0 ,,. °" "1 .... ()ft 111 ,-., Oft 10 I ... Oft 10 5' 1 ()ft 10 4 .. Ott 10.0 1"' Off '. "" Oft " -Oft .. "' Oft .., •• ()ft 1 7 "" Oft u ..... Off l.l ..... Off u .... Oft Ll ... Oft u ..... Off I.I .... Ott IJ \I) Ott 1.1 ~I .. ,. u ,,. :tA ~ ~ ;i •• .... •II I~ •• •••• IA ·'" ,IA ·'" ,,, ,,,. ·'A ~· ... .1 .. ~·· ·1• {1: ':~ 'IA •• ... t A •A "' . " .. 1 .. ''"' 1IA ''" ·•A "'" 'TIA ••• .::s ... .. -Ajl \jl H .. J" j~ .,. . ,. .,. •' '' , I . '#o I 'A I '" . ...... I "" ... . ~~. .. ,. . •I ' '". ., 'I ., ... . . . .. • I .. a I ··! ~ A I . : I A ' I I ·~ t •/ ! ,, ' ·: ! :q:' ~I ·"I ... ,, .. ;: ' •1 .t I i ' • I • I : I e I I I .. • I I I •I I ·I I :: I .... I :! I '• I . .. .. • ! ,. . ~ I , . • I . ' i I I I I . ! .. .... I •f' .. '. •(; q 2 I ·1 I ~ ' • • ~ ~~ I • I : I ~ I ~ I J I t UI n • ... '" ' :i I •($ " • .. .... lS ,, I( ,, •I> " • ~ Orange COllt DAILY PILOT/Tllurld1y, February 4, 1982 s NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS 01101ATWMt lltc\1109 ••40U ON'"' 1111• YO••. MIOWtn, ,.4(.,1(, , ••• '°''"· OIHO•f AJID ClllCUllllAft nOOI 1ac11•1t•ua1101nou10 • ., '"' t!l••o••o 111n1111• Ifft ... care costs explode We no loo••r cao afford to divide tbe beallb care system Into tbol.e who cure, tbo1e wbo pey and tboH wbo are cared for. Al American Hotptt.al AnodaUon President J. Alu.a.oder McMahon warna, "It la tlme that all participant.a ln the private Metor become actively involved in evaluaUn1 and determlnln1 which beoeflta ol our beallb care 1)'1lem we want to keep, which we want to 1row and which we feel an no lon1or COll~ffecUve." The appeal, could not come at a · " ~ .. more opportune time. Health care costs have exploded • :S -soartn1 12 .sn11111 •11~ .. ,, percent in 11181 oo top L of an aatow>dln1 U .2•: ----------percent in 1980, 10 all·time record. Our annual 1pendin1 of '247.2 billion ln medical outlays of all kinds oow amount.I to 9.4 percent ol our total output for goods and service., or Mn incredible average of $1 ,067 for every man, woman and cblld in the United St.ala. To tack.le the problem. six national organualions -the AFL·CIO, American Hospital Association, American Medical Association, Blue Cross and Blue Shield Associations, Busio~ Roundtable and Health Insurance Association of America -met in mid·J aouary t.o endone the potentials of voluntary coalitions on a local, state and regional buis and to encourage their members' participation in such coalitions. No other segment of our economy bas gone through so sharp a rise in recent yean as health. care. Estimates are that the per capita cost of medical care will almoat triple t.o $3,057 by 1990, when the nation's medical bill could reach a whopping 11.5 percent of our output. Much of the increase is the price of progrns. Technological innovations such a.s intensive care units and artificial kidney machines have made the treatment of illnesses increasingly effective, but also more costly. A factor related to tbe riae in costs is Americans' lengthening life span, which bas increased the numbeT of America's elderly, who are the more prevalent victims of costly, long.term diseases. The quantity, as well as the quality, of health services has also increased, and hence costs. Pushing up the cost or health care dramatically, too, is the lack of price competitk>o and the fact that most health care bills are paid by health i.n.surers, employers or the aovernment. Thia leavea few incentives or consumer demands for holding down these bills. Yes, there have been payoffs. Most Americans are living longer than ever before. Today, one out of nine Americans -25 million of us -are over 15. or $ million more than in 1970. And infant mortality ia now tire low~t in our m1UOb'S hbtory. Yet, other flndinp point t.o inequities that raiae the question or whether lh.e oat.ion ia 1peodio1 too much for the health care we get and bow we get it. For instance, althou(h infant mortality is declinina. black infants still die at nearly twice the rate of white infants during their first year. And non·whites can expect t.o live four to five years fewer than whites. It's no s urprise that our minorities receive inferior health care, reporu a study released by the pretigious Institute of Medicine. Blacks are Jess likely than whites to see private physicians, the study found, regardless of income or type of i.n.surance - and are twice as likely as whites to visit physicians at clinks or hospital emergency rooms. "Rising costs threaten the ability of communities to preserve the gains made in recent years in ma~inl quality care available to all Americans," says Dr David E. Rogers, president or the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. DP! JA~l~) f!f!!~§. ·-'°' w.cs , ~, I TOCKS 0... Mi.a &..-C'"9 QI JD Ind en.• 1151.16 Ml.It M.S.U-Ut 20 Tr" ma .-.1• li1.Jt m...._ 1.12 IS Utt !0711 1-.12 tOUI 197.•t-t.a 1 ., st1c SJS.ot m .St »•·" m ti-2.11 11141n . . .. .. .. . . s, ,,. ..... Tr•n t,11t• Vtll1 . ........... 7a.Jm U Stk . . . . . . . . . . . 1 .011, .. WHAT STOCKS DID NEW ·y~I( (API ,,_ i I """--' Oe<llMll """"" ';. l Unt11~ 'TOC.11-........... ...... ._, •• 04 '"' J -~ • WHATAMl•OIO NEW YORK IAPI ..... l ""-· '1.) ., =!.J " -- METALS ........ , C•PP•• 1' ti <•'Ila • pownd, V.S -lftatleN. LNtn_ • ....., ~IM42-4c-•~"41_ .. Tie 17 .. Mnalt W-c-tt. ,_ ........... ,._n_a,.....,NY Matt'"" lml.00-..... .... ._UM.OOtroyo1., N.Y. SILVER ....... , H.,,...,&H_,...,._trwr- GOY COINS • NIW Y0-K tA"I -~ 1"9 ,..._, "' .... Ci9IM. ~ "''"' ............ 11'te9. • ~ ........... ..., .............. .. ........ ,....,&.; ...... .,. ..... ..._ •-. 1.t w, .... am•"' ..... ----~.-.., .... ms.a ...... • 0. u a o c u • '• Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT/Thurlday. Februwy 4, 1882 .. ~ ......... DISC CAMERA Walter A. Fallon, chairman of Eastman Kodak Co., demonstrates camera called a "decision-free photography system." Beckman starts Mideast unit Beckman Instruments Inc. has established new Middle Eastern process 1roup operations to serve existing and future business potential in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the United Ar ab Emirates, the company announced. Roy F. Brown, vice president/manager of the company's Process Instruments and Controls Group, said Ladislaus (Lad) J . Perenyi, a veteran Beckman lntemat1onal executive for 24 years, will bead the new unit to be known as Process Instruments and Controls Operations-Middle East. "Saudi Arabian industry looks to American in~trumentation experts for state-of-the-art technology that they need to stimulate growth and achieve their industrial goals," Brown said. "Beckman until now has served these Middle Ea stern countries through its European s ubsidiaries.'· TIAI SD BLOWS! Whale watch Cruises WEEKDAYS 10AM WEEKENDS 9:30 AM & 1 :30 PM Leaving from the Advanced Emphysema a nd chronic bronchitis have caused millions of resp1ratorr c ripples. These diseases start s lo~l y and early S) mptoms are not too tro uble:.ome Man y people wrong!) ignore them The best chance Cor control 1s an early detection and prompt treatment. Watch out for morning coughing spells or shortness or breath during your d a il y act1v1t1es Take this match test. Light an ordinary match and hold it lit about 12· inches from your mouth. Take a normal breath and then .. huff' out the match without pursing your lips If the match Is nor blown out you may have emphysema. See your physician ror a positive diagnosis. YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHON E US when you need a med.icme Pick up you r prescription if shopping nearby, or we Kodak· introduces film disc camera Automated system expected to increase yield of sharp pictures • NEW YORK (AP> -Eutman Kodak Co. baa lntroduced a new camera that uses a 15-expoeure fllm diac, and the company caUed lt the bl11est Innovation ln amateur photo1raphy ln two decades. The three "shirt pocket" cameru, ran1ln1 ln r.rlce from $67 .H to $142.H, represent a 'subatantlal leap forward" ln automation. They use a ftlm able to respond to wide variations ln U1ht and have a nash unlt that recycles ln barely more than one second, said Kodak chairman Walter A. Fallon. "This means that users can take pictures practically as fast as they can press the shutter release," he said. And the results will be true suds successful ln prevloualy "marlinal or difficult picture·ukln1 sltuationa,'' be 1a1a. The key to the 1y1tem, Kodak said, ls Ill 15 -expoaure tllm dl1c and a len1 1ystem lt descrlbea aa near the "theoretical limits of perfection" for a fixed-focua camera. A film disc wlll CMl S:U9. The system works "in. a spli t-second' s time." Fallon said the disc cameras and film, to be available In May, should reduce the chance of underexposure by one-half, "camera 1bake that result.a In blurry rtctures to lea1 lban 2 percent, and the number o blank framea and flub failures to ie11 than a fraction of 1 percent." He said the camera will , "ln a spUt-second's tlme," analyze the scene, 1et the correct exposure, activate the buUl-ln nub lf needed, take the picture, advance the ntm and recbar1e the nash. The system la the 1reatest innovation lo home photography since the Kodak lnatamatic cartrtd1e film cameras were introduced 19 years a10, Fallon said. He said lt aKould lncreue the yield of "good to excellent'' pictures by 25 percent. 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Eaay to 3 9 clean up with juat water. 1 9 Reg. 15.99 . . - Thanks for eve rybody ~ support and conce rn regarding the death of Mr. Rima. • ' Daily Pll9( , THU~SDAY, FEB. 4, 1912 . ClASSIFllD cs Getting tossed to the lions Small. area high school charged with. qthletic violations By llOOER CARLSON °' .. .,. ........... Edlaon Hi&h School may be the subject of recruiting alle1aUons and other alleged violations -but they needn't feel picked on. What's 1otnc on now u the CIF Southern Section lnvestieates seems to make charaes aaainst Edl.aon dull An Oran&e County high school bu been accused or 1ross athletic violations, including the use of an Edlsoo athlete on one of its teams. To wit: -The 1980-81 basketball team included a run time Golden West College student and two eighth graders. -The 1980 football team had a 20-year-old and two eighth .craders on it. -A part-time teacher played on the basketball team. All of them also competed on the 1981 baseball team -A Cypress College student played on the basketball team. -An Edison High student played on the girls' basketball team. Are you still with us? The school is in Westminster -and its nickname is the Lions. Yes, it's the Goldenwest Christian High Lions who have been accused of these misdeeds and the CJF Southern Section Office is in the process of reviewing the case with final determinations to be taken Feb. 18, according lo administrative assistant Dean Crowley Located just up the str eet from Westminster High, the 60-studenl (9-12) school competes on the junior varsity level only and Is a member of the Academy League. PrlnclpaJ Sybil McCorkle denies the first four char1es. but admits her Lions a re guilty of the latter two crimes. "I'm guilty," says the grey-haired, bespectacled principal. "I just hope they don't kick us out (of the CIF>. because it's too h ard to get back in. "If they do, I'm going to complain about use and UCLA." As for potential penalties, that's a little I'm guilty. I just hope they don't kick us out r of the CIF ), because it's .. too hard to get back in. -Prlnc1.,_1 Sybil McCorkle bit in the air. Forfeitures would seem to be in order. but according to McCorkle, the events were forfeited before they were played. "We only had fi ve boys playing and one had been sick for two days. We were losing about 10·50, so the coach went to the other coac h and the referees and said, 'Look, we can quit now, or we can forfeit now and let this other boy play (the Cypress College student) and play the game out for fun · "Since, I've found out that's against the rules . I'm not a sports person. but I have a rule book now, so I 'll be better .. As for the Edison girl, McCorkle says "Same thing. We were at School of Desert and we had four girls. So we told the coach we can't play tonight "Shti <the other coach> s aid, 'hey, I'll lo;.in you on• of m y girls.· "We forfeited before we played and a girl who came along was an Edison student who was a friend of one o f our players. "So we played The referees knew it "We're guilty, we just didn't know the difference "I just wish this s tory wasn't being written. I hale to see my 22-year record blasted. You know, when a Christian School does something wrong, everyone wants lo make a big incident out of it.'' The only other charge McCorkle gives subs tance to is the 20-year-0ld playing on the eight-man football team .. lie didn't turn 20 until arter the season," she explams "He was a dropout who came back to finish his education cThe Lions appear to be guilty, since you must not rea('h the age of 19 before Sept. 1 of a :.chool year> " A II of this has com e to light, says Mccorkle, because a previous coach whom she has smce fired, 1s disgruntled and turned the Lions in . "Our football team was made up mostly or freshman a nd most of the teams we played seemed to run their varsity in on us anyway," sa ys Mccorkle So. maybe some forfeits are due here, eh" Well . Mccorkle says she doesn't know what the Lion~· Junior varsity record was in 1980. "but 1t was pretty sad." Through all of this, McCorkle appears undaunted "Maybe next year wt>'ll go vars ity," she says UCI can't look ahead Barons Dlove past Marina Anteaters face San Jose State before Fresno showdotvn ByJOHNSEVANO 0(-°*' "91 59" UC Irvine's BIG WEEK is he re, but the Anteaters can't afford to think about Fresno State . at least not yet anyway. First, the Anteaters have an .J_mportant •date with San J~e S tate -and that pivotal confrontation will take place• tonight <7 ·30) before an ex pected sellout crowd at Crawford Hall. what usually gives the Anteaters ms. The Spartans, like Fresno State, like to hold on to the ball and hnltt on . . and hold on . and hold on. "They like their games to be On radio tonight KWVE (108 FM) at 7:30 (17-1. 6·0>. they haven't been playing well recently Arter shooting more than 60 percent from the field as a team !er m~t c! th:: ;-car' u,...~ hca5 connected at less than 50 percent its last three games "Our problem 1s puttmg the damn thing in the hole... added Mulligan "We're playing the same we've always played the ball just is n't dropping I don't think 1t 's a m ental th mg · · By ROGER CARLSON Of -O~ty ~-S ..... ThPrP's ~ t!me !or everyth!r:g, including pe aking , and at Fountarn Valley High , th e Barons appear to have found all of the right ingredients al the right lime. down the stretch. as evidenced by Wed~day's 75-44 rout of visiting Marina. T he victory sends Coach Dave Brown's Barons mto third place, a game ahead of Marina and O.ty ~ .... "-19..., ,.._. O'- LEFT-HANOEO MOVE -Jamaal Wilkes <521 of the Lakers tries a left-handed shot against defensive pressure applied by center Marv in Webster Wednesday night. Actually, with the way the Anteaters have been playing of late, they can't afford the luxury or looking pas t the Spartans. San Jose Slate's numbers aren't very glossy (9-8 overall, 3·3 in the PCAA>. but the type or basketball the Spartans play is in the 40's." says Coach Bill Mulligan, who en1oys a much faster pace. "Last year they opened in a four-corners at San J ose, and I don't think they're going to play any ditrerenUy this time." Of course, more important to Mulligan is that HIS team starts playing differently. Despite the Anteaters' impressive numbers M ul l igan ad mitte d the Anteaters were m somewhat of a "slump," but he went on to emphasize that while teams have been double and triple teaming Kevin Magee, the usually r e liable s hooting of Rainer Wulf and R andy Whieldon has been amiss and that shouldn't go on for much lonJ!er. Edison tops Ocean View (SH PageC2) Friday nighl's foe, Ocean View, in Sunset League basketball a<'t1on Lakers troubled on and off the court 'T he last two games are the best two games we've played th is year." sa id B ro wn . following his team's systematic demohshmg of the Vikings Knicks knock them out of first place in the Pacific Division, 98-94 What is troubling Mulligan, though, is the play of his point guards Kevin Fuller and Leonard Johnson "On Thursday they were I for 10 between them ," he said "Saturday, they were 1 for 7 I learned back in gram mar school that ·s only 2 for 17 They have to start doing better. they can't be throwmg up bricks all the time." The~e were the same Vi kmgs who shocked the Barons m the f1 r s t round . 42-41 . but an y resemblance to t he pas t was diffic ult to get into focus as the Barons Jumped to leads or 11·3, 33 17. 48·25 and 62-32, then the reserves allowed it to dwmdle to 64 44 before pulling a way for the final 31 point margin By CURT SEED EN 0t-.o.11y ...... ~ INGLEWOOD Los Angeles Lakers Coach Pat Riley sounded s ure of himself Wednes day night. "It's a long way to go," he was saying after the New York Knicks handed his team a 98·94 setback at the Forum. "And I've been around too long to let a few losses gel lo me." Indeed. back-to-baek defeats happen to the bes t or NBA teams But after Wednesday night's disappointing loss, the Lakers find themselves in their biggest slump of the season AND WEDNESDAY night's turn of events -both on and off lhe court -are indicative of the way t h e team bas bee n struggling. To begin with, Magic J ohnson didn't play . He appare ntly injured his back Tuesday night in the Lakers' 119-117 defeat at Golden State. When he woke up Wednesda y , his back h ad stiffened on him. And then, there's the Lakers' impressive first quarter against the Knick:s. In that period, the Lakers were outrebouoded. 13-6. They s hot a dismaJ .400 from the floor and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar dido 't score a point. There's also the 6~ minutes - the final 6:21 of the game to be exact -in which the Lakers couldn't score a point. They literally watched the Knicks , tum a 91-83 deficit into a 97-91 advaot.ge. Only a three-point basket by Norm Nixon in the flnal seconds prevented the Lakera from belns abut out durtna the '""· .. lllGRT NOW, tbh ia de'rtnltely the low point of the 1eaaon for ua," admitted Riley. "But the lut thin• we want to be rtabt no. ll ne1aUve. We're IUJJ amonc the top lbree In our 1..,ue." • .'.!•We couldD't make 1 bucket Md we couldn't 1et a bOunce," ~ bOD, wbO ftmabed thl •ltlt ~ D iiolni8. ''ha fact lD ~ the last two games, we haven't bad a call at the right time or gotten a bounce .. On the h eels of Tuesday night's defeat to the Warriors - in which Golden State won\~e game with a pair of free tl\rOws with no time remaining on the clock Riley det1ded to call a team meeting before Wednesday's game. "We talked about last night's game and why we lost and the reaso n we los t it down the stretch." explained Riley "We tried to figure out why we were giving up leads.'' Wednesday night. giving up leads seemed hke the last of the Lake rs' worries early in the game THE KNICKS, with Mike New lln and Mauri ce Lucas com binmg for 14 points, jumped o ut to a 26-11 advantage before settling for a 28· 17 lead after one period And. despite Lhe fact J abbar did not score a point in the first half, the Lakers managed to battle back. Bob McAdoo and Eddie Jordan cam e o ff the ben ch to ignite the Lakers and pull them to within four (SJ-49) at the intermission. ·'I thought we played an ·ex ceptiona I game with out Magic," Riley admitted. trying to hit a note of optimism. "I• thought it was a very fruitful team effort." Jamaal Wilkes led all scorers on the floor with 26 points, and both Jabbar and Michael Cooper chipped in 12 apiece. McAdoo added 10 points and Jordan hit on 4 of his S shots for eight points. Newlin had 21 for the Knicks while Mi c hael Ric h ardson scored 18 and Sly Williams - who had been s u spended inde finitely last Saturday for missing practices and doctors' appointments -was reinstated to chip in 14 JABBAR HAD one of bis toughest nights agains t the Kni c k s ' 7 -1 cent e r Bill Cartwright. taking just 14 shots all evening That seems to contradict the Lakers' off-the-court problem which d eveloped Wednes day night. That proble m is a reported quote by J ohnson that the Lakers were taking the ball mside to Jabbar too much. "I came to the Forum tonight and everybody came up and said we w e re at each oth er 's throats," Johnson explained afterward. "I don't know what was said. I guess it was on the radio. "We 're friends. We talked to eac h oth e r this morning.·' Johnson ins i s t e d . ''It's frus trating. Pretty soon. I'm JUSt not going to give any more comments. Any time you say something, it's taken the wrong way. It makes problems for the team ." ADDED JABBAR: "I don't think I'm trying to hog the ball 1' m just trying to make sure everybody utilizes their talent ... Wednesday night. the Knicks utilized their talent to snap a 10-game losing streak against the Lakers which dates back to Nov 6, 1977 By losing, the Lakers dropped out of fi rst place In the Pacific Division. SeatUe. which defeated Kansas City Wednesday night, moved a few percentage polnts ahead of them . UCI especially can 't be off target this week with the limited shooting opportunities that will be presented to the m . The Spartans are led by Chris McNealy. who enters tonight's game with a 16.7 average He a l so l e ad s the team 1n rebounding at 9 9 a game. The other two front line st arters wilf probably be 6-7 forward Greg Vinson and 6·8 cent er Ed Uthoff. Vinson 1s avera~ing 4 .6 points, while Uthoff 1s putting them in al a 2 5 clip The starting gua rds will be 6·1 Jonathan Brown and 6-1 Michael Dixon, though 6·2 Michael Moore should be the first off the bench. Brown is averaging 6.3 points. Dixon 3.1 and Moore 8.8. UCJ swept the two m eetings last year , winning easily at home (90-78 ) before barely escaping at San Jose <S0-49 ). OCI knows it can't get caught trying to escape tonight , either. "They know it's a big game," contended Mulligan. "l don't have to stress It to ·em .·· Ho w can there be s uch a dis parity 10 scores? "l was asking my assist ants the s ame thing," said Rrown. "But it happens, on every level " Jeff Hughes. F ou ntain Valley's outside power . led all scorers with 22 points ln less than three quarters o f action. while reserve John Eckweiler tossed in a career high of 13 points and Ken Harter tallied 11 as the Barons went to t he bench early with the breather clinched. The Vikings had held Hughes t o 10 poin ts with a diamond-and-one defense in the first encounter as John Berry held the Barons' ace we ll below his norm. ' But this time it was no soap. Berry began agamst Hughes. but the rest of the Barons took advantage lo run up a 9-3 margin. then Hughes hit a pair of long-range ·shots and '9dded two free throws and the rout was on After that the Vikes tried a lot (See-BARONS, Pase C2> Mesa knocks Estancia from top; CdM breezes By ROBB MUNSON °' .... °*' .......... Costa Mesa Hip's Mustanp picked u}J one of the biggest wins ln the school's history Wednesday nitht, a 56-53 Sea View Leaaue victory over boat Estancia, knocldnc tbo latter out of 1 share oft.be leaeoe lead . But it wasn't E1tanda'1 problemt the Mustanp were t.blnkln1 about, tt wu a thlrd straight conquest •talnat tbe Bl1 Three (Corona del Mar, Ne•port Harbor and Estancia) and ltJlacet Meaa withtn strUdn• cll1tance thelr firat CIF playo«1 berth sloce the ,_ campalen. With a 7-4 record and the lelC\M'I tbr • cellar dwellen remalnlDI - CSaddleback, Irvine and El Toro have a comblned leasue record of 3-30), thlnp are looting rosy for Coach Tim Panel'• Muatanp after what waa onc:e • very shaky beslnnlnc. Mesa came lnto the 1ame u t.be taller team, and ueed Its h•l•bt advantafe to dominate the boards. Jlm Pelle~ led the Muatanp with 12 rebound•, while teammate Ken Bard.itey scored 1'1 polnta ln a balanCed attack. "Tbll wu OW' b11111t win of the year," Hid Mustanea Coach nm Panel. "lt'• toulh to beat EltQela heN. Tbe ttawd WU Sl'Ml· J:atanda ii a well-c:ollcbN irc>UP ,. • Estancia (f.2) scored 22 points in the fin t quart.er, while shooting a torrid 73 percent from the field. But disastrous second and third quarters were all Men needed to take a "·39 advantage lnto the fourth quarter. During the middle quarters, the Eaales were held to only 17 Polo\&. while Mesa countered with 26. AIM> E1tanda manal'ed a dismal a& percent from the floor during thll span. "We were too tentatlve ln the ucond and tblrd quarteu1 ·• aatd Eatencla Coacb Lany Sunaerman. "Our ftnt quarter WAI treat, but they outrebounded YI and d14ia't llve us any aecood Mota.'' Des pite their poor showing, Estancia was still ln the thick of thlngs with 2:31 left. Steve Kraiss hit from inside to cut Mesa's lead to Sl-48. Then, wlt.b only 16 seconds ten , Brian Midland made a three-point play, m aking the score 55-53 in favor of Mesa. M e11 promptly turned the ball over to Estancia, but stole It back seconds later. Bardsley wu fouled, and the M guard sealed the victory with a free throw. "lt wu a srut effort by all," said Parael. "Pellchowild Md a lftal ~· on the boards. '8INllllQ coatn1I our <S..M ,Pac ar . I I --Orange Cout DAIL Y_~l~TfT!!lJrldlY. Ftbr~ary 4, 1982 ...ill'--------------------------.... ---.---------------------------------------------------------------------- Wlntn ... Bucka Otlflt Chicago Edi. ·t t. Mu.~~e:J'u!:·~~lh·,a=~·-., son pene ra tng It wu 1nou1h for 1 l.lJ.• victory E.llJ ' over Cblca•o ln lb• National . ~~~tb~~~O:iu~ =~=.'"Tm:.~~ Oilers, Sailors, University, Capo win . Fresno State could '·outnumber UCI fans From AP dllpaceltet VRESNO -Fresno State'• m 17th-ranked basketball team bas 'taken the home court advantaae onto the road as hundreds -sometimes thousands - of fans travel 200 miles or more to see the Bulldogs play. Called the "Red Wave" in their red shirts or sweaters, 1,600 Fresno followers found their way to San Jose last week. The bost Spartans had about 800 supporters on hand. Fresno's fans will be out in Corce aialn Sunday when the 17-1 Bulldogs travel south to play UC Irvine, also 17·1. Because the Pacific Coast Athletic Association lead, not to mention national status, are on the line, Irvine moved the iame from its 1,500-seat campus gym to the 9,400-seat Long Beach arena. Tbe Bulldogs put 2,000 tickets on sale Tuesday and sold out in 45 minutes. public information director Scott Johnson said Wednesday. Another 750 Uckets were ordered, and some Fresno fans may buy tickets at the door. Quote of the day Al McGuire. commenting on the build . of Missouri's Mlcllael Wallter during the telecast of the Missouri-Louisville basketball game : "If we name«S an• all-rear end team, this guy would be.the captain." · Canadiens win seventh straight Mart Napier scored two goals in Eil. the first three minutes of the third ' · period Wednesday night to propel the • Montreal Canadiens to a 6·3 victory over Edmonton in the National Hockey League. The win was Montreal's seventh straight and moved the Canadiens six points behind the Oilers in the overall standings . . . Graat Mulvey ignited a sputtering offense by scoring five goals to set a ciub mark and led Chicago to a wild 9-5 win over St. Louis . . . Left wing C\Jrl Fraser•s goal from a scramble in front of the Toronto net eight minutes into the third period proved to be the winner as Vancouver stopped the Maple Leafs 3-1 . Steve Kasper scored a short-banded goal and assisted on two other s co res to I ea d Boston pas t Bu ff a'1 o , 5·2 ... Anders HakansSOD scored twice in a six-goal second period to carry Minnesota \o a 9-6 triumph in Pittsburgh. From PageC1 and Jualor Brtdtemaa, both aldellned wlth ankle 1prain1 . . , Elaewhent, Ga WUUa•• and Jack Slkma combined for 49 point.a lead1n1 Suttle to a 97·87 trtumph over Kansaa Cilr, movlnt the Sonics lnto flnt place In the Pacltlc Dlvlalon ... Benard &la, slammed home a mlsaed shot with one second remaining to Ii ve Golden Stat~ a 80-88 • win in Phoenix . . . Rookie Danny Schaye1 1rabbed a rebound and lank two free •••Tua throws with under a minute to play to give Utah a 122·118 victory over Portland ... Joe Bryant scored 20 second-half points to lead San Dle10 past Dallaa, 113-106 . . . Ray Wllllama poured ln 34 point.a to pace New Jersey to a 112 ·103 win over AUanta . . . Geoff Huston pasaed tor 20 aasi.sts to go with his 19 points u Cleveland downed Indiana, 108·104 . . . Philadelphia'• Jail•• Erving netted 32 point• as Pblladelphla overwhelmed Washington, 122·96. . Kings coach faces suspension Los Angeles Kings Coach Doa Ill Perry has been suspended for 15 days by National Hockey Leaeue President Joba Ziegler for orderln1 Paal Mulvey to leave the bench during an altercation in a game Jan. 24 against Vancouver. In addition, the Kings have been fined $5,000 by the league. Under Ziegler's order, Perry cannot attend team practices nor e}(erciae any other duty for the Kings or its mloor-leaeue affiliates during the period of bis suspension. Perry, wbo waived his right to appeal, elected to bestn the suspension immediately, meanlQI It will terminate Feb. 18 and be wUl miss aix games . . . Sam Gilbert, a wealthy contractor and UCLA booster, said Wednesday be bad negotiated with NBA teama on behalf of Marques Job.uoo before Johnson's ell1lblllty had exp1red at UCLA. An NCAA spokesman said that would have been a rules violation, but Gilbert said be was unaware of that at the Ume and st1U doesn't believe it wu. Gilbert told Stu Nallan of Channel 4 that he had represented Johnson, Richard W111ll.agtoa and Brad Hollaad in discussions with NBA teams while the three players were still with UCLA . . . One of the world's top discus throwers, Ben PlaclmeU of San Jose, filed suit In federal court to force an amateur athletic organization to allow him to participate in track and field meets this summer. Television. radio TV: No events scheduled. RADIO: Basketball -San Jose State at UC Irvine, 7:30 p.m., KWVE (108 FM>: Cal State (Fullerton) at Pacific, 7:30 p.m., KWRM <1370); Fresno State at Long Beach State, 7 :35 p.m ., KLON C88 FM ). From PageC1 BARONS WIN EASILY • • • MESA. • • of different things but nothing really worked. The most telling item was Marina's shooting The Vikings connected on only 3 of 10 in the first quarter, then hit 3 of their next 10 into the second period ip falling behind by a 33·17 margin lo all, Marina shooters could net only 14 of 45 (31.l percent) against Fountain Valley's matchup zone. "We hustled and got a hand in their faces," said Brown. Marina Coach Steve Popovich agreed. "Fountain Valley's Sea Kings catch E8tancia in soccer Corona del Mar High beat Costa Mesa, 1-0, while Estancia and Saddleback played lo a scoreless tie in men's Sea View League socce r action Wednesday, putting the Eagles and Sea Kings in a tie for the league lead. CdM's Jeff Kordick headed in a goal on an assist from Scott McCrimmon midway through tbe second half to give the Sea 1Gngs their win over Mesa. CdM and Estancia are now deadlocked at 6·2-1. ln other Sea View action, Tom Gotuuo and Bob Talamo bad , one goal apiece to give Newport Harbor a 2-1 victory over El Toro. The win makes the Saliors 4.5 in league play. defense made us work for our shots and then when we got the shots, they just wouldn't go "And, the boards. They were grabbing the ball while we were swatting away at it.'' Harter led in that department with 13 rebounds. while Dave Maurel, Alan Villanueva, John Kosty and Rob Whitehair added seven apiece. "This is a good rebounding group," said Brown. Brown switched his starting lineup around a bit, inserting sophomor e Rolf Jacobs and Maurel, because of their sterling e ff o rt s Friday against Huntington Beach. Jacobs was a big factor - playing perhaps his best overall game of the season despite scoring only rour points. "Jacobs is starting to play," said Brown. "He's no longer a sophomore.'' The Vikings got double-figure scoring from Scott Filipek ( 16) and Rick Smith (12), but very little from the rest of the squad. "I didn't feel we panicked or fell apart," said Popovich. "But it just didn't get us anywhere." Add Brown: "Everything just went our way." ll sure did. In the first half the Barons missed only 3 of 15 free throws, and two of those were converted into long-range buckets by Hughes arter a teammate got the rebound. And again it was the Barons hitting those last shots, as Whitehair cashed in with buckets twice with two seconds left in a quarter. game, and Jeff Field ignited us in the second half." Field poured in 11 second half points, while hitting 5 of 5 from the field. Pelicbowski added 14 for the winners. Meanwhile, Estancia had four players in double figures : Kraiss had a game-high 18 while Jeff Gardner, Chris Maydole and Randy Tift had 10 each. Kraiss also pulled down 10 rebounds. In other Sea View League action: CdM 73, El Toro 41 The Sea Kings gained their one-game advantage in the Sea View League race with an easy win over the Chargers. "We've got to gear up for our final three games which are all big ones," said CdM Coach Jack Errion. Al 10· 1, the Sea Kings play at Newport Harbor Friday. Mike Hess had seven assists to go with his 12 points and Dave Vansteenhuyse came off the bench to contribute 10 points. King may retire DETROIT CAP> -Billie Jean King, in the twilight of her loog and storied tennis career, Is trying to decide whether to call It quits -t.hi.s time for good. King, frustrated by several decisions by match officials and unhappy with her own poor performance, walked out in the middle or her first-round match Tuesday night against Ann Kiyomura. COLLEGE BASKETBALL $ GRAND OPENING s UC Irvine vs. SAN JOSI STATE TONIGHT 7:25 p.m. K-WAVE FM-108 JIM Hunter'9 REDWOOD 11101 a. Harbor 2 xtMerch 2 xi Moh Hrt S.A. At ft .57 ft 2 xi Cir Hrt 1.31 fl 1 ••••·~nc1 .17•• +2••'1 ......... ,. 1••tl thru 2/7 OPEN lhOC> TO •:oo •••••••• 0 0 z n :u ,,, ""4 "' ,, ~ II) ., awauD DUNN " .. Delllf ........ They iave them a run for their money, but the Seahawa came up abort. Ed1IOD Hiib Mld oo to .tta No. 1 raokln1 la Oran1e County Wednesday nlcbt bJ 1toppln1 Ocean View, 84·57, ln a cl<»ely-toulht coa..telt at Ocean Vlew. Jim t.Jaevitch waa the bit 1tory tor the Stahawa, u be poured ln a career il)l'h S5 point.a, and alto •rabbed 21 rebounda. But even the 6·9 Usevitch could not bold off the Edison attack. Led by cuard Jeff Stephena, the CharJ!tn were able to penetrate with Lbelr offense. DlablftS off several nifty passea, the 6-2 aen.lor scored lt points, u Stephens and Richard Chant (21 point.a> proved to be too much for the Seahawkl. "Stephens has now bad two 1reat sames uatn.st Ocean View," said Cbar1er Coach Barr)' Leigh. "A lot or our players were 1ettlnl Into rout trouble, and it just seems that Stephens would always be there and pick up the alack." Trailing 32-30 at halftime, the Seah•wke came out in the third quarter by outscort.nc Edi.on, 8·2. The Seahawks took the lead for the fint Ume at that point, 38-34, but could not hold on. "We didn't take care of the ball when we bad the lead," Seahawk Coach Jim Harri.a aaJd. "We 'played very well tonight, but they are a very physical team and are able~ come back eully." The Seahawks led with 1 :44 left in tbe third quarter, 41-40, but Edison came char1in1 back with another surge to take the lead for cood. Mark Goudge scored with of hls 13 point.a in the final period, to help boost the EdiJOD win. Edison ahot 53 percent ftom the noor, but the key to it.a victory wu Its bustle and determination to flgbt back. "It waa ereat huatllng that kept us in the game," aald Lelah. "Harri.a had hla kldl ready to play. They took ua out of our offense in the first half." "It was a very physical 1ame. We were ln foul trouble, and tried to spread the noor out and 1lve the ball to Chang," Lelah said. Led by Usevitch. the Seahawu outrebounded Saddle back, OC C lay traps for foes It wu a banner night for a pair of Orange Coast area community college basketball teams Wednesday as Saddleback and Oran1e Coast colleges each surprised bighly-re«arded foes. The Southland's top-ranked squad, Rlvenide, visited Saddleback with a two-game cushion in the Mission Conference, but departed only one game in front after the Gauchos startled the Tigers. 67-66. Meanwhile, Orange Cout may be only 2-5 in the South Coast Conferetice, but the Pirates' 41-40 shocker over Fullerton sent the Hometa reeling from the top spot in the South Cout. _ With the Gauchos leading 87-68 and five seconds remaining, George Turner hJt one or two free throws to make it 68-66. Danny Poole brought the ball upcourt for Riverside, cast off from 25 feet and missed with Tracy Mitchel grabbing the rebound. Since the clock was not started, five s~ds still remained. After a scuffle and discussion with the officials, tbe Gauchos were awarded the victory. Orange Coast maintained a mastery over Fullerton that has seen the Pirates beat the Hornets five straight times at OCC. Ron Calhoun hit a jumper from 15 feet at the buuer to settle the outcome. With 1:05 remaining, Fullerton had stolen the ball and Andre Smith's 15-foot jumper bad liven the Hornets a 40-39 lead. OCC then ran the clock down to 14 seconds and called timeout. With the play expected to go to the Pirates' leading scorer, Chris Beasley, the Hornets' de(ense sagged on Beasley and allowed Calhoun the wide-open shot. Calhoun finished with only seven points, but hit all three of his shots from the field. Beasley pulled down 11 rebounds, bad four steals and two blocks to go with 20 points. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA PREP &4SKETB~LL m the Char1ereh 33·28. Cban1 wu lb• leadlDI rebounder for t e Char1era with 10. Ediaon opened the IADM by outteono1 tbe Seahawkl, 10 ·2, but line paHiDI by Sc9tt DeBrouwer and the 1mlde aboot.lna of U~b backbooed the Ocean View comebaci. The lt-2 Charaers were eullty of only three turnovers, but committed 20 fouh. Now 8-1 In the Sun1et Leacue. !dJaon wtu travel to Westminster Friday nltbt to fa~ lbe doormat of the lea1ue. Tho Seahawq wW journey on to Fountain Valley Friday, a team wbicb Ocean View has beaten twice thia year (once in tournament play>, each time by two point.a. Elsewhere: Huntlngton 8Hch 82, Weltmlneter 54 OUer Coach Roy Miller uaed 13 playen and got balanced scoring from starten Jim Lane (18), Billy Thompson ( 12) and Bruce Ayres (14) aa Huntington Beach (S.-2) stayed one 1ame off the pace of leaeue-leading Edison. The OiJeni got out to a 34·13 halfllme lead, enabling Miller to go to his bench early. Lane grabbed nlne rebounds before taking a real wblle Thompson added seven. Westminster, still winless in the touah Sunset circuit, got lS points from Jen Eastin and eleht each from Don Petka and Tom Nicolai. Newport H•rbor 88, Irvine 50 Newport's Byron Ball scored t.be rtrat et1ht points of the third quarter and flniabed with a 1ame-hilh 22 to help the Sailors break open a titht game . The Sailors were leading, 26-23, at the half before Ball got the hot hand. "We played a real good first half •Caln.st them," Irvine Coach Al Herring said. "It looks like they really go to him <Ball) when they get in trouble." Newport improved its Sea View mark to 8-3 , despite playing without the services of two starteni. "Everyone else just kind of chipped ln and helped out," Sailor Coach Jerry OeBuak aald. Ceplatr•no Valley 88, l•gun• Be•ch 57 Capistrano Valley tightened Its grip on the South Coast League lead as Dan Dargan and Walt Decasas led the way with 26 and 21 polnta. respectively. Neil Riddell bad 20 points for Laeuna before fouling out. The Artists, 2-6 in South Coast play. committed a total of 30 fouls to Capo's 15. Unlverstty 71, Saddleback 44 The Trojans jumped to a 23-6 first quarter lead behind the scoring of Brad Guess, who hit 11 of his 2S points in that first span, turning the game quickly into a rout. "Ssddleback tr~ to be patient, i:iui. once Uley threw the ball out of bounds, that was it," said University Coach Jeff Cunningham. The victory ups Saddleback's Sea View League record to 7-4, keeping pace with Costa Mesa in fourth place. Estancia (9·2) visits University Friday. Mater Del game postponed The Monarchs made the journey to the St. Paul gym in Santa Fe Springs, only to find that the gym floor had been mopped improperly and was too slippery to play on "What else could happen,'>" asked Mater Dei Coach Bill Alexander. Yachts slowed down Light winds off Baja California near Caho San Lucas have slowed the yachts in the San Diego to Man:r.anillo race. Merlin's position report Wednesday showed her about 25 miles from the cape but sailing over 100 miles offshore, apparently seeking stronger winds. But in the soft winds Merlin bad opened up a SO·mile lead over Christine, her rival for first to finish in the 1,110-mile race. The four Santa Cru:r.·SOs. led by Hana Ho, were showing positions off Magdalena Bay, also a considerable distance offshore. - OUTSTANDING VALUES! Snow dep(b/lncbes CondJtloaa Ufta/cbaln · t'1EW 1911 WI RAlllT "\. .. SIDAH Super economy with this one! Fu tty eQtipped inchJdlng a 4 apeed transmission. tinted glas1. radlat tires and rrorel (Stk 30m (01e13>. Mountain High Holiday Hill Mt. Baldy Kratka Ridge Mt. Waterman Snow Summit Snow Valley Goldmine 1B pp/hp 4C 18 pp/hp 2C 24 pp/hp FO 36 pp/hp FO 36 pp/hp FO 36-60 pp/hp FO 60 pp/hp FO • 36-48 pp/hp FO CENTRAL CAUFORNIA June Mountain Mammoth Mountain China Peak Dodee Ridge 57-80 pp/hp 109 pp/hp 60 pp/hp 78.96 pp/hp NORTHERN CAUt'OaNIA 4C 21C FO SL Mt. Reba 78-138 pp/hp 7L Kirkwood 144-284 pp/hp FO Si~rra Ski Ranch 102 pp/hp FO Heavenly Valley 79 pp/bp FO Northstar 48·120 pp/hp FO Squaw Valley 68·132 pp 21L Donner Sid Ranch 144-Ul8 pp 3C Alpine Meadows 89-180 PP lOL Su1ar Bowl 161·2$2 pp 5C Bortal · . 1•·180 PP 6C Homewood Ski Area 72·158 PP . . 3C Conditions: hp -Hardpack; pp -peck9d powder; pow - powder. ' Li.ftl/cba)n: ~ -llft.i; C -chain; FO-full o ration. . - SAUPllCI s VAMAeoM .,_. F utly tqulpptd with INt~ ...... tinted gl ... dtlux. ~ & mortt (Stk. 3028). (107298~ LhtPrb-SI 1,190 D-...-s1at1 I I I • I I I I .. • c a -• Oranga Coat DAILY PILOTIThurlday, February 4, 1982 NIA ••tTW•Mtoelfll•INC9 a.Mtle ~ o.i-.. ..... .......... flortl-..,, D .... fl.ottrDf ...... W L • II II If u " ,. " ,. " ,. II _....,.., ..... flcL ee ... _ .... .lel ' .m Wt ·"'' . .111 17 lenAn ..... Den wet HOllt'IOll Vlal't Ka nsatC"y 0.11•• tt 14 .. ,. t• 20 .U S SV. n n .JOO '"°' I•" .mu I• JI Jl1 •• u ,, "'1411\ IAITl•NCONfll••NC• A-...COIY1ti. llot toft Pllll11Mlpf\lt Wetlllntton NewJ-y New Vqn "'' 11 , • n n 21 1• 21 u C-NIDlw..,_ Mllwau.._ Allent.t O.lroll lndlen. Cllk teo Clowtle"°' JO 14 " ,. It 2t " ,. 11 27 10 )I W.-.-Y•k-NewYorll ... ~11.,..M Booton el O.Croll, ppd .. ,,,_ New J-v 112, A ti.nu 103 1'1111~ 122, Wetlll ......... Clewelend IOI, lnctlen. ICM Mllw-llJ, Chl<eec>" S... Di99011>, 0.llH 11» U leh 122. Ponlenct 1 II Gol.,...SldttO, "'-Illa• 5Httle'7, K-1Cltyl7 T ....... 10-0ellwerell~ Phoenl• el s.n Antonio Knlcks 98, Laker• t4 .7to .... JV. MO 11 .. , lfV. 457 IJ _.., - .'41 lOV. .'21 11111 421 ""' 400 11 ... 12110 .... vo•K -LIKH IJ, RutHll •• C•rlwr._.,. 10, -lln JI. Ak ""r-11 Wet:>sler s. Smlth t, w1111em1 I•. KnlVtll o Carter 1. Oemk o Totett, •1 ,.,,. tt LOS AHO•L•I -Ram1>11 1, WllllH 26. Al>dul-Jebber 12, C-9r 11, Nlaon ?J, Mc Adoo 10, Brewer 2. Jorde n I , Lendsl>e,,,... 0 T otels ., 1 10 ~ sc .... ,o-.. ,.. Ntw YO<ll 1t 2S 26 " " L" AllQeltl 17 J2 21 17 •• Th.-point -·· -l'll•on l"oule<I OUI -none Tolel fOUI• -New Vorll II. L.o• Anoel" 21 A 11,'13 HIOH SCHOOL "ountaln Valley 78, Martna 44 M4•1NA -'"''" 1•. l«r, s, Smllh U , Klunmen •. Tandy J, C'*"ll I, llel 1, Mllltt o. C••ldv o. •eou. 0 TOl•I• h 1 .. u .. l'OUNTAIN VALL•Y -Vlllen ... w• •• HUeMI 22, Ha,,tr 11 "'-"rel J, Je<oOt 4, Whhehtlr I. John Ecllweller IJ, Jim E<kwtlltr 1, 8ul11, Kiib<> 2, K"1Y 0 Totelt 211 .. 2• 1s. k-ltyQul'Wf'I Merine ' 14 t U-4ol Founleln Velltf 11 It 11 17-7' fol•I to..11 Menne 11, , ... nlelft Valley 10, h chnket Coecll .._,,kh (Metln•I Htn. 9eech 82, Weetmlneter 54 HUNTINGTON ••ACM LeM II, ThomptO" 12, Ayr•t U, Sha<klelorcl 2, FHnllr• 2, Seleye 10, lillllt 4, Hertler O Mello• Card• o, Gibson O. Kl•O•r O. llupll,._0 Totel• 21._UU WllTMINST•ll -Eulln II, 0 -nt •. Ptlll• I, Grems t, Nkolel I, Pe1tl 2, Nunet 1 BleUslty1, Shrew11>ury S Tote l1 21 IOU ,. kwetrTO...n." Hununoion &..ch 20 •• " ,._., Wutmlntltr 6 1 It 22 f' Totel foul\ Hunllnglon Beech n WutmlnSl•r 1', TethftlCtl foul Ea.Un IWulmlnst•r) Edlaon 84, OcHn View 57 &OllOM CheftO 21 DIB•rnerdo t Sltohtns It, GCIU09f IJ, Blne•kl 1 Smith o Totelt. 2412·11 .- OCIAN Vl•W 0.Brouwtr 1 Ctrroll S U uwll<ll JS, Werner • Judo• • AnlonOCl(IUlot 1 Tolel1 1113 10 SJ k-i.vo...ri.ro Edi ton It 13 IJ •• _... Ocu n View u 16 It 1._ ST Tolel lou4• Edt!IOll 10. O<ten View "· Fouled out Weriwt !Ocean lllew1. GoudVt IEdltonl. TIC'hnlul DIBerneroo !Edlt0nl Newport Ha1bor 68. lrvtne 50 N•WflOtlT HAll8011-Bell 2J S.-t 12, Scldmore •. Folk •. Seib~ t . wolf• J Brandl 1 Enol•nd I. wantau o To1et1. 2• ?0-2' .. t•VtNE-Cetver 17. 8u1er • 8ro10wkh II Ntal 14 JollM I uswry o Mar1tl o T otel1 "l2 u '° ..... ~,o,..,,.,. Newpor1 HerbOr It I 10 10-...- lrwlnt •S I I 19 !O Totel '°"" Ntwoorl Har11ot II trwlf'l« U • ID 40 Hohnes pours in El Toro triumph For two periods Wednesday night, it appeared as if Corona del Mar Hi.rh would take over sole possession of first place in the Sea View League women's basketball race IPOMF.N CdM .,i, II Toro 41 •L TO•O ll'IUlt 1, Hetr1tr1el 1 llltltlllt/1 •• ~· •• ""-flln•n ••• llk11'9>t t, "104'tl II, Mollr ... t. WMtlly I .... ,.., 0 Totelt· U 1U4 •t CO•O..A DIL ~· Ly"'h 11, H-11, OlN'I 2, 0."91 10. ,.It,.,. u. IUno- 1. Htlllllft-lh • 111•"°4 1 Otwlt .•1 VMSl""""v• '41, Und9rWOOf t Tt4elt " .... ,, ac-i.vo.,...,. 11 Toro 10 7 7 11_.1 '°'one *'Mer 11 JO " •• n Ttl•l .... h I I T.,.. It c ...... 1e1 Mer II Unlveretty 71, laddtebecll 44 VNIVIUITY" Outtl U , Ill-14, Mv«t •• ll•lcllHt 10, S.OlsoH •• L•l'Mll 1, MonrW 4, A•lllunoO. ChtlO Totala JO 11 IHI UOOLal4Ca De...,._, J c; ... ti, ---....c~ <I. o."""' 1, Gara I. 11-t -MOllCtltf 4, 0 ''-"""1111 • Totela 111 1144 ken ... OM._" Unlwtrtlty U f ti tt II $ffdloM<• • II • I._.. Total to.ilt' Vnl-tllY 17. ie•telltn 14 Cotta MeH st l!stanola 13 COITAM81A 8tl'~lty 11. l'elk-1 If, lllthtbar .. r ), $1raytt I, l'lelll 11, Palml>leclle I Tolall U l~lt $t •ITAMCIA -OardMf 10, Meydole IO, Mlften4 !. KrtlH II, Tift 10, MCC.11111 0 JOl\nalonO TOltla tt 1 .. 14 » 1c ...... o.,,.,.. CDtta Mt.. 11 U 14 11-tt l!tlancl• • t 22 l+:--5.> Total IOUla· CO.le Maw u. lhlencle u '•ul•d oul T Ill llhl•n< l•I Tet11nlcel foult J Field tCotle -.-. .. 1 Cepo Valley 881• L•g. BHch 117 CAll'llT•ANO VALL•Y-S.OOWk• t, Cell I, o.c-11 Derten it M11nrM I Mutdor t. Mor1ent0n • llyen t. WHltrlleld O Totelt Jt '"" • LAeUNA 8 EAC-RI-ti 10 ...... I, McOrell 1, Shon 2, Dvort• 1 WeldruP I. T tpper 2 Hobin • Fortune 2. Geyer 3, Wlllerd•,OrelO Tolela·1017-21H k•••yo....-,.. Ctplllr..., Vellty tt It 10 )I_. L•o.,,,. Bffch 11 10 to I~ S7 Totel lo.ila Cei>lllr•no V•ll•Y U, Leoune B .. ctt 10 Fouled out RI-II tLeoune Beec111 . Dvorak IL•oune 8••<11). Tecllnl<el HOOln tLaQllM a .. cllt HIGH SCHOOL 'WOMEN lrvln• 85, Newport Herbor 38 lllVINI!-Steumen 11, K Oden 14, Pfullt 1, Mont< It, E Oclen •. PllllllPo 1, Trammell O Flynn 9 Moo<• 0. folell 21 U l•U OCIWl'OllT HAIHOfll Dodcb IS Waynt1 U, Ad.ir>a 1 B•tdle • Jurkonwk 2, o ... n 0 Plallool 0 Toi••• IH u J4 kw• h ou.n." .,.,,,. n • ,. ,._.., NtwPOrl H.Orbor It 11 • l-l6 T olel louU Ir vino II N-porl Her11or 11, Tecllnlcal loul Nowp0rl Herbo• bencll Eatancla 54, Cotta M•H 40 ESTANCIA Cer'*"ltr I Vatcher O. HOw lencl • Conway O MecMllllen 10. !><no••• I CIVltlmon 10 H•l"<O<k . Hughet 11 Tot•t• 111a.u1• COSTA MESA l"• t , Lerner .. N .. 11' !>4.ooor o, Garcia 1, Armondarti O, McAl•r O Prlu O R"hel>t•oer • Slljovlc o Tot.eh H 10 H .00 S<•• h 0...r1•" E"encoe 13 " • 11~ c ..... ~.. • t ) IJ 7-40 Tolal 10 IOUll E•l•n<I• "· Cott• Me ... Foultd Out Larne r ICMI• M•UI. Lu• ICMI• Mew) H-l•no tE"on<l•I Unlve u 11Y H. l eddlebeoll H IAOOL.ailAbc-,.,, .. I, M<OltWt t, Nhlk 1, '°"*" t, Me<lllNlll I. tt41lt1 • ... " llNIVl .... TY C.,,,..,-, I, U,.,..,..... ti, ""'-,.""'" U, HIMI II, v., .. t , Me!WW• •• """'' , ....... 11·••,. ..... ...,e.Nn ........ ' ••• 11 Unlwe•tltv U 11 II 10-" Toi•• hl\ilt: ......... "· un1 .... 111y 11· ,oulffM McOlftnlt ! ...... •111<11) at T0t0 N CdM 84 co•OMA OIL MA·-.... y 1, "-" 1, ICtnMll •· Och•ner I. Oroe111>u1t tt, o..lt II Tttet•. 24 ._12 M. IL TO•O-Holm" 40, Ot ftnlton 4, M<Olll 11, CleA I, Ka,,..,• Tottlt IO •17 .. ..... .. ...,.... (Mone Clel MM " 14 t U-M 11 Toro u II H 1._.. To1e1 lwttl CWIM dtl Mir 11, II T.,t II, 'outed°"'' Klfldall IC...,,. Clef Mer) S a nta Anlt1 W•l*H04Y'I ••WLTI , ................... .,_.... . ,..IT •ACl.t V.fllf'°'* Im• Slrrltr (OllwafOll 1100 7 6' UO S.lldl 01 V91111 IC.IMltdal •·• UO 8rlthl Ille CH-ltyl 10.AO Also reced Pe,,y't Over, Oltlenl Guy, Tallllt ""'· T1'1ettr1 flloyel. DtftCI ... l"rltnd u lie! V Lo. Snow-k Time I 17 •IS. HCOND •ACI. One mlle Teyene tOwrre) IJ.00 1.40 7 IO 8uoy1nt Lett tHMMf') 10 ID tJ 10 80HOWed -IS .. lntrl I 40 Alto tKed Pot H•"°' ..._.,. OIMn, Ha" • Nolloft. HIVtl Celll>er, Sere SUtlthl"f. Comllv, Touchy Time t.•. JI DAILY DOUeLE 1"21peld1111.ID THl•O •ACl! ... 11tl_. L'Cep tOllverftl I 40 •ID 4 00 Alc•ltlout !Plnu yl •ID > 60 Heullu !Melle) • 10 Alao rec•d Colonel Arms, l'rl•ndly Kln9, Olivie Oeor91. Serv•. F-••I J ud91, Pleyer Joe, G.,... Room Tim• t II >ti ,OU •TH •ACI! t lurl""9' !>henlln tAtmusienl 1 00 • 40 S 20 Bu<l<ohOV (G .. rre) I ID S 20 F0<oollen Men (Pineo > ) 60 Alto raced· F1 .. 1 l!!rlc, Feeraom• l"oureorne. AM.._ lo Gercle, A .. d Y lltC>, Gre vllH . Olymplc Goe l, Credi! Ktno. MIQhly 0uU Tlmt I; IO llS ,.,TH •AC•. OIW mll• t<•r1>Jc l~H•r-) tt 60 • 60 t 60 Kem Win Rultr t.t.tm.nwnl J JO 2.20 Julleniw f Plnceyl 1.IO Alt.o r.Ced l"Mthot Rtwtrd My S-1 LoYltt Prlnceu Alva SIW Don I Cer• HotlettAMle Time I :16 4/i SJ UIACTA l+Sl peld Jiit 00 SIXTH •ACll. I f11tfono1 World of Swy WOflO tCH I..-) J IO 1 ID 1 40 Merit'• l"ftl L-1ve1.n1 ... 1e1 • 60 uo 1<eryn'1 ProMnl tAtmu• .. nl t 00 Aleo rt<9d· Meme Tia, Ledy N01'1, Bretl< Out lfl• Wliw, E"911all Glrl, So<>ooll Time I 0t JIS. Enter El Toro's Robin Holmes. Holmes poured in 40 points to help the Chargers overcome Cd.M 's 33-27 halttlme lead as El Toro won this showdown or the league leaders.,. 68-54. Hughes a nd 10 each from Chris MacMilha n and Sally Christman u the Eagles maintained sole possession or third place al 8-3. Costa Mesa (6·5> was led by Shelly Neal's game·high 19 points. The Mustangs converted just 10 of 24 free throws while Estancia hit 18 of 23. GLIDDEN E»ewhere, E stancia beat Costa Mesa. Irvine had no trouble with Newport Harbor and University routed Saddleback. Here's how it went lrvlne 85, Newport Harbor 36 El Toro 88, CdM 54 The Chargers went to a full -court preu In the third quarter and Holmes handled nearly au of the scoring chores to turn the game around. "She was just awesome," Sea Kmg Coach Karen Gearhardt said or Holmes. "We bad her under control in lhe first half but she just went crazy in the second half. "She got a lot of breakaway baskets off their press and she got inside on us a lot more." The Sea Kings were led by Lisa Greenburg's 19 points and 15 rebounds while Angie Dodds chipped in 12 points. The win gives EJ Toro a 10-1 Sea View record and puts the Chargers one game ahead of the 9-2 Sea Kings E1tanda 54, Coate Meaa 40 Estancia went into the fourth quarter with a slim 36-33 lead but the Eagles hit eight of nine free throws down the stretch to widen the gap E s tancia got 17 points from Debbie Kim Oden blocked eight s~ and had 14 points. including 10 in the third quarter; to lead the Vaqueros to the easy win. I rvlne went to a full-court press in lhe tturd quarter and it helped the Vaqueros outscore Newport, 26·4, to break the game open. Lisa Slessman and Robin Monk chipped in eight points each m that period Newport got 15 po ints rrom Elizabeth Dodds while Lisa Wayne added 13 The loss drops the Sailors Sea View record to 0-11 while I rvme 1s now 6·5 University 59, S eddleback 17 Susan Unde rwood , Brenda Z1 m merman and Lol'ita Hines combined for 39 points to lead the Trojans lo a rout. U niversity wasted little lime. taking a 14-2 first·quarter lead and en1oying a comfortable 31·5 halftime lead . The win puts the Trojans at 3-8 while Saddleback dropped to 1-10. Linda Novak was the high score r for the Roadrunners with seven points. Basketball scores BMketball Ml Sen Mien lo U. Cerrito$ U S.ftlt AM '1, S... O!eQO AMw 70 Ml-~· Sedd .. O.O ... Alwertlw w Sen Olt90 U, Clln.t .. Sen Bernerdlno 72, Pelomar U ~c.iter-• LA VelltY "·LA Minion •• Lono llH<ll cc• Pewwna Jt Hlah IC~OOI ... ..,, ... Le .... Newpor1 H•r11o• ... ,,,,,,,. IO Corona Clol MoV n . E 1 Toro• 1 U"lvorlllY 11, Seddltbtc-'4 Co.la ~ M. E•tencla IJ ,. ....... l..Mflle , ovn1al11 Vet lty 7S, "'4orln• '4 Edi ton .... OcMll View JI Hunll,...4111 IM<h U, WHlmlntltr IMlllCMtt~ C•PI .,,.,,. V•ll•y ... Le9u11e 8HCllS7 hn Clerr.nletel,•l.lotuna Hlllt S7 "°''"lall Vlojo IO, Dene Hlllt .. ....... w.... .... ., Del wt 14 ~"''· ._., ltrvltt IO, '"'-.t.m.tt 7' C..Vl.MtM c.~ ... 0r.,... .. S.ntt An1 9', ,_...Ill tt Tldtln n, a1Modtlllt4J llnta AM ve1i.., ... VIiia "•"' St ,,.....l.MfM c.,..,._6&.~•a.. . I.et A M, II Der-40 ..... ti. I.Mr ... IC. !If• ,._Hie.a!• ""'-" l.MfM s.Mte"" 9-19...,. M I.A ...... .,, l'Ullt"911 62 U eU Trey 1!, IU!lly HOii a ............ w,... I.It•""-•· ..... or.,.,. ~ .. ~°'""· Lt CMM.l "1, blKM A!MtltN 61 MIMlftl~-'= .,.IM)tl,. •. ...., __ .. v •• -............... . standings Sunaet Leegu• Ed loon Hunlln91on 9M<tl l'ounlaln v111ty Merine Octenv- L...-Ovt#tll W L W L 6 I 1' t ' 2 " • > ,. , 4 II t ,, . WutmlMC•r O I ' .. ,. ..... .,..0-11:•1 M•r IM t i Hvnllf191on B<wlcll 0cu 11 View at l'-t•ln Velln WttlmlMttr II Ecltton Sea Vtew League , . Leafllt Ovt<'ell W L W L Corone Clef -r IO I 1t 1 Etlan<le t 2 17 • HewPOr1 Herw • I u 1 Cotle Mita 7 • 11 I Vnlvet\lly 1 • U t r 1 Toro t • J n lfvllle 1 10 I 11 Sa4MltM<ll 0 " t " ''*Y•O-O:•l C_,,. dtl MM el N.-,ot1 Har110r !11tncle .. vn1 ... rt1ty s.cldltMlll. e1 Coete M9oa ltvlMllllT- IOutt\ Coa9' l.Hgue uee-0-.•" W L W L Ceplslr-VtlltY • ' t 14 7 Miit~ VltlO S l It II llafl c lt"-W ' ) " • OllM Hlllt 4 • II I ~..... t •• ,, ~·HI"' I 6 14 7 ............. ,,, .. , ea,.1,.,... 'olali9Y Iii ltfl , .......... '-.aeuM leeell 11 0-Hlllt MIMi.tl Yleltet UW.. Hlllt ............... ........ ~ W L W L ltntll• I 1 U I ...,....... • ' u ' -...,o.. a ' " • ..... ""* ' • , • ll -~ 1 • • 11 ........... 4,l., 81 .... MlrlflllrlllM tel WW Oef .. r111tt.ttt.•..,1 _,.,._ 4,,., 11111.w Oii it .. ,.,. LATEX WALL & CEILING PAINT s5~a~ <::: CltLl l'OA"IA CALIFORNIA litl RUSTIC STAINS Otl Base House L J •et..• c°'"°" Stain. Solki cn1 ExterlOf (Clear) -Semi-transparent 10 oz. cartri{)Je t.iailable in all the Aeo s419 well kOONn colocs ~14 CONTECH CONSTRUCTION ADHESIVE I IPL200) 10.6 oz. cartrl<tJe l s1ss •• .... llVl •nt 8 AC•. I 'Al rlll ..... lwf. w.-1.., Liii 1 """-.> ta 4 • He,__ OM (Y ..... Ntle) t • •ullf c:.n.,... IM•lty) •• Ma<M, -'JM fi e.Ml. Me,.r ._.,,, Mr ........ Tl-· 1•'14/t .. l llAC'TA 1a.11 ,_.. t117 IO . U "ltK tlJI 11·11~·7 It ~ t7,AJ• wllll I, W!mlftt llcub Ith W ... ) U ~-11• <aft ...... ,_.. 114Ut w)lh M6 wlnnlftt llOett lfl,.. ...,_) U 11'10 llll ttr9"" COft .. 14'tltl\ ,_14 tit. o0 "'"" It •IMtne tk114'tt (fwr ,,.,_, -wreiclll ll•NTM R4CI. 7 ,.., ...... ll'lylflt .. ...,., ll*lltl tO.. l.OI uo .. lllfvl Wr IA-nl I 00 4 IO C-ry AT-IC•l.enodel 11 JO Alie rKff A IClu ter Luc•. "'" "41¥-.... .,.1tu1 Ontt. ac ... O'H......,.,.., ~ID'Or Tl-· l 'D4/f MIMTM •"'°'•·I 1/1' milt• OK.-( l"lftuyl 7 00 J ID J » Tttlll~n (Qwrrel I ... 2 .. Ml•ttr L...,.e IC..IMMal I IO AIM r .... ; Acth1t "otlltll, 1-m.tk, $tr11ttln' ~. Oerl>ve'911tv-. ll'M"IC lltot'm, va Yell Men. Tltnt: 1 GllS U UtACTA <Ml pelct ~IO Att...-.ct n,11• HotlVWOOd ... ,, WIOttl,O.Y'I RHUL Tl ..... ., ........ __ _..., l'I •IT RACa. One ml .. l'k•· k trplo 0 'utiflltllll) IJ • • .. I IO H-dV Scocll (Vtllenctl,,.,._I H 00 ... Mn. M. (~I 11 00 Alto r...i• Bleck l'-1, , __ Wllh Lov•, Tht Punll, The Comedy Awttd, Wlnltrllewll, .._y Olrl, Dale't OtnOV Tlmt· 2:GUIS saco..o •.t1e•. o... m11o l'k• S.ntafll._(~111 S20 140 100 T •noo Oulll I Mitlor I • 20 uo Chercoal Henowr !Gouclreeul • 40 Alto recect· Ashl•y Lord, TllrH Slett, 0-rel Sii-, -MVtltry, Dul>lel A l'IOIMe Cldlll, EJM< F.,.. Time tit fl OAIL Y DOU8L• C 1~)1 peld S.. ID THl•D •AC•. One mite pen Ounberrof t8evltul 12.10 1.10 •ID Front,. ... !Cr•wtontl 16 to I to ~'rdMy 0. IGrvMv) J 00 Alto reced NllChtl lol>ell, Mlchto- Htll, Tlrne Tree.er, LI•• Wirt N. Hurrlc-Aoua, 8rllllenl O'SllH Time 1 04 4/1. U • XACTA C7-4t peld 1114 ID l'OU•TH •AC&.ON mile lrol. Alley 8rultaf <Hom IDS .00 24 40 10 20 Oomerr l'loe1 (Gouclrweul • 10 100 Htth Cll ..... 19er1re ml 10 20 Also rectd Pompe,.o John, C•utlll S.-dtne. Milot Mlrllen)ev. Devan• CuP, Ottart CNclw11, Sier E,,.,,.r0<, AM-VlclOry Time 1 Gt ""™ fllAC• Ont mll• pec:e Slrtp Sq.,..,. tWllllem11 21 . .00 t 60 • 411 Soeclal Ouellty IAul>ln l J.40 2 ID Sly Lii IOUnnl9111I I 00 AllO reced Bler,.ey Wey, WenerMt Nordel Tryu Brv•n H Tep On w- Wenolo. Fultel>Ull• T ltnt J 01 2/S. ts EXACT.ti I~•> paid lU1 .. 00 SIXTH •4CI. Ont mllt pece. Tl"UtTrkllC!B.,,_I 1060 640 110 It., •• J-... _,,, '00 • 20 Wlw ln,..._t (Crtwfordl • 00 AllO r•ecl T'welt'\ Ledy, 5-w Dtw. l.09en c~ M, Plftch Hll, 11.,. s .. mmer 111 ...... Clwnc.•. HollVI Awev Time· 2 OQ ts IXACTA 17-tl petd '160 00 GEOCEL CAULKING SEALANT Bathroom (White) 4 oz. tube Regs339 s1as STANLEY UTILITY KNIVES (10·299) Reg. ':JOI 11\fallTN •.t1e1 Oftt "'"',a• IYIMrtWW-.1 U41t I• ... (l'lllte....,. (Ntnltl II.ti lM '''"''!ti",,._,,, , ... AIN ,.., '--"'" J-. JtttMi.. ...,, ll'lylrit ...,.,, (la•~ LN, .. ,....,.. lrM N, C:-.., ...... I. 11..., ICM- ti .... l •t\ "' M ••ACT4 1•11 ,. .. t.tll oo • ...HTN llAt•. Ont.,., ..... Cit • Oun...,. N ''*'*'""' f ti >.• 4 • •II~ WIN IV Gelliti-1 I • t.a -.au .... a._,_IL C_la,..) I• tlO Al .. r.... H.._.,ew L't'M, t ·LAIM• Oretm, Olalf\OUt lty N, c .. 1 It Mall, t·T11\aMUI , ....... ( ....... Ylme· 1·tt tit NIMTM llAt•. One mllt •-Ttw otrrt H ,.,_,_, a 40 a• tA LeUlll"' (lfwNwll 14 40 •IO Mr•r .... 4Ulte...,,l ta Alto ree.ct: ,,.,...,. l•en, Y•'*· (;le•Y '-tlltl, M.IC,. H-. k'll,,._Y Time • t ••21S p ••ACTA t .. tl ,_.. '7 .. JO tJ PICll •1a llCH·l•MI Pllf l11 •• IO •1111 IWt """"""" tkl<tt• lllwe t•ne.I '1 Pick llK c..,...ellon .,.id "'·40 w1111 111 wlnnlnotk•tt.l Clllurhonttl T•NTH llAtl. One mlll PK• A11Mr1.,do llC.t-lorl II JO 7 • &.GD ""°''' urwu (Oouler'lel "60 • 40 L..,.,...., C,,.mwr tWlll...,,.1) I IO A Ito raced Monalenor Oele, Loy el Hu,. .. r. 5Pet'kle Ar911, AndV t C>Mn. lllelitr Pelnter, lllltiy Chenet, l'lecervlll• Time 2:., ti aXM:TA 110.21 paid St,00 20 "tt•ndlne• •.tst College ·-UC Ir...._ I, ,,_It. I ........ ICHll"9 IUCll Clef Go, M . I>. Me MJ9n IUCll Clef 1-ttalfl, M . M , -Mye" IUCll Clef Hl-llel, ._,, ._,, Nl11en tUCll Clef Slt••rl • ._), M Elled9f IUCll <Ml Hotw. ._,, t ·), K_.,. IUCI) C1e1 HarrlflOlon. 4-6. 7 .... •1 Mye r a Myera IUCll dtl Healll Hl ppenatlll 2 t •·> •' Mellory K•ll"9 IUCll wt Go-S1 ..... 11 Ml, > ... ._I, ._r Lll*HI tl"SI <Ml Nh<on·IC_.,., ....... Men'• aoccer HtONICNOOL N-' H-1. 11 Ten I NewPOrl Harbor uorlllt Gol\tllO Talemo OIMl,~MoNt Corone del Mer K«lno K0<lc1< t ·-lo•.S--.C•• GLIDDEN LATEX REDWOOD STAIN s4~a~ CONTE CH LATEX CAULK tWhlte) 10 6 oz. cartri{)Je 95c Reg. s189 7~ COMBINATION SAW BLADES $5.00 diSCOlllt OOtlJ:i avai~ lhPlf~. s11s Reg '2" . I ~ ~ - ---- Orange Coatt O~ Y PILOTIThuradmy. February 4, 1882 Skiers have chance to test skills'Sherrill's MUCRl. al ... , .... "ntT1outeut1••M II UP• at a• Ca U • • : P • 8 ary NOTIC9 OILOIUOl.UTICHI Lake Tahoe ski racing course available to. all for $1 • • • ed 0::.~~~:fr:==~= Cntlclz Litt erl11•r 111• ,.,,., w11111.,, W008IONG THB 8LOPl!8: 111 .. ..._--. ._,,.,,...., ,..,,_, MAMalTATIM9NT CAl.IPO•NIA, cou•n• o• Du!i':~~·.••'"' •• , .. " I• 11•1111 o~~:.~~••oa1vwwwn •u•NI (;HAAT•••. un P.o.eo•ill H•w,.tl 11•0 , tull• •. Hlw .. rt •T1A ..... ~--I •••• l11cfl CA~ I.A •TIPPt WOOD • DOW Valley ln Lake Tahoe bu lNltalled • IKllNQ !IJ.EI au~ANG =."~~:.:11~1·~ ."~7'(~'.:;!:::: coln-ope:ra.ted race coul'lt ln the Eut Broadway A rt ult f c11111r1111 ll•v• ••u••v•• 11111• cc'•l"T I ll091•T •U•HI.,.. ILi.A•• AUOCI AYto• •• :~rt.,..._,__, e..c11, C.A OIN•~.Z-:.-'.-eu Alltma~. The coune 11 detlped for reeruUooal JOHN J 0 : n c a:Se, P~~ ~~o~ :.~n:;:•.::,ott~:=~·,-!";,~ racln1. and for only Sl. akiera of all ablUllea can University of WlJconaln hM •vt••tv • "'<~ 111v .. ,. ......... teal their akllla SEVANO calla it "oulr11eoua... °"o":~"o°j=';','~m Tlllt ....,_ It '°"°"'tao W .., a.MIYA L ..... _, .... I ·-·1 ·~·-· ·~ ........... .......................... ws .,. flllt u-w• 11 .... wltll ttw CAlllNUMMl••m The course was ealabllahed to live the 1ener1l Abe c ban 1 n , a .. , .. ,...,,.. Public •-·t f k' ln ln al tl'ubn.-Of.,. eo.11 o.i1v Piiot, • ... e o s • rac I a • e, no-pressure University of Arllona "•" •. t..i M2.ta c ... 111y CMNI .t Orentie C111"'' "' •Of IC.I Y• ........ _... TM J'ttllttCI ~--.......... ....... . l'IGSM _.._.....,. ... ,_,.._. atmoaph re. 2. When 1klln1 downhlll or overt.akin1 another Journallam profeuor. · The Idea la definitely not new to skiers 1n some peraon, tt•a up to YOU to avoid the other skier. aaya It la ''completely .-.C •Ta Pu1111.w er-. c ... , o.11, l'llM, • ...,._ ..., .. ...., "'.,.._ "-" •. ti 1e. U, 1"1 Ma ,:-.,-WWI ..... h .-,iu 9f • parta or Colorado, who have eQjoyed the aame kind 3. Do not atop where you obstruct a traU or are out of line." --,.-OT""1c_1_0-,.-,-.-L,-u-.. -o-,-• .....-- of Innovation for some time now. • not vlalble from above M al he m a t l c a 01ca110,. "°"1c1.osuu ,..,,., In .... _..,. , ... "'°""' • I •r•1n9lly ti lll•l ''"' W'llllll ......... If tfl'(, _.,-.111 ...... ti ..... Whal'• particularly nice ia that the coune ln 4. Whcin entering a traU or atartlna downhill, proftuor Wilfred l'REHCH ouuTu HOMu Squaw Valley Is destined for akicns of all abilities. yield to other skiers. Ka~an of the University ~~:g~~!t~~:0 ~J:i.. •• •oHA~o AVl_..I U.-. lie ........ P ••· "ICTITIOUI IUllNIU .,..... .... -.C.., c.Mre U.. NAMI ITATHd"T I• ••fl .. clt a Me•ff ••• UO. STA. T ""ST <•S d• rd •R ti T t 5. Ski wit.h.ln your ability level. lf you are a of ich11an lhinka It la ,~.:~ ~:!'rr..,11~:A0~ g::,:::· ic. tan • a n1 es > -a novice, do not adventure onto the advanced runs. "lnevit•ble," thouch "a St•t• 01 c.i11 ... .wa. " twrm c.ntty flle lollowl110 ,.,, .. "II Hlllt ..-...,. •It .... WI la Du•lllff• •• ... -...... a l!G I IT It Y 01' 01 H TAL SI U .. M-Mll<llM •IClftteJI .. HEALTH IMJ M(l'-11, tulle 0, ........ M etll .-ct. llMffla naUonwide prorram aimed at lmprovtn1 the skills Conversely. if you are an expert, don't "hot rod" s a d 1 l de 1 i 1 b t 0 n 111t111v ••r1wo1 O.C•Mott ,.,.,. .... "'. of the skllne public -ls being offered at Mt. Reba on the novi·ce slopes. American society... •cnct s..1. '0r" ... 5uc»•1or c-1 •• Ille H1111tl119ton 8-UI, CAttW ltorlo lmmadlatem•t1I•. ff nta elltNAOETTC L JACOt .... , I , tu ,_.u. ftUIY, M ..., this season. bes th l -1y °' .,..., s1a10 °' c.111.,. ..... Every year lbe majority of ski injuries are At t, ey accept t •111•••d Oft Nov•m1>1r >. '"'· •tld Star Test is a proficiency trial ln which a caused by other skiers. who are usually careless 1rud11ngly as a fact of ~:!~0!:111':!i":.::. !:~~'~ ~~..!~ Oortorcl on .... Hunlll'l9fon 9Mch, CA lfljftl, --, .. ., ..... .-... n ... 1 TO THE Ol!l'l!NOAHT A <1•11 Tiii• Dutl .... > It (Ondu<l.0 0ov ... On'lplaltll Ila• bt111 111•0 llV lhl recreational skier can earn a bronze, 1llver or gold wlth lhe above rules. academic life. At worst 0u.,,., Hornet A,-1.11o11 '"' uw pin. It's based solely on the ability of a sider to One other ruJe that wasn't added was that of they are Infuriated. ;.:i;;~~114~::c~ ~~~:=,,: llldlvlOual pill ... 111 ........ '°" II ¥111 wt~ to e.-io L Ja<OO 1..W Wt l<IWWll, '°" m""· wlltolll Thlt tllat-t Wiii 111.0 wnh IN'• day• ... ., llllt •-I• .. ,Wd Cou111v c .. rk of 0ra11911 cou11tv Oft on , .... Ill• wllll 1111• twrl • wrMt111 1"91> 1, "" '"po" .. i. IN COMj;laltll. ur11na vou perform certain turns, traverses and stops on a courtesY,. A little goes 8 long way and it most But 0 v er a 11 • a atld ••'• -'"" Aooa1a 01tot1 •net groomed and/or moguJed slope. certalnJy will mitke your day on the slopes more sampling Of campua ~~'· ,~:":, ~= ,'!:';:':!•nn~'~;.~~ ,,,mt. ... y-...,..., ........ be ............ For the $3 registration fee ,• trained instructor enjoyable. opinion shows that a tou11drod & 1or1v & 00,,00 0011.,., will take you on a designated slope (depending on reported $287,000-a-year 1aw11.11111onovo111>oun11eds1a1"·•nd PulllltllM Or•-Coe" Ollly Piiot, 11t>ll<allon OI ,,.. 114-111, 11141 llllt 1"91> • 11 11 ,, ltm ,.7.., ... ,, "'IV ""•' • )\IOOIMftl aoaln•I • • ' ' • ,.., lot "" rallltf do~ 111 1111 whether you're a beginner. intermediate or contract University of ~.;v.~":.!' ~=::, ·~::!':;''.~ advanced skier), demonstrate and explain the s Pittsbur&h coach Jackie '"'· 1"""com...-o10 wu a11 u.e omplalnt. whl<ll <euld ruull II\ arnl1llmt11I ol weeu. 101110 ol 011•'1' or pr-rly .,. ollllr ••11•1 maneuvers to be evaluated and then will conduct ~pson copes Sherrill signed last week ~;:~:·~~ ~ •• ·~~.~;i:"''!;::.?..:":9:; the test. to coach Texas A&M 's tollo•• * * * fOOtbatl team is OOt LotUolTratt NoOSAHoermap requosUd 111 IN corn,.i.i111 NOTICIO'l"a'""''llAUI OATEOJ .... 1.1 .. 1 Tll• lr•I ... C-y n 190f M LEE A llAANCH, THE SKI SCHOOL at Alpine Meadows in WI.th pressures sitting well with college r=:::~::~7!:.1~..:..:.~.!!~~.~ Ta hoe City has an accelerated instruction professors who can only 0111co 01 •n• co11111v Recorder 01 program for the serious athlete interested in an dream about s uch a ~~~,.o~~.c;c::~~:~·:;~~;.:; ••11 "' intensive Ski experience. Salary. Property I\ mo<e commo11ly known Ole11lcoff, .WI, No J1"7·SJ llv vlrt.. Ci.rtl of •11 eucul1011 If"*' Oii Otumlltt llv LINO/\ MOFFETT. U . '"' 0ov Iha SuolrlOr COllr\. C-y OetoulY of Orar1ge, Si.I• of C•lttomia, -• ICKIY, NIULANO, , •• o•s & 111oomo111 ..,,.,.d In ravor ol T,,. Ot..t..lnA 11v1110 Co mpo11v •\ ludome11t ti t..a-Mrwt,lollllstt cr•dllorlU a11<1 •0•11111 Igor M . II Tlf'e,c.A.,.. Called the "Alpine Learning Adventure," the Virmnia' s 7 ~4 center learning The terms of Sherrill'S• ~~11:~~1;""mln do Fer. C0$1• Mesa, program will next be offered March 8·12. The class ::1• s 1 x . ye a r c 0 n tract T09111>e< "'"" ••• •no \l11ou1ar '"" Olenlcofl. Oletl P.-rtle1 Corp. IMO 11•11 ... ,_ On•lopma11I Corp., and Amer1u11 Publl.-Or.,oe Coatl Dally Piiot. C:ommortl•I 1!11t•rprh .. , lt1<. •• Jan. u , Jt. 21, F.O •. '"' 211 .. 1 Size iS limited tO five Skiers per group. 8 n n 0 Un Ced by lb e 1ontme11h nereGllamtnh ond Bv JORN NELSON •PC>U•lono<'ICe\ tn>oreunto belo119l119 or • • * " u n i v er s l t y p u t t b e '" 011vw1w appert11111no luclom1111 dllblorltl, 1howl110 a "'' bal•M• of U0,0(0.00 actually -., told 1u«19men1 on 1111 Oat• o l tho luuance ol said HKullon, I llav• A PRACTICAL NOTE for the weekend: •~-c-HA"':LO'ITESVILLE, Va. CAP> _ Ra!pb coach's base pay at G•~~~L;~,~i~~ • .'~.~~:.~.:;. Many of the locaJ ski areas are predicting a Sampson's 7 feet, 4 inches of muscle and sinew $95,000 a year. But be 01 ,0 00 o·c1oc10. , m 01 .,._. .sav et l••l•d -•II lhl rlt/lt. lllle -NOTIC• 0,, TaUITll'S IALIE heavy turnout for this weekend (like most were stretched out on a couch in the athletic also will receive cash ~!'~.\~~,,: w':.'~~~ ~. ~;:: weekend$). If you are planning t.o get in a few offices at the University or Vlrctnla. He leaned his and other benefits from I •Ill .... lh• above dnc/lbeo lt1le•••I ol Yid llldgmonl debtor h i 111 LOAt1 NO Ml the ~_.,y Ill IM C_, ol Or.,9' T 1. -... M-t Stal• ol Calllor11I•. O•>trlb"I a1 THE YOUNG AUOCIATES. INC at runs, it is recommended that you purchase lift head against the wall and folded bil massive. Aegie rans and alumni, :~oc:":'v,;,~,~~.:~".~11e1m~·~~ tickets before you le ave hands in his lap. His crossed feet reached more and published reports ,.., .... ,v io sat•••• .. ,d 111aom..,t follow• P.,.col 1111 8-Ill, p_. 11 fuly •Pllnl•d Tru•I•• 1111dar Ill• .. of Ille Mite.II•-"""' of lollo•l"ll -'1--of lrwt WILL Or•l\O• C°"""f c .. 11om1. SELi.. AT PUBLIC AUCTION "o THI! • • • than halfway to the opposite s1de of the room. have put his l 0 la I with .......... and .... \, "'1111 '11gt\HI NOW THAT THERE is plenty of snow on the He listened patiently, relaxlnl 81 much as the compensation at around ~~~~·~;';.!!"''"1••1111111°""v 0•u.e Pr09ff1v .. ,,._. ,.,_,y ,_ HIGHl!5T llODE• l'OA CASH u 11HI Cow•n St•••t. tr•ll'e, CPlf•llll at llmt of .... 111 1awlu1 C•lllornlo money ol tl'le Unttecl ~I .i1 r .... t. slopes. naturally a large number of skiers will be 1 d bl • b" d 1 Id $287 000 a year 00100 11 s1111a ""• c1111or111a, heading for the mountains. · tight Y woun ca e tn 18 arms an ep wou · Sherrill, 38, ·became a Januarv "· ,.., l091tl'lff wltll all -•l"llUI•• -11111alld1-.. 1 ~ylCI '° --le11om111h, her1dllam•1111 and holO ll'f It -Mid o.d of Tru•l 111 •-'rter.ancn tl'ler-'o t>etonol"ll or 1~';.~.;1J:""~~:l:e:~':t'L 1 allow. L" H Du•~• With so many skiers, especially new ones, , 'There's a radio station in Greensboro that bot property during five ••s Town c-..10• or . su11. to0 sharing space on the slopes, It's not a bad Idea to wants to follow you around 'or part of a day 'or a years u bead coach at ~:::~.~:-";:,,:::,. In anvwlM a_,-tal11lno. ,,...,, .... ....,.., NOTICE IS HEAEIY GlllEH ltoel llNEFICIA•Y RUSSELL c.e review your basic rules of safety. 1 1' Pill, where his teams story. Ralph. Do you feel like you owe the people 11~ Sho•lll coro!, A " 0 G • T e s · on l'rld•1. Marcto S, lta, at tO·OO • m KARLEN, a married ma11, •• Ill\ •I Maltl '--'t'. Courllllutoe, 700 Cl•lc .... r1t1 -1Y The Skiline Newsletter offers these Ups : In Greensboro anything?" Doug Ellin, the comp oe:u a 50-9·1 record. c-•vofor-c• 1. Ski under control and ln such a manner that Virginia sports information director. did not have MX Illa ::.!!':"''"" C..,lor Ori.,. Wffl, City of ~nta ,.,,., AKO,_ J._,. 12, IWI aa lftllr No County of Or-. Stale of Call,.,.,,.a, I 1'olll l11 ...... , ... , -~I of Otfl<YI will Mii at pulbllc audlon to tM ~ Ae<.orck .., .,. offl<• ., .,. A1<or-b'-' ·lo< c1111 l111awfu1 ,_Y of I,.. of Or.no-c--,, .. 111 -of 1r-u1111.o S'-'", all ltoo rleM. tit .. -Mt<•l--lool-lftopr-11. you can stop or avoid other skiers or objects. long to wait for an answer. Pub"'""° 0r-co .. 1 oa11v P1101. DEATH 1mc1s BLAKESLEE su rvived by his wife COf>Y C. BLAKESLEE. Imogene or lrvrne, Ca., former resident of Costa daughter Barbara Stoermer Mesa. Ca before moving to of Laguna Beach. Ca . Oklahoma Passed away on brother Charles Mann of February l , 1982. She was a London. England Graveside former graduate of Estancia services will be held on High School. class of 1972 Friday, February s. 1982 at Sit~ hd:. vec11 a Fed~r;:l 2 QQPM 9t H ~rhnr Lawn Court Reporter for 8 years Memorial Park with Dr She 1s survived by her John Huffman S r .. St parents Paul and Wayneta Andrew's Presbyterian Devine of Costa Mesa, Ca . Church or Newport Beach, sisters Casey Cargill of orric1aung Services under Louisiana and CourLney the direction of Harbor Car g 111 or Ok I a ho ma Lawn·Mount Olive Mortuary Graveside services will be of Costa Mesa. 540·5554. held on Thursday. February NELSON 4 1982 at 2-C)()PM al Harbor I V E R E D W A R D Lawn Memorial Park NELSON, resident of Santa Services under the direction Ana, Ca Passed away on ofHarborLawn·MountOhve Januar) 30. 1982. He is Mortuary or Costa Mesa s u r v 1 ved by h lS Wl(e 540 5554 Pauhne. brother Victor of BREWSTER M 1nnesota, sisters Victoria MARILYNN LOUISE Thompsoooflowaandlrene B R E W ST ER . born 1 n Dennison also of Iowa. also Pomona, Ca Passed away several nieces and nephews on Februaq l , 1982 Services were held on Survived by her husband Wednesday. February 3, James Brewster. and 4 1982 at 10 OOAM at Harbor c h 1 I d r c n , Lawrence Lawn Memonal Chapel with Brewster, Teresa Wickell, interment se rvices Kathy Rogers and John 1 m me diately following Brews ter and a Is o 6 Services under the directmn grandchildren Me morial of Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive ser vices will be held at Mortuary of Costa Mesa Pac1f1c View on Thursday, 540 SSS4 February 4. 1982 at 2 OOPM PATRICX In lieu of flowers the family FRANK L PATR~CK . age suggests contributions be 93, u 24 year resident of made to the American Laguna Beach, Ca. Passed Cancer Society away on February 2, 1982 MANN F'ormerly of Santa Ana, Ca. R O B E RT TH o M As He was a member or the MANN, resident of Irvine. First Congregational Ca . Passed awa y on Church, a 32nd Degree February t,.1982 He was a Mason. a Shriner. a member member or the Masonic of the Santa Ana Elks and Lodge or Culver City-Foshay the Laguna Hills Club Lodge lf.467 F&AM He was a Survived by hlS wife ~la, 2 retired MaJOr with the Rine daughters Eleanor Gilbert. Brigade. his MaJesty's or Prescott. Arizona and Army or Great Britain lie IS Ehzabelh Dye or Glendale, Ca • 4 grandchildren and 2 greal:,Srandchildren ------------.Services will be held on • Friday, Fd>ruary S, 1982 al ~··..II...._..-.._ _____ , 10 OOAM at Ray Family 1.un HllGlllOH SMfTH I TUTHILl WISTCLIFf CHA'IL 427 E 17th <;1 Cos1a Mesa fi4E\-Cl3'71 'tllCl HOTHUS SMITHS' MOITUA.llY 627 Main SI ttunllnqton Starn 536 6539 rACIHC ¥11W MIMO•IAL , ... Cerreterv Moriuarv Chapel-Crematory J600 Pac1hc lltew 0 11vf' Newporl Beach 644·2700 MtCO....CX MOITUAlllS taciuna Besen A9A·9'15 taouna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Cao1strano •95 1776 KAltoa u.w~. 01.1v1 Monuarv • C.meterv Cr1met01V 1625 G•aler Ave Cott•MeU 5'().S$5.4 Mortuary, 976 South Coast , Hwy., Laguna Beach, Ca. with Pastor Robert B Vandermay of the First Congregat1on!ll Church, Glendale , off1cialang Family interment to follow at Forest Lawn Cemetery. Glendale Friends who wish may make donaltons in heu or flowers to a fa vorile c harity Ray Family Mortuary. Laguna Beach directors . ZARP VETA MARIE ZARP , resident or Newport Beach, Ca. Passed away on January 31, 1982 at the age r 84. She la survived by a daushter Vlrglnia LaLande ot La Mirada. Ca., 2 sons Richard Zarp of Riverside, Ca and Thomu Zarp ot Bellflower . Ca , lS crandchlldren and .. sreat-1nndchlldren. She workrd for many years al Our Lady of Mount Carmel Catholic Church, Newport Beach. and w4t • mem· ber of the Lady'• Gulld. Roury waa recited on uday. Febnlary 2, 1182 at l :OOPM at St. Paul ol U,. Cro.1 Catbolk Chuteb. Mau r Chrtattan Burial celebrated on Wednesday, February a. 1182 at lO:OOAJI al St PHI of the Cr9.1,1 Calbo"c Clturdt, La Nlra4li; Ce Mctmocial MMI wlU be •l•brated at Ou-r 1Ad1 ol llOUDl Carmt) Catholic Church, Newport &eHJl, Ca. Ort MondU;-Feiinwj 1.1111 at 1 l>N; - --- ••Nope," Sampson replied He did not NOTICE OF DEATH OF J•11 11 11 Feo • '"' uii.s2 lt1teroll ol laid I...,....,.. dobt0<hi 111 IEXHlllT "A" , ... allow -·'-.,,_,,,_ or to PARCEL I Unit Ho ' •• --elaborate. "OK. We'll tell them 'no.'.. BERNICE w. ZELLER much ltw<tOI •• ma, be nece•sarv to dH<rll>ICI HI .,.. ~1111.... P\all sall1ly Yid ue<ullon wllto acc..-recor<llCI Oft Ot..., •. 1'7 .. In .... lmorHI -cOll• ""•· P ... -of Offtclal Rec-ot SVCH EXCHANGES have become part of Sampson's daily routine. He tolerates the interruptions -"I put up with them, then go on to the next thing" -but he doesn't rellly enjoy them. Later that night, after a basketball 1ame at University Hall, Sampson crouched through a doorway and emerged from a darkened hallway. Autorraph seekers waited in the gymnaalum. He had decided not t.o sign autoerapbs that night, so he ignored them es he au-~ 1nritdy acrou the hardwood floor. ·'There are only so JnaDY pieces of himself that be can give away." bil coach, Terry Holland. said. "He can become rrutt. ooo-rommwlicative. It's like 'Caleb 22.' When be does something for the Vlritnla Education Aasoc:latioo, the cancer society calls. They say, 'You did lt for the education aasodation.' but he has lO turn them down. And he's a bad 1uy. "But be understands now that just because he's eoing to get five or six more calb, be can't shut everyone out." Sampson la in his third year at Vlr&inia. HE HAS STaUGGLED t.o leam to live with the disadvantages of being 7_.. in a 5-10 society. He also bas learned t.o cope with the pressure or being acclaimed the best college basketball player in the country. "l had to learn how to deal with it everytime I walked out!lld~:~ Sampson said. "l've had so many different experiences with people because of my height. "Most of the people here have seen me. They know me. It's gotten easier here, I've been around for so long," be said. "I 'm so tall, everybody bas seen me at least once.·• Maturity is the word that best describes Sampson's progress, both as a basketball player and a student, Holland said. As a freshman, Sampson spent most or his spare time in a dormitory room. Now, he ls a reeular around campus, although he still avoids lonesome forays Into the outside world. A dry sense of humor has made him a favorite among teammates. ·'When he walks Into a restaurant. be would like to be just another customer.'' Holland said, "but he realizes he can't be." When Sampson arrived at Vlrglnia as one of the most aggressively recruited players of lbe decade, there was serious consideration eiven to shielding him. County athletes will he honored Dan Gurney, Shirley Babashoff, Kevin Maeee. Bruce Pephall, Wayne Carlander and Steve Scott will be among those honored at the second Orange Countr Sports Hall of Fame banquet at the Anaheim Convention Center Monday nllht. Feb. 15. Gurney and Babaahort join a select group of former athletes who will b(\ inducted Into the Hall of Fame. Also honor~ with such credentials wlll be Cathy RilbY·Mason, Bric Owens and Bob Hamblin along with posthumoua awards to Arkie Vauahan and Eddie West. This group of 1-nductees will join those honored at latl year•a banquet ln the Oran1e County Hall of Fame. Dodjer Manager Tommy Lasorda, a resident of Fullerton, will receive the 1981 Lifetime Achievement Award, a apecial cate1ory for those 1Ull active in their aport. Ma1ee1 PeubaU, Scott and Carlander wlll receive apeclal awardl 1lon1 wtth Gary Carter1 Pat Mcinally, AM Meyen, Aulie Garrido ana Dave WillOll. Tbla year's tvent, lo addiUon to the S50 ba_nquet tickets, wtu aeJl a limited number of aaUery Hats at S3 each for apxta lana to 1lt In the upper DOl1ion of tbe OolllHntlun Cenie.T and '1ew tMtes(MUa. Tbe event Will set under way w1lh bltblliht movl• 1tartiq at '1 :80 lllcludlnl tbtl Doqera' World 8erie9 trlwnpb. TM banq...C seu ttart.d at l :IO. • . Tlcketl f« the 1\#ent are avillabM at Anabtlm ODD•--OlllUc' or br •••• I cbffk to P.O. BOJr -.:a, Anabdm tnOI. rurt.b :r 1n.fonnat&on m11 be Obc.alned by callin1 'Tl'N4lfl· AND OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE NO. A·112020. To •II heirs , beneficiaries, creditors and contingent creditors of BERNICE .w. ZELLER and persons who may be otherwise Interested in the will and/or estate. A petition has been filed by Lurlene White in the Superior Court !Jf Oral"g~ County requesting that Lurlene White be appointed as personal representative t o administer the estate of Bernice W. Zeller <under the Independent Administration of Estates Act>. The petition is set for hearlfl9 In Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic Center Drive, West, In the City of Santa Ana, California on March 3, 1982at9:30a.m. IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition. you should either appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR o r a contingent creditor of the deceased. you must file your cJaim w ith the court or presen t ii lo the personal representative appointed by the court within foor months from the date of first issuance of letters as provided in section 700 of the Probate Code of California. Tt\e time for filing claims will not expire prior to four months from the date of the hearing noticed above. YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the coort. If you are Interested In the estate, you may file a request with the coort to receive special notice of the Inventory of estate and of the petitions, accounts and reports described in Section t200.S of the California Probate Code. E.A. Bouveron 20951 Broolehunt St., Sult.3 Huntington Beach, Ca . 92646 963-4623 Published Orange Coast Dally Pilot. Feb 3, 4, 10, 1982 NOTICE 01' T•un11·s SALi Dated •• Sant• Atll. Calllor11I•, Or ..... ~. Cellfomla. U)ANNO.tesM Jot1uary1',I.., P.ARCEL 2 "" 11ndl•lded Ofte T' MO. '1Ml.J llA/\OGATES. tw•11ty·lhlrd 1t/Uro1 ..... ,.11 ••• T D ~Elt\llCE COMPANY H dlllY Sl>erltl-C.OllOtler 1..,1111111 <.-In tM IW 1-rffl In ·-1111.0 Tru•IH Uft<ltr Iha followlt19 C-'VolOra1199. •n<I ,. , ... c-Area of Loi t of cko<rlb.o -of lrull WILL SELL Calll°"'ll Traci ..... Ill lhl City ol lrvi11•, AT PUBL IC /\U CTIOH TO THE 11 It. e..-....... 1 County o!C>r-. $4ata of C .. llOf"ftla. HIG HEST BIDDER FOR CASH ~lllaMAW ..... t, .. ,..,Maplllldl11~•t,,~t2 (payable •I llm• of HI• In ......... PlaHltltt'• A-Y lo u. l11<1u.i ... of Mltall•-· Mai>t. mo,..r of I,,. u1111.o St.IHI •II ''9111, .., .. .......,. ~Ori.,., ,.,.. ,_ record• ol sakl Couroly, H ...cto term I\ 1111• •l>CI lntorttl conwvea to and now .. ..,-' 9-111.CA ._ d•flt1ed 111 Ille Arfl<I • e11t111eo held by II -WIG OftCI of Trull In "0.111111~' ol 1'11 OeclaraUOll ol 1111 prOPertv twretnalter dHc roM<I Puoll"'90 Or-Coefl Dall• Pii.c. Cova"• n I•, Co" d 111 o "• • "d TAUSTOA AAYMONO L WORTH,. Fell •.II ••. ltm SI..., •utrk.-. rec«-on ~-•• Sff't9M mlln.,.,WANNt;N t. WORlH t91•. tn DOOa '1it• ~ 191T. U"'fK ... t • \lt19le ma11 •• jolt1I 1e11a111' Records, of u ld Cou11tv Ith• llENEl'ICIARY CECILE I PflUC 9ITt( ""O.Cl1r.C.lon"I, PEHO LETON,a w-EXCEPTING THIAEl'lioM all oll, Rec.,_ ~"" 1•. ••• •• 111Slr AM-t oll rloPll•. -•It., mlfleral r'9fll~ Ho J07W HI -11"2, -•14 of T.l.NO.I.., 11a1ura1 o•• rlellt. e11d otllet Offkl•I Rltordl In ,,,. oflk• ol I... NOTlcao,,T•UITEll'IAL• llvO•ec•.-. " __ ... , ........ Aocorde• of Or-Courttv. ••Id -Oii l'-.y M. tta at 11 00 o.m , -11ow11, -tMrmel ••-. -all ol lru1I O•.crlbM lno to..llowl110 f<IRSTA~TITLEINSURA .. CE pro<fucH dlrlvlel from_, of U.. prop.rty COMPANY, 1 Cellloml• corp0retlon, lorf90f"O. tMI may be wllflln °' u.-r PARCEL I Unit No 20 U si-n •ncl es TrullM ., S..Cctt-TN•1-or Ill• parcel ot la11d ll•r•lnal>Ov• dHtrlbed 111 IM Concloml11lum Plan Sullslllut.cl T•utl ... of lllal cortolfl dlterll>ICI, tovelhe< •111'1 ll'le ,.,,.,,.., recorded Oft July 1, '"°· 111 8-1>6$2, O..d of Trutl ••Kiited lly H ., H tlgllt of «1111119, mlnl119, ••JllOt"lno, Paou ttU lo • .,,, lt1tlu1 lo , ol GE NERAL PARTNERSHIP, and ..... -r•t"'9 ,........., -ltorl"O ftl Oft~l'1Kord1011~11dCoun1v. rttorOed Seplemb•r J, IHI u •nclre,,_tnottwwmol,_,•ald l-PAAC.EL 1 All u11dlvlded 011e l11stru....,.1 no -· 111 -14*, O< •ny -i...a .. lt>CI ....... -rlgM llllrtv "'"'" '"''""' ,,.,., .. , u • -"'of OflK'lal Rae-of Ora._ 10 wllll"!otk.,, cllr1<tlonelly drill -1 .... n1111common111 tlw to. lnlorHl 111 Cout1ly (.all10<10 -""~-lo mine trom 1...01 otflar 11\an t- -to mo Common A,.• of ~ l of that ctria111 Notk• of Ol41u11 -11ore111a11o.,. dH<rl-. ou. or o•• Tta<I ICDCI •• oe• moo flleel "' ._ EletllOll ... Sell _,,.,.. --..... tuntW!t -~ 1-. ·~ _,, P•Olf'\ 1J -I• of Ml>eellon10U• Octooer IJ, '"' " 11111ru ....... 1 no 0< acrou IN ..-.naco ol ,,.. laftCI Ma~ rKO<dl of Wkl County, •• well ISltl, ... bOOll; IOSJ. ~ 1206, of ......... _ -·-· -II oonom lfflll 11 defined In "'9 A'1k .. -Ill.a Olllc~I Record\ of t1lll ~. wlll 1uch whlp•IO<klCI or dlr1<tlo11au, "O.ll111ti-of tto. Oec•aratlotl of utlder -punJar11 to .. kl Deed ol cldlllCI -It. 1-..1& -\Mfb ..-r Co•• "•" 11 Co " d 111 o "• •" d T ni•I Mii at PUOlk aucllen IO< ta\11, and bl.,.•ltl or ..._.., ll'le ell1fflor R11trlctloM dnCrillad 111 "SUBJECT lawful "-Y o1 .... U.WllO Stal" of llmlb lherlol, -10 .-111, ren.w>el, TO ·• -(llW "O.C1arallon" I. Am9r1Ca. •Iii. mal11 •11tranc:• to f<lnt e<iulp, m.lntal11, •-Ir, -.cie11 -PARCEL l E•~> a> .. 1 lortll In Amorltan Tit .. l11wronc1 Company op••ale any •uCh well1 of mlMI tho Sect1011\ entltltd "t eru111 1ocated at ti. Ea11 Flfltl StrMI, 111 llll wltlloul ._,,.,., IM rloftl to Mill, EaMm..,o lot o-n" •ncl "SU_.rt. City of Santo AtW, Clllf0<nla. _ ,,.., mlno. uore, e•plore 111d oper•tt S.lllun•nl Incl E"'"'°'n~nl" ot llw right. title -lftWfffl ClftYe\'ICI to thr°"91' -swnac• "' Iha -_j(IO Art It lo """""" "E ....... tntt" of IM •nd llOW -b' II ..-said Dold of lttl of tho -.bturtK• of llM land O.tlarallon Trull 111 ttoe --1¥ \lfuallel 111 t11d '1erelna-dtter'-PAACEL. Euemenl\ •• \UCh Cout1h •ndSi.tec1Herlbad•• PA•CELJ A .. --............. eawment• ••• e>art lcu•a•lv set IOrtll In IXHlelT "A" and •orwu owr ttoe Privet• 0.IVft the Arlkle -lll<td ··eovmefth" ol 1 h• lat1<1 rahrred to 111 11111 wllhl11 TrKI tJOI, u par map Iliad In th• OotlarollOll or Co••t1•t1 I" QUO"'"'" I• "'"'tad In .,. •tal• of llooll 1'1, P19tt 10 to"· 1nc1v11 .. ,,, ~sou"adJllEICoTn•T0•~.d ... A~1;-•c 1~~~~•t•'", Colllornla, C-'V o1 0r.,., cuv o1 Mltt•ll•11•ou1 M•P•. Aoto•d• 01 --' ~ lrYIM, -II dtter.lltd os lollowt Ora-c;c...,ty, C.ttllomia Oat larat1011 I 1111der lh• S.<11011 PARCEL ), ti .-on a e>«cll PARC El • EawMenl IJ """ 111.011191 In -h Artie .. entHllcl H map filed In._ 111, p_, IO -ti EaMlfl..,t 11 partlcul1rlv Mt -In follow• "Ownff• Aloflll alld OutlH, ol par<1I .._ 111 ,,,. office of llll -Artl<le 9111111«1 "E~" ol U llllllH a11d Cobio Televl1lo11." CCIUftly Ac-of sakl ,_Iv. Ill• O.cleratlotl l#ldlr tfll S.CtlOll "Sldey.,.d Eo-J," ··~ •n<I Excetil _, and .ii oll, oll rlgtou, llladlt10 111 ...ch Artl<ll lftlltlM n S.lll1me11t." "EMroetllmelll," -mllllraO.. m1,,.,.1 rlgtot1. nalwal OU lollowl "Utlllllo•"· "Su-r1 atld "CommUftltv Facllllle• E-1." tlgllh, olld olhlr llydroc1rllo•" by Satll•,.....I". "Et1Croachmlnt" a11d PA•CIL 5· E•-nt tor lllOf'otl. wheltolwr 11am9 ..,_,,, OHC'lffmal "C.mmot1 A'" Ea_.,_t ... •• , • ., -dralt1aoe "",_ Offr \IHm -•II proclutb dlrlVICI lrom PARCEL s Eu•m•lll .. IUCll ttoat POrtlOll II l..ol I, Trac1 iOHl. •• •ny of ,,,. fortQOlllO 111•1 may bt E.,.,,...,,, It partkulartv Mt lortf> In par m•p 1111<1 In 8ooll .. 1. Pao-• 21 wlllllnorundllrl,..laM,toee!Mrwltll ,,,. ArtlcM ...Ulled "E.--Of 111d 11, of Mluell111eou• Maps, 1,,. -tual rlghl of Orllllng, mlnl"O. Iha O•clua1lo11 ol Cov•11111tt, tlCOrlh Of Mkl ~¥. ""'klad et uplorltto. -_f .. i"O ,......,.,,, -C-lllorw -AKtrktloft1 -dit4 Comn'IOft RMOway on Ewtollllt G of the slorlt10 lt1 -,_.,,. ,,.. Wm9 from J..,.. '· t'7•, 111 8-117*, P ... •11 ol Oe<laratlon, M wcll11....-t I• n'IOfe sal<I lalld or a<IV 04Nf land. IM ..... 1"11 Oflltlal ltltord\ of Ora"'° C-ty partltularly dleKrMllCI "' S.Ctlon II. , ... ''°"' lo ....... tock or dlrKt-.illy c • 111 • , "I.. ( 111. . • M. I I., ArtlcMXlllof-0.Clarllloft drlllalldmlnelrom--rttoan Ooc1orat1a11'"1 ul\cllr Ill• S.ct1011 EXCEPT.,, oll, 9el -11¥'dfoc•..-,,,., .. COtl ... 'f•O toer•ll"r. Oii or •• , lll•fl•o 111 tu<h Artlcll Mtlt ..... ....,.ta_ -°'"" ml,..,al rlgllb, _111• t-'t..., lhltb 1,...,, lllrouofl follO•• "Ownff• ltlefob -dWt•s. wltflout ~. ,,.. rlQllt to enter 1,.. ., •trou 1119 -11<• of 11'11 •-. Ullllt111 atld Cable T•l••lllOfls·· wrteu o1 .. ld •--to • di~• encl to bottom tu<ll ,.,.,.pstocklCI or "Utlllllft", "~ -s..t_.•, of 500 twt ''°"' ,,.. sur1ac• ltltflol, as dlracti-llv drilled wtllt, 1_,, 11141 "E,.croac....-". -"CCM'llfftlllllty r•Ht••d lt1 Ille 0110 recorded •llall• ..,.... and ~ or .,.yonct FeclllllH ~·· S..tamlllr 27, 1'7', In 800lt um, Ill• utirlor lfmltt 1 ... reot, anct lo PAACEL6 Ea-IM«al ..... P•o• tall, Olllclal Aecordt. U ••frlll, ••tunnel. •Quip, mllllt•ln, p11rP1MI -· ~. IN.,.._ -£•• .. ""'· lrvtM, C.A. , r•palr. ~ --•le •nv well a<rou l.Alt1 A ancl II Of Tract.,., " '"Clf • 61,..I eddr"1 or coMmOll ••II• or mlnft, wl._t, llowtlver, 111e' ,,., MICl 11-111 a-at,,.._. 11 t• Oulonatlot1 h ttoown abo••. no rtolll lo drill, m!M, ttore, explore •net "· l11clutl,. el Ml-11-~ war r111ty h 'lve11 •• to Ila OPe••I• ll•JOUQll II• Wf'fau 0, ,,.. lltKordl el Or.,... CeuMv. Callfwftlt, complllilfWH or corte<INUI " Ttoe upper soo lwt of -..,....,,.K• of the IS ,., "-' ll'd ,9"Cl.,.tr11M flew blnefl<lary -·Mid Deed of TrlAI, lend, •• ,_,...., Ill Iha deed ltOl'll.... 11r11111 .. o ..... _,, lhrouofl -by,.._°'._,, ... dllau1t In u .. I rvlno (On'I POll'f, • Mlcllloan ICtOH LotOolTtatUl», .. _ .... 0111101111111 u c ured Illa robv. <O'l>Ofallon, tu<CHtorbv ,.,.,_ wlUI llltd 800ll a5, P .... ,. .. a IMllltl,.. fllnlofore ·---dellff'9d to lrvlt1• lnduttrl•I ComoM•. fl(,,,_ ol Mls<•ll•-MIM. '9COf'cb of ,,.. 11tl69fllQMd a wrltletl 0.Clarallon ~r "· 1'11 1ft 8-i,_, p... Ora1101 Cou11ty, (;allf1rt1la. SttMI f1f o.taull -~ '°' s. ... •net "1ol01flclal A1<cinft oddr•n. I Norlll Cove. lnl11•, wrlll111 no4k• of ()reach -of ele<llon Alto oac;.,. ar1y -•II ·-• rlollll Clllfetttla. to uu .. .,.. undllnl.,.O to .. 11 Miid or 111t.,••t ,,..,.111, no ..,....er llOW "(If I fl,_ ....,.... or -proPlfty to tall•f>t salcl oOtloatlotl•, acqult'Od .., .,Id ,....,, iooo_, wllll dUlt 11•t1ot1 h 111ow11 alloo, Ila 111d th•r111tor Ill• u11d•nlon•d ,,.. rloM --1o el(lllon, d<lll, •,,.!:P',!:..'.!.. .,1 'c!.~·~~ ~. 1 o II J cou..o .. 111 notice al llrMth alld ot . ..Orlll, ,_...., ...,,. lfll .. _ _ .. ·---·-·-- 564-62 •tecti... to be Ate~ ~·-21, from 1111 tallCI or lo dl""1., ot,..rwlw TM ~!My Ylllltt -o.. If !------------t"1 •t 1"'41 HO llU7 In lloolt. 1•267, 11llllre ...ch., ... ,, ,..,.... ., l11"11tls Trvtt.. by,__ .. a~ W-llllt "ICTITIOUI eUllNISS MAMtl ITATIMeNT Tiii 1o1i..,;1110 PffMflS ar1 dolllO ""''"'" ... (0UHTllY 'LUS, .. 71 L.ewftM-Otl.,,., Hllfll~ 8-11, CA...._ J OANNa THlltlSA WINTMlllMAH, H71 ~awr1hlvet1 0.1,,., ~ e11e11, CA.,.._ Tlllt ...,_ Is <GNloetlCI 0., Oft ............ ,,.._~ .. , .... ..._, ......... •"" ... Gwtlt'f C:-" Of ..... COUlltY.,. Jiii _ , .. ,Gf .. IOOlflclal Ae<ordt. on ... ., other P"OD'rt'fOWMCIW lelMO ltl ....... , ... loft. MCllrW ...... .,.,. Said .... """ .. ...-. bul wH-1 llV Grantor, ~' tllCll watM r!QM• ,..,.....,. •-W. .,.,. _........, i. cov•111nl or werret1ly, uprau or 111a11 bo reparlan, ov.,1yl11t. ,,. 111\de~ a wrttt9ft C>Kltnttleft lmplled, ,_..ltlotllle, -MUlon.0< 1pp,opt111lv1. p1rca1 atl119, ., o.f•lllt Md~.., tMe,...., encuMtlt•'CI' to pey tt>e remalt1l"11 prHC rlP't,.., lldllldkaltcl, t\al\ltOl'y or wrltttc1 ...tlce Of..._,. tNI .. ...._ "'ln<lp11 tum Of .,.. llOt•lll MCurecl co"trectual; but wllllOut, llO .. v•r, ii• oO• .. 111-.11..-• "'41 .... llv Mid 0.0 of TNtt, wltll l11t.retl.. .,,, rlOM .. tflMf "'*' Ille MlrfKI ., ~y ..... lllfV ............... 111 uld-provl-. aov...c.~ ll1ny, Mid ltlld lnltw•~I• Gt~,. •IOfll•, aftf lfllf'Mftw h •...,al•• u.tM vt\Cllr 1111 \lnTl!I II Ml9 Owd OI Trv.t, H r•t1"""° 111 1 ... 0..0 ft'Clfft IM .. i. ...Clo .. ~ tN1 If "9diWI .. '"'• cllarveJ atld .. ,.,. .. ,of t111 1rvl11• Comp111y, • Ml<lllt•" ,be '9t....,. ~ t. ,., • fllwV. Truttll -Of 1111 tl'\ltlt <re-Illy catll*rllle!I. a11<cHnor by n'lff9ff ..._ 11111 ln lllOllll MMt. .... ISi, If Mkl OMll Trvst Self .......... •II" lrvln• lllOVttrl•I (•m1111 ....... OM< ... ••-s.N ...... .. htlf .,. "'*"· ,..._Y "· na •I r1carc1 .. oc-' It, tt1• lfl ._ matt, t1111t wltllMt <•v11•tAI ., 2:M "M. •I ,,,. C.......,._ A""'"ua •-. 1'11i'"19f0flklal~ec....._ .,.,,,.,.,.,, •• ,,..., er IM•ll••· 11\trlfKI • ... CM< ColMtf' lulld1nt. Namt ............. IM lltMfklM)o ntu•lfll lllla, ........... 1r • Eett 0-W-A_, lfl tht City at wllOte ....-tt tM .... It ••111 ellC~ ti ... ., .. ,__... of Of• ..... CA. c9tldudlC! JIC:CO OIVlt..Of'MfNT, •Pf'I"''"' Mn 9/f ....... eacww .. At tM tllnt .t thl IMlll ....ilc.oMlon If INC,, c/e ""°"' .. Miit .. , tMl9I .... 0... .t n.t .. .,_.....,.IA '"I' .,..l(.e, Ille telllC ll4'IWllM ot tM fll•111ro• Sir .. t, l .. AllltlH ..... M4llt,,,......., ...._.. tt _..,, ,., .... ""••IO 1111.,.ce •t 11>1 •llllo•t1111 c.11f0nll••tl, A""· V.l. •'-· --.r .. ._., .... o..., ,,,.., fl ~llJllM Qnneia COIA Oall'I' tp~ ~~~.:==':.~~ ,.,!'~':1::.:. l= :'-:::·~~.:.II=·-==--~':; 1,1"2 att.•,ll,tl,JJ,ltS1 ,..,... '"d atv1nc1t It Ut,7UU. T1 111wrltl11tfl'tm ... """'"'le,...,..... .. MOIMel"""' ............ .. -II' -t dtt_,.Mlfle tM -""'t ..._, ....,.. may tO dlyt fNm "'9 tit-ti jlllMl<elJM -' l\tlllf tft ......,, ....._.. ..... .. ~ .. ,_ <•II Ul•l .,,..... tllltll041<it. ,t:• ~ .. flt ... ~ A._ -------------ttOATIOJ-r•.t• Stlf .... Wiii Mm• wlt!Mwt .. _.. .... CMcCMtlw ....... -l'ICTITIOUSaut1•Ull T.O. ll1tv1ca COMl'AHY t•v111•11t ., WtrrlfltY. '°"' • ., • ·-~.-."' .. City NAMl! ITA.,._•T ..... TNMlll, 1111,1119, .... Otlt, ,._HIM tr ttOt.,.. ?111 l•ll•Wlllt ,.,_ It .. 111 ey C:llMly "'--• -'"'*·-_, _... OM llf TNll. AUM """ .. 9lt ~I ........ MIM9•• ~It(""""' •wit! •t--.Jt, ................ e( WI ..-n, .. ....,.,.... .r .. auau•aAM W0004.ANOl 1.TO.. Ollt ca,.......,......_ .. ""'' ... CHI• ... "..... •• .. .............. , ........ , .. Ill .... ,...., •t • k it !It Or" .. ,CA.... MVllllC .. It ""9 tilM llf .. lllltltl IKWIM!ilf ....... _,.. ... .. ~=.~-'171•1.... jlMllUtlMtfW.~ .. k•: ................ -. ....... ..,.._. M. .,,_, CIO ,,_ .. f'Wlla.M Or ... CMe OMIY flll•, u.-.lt. • •"It •• .,lllCU h tt .. IU n . Ye t --... __...,..I ... "•··"·"--..... 0.....1_.,...... ~~---o..re ..--. -· . ·--~.... • ... ,_... ,..... .,.._,. • Cel ................ _..... ,,_..,,__ ,._, ·- ~ .._. ,., ...... ,, .. " .._"' Nowm---t .. •n-r .__......,.. o.4111tl~-. .. ~--vw• nw ...... Clllllllla_•........ t'lllttT-· 0 ,-. • ....,. .. .,..,. ~need the ..... .... ,......._......_,,.. .. ~ 1-1 tJon It-'* ..... ,._..._., c:wlllf°""lt~............ .,..OtMa Pf'" -............ -----... ,._ .-YUl ... .,,.~_r ~ ,........ ar-.. CMtt o.r1v.,..... tn the 1•,•e111U11i"'j11p1111111a!!llqw ~o..-arao. °"',.,."""" ......... .._ c....., 1'IL. ,..,.,11 ... .,,,. I ,,,...L_~:.::::!!!!!~~~J.,..,.11,tt,1• ... • ..... "9 1 ~ ~·-oqo,------• d r:; • 4 ..... Orenr COllt DAIL v ALOT/Thurac:tar, Ftbru'? •. 1m ' I • £11111FIED The marketplace on the Orange Coast • ~ Among ~ople lookang for a rental, 70'1f, • read real ettate claui/iftl OiU. . . RULmm Atrt.,f t• \•l' 4p6,.tntft4_. l0t '•Lt' ltl<'fll'r•n1 lki>•llh> p,....,,, ftftWltt)l.ol'lf)O'I' t.'om"'trrt•I ~'°"'''' l0ftdcwn1ri•11fn\~t .. °'*Pktft l rut\ ,_ .. 1.-t-to bt \lo•«I h•fomir Proput' 11'16~t,.•IPrOl>forh t..olt tor ~ .. 1, ll•t. H•1t Trlr ~''' M_,.n 01iri.n• Kt'\.i'fl ~,,t ~,..~'P':. Oul Oflllot• h"I' Rene"" ••rm" C...roH .. it•el t.:..tittf t.trh•n•t kt•• l..\l•lf ~•1'l"1 IENTALS ~tWrftt<tfW.d ~ltifllffU\f\td ~••r•wl•f ,~, .... ,..., ._.,. ( OftdOrn1no1i1•" l 1f T .. ,.,...,W" r ufl't 1 .. ~, .. ~U'\tliirft ~\n l•f "Pt>'"'" A&1t-11.l1tf-.r" ~ph t"\irrtor' nl -· R-•11<>.<d ttulfb\fltti\ c ..... 1110-!lt,unmrt Mm .1 '-""•"""'•'\ flMt•I~ to""•'" C«•I:•"'"' HrM OU.o M•N•I ... ~\"""'"•' lr.d\Nnel Mtftt•I ""-Oftlt MHll•I• "1ftlf'd ~I\(' Hf'ftl•llli 81/SINESS, INVEST MCNT, ANANCE AlfNOUllCEMENTS, rHSOffALS & LOST & FOUND 4..,..,...,,., C"at Pool i..c.i '°''"' ....... , .. rid ""'-" So<1al nwi.. Tr•\ri SEIYICES '"'"'" 11•--- DlrtOYMEllT l PIErAIA Tl 0 N "'tow" IWr«ltof' Job~ .. ,,, .. .... ~ ...... .., 11 & f MCRCHANOISC AMtfot~ ~>nt"n Aurhon """"' hld.._.lhlf'flel" l°•IMtb. fq~p"""' l.u llotl• f~ .... , ... t\mohffr -c., .... '-'• ....... t'°"itftotd f;n-:ad• Jt•tin Lnnuw._ lh<~IO<fl ~IM'ttl•M'W'll M•M"tll•M-Ou~ 'A •nl•l'I \tw\H'al IP\'lllntfn#fll• (lf,1tt t·vrft • lq-.1p P•h ~-i:~~~~~ ~ ... c...i, Slort Rf'°'litUr•M Kit' ~ T.dio H1 .. 1 '-tl.f'rt'fl BOATS & MUINE EOUlrMENT ..,,.,.,., Ho.u M ,.,.. twh 11 .. -·lhnMlqwtp Boob ...... &.b llf'M t "•""' lloob5..i lloob!il,.. l>oth -.s,...s ...... lkMb<itf'W'U• TIANSPttTATION '\tfft•" l 19'prn ~If'"""' Dtc1rw far, ~,_ .. Wo&od. H·lt'• Y«Ar' Motor Um' .Mlf' MtM Tre1fff1. lu•tl !~~~,~~'!"~·~· AUTOMOBILE llfMUI 4-~W> l'lh .*lt. tlttrnttoo \ '"'' • .,., S.-.rt." Mtc r Hnfh •Wl"tt't'1Un\H rrllCll.t \''"' AutulAu1njl 1't.tlut w lnltft AUTOS, IMPOITED l.t'flitul 4U• Kunwu -'1.11h AW3lH• llulr\ ¥11'¥> l··~· t..olt O•hlM'I trfUll •···· ttor.11. "~' '·-""' .... n\;fil1• 11 .. ... •...n~""°'·"' lit. lllil ~ ....... ............ l'lln< .. ..... " """'""'"' ""'"" Moh ~. r.,.,.. ru...,ei 1"4~···'"" \eh• .... ..... "-ft• llor ~ I ....... llor Wt IHcMtwt,., Wt ....... llor ~ ••••••• ~.~.~ •••••••• ~~-~-~ •••••••• ~.~.~ ••••••• ~.~~ ••••••• ·················~····· •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••1• ... • ••••••••••••• •• 1002 tot2 014 , ...,.. 100} ChMttt 1002'/ChMfll IUVJ ~--1002 ••••••••••••••••••n••• C...cMaMor IOJZ c:..teMeM I ' i ....................... ·······················1······················· ···········~··········· ~······················ . . .........•••..•..•.•..•••••••..•.•..•.••••••. 1 Sh.If(&. Lea~e option 2 br, •.WO will mak~ ll yours. CDM DUPLEX wide greenbelt 1139.~. C h a r m I n ~ 4 8 r ......u&.A HOMIS Beat buy In CdM Lr11 3 DAmtMG! Bkr,644·0134 ~ ~ j ~~~~~· Call now Remodeled, decorated 3 bdrm , 3 bath, :'b~yw.;/~~ + J~~ matr bdrm with ocean view $425,000. , wiS4o,ooo dwn Joyt'r •IA YFltOMT * I Oo/o DOWM • Wallie, 1 I 12-08 IOAT SLIP SparlOUJ 4 bdrm .. c.. West Bay bayfront. Slips for 2 boats; •,'~. EQUAL HOUSING SSSS,000 Plan In The Blurrs remodeled 3 bdrm, 3 bath $1,200,000. -· WOW! Lowest priced "'·""'r l""atlon overlook· This flawre11 Eutslde C:O.ta Mesa home offers 3 l!drms, 2 baths and is ln excel rond Perfect for 1d1ve ramll)' hvina °' etllertatn1n1 An out· stand1n1 \alue at SIS9,950 Owner will finance Ca 11 John ,.,. OPPORTUNITY b r h ON ........ "" 1aru •• ay ront ome 2·STOIYDW\D-MIWPOITllACH 11\&lhepool Pncednaht Ocean & jetty views. Marine room, 4 :: Nil·"-'• Mottet: BALBOA COVES Largt> STIPS TO HACH • OWMll WILL at S299.* L.H Beat of bd 3 b th 3700 ft $1 385 000 MnT • 4 bdrm. J bath. doubll' all you can move in wuh nn, a • sq. · · • · :: All real estate ad · fir~lace, t'O\ered p.il101 ~I AT 13% JUSl 101, down and a :;:: v er 11 se d 1 "bJ l h 1 6 plus moch more' Will , Call today to see this fine duplex. Live 12• ,·, fixed rate 30 year 1 ... neiw11~r is su etl to \I TD-or trade for in one unit and rent the other. 4 loan! lE ~ ~ct e~I [:,~r ~~~sh F.astb~s ~~pe,rt' Bedrooms and 2 baths in upper; 2 :: makes 11 11legal to ad lomua-y rop. bedrooms and 1 bath in lower . 1tr.• \enlse "any prelerencl'. R"91tors r · I · h ·l So · f ,,_, 1 d •675-7060• 1repace an eac um . me view o ::: t·~m~::.i\11~~ • b~~ed ·~n lll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll--ocean. Owner will carry lst trust deed ::: race. t'olor. reltg1on. VIEWTOWMHOMES and note of ~.000 at 13% interest. sex, or nalton.il ong1n. Master swtt>s ,.14 ... 4 of No Joan fee. Ask $279,500. Submit your or an intention to make ~ offer. See now. '"'' h ( "'·ean & N1gh1 laghh :: f1"~ I~~~ I 0 ~~e oe:e~~:. '~el Area p Jrk ... open WESUY M. TA nOll co .. UALTOIS :: cnm111a11on " spaces Sl3i.OOO Xlnt 2111 S. ...... H• ICNld ::'.!: F\n Hal or Pai .\g1 s MIWPOIT CIMTll. M.I. 64Mt IO I•~ This newspaper Wiii not rg_ ~5. liiJ 7J()() 1n knowingly at'l'l'Pt a1n ~ advertising for ·r<·al nu estate wh1l'h 1~ an '1ola ~ lionoflhtl_law 9l/4%LOAM R~ed SI 00,000 SPYGLASS BYOWMER ~ .. lllAJ ~ llw ..,.., l'f .. FUii Pnre $575,000 EIRORS: Advertisers Mo11thl1· P,11 nwnt S2m should check ffltlr ads SOL'THPORT MODEL cW~ Md ~rt tr· libr 4' !bd llOO )q fl "1 25 Bodegd B.i' !: ron lmMtdl .ty. Tht _ ral_!~'"'er:_iS9 om f!:' DAILY PILOT auumu S AXER-UPPERS S t: l.,.ty fOf' tht first -M h1corrtct lnstrtlon 32 units. Corona I J~I ....Aw ~ -·1· "O" VACANCIES ~ l•-------11111 far helm~ mJrkl'l f'or I -s~I up r Jll Hid< an~t~~~·~~~·;~ I :~ HouMs for Solt ::\_, : ······················ ·~·· GtMnil I 00 0 • U.• •••••••••••••••••••••• ... ,,, Frnd out about the h11th ::;; earning real e~t.ilt' st.1lt'~ "" ('areer op port un1t 1e~ ~:: 1· 11 1 t h T H E R E t\ L ... ~. FSr.\TERS L1ren~1n~ The onl~ Lo1 in c 'pru' Co1~ San C'lt•llll'ntt·I dl'roc.~ from both Tl·nn1' rooru & rlubhouM' ht IHTll' offered' Firm JI $1115.000 Pt-nnim.tn & ~O!llVan~ g,5 I IOOO I S('hool fee5 romplNely refundable to ~l'hool of vour ch0tce Exlen~11 t' ~ sales training For 1n w11 fi>rr~:lllon. l'all 751 Gl91 -SELL idle items with u Daily PJIO( Class1f1ed Ad 642-5678. --)111\ AAll'\ro ... .... . .... U!>l•10 ...... ,._ f n r . .., . DIMES ,,. " .. ., JVWI in the famous Daily Pilot DIMES-A-LINE ADS AdurtlH Item• up to $50 In 111lue In OlmH2A-UM ad• every S1turd1y In the Dally Piiot. Bttng yoUf ad with calh to any of our thrH convenient ottlce• or mall your copy with a cttedr Of money order fOf the correct 1moum. 20c per ane. S1 .00 mlnlmum. Sofry, no 1twe1tocll, produce or pl1nls and no commetdal adl ire allo-d. Eadl Item mull be priced with no Item over $50. DfmH,A·Un• 1d1 may be p11ced at the Co1u MeN otflce until 3 p.m. Friday. iHE BIGGEST GARAGE SALE ON THE ORANGE COAST IS IN THE DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIEDS SUM SET I OPEMHOUSE I l'OO'll' & l'lljOI lhl• 'Oii 'l'11111i: oH·rt -.11u1t11J i-1 I from Sp1 l(IJ'' lltll Fri 1 ~ i l'\I ~3 llJlf \1n11n Ii.I\ Bron· & \' 1l'k It' II I " m 11 r l' n 1; 11 o cl r l'TO!>l'rtlt'~ iltO ();!!Ii WILL TRADE For hon1t• or tnl'l>nlt' pro lll'l11 Sl:!.'>h 1•11u11' 1n 1 ,, r 111 u I I ' ' II II cl II ' DIVE RIGHT IM S111n1 an' t1mt' in lovcll 'olar hl'Ult'd pool '3 lldrni. 1J. Ba , re nudl'll'<I k1tl'hen in ont' or l'o,ta M t')J • ~ be~t Jrt·J~ Ownt.>r 1 t'rY fie xi !Jll' FUii pnrt.' $i45,000 i51 31891 C::. C,ft f ( T -f"" PHOPt: H' It C, Slltll mu ,,~,u111.1hl1· --------it.0-1.173 SUPERB YU-OWNER F1NAN. l1pedolly lor99 trf-Mv.. ho•• witll bentlf•I decor bf decor.tor ftli a Ii~, HoaplaltJ I lmry ill tWt J W + for..I •rrorect ck na.. ...,. ..... ,., + ... wm..d,... ..... For ........................ ,... + pm. .... UMQUIST10MAU VIEW OF OCEAN I IA YFltOMT do .... ! o.... wll e.tp fllmu. St75,000. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC. REAL ESTATE SW• Rt<1t"'• p,.,._,, M.nogmwnt ?436 w Co.~I Hwv JIS M.nrw All« l'if,..'IJO<l &11eh &l>oi lslMI 631-1400 '7Ut00 HOISi COUNTIY Dramatic Home-Approx. % Acres-4 Bdrm·Pool·Spa,Park 8 Cars + RV-Great Location-Keep 3 Horses, Ma ybe More On Your ·own Property. $289,000 ® ·--.. -....... 759-9180 uc_,_ ... ,... twwperf C..ter smtm D.WIEE From this rare Delmar model 3 Bdrm 2 Ba with formal D.R. and family room fabulous mountain and ~lty light views. Motivated aellu will assist with financing.· • Offend at SMe,000. f ~ • I • A Di1'1s1on or JI Jrbor lnve~tmenl Co • ·•-•f 00 • • • ·•-•f UDO ISLI HOMIS PrimP Lido Nord bavfront. s bdrm, s bath. Lge L.R. 2 boat slips $1,500,000. Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath + large rec. rm . beam ceili ngs, $420,000. 'Lagoon view from 6 bdrm , s bath, playroom, dark rm . den. $1,350,000! CAINATION COYE Spectacular bayfront view 4 bdrm , 4 bath, 2 boat slips $1,900,000. 3 Prim1 DUDlexts Campbell ror further 1n 3 Bdr + 3 Brd/ As~ullll! rormallon • szoo.<m 1n loan~ hk 1ng IOGHS HAL TY S:llll.<m 675-23 I • 2 Br + 2 Br )O otl .. 111!!!!!!!1!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ bays1de S389,000 4 Br + 2 Br iumbo lo;iru,, '" of hw) SH!l,000 CaJI for more dt.>tJ1h. Darrell. Pa)h. Jl:I Re M.ix 7!>9 l221 MEW CONDO SO DH \jl'Ol t.Jl ~iT. MESA VERDE For &ale b) 011 ner \~ sume v \ Str7.000 a1 10'. 2 bdrm M~a Verdl' con do S99. 000 7S I 23liO SHAJtP EASTSIDE 6PLEX OHL Y I S°lo DOWM Owner wtll f111an1·,• In q0Jlaf1t•d hOl l•r W1•ll lc~;~tl'CI. ~ood lnoklOI! 1, uinb + ~ l'Jr )!ar.1i:1• • Jmple pJrkmi: B..!011 11 llrne~gro~~ Colltoday644-721 I ~ 5! MESA VEIDE IBR. 3BA, F.tm Rm. Pool Spa OWC Assume fa1sung Loan) Eqwly Shanng Straight Note or Tradl' Sl8S.000 8) Owner 979 5814 41::.,I » HERITAGE • I REALTORS If it's got wheels, you'll move it faster in a Daily Pilot classified ad.Ca ll 642-5678 and a friendly ad, viserwill help you turn your wheels into cash . won HU Here It IS February alreedy and rm havtno 1rooble k"plng mv New Yee1·1 resolutlon not 10 procru1ln1te I haven't even --------. aen1 out •II my cards tor the RAMROY 1--·. I I 11 I I' O Comolote "'" cho<l lo ouotod • • . . • . by I.II.no •• "'-"'''~"9 -d '--...___..__,___...__..,.,_, '°" d ... loo ''""' ••op No J belo- tft PP NI N~8[tf0 I' V 1tl'ltS IN SOVO!S r r 1· r I' r I' 1 I I I I I I I I SlllC&ANlt ., VINES CD END R 0 NI R 8 NEER GE S 9 S C 8 T 0 E G 8 I T I T C R Y K P L I I 0 E R Y R R E 8 N A R C E H V 0 N T VOGVAENEV SUQ llTAOAOR P V R P I M T E P A Z 0 E G R £ R R A YLEWASSTOHJERUT &DA OAERTRTLOOWCOVPEANM 8 S H M E J R E E S L 6 E E M N a E M E I 8 P 0 L t C R E X l l Y C I l D E H E A Y 0 U I E M I 6 V H V R L 0 I A R I E W I T A A £ A Y 0 P A N L L E H E 8 A T T I I H R Y P A N V U I L H T A A I I I R H A P R C R t A C H C NP T 8 SM E·l k CU SY [ N 0 H P.E GRAP I IHVOENLlltYCSYO --. -. ~ • .......,, ,t:~ --.. ..:1 .. =-= ·-. . " . . ...................... . ..,,. ........ , a............ ~........... (Weft"___.. IL.ill _............ u & , .. II ....__ .......... " ..... "'..... • ........ ····**~······,·o·~~ ...................... 1.0"', ... , ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. .,.~' 2110 -···-... ,. r-www .... ~ --y......., ... ~ ... ............... ••• ••••• ff "' ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ......................................... ..... ......... ....,.._, w...rre.,.,.,., JOOO n••••••**•••••u•••••• L-..L...... .. • ...... ---•••••••••••••• ........................................... ,. ,.,s. 1100 ....................... **&OI TOTAL Cott.Mtae UJ4 ......_ . 1J4 ..... , .. ,...... dH c.NMIM JU4 Trt""" P..e "-By Own tr La 1 u n a ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... • .. •••••••••••••• ............ ••••••••••••• 0..,. will tarry paper Btadl. a Story Ocun ....................... IMCOME MtlAI p M II ONI 0, F'or "' n I • bdrm . Bia C.nyon 2 Br 2 Ba, QI .u.11 ~.,, emotional Cenyoa View a. • BR. This .~~u!.~tun 3 2Br Obi wldeacr~H from '9tOPERTY uunn AY ENT THI LUCKY NW l\replace, sllyUaht, air 187$/mo. Patrtck. •It W¥1~BJP.o homl. No t1n>enH baa 3BA 2rl"l>k'• Complete bedrootn home 11 on an ~=~~n:f1.SuCr.~so' SPECIAUST 7X,rot1! u hou1t1, all R~nt In Coata Mes•'• ~It c,uJ de aacblareen· 7Sf.l221 'been •pared [n up1r1d md lnlaw Apt. Lra Lot extra wide corner lot. Ttrma like rent Allt run 1111 1pt romplex NEWE ST ated 20 "'" mpecu e ex· 28R Condo . Adult lftl Central air. hUJe WO,OOO Owner ualst L.arpa .. umable loanal s.nmor962·18611 Selec.1frommultlph:un Poe.itivecaahflow C11ll Towohome t rLLAGE H utive home , no Complex28A.NrHoaa master aulte a or 4 l'lnand n& 494·4819 12~ and owner will Ill. Tml\li av11lluble to i COMMUNJTY 2&3 8r children, no pet.a 11150 SSMo Ut,L11t f!Dep. Bdnna. I baths. Good Woods Cove, acrou from C-rclol v••ty""'"tl~-.... 211 ea.1000 1800sq I\ of. 7~,,..!vall Feb 25th NoDop. 761·7633 __ _ klCIUon.tll'l.500. sand, acrou from ~ 1600 ... "'" ~.. \\bodbrld9e ......,_, ~ O\arTown Rtallv •or .... r n-tt• Davia ,... ~·~ pure luxury 011rage11. -Seavlew lr1 4 Br ocun 17$-750 , ,, ..... -" ~ ...... ••••••••••••••••• ~ Really hydro lubs in muter Lrg 4bdrm pool home , 3 vu, SlGOO/mo. Patrick, I 10t84l·o.199 sldence, new 2 Br, den, 3 1 • 551 3000 • sulte, dining roomK , car gar, $950/mo. Call •f '1»-1221 ••••u••'*••••••••••••• ocean view deck, 2 Hl&h vl1lbllity C 3 ~ •••1"1110 ftwy,tr~i., micro wave oven•' I•-------• Co mpue before you rent. Cuatom dul(ll feature•: Pool, BBQ. cov'rd /araac, aur rounde with plush landKaplna Adult llv Ina at Its l>Ht. No pets . 1 Br. furn from S4M 3M w. Wllaon, 642· 1971 ........... _. 1040 Ba, Jae., master Ba. spa HIWPORT HACH I · woodbumin& flreplat•es rol.lect 1-421-1371 -"""'-=-=o=..----- ~TIS'J' ABODE, 1 ml to f111lc • extensive views Ocean view. 120 ft fron !,mmwnM JOC ll -pri t r & ds' ONT A.LS llG CAHYOM ..._ ........ 3Br,2 Bal110K, oa1t .• maho1 .. koa,brass U ~-OCEANS!DE unfurn vae paios yur . IBr IBa 16$0 Luxur io us thr•• ""'-" flx I d d lqe. aeex.lstJn&bwld • 714 641-0763 . studio apt Roof patio Gardener provided 20r'1aa ""' ...... •ltocll l740 ~house Sun 1·5 20612 tures, ea e glass. Ina ol 4000 sq fl or buJld 28r, new On atp, harbo; Elegant living only . 15 3 Br: 2 Ba 1fJg bedrooms T'wo bath• ...................... . ~Lo., H8960-Z1U cent VIC. full sec sys.. w·------10,000 sq (t Owner will 292SCollege Ave & r ' v er ,, I u ~ s mlnutea from Fashion Le R Rlt u•~ '"'""' Formal dlnlna room H.l.'1 Fl ... EST SPOTLE rm K, 20'k down, owe "''-~"'"' ....... *'7U 000 "'I 7300 Cos111 Mesa. CA-I ~ w lst--..t 7 l s c atsor y ....., . .....,... RJel.lud""Orllt...,. In mut " SS DRE AM b I 13 •r1 9 NOMI ·-·•· ...... ""' • -Nonhcout Condo .,."" "'"'· mU1utes o • ,.., ...... ""' ' HOME a .. ,. • •·1235 RealU>r ~ 73().7.,.., aft ·..,.,.,pu Plau or o c Airport Newlownhome,3bdrm,3 tel tones 3000 sq fl SpamshEet1te Uv1ng! make ~to~~·~~:'n5u~~ 00-7~ ' PllVATllEACH ~3363 '"''" 6 "' Just east of Newport ba. pauo, garaae Park J1cu1u off master 8eaut1ful park-like sur W'J.BOO BkrlM8 0709 L..J-aHlcJle4 1052 Smsauooal 4 Br borne Co.tdotnlal•lft~ow• C.M. Tu .... r Blvd &~o of San Diego &pool.$900mo 6738585. bedroom 3 car garage round1n1s Terraced .L-.L...... 1044 ••••.•oc•••E•:•N•v••l•E•w··.••••• smack on the water!' .........__ .. __ 1 1700 OutofStote Frwy Starting at $900a •-le h 1 $2050 month. Yearly pool Sunken .au bbq, ..,....._ n Featunng French doors. _. nw -l·plex Xlnl rinance ,,....., 2600 month 631 54390 24 73 ~ oc 124 lease Call '31 7300. sparkling fount11ns ••••••••••••••••••••••• N 11 u e I sh 0 r es frplc. proless1onally de •NORTH.WN•G•n;:~CH•• 305K 675--00'73/1·345-4123 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Orangt' Ave, Co:.ta ••••••••••••••••••••••• Realtor Spacious room a DESPHATE I townhouse , largest coraled & pnvate SAN Beautiful 100 ft x 200 fl Mesa OCEANFIONT lt!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!lll• Separate dining area Woodbridae 3Br 2ba, 1 model S289 ,000 ownr DY BE AC H 0 n I y V1rg1ma JUST ltu..UCRA front age on H cn1 c at Hr Secunty, iz mi ore POOL HOME W a I k In c Io a et s . yrnew Lowdown as 493-9411 $249,000 & seller will l-OuntryClubEstate:. al al RoeueR1verinSoothern JB R l '1 BA , nu rpt , pvt heh. fishing pier, JBRFmhomtBkBay homelike kitchen & 'sume loans Need fist carry80'.loanatl3'•" New3br,3b.iCondo !12 blocks from beach Oreeon Trees. water wallfiaperskyhghts 2Br,adJt.sonly,nodogs $J.200rm CallSuzanm> cabU>ets Walk toHunt sale. 3 br~~~~~l~:Es:per 750 1501or7S2·7373 Luxu~x?:;~rator :iwoo~y l ~r~~~ ~n~~sn skiing, close to town ci'bfta~ p~,-~~c3:~~ 1750 roo. 17141499-3816 675 3445 a..t.nt mgt;intS:~'-~~m. S48S SUCCF.SS REALTY ~~ Owne~95-S707 -From $175,000 Three bdrm unit great ~0·~ :o 8°cj 469 E Sid :!bd h LocJ1t1ta......, 3252 Coildo.nWllllK ___ 54'-'.:.9-"-·7~991 <7!!t847·7066 for owner occupancy ran s ah, rt'gon l' rm, newt ru ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ul'!fwwllhed 3425 Uruvers1ty Park 4 BR, 2• • lAlb For.st I 055 s ,. Owner financing avail 97~ 1·500·476 <149I 0 u1 · 10 rm 6 1 d 1 n · Cstline Vu Adil romm B ••••••••••••••••••••••• '-Plaza, 3BR 28A, .it-Onl C 1 •--' breakfast nook . 2 car r--3 bd 2 b ••••••••••••••••••••••• A, Fam room. green sum 111• •. S60K Isl. Y S280.000 al today -&tote gar. yrd, grdnr S675 \.l\llgeous rm , a Upper 2 Bdrm Pi Bath belt location, robble OWC 2nd Submit terms m-~O bctt.ge 2800 546·4253 Fpl $750 493-2256 So Qlast Pl11za area. lg stone drive & entrv SIOlK 964 1988 A ....................... -2bd;m, 2ba townhouse. dt>rk p.H10, pool, re'·. many xtras! Must llee; WoodtdEt.cjonce ~r. LLS'P" TE Want a tax shelter? Sell L~g 4BR1 EKPe<·1St ylde du! rm. frplc. air, pool. Secuntygate.~25 $175,000 w I m 10 dn HI I #"I my I 12 year new tnplex ome n re erre jac., patio, gar dr opnr bi5 Sl60 _ 6411 4844 0 W C at 1 2 '• '• Pnvate 4 bedroom, 2 TAKEOVER 1800 REALTORS . or exchange e11wty for Residential Art'a CM Adults only S725 mo Owner/agnt SS2804ti or bath home that shows 8>..•; loan at $786 per ••••••••••••••••••••••• t'Of'ldoor?Owner Aftl'r7 Brand New, Car11eti., 1714J675·7l71 NUDF.LUXF.1 BR Adults, no pets UlJllL1es Free• LA QUINTA HERMOSA 16211 Parkside Ln. I btlt w of Bearh, 3 blks s or F.dinger 847·544 I (702) 588-8123 hke a model Over 1000 mo or S25.000 down . H B 4 PLEX 714-760-0734 Dr a Pe s. & P 3 1 n t Tennis. spa. ~·aew · full S<1uare feet of decking OWCbalanre sBR3Ba, Near beach By owner LohforSde 2200 ---Th roughout E\ ery Labfottst 3255 St.'('unty, bit in bkcase, l.mJiMaleoch 3748 u.ivtnlty Peri 2BR 2ba, 2 car garage. roiy frpk, nr srhools, shops, fwys. Vacant, re ady for occupancy SlSS.OOll. with bpa overlooking lovely 2 sty, $245,000 Pnncipals only Cash ••••••••••••••••••••••• • * • Room & Window 3 Car ••••••••••••••••••••••• SA~tmo~7 2914 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644.1396 644-6397 !iecloded r reek and S46-S88I) or 631 7215 evs lowers price Comp sale HUfl{T CLUB 1,0T MRS. A..J. kEEFER Gar Fenc:ed Back Yard LAKE FOREST 2 story, 31---------11..uxury studio, spa, TV. woods Formal dining Vmce $225,000842-5763~ I Acre guarded gate 3187CollegeA\'e Gardening Service, &den,J balh On water. WESTCLIFF maid service, phones. room . 2 cus t om comm S250.000 low OSTAMei;a Orange Tree. Water new boat dock' Avail S115~k 499·22gl_ __ fireplaces, plush carpet WSE/Of'T or SALE LAGUNA IUCH d wn 4 93 339 5 h m Yoo are the winner of Pets SubJect to A p _Feb. 13 S92S 754 7!0Q_ ~c:e~i~aul~ dnei"~ ,c~~ ing, wood plank floonng 4 br, 3 ba exec Westchff IO wtlts on Glenneyre 633-0161 off two free tickets tS19 00 J prov a I Im med Oc c Spacious two bcdroomi. in kitchen and nook home.Allnewm&out Ocean view, 2 blks to MD.toiltD Mrt valuetothe S12SOM~9S78974 Mtwportleoch 3269 Two baths Private Newportleodl 3769 area, and atnum off the Qliet, res1d street Va ocean Zontd for com ~' • ' CIRCUS Y A.RGA.S •••••••••••••••••• •• • •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• PERFECT fam11) room make th1:. l'ant -1 m med oc c m'I 3 comm'!, 1 apts 2400 Sii PARK DRIVE • EuE/,...,. S LE pauo Love!)' grounds & OCEANFRONT 2 & 4 Br S27SK Ow 25 SBS0,000 w1l0', dn Xlnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lacuna Hllls Mull 3 Br, IBa, ~acant. ne~ lo6l"WI """' or A pool Adult complex Avail Winter Weekly SPOT! S3holme4.000awt11rhueassduemhagbblt• n agt 7~2 so ~um financing owe PALM SPRIMGS Feb 9 . II cpt.s & drps. lg yd, $750 4 br. 3 ba exec Westchff Eas) wallt to sho1>5 Ind Monthly 673-7873. r r -1 h " C4111M n ....... 132 222'( I b CltyShoppingCenter rm0wner5492042 home Allnewin&out bank) $670 month -or ami Y wit children first loan of S159,453 at W•TBt--... a 8..:!'!:!" -aJrway Olon eaut Oranoe -"'·et. res1d street Va y Want someth.lng xtra No lhru tralf1 c on street 121 , Sub "' ~"" 1 goU course Discount for " 2BR c •. D 'fW early leai.e Broker andthis 3 bdrmhomeis ,, m1ttermsto U:XmCann!l')'Vlllage.,ai.come ..... rty ZOOO ,cash~-2188e,•s Febt9 22 .irpet ... rapei. I cant -1mmed ocr 6317300 special 1n a 2 Br close to park, pool and owner will lake 60 boat Will •••••••••••••••••••••••!-.......--To claim ticket\. rail rar gar No Pets $450 Stnl Own a1!]~2 2550 lt!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!I Townhouse. complete!~ 768-4519 take 4.000 sqfl. oHtce • ,..,_ot~ tH2 5678, t'Xt 272 !??~&Last SIOODep 2BR,2BA,locinxlntW furn~S895 Mo.760-9117 schools Lots of up I buldrng $6SO OOOfee Is unit. ( M Apt 1980 I Pl .. rti., 2550 Ticket~ mu)t Ix-c1.11mt'd .,..,..~, side areu ~·10\il in no~' 2 .._ 2 lottls OCEANFRONT I br t1U grades addll1onal Owner agent · pnced S248,0000W<: ' b F b 9 .,,. • " ~ " Hunun.oton Beach Ne11o , rounter&storagespace.~!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!lll!!!!Jl!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!f 642-5200 6-452075 5485763 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ye ru.iryl .t9.,.. 3 BR 2 Ba lgt family j!B()mo67S-0941 pool i'ennls. extras 6·15. furn S550 . un pallo and planters and i.&w--rfle h 1069 For Sale or Trade Bv * • * room. gardener rn 4bdrm EaslbluH home. galore'$7006758252 -furn -SSOO wkdys generous patio tover ·-...-oc APPLE VALLEY Owner I Coronado duded S795 mo 640 6161 $1200 mo 644 1547 . 833 3143, eves wknds Owneroffenng generous ••••••••U••S•T••S••E•E••••••• Tax Slleft•r ra>ei. 1 Watt'rlront 1 Yr Rental1 <X' RENTALS ~831_4__ Mew CCMtdo C. M. -"7JO.M27~=------te r m~ to help you M Nc.ir nt'~ I plt'X 2 Old 3BR. 28:\ Condo ••••••••••••••••••••••• !Sbr'bS200toS2000 Westd1ff Sha111lge3Br Zbdrm.2ba.Nr So c~1 1--------· ( purrbase $155,000 Ocean & bay \'U, 4 Bdr bdrm. 2 bath l'.Jl h unit Slip for44' Boat For Hse ....... hmlihed 750 3314 Open 1 dd}'~ QI.let st. blR treel> $995. Pl al a wat t' r( a 11 !>. sracoN BAY • w bonll!> rm. pool, ~pa, "'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~'I with f1rt'pldl"e, t·ndo~t'd or Condo Betwten ).,\ & ••••••••••••••••••••••• LO\el) 3+ br, exec w ~b789.~l!:.._6710 ~treams. pool , i.pa. en1· U +rityhtt'~ Pro( deror -= PllllO. l(ar.i~e 91,, ht Sanl"lt'mentt' OnorNr Coro..oct.IMor 3122 fnt'd.yd por opt SSSO Rar S750mo 1 Bdrm , month to Assume 11 78', A great FR& ROlLS ROYCE Pos i·ash flow Now W a t c r lJ a ) ) . ••••••••••••••••••••••• OC RENTAL§ 750-33t4 Nwpt Hgts. 2 b~ \l'ry pvt. 759 093-1 month. utilities paid \'alue $429,000 Won't Lido Island Bv Owner 5159.500 8111 Grund\· 213 282 02 82 t:' e . Upgraded 2Br 2ba. yard. f.-isti.ide lge I bdrm. den, i;:P ~_t';c ?lt~~ai;t 2 BR Condo Beach & El Sl.000 mo Call Dean, la~t Patr1 \'k, agt Spar1oui. 3BR. 2RA Rltr_,_6756161 . 2135760732 carport, no dog!> garage, laundry farll. hi. Avail 3 2 112 $625 agt.67>6000 }$l22l Home On 5fi' Lot ~mo_A.8'·67311111 bllns Pvt ~treet Freshl•--------1rall OJ 847'653S lnrludl'~ Arl'htteet ·., ColtoMtta 3124 paint. new c.-rpt S425 Home.NptShores S750 ~!48S plans fur add111onal n....~-LE TUR., TO c• '"'"'"'IFIED ••••••••••••••••••••••• tf325(Mll)after5pm Famity Homc.3Br S900 To~se B .-l!-UI" "' ~ •1 v .... bd &yfn3Brdol'k $3250 •L..L-•.1.-...1 edroom & Bonu., BECAIJSETBEYKNO'WOTBER .. esa eru.:,3 rm.2ba. \'IEWfROM wmwTISIMtWV Room Plu~ Owner·, lrg tam rm $850 mo ht EVERY RM 1.961 Rolls Royce S1h er PEOPLE A.RE SEI.LJM;. & last. ref'~ S"8 6381.1 NeYr 2Br 2•2ba. mll'n>. Cloud II O\t'~S36-0.0001n 9-5pm,SS6-0701llfl5,em ~pa S850. 541 411lS. lf52~ CAM""Da·mv1NE. HPT HEIGHTS Lo' ely home in Newport •••••••••••••• ••• ••• • •• w 3 lg bd. formll I din in I? OF.LUXE end unit like & fam rm Immaculate ~ ~a~ .. R r!n~a '<i'r7:~· CllJlllMI leach 1 048 S E C L U D E 0 CHARM ...................... A Lot For A LittH I acre + bldg i.1te. gent ly slop111g parcel ~hort distance from tenms & beach Ownr has 1n h>umabie Loan' .111 I 2 ~ , SS b o ll o u ~ :Cvch j i 6f I iii:> iTiii m 5.'B·JP3 ~":.:;:,.m.:~· i:ioo.isi.0£·;ti;;;;·~a·r· MESA VERDE ~ Hous~ 10~,,.,. 1r .,,,. 2• ,Ba. lg sunn) patio. 3 Bdrm. 2 ba flreplare. no1urrnlproo1<1n upJ!raded SllOO mo Riil d1i.hwasher. fenced * * * \'W ENl~SL I.\ .,1..,.ordold Grund 675 •16 ) a rd S 11 5 mo U>aded Jbr. f111lc:. gar, A..Killdey II to5 P \IS.it & Sun 1>obbl<-.and ••k• -I}_ -Ii t -I w gardener Option to pool,+ VIEW. now S69S 1019Santa Roi.;i \'ew3sto~bellchh!o~ u"""'"""'"' Dttocator:.2BR.28\H1e bu)-OCRENT.\LS_ 7503314 OSTAM~1 t911 Court Str('et l•mt11n 1<. "'°" Canyon T\llnhome "o s.15 25;4 c.~ You are tht' 11o 1nner of Sl500 mo yrl• Isl! I • " Wat"'Jront.Ho 1 .. l'lblm S A hne SSi5 ~o .... 631 1400mes n, j .Jlt'!S 77S 25/lO. i51 0796 • eluded plans for ru~tom '1lla SI 7S.OOO Spec-e la('W3t VleWS I MISSION REALTY 494 0731 1\ pm ate rontempora!')o entertainment homt' '4-3 Bdrm!> t•cntr k1tt·h 11.oods) ~etting lob u( gl.i:.~. 1011. ering trte:. and spa Room 10 t'"< pand on & out + alle} ace~ Best :.t in Hl(t' Pnced at onl} $279.500 Call Diana. al(t s:n 1266 Walk 1n or (·.ill •nd arow """ •t>r ("h1ldren Pt't St 100 I """"'r Harbor Ocean \"u t ( k s 9 oo 675 2291or8-18 3!33 II'_....,,,. 1h.. '"' .,u 029• :. 2Br. tBa. nr SC Pla1.i 3 BR. 2 ba $1185 mo 239 wol rlOttthllr et' 1 I 1 Harbor R1d~t' Lurt'rn\' Estat.-Model $1>2..,,000 Hotn-" $100.000 und('1 ·~.,,_.~it.rm ~'"" "' full sec pools spas Ocean\'u 6i52967 '•ue e wfH'M.ltUn ,,..,." L.1-.....---••-...&..-j ... L-'"' \dltsonl}' SM() ~6·4~29 2 Br 2 Ba w stonu frpl1· ~RCUS VARGAS uvfulnf'• ,._,~Mtiru d ' Lagun.iH11l~Mall s~ s1udt0s one anCI IWO bedfoom IPll'f· ment& FURNISHED and UNFURNISHED. Qal(wOOO also otters • All Ulllitlel Plid ·tmmedl91• OCcupency t r .. r. I ., ,, 0( .. "' A ? .I ti 0 " Q I - ·'· ·t L J 1- M1n1 Resort \top Ponofino's Peak Spet· tacular \lew home with Canal Front. Newport pool & property 2 BR. 2 Shores. 4 Br Den BA , den, librar) S25.000down,011onerw1ll S4«>.000 Superb owner tarry Must ~.-II' M akt' financing Call OIAner offer' Tennis pool . ~alk directl). dyi., s.15 llfl6. lo beaeh ·\itent lilti 10.H ~ 499·~ or~ 2805 1044 .,.,._ 1044 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• MEAT AMAMCIM& PACli(i.I Cute 2 BR, 1~ BA Irvine borne located in a tranquil community. Enjoy a spacious kitchen private patio & near new carpet. Priced at $129,900. Rose Gammon 752·1414 (TU ) IXCllLIHT FIHAHCIHG. Only $32,700 down on this love ly Deane 3 BR + loft. Monthly payments -$2000 on AITD at 12% APR. $218,000 Julie Van Wieren, 752.1414 (822). apprab.il' 10 du"' 11 I 71',().19/i EA.STILUFF L'µg raded Lusk 3bdrm ram rm. den ~th hdrm pool 30 ~ r a~~uma bh· loan Open Hou~t'. Sun da). I 4pm ~ .\l~ppo St Etll•en .\rtuko\ 11·k Reali~ 7~ 0332 Harhor R1dgl'. S parlnt:r \11.intl'd to bwld ru~tom holTX' 759 0481 MEW CONDO In HTS 3Br 212ba 2 Yrs new BRlGITT & SUNNY $179,500 675-1771 SPr\ClOUS 4BR. 2B \ Fanuly Room. Pool. Cul de-Sac 955-0809 Clff Dr. W /Yl~w Jbdrm. 2ba. $385.000 Lrg home w1remodeled kitch. fam rm w bar, gd fin avail Call 1>42·6173 . 646-5096 a gt FAIULOUS SEAVIEW Guard gated comm, pool, lenntS. \'leW Of Catalina Nwpl Bay, etc m> + s<1 ft 2Br + + $80,000 m opl(radl's. J yrs ne11o Asking $450.000 Call bkr Gent> HilJ642i.179ort>-12 ~00 ~ dn. no quabfymg on 2 BR & den. 212 bacon do Approx S2700 mo pmts Walk to beach 6.11-06.1.11 833-8100 , h•nln In vour lllf' ntt-HAJtaJr ~ pu,..t\&v Ol 1 wn C'h..-k r!Al*!l\,d u mavmaMI- , h•nttn • 11111< mtll'r 1n0<11At>1< f r . Five -string banjo-0-0-os. Four· wheel·dr/ves, Three ·bedroom homes, 1wo ·wheer bikes. J.c;r And apartments In the clW·Y· Y·yt •••••••••••••• ••• •••. •• 3 br 2 ba houst' frplr ~ r . Po o I & g a r Feb 9 11 GeMra 32Q2 gar, la" n ma int $iSO !TI-5 mo 675 2520 da1s t'il) Shoppin1t Cent .. r •••••••••••••• ••• • • •••• mo ~ 7002_. 640_1~ _ I Newport ShN. home Si~ Orange RENTALS Eastsldt' Condo 2 Br 11: Bayfrt 38r w dock $32.'iO Feb 19 22 l Yearly Weeki) Winter Ba lrplr. garage Waterlront Homeslnr To rla1m ticket~. cJll 2.3.4 Bdrmh. Ne>4-port S6SO ~ ~ 3561 6311400 6t2 5678 rxt 272 Beach & Balboa House Webtside $475 mo 1--------•t Tll'kets mui.t bl' 1•la 1med JACOBS REALTY I'' Br I Bi garage.. THE ILUFFS b\ FebrUJI)' 19. 19112 PROPERTY yard K1ds ok 641 07§1 __ One story, two bedroom * * * MGRS. I Yr ~e11o• Condo !400 sq two bath condo End un °"*HS Unfum 3600 1. 'rC 1.17 , ft J.\ Beamed Ce1hng, 11 Gorgeous greenbelt ••••••••••••••••••••••• __ 'JU..C.Y ,,_ M1t·row'. 2 <'ar g ar Covered patio with Be.iut1ful Nl'~ Cui.torn ' Lg 3 Br. 1',ba frpll-. 2 j w opener Pool. Sec skylight and indoor out Deluxe IJuµl.-x JllR. car g.ir. palto t2671 \I guarQ.., MORF.' $695 Mo door carpet Adult~onl) 28.\ Frplc. <.'t·ntral \1r. lard,<!_~O 536 Im +$('( Call631 ~8 __ $925 month 'r'earh· fllrl Dbl c:aragl'~ $85-0 S1r1: clean 2 Br I Ba lease Broker. 631 -7300 . Mo 1.5t. Lai.I & SSOO Oep lalboaldaltd 3206 enl'lsdgarag~.yard .new 1111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!11-I Located at 193 E ••••••••••••••••••••••• pamt &cafJJ{'t No pets \'1rg1n1a Call Saber Bay(ront, beach. 2 Br 2 S550 + securit\ 2544 IA.YFRONT Realty 714 i71!-4000 Ba 123 E Ba)front. Orange. hous e A Pier and slip for larue I Bdr. washer dr)er Balboa Island Sl200 54112778 " winter S1400 .innual boat furnished six )ard. South Laguna. • S 1 Miiiion In Aecreltlon And Much MOl'e' Foi a month or a hfe- ome Models ooen da•ty 9am to 6pm Adults only no pets Oakwood· Garden Apartments Newport Beach/No. 880 Irvine Iii 1611'1 {H 4) 645-1104 Newport ee.ctllSo. 1700 16th St (()o.tf II 16111) [714) &42·5113 ~rb, d~j!!_'.178 :i.sn f..,toi1t YoU•'I 3234 bedrooms. fl\e baths. ~mo ~all, 499 4486 •••••••••••••• ••• •••••• drnmg room and den I F\tm 2 br 2 ba lge pauo Copttn.loleoch 3211 4 Bdrm. 2 Ba near Mile Tennis courts and ... hwlltsfw,,Yslted tenrus & 0pool 'overlook: ••••••••••••••••••••••• Square Avail 2'10 No beaches Shon term or "••••••••••••••••••••• i.ng bav $1150 mo Short CapLStranoPahsadeslux. pets S795 mo. S9SO years lease S5SOO s.o.r.-Allo 3707 orloni_term 646·63SO ocn vws. brand new i.1dc security de)>Osil Our n»nth Broker.631-7300 •••••••••••••••••••••• by side duplex 2 master T 0 w n R e a I t y BAY FR 0 NT AG E. I bdrms bas. walk tn hrh n5 7501 ti41-0399 1 beach. pier. prkg, 2 BR S700 496 2228 --I S750 . 1 BR. S600 Adlts ----twilM;• leoch 3240 A.YFIONT Util pd Till May 27 303 ..................... .. ..::or.oct.1Mor 3%22 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 story, 4 :+-bdrms. 2 E F.d ewater 1871 2866 llcAooP .. Mla 3107 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4BR Condo 1•,RA S62S baths . fireplace . ••••••••••••••••••••••• lrg 3bdrm, 21 2~a. ram mo lJlt. Last & Dep No gorgeous view Pier and 2 bdrm Cum 21th St Yr S350 U 111 Pd I BR . rm, den, din rm. (rpk. Pets 768-7633 slip S3000 per mo Avatl ly $460 mo Call after Ii ~lex 417 EBay Ave patio, 2 blks from ()(Un 4 Br 2,, Ba Bon1ts rm, Feb. 1 pm, 675-9394 Balboa 547 USS, S42·0190 Rent/lease. 11400 F 3 100 ft Bach ,fullk1tch,SJSO yr oc•• ... RaO ... T 640-1484. G::/'Lake 11~\ e·v~~ ly , In cl ut11 Quiet. ""'"~ " b mature , non smk r 2 bdrm. 2 bath. new 2 r. f.rpk, patio, nr 840-6203 673.5580 pa111t & carpet Yearly Fashion jaland & ocean Cute bcb home' lBR w I lease S7~. Call Linda or S7501e~.64~1177 a•r:...llidok,nowS375 CostaMno 3724 An ,675-7060 Charming 28 R, t BA . 0C KENTALS 750-3314 Harbor Ridge lease. 4 Br, ••••••••••••••••••••••• N_u__.2 .... &""'J-B-'-R'"'. -28-A-. y_e_a_r-ly-. Frpk , Ga r S650 Adults 3 Br 3 Ba o R F R 1 bdrm rum or unrurn c-......1 bl · _... No P A .,.6 029• . with garage Child & . .. .. study, · • • • ., <', l-lns. gar. parr.· els &t '" -" _ small pet ok $650/mo highly upgraded, fab vu, $395 Furn bachelor. 1ng Close to bay 6 Shorecllrfs Mo to mo lse 2 536-7979 guard gate, pool !tennis. S34S S200 sec dep + ocean Brtr 675-4912. Br l '1 ba. fam rm, bvmg HOME f'OR RENT $3200tmo Bob or Dovie lit. rmve-in S48 0130 Ocean Front Lr 1 BR rm. kitchen, 2 'r· lge 2 Bdrm S600 Fenced Koop, agt 7S9-1.221 Sln&le only IBR Apt Nr Ba. Frpk, Yrly~ Adul~ yard Pets kids o $950. 41• B 2 Ba F ·1 oct. _,.,,_ 1st•-Lisi N p lst last. refs req yard & garage Kids & ., r am1 y rm . ....,., ... ., "' o els 1600 Mo. 644-0UM pets welcome 545 2000 Dinmg rm . I block from fUm No Pets 546 9591 ..:67J..84;.:..::...='------- A&ent1 nofee NH High Sch ool OCEANFRONT : See Lee 3 BR 2~ .. Ba w patio H........,. SlOOO •mo Age nt Whether you're buylna or Catalina every mornina. ' 1ardener Sl.050 mo .~ ..... "!"7' °" 3242 S4l·S032. sellin~ Cl1u1fted ad 1 Br '°" 1 penon, non 640-8510; 760-8689 "'aw s h .... ill _.._._ ~ "'"'"" •••u•••••••••••••••••• p1c1ous ouse with ve • ...., I w aet your Sn""''CT aw. -1mo . IH• ... ' JClllMMC,.._. 2 bdnn plus den condo Secunty guard. pools. Lennis. 1315,000. Assume ~• 'l-1st Owner/ Agt 0 lfll ·3737 I H. &40.6188 SPYGLASS HILL Waterfront Broad moor swimming pool 3 Br 2 meuaae to the rlaht incld utl . m-G72. Spettacular ocean vu, 2bdnn Zba frplc wet· Ba. F1m1l.y rm. frpk + :~~ Call Today' C.... .. M.. JIU 3+ family. formal din-bar, dbl aa~. slip 'avail. 2 additional utility ••••••****••••••••••••• :ih ·•I "' ,f(I . ' • . • ~ NEW BUSINESSMEN Coe._ ._ DAILY PILOT for l•f•r•1tlo1 re11rdl111 t111 •.. .,,,==-........ flllll•• -· IOIO ••••••••••••••••••••••• NO 9UALIFYIMG I ASWME LOW, LOW OOWN 3/r new dttamhoUJe, 3 B 2 81, fam rm, CUl•dt·llC, 2 car ttar, lq lot, beaut. ldtdl.. owe. Le.,. op· tion avail. Hu.rry, won't lull So1an Jlan, •It Ina , pool' spa patio 11100 mo bdrm s . Nlcely STEPTOoc••N ... SZOOO/rm . Gardener and (714)875.7171. 1 •~dsc aped · 1 u t o DOINO IUllNHS dwmlnt In~~°'!~ pool care Incl A&t 28 2i BA ~I 2 sprinklers l l.2SO/mo. In· UNDa A 2 Br z Ba. fl"j)lc, ocua 71J0.9333 r, N p' •/k c, car clds eardener It pool v I e w from d • c '. pr, o eu/ Ida l600 •nvice 640-1327 ACnTIOUI BIO/mo. Call Antllofty W... 3U4 rm. PJOSff. 942.4534 551-6188. <irice 759"59'7.' NAiii? d~ MJ.5'1S'7. eve. 6 ·-•.-....................... 3244 Bluffs. But greenbelt !.':'::t.:':::: ~a1.eao. ~T..,.1111 ....................... loc. 6 Decor! 381l. ... .. ...i-.. •"' 3 bdrm, 21,; ba. view, I new 3 br. 3 ba, 111BA. r#m Rm. Sl050. ........ .... ........ @ . 1213)582·4114 paUo. car. Park, pool, 'fe0.8384,815$30 llM, ...... •i-... Sb arp 3 b r , 2 b 1 . ™· "75/mo. 833-90$'7 lllit ~-4 bdrm, 3 :~ ':'.. ":': :.: pool/spa, bbq, 1ar, RANCHOSANJOAQUIN batha.$1.21DOmonth Tiiie OAl&.Y "K.Ol wit carpel, drapea, new VILLAS 2br, 21.tba, '"'2607 f::"' ,_ "°" .. .,., kltcben. UO/mo . dm. POOl •Jae., adult Canal Front N,ewport M.•o.• · 3 1at/lut. UOO dep. l'CllMI. •1mo. Mardi .... Or +.a.. ... or :::;:-c::..::e.::•!:.: W-7150 11t.m.t1M. ctobQY.SlMoJmo. =-............... CMOICIL StDI MOITHWOOO .._'!'!_ii, pool, •alk to • =·.-:-~ .. ~ 18r. i.a., h'Jlc. bit• a bdrm. J be.. ~ee. --... Acal w..10.. or rUCtflrftn, ·"dallw•br, mt" ft. Anll lmaw4. r--•=-•=------:=,.~1t-:_."; paU0, Poll. • mo., ,..._...., >• • .., -.. ,_.,. •• T OA9'.Y adlta, DO peta. Hl nr ftit;aa ....,, ,.O. , .. ........ 'ti.=-~~ ~e:.:fi ..,..:1om::iur;a=-:1.az::s;;a;1&.1 =::.:: ..... 'Rift ...... , • ...... ~...... ~·s:.e:r .. . ~-... 2 Br2 Bl toado, encl. aar, ldulta, ms mo. --3 br, 21 .. ba. ftplt. 1 bl bell, •tmo ioelda vut. d1y1 7St·lSOl. nu ftt1S7!/MM1TS Cite 181 llA. Pttk, 1ood area, Utt •o t 1url1 •rkr m.thl.. Ch,.laJ I Ir l &a ..... Diie.i ..... •r. •• ••u tut. . . . .. ..... 4IOO Offkta.ttl . ..... ....................... C......... 1114 .._,.. 112 tie w..-t.... 316' M a tlardwelfkllll 11eb -...•••• .. •••••Ht u tt••u•••••n•••ueen •0•h•••n .. •n••H•u i..-1 1ot lO 1b1r. w /F Nl'Wt.Y DECOR DUPLp<: Lar1t 3 bdrm, S.cbtlor Bett'b A t 213:2 C.Hl4H4c• di It IU pd, tnrl 1ar = ';1"\ rm t~:t" Aull now, yrly fae Room ma le nuded ,.._ Miit. 11.0 IH. llMtrial bids. • 14 . .,_... • f.Ot a.;· tu1iiry offln auilea 8X9CUpfan HIWPOITllAC:H ~CINTll l\.w/tPriollm~U.rur Gray/blkl•~t T • avail lmmed Just eoutb •P'ULLBERVlClt• .. 11 I Office 0¥trtaa_.s doot • r~ l'111t.W lAlt Al • 1wullff. pool Adulu tvd w 2 Ktn 1J • &150tn Call ill 4pm w1retn1. lo shr bome in ol 4m ~W)' on hi&Jl IX· hf Offlct S..C~ S... adJoWn• paved park ..::«"=11-.:lrU__..,~~"""";:'~ poturt Beach Blvcf l'Ull "AHewCo.c..t'" <&ltt.froms.t! $00t0lOGOlqtl in&. Cont.trot Redhlll 6 IG·5073 <'Ora • car 111 8'7S-3l• CdM SZOOmo. lit' lut Imo '95 HIO -Ttl).D service Call 11ent P\lllservke/cu1(om •BrlncholflcellOtmo AvlJlableforl..eue Paularlno. C M Loat Ory ••t •": ~ o(flre Ii dealc apace ~II 7U.=NOl=---i Call Wllllam F Cott1 ~l bairtd C.C, n"'f' ~-3 8rTownhouee Ntlwty decor 1a1 pd • tnel aar . pool .• dawhr 1 Br -lBr. 1 b1k lo bay ' bch, ---near Ol't1n, ·~~al!: MOO mo lie 673 mo or Sil-48R lb~ nt 11de clta n 24 812 A evam 2483 8ackb1y. rl.50 + 1• UUI Nr 0 C Airport tor more lnlormallon vie Meta Dr • lull MIWPOlTIUCH ''SeetoAppreciate'" 3 orrtre •ul te + ~ ...... 411 Ana l 21. Jhwar- Adwu .$0'J3 28r 1 Bl Apl Newly dct'or Oas pd ~ 11r . pool, dahwr Ad\llu 64Z son Cordova Dr 68H537, ---«limo t213l40226SllcollttO S.C"-... 3176 -- l.arlf Studio Apt with ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rmmt W11ntcd M to shr Ol•unvl~w $260/roo NICI:: 2 BEDROOM a::Jpt l200s:~:t'ase 661 1192 apartment with view or _c~ eoc e • AJRPORT Cuatorn or 751-8971 rtt rt I ti ' tC t' a-It' ••••n•••••••••••••••• ~ nca, 000 to UIOO sq ft -!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!~!!!!1-I ~ ~.: ·A~':.TP1n °:r11 I 0 e nca y &>at. RV, Auto stora~:; l.olt SlameN C•t ma&. fl'romllO<llt't11r 2ortlt' acijoinin1 partial •lilt loc for lmmed & lnnttmtnt fenced, ucure neutered. 1ra1. • c .... i Mullan Rlty ~0-29GO Ba yv I 1: w N t w P 0 r 1 subJe~ Con tart Betty. l _ 640-5777 Imo 641HW eyed "M1rahrrwU01'''. Orachf!()()mo 642-2255 17141~1 0291 --Tr 1d•wIod1 La. Sc>acious 2 Br, 1 Ba. 139~ 3 Br, 11 t Ba. 1425. Laun 4n' rac., ~· 5411·8"6 --the ~olf couue, hllls. Udo W~terlront Luxury Sharp 3 br veiry Ire publlc tennis courts Condo. Sllp 1v11l 28R 11-.i ..... ._....,,..___..___..~.,__.Y~..__~_.___.,,.._,___...~~---,..__--_.~~~~ l2l otflcet for rent, ap ...... /l••Ht/ Baycml, NB REWARD prox 400aq. ft Avail Im· "'-'• ..;:;..a..:;:..;;*';:.;.;.----~ ~ltx, bit Ins. t'ncl aar btihind pr operty 2 38A enormous rma •••••• • • ••• • ••••• •• • •••• •••• •••• •• •• •' •• ••• •• Small child ok Nr PCH enclosed curporta. '8 11 F\J"l: PJO + 1, 675 4140 & Mala a. ~ 730·~ builtln~. laundry h1riU ty Jo.:ASTRl.UFF N o ' mrd. $375/mo Superior .:;;;;•••n••••••••• found dos on public Ave.1 C.M. 64H709. ~., IOO beach. M/whitt/blk ' fl'ireplace, pool, pvt patio, dlahwasher. on F./alde, all lll x Ira 2 Br &arden apts From SMIO M7-2141. H ...... °" lttcla 314 In 4 wut modern spaniKh Fem to shr w t samr ••••••••••••••••!\.... style bulldill8 2 adults rum. 3 Br 1•1 Ba condo Larae 3 bdrm . z bath, only Noch1ldre11 or ~Is 1250/mu 759 1980. Tc N .. .,_ h r ~ r 1rey, caU to deat'ribe me ewpo,. -•c o · ...................... ~78 C4!. 944 sq ft newl1. re coat a M e aa La u 11 • "'~;.;;;....;."""_..__ __ '"""'."._~ modeled , beiut1ful dry s11K1roaapermo Found: 8111ett Hound , Marlt673-6606 641·0763, A&ent Puppy. Blycrett area. 2 Br Adult. beamed cerl lnp, serve bar, rernge, loU ol wood f\'o pets 22!16 Maple St S420 mo 548-73M, 673-8803 frplc. patio, 11.1ro11ll plell!. S4SO pt'r month ~4346 Xlnt. ~ 675 9132 Available February --- 2 bd----1-1 -b-S37• Call owner 1714) Shrfurn 2 br apt. pref ~rt Beach so. N ..:;~.:.=...:.J~Ol7 ----- Newport Blvd 336. 434, Mmlfect..... Foond Npt B<'h on Ctt rm. i a, J 00-01.18 sport nut 14 tstereo, +$375 deposit Gas pd · ~Im> gsa 997 4U!O 800, 1237 sq n i.l 85' 11 $41 Co needs associate with Hwy car key• w /namt- ft. Private entrance Z .000 to Join est OC plate Jack Reed. Nr Buch Bl Ii MC'l"ad ~llh"9ntl.tltd F roommate 25 35 to ahr ~~Adi ts no pets orUltfwWtlMd 3t00 furn F V apt w ~am1· s M c Flrm In tut expand.Ina 1 err a g m 1 0 dM!mical rield No txp ..:673-=-'1-086=------ 3br. 2ba upper 4 pin, adults. no pets. '525 IO.OC Valencia 545 7983 ----•••••••••••••• ••••••••• @ rrx.> 964 7121 evs 641-1324 necessary will train Foond· Medium Blk Ptap.. ...._., lttltal 4450 Muil have manaeement PY F Wht Cb11t • ••••••••••••••••••••••• :ib1hty and start am p.., .. s Sbr1 Ha!.red. Wbt Delu"e poolside xtra S E A W I 11o...1 0 ON THE BEACH tt')IJ large 2br. 2 ba. bltns, ,.... M F to shr Bal 'ronrlo dswhr, ii, males beach VILLAGE 1 $350 mo + ': u1a1 ' • SloreorOHke 1350sq ft mediately S2 .000 mo Flea Collar.•1171 • 2 BR Mesa Verde up per New decor Adlts. $415. no pets 833-8974 ;:,u~ no ~ts $450mo New l&c2 bdrm luxury 675 426a!ti·8AM or PM Mesa Verde Area Should lllllke $40 SOK 1st F o u n d S m D o I 545·4123 yr Wrlle Ad #932 c/o W/Sweater Mesa Del --adult apts in 14 plans I South Lagun;i o, ean f)-plr · J Br 2' 1 ba. 2 car· Bdrm from S490. 2 bdrm Side ol Hlghwa> Gated 2 blks from beach. from S570, Townhouse Area. Pool, Pvt En $750 mo 968~0 from $640 + pools, ten tranre, Bath. $295. + Lrg !bdrm condo, patao, rus, waterfalls, ponds' Llll Must ht' empl, ha\ 1• Beach Store. Ne14•port O;uly Pilot. PO Box 1560 Mar on La Sall CaU ~ Walk traffic.prime lora Costa Mesa CA 92626 ldenl!fy, ~627• • 3 Br Condo nr S C Plaza. S.A Pool. spa, garaee $750 What a neat way to send a Valentine message to your sweetheart, wife, husband. parents, grandparents, boss, teacher. or friends. tioo! 800 sq rt 675 4185. Gav111g Name· phone and Found F Hu s k y 673-l40l _ best tune to contact 9\ephfrd Mix Approx 549 3232or641 1460 2 Br Adults. no pets, new ly dtt stovetrefn&. encl patio S4SO 979 4!10 wai.h dry, frplc, pool & Gas for rookmg & heat rl'fb .i99 4722 f:\ e~ ~~ITILYD Wanted . Investor for 5Mo Brookhurst 6 """''""' growing drapery con Adams 558.2453 Jar, Se<' gate. close to ang paid From San beach, 6 mo new, $550 Diego F'rwy dnve North F. rh1ld ok. shr lux 4b1 roorlo. pool, ten1113, ett" S27S 645 5123 Nam·y Your oum personal message wtll appear in our special Love Lines columns Wednesday . February1JO. Spill shop 600 •q ft ~. 1155 4764 e es Des1gner/bwlder relat· cem .,,.s · ' v fi'oond. Blk Lab M 3 Mo 9685632_ on Bearh to Mct'adden ed 2330 Newport Blvd ~ 2775 & 537 2789 Old Vfc CM. 754·5236, Costa Mesa 642·4382, BEAUTY SHOP 00-9701 Mesa Verde. 2 br, new crpt, drps. paint Qwet area. Cul de·sac S-175 $1936, 966 14~ fUnushoo & Unfurn I 2·3 Bdrm Ap t 1> Gym , Jaruzz1. Sauna, pool. then West on McFadden lo Seaw1nd Village • * • l'aulifte PHH 147 Monung l'un\•on Mail the coupon below witfi your mes$age & payment to : Classified Love Lines, Irvine Mirror, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa 92626 or call 642-7667 , and we will bill you . 494-3317 Very busyshoP in C ·MF -'ound=-''-"': M'--b-Lk_Co_l_li_e _m_i_x. Studio space in C M 848·958511-349·4139 M blk & gray Malamute, PALM MESA APTS t714 J~3·5198 tennis. vol ley ball. WiffletreeArb basketball, game room Furn & unfurn bdrm Hunt Rrh 114ti 0619 apt J\11 ut1l 11d All I Hr w frpk , pool, l•nl'I amemt~ 84.,!i Olil!! ORONA Dl•I Mar av1111.to share w /serious Mol9ty to Loan 502 F blk & wht Terrtpoo. art.1st. approx $85 /mo •••••••••••••••••••••• 644 3656 Nwpl Sheller, 962·0740, 557·62'1~ * * * l2S Mesa Dr., C.M 1561 Mesa Dr 2 Br unfurn $11 25 Adults only, C11ll ht wn 94. 546-9860 Yoo are the wuinl'r or two free il<'kt'ti. IS19 001 1 ulue to the Commtrclal u.da YCMtlCllt Los I : 0 range Ma I e Retdal 4475 1724NewportH1lls W, Man x Short Tail. gar. nr shoppini: $39~. Rooms 4000 847 OOSti ••••••••••••••••••••••• CIRCUS VARGAS Laguna Htl I~ Mall Feb 9 II -------------------------~~-••••••••~•••••••••••••• EWPORT Beach 'fhurin & Bay CM . Cl Property 2 Br 1 Ba You are the winner of """63""1_837-'l _____ _ 2 HUGE Bedrooms Ground Floor, Fully Carpeted Bui It ins SUPER Localion' 0\ er 50 Adults No Pet!> $385 Mo Apply Apt "E' 563-Wi Ison 646 · 44 77 l1nfun1 2 Rr Apt \dults Laguna Beach Motor inn. ooh. no pets 985 No Par1f1c Co a:. I Please publish my Valentine mes~aoe a s written below on WedneSday, Feb. 10. (Write one word per space 3 line minimum Compute char~ at end ol hne I house In high traffic two free tickets IS19 001 l..alt : Parrot, sml green area of Westside Costa value tothe dusky Conure, H.B. 9ti0 26ia Hwy, Laguna Beach Cll'dn, xtra IJ!e 2 br. I', Dad). W~kiy. K1lrhl'n ba twrihsl• , . ma ocean a\ a1labll' Lo\I \I inter l'H~ ShOIJPlllR renter Orangl' Mesa Ternfic for Anti· CllCUS V AlGAS area, ~ward 848·16S9 Feb 1!1 22 <1ue Shop. Accounting Laguna Hills M:ill Found. Pomme Nnian Offire. Law Office. etc Feb 9 11 dog, dntwn H B. 1/22. \dull~ onh, no peb ~tes 49'1 529-1 SS25 !lti().2392 Balboa Inn S90 & up To llaam IJt•keh l'a II 1.12 Stiill l' x t 2 72 Xlnt park mg Will dis Caty Shopping Center Call to identify, 543-Gt'Tl c~ remodehng to swt Orange F C Newly decorated lar11e 2 S550 2B R 2B \ :'It ant week I) K1~chennette Br with patio. pool , t'ond ~ r Beh Be!t t oceanJr_o1_1t 675 llNO garage. kids OK, no \red No Pet!! 8J3 3307 Room. S215 mo 5 Hou~e~ l'ltktol!> mo'l llt' 1 l,11111ct.l h\ Ft>hru,11'\ 19 19112 .99 .\pprox 900 sq rt ex Feb 19 22 Found Rust . Ocker duding the ) a rd To rla1m t1l•kets, call Spaniel Vic Fairview ~ mo 641 0763 fromSand NB • * • ShJrl' 2br Jpt "' 110111 S250 mo (;J~ & 14tr 11<1 IH2 5073 ur Ii I~ :10211 $500 mo 548·5442, 642·5678. ext 272 CM ~_6300 ____ _ 1.32 ii().5629__ __ 'l'lckets m111>l be rla11'l)C'd Found Spnnger Spaniel t and 2 bdrm trailers DElUXE 2 81, I IA ti75 112115 Sl65 to S260 + $150 nr beh nel4 frplc. pat10 P\t ent no mukini: r 1.65 ____ 1.98 ~·tri_j R_.al 4500 by Februan 19, 1982 Blk 41 Wht Mother. Vic .._ m """ * * * HB Bushard &. Adams. secunty, no children. no• t•nd gar. dl>hw sher dn ~ ~ F Rmmt l>hr ~pJ1·1ou' pets 6'2·9193 l33 E lblh .!>m>ke alarm. bJkon\. -lO ~g. I'~~~ O\ H 2BR. 2B \ ~\ill Fat' t \I Costa Mesa . .\dull~. $4115 before --"!> I ~pt SJOO Ellen 545 13~; !IPM .90046H P\1 Entr. Hunllnj.!ton Rt-i.p Mdture F 25 JS WT SIDE I Harbour Lu\. c\ m. . ......... . R . 1575 rm I 2Br. 11,aa Mo\'emtod.t} 3BR3Ba. TeMJs. p,.,, Bl·h $2gs ~l'\:'''""toi.hr2B .211\ twnhse. yd ball-on\ . 1 . 3 t•a'r gar Qwel tul de fl40.~ 111ldM 5325. +~' • ulll ·II t OK . II bit Sal' ~ Sam 730 4741 7b0 3813 sma pe · a n~. • · -·---Male 22.30 Pool, lt'nn1!> ____ 2.31 Add.itional lines otl 33c per line Name ...................••.................... · ··· · ...........•...•....... N 1:1 • 3975 B1rrh 8860 ~Q ft or less MIA zone. 5<> per sq ft A~ent 541·5032 13XJ.JOOO sq ft by Npt fwy & 406 fwy t'rom S504 Mr O'Keere 85HB28 lndry rm This one won t , Blk to Bch 2BR. 2BA. jar Walk 10 Beill'll l'rof 25 35 \I rc~IJ Job tu last. Gar. \dulls $485 124 548 .&oo shr hou!>e in N B Avail For Renl·S,000 sq Ct in· TSL MGMT 642· 1603 :nh Streel 894 8287 After F---~ Mar t I ns till2h Address . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . ...... · · · · • · · • • · • • · dustnal bldg Avail 1m· 2BR.11-iBAStud10 Pool. 5PM emaleroommatl'want Mt' J0.50 to :.hr w f' med Formorcmfocall Hot&. cold water, gas ClOSETO IEACH ~t~.1·~ B~1th/:e\' lat ONF. BLK TO BEArn Cit y .... , . , •.. Zip ..... ·: ... Phone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ,::n""l~'--1-P-a-rk-Units for he at ing pa Id by ~ mo 3 Br 2 Ba .\IJt S2SO mo Call aft 6PM or Balboa Peninsula Pt x J C heck or money order e nc losed lease l500. 1900. 3000 .. landlord Cov'd varking. 2 car gar:ige Sma 11 llPM 964.1905 lg 2 Bdr 2 Bath AJJl 1700 B 'll Walk to shoppin g child ok Yard .--------sqft ~moyrly.ulll -11 I me J'IOOsq fl umts Avail. S46S·S476 Oln·e Tree. \13 l>her dryer hook UIJ, llUTOOCEAH, pd ti7Hti22 aft tiPM ,•Bill my Visa~ ................. Exp............. ~rr1i~n~d w~~~~~~(':e 2190CollegeAve all built in~ Call for Fllrn bal'h. w ba.th, 10 7JO.OIS2exJl2Ann i_i sp11ce with carpets. ___ 548_._·7_36_7 aJJJJI ~·I .refr1e_ &. ut1I No Sper view. sec g11te. ~Bill my Maste rcard :: .......... Exp ........... : or aves &. wel ·bars I Quiet I Br I Ba . new TSL MG MT 642 lf.03 lltcnen t'vt ent5ra9nce J>OOI, Jar ill tj 1'!4)tmo • • • • ~d~l~ ~,.~c.~~ ~ • •, • •, • •, • , •,,, •, • •,, • • , • • •, 36• .J8• a sq fl ca 11 carpets & drapes, good -S295 mo 675·0 4 or +It hsek 700·9307 642.4463, Moo Fri II 5 I E side lor Mature ~1~~:e1~?. ~fo~~H& ~>tTI,l_askf.Q.rSue. F Rmmt Over 25 Non , 1 adults only S350 147 E refnge Gas & water CdM Rm in NICE smk.r.Refsreq Balbo11 ... 6 •••••••••••••••••• • ••••••• t8lbSt 114 l!!ild SJOO mo 530 1919 Duplex To Prof Mature 673 1908 • W\U<TOBEA_C_H-2Br i'!~r~,S~S5Re~s·tft~~· M1FSZ25 beautJbr,hot • 8 DAY WEEK SPECIAL 119e8tiaJlll ~h tlO\ e d & rewgpC't &»7~ ~~· ~~l~i~~u~/Ps ~ : . • 8 Deya • 3 Linea • 8 Doller• :· S \a t' 'dr smd t' "'-.... f "" "' ' '"><.«75 Bob S .. p .. •rMii:: ... T ok .. "" '~" ~9-9 """ .. mg em . ...,""'· , ......, oN "' ""' """ ~ mo ,..,., 1 ' blk bl'h. N B unfum . Beautiful garden apts w \l..K TO BE \CH 1 Br non smk.r S2'1S 675 1706 Roommates needed lo Pauos deck~ Spa. heJt st 0 \ e & r {'fr I Re all .j shan rondo lO beaullful I • Its easy to place your 8-0ay Week Classrf red by marl and rt • ~~~~~~ts. no pet~ SS25 S350 mo fu;. needed for fem w1m ~~~%~ :~~l~s f:11:, I e costs 1usl $8 -thats only a dollar a day' To Qualtfy for lhts e ~w Wilson 631 5.S83 536 7979 -fant in xchange for 644.-41176 __ e special offer you musl be a non-commercial user oJlerrng e PINE BLUFF APTS 2 Br upslairs Apt near babvsittmg or hspkpg. M CHRISTIAN RMMn; merchandise for sale UP to $800 per ad, and the price must 2 Br 2 Ba No peb Beach & Ellis S47Stmo 957.8.190 2BR lBA . EC M • Patao. view. frpl c, ~ecfir~~~~·e~t~ Furn rm for rent in S2llmo 63147960an be 1n your ad The cost stays the same whether your ad e JBCUUi, gar. gas SlOH, no fee Newport. S2SO mo· Gcs'OQH • needs eight days selling time Or JUSI One • ~ 631-6107 female pref 64>3448 11ft for lti • Beautiful t Br Apt Qwet ~Oft ~---_ _ •• ~ •• ~ ........ ~~.s.~ • bldg, near s hops & HarbOur 3842 Hohfs.Motels 4100 Garage.storagt>only full e Use one word 1n each box About 4 words make one • buses 213 498 6786 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• or partial • class1f1ed line of type M1n1mum ad IS 3 lines Please print • 213 597·0956 Guarded gate. tennis u .. LARKMOTEL 89l 141Sda\\(1n11 pla nly --EASTSIOE l'OUrt!. swimming pool. ~entah now a\aal • • •• r---1 ---------------------------, : 3BR 2BA . Avail Ft•b hie roof. cobbll' stone s1o5 & uv Color T\' Offic:tR...+al 4400 ..... 'uo• 1 Ids Gas & \lrei!l, on rhannel adJa Ph 22_, ••••••••••••••••••••• •• urn ..,.,., nr cent 10 manna l'11111ue one!. in room 1• " " w Wale[ No Pets 8339389 2BR""" mo Newport Rhd CM umwestrhrf. ,, n Jnt • I I --"' f111anc1al 1n1>t iOOO~ f • •Eostside/Spoffeu 7~ ~22-6"6·N4S l~t rloor Agent >II 5032 • I I • Cluld welcome. 2 BR 2BR.212BACONOO NEIDA.PLACE? EXECUTIVE • I I • rpts, drps, pvt patw S850 mo Rea~ Wttklv R.ite~ I Stove. pool, lmlry No 738·5022 Katchenettes:Phones SUITES • I cats1dogs $495 water & Lagirna lt;h 3848 "Z" Channel Mo' 1e~ IN I S 1.00 I • P$1u Epdlo ... Near Orange •••••••••••••••••••• • • • Sandpiper, 1967 Ne-.IJOrt HERITAGE • I I • ..., ~noeor960 3989 I Bdrm loft apt Frpk Bl C-OSta t'!!esa 645 91~7 PLAZA • I 10.IO I • --sto\e. refng d ". 2 blks Int Homu 4175 l\ew luxury office i.µdll' I I 2BR 1BA, Old but Clean ocean.1st last-+ 1l uul ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1n ln•ane:. bu\ll'l>l • I 13 20 0 N "' '1 • I e 2248 Canyon r • o S600 mo 4~·7222 lroWll's Gr'0411> Hm center' Eas~ r r";'\ . .ir Pets 2nd rloor $390 ocii:: ..... FRO ... T Sr C1uenc '8s5·622l re.s Avail no" Lill • I 15 ao I • Sierra Mngt Co 641 1324 ""'" " ·~ for details • E Side cozy barhelor Most eleganl apartment SunwntrRentals 4200 551-1231 640·4230 • I I • $375 l . I building an Laguna ....................... • I Add $2.60 for ••ch eddltlonelllne for 8 tlmea I • apt w patio tr Beach Finest lorat1on in •DELUXE OFftCES * pd 631-4320 Agt town Breathtaking OCEAN VIEW F'rom 1 room to 1400 sq • 1 1 1 1 • Lrg I Br Adult Near \11.'WS All bit ms. heated ft F'rom St 15 a !IQ rt No shops, pool. all ut1l pd pool ~ubt garage, I rru to beach Wkly or lease required AdJ • 962 281!._ -----MOMy WCll!hd 503 Found Fem a I e •••••••••••••••••••••• Doberman puppy. black 520.000 at 2S'.. secur~ buy, well established, &tan, 540-7210 ~lal lab, 645·2075 Found: Gray white fem long haired cat El MortCJC!911, Trv1t C.amino Or, CM 540-4836 Deidt 503 •••••••••••••••••••••• P~ SlSO Sattler MtCJ. Co. ••••••••••••••••••••••• All types of real estate For total relaxation with mvestments since 1949 a protessional massaae. C-..ial•'-!ft Steve 10.6, 548·2617 ~WTii' Lonely Toniaht? Need 642-2 I 71_545_-06J I Company! Call Monica. WU~OW HAS SSS for COEDS-Would Love To TD s, RE Loans, IOK Party with You ! Call Up No Credit Check, No Lu It e or s y ! vi: .,. t'enalty Denmsson As An.ytJme 761.9036 -953·18Z2 soc 67J. 7311 ---Strong prof man desires MUD CASH? pmty sensual lady is.~ Tusl Ot't'd mone) days rutes7~ a\ a1labll' 2nd or 3rd r or womenon.Jy.total TO~ on res1dent1al or in body massaie by Diane. come propert1e~ We By appt IG-6 548..(N()7 handle a full r.inge or -~-------­ mortgage CO\erage at ~& very rompellla\ e rates ,.... • Courtes} lo Brokers ••••••••••••••••••••••• 714 76t-t5'51 ask for Sdlooh& Ste,eorDuane ..._.._ 71tS Arwtw.,.llh/ ,, , ht ltOatAs/ Lolf&Fot.d •••••••••••••••••••••• 510 •••••••••••••••••••••• PREGHAHT1 Pregnancy testing. 2 nun slJ.de or early deler· ••••••••••••••••••••••• SJl.90/WI Hot lunch C.M. Cbri.1· uan Preschool. 646·5423 • .VORNING , AFTERNOON "EVENING •WEEKENDS lion. All methods or birth Trwung classes for l'OOtrol Abortion 24 hr help l!ne C'onf1dent1al Women 's Center. 1125 E 17th St . • 110 East 54 • 495 SCRAM-lETS Dr'1A1titt.t C.rtNebo ..... t MtclcalUb A11t CAU55t-6UI ANSWERS Cahf Paramedical ' Lawful Crush Tech College, 37U Looi WLnd) _Armory Brat'h Blvd Long Buch HOLIDAYS Jobs Wmttd. 7075 Here 11 1s Februar} ••••••••••••••••••••••• alread) and I'm having Retired Gentleman DOO· trouble' keepin~ my New smkr will excb lite Year's resolution not to duues fM reduced rm procrastinate I ha\en'l rent al ( slee p1n I I even sent out a II my _548-_7_197 _____ _ r a rd s f o r t h e ComP.anaoninurses aide HOLIDAYS av11lable any shift for inform call S48«Mll Lost&Fo.d 530 ...Wlllhd 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••• 1884 Monrov1a,_S48 01_3') elevator Lease only rmnthly 3 br. 2' i ba \1rporter Inn 2li2 Do Publish my ad for 8 days starting I • $550. 3H, 21A S850 & up 330 Chff Dr condo (213)592·418'1 .PJt Call AM 833 3t23 • I • ---------i ...................... . Accounta P~able Family, 2 ch.ildren OK 4!M·IKl83 Vocation Retttofs 4250 I 7TH STIEET • Classification I • No Pets 545 ·9908 1 bdrm, fireplace. large ••••••••••••••••••••••• COSTA MESA I 557.1634 · deck, Ocean View $600 OCEANFRONT2&4 Br 2oraroomofflresultes • Name I • mo. 494·5570 Avail. Winter Weekly 38R2ba,adults,nopets ~ -rtlt-h 3869 Month.ly.sn.7873. /\C.plentyor11rkg Ut1I e Address I. 2nd Or S52S+dep Avail ,..ewpo OC -• incl Avail. now Call • now.540.2245 .. p·;~·K••N••E•W··,··a··R•T•••• ~~,'!'ys~g~~!~~~a31~~n2 Realonomics 675 6700 City Zip Phone I • 2Br.Townhouse Nopets M Ba . rum wiatrium 600 SQ rt Mesa Verde • I • Mature adults only COUHTRY CLUI Golf. tennis Oa1ly. am • Check or M.O. enclosed 0 I • =~ 155 w is1h st 8a"be1o~v11:Gtiertroom ;~W &1~:n~~1lk~~1~~ BA_Y5F4sRH023 •...Jf • Charge my ad to: II • STIJNNlNG la rge 2 Br 2 ' · 9.5P M, ask ror Mar ,.... apts & townhouses -Pnme oHrce 760 9440 • Ba garden apt . pool & Prom $54G-SIOOO &44 1900 No Tahoe Condo. 4 Br 5 t' t ,1 250 rt 0 -# E p I • rec area S43S 710 W --' --• nun to Northstar S400 os a ,, esa. sq • Lr~ X . I • 18th St M> FEE. Apt & Condo wit Tomss7.1668 suite Sl75 mo U11ls in rentals Villa Rentals --rid 779 W 19th St • • I E.SJde fourplex , 2 Br 1 675 (912 Broker Mammoth 3 bdrm rondo 1 85111928 • 0 # Exp. I • ~·1:u~ars;n~~!i:!~r Laree tBR uu1 pd Spot zs11om11ht NEWPORT t Adults' no rwots UNI less. Qt.let S4SO 2421 E 499 · 5304 h r • L------------------------------' ... ~ ..,,,,, 16thSt 645·4718 Large Big Bear csban. Executive &11tes as o • 752-~ --I bl I l 2 fices available nr 0 c •• r-------·· WE'LL PAY THE POSTAGE ------------,, 1.4e1BR.refng inrl.no 5tf1l5 to beach 1·3 Br, f°0 1 t 's~oor vj, Alrport.from$36Sw rull • pets. $375 Lndry racrl. 1·2Br. both frplcs S77Hr rp c~ · e e p~ service available Call : :: 11~1 NO POSTACE ': • 851-2175 $650 per mo Im · ~8116· now for 1 month free m111culate 673-2507 agt llllfab to Sllon 430 Usa IL13·9976. NECESSARY I br. J bacondo, Jae. pool. 2 Br. 2 Ba. Condo. pool, ••••••••••••••••••••••• <.,..,' <72 sq n Sl 00 per I If MAllED I • carpor1, o'lootin& tennis n....1 Sh 2RR 2BA CdM _, " . • I IN THE 1 cru. full tee. So Coast frplc, 2 pnvale pallos. ...; I iluc rr Bch F Prer 9Q ft • 3975 Birch . N 8 11· Q • Pina aru $475-1550 lround level. S650 +de· 5M-S.m,&lS·96l9Eves i AientS.1·5032. • ,; UNIT£0 STATES .g , • rum or unrurn Cali t. 730-l783 55H 935_ anre space for rent :W • t! .. Ter1,6'6 3963j631·8228 Sparlous I BR in FE~AL~ lo s h are sq. rt. aecond floor E BUSINESS REPLY LABEL • pd L F.aslblurr. Pool. Quiet. spacious 2 bedroom. l Preatlaious WestcllH t w ~ All utilltiea · ae 1 Pleasanl area! Single bath apar1 ment In Hunt area S1.00:l5. rt Medical F11tSTClAH PUM1T HO 1J c~u MHA, CALlf'OflHIA . • bdnn apt, newly dee No I Be 11 rzoo mo • 2 ; Pell. Ad ults . $300 Adult. No Pets. S500/mo ngton ac · Bldg.Call ·6501. nr.ocrrcE e • 644_.767 900-<»'72 K POSTAGE Will SE PAC> BY A....,....,""" • g ...;.6';;;..'5-=IS;.;.;'7'8_or"""960-....-..11_26_. __ ~et 2 Br 1 Ba 1ara1e.Sh ..::.;;;.:.are~4;..;...·b<l-,r_m_h_o_me_b-tt $25SMo-Privateorrlre/ ·:. ~i3-o. Olr1n .gitlCyOIPI( 0,-·,lly I Ptllot ' ·: UtU pd. lBr. quiet. adlta. pool, adults, no pet~ Bly aod Ocean. Avail parkin.1 /kitchenette spr _ ,... ,.UO.IZSOmo. 1901 15th. St. Apt 0 . Ftb1.ST5-2837M\6PM 11100MainSUlunt8ch. I ___ t44.;;..;.;..-S..-...--~• 111>.642·7 • FSl\r38RApt.AvailFeb Daib'Jantr.AJluUl pd 1 ltaullfully dedrated SO.-l Ot 2 br apta. 1 ml Db. CM Ana. No Lut Avail. nowl (714)1M8-3133 I a.do. Ste. RK. IM, ltom beacb. No pela. crl)ep.646-5413 II 1 e 1' 80115&0 '• I tm.Carta.Mtf17t .-itaonlz.'42·2157 Fem to lhr 3Br 2ba &I =r\ e .. cb, prime • ~~ ...... ...,,, 00 ~: S. It I Ba, h'plc. 1ar11e. IaJe 1-yfronL apt w/lM ft. 2~ loc!1t°°· ~ • 'I 330 W. lly 'St. I •. ~·· r-no ldd.1 or pell. 6 lF, $325+11W. f7S.1318 eq. umCI .... n , -CO If I Mttl Ca 9211')8 1 • • ' ...ir:i:;:;=~~~-ia.irtrahri,nunr, eiu19.Mar1tm-@. I · 1 " • I • FOUND ADS ARE FREE Call: 642-5671 L.os~~t'f'7a1m lluntlngton Bearh, Sat Jan 23rd &rttn collar REWARD S36 3286 SJ&-4758 Loat Plt'ase return "ROSIE", spayed salt & pepptr fem Schnauier taken from Leeper's An tlQues 1·30 Purple nylon collar. OC he 36H55 Dot needs med1ratlon Owner heartbroken Genetous reward Dvs 637·6790. eves art ·5. •3543 Robert P Warmlnatoo Co mpany needs energetir Person ln Ac· countlna Department, Experienced required, Real Elltate Prererablt'. Excellent Salary , 8'nefits & work.inc COii· dil.lons in Costa Mesa Of fice Call Sally for A p poantment 966 ·U33. F.OE. .... ......... Tolnc. ,,, Investment F l rm . Newport Beac:b. tt· qui r es stronl Ad· mln11trathe !1. ec:utlve Sec:rttarlal back1round. Good slulls1experitD<'e. £11. trtmely b11v1 work load Fut-paced; •· adlne-orienled job. "•· 1moker Call Cartol. -.om . . • • • • , llLL Wit .._.. w!P a a'*-. J tmll, modmi 1m..a1 bM sm. noo· ma==.~ I 1 ~DlllJ!:::=~=~==lla=11=WN~!!:--!·=•=~=m.=M11==•~·m~t~.;..~.!~1=J=·•~o~2o:i:::==m.=111t==:::::=:w'~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·=-=·~··~·:=:.:•~··~~·~·-~~~·~·:...C·~·~··:...:.•~·~·.::.;;:.:.•L~~==::.:.:~~~~~~~ • /1 • .. ,. ......... .. 1 ' ' ' '! I . I ......... ...,,.. ... 1'• .......................................••••••••• 1 ••••••••••••• rill 'WtCIN Crpt C1t11tn DlYWALLfAOOUSTIC Oardmlnl Went.ed HAULING 6 DUM p IXPIR. PREPARER CUSTOM INT /EXT r1 ..._ d•.n • ~IM>ll. U yn up. P\lllf Ue'd t Mowmt. ldllnl. rakln1. JOM, uklor Randy. Enrolltd lo practice EXPERT HRVICE" tm'Nll Thick l'DDIU)t Wilt lmund. $32-$$49 • w •• p I D • , r • e "'""' befon lbe IM. Quality LOW RAT!S 1.Jl~.. Wcgl\!H, MW'fte DRYWALLTAPINO est1matt1 NS 4'72 or -Q.-.-...... -•• ;.;.:;..:Y;.;;;;O;.;..UI_. -... -C-T-t..;;;;at=rt&l=....;;.cot=t..;;..;541-.~.-..;.;ll'--I NV-BROOK 5'5·1115 ft! No8&tlm/NoSbempoo Alltat1&re1•1cOU1tlc ..... MS.$ ....... m ___ ._____ _,._.. A FEDERATED NEUIONSPAINTINO StalnlpectaUat. Fiil mt. K1vlal1U088 CUSTOM GARDENING TODAY! Y1rd/11r1ae lncomaTa.Servlce Int/Ext RMld/Comm uSl(YU6Ht'S** 'tAJ.L1,_P 'I dq,ft'euat.131·1512 ............... ,.. Ret!d'l/Comm'I cln-14>, etc. l tOft truck. 631·48'7lforap,et. Acoustic cetUn11. Ref1, All She• lnatalled. lor1 -~ Cln 183-3S'71 x•.. .63J.l983 (M hrt> Uc'd. Freent.83'1·ZM7 •.~act ..................... , c-tlt/Cw_rtte ....................... •URI· • -Great Prka1 &3J·&2$5 ... tn-11 I SO... • ...... :, ..... , ....... ELECTRICIAN -priced nlEGRASSHOPrtR H11hWirunb1t/rceleeantr.uimp', deltrtc, MllDn f PAJNTER NEEDS -. ..... Tit _,..,_ " THOMPSON'S rtlb&, fNe '¥.tlmate on Complettl1wnmalnt I ....................... WORK-30yr1exp.lnt tdt ll IAILY lkildtr1Sl.ncetN7 COHCRETECONSTR lupor1malljobe lndoorplantapeclallat J\1\11 trub.141""914 BRICKWORK Small Int Acouatkcellln&• ••••••••••••••11••11••• ••••••11••••••••••••u• NOT Adcnlklnl·mnodtlhll ••-.i-• .... , ........ Uc. l311118:Zl 813-1w9 Domlnlc&42'4Ul TREES/SHRUBTRJM jobs, Newport. Coste DaviaPalnlin&l47·5ll8 Ora.l.nscleartdfromSIO nLEINSTALLED -..Cl Doon, wtndow•.i.. patio ~ -"""-• 14eu. Irvine Ref1 -PlumbtncRepaln AllKlndsGuuant.eed IW1mY ~.P'ttet1l.lle11. c.....lc.,. RWD/COMM 'L Landacapinl·Yd ClnUJ>I ~art.!flrYdCletn·~ 67~311~. PalnlJna'1the01me, P'teecst.MU1&42·9033 Rafa Johnl40-t21T Dol'fMOWt Uc.JJlC8U M9·2l10 ............ , .. ••••••• 31 yrs elt~. Do my own 'ln.etrim·Elpertmalnt. tt . 557. l C\lstomBrlckMasonry Pederte11'1theN1me! A'll.MPLUMBJNG& C..'UstomC.eramlcTlle A*flw•-..L.... rtN.IROME Hanlell'1C.ramlcTUe woct.Urd.Al64a·&l2' Jlml5l.Ol29 DemoUUon·Gradlna Compl yard con1truc · Uc.Zll534 "2·0882 HEATlNG REPAIR Promptserv.Freust. _... lllPROVEMENTS floora ·Sbowtra-Tubl UC'DELECTRIClAN GARDEN SERVICE Transport. Aaphall, con· tlon, pool de<"h ' lbepaintinl coll. frad REPLACE &U·l6111 ChuclrSTH408 Yow~ Pflot Addltlcu•B•-deUn1 "-" ...... ..... n. •• 1 work Reas rates T T I I / cnu 6 tree removal -"loa"r-, --al ref• 7 yn exp. ~uaUty work ~Dtnet-,._ ...u me .... ._ "'..., . ree r m RI n I Soll prtp ... plantlo1 ..... ...~. """" Pr 2SYraExp Free Eat •:s...c.u;f" -.u~-f)oeeat S31·507ZTom f\enloval&42·W7at\.4 • ~12 Lowr1tes. an18'6·1188 •f"tVM•111•llt ReuonableWork Guar ~ a:IM• -~ TOP QUALITY Operated equip Comm 'I L.J.B. PAINTING ••••••••••••••••••••••• J .... -•""" 3382 -. 11.ntlll ••• .. •1••11••••••••••• Electricalworkal ChMnls.r.lcn •llald'l.M2-7638 Hart Masonry. Brick, NOPllTY ..vl ...... . ······••ti Childcare, P\111 Time . ....................... unvJNG HAULING Blotk, Concrete. Ref. QUALITY REAS. Trtts..kt •11 I -••AL~ Monday Fl'lday. My CM Reu. rates. $31·5055 TrffTrim Ir Removal ~ . Uc. 368294 646-1597 Larry 845-9383 all. 6 MAHAGIMIHT ..... II. •·•1 Uc -11 .... oc; Home. Slfft. Electric our Specially! Home Repaln DUMPING SU·SZO/load Quality Palntm11t reaa. Oran&• Co. area. 15 )'rl PiJl~~;;:~st~u· ... _ .,....,... su.01112 Clean, qul<"k, depend•· 760-9Gt$or!73.!JOO TM-tl04/9S5-008$Marlt ~~~'ii~'d~~l~~~. ntes. int, ext, res, experience Callroriufo Oamp&.Set-•m&Serv. w.HAUCOMSR. a ._ tr~•-ble WedoanyslzeJob a.....-thm1dt .... 9 ble WedoanysiieJob comm , refs Mike , andratea •~ ..,. Custom homes, tram· 41••1 __,.""'1 •631·1345• .... _., ....................... ...... 4115664 963-t llZ -$40o.51S4 Ina. remodel, French ...................... • ...................... WanlaREALLY CLEAN •636--• . ...._. doon, akyUohu. patio PEP GIRLS cleaning ftoorCo•frilMJ TRACTOR, Ideal ro.~ HOUSE! Call Gingham EXPERT BRICK AND ll'n'/EXTPAINTING R.E. broker will manage ~lfftt·., ... ~••••nll• 848 3652 service. Homea·Ofrlcea· •••n••••••.••••••••••• sr~lllll acceas areas, 48 Girl. Fl'eeest. 645.5123 Muonry. Small jobs & Quality work Reas. )'OW' otflce bldg in re AU.BJ'ATE PAVING coven. ' Ap!J. 548·0663 Qupet It Linoleum for . wide Kubotaaklploader. -=;.;....;~;;;..;;.;;.;;.;...;;..;.;;_~"---1 repaln f°'l'plc fac1n118 Free est. Steve 547-4281 tum for omce. Bkkp& IMlcoetins ·Stri~nfc C •oct ,._ ol Home, Va11 ' Motor $30hr lna'd.6t2·5006 ROBIN'SCLEANING Reis ~1·4555,760-7074 BOGDANOVPAlNTING serv.a11all 5'48·1927 •~'-,....._ c.w.t ... ~.._ a on. •IMt' Horne. 847 ~Dave Service-a Lhorou,bly 0 c T u .~·· """"'m./ ea d ......... :::':':!........ ....................... umft-11 clean house. 540-0857 J..ANaiCP/MASONRY 16 yrs . op qua ly ltflM .. IRg --. Nf73l2 MS·ll81 CUSTOM CABINETS t4-1--a. tL...-....L. Doon ••••••••••••••••••••••• Concrete Ur, Ins Neat St. lie 334950 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Drt p-d.l Lot '"l""'' n-.. ea-t Mas nry Expertlse Houselteepln& 20 Fr t 536 0914 MS-038911139 1886 J D Hom Refioishln& a~· •TA nf Klt . ban. an. unlu. All phalfS, lie, bonded, ....................... 'l"'n ry . 0 Supplies rum11hed yn ee es . AnUq kl b' ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Expert Tree Pruninl • Commercial L11ndaca~ Services 957-8388 JAYETREECARE Complete service and stump gnndlng 10 yrs exp. Lie. Ins 1>40·9308 Tree Trimm&, clean ups, Monlhy service free est 646-7556 Tony'i. Tree Serva re S•sta~o1tt na. Refa.845-&21/M9·1685 exper. Fl'eust •advice •FRENCH DOORS • D~~1~$f~'::,~~e Tn.latworth es1•8003 't~~J~51N~~~~J f'\ne;~~lln~ ~:.O::b U Gl~l:e AllenConst !Mikel 10 panes Installed, 6' Remodel J.B.646_9990 MoflflcJ 646 067 utoriBCJ c C:.,.llftt 49'7·~/499·4863 slidere>pening. $150 com ....................... •" l • * Re'91o~/ltpoir ...................... . Altllwp ....................... ADD'NS/RENODELING pl (unpainted) 640· 1065 General Maintenance IMMACULATE *A· I MOVING* Quality. Ptg Low winter ....................... VOY MG E en FRANCE? _................... FINEnNJSHWORK Plans. Llc'd Georae Repalrs&Oecorating ca.-.s.r.kts T Q 11 S 1 rat.es in erren Honest. COMMllCIAL Expert pvt tutonng. all AGGB!SSJVELEGAL Remodeliq/Doorshun1 PtlmerlrSons 557·6932 ,_.,..eltfWlhlltcJ •Quallty• Ray640.5144 Homu67S:97M()(ficea c~ m ~aa~dti·na p~c;;s reliable 848·5648 /INDUSTllA.L levels. nex time Call ~lioo. ww or. Randy'l'2o.1260CdM Add'tl ' d I •n••nuu .. uuuou• HOME IMPROVEMENT exp Com""l1t1ve rates ,_.._ ll1MOD1t.1 •t(l'!.I ~7255aft 5pm fke!.a.hn'.545·8422 <llARRENOVATING hom1• 0 1!'ms1c, rroev"!0m.enst.. *e•ECl•L• REPA. IR·PLUMBINO ,,.. ..,........, ....,. ""' I In bin ~ "' .. ~ A House cleaner I'm relia-Noovertlme 73CHJ53 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Turn lost or unused Reading' relatl.'d ski ls t/ext, ca els, boat windows, oors, patios, Any chair hand·stnpped Heating· carpentry· ble, thorough & ha11e ref STARVING COLLEGE HANGING $10/ROLL space into a w.orkable Credenual_e~. exp, car· docb. 2S yrs. 645·3149 d r i v e w a ya . r e · or re1lued. $19 75 A elec. tile Free est. No /hr 968-4616. STIJDENTS MOVING Stripping-disc on paper area rooms d1v1ded. mg Spec1oalmng grades •-0 •11u••0 •uHu• CUSTOM ADDITIONS plumbln1. etc Lie Touch Or Cius In· Jobtoosmall 645·2811 LORRAINE'S HOME CO Uc l!Tl24·4.36 Vasa/MC 645·9325 drywall. drop (•eillngs & lthr4 6441179 t'M.OMYOUICil Kitchen remod . · 371rlll.Ph960-063S teriers, 711 W l1lh St Repai'rs. painting, SERVICE.REFS Insured 641-11427 UC PAPERHANGER Ln~ carpentry-to com lllllt-.d ol wu. 40 mo. Skylltes. Refs. 8 111 JM IWa Systw llA2,C.M. 642·7712 carpentry Chnstian, rt· Own trans 962.0510 eva WATCH US GROW • &nded & guar No job plttion Call Tom or Jetr wrty.n2·500'7nSZ-Olt2' M6-G082 Freedesfin71reust w•nil liable89'1-92S2 Exp ladf{,bousecleanin11 STARVING ACTORS t.oosma.Uortoolarge at6Sl2!ll3or4933886 PROF.POLISHING H••• Room adda'Uon t l lilJ ,JACKOFALLTRADES ""rv .... est Pl•ase l MOVl .. 'GCOMPANY Freeest. Tony898-2728 n~ of Pl · W II l '· enan ••••••••••••••• ••• ••••• Call day or nldht. "" "'"' L ,.. -•AAA... Slrvtce at your home or ~ am a s? n· improve men I , In . TREE • call Carol. 646-6502 art I FasUt Cardul. Lowest WALLPAPER -·-. blllineu.RJck67$-0344 crease tbe Value & surance work, decks. 5 •Jack675·30H• 4:00. Ratel' Law Allows M1C All kinds Fl'eeesl ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beauty ol Yoor Home patios Topped /removed. ex RE~ONABLE · REPAIRS FOR LESS ....... With Tbe Richness of TJ0.«167 Uc 313174 pert clean ups, lawns re·' PROMPT FREE EST EJtper D11y Work Visa Uc/Ins 673·0853 $11 roll Lie 330986 Sltinglea, flat 30 yrs -.................... SdidWood.496-fNl REMODEL/ADO-ONS novated 751·3476 I ALMOSTEVERY ,!UALITY Norm645·0880 exp Frfftst 770.2725 •bysjt,ourCMbomea,l Custom Carpentry By fr Carpentry We'd. WHYNOTONEOF REPAIR NEEDED ~I 5 required> P-..c.g 'lllEPAPERHANGER BALBOA ROOFING CO )'l'•up.anytlme. ..Jay". (Formica It 25yn. l_rwin548.2719 THEBEST!Simmons I DAVE645·4757 ~~ 645~4~; ~=·P•;1~~;~;·;y•Ri~h~·rd• Frprof ,quSIJty~~~281 Theonlyrooringco v.1th 1142-1112, ~5U9 Tile) 642·8809 or Call · Gardening, 646·6684 Masonry-Carpentry -Ti.le " eeest teve · construction rebato r.-.....&--T Qu li R R t Sinor Uc, ins. 13 yrs of QUALITY Babyslttln& Mon ·Frl. Answer Ad 11620 at -,..... .. ,._, K&DLandscapeMaant I Plumb·Roofing·Remod op• a ty/ eas a es happylocalcwstomers 67J.6743,673·8229 Newborn to 2 yrs. 6 to 642-UlO, 3' bn. ....................... RHld/Comm Clean up Stucro-D wall 536·8700 Pref. bachelor homes Thank you 631·4•10 Paperingi Painting Huber Roofin&·all types 5:JD. Cll. 642·~ c:.,.t Senlct COit.PORA TIOHS U Kaulin&. S48·2A89 12131439·8907 Free est. Jams 552 0231 New· r~'Over-decks TenderLovlllJCare ....................... frPARTNERSHIPS P'ormlng Own Business, 'lt•dwoodAoon Housttleaner, exper re C.to.Poiatilta Papet'llftlO•ol Lac 1141180Z 548-9134 Babysht.inc, anytime. Formed by Attorneys 4 Yrs Exp Landscaping. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ha gd mer Call Jodi 25 yrs exp Uc 4~1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IWJ:C.M. t7M64S Shampoo~ steam clean Reas. rates 557-5700 Grdng & Brick Pallos HARDWOOD FLOORS 642-9169 &oded Ins Refs Color "BRYANT'S• ~ ·~ Color bn&hteners, wht c:..tc. Woodworti&... Gntd Prof Service at . Beautifully deaned Housecleaning weekly, ex It 963·0911 Dick Wallcovering Removal "Qua 'ty Roofing or ':,~ c~.u:o~r!~ j ~ iiJJd:in~r:~e;~~· ................. ~.::?. Prices Sure to Please and wa!.._~ 832·4881 ba·rronthly. reha. re as I'm Sma II My prices All !ypes 642· 1343 ~e Homes "645·0tO<t 11th 6 PlacenUa, C.M. avi'room S150 couch Cro w1n moulding , 498-211Sbl7-9&W E HClll6icJ ra• Stacey 6463162 are small' CdM. NB Plashr/Repair SClldllostfincJ e.5751 SlO; chr SS Gua~ ellm ma~t u . wall units. Gardening -Com pl ••••••••••••••••••••••• ref_____ Exp'd Ron673·S477 ............................................. . BlbtllUinc in my home petodoc' Cfllt repalr csolab1.nets Hardwood clean up & tree hauling DUMP JOBS nfE BROOM SQUAD G L Mangun Pamting P~TER PATCHING BUDGET RATES L1c'd Plitt time lllon/Wed/Fti 15 yrs exp. Do work llllons to wood pro for usable items &SmalJ Movmg Jobs Quality . Reil able Cu.st work L1r 11362478 Restuccos lnl ext JO Low min Sml Jobs OK ll!lye. Colony Ml-I.SOS myseU. Refs. 531.0101 blems 631 lS28 Machael645·6734 Call MIKE 846-1391 Housecleaning 673-3121 Ins. Free est 731·8281 ~ Neat Paul 545 2977 Freee5l Ins 641 7581 Wlltdow Cl.CIMHJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Let the Sunshine In" Call Sunshine Window <.1eaning, Ltd ~·8853 •RESIDENTIAL• Avg l sty S30. avg 2 sty 5-IS Chris 95 7 8388 Clear\'1ew Windows Xlnt ser.,.1ce. rree est Ken 673·9018 For Ad Action Call a Daily Pilot AD-VISOR 642-5678 ~!~ ..... ?!~ ..... !~ ..... ?!~~ ~!~ ..... ?!.~ ~.!~ ..... !!.~~ ~.!~ ..... !!~ ~.!~ ..... ?!~~,~.~!~ ..... ?!~~ ~.~~ ..... ?!~~ ~!~ ..... !!.~~ ~.!~ ..... ?!~~ Ambitious PT, students LA....fttMa C ,~ .. -..,., STOIE · · D O G L O \' E R ,._~ Of..i-MB>ICA.l OfftCE PT rlerk·t>'P•Sl. some Rttepuonllll. part time .s OK. 3:»8:30P.M (any Grand'";;~~ed" t 11 -s:1"'·!'1 WANTED" Kennel help, -n.oe ~ ~ator Exp'd rront office bkkp'g helpful bul not days. airport area. no F tame salesperson day). Outd.r assistant for my home 1 child P n f'ul~ tune. over 18. 1will tram) 957 8589 T Y P 1 n & · r 1 I 1 n g . Needed immed 1alely person for busy uroloin nttessar; Great work ~ 7525111 needed lo work on cable TY 114. Salary + eorutle 751 62.17 Fashion Island, N B ~ut shop p/t1me AM telephone. ma ii Fu II Pe rt ec or s Im i I a r office Some back offit't' mg atmosphere. NB ---Balboa Island Must be comm. Cail Anthony · 644·09*> noex r ~ecessa ·A· time Mon l'.rt Salary .. ~tPms. Lon2term as exp. Need l?OOd refs Hr s 9 2 Call JudyJ IECEl'T-TYPE able lo work weekends l213) 434-41677. bfr 9AM· CllldCore/Hsbr ply : person ~ppary and benefits Local s1gnmrnt El Toro area Good benefits. Fulltime. ~·lq9I t SA Cmn 11 .. i. v~111111< for Cail Annalel' at 1~2 67il llUPJI. Banlung with auto rrom l ·~to Donuts 1854 Newport ~rate office G~ S8 34 per hr Ask for H B area 847 6004 p T office a:.s1i.tant rece ~t1 on1st t~ pl\t or673·<t280 ADI. Service. plsnt ore ASSISTANT 7:30 4 day' 3 days wk Blvd CM w mjl cond1t1on1> <.:all Donna. Models It Escorts Fem wanted for mental help SSW M PI ea s ant SALES N.B. EJtper. pref but IA.MK MAHA.GEi coo.secuttvely S3 35 br DRIVERS C t 962.3234 556-8S20 Only Top SS & alcoholism treatment persona Ill) It neat ap lm~d1ate """nmg for a will train. 3· 11 shift +trans cost Inquire an ~scoun ~ Girl Friday Health Fii 4.141 Barch St . Ste 213 642 .. 4852 Aft )2 program Mu~t be or pearance Typing mrl -r 56123S. Exceptional opportunity 7pm.673%186 No special he req d ness minded Typing, I Newport Beach ganued. erflc1enl. & rorres & quotations Cull -lime reader ad .t.•.t.-MRUW' in expanding branch -PIMa«ireu·gorCoYalcb .. ~s.1631 Filing , An~wering HURSISA.IDH personable S5 per hr Some lilce rinanc1al representatuvef0Mr 1n,s1~~ _.._, ""' Requires min 2 Yrs _acen a, 5 a ••!!53 phones, hght bookkeep ~all shirts Can earr GO~ duties om pet it i\ e sales pcsi ion us ~ MANACJEI exp in branch opera CREDIT .Edatonal I ing Organize New of LANDSCAPE 16100 per 8 hrs Musi p T restaurant help startlnR salary with assertive person "'Ith PreterCouplewlthChild t1ons management. Good phone manners to Expenenred Editorial , fire Pait Tame Hours Experieored land I have exrer " refs Wdflled,appl' in person system.a tic reviews pasl telephone sales ex - 11 Of. Call Karen at commercial loans with collections Ar· read galleys plus wide Positive in all ph<1ses of escou ae urse• llleTummyStuHer 270 558 2603 to arrangl' person. 1660 Placentia for 20 Units 232A Elden bllSiness development. assi5t credit manager person. editing, rewnle. 1 Open Setr Motivated scaper. Knowledgeable L N , Phone C:y Simpson at peraence o\pply in ~1213. Or Judy at cu.rate typing, general rangeofrelatedtasks 2 CaJl"••.lSJJrorappt la~caping Salary RRdeg"llfLl.5 9 1 HNosplla'I So Bnstol CM751356l_ ~alanlerv1ew \\e ,C.M .... -O Pi It A ffi d E II d k N .,..., --c~nsurate with ex · ".'3"f_ n · '"1>0r P T ~cretary Typist ~ 1~ 23~1 ~de~· ~n':t~I,;:, ~~~~a~d ~~an~ll:nef~~e ~~~ 5 ~5kfrerp~~~d ca01~ Gtrl Fri~ay for Develop ~nence S46·(fl9t Beach...j!U 9955_ --Gd hrs & gd Pay Call IECEPT/A.SSIST. SA.USUDY tlCll. in& benefits & profit peraence preferr ed days. $49-8393 ment Firm. Must be i.e lr LEGAL SECRETARY Nursing afl 6PM 6754242 Assist w recept1on1s1 ~::.dsp~~;p·mT'&e~at~ ... .., .. ment Manaaer. ex· sharin& For conriden Good startin~ salary Ellcrow Home loan ex starter & good with La,una Hill9 Recent LVM 1REc EPT1oN1 ST duties, hea\'y typing . .._.. 'al . d Publishing firm near figures Send Employ f 311 f 11 1 I must be arcurale. 9 JOam 6pm Exper 'd perienced, mature cou· U uitervaew. sen re penence Part tune lo ment history 10 714 Ca 1 probate ex · u or part 1me TYPIST La.guna Hills SOwpm Good c 0 South Coast Plaza pie. Beaut maintained sume•/orphone. John Watne Airport start hr&50-120J Adams Suite 203 Hunt penence nttessar. Ex shirts Med1ral1on & legal firm Requires benefits Located nr ~H734 « u.nlt . Costa Mesa. Jackie EK V p CaU Mrs ves, 549-4834 "'--~ Offlc:e ing\on Beach rellent typing & S H t.realments. good salal') 11eneral office slt11ls. ac-0 C Airport Merri II Sales. p time The Mole Adults, no pets Apt A.MBICAN Delivery Dnver. over 18, -slt11ls req'd Call Mrs &work!ngro~d c11rate typist. 61 ..mm L h R 1 k d +--'ary/bonus.1>42-4907 ST .. TE, ...... ., r1· b ' MVR 1690 HAIRDRESSER and Wi nslow for appt . Mesa\erdeCom· Hosp minimum Call ;1rrs ync eoca11on. as Hole. Lt o \'11lage. ex kdYS-"' "'""" lime, nng Full l l man1·cun•t with rhen· 837 !"""__ ""I l. t St CM ., ror Frankie for appoint ..,..r ....,, 673 465S w M SOON""""'rl Cent•rDr Placentia C M ime. permanen ~ uou "" e~.!.~ • .,; Winslow for appt. I 752(fl07 i;..;.....:..::i...:= --~ . NB&40.fiooEOE .. M/F ' employment for am tele. gd NB loc Health ......, ...,.,., llJ'7-l060 ~E · M r SEAMSTRESS tExperll ~'rtme:ec:rh~?s· ~ ~~v'Tr:Snt:~~s'~~ bilious person. 40 hr plan avail The Hair MA.IL Parts & 1tccess rounte• l--1/S.C,..tory -_ _ tow~k ~t home Call C (/time openlo1 in the C M 3 a m 6 a m week. ome nights & Sat ~ndlers 642 8484 __ l'IOCIESSOR person. shipping & re Ooct~ office in Costa REST AURA.HT Aiulay 642·32H for m &eoeral services dept. le..tyA11Jlt. Etooomy car ~wred. Boolckeepane exp pre HOl:SEHOLDCHORES Pubhsh1ng firm near ceivmg exp necessary Mesa needs a non Waiter u es sen1ce ler.1_~ Calif. driver's lie. req., Lie L reWqudirSedl 4·day No co I I e ct In g fel'Ted Apply m per~on Ideal for student 2 hrs J w Airport has an im Harnson Boat Center I smoker as a rronl offi ce I lotchen personnel Exp SECIETilY &dcompanybenerits,no wee.., e . a Call. $400-$4SO/mo +bonus da}. Mr Help new mediate opening ror Garden Grove. Dave o1 g1rl Pleasant and French ser Call Mark e x p e f . n e c ~12 64S-06J7 hwtfs ly .IMHDll mother. NP l H ls bnght sell starter as a Tom~·8506 mature ~ersonalit{i a Sun Mon l0.2S40·7092 Mortgage Com pany in SOUTHCOi\STPLi\ZA &t20lllS mail processor han Newport Bearh has {714)833·3232, ext. 50, Beauty Dental Office Manager. --·--d Th h , mwst f~ is busy of ire. operuno for a Secretan.· Kerry. E«Jual Oppty Af. Posh Newport salon NB. restorative prac· C~A MESA Housekeepers wanted . 1 yman e ra~t In· p1DJ/TIM£ Mull!~~ duties .. mus.I be SALES wn.h g"Ood organization fl r mat 1 v e Action seeks stylist Poss ren Uce. ~ ex-r. team GENERAL OFFICE rull. I part lime for 1d.ivl~~I sh1°1 uldtb a bile M organued Medical ex· ...__,_..._... M skill.$. e)e for accurac' lmployer. tal Tele llam-6pm . "" Bookkeeping exp. hte small rellremerlt home 0 wuu. we wa peop e -..-..IE. c...,...l..,G per pref'd leg able AMI-•Clelff ' -'-=~<=.;._----1 ~2'92 oriented 1ndi11 looking La Be h M & have a wllhngness t rn-'--''"" handwrltino , spell For fun Nautical Gill & & attention to detail ABT1ST WANTED Mid· · for a highly responsible typing, pit flex Call :! a:i~~ w~~k 50~ learn Some experience APPOIHTMEMTS lllllhte typing nee 35 Clothing Store Ex Ilion s moker. salar) cleqeorretired person b-MANICURIST. Also PoSitionreturrung a high 9-lpm64l-0763 weekends Pleasant m mail processing or SALARY+ BONUS hrs per wttk Prefer re· P.fricnce p~eferred . full Sl.100 Call Kati~. to c»p/Ume work at beauty oper. w/follow levelofesteem Xlntfr· General It' di r handyman work 1s de· KRS9am·l212pm·4 sldent or Costa Mesa time CharliesLocker 6409350 __ b o me . E 1 p r . in Adams/Harbor <Meu Inge benefits. $1600. + IMMEDIATE wor ma <"on lions or s 1 r ab I e. but not NEWPORT BEACH ~ · 675-6230 watercolors Call C. Verde area) M9·1005 in<"enlive if qualified OPENINGS appt. call 494·94~. necessary. Good benerit For interview, rail '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Bargain shoppers read 1142-~Horinterview ._,oslHoli 631~ Geuan1 baclt intolheJob Housekeeper,llveinror5 package It pleasant 640-8388 the l ittle ads in Auemblen. We will avJilable Opportunity DINTAL ASSISTANT market! yr boy It father Sun, wortine cond1uons Con· ELL idle itema wllb a 1Ha•• tomethiq you want Cluairied reaularly train. Apply 7 AM . fol promotion to food Exper'd RDA , f /lime •Lite Industrial Mon orr Non -smoker tact Mrs Eves. S49·4834 Daily Pilot Cluaified to aell! Cauilied ads do · And they r1n d what llacGrqorYacbu, 1631 servicer Please inqwre Nr.S.C.Plaza ~ •Mechanical Room, board. sal ...... .,., .. ,UC., Ad. ltweU.tez.5"71. Yley'relooklnaror . .. _ __.,_ r~ M Assemblers 575.3793 AM. 523-4920 --"' " PA.IT TIME ':;~==;;;;::;::;;;;:=:±;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;.!._::::'.:~~===;;: ...... ~"""'ta esa. betandweePnMth990e boDours oSrt2 DENTAL~ST/RDA •ElectronkAssemblers ""'P-'-M""'.-------STAITt4ERE S.9pm Expanding youth It -••••••••I 5 · ve " exper, progrffsive pre· •Packing HOOSEKEEPER AIDE The Los Angeles Times counselina firm has A119ft10M: Newport Beach ventatlve practice •Warehouse For elderly Asian coup le Is looking fo r well· openings for 3.5 sharp Ambitious boys and 752-0240 NB/lrvine area. 752-1320 VICTOR in Hunt Bch Part lime groomed. enthus1ast1r outgoinf mature peoplt lltts 1CH3 yean old, to Cabinet Worter Wanted Dentist Tempcrary Service 842.7348 aft 7pm. people lo earn up to to mot vale ambitlouE wort one or two even· to Sbr Fully Equipped "6.as20 -14G-SSO per day for a few 10.13 yr olds Call 2·5pm lnca a week 1ettin1 Shop. ~1, M9·1685 Orilllo-IDA hours work as p/tame 642·4321, ext 343. Ask for a.wip~er subacrlp· CAFETERIA Energetic exper'd Assis· Insurance sales rep. Hours are Andrea Uoa.r. )'ransportatlon Permanant work, part-tant needed for busy General TSA/IHSUIAMCE from 4pm.9pm & train '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! and conat>ant adult time, femal e, no practice. TlttltilboalayCltlb P'tOCISSOI In& •ill be provided. aupertlllon provided. weekends. Home phone. S46-5110AskforToni Responsible. self. Your earnings as a P....UOP--.L. CalU to5:JDPM, aalt for m.403 Eves. DETAILING ,.._. Dttk starting lndiv . to pro· Timu sales rep will be Needed. par\ tl~ork Andrea, 142·4321 , ext. ~-._ ... ,., .. , with 11 St.eve's Detailiol needs Clertl cess Insurance-annui· based on a guaranteed 15 to 25 hours per week. NS ._... .....,_... hardworttin& clean cut. Weekends "raveyard ty applications for hourly wage of S3SO + evenings and possibly Dlll.ty PUot Clusified Ad eoeraetic detailer for shift. Ex~rfence with Fashion lls. investment generous <"Ommisslons. Saturday. Experience in ll a= matter ... lcmaterm employement. rrontdesk procedures & firm Statistical ap-Since~ is a new pro· ad building or page h • jllltcall ·Sf'11. Call63l-l800 NCR 400' preferred ptitude. typing, 10 key aram opportunities ror makeup desirable. Abih Auto Mee an1c i..----------------... , Mature attitude a must required Computer exp advan<"ement are ex-ty to work rast and ac W he I all 1 D . Ji t t EXECUTIVE preferred Call. 640.0123 <"ellent Call now for _ ..... __ , __ I ~ tool.I. nre lnfonnation about curately under pressure ·-~ vwu 1--' Ct.It ... ,_ t necusary Salary de 50'.\ comm. HUNT _,....., Journey Man/Skills ..... areat opportuni Y pends on experience A1!I'O CENTER, 1825 SECR'ETARY:' ......_ Maintenance Man with Call Mon·f'l'i . 957-2361. The Daily Pilot is an rewir.a::t.L•• ?ee::r:1 c~~~r:iti:I~~ experience In plumbing, _e_xt_._12CM__.._. -----equal opportunity -tenan<"e. 3 morning electri<"al ' carpentry MAM•GH employer. Women and AUTOMIC..._MIC shlfltUevenlngahlfts. wort. f'\111 llme ... M/F. TUIMH minorities are en · _ __... llut bave O'tm 7:30-4PM. Salary: com· SAUSPIO'U couraf,edtojfcply. ---A 1 u lfiedr meosurat•w1tb••. ""·bmtappcatlon•at ~ud tool•. pp 'I you are qu11 or "' "'" L4loktn& for an exdtina ~ • =r rt 11tt Center, IQ1 ol the above potl· perien<"e Approx. S8·SIO career in the retail front counter. • ~nwl1 • uuw ., ... ue ca or ap· btwn BJ\M·l2 Noon or clothln& field? This ,.__,,.._ CdM ... _ ... A u f per hr. Apply In person jf Coett ~ N'ttdtd. T\lel ~tmeol at, 645·5000 send resume to: 111 w. rapidly expandlnl retell Piiot Tllir 6 rrt. Hra ,,es: 521 between 9am & l'lth. St. Unit c.4. Costa clclthlna chain 11 looking )30 ley $1. Oii ..... <<:Ill.Id a mol 4:30pm M ea ......,..., for brf1ht. motivated. c .... w..e; CA. ... 91 • · ·-· ,.able people to flll lbe WI!!!!!!•••••• :ee ••••••••• ••9} ="'• o~.:.~~~ • • Xlnt employ" benefit• ' ti •.AATI _...._ lndudln1 merctlandlae • • -___ ...,. • dia<"ount.a. Appty It: Kcztior route 1n Prim~ Newp0rt • ....,.. :=:' • • Beich area. Low Mila; •P· 9'!!!._c o 1e '1roxlmattl'J 350 cuttomera. e i_.c.nver ' tmne,CA. e eekday bOura 2:30-S:30pm. e wsu start aettptlnc •P- • ' Sat• SUn. 5am·'1am. Minimum ·• pttut.lon• Peb. lit .. am.m of oollectina. For • ~ e taH1 ull Bruce 'Carty or; e JltdleaJ/Batfiolftet .•. ·.r~~at8'14"f • r~~ ~:~t,:.:t~~-.... ............... MSN'll Worll ltmporary Jobs cklte to bome. VICKI HESTON lt~IAT!S !40;0!00 PHOI'O MODEL: Atlrtc· tlve·ottdtd for fill Rcurt mad9Ua1 ii our CGlftm1 dllC '*· No ..... '*· pltototo P.M. NonltJta. P.O. llo1 llH, ':::fort 8tadt, CA ror w\ ( { ) ) ( c---"!!<05----, ) 'tfewspaper Carriers tor l'outes in Huntingt~ Beach, fountain Valley & Newport Beach • • • . ........... ~ ., ' CALL CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT .._,,., .. r• -..... - Sales·Service·Leasing IOI' CARVER I0.15iOICE·fMW '7t .irl. AMIFM. tape, arc. auto. ma1 whla . ..,.,, 631-17'3 711:::~100 DISCOUNT MliDOUAITERS . "l.£.AS\:OR BUY .: -~~ mama·. 2031 £ 1st SI ~ 5'rta Ana 714/9S3-«fA • J ..... ... Orqe Cout DAlL Y PILOTtrhurlday. Februwy 4, 1112' ., ':. . ...................... ........................ . .•.....................••..•...•.•.................. .-el........ .... ...................... •...................... ....................... . ........................................... . hf1rW ~bsrW ....._..,,,.... .....__,,._ ....._._,,w ·~· ... ,,w . ,,,,_·u.. ....._.,.... UM4 U.... --= .... !? •• ~!!!'!e ...... !?.~' ~! .. !.' ........... !?!! !~!~.~ ...... !??.! !!!=.# ......... !?!.~ .~!!f ......... !?!.! ~ .......... !!.'. ~~ ........ !!.~~ ~0.\Nrili.iib .. !!~! ~.~~ ....... !!.~! '17 •IL 1 Owrttr •t""aLc• l 'T7 TR·T 1lr, nn bralltt ltlO VW Sclror.!,o A 9waa .. V W camper. 1110 v w Rlbbll A C~rt.ATING • "-dH•w 'II ura ab()(h 11700 0":; ''fl Cutl111 Supreme ,.. AC. on, Palat. """ U\ IN U.S. • Uni. lltrtolClll, lo ~ tt ~ wJtl\ I Mii.i)' x lrU, l 'tron en1. dYl\lmilt l!UltOm 2 door CADf' I •c1 a..y c-....... u11~9'1t2blla Sport Cpe, blk, lo1dtd Xtra Cl11n Ill ta ~ mt . 141.1311 '""""':' tnn1mlulon, air ~OU. w 1 th 4 1 P ti• d w.a 2Dr.~~lil . PP :i.-144~-- Flrm pp 04 IJIT' i• TR8 Colltrtor;c;;-roodiUonln1. ma11. and "72 Bui Lo Ml on New tranamlulon Shur~' Wt •PfflllJt., In lf'Hf'• Ai r cond pwr lttMn& l;8 Torino w10 . run.a PWo tt57 l•ltl1 'Xln1Cond $lllOO ltertO Buutlrul Brull Dl& l2eoD l7SJOl'fl S4H~ J I for tht bualneo l'lt ~bron till whtt'I rtr 11ood . aood l i r t't, •••••••••••-••••••••• -,.4.SUSL ..o IDIMOllCINll aU7tl4 Brome t450ZSRI 17495 Q1.mors.om2 Mirlno Vollowau:. t\'Utht"1>rof .. ulonal <31411 till'791 ' lliOO O.iolrMOs7z91rts V6 PvitoH1t(hb1d1 Wu JllB"11'50SL ~li..I..,._ '1STR7 VI Edi I ~Jll rn M ~ r I n u '• 111J1 Bua. n1n11ood. 842000 Un)tStltctlOtl How~SHH <;!_!_,knda In wrtt(k Budy aind MlntCo11d -ooo c1osaoWNDAYs • ctory ton iw111n, z.zooo I . OfHew ltl2 H~··oc1.. It IST•T•s•LI frtlTV' d1m1•1 All elH • •0• 30,000 mi. Spoke wbl•. Ulll vw Sci c n....A very (HD, $1700 or beat ,._clloc ""-·••ro • .. .. .. • E\'H 673 UU radl1l1 am tf m rus ~ro '( 9""'"" olfrr 64$ 2368 W\11 trllde MG ror VW ... • Oovt' Qu111I Sh Imagine w 1919 f urd OK V8 141,000 unc mtl. "10 UEL Cl111ic, Im S.. '76 Xlnt co nJ S2900 :f!in;.1'::t.:'~~n~: '76 VW BUO. id cond & 4tt ... 7JZl•ta. Howh!Stockl Nf:WP()kT Bt:At'll Granad.t $4~00 Only new lraru & rad1•tor. lnll' crnd dll: &rftn ·····TH····1··1·,··,·2··.····· M5-1107 loya oYt11m1te' with low mp& Am/Fm • trick N~~~~ U3-0~S 7W>rrul~l.ofs!'ond ~,:~·n":'tr!~ w.~~,s~ rW\t ~ 49'7 ~283 '76TRIUMPH TR·7 mllH and like new! btttoH 142·7620 '73 VW Bua t Owner {' ( SEE US FIRST! '7l Tunno New um & Jnleraor 1ood R cd~ 'tl 380SLC, lvo,-y All ill HERi! Tape, Sunroof, best orr. llCQX$801 17995 Jim '&4 VW runs Jrl, needs 0Hn ~ .. J .J ' Wt' hiive a good selecuon puint Good cond 11400 11vall A 11reat deal for aumeltue. 900 linea 3 doora. 4 over$2700.5541106 Marino Volll1wa1tn, paint $800 080 Call 67S·ll565,6JIS397 1100H111 .. 1w\o1 of NEW & USED OOOGi&2-4!16I llll!Chanlcor panualea 7!!8-0481 or631 3320 doora l Turbos availa 842-2000. Mllreat\ere 6441·0369 Yd•o 9772 1 .... 1.1 M.-..1 '><l{l'IU•> Ulevrolets• Must aell 1111 togethtt ble NOW! Come in & V•~ t770 ·~·~ VW Jel\ & rilhl '66 BAJA, IRS {ra~ ........... ._............ . '72 Maven ck 4 dr. 6c,rl $700, mwke ofr. Call .. t.?.4J driv. lt~d CJ Track ••Til"T••••••••••••'•••• door. 'T3 left door ~ centerUn81 whl spo e *I Vft.IVO DE"Lll '7tA ttctor:r a1r+1uto low mi, ~un T 30pm ••••••••••••••••••••••• Maculne •choic e of the 198> VW <'Onvertible A e.ach Western style wbl whb. l~c. ported & I •N ORANGE COUNTY ' Bro u II h ~o~~ Ir a l12!SOt1•e wknd ~48 0072 '74PINTO WAGON BESr sports sedan or dynamite deluxe Rabbit rims '°' Super Beetle poliahed heads. Zenith '72GRAN TORINO 4 1........1, air. aood cond . --. l"'-• ...,_1 lbl h d c.... sharv' Mu M ~arn r1ce d ~... " A,,, ...... oN .,,.. ...... convert ewlt Sspee ta ,,_.97 .. _ cvb Jdutercr1f\seats rr 4 rW&n.SIOOO farm butdentt!d 11.000 MG IEACH IMPORTS lransmlrnon Brull 1971 vw ScirO((O A 1 !>( 'rroot end Ii much: SALIS, SllilCE ~5~1~ :r~:~li~~ooo 6310136 aft 2 30.Pm JeH 494 1318 OWHllS 848 Dove Street. N 8 Bronze 18HZ V VI dynamite sport coupe much roore. J3290/080 OVEA.ND lliS H~ '76 Chevetlt' Dix . a r. tt50 1!173 Pinto, 4 tipd. gd TONNEAU COVER 752-0900 S8995 Jim Marino with low mlle11e. 4 64HM1 dys: 548 7657 RSEASl>EUVERY THELUGEST 1 k f ercwy II F\ts MG's, '71 '81 Ullll Harbor Blvd .C M Vmllswagen, 1142·2000 speed tr111sml11lon. 11r evs EXPERTS SELECTION ~~:~~~k~R 111~~cblk ~~~~ .... ";H"Q.!;~~;00000 ~~:il:ri~ ~a ~~~e;~t' Never used, S75 631-7170 '63 VW BaJa Bug . condlllonln&. stereo and '64 BUG. good body . new EilLE lkE or I at t' mode I lo,,. 1\lnd. mu~t ~ell Sl995 llUE IOOI(•. bi3 2108 Mana 631-7197 Ive m5& SMbcw1I Runs Good 11000 OBO alloys Ex tra bharp pamt, runs xlnt Sl500 VOlVO 1111ll'.tKt' l'.id1 lla1, 10 !lti2 IWl!r1~ i3 Pinto Slo1tion Waeon '762 499-31~ (678SPG I $4995 Jim 494 7041 H Southern l"io1hforn1.i 1 "i!J Mah bu l'lt1:»!'>ll' 4 lt7t Mtrcllfl Cd milaae, \l'l"I. clean 9 MGB Convert New Ft End & Brks, Cl ul(h, Runs Good, S2 IOO •zseo ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1979 VW Ra bb1l A Marino Volks wagen. '63 VW 8u0 • xlnt cond. 1966cOST1rAt>c;;.,!l~Avd MAIERS 11oor S11\·er.1tte) clolh lobccitWogon Sl500 biS'8674 OIAHGE COUNTY'S IM2 2000 • "'<N 16366791 clllitom 2 door with 4 runs ereat.11300 'tll VW 64'9'303 540-946 7 CADILLAC mt ne111 tin·'> $3000 53100 PCMHoc NEWEST ~ transm1ss1un and "67 Baja rebwlt 1835CC BaJa. run; gd, big snrf 2tiOO Harbor Hh ct ~ :rl81Sorti31 3081 Authonitd stereo cassette This one KYB shock~. ntw urt:.. x Int ts res. s 1 2 o o 1980 VOLVO D1e)el ~tH COSTA M ~:s \ .*' Citdlton S3'950 Sal\ tr Theodore Robin~ Ford •••••••••••••••••• •• •• • tt65 SUBARUDEALER 15 ver) s harp • 'bi Sq back. rearend, ~-4003 GL This 1s a dtdu\e 540-ISbO Ill'<! 1111 •Jil\ ~11 l"Jll :DiOHarborBhd c;o,tJ WHOUSAU Ponct.t t7SO ~-~ UDMD066l $4395 Jim custom int aim rm 'H Super ~etle Bug, sedan lt 1i.loadl'dand Uwnerl!r.:!fli Mesc1 6HOOIO or IWEIOOk! ••••••••••••••••••••••• · Manno \'ulkswagen ~tert!O, cheep lranspo ,unroor cuslom rnter immaculate (091l475 > •7t. Sei illl', xlnl , 1111,1 54().11211 1979 POfttloc "IO 914, white, rlean. gd :..i..._ ~ 842·2000 Must sell~ 080 Call t S3650 545 3~63 Sl2,500 Jim Md rino ti2 000 m1 full dt•1 Corvette 9932 ~ t 9952 "'1-Llrd .:P-6318017 nu pam --.....:___ Volkswagen, 842 2000 ......... .... ...... .... • mlCJ ",..., rond $32115 or bsl offer i3 Bug, "reblt. new paml, ---l979 vw Bus. 4 spd, air. w ~nrf R 11 Iron 1 \ ":"11'1-. ii EX l'O~D ~··•••••••••••••••••••• t014XNI 1 ~7431 1982 MODELS int & radials Flawless 1977 VW Dasher A ~uper l>Unrr. AM FM cai.i. t"11 ~I or ~9 II Ito T TOP H \Ch sg;so 78 \tu~1ani: T Top l>rk $5200 • __ ... HERE NOW'!' $2,"50 661-3982 rlean deluxe sedan LDolu & runs Ilk~ nt'w ~•~••••••••••• "Ill( P~.cll·\11.1.t. • \L.l,OPTIUNS• Blllt' Xlnt ~und ,'3700 Theodcm• Robm\ Ford. -9755 SalesServ1ceLeas1ng '78 VW Das her. a r. Au t 0 m a 1 1 c SEB(Kl,bsl ofr 540.8039.h ,.._____. Hochrou~h run,uk wm·w TA!l.INT Or Bt>~t {.ill F.it·' 2000 lidrburBlld ,l'o~1 .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• S•DDL .. t•C11 amfmcass.-tspd.13~ lransmission,aircondi llll>" -990I 2'>0 117!i'191il PP ill5SI073H X429ol6.1 Me'" 11 12 0010 o r RENA ULT ,. " "" " or offer 857.2372 after t10111ng, and stereo The =-••••0 ••••••••••••••••• [).IQ 11211 OFFER SUldU sharpest one around '76 VW Bus. 9 pas~. very ·111 t"Vl' 1k \lit: rn1111 Cougar 9933 WHOLESALE 831-2040 495.4949 Gpm 1350TWXl 1349~ Jim good t·ond Ai r cund Wllltrade MGfor' 1·011d hrJnud nu radial ....................... ILUEIOOIC! •toSIOOO 1980 VW Rabbi! D11~~1:I! •Manno Vo lks wagen. Fuel 1n1ect1on 90M 499-47221Ena whtwJllT \11re'·'llt'1' "ti8XR7CS«m: .. Spt>!'1al 1979ford 'KO F1reb1rd Formula lti.tdt'd. 21,000 m1. fullv powt'rt'd Call Stl'1 e 198 l!l2ti CA.SHRIEIATIE Toyota t765 0ynamitec·ustom2door 842·2000. $5,000 1213159ti7885, tourio.i ,u .. 111•11,1un. Edill!ln roodt•l. 1·hrom1· Must~Fostbock ONALLNEW ••••••••••••••••••••••• w 1 l h 4 spee d '"" VW B 9'792460ext~-AM rM lltrk ~ll·n·o, :ill t'llg. wire wht•cb: nt'w 179 \'II> RENAULT 18 l's '81 Toyota Cehca ST ex· transm1ss1on. roof rack. .., ue comp re 14 Super Beellt-Exc·el Mell 9910 llhr uphol full llflw«r. radial lirt-~ Ele~ !'>Unrl -+-- Thisofferendssoon cellenl rond. 1 owner. and low miles. Sharp! furbished-11ew paint ---A 4 spd, 1 owner. •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• Call Pcler, wknd' 1·1c' on d S800 -51 tiQ.l~ S4l25 ACT TODAY '! S'ISOO 851· 1464 (304ZSlof). $5995 Jim tires lnterior. Rebll eng '"""' '10 RIVIER A ti73 1!409 9 5 '1 on f ri ,_gyon ' ' Tht!(xlore Robin~ Furd 'Ii.') Le Man' Xlra !\1(·e' ~OBO °75 Cellca ST At.ttFM .Marino Volkswagen. dutch, rront end Must 44,000mi $3500,495·~2 Am1fm. full pwr. need" 8337!191 f.ord 9940 ~A>llJrburBlld .C'u,to Cass Mag Whls. Xlnt .::. sunroof, reblt ~seen to apprecla1e ·~~~~:~eb~!~!s. :~~It .;°':;~a~::~~d . lo •••••;;.•a_·~;~~;··••• ~~~I It 12 oo Io "r ~:!! ............. !!!.~ 9li8 9207 NEW LE CA R $549 ttus '81 comes with sun rod. AMtFM stereo and CMd ThrtRJ)lhout 52500 trl&, twin rarbs, 12 volt mileage, new brake~ ILUE 1001(! ·1;., \tu11tani: \ II Julo "ii \'t'go Auto llK ~11 ~1·9111 =l~~~~~Dys tmVWBus A dynamite $22001080 645·S916 andll.res.$7500 Clwfrolet 9'20 1979Ford ne111 paint. mini cond S219SOO Bt-)1 OHer mo r e atll 4 58 Serl61348 OUHGE COAST AMC/JHP/ uNAULT '17 20R en&lne Toyota 7 pass t n g er w Ith Must Sell ·74 Super Bet 833-0153, 966 1303 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LTD w;rn $2200 OBO 1>41 Wt.S KHond1t1on Rad1.itor seat.s S75 9602386 spm. 7 passen~er with 4 speed overhead, air condition I preciateS2500 840.91!2 'Ill Elertra. good <'ond' i2 l"he1ellt· run' Kood 1108427 '78 \1u~tanl(. T 11111. 'Int i..11, 1321 SSOO ~Ilea bla<'k bucket 1978 l/W Bus. A dyn am lie automauc transmission. tJe Rbl{ en& See to Ap 1 Like '\ e111 rd 11 Don 253' Harbor Blvd -I transm1ss1on AJale Ill& and low miles The, --~ oneowner.noacc1denl) rra~ P' J 1 bl''t orr S4100 rund.c11r $.~ Get GREEN. ush brown beige original cleantst one 10 town 1 .71 BUG. good mech 640-431l rut S795 &6 711ti8or-19s 2lt.t Thl.'Odore Robin~ Ford 114.2 94ti3 Sellmg .in) thmg wnh ii for WHITE elephanls Sharp' 104~1 SS995 1038l34 I $4995 J 1 m <'ond, sem1·auto trans, '76 Bw<'k Electra l.973 C.ll~\) SIJ Wgn h1 I a)iO H .. rbur Bii d l'u,ta 1·th Mll!>(ang Cl.t))ll • PS Dail) Pilot Cla~siht'd Ad withaClass1r1edAd I J 1 m M ii r 1 n o Manno Volk swagen. $1 795 Evs wknds FullPwr.$3000 m1 bu1 rht-ap 1r""'I' Me)a bH 0010 or PB.289 \u10.Re,1urtd" 1s a simple matter ~xrz::I 64~ 7770 Call 642 5678 __ \'olkswagen. 842 2000 842 zooo 1 642 7874, wkdys 833·9480 645-6066 S200 964 9833 ~82! I Bt.-sl Offer 751 5894 JUSlt-.1.11642 5!.i8 ... ... . ATLAS CHRY~YMOUTH 2929 t{arbor Blvd . Costa Meu. Tel. ~1934. 3 blocks, aouth of San Diego Freewmy otf Halt>of' Blvd Comp .. tel 1body shop. Sales. Servie41 Pa-ta. 5-rvl08 Dept. open Monday thru Friday 7·30 AM to 5·30 P.M and 8 A.M. to 5 P.M. on Saturday · • HACH IMPOlrTS 'l 848 Dove Strfft. Newport Beech. Tel 752-0900. Call us. we're the 1pec1ahat1 tor Alla Romeo. Peugeot. Saab & Maaeratl • THEODOIEIOllMSFOllD Modem sales. MrvlC41, parta. body, paint & tire depts. Comp.tltlw ratft on ..... & cMily rentala. 2060 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. 842-0010 °' 54().821 t • JOHHSOM & SOM UHCOl.M ... CUIY 2628 Harbor Blvd., Costa Meaa. Tel 544>5630. 57 YHrS o4 tri.tldly family aervlce -Orange County's oldest l.in- cotn-Mercury dealer1h1p SOUTH COAST DONE 2881 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Meu. Tel 54CMXS30. RV service epeciatlata. 9_u1tom van con....,..,ona • • MIWPOlT IMPOITS 3100 W. Coa1t Highway, N•wport Beach. T•I. 642-t405/540-t 7&4. TM Ftrreti .... Ulrteft. MATCH THE NUMBERS OH THE WITH THE NUMBERS IH THE BOXES MIWPOltT DATSUN 888 Do¥e Street. Newport BMch Tel. 833-1300. At the triangle of JamborH. MacAr1hur & Bristol behind Vic· torta Swtlon. Sales. Serv1C41. Leasing & Pat1& Aeet dt. ooum. to the public • MAIDS CADILLAC 2600 Harbor Blvd .. Coile Me.a. Tel. 540-9100. Orange County's L1rgeat Cadillac dealer. s.ies. Servi~. Leas- ing. • DAVPD J. PNLLIPS IUIClt.roNTIAC-MADA Sales • Sefvloe • Leuing 24888 Alicia Patttwsy Laguna Hilla • Cl:tlCK IVYSON POaseff5.AUD'-VW 415 E. Coast Hwy .. Newport BMch. 673-0900. The only dealerahlp In Orange County with theM thrM great mMel under ooe roof I • ALAM MAGMOM rotmAC.sm.AAU 2AeO Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mia&. Tel. ~. Sat-. .. Service, L ... lng. _"Mr. GoOdwrtneh ... • HOUSI OISIMPOITI NllC-l9CI ........... ~ 8182 Manch•t.r Blvd .. Buen• Pll'k (on Santa Ana F~~ T•k• a.ach 81Yd. offl'9mP -sharp r1ght o-n Manchtilter. \ ~ MER-CEDES (218or114) 137·2333 • • IOI LONGPRE PONTIAC 13600 Beach Blvd . Westminster Tel 892-6651 Orange County s oldest and largest Pontiac dealership Sales. Service. Parts • SAIL CHEVROLET 900 South Coast Highway Laguna Beach .. Qrry' .... It ......... yot1!" SALES HOURS· Mon ·Fri 9-7. Sat 9-5. Sun 10-4 494-1131 546·9967 COSTA MESA DATSUN 2645 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa Tel 540-6-410 Serving Orange County tor 16 years 1 Mole So 405 • SUNSET FOID, IHC. (Home of Withe the While), 5440 Garden Grove Blvd , Westminster Tel 63&--4010 • • SANTA ANA DATSUN 2001 E. 17th Street, Sar\ta Ana Tel 558·7811 Your• Original Dedicated Datsun Dealer • MIRACLE MAZDA We'Ye mcwedl Our new location Is 1425 Baker Street. Coe1a Mela. Tel. 545-3334. Stop by & visit our brand nttw showroom and ... why we're the 11 Mazda dealer 1n SOuthem c.Jlfomla. Sal••. Service, Pans and LHSlng • AMAHllM MAIDA "Olllr o.c. ...... .,... ... ,,... ..... a...c.n" 801 S. Anaheim Blvd .. Anaheim 956-1820. Juat north ot Santa An• Frwy. on Anaheim Blvd. can us llratl ·we ARE HARD TO ANC>-eUT WORTH ITI" • SADDUIACI IMW/IUIAIU 28402 Marguerite Pkwy .. Al/tA'y Pkwy. exit We off« wha\ no bank or teu• compahy can: 1. Expertly ..rted. mott modern •ef'Vlce & pertt dep4.: 2. One of the Southland'• MOit ••per1enced Ml• & INling at-'f; 3. EJllNNltl°" of the middleman by 1..ing deller direct. 8!1·2040 -•• DGM LEASING, IMC. 730 w 19th St . Costa MtH 6'2·1~ You rem tor a surprise at DGM Leasing ° COHNEl.L CHIVIOUT • .2828 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mela. Ofer 20 y.... serving Or1'nge County! Salea, leulng, MrVlce C.11 5*-1200; special parta..m.: s.46-9400, body shop line, 754-0400. • IOY CAIYH IOU.S IOYCWMW 1540 Jamboree Road. Newpof1 BMch. ~ Sat ... s.rvtoe, Pam And L...Sng. COMSIDll IT SOL.DI UMd cara are In d•~nd and Mil quickly when tdYettlMd In af•lfled. To ptac.e your private patty ad, oall selly Le9 •642-5878. ,, .. • • • * • 111111 CUii Ylll lllEllll llllY NPll THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 4 . 1962 ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS A1ir Florida tapes suggest pilots aware of • ice WASHINGTON (AP)~ Tne recordlnp from the Air Florida Jet tbat craabed Into the Potomac River last montb support theories that ice or snow on the winp made it atall -and atront ly auneat the pU* knew of the problem before taking off, according to today's Washington Poat. The cockpit voice tape suuests the pilot and coellot bad seen a buildup or ice or IDOW on the Boeln& ~ winM.. but went ahead Wlth Uieill-fated flight anyway, an unidentitled source close lo the National Transportation Safety Board Investigation told the newspaper. NTSB spokesman Ira Furman and Francis McAdams, head of the NTSB Investigation, could not be reached for comment on the report Wednesday night. According to a preliminary tunscrlpt of the tape, pilot Larry Wheat.on and copilot Alan Petll spoke to each other repeatedly about the heavy snow fallln1 Jan. 13 aa they prepared to lake off. the Post said. One source told the newspaper that their words suggest they al one p,0lnt looked out their windows specifically to check for snow on one of the wings, noted there was some, but took off anyway. About 30 seconds later, Petit' a final words to Wheaton reportedly were, "We're 1otn1 down, Larry," and Wheaton responded, "I know It." Seventy-four of the 79 people on the jetliner, includin1 Wheaton and Petit, were killed wben lhe plane hit a busy commuter bridge and smashed into the icy Potomac. Four people on the bridge were killed. FAA regulations state that "no pilot may take off an airplane that baa frost, snow or ice adhering to'· engines, windshields. win ea . control surfaces or, with piston-engine aircraft, the propeller. Ice or snow can reduce the lifting power of wings . Inves tigators have said that ,about 43 minutes elapsed between Flight 90's last de-icing and the takeoff. As the plane aped down tbe runway at National Airport, tbe pilots' words indicate they were worried they were not accelerating fast enou1b. according to ~e Post. One source was quoted aa saying that preliminary electronic analysis of the jet noise recorded on the tape indicates the engines were producing only 80 percent of normal power. Reagan ~aps plan • on interest rates • WASHINGTON CA P) - President Reagan will announce in the next two lo three weeks a plan to ·bring down mortgage interest rates, a top adviser said today. Edwin Meese Ill, counselor to the president , made the comment in regard to a question on what steps Reagan would take to spur housing, one of the most depressed sectors of the economy. He did not explain whether the plan would be aimed at mortgage interest rates or at all interest rates. But a presidential aide said later Meese was referring to the housing industry. Meese's comments came at a breakfast speech to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce on the administration's legislative priorities for 1982 "We have a s eries of measures that are under consideration now," he said in regard to housing. "The main thing we have to do though . . . 1s do e verything possible to bring down the interest rates. "This ts why you'll be seeing some specific action on that in the next two or three weeks by the president." The administration has been openly critical in the past few wePks or the actions by the Federal tt~serve Board to restrict the nation's monetary supply, saying the Fed's lack of precision in meeting its growth targets was responsible for currently high interest rates. The prime rate jumped again Tuesday as banks responded to economic pressures such as increased borrowing by the Treasury to finance the government's growing deficlla. Meese earlier saul fhat the high interest rates were the result of a "lack of confidence" by investors that "any government can hold to their course." And he said the Reagan administration had no intention or deviating from its tax cut and budget cut plans. "This administration will stay on course," he said. "We will not be giving in to the vagaries of the stock market . . . '' 'Mother begged me,' Srwwf all murder suspect says pa_ralyzes 11 DA V1D &1.JTlMANN called paramedics to the home .1.V idwe st ~ .. ~,...,..., al 1211 W. Bay St. Murder defendant Herbert During bis 'first day on the Barclay Baetz told a Superior witness stand Wednesday, Baeu Court Jury today that he gave' had testified that bis mother bis 87-year-old mother a lethal asked him if be would help her dose of cyanide last September end her life aboUt nine months after she begged tum, "Barclay, before she died. just put me away." The defendant hu said that be In his second day on the realized that bla mother wu witness stand, Baetz, a balding serious and that, "yes, I felt I 57 -year-old chemist, testified had agreed to something, but I that he mixed the potassium didn't feel I would be called on cyanide in a glass with orange to carry it out." juice and gave it to Janette However, in today 's Baetz as she sat in the living testimony, the bespectacled room of her Newport Beach Baell said that his mother asked home last Sept. 10. him on the night of her death Questioned by defense lawyer · • B a r c I a y c a n · t you do Stuart Grant, the defendant said something for me?" his mother took one sip of the Baetz said that the two began lethal drink and then convulsed, to quarrel, as they bad in the lapsing into unconsciousness. past , over her refusal to take The woman was eventually pain medications ror a nerve1 pronounced dead at Hoag ailment that caused her pain· Memorial Hospital after Baetz <See MOTHER, Pa~e AZ) PSA vows to fix offending billboard. A Pacific Southwest Airlines billboard that has raised the ire of Orange County Supervisor Thomas Riley because it does not refer to John Wayne Airport wlll soon be changed. Jobo O 'Malley Jr., the airline's government affairs director, said the billboard, which makes reference to Orange County Airport, is scheduled to be repainted within 30 days. He said the airline has no plans to either remove the sign or have it repainted sooner because of contract provisions IRANlil COAST WIATHIR Variable cloudiness today through Friday morning, becoming fair Friday afternoon. Highs both days .62 to 66. Lows tonight 46 to 54. lillDITDUY Boz tape, lrodmQ 1tomps .Oftd coupon1 .ore tlw laltd promotfonl ~ing uied bJ1 .ofrlin•• to wm pois.., •. All. 11111 .,.. ..... ~.: ~'Al 1::1 -II • ... ..-. .. -. with an outdoor advertising firm. Riley, who proposed that Orange County Airport be renamed to honor John Wayne, objected to the billboard in a Jan. Z1 letter to O'Malley. A similar protest had been lodged by Riley in October when the billboard was located on Main Street near the Santa Ana-Orange border. O'Malley said the billboard recently was moved to the new . location alongside the Santa Ana Freeway at Valley View Avenue in Santa Fe Springs. PSA officials saJd m a recen\. letter to Riley that use of Orang~ County Airport on the blllboar~ and signboards on Orangft County Transit District b~ was short-term in nature anq was aimed at persons who mJgbt; not be aware of the airport's name change, such as tourists. O'Malley -p0inted out that the bulk of the airlines other advertising about its service to Orange County makes reference to John Wayne Airport. For example. a recent edltioD or PSA's infli1bt ma1aaine contained a centerfold ad that reads, "Now PSA presenta smile service from John Wayne Orange County Airport to the Bay Area," PSA operates two Oran1e County-San Francisco Bay Area Qigbta dally. O'MaUey al.id tbe airline wu not trying to "anta1onlae" anyone by Wlinl Oran1e County Airport tn selected advertlalna . Asked lf he felt Rlley wu being ant a1onlttlc over the luue, O'Malley replied. "I a« that hnpreuioo." BJ TIMI ANodaled Preu Wide areas of the Midwest were immobilized by up to two feet of snow that crushed roofs and forced schools and bulineues to close in the second heavy snowfall tb1a week. More misery was in store as a third storm began moving in from the Rocky Mountains. Seven northwest Ohio counties were declared snow emer1ency areas with ravel limited to emergencies. In Qeorgia, !Qeanwhile, rec;ord floods sent hOmeowners neeang, and the Northeast was pelted with freezing rain. The Midwest's second storm, which turned into sleet today over the eastern Ohio Valley, caused fewer problems than earlier storms that have pasted the area this winter "I think everybody learned his lesson," said Monroe County, Mich., sheriff's dispatcher Betty Miller. "Most people took cover this time." Experts were called to the Eastern Missouri Correctional Center in Pacific. where the roof of the new $25 million facility began to sag under nearly two reel of snow. HANDICAP LEADER -Hard working crew of the 40--f oot sloop Saeta. owned and skippered by Rogelio Partida of the Club de Yates de Acapulco held the handicap lead after three 0.-,Nle ..... ..., ....... ~ days of sailing in San Diego Yacht Club's fourth biennial San Diego-to·Manzanillo race. Saeta is a Class C entry For today·s update. see Sports, Page C2. • In Indiana, 15 members of the Ball State University men's baseball team and six members of the track team escaped injury when a fieldbouse roof caved in. The Howard County Civil Defense maintenance garage in Kokomo collapsed and snow flattened the roof of a commons area at Eastbrook High School near Marion. First Lady's china surwves $290,000 set comes t hr ough dinner debut intact WASHINGTON (AP) -Nancy first lady had S81d was so Reagan's new china set survived •'badly, badly needed,'· was l,U White House debut intact. ,..........unveiled Wednesday night at a Nary a $48 cup was broken. state dinner honoring President And despite ita $209,000 price Hosnl Mubarak of Egypt. In Georgia, forecasters said Sweetwater Cs:,eek would crest at 12 or 13 feet above flood stage today at Austell near Atlanta, forcing residents to flee 100 houses and trailers. (Related photo, Page A4 ). ta1 -paid with a donaUon from It was the first thing he the non-profit Knapp Foundation menUooed in bis after-dinner -there didn't seem to be a toast. critic in the house. "Before I start, let me first Even the butlers loved it, congratulate Mrs. Reagan for according to chief usher Rex the new china which is very Scouten. elegant," Mubarak said. , The 4,372-piece set, which the The 120 dinner guests Stranded on roof Snow sh~veler marooned all night GOFFSTOWN, N.H. <AP> -Tales of people stranded by snow and ice are becoming familiar this winter -but Rodney Upton may be the only one marooned all night on his own roof. Upton, in his early 40s, said he saw cracks in the ceiling of his split-level home and went up on the roof about 9 p.m .. Tuesday to shovel off some of the.2~ feet of snow to relieve the stress. · As be shoveled, it began to sleet, t hen rain, al'MI around midnight he decided to come down . But hla ladder was encrusted with ice and he was afraid to climb the 10 feet to the ground. He yelled and banged oo the roof but said he couldn't attr~ct attention or rouse his wife, who was sleeping in a room below: To keep warm, he kept shoveling. By 4:30 a.m., he1 1p0tted a workbound neighbor, whose aon, a fireman, called the,tlre department. Flreflghten took hlm ~wn by ladder. . i applauded and the first lady laughed. Mubarak wasn't the only ooe with compliment.a. The butlers "are mighty proud or it," Scouten said. "They are thrilled to death. It's beautiful." Vice President George Bush called it fine china and aaid it was outra1eous to criticlle the first lady since she acquired it at no coat to the taxpayers. "I think she should get some credit," he said. The 220-place service was ordered seven monlha a10 and •rrl ved by truck Tuesday in • time to be band-waahed for Wednesday night's dinner. Tbe ivory china with a red and IOld border WU the showcase for a dlnnel' of filet or mount.ain trout farcle with fleurona, supreme of cblcken wltb. red s>:ePpen and white rice, ll"ed b'eana amandlne, port aalut cbeeae, watercrea• and mushroom Hlad, chocolate mouue a.Cid petlU toqra. Eacb place MWnc ~I.Ila ol 19 pieces, but only seven were used Wednesdiy: service plate, salad plate, dinner plate, flab plate, dessert plate, demitasse cup and saucer. The other pieces are: soup plate, finger bowl plate, butter plate, tea cup and saucer, bouillon cup, cream soup cup and stand, berry bowl, cerear bowl, ramekin, and cocktail cup. In addition, 60 extra demitasse cups and teacups were ordered, along with 72 large platters. Obviously sensitive to criticism of the china pure!hase, Mrs. Reagan's press office pql out a chart showing the C<MJt ill 1981 dollars of dishes purcbuect in the administratlona of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Harry Truman and Lyndon Baines Johnson. Accordin1 to Sheila Tate, lln. Rea1an'1 press secretary, the only other White Houae China that was not paid by t.upa1en was the Johnson aerYice, contributed by an anonymoua donor. Mra. Tate made the followlns cost comparisons: -Jl'Da -$9,IOl.IO actual cost; $14,108 in m1 dollars. -Tnm• -•.rn.to actual cost; •.100 in mt dollaia. -.11•11•• -•.•.ac aauaa cost; '115,000 lft t•t doll..-.. -...... -..... •cWll and 1181 cost. '' l tbou1bl dt •ould be interatlna hlltoilcall1," llra. Tate aakl of tbt compariloe. I ~ I I JAf • " ft ft •. Orange Coatt OAllV PILOT!Thuraday, February 4, 1982 /'" • 1ShoOiing • • m eateey pro lied . , ' Cheep shots make typo worse Suspect denies kiHing J l (. I ~ t: 0 0 9 ~ ,I n '} , I '} , b ';I , b W eatmlo1ter ~llee are lov11U1atln1 the 1bo0Un1 Wedotlclay oltbt of a customer In a local Vletnameae restaurant. Police said the customer. Thon1 Quoe Duong, 21, of Santa Ana, was treated at Westminster Community Ho1pltal for a severe rlesb wound in the neck and was released. The incident occurred at 10 15 p.m ., when three to six men described as Orientals in their mld·20s entered the Dong Thanh restaurant, Bolsa A venue and Ward Street, Westminster police Officer Earle Graham said. G raham said one or the intruders fired a single shot from a .JS.caliber handgun, then the 1roup fied. He said no motive for the shooting has yet been determined. BY STEVE MARBLE · Of-~ ......... If I never hear the word ··canary" agaln, I'll be happy, Real happy. . You might sny I've been eating canary I mean crow -most of the week. I've endured what can only be described us a relentless attack or bird calls. bird jokes and general bird humor. Alfred Hitchcock would have had trouble directing the sort of bird scene I've been facing in the Daily Pilot newsroom. A zoo keeper should have 1t so rough. An explanation is in order. It all started when I wrote a short feature about a Costa Mesa woman who sells reclaimed aluminum cans then divides her profits among four charities . Al least that's the way I wtote 1l. I'm positive of :hat. But that's not the way it came out in the paper Monday. The story, as it was printed, had the can-collecting woman dividing up her profits among four canaries. That's canaries as in birds, little feathered things with wings. The following morning, the jokes started. I should have seen them coming. Ol!f!NOANT TESTIFIES Herbert Barclay Baetz said that he gave his mother a lethal dose of cyanide after she begged him "put me away." during testimony in Superior Court today. From PageA1 MOTHER 'ASKED FOR DEA1'H'. and itching. Describing the events of the evening for the jury. Baetz said he told his mother emotionally. "We 've got to figure out something to do about all this." Saying that they both were growing angry. the witness said his mother told him. "Barclay put me away. It's time to put me away now." • • Baetz told the jury jn Superior i Court Judge Everett Dickey's V. courtroom that he believed his '< ' mother was serious and ·that he n went upstairs to get the cyanide after she told him repeatedJy. • "Put me away Put me away." Baetz sajd he screamed back at her, "Shut up, shut up. I can't take it anymore." ' Baetz said he went upstairs t and brought down a bottle or · 1 . cyanide that he bad purchased about a year earlier and mixed a I half teaspoonful into a glass of orange juice. ' "I said, 'Mother are you really I serioua about this business':· he said, and she responded . "Barclay just put me away." Baeti said he gave her the drink and that she took one sip of it by herself as he stood by watching her. The witness said be began to panic because he reared his mother bad not sipped enough of the cyanide to kill her. Baetz said be told her . "Mother, damn it all, let me ON WITNESS STAND Murder defendant Baetz t estified his mo the r was annoyed by a nightmare she had in early 1981 give you some more." However, he testlfled, she was non-'tesponsive and appeared to be unconscious. Asked ·by his lawyer why he was so panicked, Baetz aald, o.-ANOilCOAST Dilly Pilat CIH1lfled 1ctvert11ln9 714Jl42·5e71 All other ap.rtment1 142-4321 TESTIMONY Baetz, of Newport Beach. said his mother asked him what was the best way to end her life. "Supposing she was revivable? What would she come back as? She just wanted to pass away." The prosecution is seeking a murder conviction a1ain.st the Newport Beach resident. But, defense lawyer Grant baa asserted that Baeh never intended to kill bis mother but was only responding to her request to end ber life. Prevtoua witneaaea called by the proaeculio.n testified that Baetz, who la twice divorced, argued heat.edly 1¥lth his mother on many occasions. He moved in with her tn um. ERASeibaek RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -A Je1illat.lve committee voted lJ.7 today nOt to report tbe r.caua.1 Rt1hta Amendment to U.. floor of the Vir1lbla Houae of Del11at11, almo1t eertalal1 kUllDI ERA'a cha.nee of PUI ... iia tbe 0.0.raJ Aaembly. ' Steve Mitchell, o fellow reporter, wanted to know this. ·'What happens 1f one Of the birds dles. Do the other1 dlvlde up the money or ... More laughter, more bird calls and bird imltallont1 followed. 1 couldn't escape lt. "What has eight leas and weighs 1,000 pounds and chirps?,•· one of my colleagues wanted to know. I wasn't sure. "Four 250-pound canaries," he laughed. slapping Ms knee. Then a curious reader gave me a phone call "Are you Steve Marble?" he wanted to know I told him I was. "Well." he continued, "about those canaries . Even he was laughing and I didn't even know the guy. But that was just the start. My boss took to flapping his arms like some kind of out-of -control bird t a canary, I guess J and several others started cutting out bird stories and leaving them on my desk. l tried to explain that 1t was some other b1rd -bram that made the canary goof. That only brought more bird whistles. Even in the restroom l heard the bird calls was But I figured my wife would unders tand wrong. She read the article. doubled up in laughter and immediately called several friends to share the Joke ::-:inc said they laughed too. But being the good humored. thick-skinned guy ·I am, l didn't get my beak out of shape over any or this. You might say I didn't even gel my feathers ruffled But someday . . Kennedy library has secret tapes BOSTON CAP) -President John F . Kennedy secretly recorded conversations and telephone calls with world leaders, congressmen and aides while in the White House, the direct.or of the Kennedy library said today. ·'I have no reason to think they knew they were being taped," Dan Fenn Jr .. the library director. said or the people recorded in 100 to 140 • hours of taped meetings and con versa lions. The tapes are being examined ic Bo-:ton al th~ ?i~~ry in preparation for their release to the public. poS,si bly this summer. Fenn said 2.SO· telephone conversations' and 325 meetings in the Oval Office or Cabinet Room in tboe White House were recorded from mid-1962 to Nov. 7, 1963, IS days before Kennedy was assassinated. Among those recorded in telephone caJls were Marshal Tito or Yugoslavia , Gen Douglas MacArthur. evangelist Billy Graham and Adlai Stevenson, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations under Kennedy. The list includes members or Congress , according to an index of the tapes that Fenn had. The Washington Post said today that an index or the recordings it obtained also s hows Kennedy taped conversations wilb members of bis family, including his wife, Jacqueline. The subjects or t h e conversations included Vietnam, tbe Cuban missile crisis, the · integration of the University of Mississippi and civil rights in general. "J haven't the vaguest idea why Kennedy used the tapes or saved them," Fenn said. Material from the tapes was not available. ''When they' re available, they'll be available lo anyone. junior high school students, Arthur Schlesinger or anyone " Any potentially classified material will be referred to the originating agency, which will decide whether to keep it classified or allow the museum to release it, Fenn said. "There was no attempt to hjde the existence o( this material," Fenn said Wday in an interview at his Lexington. Mass .. home "We snid t.'wse tape:; dirl ~rut "I think one reason for all the excitement is that some people expect great big secrets to be exposed." Schmitz flays party leaders · &8 'eunuchs' SACRAMENTO <APJ State Sen . John Sc hmitz says California Republican Party leaders are "moral eunuchs" for condemning his attack on abortion-rights advocates a s anti-Jewish. Schmitz, of Corona del Mar, is seeking the R e publican nomination for the U.S. Senate. He is sued a statement Wednesday in response to a condemnalion by seven top officials or the slate GOP at the California Republican Party convention last weekend in Monterey. At the convention , party leaders sidetracked a formal resolution condemning Schmitz -thus avoiding a possible floor fight. But they issued a personal statement accusing Schmlu or anti-Semitism and bigotry How to avoid · By DAVIDIU.l'l'Z.llANN o1-~ ........... A prevlou•ly convicted sex offender char1ed w1tb kill.in« a 12·year -old Anaheim boy admitted t.o police last August thal he sexually molested the cbild and eventually "hogtied" bim before leavln1 him ln a remote area in Los Angeles Co\lnty. S.Ut, accordln1 to Oran1e Cou~y Grand Jury transcripts releaeed Wednesday. Robert Jacksan 'lbompson, as. denied that be killed youn1 Benjamin Lee Brenneman. whose body was found in the Rancho Palos Verdes area a day after he disappeareel from an Anaheim apartment ~omplex on Aug. 25, 1981. The young~ter, a newspaper delivery boy ror the Orange County Regis ter , died or strangulation Thompson was schedu~d to be arraigned today in superior court on an indictment which a cc uses him of murder , kidnapping, sodomy and sex perversion . Special circumstances also are alleged which could lead to imposition of the death penalty II Thompson is convicted. r n testimony before the grand jury last month, Anaheim police detective David Tuttle said Thompson asked to speak with investigators several days after his arrest. Tuttle quoted Thompson as saying: "I didn't mean to do it ... When I left him he was alive." Tuttle said Thompson went on : "He <Brenneman) came into my apartment. I made advances and be got scared. l lied him up. I didn't want lo hurt him. I just drove around l got scared. I didn't know what to do." Young Brenneman, who would have started junior high school last fall, was going door to door at the Oakwood apartment compl e x s eeking new subscribers to the newspaper. The apartments are located at the corne r or Broadway and Brookhurst m Anaheim. Other witnesses who Ii ved at the apartment said they saw the yo ungs t e r talking with Thomoson at the doorway cf his unit. · Durmg his interview with officers on Aug. 30 at Anaheim police headquarters, Tuttle said Thomps on volunteered information about the case. At one point during the interrogation, the investigator said, Thompson ''broke down. was crying, was very emotional, was upset " Tuttle said he asked the s u s pect . "Did you put (Brenneman) JD the trunk?" "Yes, God forgive me. He was alive when l dropped him off," Thompson responded. Tuttle said Thompson admitted putting the boy in the large blue trunk at his apartment. Witnesses had seen him moving the trunk out of hls unit. Earlier. the defendant had told police he was simply moving clothing back to his mother's home m Bellflower. Thompson . according to Tuttle, s aid he drove down Brookhurst Street to Pacific Coast Highway "a nd drove around in an area that was secluded." At th.is point, Brenneman was apparently removed from U.e trunk, tied up and then put back in the container. the costly mistake of buying the wrong diamond. In the world of precious gems. true quality is never synonymous with "cut" prices or "discounts ... The best and most economical place to shop for fine diamonds is always a fine jewelry store. We are diamond specialists. We've built our reputation by offering only the finest Qualify gems at fair. competitive prices. Every day. Year aftetyear. We urge you to ask questions. Compare prlce and quality. The more you know about diamonds. the more you'll apj>reciate the difference between fine quality stones and inferior grades. Our experts will be happy to explain the "Four C's" that make up a diamontfs character and det:ennine values: colgr. clari~ rut and carat You'll see. a diamond "bargain" is no bargain at all If you sacrifice the qualltJes that make a diamond beautiful and valuable. Whenever you shop for diamonds, remember the "Four C's." And the "Fifth C." Confidence. That's the mJSt ~mportant thing we sell. §LA.VICK'S "'-.llMlnSkU 1917 WMrt tN ~sr s~rpriKJ ~n.. .......... llllrld (714} 144-t•·~lllch :..~ U.~·591 ~·&.II v.g.. SOME DOLL -Brooke Shields, movie star. and Johnny Carson of "The Tonight Show," share a laugh over a new Brooke Shields doll Aft ........ during her guest appearance this week. The actress says the doll was constructed mostly from photographs. Pregnant mom wins contest A pregnant mother said she will use $50,000 won in a sweepstakes to buy a car. pay bills and add to her home to accommodate an expected fourth child. Joan Walker, a technician at San Leandro's Vesper Memorial Hospital, said she and Michael Walker have been entering contests since they were married but, except for a Lake Tahoe ski trip, have won only trinkets. The Walkers said they learned about their win in a Hostess Cupcake sweepstakes the same day they found out about Mrs. Walker's pregnancy. Fred Sllverma•, former· programming boss of all threl! major television networks, may be considering a political. career. "I'd like to go into the vublic seclur," The Wall Street Journal quoted Silverman as saying. "I'm interested in public service. I'd like to think maybe there is something else besides television ... Silverman is running lnterMedia Entertainment Co., a joint venture with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Film Co., and United Artlsts Corp., which is developin1 programs for network and cable television , the Journal said. Gov. Hap Carey, father of 14 , was honored by a planned parenthood organization for his support of state financing to help pay for abortions for the poor and for increasing financing for family planning clinics. "You had the coura1e of your convictions. When the chips were down we knew we could count on you," Mary Lladsay, president of Family Planning Advocates of New York, said in presentine the Margaret Sa•1er Award, named for the pioneer in. birth cootrol ed~auoo. · Carey, a Roman Catholic, has ~ a staunch support.er of state financln1 of poor women's abortJons althouth be bas said he personally is "morally" opposed to abortion. Mayor 1.tomel WU••• of Oakland ;ibould earn 912.8'10 -four times as mU<:b as he'• ma king, members of a Charter Review subcommittee aay. The Charter Revl,w Committee. appointed by the mayor and approved by th~ Clty· Council last May, has been considering changing the city's form of government by shilling most decision-making from the city manager to the mayor. The 17-member committee has failed to reach a consensus on the extent of the change, but most agreed the mayor's salary should be increased from the $15,000 set out in the charter. City Manager Henry Gardner earns $64,896 a year . Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands will visit 12 American cities this year in two trips celebraline 200 years of diplomatic relations between the two countries, the Govenunent Information Service said. The aeency said a ·'state visit'' from AprU 19-24 will take the queen to New York, Washington, Philadelphia, and Princeton, N.J . On a second vi1lt from June 16-29, 1be wUJ travel to Atlanta, Houston , Los Ansel~;, S~n Franci1co, Cbica10. and Ann Arbor, Grand Rapids and Holland: Mich. The qency said the queen will be accompanied on both \rips by her husband, Prtaee aa-. 'Cloudy through Friday Varl•ble cloudlrwu today lllrOUOfl Friday mornln9. t>ecomln9 fair Friday an..-Cool., wltll lll!Jht bOtll daYJ all 60 lo M Low. tonloM • to• EIM-•. from Point C~ICWI to Ille M .. k 8" _, -°"' 60 mllM ~ va<lable winch t119'1I end "'°'"'"' -.. be<Oftlll'IO --ttto Uk,,...,.W•-•no--to 11or111wett 11 to 11 kllOU Friday afte<-Wind waVtt of , lo • - Westerly -"' I lo J !Mt V .S. summary California 0-CH tlllet Gell la. npect.., In s.utfle"' Cll"9ml8's COlllUI arwt 1111111 l'rld8y 8ftt-. wlwfl fair _"' ... '·~ Tiit NMIDMI WMtllef' Servka tald ltle'9 wlll bt ,,.,....._ cl9udlfteta lt1 c-t•I t«lloM 8fld e11 Ult coattef *"""' ... ~·~ -· ........ l'riay fNl"lllfl9. I.Al .,,..... wlM clMr CW1 l'ttclr(, IM CMMr.,. _°'*'911. o. .. ru ~ .. ,.,, tt1rwe11 l'..W..,wlel_ .. __ .,. ....................... tMa .. .... ,,...._a,... .... .,. H ..... w111,.. ..__ S4 Md w lft tlle _..,...*'-"'Mid '2 ...... Ill _.._,....,,.. o ............ ~.1,.. ~ ..... ,,_ _ ,..,. ... '"'"..._ ..... ~ " ...... ,._. ........ 11 .... ..._ • tM ... ..,.. Witt\ .... MIMIM "'-IA_,. ... ee..r.1 .,., ·~ ...... .,. tWlll MWNIM ......... "' .... .. .., .... ........, ......... Extended forecast SO\JTHl!llN CALIFOllHIA COASTAL ANO MOUNTAIN Alllll!AS F•lr Windy In movnt•IM - llelow PHH• mottly endln9 by Mono•v Mo.ell ,_ .., _..,,,., Coutal area hl9l1t S2 to U •1111 .,.,.,n19111 -. In JOt to 4 -Ill ••a 111oM JO to 4J --. n 1o n T-....--'-alt a-.., to s ---111911er by~ Temperatures MATIC>ff Ml Le ~. 4J l4 ·'° 40 14 20 J .04 " ,. .JO S4 41 .21 11 ., 41 40 .24 S1 as a • ·21 ,, u Sol • .JO t1 " J7 " 11 11 SS .01 Sol l1 24 " 5' .42 20 ~ 62 J9 .CM • 24 .17 40 27 .u 42 1' ... 7t 14 Cit 1t ·1 •• • 17 '° " " Jt ,. SI '7 .22 1• u 04 14 11 " ., ·10 a w 41 42 .» •t a ., 1A " l'tl•ftd.,,,. l'tl•IMl.O.. ltepid City ·-S.ttlAk• s..m. SI L.81111 Sl•·T-StSi.M.wW ~ Tuc- TulM W•tl\'"9tll WIChlta UU llllMl•IA ........... ••Y'M turell• "'""° UM•Mr ..... ,. ....... ¥.try1wllle _,.., _,.. O.leftd 1tec1•-1t-..ec1ty Se<r~ S.llMt SeftO .... U..l'r-*• " ., .u S...t• ...... " 12 "" Stlllo _ .. ., ·" .a StDc•..., 4' • TI!iermal H 11 ... Ulll ... . ., .. ,_ ,, • "1 •• ·-• u .•• ""°" n ·27 C.UllM JO 6 Ullt ArrowflMd .. J5 L.on9 ._.. • 12 -.... .. i. .. 41 .JI ~ llMdl 11 J o..t.rte .. 61 " ,. hlmS!W119 •teMeN • s.ii ..,._.llD '1 Sell J- Soe..i. Ana Jlt Seflto Crv1 • T8MtVe1My tO 41 " St - M .. " 40 .. 1l .0 t1 10 • .., . ... 41 10 ,, ..... 62 11 .. 41 67 a 6t IS " a 61 G u a .. 11 61 76 ~ rAM AldlUCAM n " u a= .. ., " 70 G .. d ,. . .., .. .... 19 SI 11¥""* ...... Cwac:M ,,......, Gll*ltlaJ•a ~ ..... ""-ltlfttS .... Mofltt99..., ... 75 .01 " .. 70 ,. .. 7S 11 10 7t ,. ., n ., ... 10 .. 10 ... 10 .... • .-" -Meaatleft II SI ·IURf RIPlll ' .. We're Listening ••• •rtN •Kk•Cfty ....,.,~ N-11 .... ,..,.. Teeu<letlM Ttl11141N veracnn Tides TOOo\Y ti " .OS 7J ,. " 1t n II 1'l 1.1S rt S1 .. 71 " .. ,,,. ..... l'ltlDAY "'"'-11:11 ..... l.t ""''""' ,,....... , ... _.... _ 1:•11.m. I I IKtM!lltfl 1:10.m.. U 14'11 ....... y ..... , ....... ··-,, .. , ... ,.., ..... . ~ ,._ llolMy M t:SJ •• m., ..t• ,,,..., .. Ji•··"'· , What do you Uk~ about the Dally Piiot! What don't you like? Call the number below and :::Hft will be re<:ordH, transcribed and delivered to tM ate editor. The same 24-hour an1w~n1 HtVlce may be uaed to record let· tera to the editor on a.by t.oe>lc. Mallbol contrtbutor1 must include their name and telephone number for verttlcatlon. No drculatlon calla, pleue. TeU u1 wh•l'I on your f'lllnd. ·. Orange Coaet DAILY PtLOT/Thur.day, February ... '4982 H /F biflation hits inmates Fee hiked for prisoners on work furlougfJ program 8y JEFF AOL£& O( .. OlltY .......... The •tine or infiaUon may be about as painful for Oran1• County'• work releue pr~ aa lt I.I ror everyone elae now that the county haa decided to double the fee it char1e1 such inmates. The county Board of Supervtaon voted unanimoualy this week to ral..e the fee lt charees prt.sonen enrolled in lu work furlouah proaram from SS to $10 a day for each day or work. The increase, which wlll become effective this week, will mean a prisoner enrolled in the program will have to pay approximately $50 a week in fees to help pay the coat of administering the program, established in 1972. Selected prisoners admitted to the work release program ·are permitted to leave the"'jail each day and maintain their regular work schedule. Each night and durin1 weekends , bow•ver, thffe prilonen are required to · return to tbelr cell• and .erve their senU!nce1. Tbe fee lncrea1e wa1 requested by the county Probation Department becauae lt now coeu $18.'18 per priaoner per day to run the proaram, more than 87 percent more than ii to be collected from participants. The projected $2US ,OOO that will be collected in 1982 will be used to pay for the six probaUoo offlcen assiened to the protram on a full-time basis. The alx supervise work release prisoners and process applications from those hopina to join the program. Probation department official! did not ask supervisors to increase fees to cover the full coat of the program because they were concerned it might deter prisoners eligible from applyine. Jay Hynds, the pro1ram Fund delay pushes OCTD to borrow By GLENN SCOTr Of .... .,..., .... 54.lfl For the first time in its 10-year his tory, the Orange County Tranait District plaM to borrow millions of dollars to pay for its annual operating expenses. The district traditionally has used a "pay-as -you -go " Solons push early impact of tax cut WASHINGTON (AP ) Taxpfyers would begin noticin& this year's tax cut in their paychecks Immediately - Instead of having to wait until summer ·-under lecislation introduced by the top-ranking members of the congressional Joint Economic Committ~ bemocraUc Rep. Henry Reual of Wlaconsin, the chairman, and Republican Sen. Roger Jepsen of Iowa, the vice chairman, seldom agree on economic matt.en. But they told a news c:onfereace W -.dneaday that expediting a chan1e lo withholdin& rates would combat tbe reeesaion. Unless the law is revised, tbe average 10 percent cut in individual taxes that went into effect Jan. l will not be evident untll withholding ratea are reduced July 1. .. Now that we are in a recession, with unemployment escalating rapidly. it is essential that some action be taken," Reuss said . "Increasing withholding allowances now will give the economy a stimulus now. when it needs it." Other members of Congress have offered similar legislation. But Rep. Barber Conable of New York, senior Republican on the House Ways and Means Committee, said Wednesday he is opposed Fire killa one LOS ANGELES <AP> -One person was killed and fo~r injured when a fire broke out m a downtown area hotel today, officials said. The blaze caused $26,000 damage to the Holland Hotel. approach to fund its public bua system by spending its federal s ubsidies. state sales tax reimbursements and farebox revenues already collected. But administrators said this week an anticipated $13 million needed for operations this spring and summer has not yet arrived from the belt-tightening federal government and probably won't until August or September. at the end of the federal fiscal year. Thus, Finance Director John Beatty outlined a program this week to the district's Board of Directors in which they could s e I 1 s o · c a -1 l e d ''revenue-anticipation'' notes beginning next month. He said although OCTD has never employed the measure, other large transit districts, including those in San Dleeo and New York, have borrowed funds similarly. Ar. upiimisttc Generai Manager James Reichert added that the sale of notes woukl be timely because the diatrlct can es ta bll.sh a solid credit raUn1 before it begins in the next several years to investigate ways. of funding a proposed mass transit Ube through the county. $30,000 gram goes to NB man A university researcher from Newport Beach has been awarded a $30,000 grant from the American Lung Association to examine the impact of an a nti -smoking campaign he helped create . Brian Flay, Ph.D., will use the grant to assess the effects of a program aimed at educating about a>,000 Southern California seventh-graders how to resist peer pressure to smoke. Assistant director of the U niversity of Southern Ca Ii fornia 's Health Behavior Research Institute, Flay will evaluate the anti-smoking program that begins this month and includes classroom instruction and exposure on the "Feeling Fine" segment of KNBC-TV news shows The new Seiko LassaJe . director, called the work furlou•b propam a "very succeufuJ one.· He uld approximately IO county pritonen, wtt.b HDWDcei ran•ln1 from 30 dayt to one year, partlctpaU! each mootb. Hynda added that tbere bu been a very low walk·awat rate. He aatd tbe department strive$ to place u many wtJ.Unc prisoners in the community to eam a wa1e u poaalble. In other action Tueaday, supervisors: -Approved purchase of a 22-foot patrol and rescue boat for the Orange County Harbor Patrol. Cost of the new patrol boat will be $31,959. -Voted to maintain at 1981-82 levels the county s hare of funding for social service programs (34 percent) and directed the Human Services Agency to make diacretiooary cuts in its 1982-83 bud1et ao it can stay within its prescribed funding level. CANDIDATE -Rancho Santa Fe attorney Stan Legro has announced he will seek election to the 43rd Congressional District. Attorney announces candidacy Claiming to be the most experienced candidate seeJdn• to represent the 43rd Congressional Distrkt, Rancho Santa Fe attorney Stan Lecro has announced he will seek tbe office in the June 8 GOP primary election. At a press conference this week in Laguna Hills. Legro, '5, stressed bis background in Washington politics. He said be was c hief e nforcement officer for the Environment.al Protection Agency during the Ford administration. Legro is running for the congressional seat of Clair Burgener. who has announced he will retire. Legro, a former U.S. Marine Corps officer, said he had about $32,000 in campaign funds, and expects to raise as much u be needs to win. The district includes port.ions of northern San Diego County and southern Orange County including San Clemente, San Juan Capistrano and El Toro . To own one is to possess the dream of perfection . Designed to stul the heart and ~ the intellect. '\(bndrousJy slim. Suptemcly · refined. ~ could seek yet M\Otr flnd Uxir equa.J In ekg;ant bearing and quartz technology. ~ buutlful bncdcts ~ the light and enc~ cbssk i>nns ln glum and gUt. Marvels of thinness. SEIKO LASSALE ' " , .. .. H/I' Orange Coast OAILV PILOT(fhurtd•v. February 4, 198.2 ,., .. ,.. ....... HORSES' BEST FRIEND Two horses are rescued from Atlanta floodwaters by firemen and residents_ Residential areas were evacuated in parts or the Georgia city after 6 inches of rain fell 1 Wednesday. }\rgentina connection? 'u .s. seeks. ally for El Salvador. aid t law m Poland and the pope's plans to visit his homeland next s ummer The Polish-born pontirr received Space pr«;»be funds kept alive WASHINGTON (AP) -Overrtdln1 bla lt1c1J advikrl, Prealdent Rea1an 11 · proposlna in hll new budaet that much of the U.S planetary eaploratlon proaram be kept aUve. . Ju1t three month• ago. the Otftce of Mana1ement and Bud1et recommended klllln1 most deep apace exploration projecta ln its drlve to cut federal spendlna. The ertort met atrona opposlUoo from aclentltlc or1anlzatlon1 and congressmen on key apace commtttea who took their cue to the White HOUH. A• a ,..ult, Rea1an bu put money tor Mveral deep-1pace projo(ta in bla fltcal i• bud1et. lnclud-.C.\ ii *·' mUUoa to conli.ou devele>pmfht ot tbe Juplter-orbttbi1 Gallleo ••~llite ; *21 million to move ahead wttb. Hveral l!:uropean naUona on a Jolnl 1\aO-probe mt11lon; and money to ma1Dta.l.n the deep apace tracklnt network and to allow the Voy11er 2 1pacecraft to travel on to Uran&.11 and Neptune. , rt OMB bad aucce~ed In d:ropp1D1 the plan etary pro1ram1, 1t woU.ldl have meant the lols of about 1,IOO Jobi at NASA '1 Jet PropullM>n Laboratory lD Pa1Jdena which maoa1u tbe d p-1pac:e effort.a. The president lJ to aubmit bl.f tuU 1• budcet to Con11'e11 on Moaday. 1'>e A11oclated PrH• on Wednesday obtained an advance copy of the Na\lonal Aeronautic• and Space Admlnl.atraUoo aecUon. Rea1an propoaea total NASA apendlna of te.6 bllUon. FactoriQi ln lnftatloo, that'• about equal to 1982'• S.S.98 billion. 'Reagan waises Dozier's bravery WASHINGTON CAP> -President 1Reagan today praised Brig. Gen. James L Dozier's bravery during 42 d•y• of terrorist captivity and .told {be SO-year-old general. "Welcome home, soldier." Reagan, addressing the general and hundreds or other guests at today's annual National Prayer Breakfast, said "Gen. Dozier I know you don't like being praised for what you only consider doing your duly. Forgive me, J 'm going to pull rank on you.'· Reagan told the audience that it bu been said a hero Is no braver than anyone else, but ls just "brave five minutes longer." "General. you were brave 42 days longer.'' the president told him, adding: "We want to give thank.s to God for answering our prayers; we want to salute the Italian authorities for their brilliant rescue, and, Jim, we just want to thank both you and Judith (Dozjer's wife J for your gallantry. "Welcome home, soldier " Dozier . Reagan's guest at the · breakfast at a Washington hotel, then rode to the White House In a motorcade and posed for pictures in the Oval omce. One week ago, Dosier was freed from hls Red Brigades captors by Italian police commandos. Before beginning a leave of absence, Dozier also will brief Defense Secretary Caspar W Weinberger and hold a pre$! conference at the Pentagon. Dozier was welcomed home Wednesday at Andrews Air Force Base by Vice President George Bush. Arrests cost e lde rly card game CLEARWATER. Fla. <AP ) Thousands of elderly people who had little recreation save for their card games wiU be affected by the gambl1ng con viclions of eight retirees arrested al a "nickel-and-dime" poker game. says Peter Leck, one of the "Largo 8." As for Leck, he's through with poker ") don't want a record at thls late date," said the retired steelworker from Butralo. N Y Al 63 , he was the youngest of the men found guilty of violating Florida's gambling law. "I'll probably play gin rummy -but just for fun." Two Pinellas Count y undercover detectives had _gone. to a recreation hall in Largo, the Kanchero Village Mobile llome Park, on a complaint Nov. 4. While playing pool, they watched the r e tirees' card game over their shoulders for an hour. Assistant State Attorney Ron Crider had the evidence: a deck o( cards, poke-r chips and $24 cash seized from the card table that day After a two·day trial, dunng which two of the defendants were ho6pitalized. a Jury of four women and two men de It berated less than an hour to reach a verdict was tn mlensi ve care with a heart problem and the other had cataract surgery. Pinellas County Judge William Blac kwood withheld adjudication of guilt. which means if the defendants me~t the court's conditions they can pet1t1on to have their records wiped clean He gave the defendants 30 days probation and ordered each to pay $7S court costs ''I'm lrymg lo be philosophical, but it hurts," defense lawyer David Kurland said "The defendants were stoic. They paid their court costs and left." 5 NEW YORK CAP> -Reagan .administration officials have .'4!lpproached the government or ·Argentina about having this country infiltrate combat forces into Nicaragua, ABC News reports. One of the hospitalized defendants Archbishop Jozef Glemp, the Polish 1----------------------------------------- Basing its report on an unidentified congressional source. A BC reported Wednesday that the purpose of the infiltration would be to help choke off supplies allegedly being sent to rebels in El Salvador from Cuba through Nicaragua. If all went well, the troops might mount a co unter-revolution against Nicaragua's ruling leftist junta, ABC said. Mubarak iR11utent WASHINGTON <AP> Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak tS holding firm to Egypt's insistence that Palestinians eventually must have the right to establish their own "national entity." In a toast at a White House banquet Wednesday night, Mubarak urged President Reagan lo s tart an "American dialogue with the Palestinians" in the search ror a lasting peace in the Middle East A uthority soug ht WASHINGTON <APJ Although President Reagan is holding his request for actual defense spending for next year to about $1 billion more than he predicted in September, he is s·eeking an extra $13.9 billion in new budget authority for the Pentagon, administration sources say. The distinction is that most of the extra $13.9 billion in "budget authority" would not actually be spent in fiscal 1983 The Pentagon could, however, let contracts for that amount, which would have to be paid for in later years Pope meets Polet VATICAN CITY <AP 1 -The leaders of Poland's powerful Roman Catholic Church met with Pope John Paul II shortly after arriving from Warsa~ ~oday for talks on martial p rim ate , toge th er with the archbishop of Krakow. Franciszek Macharski, and the archbishop of Wroclaw, Henryk Gulbinowicz. Auto t ale• plunge DETROIT <A P ) -US . automakers s uffe red their worst January in 21 years last month as sales plunged 18 .5 percent and imports captured a January.record share of the market, the companies said .. Domes tic auto makers s aid Wednesday they sold 368,138 cars in January C\)mpared with 469,832 cars sold in lhe first month of 1981. There was an additional selLiog day 10 January la st year , and the percentage comparison 1s based on the rate of sales per day Kissinger tested BOSTON <AP J Former Secretary of State Henry KtSsmger has been admitted to Massachusetts General Hospita l for a physical exa mination and tests on an old s h oulder ailment , the hospital disrlosed today. Kissinger, 58. who ser ved in the administrations o f Pres idents Kennedy. Nixon and Ford. flew to Boston from his Washington home and was admitted to the hospital Wednesday night. Therapy ppproved OKLAHOMA 't'rT"Y" (AP > A measure passed by the state House Wednesday could make Oklahoma the first slate to allow a controversial c ance r the rapy us ing protein injections to boost the body's defense mechanisms. The treatment lmmuno · Augmentative Therapy has not been approved by the U S Food and Drug Administration and 1s available only in Freeport, Bahamas, al the clinic of Dr. Lawrence Burton who developed the therapy. LEARN ... Interior Design • Valentine's Art Show /Sale Teught by our profnalonal in our elegant design ltudlo. Great gifts from Huntington Center dally thru Feb. 1 o. Men Win Lcdes Days? 2,000 ladies win See's candy or 4'" plants. Men can wtn other prizes up •to •eoo Jackpot at Huntington C.ntef"a driver lie. IWMC)ltakes. Ends Sun. CALL64~H71 end 10( a frtHdly Ad· . .s.or bdp you place your r . adtodey. ' - Limited Enrol1~t-f'our 2·Hr ClaaSH Begi~~ Feb. 9. 1982 125 00 '°' Study Aids & 0.1gn Book Don't Delay -CALL 642-2050 •k for Harry .. "11~tc Fine FumltiMe MCI Interior 0..19ft 1115 NewpcM1 atwd. Co••• ..... FEBRUARY CARPET SALE . . 5 "• • tall 5•;, oz 1.49 SCARVES FROM SQUARE TO TASSELED From lndla BIG FINE COTTON SQUARES Countless colors and dealgna from posy to palaley. 21· )( 21· 21· )( 21· 1.49 1.99 SOLID COLOR SLUB WEAVE COTTON SOLID BAASS PLANTERS From India Metallic gold threads form strlp.cj or checkered accents on deep bold colors Both styles In aHorted colors. . -BED&PRE.MlS "'From India Thick and thin woven threading forms nicely striped texturing. Blue, Natural, Beige or Wine 12· )( 108" 12.99 Cleverly curvaceous and gleamlngly grand' HAMMERED 5• dla '• deep 4.88 FOOTED 4 SIZES •I'! •• to a· dla 2 •1. • to 3" deep 3.79 to 8.79 WHITE PORCELAIN SOUP, STEW OR VEGETABLE BOWL From Japan WITH GATHERED ~_,...-,. TASSEL ENOS -.,_..._.-~ 78 • long 21 • wide 4.99 WTH BORDER STRIPES 66" long 14· wide 3.66 .._-------'-------.-.-... C-Y---1~--....;z.--....i...---------1 Clothing Section ...... NATURAL BAMBOO WORK .,.,. BASKETS From China NATURAL For letters. htler, laundry, leaves. CANE logs or linens. BASKETRY 9 SlZES a· to 18" d1a 10· to 20." deep 1.59 10 7.99 ~~;;.·tl:l!'!'i• 5 SIZES ~~~~ 4 • to a•;,· dla 2•11· to 3•;, ·deep PLATE 10· di& LEAF TRAYS 6'/1. )( 12· 1.69 .49 10 1.49 9 '/1. )( 19" 2.99 TEAK FINISH SQUARE LAMP TABLE 23· )( 23· )( 15· 1811 BURNT BAMBOO NESTING TABLES From China 16 •;, • to ~lliii'll!iiiiilEiii..-lilJii:::.. 24" tall 11 '/1. )( 20· 11.77 10'/•"><17" Neatly nautical decor for well, celling or costume. Brown, Blue or Natural 6' )( 12' 1.99 TEAK OR WALNUT FINl,.5H TABLE 24.88 8.77 NATURAL RATTAN PICTURE FRAME From lndonesle ON CASTERS 18" )( 28 " 20· tall 53.88 TEAK OR WALNUT FINISH COFFEE TABLE WITH SHELF is• x 36" x 18· tall 49.88 To hold bold prints, collages or fabrics. 2-TONE M1TAN ACCESSORIES ~s;;;==::==~ 31·x39" NATURAL t9" x26V. • From Singapore Natural atlck rattan acc .. 1orlea are handsome and 'liil~li~~-11 RA1TAN Image Size SEA CHESTS 27 .88 From t-------- well made. SETTEE 44• wide 89.88 35• tall MAGAZINE RACK 1e· wide 11• tall 19.99 ORUM STOOL 17" dla. 18" ''"23.89 lndonHla Sturdy, relnforoec1 cheata are made of thlolt, golden rattan ~Ith peel rattan edging and hidden metal hlngH. 12• to to• tall t•V.• x27'h • 28.98 11·><3t'h• 49.99 20· >C3S~· ••• DIRBCTLY ACROSS PROM SOUTH coaaT R&:AZ• llCll. TO·fll. 11 A.M.-· P.M. SLl8Hll Y WEIT OF lltllTOl AT 1313 I UNFLOWEI ' (TAKE llUITOL EXIT OFF 405 FREEWAY) Vf&A • MWlll CM.-.. ~ Oii MM OlllBt • AllPU Piii H.lltMt I IAT. 11 A.M.~ P.M . IUl._ 11 .... ;.;..e P.M. • --~~---------~-----•,...•wq,--------·---..-•~ ~ .. ·----------~--~- -~utuurn·· - Congress to rule on mili'tary pay? SACRAMENTO (AP) -The AIMmbly Judiciary Committee, tom betWffft divorced military r.ttrees and their ex-wlvea, bu voted to aak CQntreu to overturn a court rulln1 favorinJ ex·hutbanda. • The almUar resolutions went to the Assembly floor Wednesday. A number or women who were divorced from mllttary men teatifled that the court rulln1 put many middle·a1ed and eldtrly women on welfare became they had devoted their lives to the husband's mutt•ry careers. The)' alto pointed out that IDY penstona the women earned while workin1 durtn1 the marrta1e were divisible, but the man's military pay was not. --------------- Orange Cout DAILY PtL01'rhu'9day, February 4, 1812 ............. Suspect' s eousin: ] believed suicide LOS ANGELES <AP> -M mourneu paid their llnal rttptctl to 1laln Turkith consul 1en1,ral Kemal Arlkan, lb• rather of the man cbar1ed with Arlkan'1 aaaualnaUoo JOiotd ID Armenian proteat •1aln1t alltted FBI haraa1ment. Meanwhile, a local televlaion ataUoo reported Wedne1day nl1ht that police are lnvest11aUn1 the poeatblllty ot a link between Arlkan'a murder and the weekend su.iclde of a cousln of the accu.sed murderer, 19-year-old Harry Saaaounlan. by mtnor1 after they aaw 1fmllar ICllM bl a 1114 tel• fllm loet her battle to baft Sl 1 million dam111 1ul retnatated by the Callfornl Supreme Court. A court of Appeal to Sa Francltco had euller upheld rulinC by San P'raacl1c Superior Court Juc111 Ro Do nee for the N atlona Broadcastln1 Co. and KRON· in San Francisco. He ha dismissed the ault after attorneys acknowledsed they could not prove the televlaiod movie "Born Innocent" hacf incited the sexual attack. The vote was 8·2 for AJRQ by Assemblyman William Fllante, R·Greenbrae, and S-1 for AJR83 by Aaaemblyman Allater McAllster, D·San Jose. Both would ask Contreas to paaa one of a half dozen bills that would let state divorce laws covem how military retirement pay ia divided among divorcing spouses. But representatives of retired military aroup1, all men, said the money was not pension but military retirement pay and the men were subject to recall lnto active duty. They said there were sufficient laws to let court.a require men to support their wives and children. SUBJECTS OF SEARCH -Sheriff's deputies are searching today ror Natelee Jae Cochran, 3. and her babysitter. Jody Lynn Finkle, both missing since Saturday . Natelee, who sufrers from hydrocephalus and must have regular treatments to stay alive. had been in the care or Ms. Finkle while her mother Cathv Cochran of Hawthorne took a weekend trip to Las Vegas. Nishan Bagdaasarian, who was related to Sasaounian by m arrlage and who -like Sassounian -came to the United States from Lebanon flve years ago, waa found dead Sunday In a Redondo Beach apartment. Generator cawe of Amtrak blaze Kidnapper given maxinwm •entence HAYWARD (AP) -A juqe - frustrated by a law that llm!ted his sentencin1 power Wednesday eave convicted kidnapper Kenneth Parnell a maximum 20 months in priaoo for abducting Steven Stayner, who then lived with Parnell for seven years. California's community property law generally holds that retirement benefits earned during employment durin1 the marriage are community property and may be divided as such in a divorce case. Career sailor on final voyage SANTA BARBARA (AP> A bout 20 passengers from one car of an Amtrak train were evacuated safely after a small rire broke out in a battery compartment, officials said. ''This is not in keeping with what the court feels ia an appropriate term, but it ls ln complying with the law required," Alameda Superior Court Judge M.O. Sabraw said. But a 1981 U.S. Supreme Court case held that military retirement benefits belonged to the military person alone and could not be community property. Sea-going lifetime filled with wild adventures, shipwrecks CalifQJ'nia is one of ei1ht states that have community property laws, which state that everything acquired by tbe couple during a blarriage belongs to both. "This court decision has wreaked havoc with our community property law," said McAlister. "Property law and domestic relations law should be regulated by the states, not the federal government.'' HALF MOON BAY (AP> - Memorial services were held Wednesday for Peter E . Odeen, whose life on the seas was spiced with shipwrecks and other wild adventures. Odeen died Sunday after being ill for two months. The first ship the career sailor worked for pay was a Finnish three-masted bark bound for New Brunswick. He had left a Stockholm higb school and signed on as a deckhand. The ship struck an iceberg, but reached shore. A few weeks later, he was knocked into the sea and nearly perished m a @felido mighty tide off the Canadian coast. The rest of his sea-eoing IHe was also hair-raising. lfe made Alaskan salmon runs. He served as boatswajn aboard a steamer \Vorkersentenced LOS ANGELES CAP> --A Superior Court judge has fined Jean Mulligan SS,000 and placed her on three years' probation after she pleaded guilty to conspiracy in forging recall petitions against former Los Angeles Board of Education President Howard Miller. that sank after it was rammed The Amtrak Streamliner, by another steamer off Port headed north from San Diego on Townsend, wash. Wednesday, had names coming While captain of a boat, he from the seventh of it.a eight discovered the body of his cars as it pulled into the Santa engineer, who was murdered. Barbara station, but firemen Eventually he became port doused the fire within minutes, captain in New York for a officials said. subsidiary of Alcoa Steamship. Amtrak officials said the fire He later supervised the transfer apparently was caused when a of 50 Liberty ships into service. generator malfunction caused He also was a lieutenant an electrical overload. commander m the U.S. NavaJ Aasaulted oirl Reserve. e .. Four years before his loaea Court bid retirement, in 1955, he visited Sweden The ferryboat on which SAN FRANCISCO CAP > -A Foundation help• in atonn damage SAN RAFAEL CAP> -Marin Countv received a major aulat its its efforts to cope with the devastatlna Jan. 3-5 storm when the San Francisco Found&~ on Wednesday offered it $~ million to match $15 million in federal funds. 1 The combined $20 million. would pay for about half the damage to the county's roads, levees and other public property. he was a passenger sank. girl who was attacked brutally ~~~~_____;_--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ is now serving LDll~b, Dinner & fAdtails for reservations : 675-r.,os J. Ample Parking at 2900 Newp0rt Blvd. tcorner 0( 2!kh Ind Newport &Ivel i Newport Beach :::..--,,:::: ~ ethebusto Tahiti next.year. . a. 1HI AlllY SCHOOL A Cattlollc Boarding High Schoo4 for boys. CAMP HOLY CIOSS / A Summer c.rnp for boys 9 to 14 ye.,. old. ' Conducted by the Benedictine Monks of Cdorado in Southern Rockies. Country En- vkooment near ski areas. c ... ,. ....... ,.s..ct••• ............ tt.r...s. , ....... c., .. S $ tlwd ..... •Al ..... ACUJhd flirw. cl ...... .. DlllCTC>a Oii ADMISSIOMS THI AlllY SCHOOL ' IOI Jll . C.AMOt' CnY, COLOUDO 11212 "-r. lJOJI Z7M'3 I -oa-........................ .,......, ... MIWPOIT IMCH . l7' 4J 960.Zf 41 Annual Clearance Sale SaviRB• From 20. '!Oo/c Decorative Hardware By .AMCO .~\~DEBS Sl!ppl,I' Sjl«Wlzbw In Uw coordination ol IM decontlt't IMrdwan for .fOfll' pro,}«t. lliillllled bardware f-: . y DOORS, 8A:IlJ., ~~HEN, • BARS, CABtNWf AN~. _ ... B 111 Ae'CUSORIES (714) .64~4184 a..~ ... _ Wouldn't it be nice to have an extra $3,000 next year so you can take that dream vacation you've always wanted? Well, it's possible. Because that's how much you could save in just one year by riding the OCTD bus to work each day. Here's how: Most of us think the main expense of operating a car is the high price of gasoline. But there are many hidden costs that quickly add up. Like depre- ciation, maintenance, insur- ance, even parking charges. In our area, that totals more than $13 per day. And that's for a car driven only 20 miles round trip to work. The bus costs just 7 5¢ during morning and evening rush hours and 60¢ at all other times. And we offer the option of either taking one of our regular routes that cover Orange County, or our express routes specifically planned around l~ge I employment centers. (Fare on express routes is $1.50.) 'lb help make planning your trip on the bus conve- nient, we offer a free Ride Guide, which most major em- ployers have available, or you can call OCTD at 636-RIDE for a copy and a personalired route schedule that fits your specific transportation needs. And, since 75% of the Orange County population lives within 3-blocks of a bus stop, it's very convenient. So take a ride t.o work on the best bargain around town. And have a vacation on us. Cost of operating a car for one year. Daily Round trip miles 20 30 40 50 Standard Car $3392 $3896 $3999 $4804 Compact Car $3309 $3594 $3880 $4188 Source: Runzheimer and Company, Inc. Costs are as of August 1, 1981. 636-llDE I I I ~·· Orange Cout DAILY ~11..0T/Thurtday, February 4, 1982 ,, 'Familiar faces back ·in HB election race • The upcoming e lection in 1 Huntington Beach promises to be 1 colorful and unusual largely because of the resurfacing of two familiar faces. Former City Administrator Bud Belsito and former City Attorney Don Bonfa say they're throwing their hats into the ring Belsito says he wants lo join the City Council, the same group that fired him on a 5-2 vote in August 1980. If elected to City Council . Belsito says he would offer a working knowledge of city government, but all four of the incumbents up for re-election voted to fire him for an alleged "lack of leadership, .. Belsito's firing came in the wake of nepotism charges that ttiree of his relatives daughter. daughter-in-law and nephew were employed by the city's job-training program in violation of federal regulations. A county audit still maintains the city must repay $5,743 earned by Belsito's relatives in the Comprehensive Employment and Training Act <CETAl program Belsito says he 'll run a ··positive" campaign without a backlash of criticism for the incumbents who fired him Bonf a was city attorney for 12 years and says he wants his old job back. He was soundly defeated in the 1978 election by current incumbent Gail Hutton In 1977. Bonfa made headlines by getting into a physical altercation with a deputy city attorney in City Hall Add to this 10 City Council candidates. including incumbent John Thomas who's suing the c ity because he believes votes were incorrectly counted in 1980. and it promises to b.: an Interesting election Revision justified The Fountain Valley City Council has given its preliminary approval to a revision in the city's campaign contribution law. Cu rre ntly. anyone who d o nates $10 or m ore to a campaign must be identified in the required financial statements. The proposed change would require such ide ntification only for those donating more than $50 to a candidate. The revision was approved Tuesday and faces a required second reading next Tuesday If adopted at that time, the change would take effect immediately Councilman Eugene Van Dask. who proposed the revision. said candidates are now saddled with too much paperwork identifying small donat1 on!'>, which may include tickets to a candidate's fund-raising event He said it 1s unlikely donors could buy much influence for such· small contributions. Thus, the change appears to be justified. Fountain Valley's $50 anonymous donation limit will still be more strict than the $100 limit designated by state law ln fact. some neighboring cities such as Costa Mesa, Irvine and Laguna Beach have no local limit and adhere to that state figure. Some reservations have been expressed regarding the timing of the campaign law change. coming as cand idates are gearing up for the April 13 Citv Council election. Although it is general!) undesirable to revise campaign iaw so ciose to an eieciion. the current change should have little impact other than lo reduce some paperwork for candidates Hearing may end debate The Edison High School football team in Huntington Beach has become the powerhouse squad of Orange County in recent years. winning 32 of 33 games and two of the last . three Cl F Big Five championships. Much credit for the team's success has gone to the coaching sta ff. But there have been rumblings of illegal recruitment of athletes from other schools. The allegations have never been substantiated. Edison head coach Bill Workman denies the1 charges . He says transfer athletes come to Ed ison because they hear of the good football program. Star transfer athletes began appearing at Edison in 1978 when Mike Dotterer transferred from another district . Later, running backs Kerwin Bell and hi s brother Dino transferred from another city to Edison High School. Last year. several top players began their careers at other high schools -mcluding Chatsworth, Fontana and Huntington Beach -but transferred to Edison. ,,. . Such transfers have added fuel to allegations of recruiting. Last November. an anon ymous 11-page letter was mailed to various news media. school district officials and California Inter-scholastic Federation (CIF> authorities charging that Edison coaches had recruited athletes a nd given them favorable grade changes. CIF .officials ordered trustees of the Huntington Beach Union High School D1str1ct to investigate the letter's charges. Now school trustees have taken lbe wise step of bringing in an administrative law judge to conduct an independe nt hearing on t he matter. He will have power to subpoena witnesses and have !hem testify under oath. The hearing wi II be un- comfortable for everyone - the school district, the school. the coaches, certainly the student athletes who will be involved. and the community. The impaneling or such a hearing certainly does not imply that the charges are valid. But it 1s the only way to deal fairly and finally with this festering issue. Opi nions ~pressed in the space above are those of the Daily Piiot. Other views ex-pressed oo tnrs page are tnose ot tneir autnors and artists Reader comment is invrt ed. Address ThP Daily Prlot, P 0 Box tS60, Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone 17 141 642·4321. L.M. Boyd I Quake warning The Japanese back in tm noticed that catfilh suddenly became lively rl8bt before an earthquake. Tbe Cblnese in lt'7S toot seriOUlly tbe yelpin1 of clop, 1wfacin1 of makes, racin1 of ratl and wak1nc of chickens lo the ntaht to evacuate teoa of tboua&Dds of people in time to save tbeui from tbe devutattnt Halcbena quake. VlrtuaJly all the animals acted up at Karine World/ Mrtca USA tn Redwood Clty, t.be nltbl before tbe 5-•Ricbter acaJe tnmor lbereabluta ht tm. llQJ spee1allata DOW ~ that tuat about ev.,. aah:nal 1pedn, except man, can foretell Urthquakea. • Bt11eat beut evu to watt the ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat earth -the uJtrasaurus -had two brains, one in lta head and one in lts behind. What killed it off. [presume, were committee decisions. Our Lanluaae man ls still lr>'in& to come up with the word with letters that can be uransed to make the most otbeT worda. "Spart" aeema to be a j>!dtY fair candidate. Spear. Pean. Pane. Par•. Rapes, Reaps. Apers. T'be u111et1 aoaa. Lobster Tbermidor was named by Napoleon after the month In which be was firtl served sald diab. The French calendar of that time listed tt as the eleven<h month from July 19 to Auaust 11. T"oma1 P. Hatey Publlsner ~~A.~lne Editor B•rtNlr• Krelbtc" Editorial Pege Editor 'Integrity' panel data probed WASHINGTON The President's Council on Integrity and Efficiency. of all things , is the target o r a con·gressional investigation. Its integrity and efficiency have been called into question. The council was formed with great fanfare by President Reagan to coord inate the efforts or the 'government's inspectors general -the "junkyard dogs" the administration sicced on crooks and incompetents in the federal bureaucracy. It is made up of the IGs themselves, plus additional representatives from the far corners or the administration. The man in charge is Edwin Harper. No 2 man in t he Office of Management and Budget. THE PRESIDENT himself appeared in the White House press room last December to express his personal delight with the council's work "I promised we'd follow every lead, root out every incompetent and prosecute every crook that we found cheating," Reagan said . "Thal .Pledge has been kept " Indeed, the council's first two reports depicted a triumphant campaign against the pernirinu~ and the profligate. As tonishing increases in the percentage or indictments, convictions and recoveries during the previous six months were claimed. The number of telephone tips had nearly doubled. according to the reports. The statistics were so astonish.Ing, in fact, that they aroused the suspicion or Rep. John Dingell, 0 -Mich., the professional skeptic who chairs the House Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations. On Dec. 22, Dingell sent a confidential letter to Comptroller JICI INDllSIN General Charles A. Bowser, a.slang that he set the General Accounting Office's own junkyard dogs loose on the council. My associate Lucette Lagnado has seen the letter. "l am concerned t hat the quantitative data contained in the First and Second Summary Reports and the fact sheets accompanying such reports may not reflect adequately the performance of the Offices of Inspector General." Dingell wrote. He asked that the GAO "determine the accuracy or this data so that Congress gives it appropriate weight when evaluating the performance or the IG Offices and in allocating budgetary and personnel resources lo such Offices." Here are some or the specific points that Dingell asked the GAO t.o look into: The possibility that the statistics were mistakenly or knowingly inllated by "double counting" when more than one agency's IG worked on the same case. Dingell wants to know if the results claim ed by each IG on a particular joint investigation were combined as they should have been, or were added together as· if they were separate cases. -THE LACK OF hard data on which the glowing percentages were based. Dingell noted that the fact sheet accompanying the second report cl a 1 med "a 46 percent increase in recoveries. a 59 percent increase in indictments and a 28 percent increase in convictions over the past six months." But the congressman complained : "Un fo rtunat ely , o n e can not independently verify these percentage increase figures " The second report's claim that "phoned-in lips of possible wrongdoing were up 80 percent" over the previous six months. Dingell wants to see some documentation to support Uus assertion Footnote. A spokeswoman for Loe OMB said: "The council welcomes the GAO audit." She added that, if anything, the council erred on the side of caution, and its figures were "too conservative ·· Legislation can't f orCe responsibility To the Editor I would like lo express my view on your Jan. 22 editorial on "Bill Defeat CosUy." First I would like to thank you for your ability to observe. You definitely should have doubts about the concept or requiring a refundable deposit on drink containers. The MAILBOX environmentalists have once again missed the important fact: Individuals have to be responsible -you can't legislate responsibilil~ The individuals who litter will still «tter -an act of legislation certainly will not deter these people. YOUR POINT is well taken on the cost. However. we the consumers in addition to paying the deposit will even pay more if this legislation is enacted Who do you t hink will pay for all the additional handling or these containers? The consumer! I suggest that we take a hard look al the states which already have this law -they are experiencing storage, handling, health hazards and are only taking care of 15 percent to 17 percent of the litter problem. Educate the people, encourage the recyclers and each of us can set good examples and not litter DOLLY STOKES Gestapo tactics To the Editor. Re· Sen. John G. Schmitz vs Senate Rules Committee. The issue in this case ls not a matter of what Sen. Schm itz said or didn't say. The big Issue is that Sen. Schmitz waa not given a fair bearing by an impartial group, as is usually accorded to even common criminals. U Gestapo tactics can be used by the state Senate to "purge" themselves of opposition, with no consideration given to the constituents who voted the politician Into omce, the~ this state is ln biC trouble. Terms s uch as "unusual" and "unprecedented" have been used in articles to describe this action, Sen. Schmit& was stripped of the following important poslUons..a.r the Senate Rules Committee: Cbalrmansbip of t he CoruJtitut.lonal Amendmentl Committee, v ice chairman of the Industrial Re1ations Committee and hh m embership tn the advhory Commiulon on the Status ol Women. Thia l• a pretty steep penally for reapondlo1 n t81ll•ely to the bum Ulatln1 tncldent of feminl1t attorney Gloria Allred'• publicly throwlna 1 chutity belt at the Senator. She set the trap and he tell Into ltl But Obert¥ and~':'Uce decrea thlt th1f blatant viola of clvll Ubtrtla :"hould not go unchallenged! Politicians or ordinary citizens should not be silenced and intimidated if we are guaranteed freedom of speech under the Constitution. All viewpoints deserve to be heard. otherwise are we no different from Communist countries' JACQUILINE STUBBINS Precious lettuce To the Editor: I had to say this . . . signs of the times. I really don't know what is more expensive. a head of lettuce or a stack of dollar bills. Al a dollar a head I expect lo see an engraving of George Washington on the next head I buy Perhaps that kindly old father or our country looking up at me with those big sad eyes will do something to control my diet. or course I don't enjoy eating alone. I wonder what George would like -house dressing, Roquefort, blue or Thousand Island dressing? Finally I was wondering what kind or dog eats lettuce? l saw a lady ask for a doggy bag and then stuffing It with her uneaten salad. Oh well, as my daughter would say, "let us" get onto something else' JAMES DELMONTE Downtown planning To the Editor: ll 's possible to believe untrue statements if you don't have sufficient background information. Area residents and many others prefer developme nt in downtown Huntington Beach to be compatible with and not adversely impact nearby areas Some for intense development resort to untrue statements against us who are fo r reasonable development. Two such false statements are: 1. Those against building high-rises downtown don't want anything at all done downtown. They want the an!a to rem aln blighted 2. The reason nothing's happened downtown is that they weren't given the height and inteMity they wanl. JN A RECENT survey ot 500 people, one of the questions waa: Do you favor redevelOPment downtown? 1be per~nt of yea answers In alp code 92848 (downtown and aurroundina area) were 95 (men), 80 cwomen). The ya answers in the other three Huntinston Beach tip • l.tlttra from r~eri orf' ~!com• TM right lo condmsr lelteri to fir IJ)OCt or thmlnott lit>tl 13 rurrvtd Lftrtrs of 300 word• or leu wtll be gttlfft prt/frtnef All letlert mu.rt mcludt lignoturt ond ma.Umg address but nomn mo11 bf wU~ld Oft rt· quttt If tuf/lcatnt rto1on 11 oppor,,.r. P~t"J will not be publf11ted. L.Att~• ma11 be tcltphoned to 642-608f. Nom• and plaont numbfr o/ ''" contnbut9r mu.at be ~""' for ocn/lcahora purpout code areas were 60/45, 85/50 and 75/'JIJ. This clearly indicates that we closest to the downtown are the most concerned about cleaning that m ess op My letters to the editor have strong))( urged that something be done about downtown and supported efforts in that direction Now let's consider the intensity or development. The October 1976 Environmental Impact Report < EIR ) used market potential information from Urban Projects Inc. From EIR page 61. The 1990 market potential is 153,000 square reet or commercial space: the supply under high intensity is 666,000 square feet Cover four times the demand>. The low intensity supply also e xceeds market potential < EIR page 69). Obviously Councilman MacAJlister's s tat e ment th at , "It 's more economically feasible to go six stories" is incorrect. The above market potential figures may n<>w be less because of the nearby new Newland Center. Also a 10-20 acre mini-theme park (small Knott's or DisneylandJ is no-longer considered. nor the intensive promotion of tourist trade. If the new Newland Center finds one story is enoug h , s houldn 't t hree stories be adequate for downtown? A 61-page package is available for further information on this and related a rea issues (536-3577). It's better to comment now so that a meaningful exchange can take place. If someone holds off until it's too late for us to respond in a timely manner, we might conclude that he doesn't want his comments evaluated for correctness. LEONARD WRIGHT 'Vgly' award? To the Editor. Hit ls the aim of the powers that-be in Huntington Beach to win the "Most Ugly" eward for erection of the chain link fence on the state beach, lhen their aim Is accomplished. They wln the award hands down. Now let us, as cltizens, try to 1et them to remove it. ROBERT E. SCHMITZ, M.D. ' • llllJ Plllt THURSDAY, FEB.,, 1982 CAVALCADE 82 llllll lllCH/IDITH COllT TELEVISION 84 STOCKS 87 Anthony Hopkins portrays the Hunchback of Notre Dame in television remake of Victor Hugo classic. See Rage 84. D 0 Laguna declares war on coastline oil leasing The City of La1un• Beach bu declared war on proposed oil and 1as leaaea off the city's coasUine and officials plan to use letters from citizens as ammunition. ,. City council members unanimously approved sendin1. a press release to newspapers ur11ln1 Lagunans to write to a ta..riety of state offices and legislators seeking deletion of Council . hopefuls up by2 The field of candidates seeking three seats on tbe Laguna Beach City Council April 13 has grown to 10, with two more residents taking out nomination papers. Beth Leeds, who works at Victoriana Airlooms in Laguna Canyon took out papers, as did Paul Christiansen. owner of the Hotel California in town. They join candidates Ricky Slater, a church employee; Pat Barry, Boys Club director: Kelly Boy,d, incumbent councilman; John Gabriels, a civic activist; Dan Kenney, director of pharmacy services; Bobbie Minkin. homeowner association officer ; Ron Williams , a real estate developer; and Bob Gentry, UC Irvine administrator. To date, only Mrs. Minkin, Kenney and Slater have returned nomination papers each containing the signatures of 20 registered Lagunans. Incumbent William Wilcoxen has said he will not seek a four year term on the council, and incumbe.,t Hcw:?rd Dawson l)~s indicated he ''most likely .. will not run again. However, incumbent Boyd uid he would be filing his completed papers today. which means the remaining candidates have until next Tuesday to return their papers. -HB doctor will direct health agency Huntington Beach resident Dr. Charles Kerns has been named to head Orange County government's new Health Care Agency. which bas a $60 mill.ion annual budget and about 1,.200 employees. Kerns, 34, was appointed Wednesday by the County Board of Supervisors over about 100 appUcants who were recruited nationwide. A clinical psychologist who joined the county in 1976, Kerns was the interim assistant director of mental health in the county's Human Services Agency. The health care position was created when county supervisors voted last November to split the giant Human Services Agency into two smaller agencies. Kerns' Health Care Agency will administer public health. programs. mental health programs and medical r.rograms which serve the ndigent. Unidentified man killed by car in El TorQ A man the California Highway Patrol ls deacribine as a probable transient died early today after be was struck by a car ,whlle walldng in the vehicle lane of El Toro Road In Lake Forest. Officer Dick Van Cott said the' man, who was carrylne no Identification, was ttruck at about 1:05 a.m . by a vehicle driven by Frank Griffo, :n. of TrabucoC~. I • The stricken pedeatrian wu \aken to Mission Community HospltaJ, wheN be died at 3:516 p. m .• Van Cott aaid. He sai~ the man, about 50, wu walkini lD the w..ibouncl tratnc lane When he wublt. Van Cott uld Griffo wat travellal at about 15 mpb at the llm• ol the accident. The uaJdenUllild me II ~crtbed u ..... 5.f .... ~ pcNJkla. • At tie-time ol hi. death,· be ,, .. -~. brOWft •ult coet? P'MD ......... &Dd lbli'l, w ~eeked puu, Vu CoU 1aJd • • tracts off1bore for sale. The U.S. has issued a notice of sale of oil and 1u leHe1 ln the outer continental shelf, in an area encompauin1 892,000 acres in Southern CaU!ornia. Several of those trac'ts proposed in the lease sale would be off Laguna's coastline. Newport Beach is also on record opposing the lease sale, but. to date, bas launched no SAN JOAQUIN HILLS TRANSPORTATION CORRIDOR active campalan to st.op the sale off that city's shore. Concern• ralaed by local officials include the vllual bllaht they say would be lm~ed on coastal residents and visitors, with oil rtp located aa cloee u three miles off the sand. And, with Laguna's thou.sands of residents who live on billaldea with unobstructed views of the ocean, the wisi&bUy riaa would CORRIDOR PLAN Map indicates special lanes for mass transit in new freeway proposed from Corona del Mar to San Juan Capistrano. Freeway to have mass transit lane B~ GLENNSC01T Of .... Deity Nie .... A new freeway throueb the San Joaquin Hills linking Corona del Mar with San Juan Capistrano will include special lanes in the median for a mass transit system, according to the lat est Orange County government plans. The lanes will have their own on and off ramps and will be inaccessible to other vehicles. said Herbert Nakasone, chief of public works planning for the Environmental Management Agenc~. LB schools off er pay bike of 5 percent By JOHN NEEDHAM Of .... 0.-., ~ s- Lag~ Beach Un ified School District trustees plan to offer district teachers. speech therapists and counselors a S percent pay raise tonight. In materials distributed by the district, figures show about 2 percent of the district salary offer coming in the form of a one-time cash settlement from private funds donated by the Laguna Beach Education Foundation. Laguna School Superintendent Bob San~his said a 3 percen~ salary increase would be included on the schoo l employees· permanent salary schedule for the 1982-83 school year. The district•s initial offer falls far below proposals by the two bargaining units representing certificated employees in Laguna schools. Teachers are asking that their salaries be increased acrcsa the board to the mean averaee of salary schedules for all other unified school districts in Orange County in the 1982-83 school year. Both teacher" and school oflicla.la have declined to release what their estimates are. However ,. district adm lnistraton say lbe a.mount would be much hi1her than the S percent otter. Tbe Laguna Beach Per'IOClDel and Guidance Auociatlon, which repre1enl1 1peech therapist.I, counaelor1, nunes and the dbU'lct paycbolotltt, hu aaked for an 11.7 percent lncreue for 111182..U. The barsalnlna unit HP the increue doesn't renect tb• total 29.S percent 1011 ltl HrDiDJ power due to inflatJoa from W75 to 1.112. • Tb•-LaJUDI BHcb 1cbo0l boll'd wUI meet at dt1trict budquarten. UD Blumoillt St.1 at7:10p.m:1 • 1 They probably will be built at lbe same elevation aa the freeway to serve as a busway, be said, although a li1bt rail system also will be considered. The County Board of Supervisors concurred t.bi.s week with the agency's proposal to locate mass transit system in the middle of the freeway rather than along a shoulder. "Nowadays, when you do future freeway planning, you are required to look into future guideways ," Nakasone explained. The freeway's first use, however, will be for cars. The majority of the 14 -mile thoroughfare estimated lo cost $250 million will have eight lanes, he said. although some sections will have six lanes. The freeway is designed to. begin at MacArthur Boulevard where the exten s ion of the Corona del Mar Freeway ends. It will cross Irvine Company property until it reaches Laguna Canyon Road, then will continue on properly owned almost exclusively by other large development corporations until it links with the San Diego Freeway at Averyll'arkway just north of San Juan Capistrano. EMA Director Murray Storm told the supervisors lo a letter this week that "first priority" in constructing the freewal will be given the portion east o Laguna Canyon be cause land development is expected to occur faster there than on Irvine Company land. To speed up the planning process. the land developers, including the •Aliso Viejo Co .. have hired Gruen Associates to head a coalition of consulting firms in preparing initial engineering studies. An .exact centerline for the freewa y is expected to be released soon, sources say. N akuooe said small segments of the freeway already have been iraded at Aliso Viejo. Land dedicatiQn and 1radin1 for the freeway has been a condition aet by the county government tor approvio11 adjacent land for development. The Irvine Company alJo ii expected to PftP•re paru of tbe freeway when It buUd.a Pellcan HUll Road over the coastal hUb to Paclftc Cout HJ•bway u a condition for 1ubdlvldln1· aectlona of lt.1 vahtable Irvine Cont property, Nuuone 1'1d. Despite the prellmJaary work, co:;x officials aUU haven't af oo a.ow to ftn~ much o the pavlnt for tbe freeway, althoup the development ftrml are expected to participate buvUy. Nalluont H.ld It IWl ii too eatl1 to pndlet when the lnew11 milbl be ID GP9r•Uae. 1 ''1'bat rMll.ro, itepedl OD bow qulckl1 diav mat oeeura.-· .b• •aid.: .• be visible for miles. In addition. the city has concerns about the potential for oil spllla, which could dama1e or destroy the cit~"s many tide pools and fish and fowl habitat. A spill could alao devastate an underwater ecolo1ic.al reserve deal1nated by the state off Laauna. Laauna Beach has established five oceanfront parka totaling nearly 15 acres which serve up to 3 million visitors each year. A substantial spill could affect revenues derived from those tourists and visitors, lbe City Council said. Specifically, the city is urging citizens to write to the state's Office of Planning and Research, the state Coastal Com mission , S~ns . Alan Cranston and S J. Hayakawa and Rep. Robert Badbam. To obta.ln addresses for the above mentioned a1encies and lawmakeri, residents are uried to call the City Clerk'• office at 497·3311. Gov. Brown hu two months In which to comment on the size, &.cation and ti.mine of the leue proposal. Not as fat as it seems Spending caution urged despite bountiful Laguna 'Windfall By STEVE MITCHELL Of ... o.I., ........... On the surface, Laguna Beach appears to be in fat city. with a mid-year budget update showing unanticipated revenue increases of $632,000. But, warns City Manager Ken Frank, the city shouldn't be lulled into spending the windfall, because things probably will change in another six months. The unexpected cash came from several sources, including property tax revenues Cup $223,000) sales tax, <up $50,000) bed tax, (up $60 ,000) and earnings on investments (up $358,000). The only drop came in municipal fines, $59,000 less than anticipated. But Frank says the financial picture in the final half of the fiscal year probably won't be so rosy. FQr one thing , investment earnings are expected to decline s ubstantially due to drops in interest rates. Property tax revenues also are expected to dip because of the slowdown in home sales due to high interest rates on mortgages. In addition, the city expects to incur hi~h costs for storm drain improvements. Costs also are. expected to increase on other projecU; that have been ignored due to budget constraints. Added to these deficits are expected cuts in stale money to Laguna Beach <a preliminary indication shows the city receiving about $90,000 less in the next fiscal year.) And federal revenue sharing funds might not be continued - which means the city would not receive the annual $135,000 It now receives each year. Frank also sought council approval for several ex penditures. including increasing the City Attorney's budget by $12,000, and adding $24,500 to the fire department budget for additional firefighters and equipment. The city manager also has received council endorsement for $7,100 for his office in salary increases. and $1 ,000 for materials for the City Council budget The mid -year windfall prompted the City Council to appro..,e transfer of $500,000 from the reserve account to the caojtal improvements fund with that money tabbed for storm drain improvements and other one-time improvements. .,...., ""A9fll .... CAUTIOUS -Laguna Beach City Manager Ken Frank warns against spending anticipated windfall funds. The budget adjustment still leaves $870,400 in the reserve account, or aiJoul. lG ve•~t c! the total general fund, as required by city codes. Ai1ist Irving Manoir, 91, dies Coast painter lived in Corona del Mar since 1939 Irving Manoir, an artist whose life spanned nine decades · and two continents, died early Tuesday in his Corona del Mar home at the age of 91. Manoir and bis wife, Hazel, first came to Orange County in 1929, where they established a studio and gallery in Fairywood Canyon of Laguna Beach. Aller several years abroad in Europe and a brief stay in Chicago, they took up permanent residence in Corona del Mar in 1939. He was born in Chicago in 1891 and took his first job as an artist in the engraving department of Montgomery Ward department sto re . Frustrated by commercial art, Manoir enrolled in the Chicago Institute of Art and was graduated three years later. He took a leaching position at the institute shortly after graudation, and in 1918 married one of his pupils, Hazel Legg. Manoir's style as an artist was influenced by the painters he met on his travels -Pablo Picabia in St. Tropez, Diego Rivera in Acapulco -among them. Manoir believed that modern art "was a struggle DIES Artist Irving Manoir of Corona del Mar is dead at 91 against the tyranny of the object, .. and in his work he tried to capture his own emotions regarding the subject matt.er as well as the subject itself. He enjoyed commercial success from the early. 30s oo, offering much or bis work for sale through the Marshall Field & Company Galleries of Chicago. Manoir's work was exhibited at the Paris Salon of 1930 and at the Salon Autome of Paris a year later. His m06t praised work, "Aspen and Snow." was recently sold by a Houston gaUery for $30,000. During the last years of his life. Manoir worked less with p8lnls and more with an ''enamel .. process he 10vented m his studio. The substance, nicknamed Rionam-el (his name •spelled backwards>. sets to rem arlnble hardness and smoothness without the.u.se of a kiln. Using handmade molds.· Manoir would cast the Rionam-el in various shapes and later paint them. Mr Manoir is survived by hia widow, Hazel; the couple bad no children. His ashes will be ·buried in Coldwater. Mlcblpn, later this week, and no servicea will be held. Riley opposes airline boosts Supervisor. notifies carriers he won't SUTJPOrl more flights By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHJ. Of .. Delty .......... Commercial airlines wantine to either increase or initiate service al John Wayne Airport are drawing opposition from Orange County Supervisor Thomas Riley. The aupervi5or. whose district includes the airport, has sent letters to three of four carriers involved which su11eat Riley will not support flight level lncreua. ID two of the lettera, the eupervilOr A.id the airlines were l1norins ''lar11er community ioala" to reduce nolee lmpacta on airport.area reeldent.I by ~ ~ level~creuee. i'ac1nc Soatbwe1t Airllnet, •bJcb now operatee two flilbU d.aUJ h'om Oran .. County to tbe San 1'randaco Bay area, bu aald It f.Dteodl to operate lb adcUUaiD&I ftllbU by Jwt.e 1. .,.....,, AlrliMl...i..:.:wMda llO# """' Sell Lat \,"ft.J .,.. two ~lllbt• d•U1 from Oran1• County, wants two more departures. Pboenix·based America West Airlines, a new carrier not now serving Orange County. wants to begin dally service from John Wayne to its home city with four nighta. And, Continental Airline•, also a newcomer, wants four fl1abtao daily. Two rughta, a~conlinl to the airline, would 10 to Denver and two to Houston. Bot.b routes would involve lntermedlate· stops. Continental'• roqueat waa dlatttrc!l from the ottMrs In that ·the" carrier want.a to use luaor and beavter BoelnJ 72'1 Jetllnerl. · "9eln1 7271 never bne been a~l'Oved for, UM al .fobn Wayne Airport. Alrllnee are requ.lNCI to fly either DC·t Super 101, oc-1.s. or BoeiQa m1. ln a reply lett.r to PSA, IUley uld t.be airline'• plan• "will'· lead PSA and th• count1 ot Ora111e not down a path o( benetlclal cooptraUon lD t.be tutve, Iii I bllCl bol*i but -8 Ulat tudl to an acrim...._ NlaUmwhlp." ft "I would coun~el that you adopt a greater level of cooperation with the Ora.n1e County Board of Supervbon," Riley said in a letter in response to WHtem's proposal to add two ru1hts. He sald any consideration of increaaln1 Western '1 fll1bt .alloeatlons would be done .. oYer ·my at.rm~ objectiolll.' · In the letter to CooUneatal, RHe1 utd, .. Your reqae•t hardly abowa an appredatiae for a Board of S\ll)enllorl ~ lJ 1trtvtna to devel01> H all'DCllt 'plan that ii in kffpln1 wttb 1•r1er co~ll)unlt)' 1oata.:• , Riley 1w DOl rMpoeded to tlM oAmertc~ West letter. Atr'POltialdla baw-c~ Ulel'ti... WOUid be S1 Jet ...... per ct., from UM aar,ort tr tM elrllnet' ~ were lfllllMd. Curr•DtlT tlt•r• are U departu.ru aathorlnd .....,. COUD\y ~ replaUQM. Otti•~ alrllDH ai• U.elr ewttn(_ aDlcatiw are AlrCa4' 11.1,:-~pabUc, 11.1, ••• ~tW,two. . ... • Orange C091t IWLY PILOTIThursdey, February 4, 1982 L . NY E COMPO ITE TRANSACTIONS Q\IOUllOllt\ IN(A.UIJI la A OU Ole T•I "CW 'l'O•C MIOWltT, PA.(IPIC. PIW IOtTOllt 01 f801T A .. 0 CIN(llUtaTI tTO<S i ACMA ... U AllO alflOeTIO I Y TMI ••UO A"D INaT11tU S•I•• ~•I p [ -, .... ("' '411., ,..., W•• !Ml P II Nft Cltv C"' ,.._II -C:.... 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(.\ f:~l111C1 I~ : I~ m: ~ o011M I 4 1t 144-\Ii Income lo•• narr"OWa By The As~lated Press Continental Airlines said its loss narrowed to $13.4 million ln the ft.Dal three months of 1981 compared with a $15.l milJjon deficit a year earlier, but it still suffered its worst year ever But Piedmont Aviation Inc., a regional carrier 11erving 80 cities in 16 states, reported that proflta leaped 79 percent in the fourth quarter and more than doubled lo,$32.5 million in 1981. Piedmont wu an exception to a series or dismal fourth-quarter earninp reports that included a $29.4 million Jou by Eutern Airlines, a $46.9 mUUon loss from Trans World Airways, a $44.7 million IOll by Delta Air Lloe1 and a $125.2 mllltoo operatln1 loss by Pan American World Alrwa.ya. Siwnal •a~• increaH SAN DIEGO <AP> -TM Sienal Companies, lnc., bas rePorttd • 12 percent lncreue 1A aales and Income for 1911, prindpall111 the result of a record fou.rtb quut.er in both. ln Lbe fourth quarter, net l.MOme was ~ at •1 mUUoa or '12 cenu per share, compared to '5J,.1 mUllon or '10 cents in the aame period of Ul80. Fo~t N. Shumwa1, ebaJnn.an and chief uecuUve olflcer, NJd Del lncome fOll 1181 wu •H m1llioD or a.• per lhare eom~red ~ •••• million or Sl.83 1han la tm . We no loncer can afford to divide t.be bealt}) care 1yatem lnto those wbo cure, thole who pay aod thole wbo are cared ror. A1 American HolpltaJ AaloelaUoa President J . Alexander Mdl&bon warm, "lt la lime that all participants in the private sector become MCllvely involved In evaluatlna and determinin1 which benefit.a of our hulth care sy1tem we want to keep, which we want to crow and which we fed are no longer cost-effective." The a ppe a I, could not come at a ~ more opportune time. Health care •,. costs b.ave exploded v soaring 12 .Sft[llll PllJfl~'_. percent in 1981 on top ..,_ ... 1_111 ______ ;L...,_r_ of an astounding 15.2 percent in 1980, an all-time record. Our annual apendine of $247.2 bllllon in medical outlays of all kllMb now amounts to 9.4 percent of our total output for goods and services, or an incredible average of $1,067 for every man, woman and child in the United States. To tackle the problem, six national oreanizaUons -the AFL·CIO , Amer1can Hospital Association, American Medical Association, Blue Cross and Blue Shield Associations, Business Roundtable and Health Insurance Association of America -met lo mid-January to endorse the potentials of voluntary coalitions on a local, state and regional basis and to encourage their members' participation in such coalitions. No other segment of our economy has gone through so sharp a rise in recent years as healt.b. care. Estimates are that the per capita cost of medical care will almost triple to $3,057 by 1990, when the nation's medical bill could reach a whopping 11 .5 percent of our output. Much of the mcrease is the price of progress: Technological innovations such as intensive care unit.a and artificial kidney machines have made the treatment of illnesses increasingly effective, but. also more costly. A factor related to the rise in costs is Americans' lengthening IHe span, which has increased the number of America's elderly, wbo are the more prevalent victims of costly. long-term diseases. The quantity, as well as the quality, of health services bas also increased. and hence costs. ' Push.ing up the cost of health care dramatically. too, is the lack of price competition and the fact that most health care biils are paid by health insurers, employers or the government This le~ves few incentives or consumer demands for holdmg down these bills. Yes, there have been payoffs. Most Americans are living longer than ever before. Today, one out of nine Americans -25 million of us -are o.ver 65, or 5 million more than in 1970. And infant mortality is now the !owe.st in our n3tion's h.istort. Yet, other findings point to inequities th~t raise the question of whether the nation la speodtng too much for the health care we get and bow we get it. For instance, although infant mortality is declining, black infants still die at nearly twice the rate of white infants during their first year. And non-whites can expect to live four to five years fewer than whit.es_. It's no surprise that our minorities receive inferior health care. reports a study released by the pretigious Institute of Medicine. Blacks are less likely than whites to see private physicians, the study found, regardless of income or type of insurance - and are twice as likely as wh.ites to visit physicians at clinics or hospital emergency rooms. "Rising costs threaten the ability of communities to preserve the gains made in recent years in making quality care available to all Americans." says Dr David E . Rogers, president of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation AMERICAN LEADERS WHAT STOCKS DID NEW. YORK IA"I Feb. ' • • Adven<ed Oe<ll-Unclleft9td 'Tou•l-New 11'9M Ntw IOWS WKATAMUOO 'oci:!s l1'0 .. ,. .... II o&:J NEW YORK IAPI-s.ie •.• Wed Dtlu -""' < ...... Of ....... ,_. ectlw A~k., 541D<k EU-. 1-lr ...... -Hy .i ,,_,, ttloll JI. w.,,. a JJD,JOO JSv. -rl't NEW vo111°i( (API Fet> J -· o~ Tecomeo.t , .. ,1'00 14~ + ll't. HouOllTr ... JOO "" -" • OcMMPtn ' " -._ -.. I 1'"-0l1 9 .. :1'00 14 •I"> Oorclluo.t n.-I 1"' -'-S.-E .. t tl,100 29'6 + l'to. 'CNl<llr Rft • IS. 100 21'1> -\It "-" eru I U,300 17 , . HelfmMIQ I IOAOO I 14 -•ii. ., 195 •1 J ,. METALS w ........... ~ <••••• 1'·11 "'"" e 0011110, U,5 detlllletleftt U...it<ff'b•~ llet o~ c-• -· o.11¥«.o Tl• 17 ..... -.., w .... ,_, ..... ' ....J AhlM ...... 1t-17c..,lt•POYNl.N.Y. ,, SOY COINS MIW vo)uc '"'' -,.,101 L•t• ........... '1llM. ~ .... .,....,..~ ' =~~~--=.JS,:.:~ ...................... .m.a.. ltJt. -.. ,_.......~.-wr ..... _ ... .. ..... ~-MOlroy-o,NYC_11_._., I "*'"' <--. :· ·~ ~ SILVER ........ , J "·· L Orange Co11t DA.IL Y PILOT/Thuraday. February 4', 1982 Budget cuts threat to school excellence Laguna Beach Unified School District trustees would like to expand course and program offerings for students, but 1t·s painfully clear they won't be getting any extra money to rarry out their goals. School board members went on record last week as favoring the expansion of mathematics, art, reading and writing courses in the district. llowever. the five-member board confined its discussion to changes that can be accomplished without spending any additional money The question of how deeply budget cuts will eat into the academic offerings in the district is an iss ue being raced by trustees. who are finding it increasingly difficult to maintain the existing curriculum. The Laguna Beach Unified School District has a long history of academic achievement, with 80 percent of all high school graduates attending a four year college, univ~rs11 y or community college. In the 1980 81 school year 11 se niors were acceptl'd at Berkeley, one at Princeton. one at Stanford, three at USC. four at Yale. one at Harvard, two at Brown. one at Columbia and one at MIT On the California State Assessment Testing Program. administered annually to au first, third. sixth and 12th graders. Laguna Beach pupils score on an average in the top 10 percent of state scores. In addition , graduating seniors score above the national. western and California averages on· the Scholastic Achievement Tes ts in the verbal and math categories. Whether these ac com plishments cun be main- tained in the face of nsing inflation and yet deeper budget cuts is the challenge facing Laguna 's teachers. school administrators and school board members and, in fact. the community Oil fight launched Laguna Beach this week launched an all-out war to prohibit offshore oil IC'ases proposed off Laguna's coastline The City Council unanimously endorsed a program of encouraging Lagunans to contact Gov Browns office. among others. to oppose proposed oil rigs that \\<Ould be visible from the city and would pose the threat of spills on the coastline The federal governmt>nl has issued a Notice of Sale to Ca lifornia for an ou t t.'r continental shelf oil and gas lease (Sale No 68 1 A number of the tract~ m the lease sale would be located off Laguna Beach. In addition to the visual blight <especially in Laguna Beach where manv homes are located on hillsides> the citv 1s concerned about the threat to 1t~ protected tidal pools and an ecological reserve off the cit~·~ shore. The governor ha::i t" o months in which to evaluate the proposed lease and respond to the federal government. Council membe rs Tuesday ~uggested five departments and legislators whn s hould l.n• barraged with mail oµposing the lease sale Those include the state's Office of Planning and Research. the Coastai ..... u1r11111ssion. Sen Alan tran ston , Sen . S .I Hayakawa and Rep Robert Badham For addresses for the above parties. call the City Clerk at 497 -3311 . Mystery gift welcome Th e re ·s an anonymous philanthropist out there. who seems to be looking out for the welfare of Laguna Beach The city has accepted two checks totalling $5.500 from tht.• mystery donor. which arrived with the stipulation the money be s pent in the po lice and fire departments Whal with the e ffects of Proposition 13. inflation and bad economic times , the mone v comes as a welcome windfall to Laguna Beach. Council members divided up • the c h ecks. with the police department choosing to purchase 19 bullet-proof vests for its officers at a cost of $157 per vest Fire department officials looked at their wish lis t and came up with several ite ms for its $2.500 portion of the money The department will buy \I fiberglass top for the driver and passenger area of one of its firetrucks ln add1t1on thcv "ill purchase spare breathing apparatus tanks . hose nozzles and a tape recorder and bl._nk tapes. Opinions expressed ln the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex- pressed on tn1s page are those 011ne1r au1nors and artists. Reader comment 1s inv1t ed Addres'> The Dally Pilot, P 0 BOJll 1560, Costa Mes.a, CA 92626 Phone 17141 64~·4321 LM. Boyd I Quake warning The Japanese back in 1932 noticed that catfish suddenly became lively right before an earthquake. The Chinese ln 1975 took seriously the yelping of dogs, s urfacing of snakes, racing or rats and waking of chickens in the night lo evacuate tens of thousands of people in time to save them from the devastating Haicheng quake. Virtually all the animals acted up at Marine World/Africa USA in Redwood City, the ni1bt before the 5.9-Ricbttt scale tremor thereabouts in 1979. Many specialists now believe · that jut about every a nimal species, except man, can foretell eartbquakea. Biggest beast' ever to walk the earth -the ultrasaurus -had two braina, one in its head and one In its behind. What killed it oft, I pre!ume, were committee decisions . Women of Swiuerland only woo the rt1bt to vote 10 years •10. But when they IDO'fe, t.bole Swills move swUtly. Recent ~Uon there 11ve Swlu , women lbe. honorable rl&bt to equal pay fof' equal work. Overall oaly 1bout 1.5 perceot of the dead In tbh country are ORANGE COAST lailyPilDI cremated. So how do you explain the remarkable staUsUcs out of Marin County north of San Francisco<> There, 50 percent are cremated. Q . How many eggs does a female alligator lay? A. About 40 maybe 60. They're as big as goose eggs She buries them six inches deep in a mud nest. Did you know an alligator embryo will drown 1f its egg 1s turned over'> More about alligator eggs as demand warrants. Stand by One out or 10 American householders aJmOISt never lock their doors. Our Language man ls still tryinat to come up with tho word with letters t hat can be arranaed to make the most other words. "Spare" seems to be a pretty fair candidate. Spear. Pears. Parse. Pares, Rapes, Reaps. Apera. The list get.s 1001. Lo~r Thennldor was named by Napoleon after lhe month in wbJcb he waa fiTSt served said dish. Tbe French calendar of that time listed It as the eleventh month rrom July 19 to August 17. Thomas P . HilllY Put>llSher l:Mmn.A. MUi'plllne Editor iarblra Krelblch ,Editorial P•ge Editor 'Integrity' panel data probed WASHINGTON The President's Council on Integrity and Efficiency, of all things, is the target of a con_gressional investigation Its integrity and efficiency have been called into question. The council was formed with great fanfare by President Reagan to coordinate the efforts of the government's inspeetors general -the "junkyard dogs" the administration sicced on crooks and incompetents in the federal bureaucracy. It is made up of the lGs themselves. plus additional representatives from the far corners of the administration. The man in charge 1s Edwin Harper, No 2 man in the Office of Management and Budget. T H E PRESIDENT himself appeared 1n the White House press room last December to express his personal delight with the council's work "I promised we'd follow every lead, root out every incompetent and prosecute every crook that we found cheating," Reagan said. "That pledge has been kept." · Indeed, the council's first two reports depicted a triumphant campaign against the pernicious and the profligate. Astonishing increases in the po::Hditage cf tn~~nts, ronv1i:tio!'.S and reroveries during the previous six months were claimed. The number of telephone tips bad nearly doubled, according to the reports. The statistics were so astonishing, in fact, that they aroused the suspicion of Rep. John Dingell , 0 -Mich . the professional skeptic who chairs the House Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations. On Dec. 22, Dingell sent a confidential letter· lo Comptroller G. -JA-Cl-1-ND-IR-SO-N -~ General Charles A. Bowser, asking that he set the General Accounting Office's own junkyard dogs loose on the council My associate Lucette Lagnado has seen the letter "I am concerned that the quantitative data contained m the First and Second Summary Reports and the fact s heets accompanying such reports may not renect adequately the performance or the Offices or Inspector General ," Dingell wrote. He asked that the GAO "determine the accuracy or this data so that Congress gives it appropriate weight when evaluatmg the performance of the IG Offices and in allocating budgetary and personnel resources to sucn Offices " Here are some of the specific points th al Dingell asked the GAO to look into: The possibility that the statistics were mistakenly or knowingly inflated by "double counting" when more than one agency's JG worked on the same case Dingell wants to know if the results claimed by each lG on a particular joint investigation were combined as they should have been, or were added together as if they were separate cases. -THE LACK OF hard data on which the glowing percentages were based. Dingell noted that the fact s heet accompanying the second report claimed "a 46 percent increase in recoveries. a 59 percent tncrease in indictments and a 28 percent increase in convictions over the past six months." But the congressman complained : "Unfortunately , one can not independently verify these percentage increase figures " The second report's claim that "phoned-in tips of possible wrongdoing were up 80 percent" over the previous six months. Dingell wants to see some documentation to s upport this assertion. Footnote: A spokeswoman for the OM B said· "The council welcomes the GAO audit ·· S h e added that , i£ anylh111g, th~ council e rred on the side or caution. and 1ts figures were "too conservative .. Legislation can't force responsibility To the Editor· 1 would like to express my view on your Jan. 22 editorial on "Bill Defeat Costly " First I would like to thank you for your ability to observe. You definitely should have doubts about the concept of requiring a refundable deposit on drink containers. The MAILBOX environmentalists have once again m1ssed the important fact Individuals have to be responsible you can't legis lHle responsibility• The indivtduals who litter will still litter an act of legis lation certainly will not deter these people VOUR POINT is well taken on the cost However, we the consumers in addition to paying the deposit wiU even pay more if this legislation is enacted Who do you think will pay for all the add1t1onal handling of these containers'> The consumer' l suggest lhat we take a hard look at the states which already have this law they are experiencmg storage, handling, health hazards and are only taking care of 15 percent to 17 percent or the litter problem. Educate the people. encourage the recyclers and C'ach or us can set good examples and not litter DOLLY STOKES GestaP.o tactics To the Editor Re· Sen. John G. Schmitz vs Senate Rules Committee· The issue in this case is not a matter of what Sen. Sehmitz said or didn't say The big issue is that Sen S<:hmil1 was not given a fair hearing by an impartial group, as is us ually accorded to even common criminals. Tf Gestapo tactics can be used by the stale Senate to "purge" themselves of opposition, with no con sideration given to the constituents who voted the politician Into omce. then this state is in biat trouble. Terms such as "unusual" and "unprecedented" have been used In articles to describe this action. Sen. Schmitz was stripped of lhe following Important positions by the Senate Rules Committee: Chairmanship of the Constitutional Amendments Comml\tee, vice chairman o f the Industrial Re.latlons Commttlet> and his m embership in the advllory CommlsRlon on the St1tus ol Women. Thia is a pretty steep penalty for reapondina negatively lo the humltlotlna incident of feminist attorney Gloria Allred'I publicly tbrowtn1 a chuUty bell at the Senator. She •et the trap and be fell Into It ! But liberty and ju.tic• decrea that thlll blatant vloJaUon of cMl UbetU ahoulti not 10 unchallenged! PollUdans or ordinary citizens s hould not be silenced and intimidated if we are guaranteed freedom or speech under the Constitution. All viewpoints deserve to be heard. otherwise are we no different from Communist countries? JACQUILlNE STUBBINS Precious l e ttuce To the Editor: I had to say this . . signs of the times I really don't know what 1s more expensive. a head of lettuce or a stack of dollar bills At a dollar a head I expect to see an engraving of George Washington on the next head r buy Pe rhaps that kmdly old father of our country looking up al me with those big sad eyes will do something to control my diet Of course I don't enjoy eating alone. I wonder what George would like house dressing, Roquefort, blue or Thousand Island dressing? Finally I was wondering what kind of dog eats lettuce., I saw a lady ask for a doggy bag and then stuffing it with her uneaten salad Oh well, as my daughter would say. 'let us" get onto somethmg else' JAMES DELMONTE Fight fairly To the Editor. The so-called Committee of 4000 urging leaseholders to dishonor their contracts with the Irvine Company after enjoying smugly the benefits of their low lease rates for 25 years in skyrocketing land values is disgraceful, but to be called <Pilot. Jan 211 "selfless" is almost amusing. The Los Angeles Times rightly denounces the Committee of 4000 for a "sh abby scene" in resorting to "political blackmail" in an unrelated action against the Irvine Company. But lhe personal attack on Jim Wood by Louis E. Scott. (Pilot Jan. 21) is In my opinion, even more shabby. I have no connections with either the Irvine Company or Jim Wood, and (mercifully) with the Committee of 4000_ but I do know that Jim Wood has 1lven his time to !lt-rve the City or Newport Beach and personally bas given money and service to various cultural activities for this community, without recognition or reward. · FOR TWO D ECADES I have watched the popular target, the Irvine Company, give 1,000 acres for a university. offer 10 acres le Newport Center for a Cultural Center, offer park and road acrea1e, make well·planned communJty vllla1es -and pay huge taxes. T heir m1ln drawback seems to be that they desire to make a profit ror • L•t .. rt ltWll ,..-,, ••• .. 1-. TM tltM tt ,...,_ ... . ltrt lo Iii WI«• tf tllm!Nlt 11 .... II,..., .... wtllln .. . •tnl\ or 1.u Wiii .. 11-.,"~' ""~ lttttt\ ,.... II\• <IVO. tltNl\11'9 •NI "'Allll'll ...,,'* M flMMt IM, .. •llllM!f Oii ,..,... " ..,,l<Mfl\ , .. _ .......... ,...,, wlll 1161 11it 111111Mh11\t11 \.e11W• "'•• .. ,........, .. ~ H•lfl• -....... ~, .. Ille Clfllfl911'9f"""' .......... , orlllulltn ...,,...._ their investors, much of which goes back into worthwhile endeavors by the Irvine Foundation, lo th.is community and others around us If profit making 1s so repugnant to the Committee or 4000 and their supporters, there are places like Russia to go. where "profit" 1s still a dirty word Free enterprise and contracts made America great. If the committee as unaware or escalated land values over the last 25 yea r s. and disagrees with the appraisers who have much more land comparisons than leasehold.5 on which to base their values. then let them fight honorably and fairly and not try to s mear all those who disagree with their tactics, and try to gel recognized. certified appraisers to revalue their leased land. LADISLAW REDAY Housing sal es To the Editor Jerry Colhns of the Irvine Company has been quoted as saying "Newport Harbor Board of Realtors figures show that 2.200 residential properties were sold in Newport Beach in 1981." Hal Pinchm, executive vice president of the Newport Harbor Costa Mesa Board of Realtors, reports a total of 2,250 sales for all members, a figure which includes sales out of the area or Newport Beach property. such as Costa Mesa. Santa Ana. Huntington Beach, Long Beach or any other areas Certainly this tnformation is available to Mr Collins and the Irvine Company. REALTORS sup porting the Committee of 4000 made a thorough study of all reported sales published in the sales books for 1981. The realtors considered sales only for the Newport Beach area. They fourtd the following: Total sales 850 minus income units of 7~. reported sales, lea$e options would be again subtracted , 27. or a total of 751 sales for 1981! The Irvine Company was only off by 1,400. But then again the company has a tendency to exaggerate numbers and manipulate figures. Three limes the actual figure ... doesn't that !\eem familiar' ANlELLO DI CRJSCI SomeUmes l tblnJc people waotma to pt on any ol the d ty counclll ln 0..&Qle Counly must bave wanted to join a circus when they ,.. y~. ' llllJ Plllt THURSDAY, FEB. 4, 198'2 Anthony Hopkins portrays the Hunchback of Notre Dame i~ television remake of Victor Hugo classic. See Rage 84. D a CAVALCADE 82 111111 BllCl/IDUTH CDllT TELEVISION B .. STOCKS 87 . Laguna declares war on coastline oil leasing Tbe City of LalfWla Beacb has declared war on propoaed oU and au leues otf the clty's coastline and officials plan to use letters from citizens as ammunition. ., City council members unanimously approved sending. a press release to newspapers urging Lagunans to write to a ti,riety of state offices and legislators seeking deletion of Council hopefuls up by2 The field of candidates seeking three seats on the Laguna Beach City Council April 13 has grown to 10, with two more residents taking out nomination papers. Beth Leeds, who works at Vicloriana Airlooms in Laguna Canyon took out papers, as did Paul Christiansen, owner of the Hotel California in town. tracts offshore ror sale. The U.S. has lsaued a notice of sale or oil and au leaaea ln the outer continental ahelr, in ao area encompuslna 892,000 acret in Southern Callromia. Several of those trac'ts proposed in the lease sale would be ore Laguna's coaslline. Newport Beach is also on record opposing the lease sale. but. to date, has launched no ' SAN JOAQUIN HUS TRANSPORTATION COAAIOOA active campaign to stop tbe saJe off that clty'a ahore. Concerns raised by local orflciala lnclude t.be visual bllc.bt they say would be imposed on coHtal residents and vtaitors, with oil rip located u close aa three miles off the sand. And, with Laguna's tbouaands ol residents who live on hlllaldes with WlObstructed views or the ocean, the unsigbUy rJgs would They join candidates Ricky Slater, a church employee; Pat Barry, Boys Club director; K e 11 y Q o y.d . i n c u m be n t councilman; John Gabriels, a civic activist ; Dan Kenney, director of pharmacy services; Bobbie Minkin, homeowner association orticer : Ron Williams, a real estate developer; and Bob Gentry, UC Irvine administrator. To date, only Mrs. Minkin, Kenney and Slater have returned nomination papers each containing the signatures of 20 registered Lagunans. CORRIDOR PLAN -Map indicates special lanes for mass transit in new freeway proposed from Corona del Mar lo San Juan Capistrano. Incumbent William Wilcoxen has said he will not seek a four year term on the council, and il'\t'Umbenl Howard Dawson has indicated he "most likely" will not run again. Freeway to have mass transit lane However, incumbent Boyd said he would be filing his completed papers today, which means the remaining candidates have until next Tuesday to return their papers. ·HB -doctor will direct Malth agency Huntington Beach resident Dr. Charles Kerrus has been named to head Orange County government's new Health Care Agency. which has a $60 million annual budget and about 1.200 employees. Kerns, 34 , was appointed Wednesday by the County Board of Supervisors over about 100 applicants who were recruited nationwide. A clinical psychologist who joined the county in 1976, Kerns was the interim assistant direct.or of mental health in the county's Human Services Agency. The health care position was created when county supervisors voted last November to split the giant Human Services Agency into two smaller agencies. Kerns' Health Care Agency will administer pul>li c health. programs. mental health programs and medical programs which serve the [ndigent. Unidentilied man killed by car in El TorQ By GLENN SCOTf Of-Dtlltf ,...._ A new freeway throu1h the San Joaquin Hills llnkinl Corona del Mar with San Juan Capistrano will include special lanes in the median for a mass transit system. according to the latest Orange County government plans. The lanes will have thdr own on and off ramps and will be inaccessible to other vehicles. said Herbert Nakasone, chief of public works planning for the Environmental Management Agency LB schools offer pay hike of 5 percent By JOHN NEEDHAM Of -.,...., -19" Laguna Beach Unified School District trustees plan to offer district teachers , speech therapists and counselors a S percent pay raise tonight. In materials distributed by the district, figures show about 2 percent of the district salary offer coming in the rorm of a one·lime cash settlement from private funds donated by the Laguna Beach Education Foundation. Laguna School Superintendent Bob Sandus said a 3 percent salary increase would be included on the school employees' permanent salary schedule for the 1982·83 school year The district's initial offer falls far below propasals by the two bargaining units representing certificated employees in Laguna schools. Teachers are asking that their A man the California Hi&bway salaries be increased across the Patrol Is describing as a board to the mean average of probable transient died early !lalary schedules for all other today after he was struck by a unified school districts in car wblle walking in lbe vehicle Orange County In the 1982-83 lane of El Toro Road in Lake school year. Forest. Both teachers and school Officer Dick Van Cott said the' officials have declined to releue man, who was carryin& no what their estimates are. ldeotlficallon, was struck at H o.w e v e r , d I a t r l c t about l :OS a.m. by a vehicle a~mhlistrat.ors say the amount driven by Frank Grillo, ~. ol would be much higher than the 5 Trabuco Canyon. percent offer. I The stricken pedestrian w11 The Laguna Beach Pel'IOllMJ taken to Miaaion Community and Guidance AuoclaUon, Hoapllal, where be died at 3:56 whlcb repreaenll speech p .m .. Van c.ott. aald. He sakl the therapists, counselora, nurses man. about 50, wu walk:inc lD and the district paycbolo(llt, the we.tbound trafnc lane when bH asked for an 11.7 percent be waa bit. ~ increase for 1982-83. Van Cott aald Griffo was The barsa1nlns untt says tbe travelinl at about IS mpb at the inc~ue doesn't reflect tbe total time ol tbe aceident. The 21.8 percent lou ln eamln1 unJdeildftld man ls ~ u power due to lnfiatlon from 11'15 ...... Uellt t, lll ~· to 1982. • At Uie ti.UM OI bla death, be Tb• La1una Bucb school ., .. WMriAC • brOlrD auJt coatz board wlll mHt at dlatrlct ....... snater a.od ahlrt, ano headqoar1erl. sso Blumont Sl1 c:bttbd pull, Van Cott aald.· at 7:30 p.m.' L They probably will be built at tbe same elevation u the freeway to serve as a busway, he said, although a light rail system also will be considered. The County Board of Supervlaors concurred this week with the agency's proposal to locate mass transit system in the middle of the freeway rather· than along a shoulder. "Nowadays, when you do future freeway planning, you are required to look into future guideways ," Nakasone explained. The freeway's first use, however, will be for cars. The majority or the 14 -mile thoroughfare estimated to cost $250 million will have eight lanes. he said. although some sections will have six lanes. The freeway is designed to. begin at MacArthur Boulevard where the extension of the Corona del Mar Freeway ends. It will cross Irvine Company property until it reaches Laguna Canyon Road, then will continue on properly owned almost exclusively by other large development corporations until it links with the San Diego Freeway at Avery Parkway just north of San Juan Capistrano. EMA Director Murray Storm told the supervisors in a letter this week that "first priority" in constructing the freeway will be given the portion east or Laguna Canyon because land development is expected to occur laster there than on Irvine Company land. To speed up the planning process. the land developers, including the •Aliso Viejo Co., have hired Gruen Associates to bead a coalition or consulting firms in preparing initial engineering studies. An exact centerline for the freeway is expected lo be released soon, sources say. Nakasone said small se1ments of the freeway already have been 1raded at Aliso Vtejo. Land dedication and gradinc for the freeway bu been a condition set by t.be county eovernment for approvin1 adjacent land tor development. The Irvine Company also la expeeted to prepare parta ol the freeway wben lt bulldl Pelican HUis Road over the coastal hllla to Pactftc Cout Hl1bway u a condition for aubdlvldlnl' sections ol lta valuable Intne· Coast property, Nakuone aald. Despiw the prellmlllary work, count)' omclala still haven't •treed on i.ow to ft.Dance mueb o tbe pavina for the treoeway, altboUf.b tho development tlrma are npected to parU~tA beaTIJy. Na.kucee ta.Id It la too eatlY to predjct wbe t.be tre.wQ mllbt be ID operatioa. , ''That realb dependl on bow qu1cJd7 development OC:C\11'1," 1)1 Hkl . be visible for mllea . In addition, the city hH concerns about the potential for oil spills, whJch could damaae or destroy the city's many tide pools and fish and fowl habitat. A spill could also devastate an underwater ecological reaerve designated by the state oft La1una. LagWla Beach haa established five oceanfront parks totalln& nearly 15 acres which serve up to 3 milhon visitors each year. A substantial spill couJd affect revenues derived from those tourists and vi11itors, the City Council said. Speclfically. the city ls urging citizens to Wl'ile to the stat.e's Office of Planning and Research, the state Coastal Comm is s Ion . S e-n s . A 1 an Cranston and S.I. Hayakawa and Rep. Robert Badham. To obtain addresaea for the above mentioned agencies and lawmakeni. reaidents are uraed lo call the City Clerk's office at t97-3311. Gov. Brown hu two mont.bl ln which to comment on the al.le, i.calion and timing of the lease proposal. Not as fat as it seems Spending caution urged despite bountiful Laguna wind/ all By STEVE MITCHELL Of ... Oa61y ...... Matt On the surface, Laguna Beach appears to be in fat city, with a mid-year budget update showing unanticipated revenue increases of $632,000. But, warns City Manager Ken Frank, the city shouldn't be lulled into spending the windfall, because things probably will change in another six months. The unexpected cash came from several sources, including properly tax revenues Cup $223,000) sales tax. (up S.50,000) bed tax, (up $60 ,000) and earnings on investments (up $358,000). Tbe only drop came in municipal fines. $59,000 less than anticipated. But Frank says the financial picture in the final half of the fiscal year probably won't be so rosy. For one thing , investment earnings are expected to decline substantially due to drops in interest rates. Property lax revenues also are expected to dip because of the slowdown in home sales due to high interest rates on mortgages. tn .Addition, the city expect.<i lo Lncur him costs for storm drain improvements. Costs also are expected lo increase on other projects that have been ignored due to budget constraints. Added to these deficits are expected cuts in state money to Laguna Beach Ca preliminary indication shows the city receiving about $90,000 less in the next fiscal year.> And federal revenue sharing funds might not be continued - which means the city would not receive the annual $135,000 it now receives each year. Frank a lso sought council approva l for severa l expenditures , including increasing the City Attorney's budget by $12,000, and adding $24,500 to the fire department budget for additional firefighters-and equipment. The city manager also bas received council endorsement for $7 ,100 for his office in salary increas es. and $1 ,000 for materials for the City Council budget. The mid-year windfall prompted the City Council to approve transfer or $500,000 from the reserve account to the capital improvements fund with that money tabbed for storm drain improvements <1110 other one·time improvements. CNM'f~141111~ CAUTIOUS -Laguna Beach City Manager Ken Frank warns against spending anticipated windfall funds. The budget adjustment still leaves $870,400 in the reserve account. or about 10 percent of the tota~ ge neral !ur.d, as required by city codes .Ai1ist Irving Manoir, 91, dies Coast fJClinter lived in Corona del Mar since 1939 Irving Manoir, an artm whose life spanned nine decades ·and two continents, died early Tuesday in his Corona del Mar home at the age of 91. Manoir and his wife, Hazel , first came to Orange County in 1929, where they established a studio and gallery in Fairywood Canyon of Laguna Beach. After several years abroad in Europe and a brief stay in Chicago, they look up permanent residence in Corona del Mar in 1939. He was born in Chicago in 1891 and took bis first job as an artist in the engraving department ol Montgomery • Ward department store . Frustrated by commercial art, Manoir enrolled in the Chicago Institute of Art and was graduated three years later. He took a leaching position at the institute shortly after graudation, and in 1918 married one of hjs pupils, Hazel Legg. Manoir's style as an artist was innuenced by the painters he met on his travels -Pablo Picabia in St. Tropez. Diego Rivera in Acapulco -among them . Manoir believed that modern art "was a struggle DIES Artist Irving Manoir of Corona del Mar is dead at 91. against the tyranny of the object," and in his work he tried lo capture his own emotions regarding the subject matt.er as well as the subject itself. He en)oyed commercial success from the early. 30s on, offering much of his work for sale through the Marshall Field & Company Galleries of Chicago. Manoir's work was exhibited al the Paris Salon or 1930 and at the Salon Autome of Paris a year later. His most praised work, "Aspen and Snow." was recenUy sold by a- Houston gallery for $30,000 During the last years of his life, Manoir worked less with paints and more with an "enamel" process be invented m his studio The substance ... nicknamed Rionam-el (his name. 'spelled backwards>. sets to. rem ark"a ble hardness an cl smoothness without the. use of a· kiln. Using handmade molds,• Manoir would cast the Rionam-el in various shapes and later paint them. Mr. Manoir is survived by his widow. Hazel ; the couple had no children. His asbes will be · buried in Coldwater. Mlctu&an. later this week, and no services )Viii be held. Riley opposes airline boosts · Supervisor. notifies carriers he won't support more flights By FREDERICK SCHOEMEIO. Of .. D.ity,.... s.... CommeTcial airlines wantina to either increase or initiate service at John Wayne Airport are drawing opposition from Orange County Supervisor Thomas Riley. The superviaor. whose district includes the airport, bas sent letters to three of lour carriers .involved which su.11e1t Riley will not support flight Jnel ' increases. In two ol the letters, the aupervlaor said lbe airlinet were lanorlnc "lar1er community 1oal1" to reduce nolH lmpadl on airport.area realdcntl by pr~~lq fllaht level 4ncreues. t'actnc Southweat Airlinn, wblch now operatel two fllCbtl daily from Oran1e Count)' to the San FrancJ•co Bay aru. b .. ••Id It lilt.ends to O)*'ate alJt addltioftal fllpta by JUM 1. W..._... Atrll.Dea which now • .,.. .. w La-• cn,y trtth two f.lltbta dall1 from 'Oran1e .. <.;ounty , wanls two more departures. Phoen.ix·ba.sed America West Airllnes, a new earlier not now serving Orange County. wants to begin dally service from John Wayne to its home clly with four nights. And, continental Airlines, also a newcomer, wants four ntlhta daily. Two flights, accord.lna to the alrlloe. would 10 to Denver and two to Houston. Both routes would Involve intermediate· Stopa. Contlnental'a requeat was distinct trom the others ln that ·the earner wants to uae larrer and heavier Boeln1 727 jetliners. Boeln1 7271 never bave been approvod tor uae at JobD WayM Alroort. AirUnet are required to lly either DC-t Super 10,a, ~ 1..ao.oreoe1n1ma. ln 1 reply letter to PSA, Riley utd the airline'• plana "wtU' lead PSA and the county ot Oran1e not down a path of bentflclat cooptraUoo ln Ute Mure, u 1 bad hoped but C1D1 t.bat leads to an acrlmonlclua relaUooabJp, •I ·'I would counsel that you adopt a greater level of cooperation with the Oran1e County Board of Supervtaora," Riley said in a letter in response to Westem's proposal to add two _. nights. He said any consideration of increasing Western'• filfbt allocations would be dooe "over ·my jtren~ua obJectlooa. · • In the letter to Oontlnent.al, Riley said, "Your requeat hardly abowa an appredatioe for a Board of Superillora wtdcb is st.rivin.a to develop ap airDort plan that la in lreepinl 'Wlib laner comnJunlt)' 10111.:· RUey bu not Ntponded to ta. -American Wtlt letler. AJrport aJdel baft-~ale......, that there would be 57 Jet ..... ~r day from the a1rpon II UIJt tirllll•' requ.ta wer-. lfaal.s. Cur rentl7 tb•r• are U departures autborlnd t&Dder county alrporl NIW•Uou. Otber airline• aad lb•lr exllUq allocatkma are A1rCa1 • ~~.bllc, u.s .. aDd ,......_ ~ -_- Orange Cout DAILY Pll.DTIThut'lday, February 4, 1882 L care costs explode We no loo.aer can afford to divide the heaJlh c81'e ayatem into thole who cure, thole who pay and Ulc>lle who ore cared ror >.. Amertca.o Hospital AssoclaUon President J . Alexander McMahon wama, "It la time that all participants in the prtva~ sector btcome actively Involved in evaluatin1 and determlnlng which benefits of our health care aya~m we want to keep, which we want to 1row and which we feel are no longer cost-effective." The appeal, could not come at a n m or e opportunt- lime. Health care •,. costs have exploded -.> -soaring 12 .s1y11111 PllJllG? percent in 1981 on top ' ,:s_ c_ of an astounding 152.._ ______________ ,...._.._ percent in 1980, an . all-time record. Our annuaJ spending ot $247.2 billion in medical outlays or all kinds now amounts to 9.4 percent of our total output for goods and services, or an incred1ble average of $1 ,067 for every man, woman and child in the United States. To tackle the problem, six natiorull organizations the AFL-CIO, American Hospital Association, American Medical Association, Blue Cross and Blue Shield Associations. Business Roundtable and Health Insurance Association of Americ a -met in mid-January to endorse the potentials of voluntary coalitions on a local, state and regional basis and to encourage their members' participation in such coalitions. No other segment of our economy has gone through so sharp a rise in recent years as heaJth. care. Estimates are that the per capita cost of medical care wiU almost triple to $3,057 by 1990, when the nation's medical bill could reach a whopping 11.5 percent of our output Much of the mcrease is the pnce of progress: Technological innovations such as intensive care units and artificial kidney machines have made the treatment or illnesses increasingly effective, but also more cosUy. A factor related to the rise in costs is Americans' lengthening life span. which has Increased the number of America's elderly, who are the more prevalent victims of costly, long-term diseases The quantity, as well as the quality, of health services has also increased, and hence costs. Pushing up the cost or heaJth care dramatically, too, is the lack of price competition and the fact that most health care bills are paid by health insurers, employers or the government. This leaves few incentives or consumer demands for holding down these bills Yes, there have been payoffs. Most Americans are living longer than ever before. Today, one out or nine Americans 25 million of us -are over 65, or 5 million more than in 1970 And infant mortality is nc~' the !O'.\'est in our netion'c h.ist.o:-t . Yet. other hndings point to inequities that raise the question of whether the nation is spending too much for the health care we gel and hqw we aet it. For instance, although infant mortality is declinlJ!S. black infants still die at nearly twice the rate of white infants dunng their first year. And non-whites can expect lo live four to five years fewer than whites. It's no surprise that our minorities receive mferior health care. reports a study released by the preligious Institute of Medicine. Blacks are less likely than whites to see private physicians, the study found, regar;dJess of income or type or insurance - and are twice as likely as whites to vi.sit physicians at clinics or hospital emergency rooms. "Rising costs threaten the ability of communities to preserve the gains made in recent years in making quality care available lo all Americans," says Dr. David E. Rogers. president of lbe Robert Wood Johnson Foundation •U:W YORK t•Pl F.O l - tlwu10.. , ••• I- TodeJ, .,, m n • •11 11 ~ ., ' m •1 1 14 METALS • ..._. . c.,~r 1' •• <ellh • po11n4ll. u.s ••tl11llt\OM. UM 12 <-a .-...CS. lltoc 42.4J , ...... pound, .,. .. ,,..,.., T ... S7.6111 Metels W-c-11• II> ........... 1~11c...Ue_,,,.,,N Y Ml-9-MO ,,..,., ..-o NY Cot'M• ....., ....,,.,,( __ SILVER .. _., & H......,., a.•u .,.. lrO'f.....,. •• ., * • • IUllll l:UIT Ylll 1111111111111 Ml rtiURSOAV, FEBRUARY 4 , 1982 ORANGE COUN T V . C A LIFORNIA 25 CENTS A1ir Florida tapes suggest pilots of • ice WASlUNGTON <AP> Tape recordings from the Air Florida j et that c ras hed Into the Potomac Raver last month support theories that ice or snow on the wings· made it stall and strongly s uggest the pilots knew of the problem before taking off. according to today's Washington Post The cockpit voice tape suggests the pilot and copilot had seen a buildup of ice or snow on the Boeing 737's wlngs but went ahead with the Ul-fated flight anyway, an unidentified .source close to the National Tra nsportation Safety Board investigation told the newspaper. NTSB spokesman Ira Furman and Francis McAdams, head of the NTSB investigation, could not be reached for comment on the report Wednesday night. According to a ~reliminary trianscrlpt of the tape, pilot Larry Wheaton and copilot Alan P etit spoke to each other repeatedly about the heavy snow tailing Jan. 13 u they prepared to take off. the Post said. One source told the newspaper that their words suagest they at one point looked out their windows specifically to check for snow on one of the wings, noted there was some, but took off anyway Reagan 1naps plan • on interest rates WASHINGTON (AP J President Reagan will announce in the next two to three weeks a plan to bring down mortgage interest rates , a top adviser said today. Edwin Meese 111, counselor to the pres ide nt , mad e the comment an regard to a question on what steps Reagan would take to spur housing, one of the most depressed sectors of the economy He dad not explain whether the plan would be aimed at mortgage interest rates or at all interest rates But a presidential aide said later Meese was r eferring to the hous ing industry Meese's comments came at a breakfast speech to the U.S. Cha mber of Commerce on the adm inistration's legislative priorities for 1982. "We ha ve a ser ies o f m easu res that are under consideration now ," he sa id in regard to housing ... The main thing we have to do though 1s do everything possible to bring down the mterest rates. ··This is why you'll be seeing some specific action on that in the next two or three weeks by the president · · The administration has been openly critical in the past few wet>ks of the actions by the Federal Reserve Board to restrict the nation 's monetary supply, saying the Fed's lack of precision an meeting its growth targets was responsi bl e for currently high interest rates. 'The prime rate jumped again Tuesday as banks responded to economic pressures such as increased borrowing by the Treasury to finance the government's growing deficits. Meese earlier sa1a tnat the high interest rates were the result of a "lack or confidence" by inves t o r s that "any government can hold to their course " And he said the Reagan admarustration bad no intention of deviating from its tax cut and budget cut plans. ·'This administration will stay on course," he said . "We will not be giving an to the vagaries of the stock market. ... " 'Mother begged me,' Snowfall murder suspect says paralyzes Midwest Bv DAVID KUTZMANN c1f IM D.llly ,.. ... Su" Murder detendant He rbert Barclay Baetz told a Supenor Court Jury today that he gave' his 87-year-old mother a lethal dose of cyanide last September after she begged ham , "Barclay, just put me away " In his second day on the witness stand, Baetz, a balding 57 -year-old chemist. testified that he mixed the potassium cyanide in a glass with orange Juice and gave 1t to Janette Baetz as she sat an the living room of h~r Newport Beach home last Sept 10 Questioned by defense lawyer Stuart Grant, tht? defendant said his mother took one sip of the lethal drank and then convulsed. lapsing anto unconsciousness. The woman was eventually pronounced dead at Hoag Memorial Hosp~lal after Baetz called paramedics to the home at 1211 W. Bay St. During his first day on the witness stand Wednesday, Baetz had testified that his mother asked him if he would help her end her life about nine months before she died. The defendant has said that he realized that his mother was serious and that, .. yes, I felt I had agreed to something, but I didn't feel I would be called on to carry it out." H owever , in today 's testimony, the bespectacled Baetz said that his mother asked him on the night of her death ''Barclay can 't you do something fo r me?" Baetz said that the two began lo quarrel, as they had an the past. over her refusal ·to take pain medications for a nerve1 ailment that caused her pain· <See MOTHER, Pal(e AZ) PSA vows to fix offending billboard A Pacific Southwest Airlines billboard that has raised the are of Orange County Supervisor Thomas Raley because it does not refer to John Wa yne Airport will soon be changed. J ohn O 'M al l ey Jr, the airline's government affairs director . said the billboard, which makes ref e rence to Orange County Airport, is scheduled to be repainted within 30 days. He said the airline has no plans to either remove the sign o r have it reparnted sooner because of contract provisions wit h an outdoor advertising firm . Riley, who proposed that Or ange County Airport be renamed lo honor John Wayne, objected lo the billboard in a Jan. 'l7 Jetter to O'Malley. A similar protes t had beeo lodged by Riley in October when the billboard was localed on Main S tr eet near the Santa Ana-Orange border. O'Malley said the billboard recently was moved to the new location alongside the Santa Ana Freeway at Valley View Avenue in Santa Fe Springs. By The A..ssoc:lated Press Wide areas or the Midwest were immobilized by up to two y reel of snow that crushed roofs a nd forced sc hoo l s and businesses to close in the second heavy snowfall this week. More misery was in store as a third storm began moving in from the Rocky Mountains. Seven northwest Ohio counties were declared snow emergency a reas with travel limited to emergencies In Georgia, meanwhile. record floods sent homeowners fleeing, and the Northeast was pelted with freezing rain The Midwest 's second storm, which turned into sleet today over the eastern Ohio Valley, ca used fe wer problems than earlier storms that have pasted the area this winter · · 1 think everybody learned his lesson," said Monroe County, Mich., sheriffs dispatcher Betty Mi lier "Most people took cover this tame." Experts were called to the Eastern Missouri Correctional Center in Pacific, where the roof of the new $25 million facility began lo sag under nearly two feet of snow. In Indiana, 15 members of the Ball State University men's basebaJI team and six members or the track team escaped injury when a fi eldhouse roof caved in. The Howard Cou nty Civil Defense maintenance garage in Kokomo collapsed. )118tice leaving SACRAMENTO (AP) -State Supreme Coust Justice Frank Newman pl ans to resign, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. said today. Brown appointed the former UC Berkeley law school dean to the court in 1977. About 30 seconds later, PetJt's final words t o Wheato n reportedly were, "We're 1oing down, Larry," and Wheaton responded, "I know It." Seventy.four of the 79 people o n the jetliner, lncludin& Wheat.on and PeUt, were killed when the plane hit a busy commuter bridge and smashed into the icy Potomac Four people on the bridge were killed. FAA regulations state that "no pilot may take off an airplane ~hat has frost, snow or ice adhering lo" engines, windshields, wings, control s urfaces or. with piston-engine aircraft, the propeller. Ice or snow can reduce the lifting power of wings . Investigators have said that ,abo ut 43 m inutes elapsed bet ween FUght 90's last de-icing and the takeoff. As the plane sped down the runway at National Airport,~ pUots' words indicate they were worried they were not accelerating fast e noush, according lo ~e Post. One source was quoted as saying that preliminary electronic analysis of the jet noise recorded on the tape 1nd1cates the engines were producing only 80 percent of normal power. HANDICAP LEADER -Hard working crew of the 40-foot sloop Saeta, owned and skippered by Rogelio Partida of the Club de Yates de Acapulco held the handicap lead after three O.ity ...... _.,,......~ days of sailing in San. Diego Yacht Club's fourth biennial San Oiego·lO·Manzanillo race. Saeta is a Class C entry For today's update. see Sports, Page C2. • First Lady's china surv1ves $290,000 set comes through dinner debut intact WASHINGTON <AP) -Nancy Reagan's new china set survived its White House debut intact. Nacy a $48 cup was broken. And despite its $209,000 price tag -paid with a donation from the non-profit Knapp Foundation -there didn 'l seem to be a critic in the house. Even the butlers loved at . according to chief usher Rex Scouten. The 4,372-piece set, which the first lady had said was so "badly. badly needed," was unveiled Wednesday night at a stale dinner honoring President Hosoi Mubarak of Egypt. It was the first thing he m entioned in his arter·dinner toast. "Before I start. let me first congratulate Mrs . Reagan for the new china which is very elegant," Mubarak said. Th e 120 dinner guests applauded and the first lady laughed. Mubarak wasn't the only one with compliments. The butlers ·'are mighty proud or it," Scouten said. "They are t hrilled lo death. It's beautiful." Vice President George Busb called it fine china and said lt was outrageous to criticize the' first lady since she acquired it at no cost to the taxpayers. ORANGE COAST WEATHER Variable cloudiness today through Friday morning , becoming fair Friday afternoon. Highs both days 62 to 66. Lows tonight 46 to 54. PSA officials said Ill a recen~ letter to Riley that use of Orange. County Airport on the billboard!\ and signboards on Orang~ County Transit District buse~ was short-term in nature anq was aimed at persons who migh\ not be aware of the airport's oame change, such as tourists. Court rules on assumable loans The 220·place service was ordered seven months ago and arrived by truck TuesdtY in time to be hand-washed for Wednesday night's dinner. The ivory china with a red and go-id border was the showcaM for a dinner of fUet of mountain trout farcie with neurons. s upreme of chicken with. red peppers and wblte rice, IJ'eell beans amandlne, port aalut cheese, watercreaa an• mushroom aalad, choeolate mousse and petita foun. INSIDE TODAY Btn topt. trading •tampa and coupon.t .ore the lotHt promoUona ~ina u.ed bl/ ofrline• to win paumaen. A6. 11011 '!:~~:-~ ~ o-• c.Mk• .... o...... Al .......... Cl ,. ...... Mt ............. ..... ,. Ill ............. ., O'Malley -pointed out t.bal the bulk of the airlines other advertising about its service to Oran1e County makes refettnce to John Wayne Airport. Fol' txample, a recent edition of PSA's infll&ht maguine contained a centeltold ad that reads, "Now PSA presents smile service from John Wayne Orange County Airport to the Bay Area." PSA operates two Orange County-San Francisco Bay Area fll&hts daily. O'Maiiey said the alrllne was n&l-~ing-W !.!antafO.niu.'' anyone by usin1 Orange County Airport in selected advertlalna. Asked lf be felt Riley wu bein1 antaaonistic over the issue, O'Malley repUtd, "I set that lmpreuion." ' Buyers can take over mortgages at old interest rates SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -The California Supreme Court today extended to private lenders and com merciaJ property its ruling that buyers can assume a morteage at old and lower interest rat.es lf their credit isn't impaired. The unanimous declslon by Justlce Allen Broussard makes it a clean s weep for some property buyers who challenged state and federally chartered banks, savln11 and loan a ssociations, and private lenders. The court 1aid all non·instltutlonal lenders and sellers of commercial property muat comply with Ila 1178 Wellel\kamp declaion. That .r ult n I • Ii d l t w I I a D • unreasonable trade restraint for banks and savings and loan asaoclallons to "call in" old loans in the sale of real property, thus forcing new negotiated loans at today's bigher interest rates. The practice of enlorclng loan note due-on-sale clauses allowed lenders to refuse to accept continued mortgage.. payments from new buyers at the old interest rates, demand payment of the old loan ln full and rue noUce of default. if not pald. ''We conchtde that no aubst.ant.lal reason bas been 1hown to treat private lenders d.lff erently tban ln1ti\utlon1l lenders ln reapoct ~o tbe rettraint on alienation (tranafer of title> resultlnc from enforcement of due-oo-sale clauses," said the CO\lrt. In this case, Da\vn Investment Co. and Gertrude Robinson sold a 16-unit apartment house ln Loi Angeles t.o Edith and Don Beck In March 1977. As part of a purchase price they 1ot an old $34 ,000 note with a due-on-sale. clause. But Dawn Investment refused lo accept paymenta on the ndte, called the loan and then ftled notJce of default and elect.Jon to ftell. A Los Anaele1 Superior Court er anted.. an....injunction_q.aloal th• aalo. Borrowing from Wellenkamp1 the Supreme Court said tbat lnClaUon and U1bt money bas resulted 1n a abort 1upply of real eslate loan money. Each place settinc conaiata of lt pieces but only seven ~ uaed Wednesday: service gla~ salad plate, dinner plate, flab plate, deaaert plate, demltaue cup and aaucer. The other pieces are: IOU.P plate, flqer bowl plat., butUr pJJ.t~ ~\.cL-'111> Jlld....UU.U' boullfon C\lP, cream ~ ~ Ind stand, be.rrJ bowl, e....a bowl, ramekin, and cocktail~· ln addUJon, eo extra demltallllt CUPI and \NC\,Qll ..... or .. 91, atona With n lar .. plattera.' ' r I ,M • • .• • •' Onng• Cout DAILY PILOTfT'huraday, February 4, 1982 1 ~hooting • ~eatery ;probed Cheep shots make typo worse SU:Spe~ denies killing t ~ Wutminater police are J!?veatl11t1r:ic the 1bootln1 -..edneeday nl&ftl or a cu1tomtr in a local Vlttnameae ~estaurant. • Police aaid the cust.omer. vrhon1 Quoc Duong, 21, otSanta Ana, was treated at ·Wei\ minster Comm unity Hospital for a severe flesh ~ound lo the neck and was released. i The incident occurred at 10: 15 p.m., when three to six men ~escribed as Orientals in lhelr mid·20s entered the Dong Thanh· 1restaurant, Bolsa A venue and ~ard Street, Westminster police Officer Earle Graham said. l G rabam sald one of the ~intruders fired a single shot f~rom a .JS.caliber handgun, then "tbe group fied. -He said no motive for the shooting has yet been etermined. etzger 111.nning LOS ANGELES CAP> alifomia Ku Klux Klan leader om Metzger has declared he is a candidate for the Democratic omination for U.S. Senate and iU run against Gov. Edmund . Brown Jr., among others. he d~j:laration was made ednesday. BY STEVE MARBLE Ot\tie DMty .......... lf t never hear the word "canary" again, I'll be happy. ~al happy . You might say I've been eating canary I mean crow most or the week. I've endured what can only be described as a relentless attack of bird calls. bird jokes and general bird humor. Alfred Hitchcock would have had trouble directing the sort of bird scene I've been facing in the Daily Pilot newsroom. A wo keeper should have it so rough. An explanation is in order. It all started when I wrote a short f ea tu re about a Costa Mesa woman who sells reclaimed aluminum cans then divides her profits a111ong four charities. At least that's the way I wrote it. I'm positive of :hat. But that's not the way it came out in the paper Monday. The story, as it was printed , had the can-collecting woman dividing up her profits among four canaries. That's canaries as in birds, little feathered things with wings. The following morning. the jokes started. I should have seen them coming. 9 r.DEliENDANT TESTIFIES -Herbert Barclay me away," during testimony in Superior Court today. Baetz sajd that he gave his mother a lethal :!dose of cyanide after s he begged him "put . • I' ".I From Page A1 . I ~MOTHER 'ASKED FOR DEATH'. • • 'land itching. 1 Describing the events of the !:evening for the jury, Baetz said he told his mother emotionally. s''We've got to figure out J something to do about all this." b Saying that they both were -; growing angry: the witness said his mother told him. "Barclay t. put me away. It's lime to put me (away now." < Baetz told the jury in Superior n Court Judge Everett Dickey's courtroom that he believed bis mother was serious and that he went upstairs to get the cyanide alter she told him repeatedly, "Put n1e away. Put me away." . Baetz said he screamed back al her, "Shut up, shut up. I can't take it anymore." Baetz said he went upstairs and brought down a boWe of cyanide that be had purchased about a year earlier and mixed a half tea.spoonful into a glass of orange juice. "I saJd, 'Mother are you really ·serious about this business'." he said, and she responded . "Barclay just put me away." Baetz said he gave her the drink and that she took one sip of it by herself as he stood by watcbiog her. The witness said be be1an to panic because he feared his mother had not sipped enouJh of • the cyanide to kill her. ; Baell said he told her. • "Mother, damn it all, let me ON WITNESS STAND - Murder defendant Baetz tes tified his mother was annoyed by a nightmare she had in early 1981 . give you some more." However, he testified. she was non-responsive and appeared to be unconscious. Asked by his lawyer why he was so panicked, Baetz said, I OftANCll COAST .. D1ily Piiat CIHalfted advent1lng 1141142·5'71 All othef Mt>llrtment9 142 ... 321 ,, -- TESTIMONY -Baetz. of Newport Beach. said his mother asked him what was the best way to end her life. "Supposing she was revlvable? What would she come back u? She just wanted to pass away." The prosecution la seeking a murder conviction againat the Newport Beach resident. But, defense lawyer Grant baa asserted that Baeta never intended to kill bis mother but was only respondlna to her request to end her ui., I Prevtous witnesses called by the prosecution testified that Baetz, who ts lwice divorced, argued heatedly with bll mother on many occuions. He moved tn with ber in 1917. Steve Mitchell. a fellow reporter, wanted to know this: "What happens ll one of the birds dles. Do the others dlvlde up the money or .. . . More laughter., more bird calls and bird Imitations followed. I couldn t escape lt. 1 'Whal has eight legs and weighs 1.000 pounds and cblrps?," one of my colleagues wanted to know. I wasn't sure. ''Four 250.pound canaries," he laughed, slapping his knee. Then a curious reader gave me a phone call. "Are you Steve Marble?" he wanted to know I told him I was. •·well," he continued, "about those canaries .. Even he was laughing and I didn't even know the guy. But that was just the start. My boss took to flapping his arms like some kind of out-of-control bird (a canary, I guessl and several others started cutting out bird stories and leaving them on my desk. I tried to explain that it was some other bird-bram that made the canary goof. That only brought more bird whistles. Even in the restroom l heard the bird calls. But l figured my wife would understand I was wrong. She read the article. doubled up m laughter and immediately called several friends to share the Joke. :::ine said they laughed too. But being the good humored. thick-skinned guy·I am. I didn't gel my beak out of shape over any of this You might say I didn't even gel my feathers ruffled But someday . . . Kennedy library · has secret tapes BOSTON CAP) -President John F . Kennedy secretly recorded conversations and telephone calls with world leaders, congressmen and aides while in the White House. the director of the Kennedy library sald today. "I have no reason to think t h ey knew they were being taped,'' Dan Fenn Jr., the library director, said of the people recorded in 100 to 140 hours of taped meetings and conversations. The tapes are beina uamined in Boston at the library in preparation for their release to the public , possibly this summer. Feno said 250 telephone convenations alld 325 meetinp in the Oval Office or Cabinet Room in the White House were recorded from mid·1962 to Nov. 7, 1963, 15 days before Kennedy was assassinated Among those recorded in telephone calls were Marshal Tito ot Yugoslavia , Gen. Douglas MacArthur. evanieUst B I II y G rah a m a n d Ad 1 a i Stevenson, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations under Kennedy. The list includes members of Congress, according to an index of the tapes that Fenn had The Washington Post said today that an index of the recordings it obtained also shows Kennedy taped conversations with members of his family, including his wife , Jacqueline. The s ubjects of the conversations included Vietnam. the Cuban missile crisis, the integration of the University of Mississippi and civil rigbta in generaJ. "I haven't the vaguest idea why KeMedy used the tapes or saved~." Fenn said. Material from the tapes was not available. "When they're available, they'll be avail able to anyone, junior high school s tudents. Arthur Schlesinger or anyone." Any potentially classified material will be referred to the originating agency, which will decide whether to keep it classified or allow the museum to release it, Fenn said. ·'There was no attempt lo h1de the existence of this material," Fenn said today in an interview at his Lexington. Mass., home. "We s&Jd those tapes did exist ·'I thmk one reason for all the excitement is that some people expect great biJl secrets to be ·exposed." Schmitz flays party leaders · as 'eunuchs' SACRAMENTO (AP) -State Sen . John Schmitz says California Republican Party leaders are "moral eunuchs" for condemnin g his attack on abortion-rights advocates as anti-Jewish. Schmitz. or Corona del Mar. is see king the R e publican nomination for the U.S. Senate. He issued a s tatement Wednesday in response to a condemnalion by seven top officials of the stale GOP at the California Republican Party convention last weekend in Monterey. Al the convention, party leaders sidelracked a formal resolution condemning Schmitz -thus avoiding a possible floor fight. But they issued a personal statement accusing Schmitz of anti-Semitism and bigotry How to avoid By DA V1D IUJTZMANN .OftlltO...,.,._ ..... A previously convicted sea offender chareed with kllllDI" a 12·year-old Anabelm boy admitted to police lut Aul\Wl that he sexually molested the child and eventually "hostied" btm before leaving him lo a remote area In Loa Aoeelea County. But. accordln1 to Oran1e County Grand Jury tranacrlpta released Wednesday,· Robert Jackson Thompson, 35, denied that be killed young Benjamin Lee Brenneman, whose body was round in the Rancho Palos Verdes area a day after be disappeared from an Anaheim apartment complex on Aug. 2S, 1981 . The youngster, a newspaper deli very boy for the Orange Cou nty Reguter . died of strangulation. Thompson was scheduled lo be arraigned today in s uperior court on an indictment which accuses him o f murder, kidnapping, sodomy and sex perversion . Special circumstances also are alleged which could lead to imposition of the death penalty ii Thompson is convicted In testimony before the grand jury last month, Anaheim police detective David Tuttle said Thompson asked to speak with investigators several days after has arrest Tuttle quoted Thompson as saying: "I didn't mean to do it When 1 left him he was alive " Tuttle said Thompson went on "He (Brenneman> came into m y apartment. I made advances and he got scared. I tied him up. I didn't want lo hurt him. I just drove around I got scared. I didn't know what lo do." Young Brenneman, who would have started junior hlgb school last fall. was going door to door at the Oakwood apartment com plex see king new subscribers to the newspaper. The apartments are located al the corner of Broadway and Brookhurst in Anaheim. Other witnesses who lived at the apartment said they saw the you ngs ter talking with Thompson-at the doorway of bis unit Durmg his interview with offi cers on Aug. 30 at Anaheim police headquarters, Tuttle said Thompson volunteered informat.Jon about the case. At one point during the interrogation, the investigator said , Thompson "broke down, was crying, was very emotional, was upset " Tuttle said he asked the suspect, "Did you put <Brenneman) in the trunk?" "Yes. God forgive me. He was alive when I dropped him off." Thompson responded . Tuttle sai d Thompson admitted putting the boy in the large blue trunk at his apartment. Witnesses had seen him moving the trunk out of his unit. Earlier, the defendant had told police he was simply moving clothing back to his mother's home in Bellflower. Thompson, according to Tuttle, said he drove down Brookhurst Street to Pacific Coast Highway "and drove around in an area that was secluded." At this point, Brenneman was apparently removed from Uae trunk, tied up and then'pul back in the container the costly mistake of buying -------~ the wrong diamond. In the world of precious gems. true quality is never synonymous with "cut" prices or "discounts." The best and most economical place to shop for fine diamonds is always a fine jewelry store. We are diamond specialists. We've built our reputation by offering only the finest quality gems at fair. competitive prices. Every day. ~r after year. We urge yoo to ask questions. Compare price and quality. The more you know about diamonds. the more you'll appreciate the difference between fine quality stones and Inferior grades. Our experts will be happy to explain the "Four C's" that make up a diamond~ Character and determine values: rotor. clarity. rut and carat You'll see. a diamond "bargain" Is no bargain at all If~ sacrifice the qualities that make a diamond beautiful anti valuable. Whenever yoo shop for dlamondS, remember the ' 1FourC's." And the "Afth c:· Confldence. That's the most ~mportant thing we sen. SLA:~lcK·s ---.--·--Miliiilifi,.,.. ttt7 W1'm w btsr Janprise.s bit.gin. hlhlon ....... ('714) __ 1_. ~ lelich ,NilO CW.-IM Angllla • Jlfl Cltlgl> • &.II~ ,. r J I "le Orange Coaat DAILY PtLOT(Thur'9day, l"ebru1ry 4, 1982 ··--------------------..:.--------------....;.------~----....:;.;...;~------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- u-------------------------------------------------------------- Leasehold lawsuit may not be solution ,, • It hardly came as a surpl'lse 1. late last week when four unhappy •.Newport Beach h<lmeowners filed a lawsuit against the Irvine Company The suit has been predicted for weeks by members of the 'Committee of 4000, a group claiming to represent the 4,000 res idents who lease land from the development rirm. Filing of the :,u1t had been prefaced by a series of offer!), •counter offers. threats and • co~nterthreats traded b~ the residents and the firm Since the committee and the ''Irvine Company never sat down 'face -to-face to has h over tne dispute. the media newspapers in particular were used to pass along the latest off er or threat So the s uit was not tHI· expected. ln the suit. four families who claim to represent the interests of hundreds of others in Newpart and Irvine challenge the Irvine Company's method of appraising la nd. The s uit con t e nds the developme nt firm s hould be appraising the land at its ·raw value" and s hould give reside nts who've been leasing the land credit for improvements made both to the property itself and the <'om mun it y . Such th 1 n gs as schools and cultural program~ s hould be considered as part of the contribution . th e suit c harges The Irvine Company, wh1<·h branded the suit a public re lations ploy and predicted it will be tossed out of court. has stuck by its procedure ror appraising land It says that procedure ""111 not change . rt is safe to say the two s1dc.•s are far apar t and that an immediate solution to the disputt> 1s not in sight Maybe a judge or Judges can find some way to rl'solve thl' matter. But legal actions of this co mplexity ha ve a way of dragging on for years . Yet, until th e issue 1s resolved, a pall hangs over thl' community that will adversel~1 impart not only the leaseholders and the company . but c ity government and the communit~· as a whole. There must be a better wa \ Trail concept worthy The big question an the wake of Irvine City Council approval of a plan to develop more than 40 miles of hiking and equestrian trails in Irvine 1s : Where's the money going to come from·> It is going to cost $800.000 to buy land for the trails. $400.000 to build them and at least $36.000 per year to maintain them Th e only read y cash available for the trails 1s $15,000 the Irvine Cit y Council has allocated Irvine's horse lover.., are now examining possible odd1twnal city allocat1ons. usl'r fees, land don a tions from the Irv ine Compa n y, s t a t e m o n ey and financial grants as ways of financing the trails system Irvine has a lready become well known for its beautiful park system and its extens 1n· bic}C'll' trails Now the e 1t y ha s the opportunity to deveiop a model system of equestnan and ·hiking trails. This opportunity should not be abandoned. The Irvine Company a nd others have suggested that the city can get by with less than the complete system of more than 40 miles . It may have to be done in phases. but the concept ought lo be preserved. Ttie complete s~ stem will a llow for subst :inllal retPnt ion of a r ural fabric amid the city's urban environment Such a trail system alo._ng with cit~ parks . open space and btcycle trails are e lements which will allow Irvine to continue to be an attracti\·c· place to live Preserving past days It may not look hke much to the casual passerby. but the turn-of-the·century buildings in Eas t Irvine are th e o ldest structures in the c ity and art' worth saving. So far, the best proposal for saving the East Irvine area has been aired b y the I rvine Company. owner of the buildings in ques tion. The company has proposed to help create a two-acre historic park for the structures The park would be built at the comer of Sand Canyon A venue and Burt Road where the Irvine Country Stor e now sta nds. Other structures would be moved to the park at the expense of the Irvine Company. which has offered to donate the land and • buildings for the park The East Irvine area stands as tes timon y to a n earlie r . simpler time on the Irvine Ranch before agriculture gave w<.ty to land development as the priman bus iness in Irvine. The time, effort a nd mone~· needed to e ns ure that East lrvml' is preserved will be well spent. Whil e many modern developments look like o ne a not her. there is nothing 1 n Irvine quite llke the charming Irvine Country Store. the quaint blacksmith shop, the old Irvine Hotel and the r epres entative farmhouses. All these structures would be saved under the Irvine Company propos a I for th e his toric park. Opinions expressed 1n the space at>ove are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex· pressed on trw1 page are tl'lo!>e ot tneir autnors and artists. Reader comment is 1nv1t ed. Address The Oatly Pilot P 0 Box ISbO, Costa Mew. CA 92626 Phone (714) 641·4321 L.M. Boyd/ Quake warning The Japanese back in 1Q32 noticed that catliah suddenly became lively r ight before an earthquake. The Chinese in 1975 took seri~ly the yelping ol dogs, surfacing ol snakes, racing of rats and waking or c:Uckens in the night to evacuate lens of thousands of people ln Ume lo save them from the dev .. t.aUn1 Halcbena quake. Virtually aJl the animals acted up at M&rlne World/Africa USA in Redwood City, the n11bt before the 5.t-Ricbter scale tremor thereabout.a lo 1m. Many speda.Hsts now believe that Just about e•ery animal speciea, except man, can foretell earthquakes. O n e out o f 10 American householders almost never lock their doors. t ' Women of Swltserland onty wont.be rl1ht t.o vote 10 yean 110. But when they move, t.ho9e Swiu move nrift.b. Recent lelitlatJoo then 1ave Swtu ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat women the honorable right lo equal pay for ry.uaJ work. Overall only about 8.S percent of the dead in this country are cremated. So how do you explain the remarkable statistics out of Marin County north of San Francisco? There, 50 percent are cremated. Q . How many eggs does a female alligator lay? A. About 40 maybe 60 They're as big as goose eggs. She buries them six Inches deep in a mud nest. Did you lplow an alli1ator embryo will drown if its eeg ia tumed over? More about alligator eggs aa demand warrants. Stand by. Lobster Tbermtdor waa named by Napoleon after the month ln which he was first served said dfah. The French caJendar or that lime listed ll ai the eleventh month from July 19 to AUS Wlt 17. Thomas P. Haley Publisher • Thoma A. Mu""'1te . Editor Ber'Mr• Krelblch EdJtorlal Page Editor 'Integrity' panel data pi-ohed WASHINGTON -The President's Council on Integrity and Efficiency. or a ll things, is the target of a congressional inves tigation. Its integrity and efficiency have been called into question. The council was formed with great fanfare by President Reagan lo coordi n ate th e efforts of the government's inspectors general the "junkyard dogs" the administration sicced on crooks and incompetents in the federal bureaucracy It is made up of the IGs themselves, plus additional representatives from the far comers of the admirustrallon The man in charge 1s Edwin Harper. No 2 man m the Office of Management and Budget THE PRESIDENT himself appeared in the White House press room last December to express his personal delight with the council's work. "I promised we'd follow every lead, root out every incompetent and prosecute every crook that we found cheating," Reagan said "That pledge has been kept." · Indeed, the council's first two reports depicted a triumpha nt campaign against the pe rnic ious and the profligate. Astonishing increases in the percentage of indictments, convictions and recoveries during the previous six months were claimed. The number of telephol\e tips had nearly doubled, according to the reports. The statistics were so astonishing, in fa ct , that they aroused the suspicion of R e p John Dingell, D -Mi c h . t h e professional s keptic who chairs the House Subcommittee on Oversight and In vestigations. On Dec. 22, Dingell sent a confidential letter to Comptroller G. -JA-Cl-Al-D-IR-S0-1 -~ General Charles A. Bowser , asking that he set the General Accounting Office's own Junkyard dogs loose on the council. My associate Lucette Lagnado has seen the letter "I am concerned that the quantitative data contained in the First and Second Summary Reports . . and the ract sheets accompanying s uch reports may not renect adequately the performance or the Offices of Inspector General," Dingell wrote. He asked that the GAO "determine the accuracy of this data so that Congress gives it appropriate weight when evaluating the performance of the rG Offices and in allocating budgetary a nd personnel resour ces to such Offi ces .. Here a re some of the specific points that Dingell asked the GAO to look into: The possibility that the statistics were mistakenly or knowingly inflated by "double counting" when more than one agency's IG worked on the same case. Dingell wants lo know if the r esults claimed by each IG on a particular joint investigation were combined as they should have been, or were added together as if they were separate cases. -THE LACK OF hard data on which the glowing percentages were based. Dingell noted that the fact s heet accompany ing the s econd report claimed "a 46 per cent increase in recoveries, a 59 percent increase in indictments and a 28 percent increase in convictions over the past six months." But the congressman complained: "U nfortunately , one cannot independently verify these percentage increase figures " The second report's claim that "phoned-in tips of possible wrongdoing we re up 80 percent" over the previous six months. Dingell wants to see some documentation lo support this assertion. Footnote. A spokeswoman for the OM B said . "The council welcomes the G AO audit " S he added that. if anything, the council erred on the side or caution, and its figures wefe "too conservative Legislation can't force responsibility To the Editor. I would like to express my view on your Jan. 22 editorial on "Bill Defeat Costly." First I would like lo thank you fo r your ability t o observe You definitely should have doubts about the concept of requiring a r efundable deposit on drink containers. The MAILBOX environmentalists have once again missed the important fact Individuals have to be responsible you can't legislate responsibility! The individuals who litter will s till litter -an act or legislation certainly wall not deter these people • YOUR POINT is well taken on the cost. However, we the consumers in addition to paying the deposit will even pay more if this legislallon is enacted Who do you think will pay for all the additional handling of these containers'> The consumer ! I suggest that we take a hard look at the slates which already have t his law -they are experiencing storage, handling. health hazards and are only taking care of lS percent lo 17 percent of t he litter problem. Educate the people, encourage the recyclers and each of us can set good examples and not litter. DOLLY STOKES Gestapo tactics To the Editor: Re Sen. John G Schmiti vs Senate Rules Committee: The issue in this case is not a matter of what Sen. Schmitz said or didn't say The big issue is that Sen. Schmitz was not given a fair hear ing by an impartial group, as is usually accorded lo even common criminals. If Gestapo tactics can be used by the stale Senate to "purge" themselves of opposition. with no consideration given to the constituents who voted the politician into office, then this state is in big trouble Terms such as "unusual" and "unprecedented" have been uaed in articles to describe th.is action. Sen Schmitz was slripped of the followtn1 important positions by the Senate Rules Co mmittee: Chairmanship of the Constitutional Amendments Committee, vice chairman of the Industrial R e.lalions Committee and hl• ,m em b ers h ip i n tbe advisory Commls.11ion on the Status of Women T his ia a preUy steep penalty for respond ing negatively to the humlllatlng Incident of femin ist attorno Gloria Allred'• publicly throwln1 a chastity belt at the Senator. She set the trap and he feU Into it! But liberty and Jt&St.lct deertie1 that thia blatant violatJon of civU Ubertlea should not 10 uncballen1ed1 PeUUctana ' or ordinary citizens s hould not be silenced and intimidated if we are guaranteed .freedom of speech under the Constitution. All viewpoints deserve to be heard , othe rwise are we no different from Communist countries? JACQUILINE STUBBINS Precious lettuce To the Editor: I had to say this ... signs of the times. r really don't know what is more expensive, a head of lettuce or a slack of dollar bills. At a dollar a head I expect to see an engraving of George Washington on the next head I buy. Perhaps that kindly old father of our country looking up at me with those big s ad eyes will do something to control my diet. Of course l don't enjoy eating alone I wonder what George would like house dressing, Roquefort. blue or Thousand Island dressing? Finally I was wondering what kind of dog eats lettuce? l saw a lady ask for a doggy bag and then stuffing it with her uneatel'I salad Oh well , as my daughter would say, "let us" get onto something else' JAMES DELMONTE Fight fairly To the Editor: The so·called Committee of 4000 urging leaseholders to dishonor their con tracts with the Irvine Company after enjoying smugly the benefits of their low lease rates for 25 years In s kyrocketing land values is disgraceful. but to ·be calle d (Pilot, Jan. 21 > •·sel'1ess" is almost amusing. The Los Angeles Times rightly denounces the Committee of 4000 for a "s habby scene"i resorting to "political blackmai in an unrelated action against the lr e Company. But the personal attack on Jim Wood by Louis E . Scott, <Pilot Jan. 21> Is ln my opinion, even more shabby. I have no connections with either the Irvine Company or Jim Wood, and (mercifully> with the Committee of 4000~ but 1 do know that Jim Wood has given his time to serve the City of Newport Beach and personally has given money and service to v.arious cu ltural actlvltles for this community, without recognition or reward. FOR TWO DECADES I have watched the popular lar1et, the lrvlne Company. give 1,000 1cre1 for a university, offer 10 acres ln Newport Center for a Cultural Center, offer park and road acre.,e, make well·planncd community vUlaces -and pay huate taxes. Their main drawback see.ma to be that they dealre to make a e_roflt for • l •llltft lrll'I ,...,, __ I<_ TN,..,.. t• t-M le" te hi ~·tr e11m1 ... i. llMI It ,_...,.. wtwi t11 • .. ,., ., , ... ""'" • 11-,. ... ,_u. Ano..._,.. ,,,... '"'" (1"°9 •ltM•~ -111"1 ..... ..,. -__. .. ""........ ii ..,.,l<Mfll.,.... h ....-........ •Ill flet .. ,_... ............. -· .. ,.....,... ....... H•-4Hld ,,_ ,.,....., tll -CMltlW1W,..,.,., Ill ti-~ .... '!"•'* --· their investors, much of which goes back into worthwhile endeavors by the l rvjne Foundation. lo this community and others around us . If profit making is so repugnant lo the Committee of 4000 and their supporters, there are places like Russia to go, where "profit" 1s still a duty word Free enterprise and contracts made America great. If the committee is unaware of escalated land values over the last 2S ye ars, and dis agrees with the appraisers who have much more land comparisons t han leaseholds on which to base their values, then let them fight honorably and fairly and not try to s mear all those who disagree with their tactics. a nd try to gel recognized. certified appraisers lo revalue their leased land LADISLAW REDAY Housing sales To the Editor Jerry Collins of the Irvine Company has been quoted as saying "Newport Harbor Board of Realtors figures show that 2,200 res idential properties were sold in Newport Beach in 1981." Hal Pinchin. executive vice president of the Newport Harbor Costa Mesa Board of Realtors. reports a total of 2,250 sales for all m embers. a figure which :-inc ludes sales out of the area of Newport Beach property, such as Costa Mesa, Santa Ana, Huntington Beach, Long Beach or any other areas. Certainly this information is available to Mr Collins and the Irvine Company. R E ALTOR S s upporting the Com mitlee of 4000 made a thorough study of all reported sales published in the sales books for 1981. The realt.ors considered sales only for the Newport Beach area. They found the following : Total sales 850 mlous income units of 72, rPported sales, lease options WOUid be again subtracted, ZT. or a t.olaJ of 751 sales for 1981 ! The Irvine Company was only off by 1,400. But then again the company has a tendency t.o exaggerate numbers and manipulate figures.~ times the actual figure . . doesn't that seem familiar! ANIELLO DI CRISCI lllllYCll Sometimes 1 lhlnk people wantlnc to tel on any of the c:lty counolla lD Oruce County must have wanted to join a cJrcus when they were }'O\ID(. bllJPlllt THU RSOAV, FEB. 4, 1912 Anthony Hopkins portrays the Hunchback of Notre Dame in television remake of Victor Hugo classic. See. P.age 84. D 0 CAVALCADE 62 111111 TELEVISION 64 STOCKS 67 Riley tells airlines he opposes added flights By Fa£DBalat SCllOEMltHJ. °' .. ...., ......... Commer"Clal airlines wan£1ng to either Increase or Initiate service at John Wayne Airport are drawin1 opposlllon from Oranae County Supervisor Thomas Riley. The supervisor, whose district includes the airport, bas sent letters to three of four carrien involved w~lch suggest Riley HB sets arcades limits 87 PATIUCK KENNEDY °' .. ~ ......... New electronic game arcades in Huntington Beach have to be at least one half mile from schools ·because city officials don't want youngsters cutting 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 Intersections with traffic stop lights for safety of the children. The new ordinance also states that arcades must be separated from homes by a "buffer" including buildings, streets, or open space of at least 100 feet. Mayor Ruth Finley says she bas "mixed feelings" about regulating arcades. but she says police officials contend children get "addicted" to the electronic screens and sometimes commit petty crimes for coins. ·'The police department absolutely swears there are more petty crimes committed by children wbo use tho~c: things," Mrs. Finley said. "They say that some of the ltids who hang out at the arcades also are the ooes developing records for petty crime. "Somewhere down the line, it's up to parents to tell their kids not to spend all their money on these games, .. she said. Councilman Ron Pattinson said, "(.see It.ids putting all their lunch money into these machines and I want to restrict them." Councilman Jack Kelly was 'the only official opposed to the ordinance, which defines an arcade as a business with at least four machines. Kelly said arcades are supervised by adults, but he objected to machines placed in liquor stores near alcohol and adult magazines. He suggested the city should put controls on each machine and that a fee could be levied to generate revenue for the cl)'. wtll not support rti1ht level lncreaaes. In two of the letters, the supervisor said the airlines were Ignoring "larger community goals" to reduce noise impacts on airport-area residents by proposing flight level Increases. .t'ac1t\c ~uthwest Airlines,. wt\ich now operates two nights daily from Orange County to the San Francisco Bay area, b94 said lt iDlends to operate_ six SAN JOAQUIN HILLS TRANSPORTATION CORRIDOR additional nlgbta by Juoe l. West.em Alrlinea, whlch now serves Salt Lake City with two fllabta daily rrom Oun1e c ounty , wants two more departures. Phoenix-baaed America West Airlines, a new carrier not oow aervlq Orange County, wants to begln dally service from John Wayne to its home city with four "1ghls. And, Continental Airlines, also. CORRIDOR PLAN Map indicates special lanes for mass transit in new freeway proposed from Corona del Mar to San Juan Capistrano. Freew-av to have ., mass transit lane By GLENN SCOTr oe ... .,...,,,......., A new freeway through the San Joaquin Hills linking Corona del Mar with San Juan Capistrano will include special lanes in the median for a mus transit system, according to the late s t Orange County government plans. The lanes will bave thell: own on and off ramps and will be inaccessible to other vehicles, said Herbert Nakasone, chief of public works planning for the Environmental Management Agency. They probably will be built at the s ame elevation as the freeway to serve as a busway. he said, although a light rail system also will be considered. The County Board of Supervisors concurred this week with the agency's . proposal !-0 locate mass transit system m the middle of the freeway rather than along a shoulder. .. Nowadays, when you do future freeway planning, you are required to look Into future guldeways ," Nakasone explained. The freeway's first use, however, will be for can. The majority of the 14 -mile thoroughfare estimated to cost $250 million will have eight lanes, he said, although some sections will have six lanes. The freeway is designed to begin at MacArthur Boulevard where the extension of the Corona del Mar Freeway ends. It wilJ cross Irvine Company property until it reaches Laguna Canyon Road, then will continue on property owned almost exclusively by other large development corporations until it links with the San Diego Freeway al A very Parkway just north of San Juan Capistrano. EMA Director Murray Storm told the supervisors in a letter this week that "first priority" in constructing the freeway will be given the portion east of Laguna Canyon because land development is expected to occur faster there than on Irvine Company land. • l"'ine slates Valentine dance To speed up the planning process, the land developers, including the Aliso Viejo Co., have hired Gruen Associates to head a coalition of consulting firms in preparing initial engineering studies. Junior hi~h s chool teen-agers are invited to a Valentine's Day dance Friday o.ight at Turtle Rock Community Park , 1 Sunnyhill, Irvine. Those wishing to attend the dance s~onsored by the Irvine c ity Community Services Department will have to show their junior high school identification. Admission is $2 at the door or $1.SO admission tickets can be bought at the park before the dance. • Turtle Rock to hold pet •how Turtle Rock <.;ommunity Park. 1 Sunnyhill. Irvine, ·wm bold a pet show on Tuesday from 3:45 p.m. to 4:45p.m. Categories for competition will include tbe Smallest. Largest, Most Unusual, Best Groomed and Best Trained. Ribbons and the Best of the Show Award will be 'Presented . For more information call 7~~6. • Irvine aenion •et luncMon The Irvine AcUve Senior Citizens' Club wlll bold a V.alenlloe's Day luncheon meeting on Feb. 13 at the Irvine Senior Center. 3 Sandburg Way, Irvine. AdmwJon ts $3. Rosemary Balley will entertain on the Hammond Organ. For more information call 551-6152. ~ · Saddleback 1ei. benefit UJalk pled1es of tl 'or mohl per mlle walked from friends, rel11Uve1 and othen in the community. The Saddlebacll Colle1e Learnin& A11\1tance Proaram is 1eeklui pledaes of flnand.al aupport for each mile walked by lt.a Mort and ltaff member• durlnt a benefit walk~. Called a Lap.A·Tboa, t.be ru.ndhJaiftl e-mlt ls a 10-mlle I trek ~ Mlaatoo vtejo, and~ Teri. Sacb walk• II btlDI aaked to 1atber: Buqet re1trlcUona bave u vtrely curtalled tbe pT01ram'1 acthitJet, wblcbl could be cut alto1etb1r' wttMn a month if out.Ide aupPort ln't fortbcomlq, uftlcla l1 1a1 . For Information. call llllkt llllen1fteld ·~ aJ '4511. An exact centerline for the freeway is expected to be released soon. sources say. Nakasone said small segments of the freeway already have been graded at Aliso Viejo. Land dedication and grading for the freeway has been a condition set by the county government for approving adjacent land for development. The Irvine Company also LI expected to prepare parta of the freeway when it builds Pelican HUis Road over the coastal bills to Paclflc Coast Highway u a condition for subdivldtns sections of its valuable Irvine Coast property, Nakasone said. Deaptt.e the pnllmlnary work, county offtclal1 1till haven't a,reed OD liM>w to ftnance mucb o the pavtnc for th~ tre.way. Medical library gete donation Tbe Sona of 1U1Y Orud Lodp of CalUoniia 1W llnm '1,., to the UC Irvine Mecllca1 Center to .11tablilb a bi.rt.b d~ Ubraty. Tb• r1irary wlll provrai current publlcatloDt and pertodlcall lot UM bJ ~ aad md.cal atuidentl CCIM9S DM with tbt trutmeDt ol children ,wJth bUth defeeta. a newcomer. wanta four ruchta dally. Two nlchta, accord.in& to the airline, would 10 to Denver and two to Houston. Bott) routes would Involve Intermediate stops. Contlnental's request was distinct from the others in that the carrier wanta to use lar1er and heavier Boeing 727 Jetllnera." Boeing 727s never have been approved for uae at John Wayne Airport .. Airlines are required to fly etther OC ·9 Super 801, DC·9·30s or Boeing 7378. In a reply letter to PSA, Riley sald the airline's plans "will lead PSA and the county of Orange not down a path of beneficial cooperation In the future, aa I had hoped, but one that leads to an acrimonious relationship.'· "I would counsel that you adopt a greater level of cooperation with the Orange County Board of Supervllon," Riley said ln a letter in reapome to Westem's proposal to add two flights. He said any cooalderaUoo of increasing Weatern's fil1bt allocations would be done "over ·my st.ren~ua objections." Other airlines and their· existing allocations are AirCa.l." 23.5, Republic, 11 .s, and Frontier, two. Irvine lllring industry New panel offering financial incentives to companies By RlatAllD GREEN O( .. oai., .......... Irvine's fledgling Industrial Development Authority Is preparing to offer financial incentives to lure new industry to the city. Authority directors will meet at 4: 30 p.m. Feb. 11 in City Hall to coll.llider applications from companies seeking tax-free financing to build plants in Irvine, s aid Michael McNamara, ctty director of administrative services. El Segundo-based Wyle Labs and the Subaru Co., which has its West Coast headquarters in Sacramento. are amon1 those companies planning lo file applications with the authority which was formed late last year. The directors of the authority are Craig Scott Galbraith, 121 Rockview Drive, Irvine, a UC Irvine faculty member; Jacques Wars hauer, S Redwood Tree Lane, Irvine, a consultant with Long Beach·based Belmont Financial·Corp., and Michael A. Oswald. 2S Morena, Irvine, an attorney with the Irvine law firm. Capretz and Kasdan. McNamara said that he doesn't believe the authority will lead to a heavy influx of new industry. since it is able to offer on.!_~ limited financial incentives. These mceotives come in the form of tax-free bonds that can be issued through the authority. Sale or these bonds would provide up to $10 million in the form of a loan to a qualifying industrial company seeking to build a plant in Irvine. The company would be responsible for paying off principal and interest on the bonds. Bond interest on tax-free bonds reportedly is relatively low in this form of financing. However. the bonds are said to be attractive to investors because no tax must be paid on bond interest. Companies seeking this advantageous form of financing to build plants in Irvine must apply to the local authority. which reviews the application and forwards it to the California Industrial Development Financing Advisory Commission. This commission has final say on the application . Tbe com mission allows for the issuance of $200 mlJJion in tax-free bond.a yearly throughout California. A provision of the federal tax <:ode allows the Issuance of tax-free industrial development bonds. Hu.ntington man health care chief H untingt.on Beach resident Dr. Charles Kerns has been named to head Orange County govemment's new Health Care Agency, which has a $60 million annual budget and about 1,3>0 employees. Kerns , 34, was appointed Wednesday by the County Board of Supervisors over about 100 applicants who \\fer.: recruited nationwide. . A clinical psychologist who joined the county ln 1976, Kerns was the interim assistant director of mental health in the county's Human Services Agency. The health care position was created when county supervisors voted last November to split the giant Jiuman Service~ Agency into two smaller agencies Kerns' Health Care Agency will administer pul>lic health programs, m e ntal health programs and medical i,>rograms w.hich serve the 10digent. Social 'Services, the other new agency, will handle welfare, day care and other indigent programs. _ He is scheduled to make his recommendations on the matter tonight prior to the school board's vote. Division cf the· old Human Services Agency, which spent more than one-third of the county's annual $763 mUUon budget, is to be completed July 1. . Supervisors have already appointed the former Human Services director. Larry Leaman. to head the new Social Services Agency. Kerns, who had been e~ $50,280 per year in bis old post, is from Marylan(\. where be received his doctorate ln psychology from the University of Maryland in 1973. Off shore leases war declared Laguna letters ammunition to fight oil, gas proposals The City of Laguna Beach has declared war on proposed oil and gas leases off the city's coastline and omc;als plan to use letters from citizens as ammunJtion. City council members unanimously approved sending a press release to newspapers urging Lagunans to write to a v-.riety of state offices and legislators seeking deletion of tracts offshore for sale. The U.S. has issued a notice of sale of oil and gas leases In the outer continental shelf, in an area encompassing 892,000 acres in Southern California. Several of those tracts proposed in the lease sale would be off Laguna's co~UJne. Newport .Heacn is also on record opposing the lease sale, but. to date, has launched no active campaign to stop the sale off that city's shore. · Concerns raised by local officials include the visual blight they say would be imposed on coastal residents and visitors, with oil rigs located as close as 4'three miles off the sand. And, with Laguna's thousands of residents who live on hillsides with unobstructed views of the ocean. the unsightly rigs would be visible for miles. In addition. the city has concerns about the potential for. oil spills. which could damage or destroy the city's many tide pools ai:.~ fish and fowl habitat. A spill couJd al.so devaatate an underwater ecological reserve designated by the state off L~guna. Lacuna Beach has established five oceanfront parks totalinr nearly 15 acres which serve up to 3 million visitors each year. A substantial spill could affect revenues derived from those tourists and visitors, the City Council said. Specifically, the city is urgtnc citizeol to write to the stat.e's Office of Planning and Research. the state Coastal Com mission, Se-ns . Alan Cranston and S.I. Hayakawa and Rep. Robert Badham. Artist Irving Manoir, 91, dies Coast painter lived in Corona del Mar since 1939 Irving Maooir. an artist whose life spanned nine decades ·and two continents, died early Tuetday in his Corona del Mar home at the age of 91. Manolr and bis wlfe, Huel, first came lo Orange County In 1929, where they established a studio and gallery ln Fatrywood Canyon of Laiuna Beach. After several years abroad ln Europe and a brief stay in Cbica10, they took up permanent residence lD Corona del Mar ln 1939. He wu born in Chlca10 In 1811 and took bla flrat job u an artist in the encr•vtn• department of Mont80mery Ward cter•rtmenl 1tore . rrustra ed oy commercial art, Manolr enrolled in the Chlcaao lutltute of Art and WU CJ'aduated three yean later. He toolk"a t.eachlnC poaiiloa at the lnlUt.ut. abort11 aft.er sraudatlon, and in 1111 married one ot hi.I p\ll)lll, Huel Wll· • Ii l1°MIU"'I 1t,ya. U U aJ1lat WU' l.nftueaced b7 UM Pabittn be met on bu travel• -Pablo Pteatiea la St. Tr0pe1, oteco Rlnra In Aca,.&co -....., tbem. Manolr belleved ~tbat mod•m art t •H • •lntSal• regard.log the subject matter as well u the subject itaelf. He enjoyed commercial success from the early.., 30I oa, offerinl much of b1s work for sale throup the Manhall Fteld & Company • Gallerln or Cbicaao. Manolr's work WH exhibited at the Parla SaJoo ol 1930 and at the Salon Autome ot Parl1 a year lat.er. Kil IDOlt praiaed work, ·:Aapea aad Snow," wu recatly aold bJ a Hauatoo 1allery for SI0,000. Durtns the lut YMn ol IDi llfe, Maaolr worked 1 .. ~ palnta and more wltb ft ''euamel" pl'OCtllS be 1DvtDl4Q •· bla atudJo. The Hbttuce, n.icknamed IUoum-el (Illa aame •1pelled baekwardl>. aft.a to, rem af"kable llardaeaa and 1mooUllll• wt&W U..w Of a ldlD. UaLq baidm• .-..-; llaaolr would caal Uae RJOG.a.m..i lD vanoua a'8 .. iDd later pa.bat. tlllililD. ........... ~·"'· ' ..... Ru!!; .. ,,. ......... • d1Udru. n11 a11ta5'9 &lll1l.ll lbe lJU~ of llle : Mi1ed la Culidwalct, otiJecl, 11 and ln bla a.. trtld l&W ** -... m • t.O eaptu,. bJ,a oWll eiDoUGM • Jiil1 be Mid. b•• Artlst trvlng-.Manolr of Corona del Mar la dead at 91, -t I { YDll llllTIWI llllY PJllll THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 4, 1982 ORANGE COUNTY . C ALIFOr~NIA :75 CENTS A1ir Florida tapes suggest pilots of • ice I WASHINGTON <AP) -Tape recordings from the Air Florida Jel that crashed Into the Potomac River last month support theories that lee or snow on the wings made it stall -and strongly suggest the pilots knew of the problem before taking off, according to today's Washington Post The cockpit voice tape suggests the pilot and CO{>ilot had seen a buildup of ice or snow on the Boeing 737's win&s but went ahead with the Ill-fated fhght anyway, an unidentified source close to the National Transportation Safety Board investigation told the newspaper. NTSB spokesman Ira Furman and Francis McAdams, head of the NTSB investieation, could not be reached for comment on the report Wednesday night. According to a preliminary transcript or the tape, pilot Larry Wheaton and copilot Alan Petit spoke to each other repeatedly about the heavy snow falling Jan. 13 as they prepared lo take off. the Post said. One source told the newspaper that their words suggest they at one point looked out their windows specifically to check for snow on one of the wings, noted there was some, but took off anyway Reagan 1naps plan • on interest rates WASHINGTON CAP ) - President Reagan will announce in the next two to three weeks a plan to bring down mortgage interest rates, a top adviser said today. Edwin Meese III, counselor to th e president, made the comment LO regard to a question on what steps Reagan would take to spur housing, one of the most depressed sectors of the economy He did not explain whether the plan would be aimed at mortgage interest rates or at all interest rates. But a presidential aide said later Meese was referring lo the housing industry Meese's comments came at a breakfast speech to the U.S Chamber or Commerce on the administration's legislative priorities for 1982. "We have a series of measures that are under consideration now.'· he said in regard to housing. "The main thing we have to do though . 1s do everything possible to bring down the interest rates "This ts why you'll be seeing l>Ome specific action on that in the next two or three weeks by the preside!lt." The administration has been openly critical in the past rew wePks of the actions by the Federal Reserve Board to restrict the nation ·s monetary supply, saying the Fed's lack of precision in meeting its growth targets was responsible for currently high interest rates. 'The prime rate jumped again Tuesday as banks responded to economic pressures such as increased borrowing by the Treasury to finance the government's growing deficjts Meese earlier saul fhat the high interest rates were the result of a "lack of confidence" by invest o r s that "any government can hold to their course." And he said the Reagan admmistrat1on had no intention of deviating from its tax cut and budget cut plans. "This administration will stay on course," he said "We will not be giving in to the vagaries of the stock market " 'Mother begged me,' Srwwf all murder suspect says pa_ralyzes Midwest By DAVID KVT'ZMANN Of IM Delly 1'1191 Slaff Murder detendant Herbe rt Barclay Baetz told a Superior Court Jury today that he gave' his 87-year-old mother a lethal dose of cyanide last September after she begged him, "Barclay, just put me away." ln his second day on the witness stand, Baetz, a baldmg 57 -year-old chemist. testified that he mixed the potassium cyanide in a glass with orange juice and gave 1t to Janette Baetz .as she sat m the living room of her Newport Beach home last Sept 10 Questioned by defense lawyer Stuart Grant, the defendant said his mother took one sip of the lethal drmk and then convulsed. lapsing into unconsciousness The woman was eventually pro nounced dead at Hoag Memorial Hospital after Baetz called paramedics lo the home at 1211 W. Bay St. DlUing his first day on the witness stand Wednesday. Baetz had testified that his mother asked him if he would help her end her life about nine months before she died. The defendant has said that he realized that bis mother was serious and that. "yes, I felt I had agreed to something, but I didn't feel I would be called on lo carry it out." Howeve r , in today 's testimony. the bespectacled Baetz said that his mother asked him on the night of her death 'Bar clay ca n 't yo u do something for me?" Baetz said that the two began to quarrel. as they had LO the past. over her refusal to take pain med1cat1ons for a nerve1 ai lment that caused her pain· <~e MOTHER , Pa~e AZ> PSA vows to fix off ending billboard A Pacific Southwest Airlines billboard that has raised the ire of Orange County Supervisor Thomas Riley because it does not refer to John Wayne Airport will soon be changed J ohn O'Mall ey Jr., the airline's government affairs director . said the billboard, which makes reference to Orange County Airport, is scheduled to be repainted within 30 days He said the airline has no plans to either remove the sign or have it repainted sooner because of contract provisions with a n outdoor advertising firm. Riley, who proposed that Orange County Airport be renamed lo honor John Wayne. objected to the billboard in a Jan. 27 letter to O'Malley. A similar protest had been lodged by Riley in October when the billboard was located on Main St r ee t near th e Santa Ana-Orange border. O'Malley said the billboard recently was moved to the new location alongside the Santa Ana Freeway at Valley View Avenue in Santa Fe Swings. By Tt.e A.uoetated Preu Wide areas of the Midwest were immobilized by up to two feet of snow that crushed roofs and forc e d school s and businesses to close in the second heavy snowfall this week. More misery was in store as a third storm began moving in from the Rocky Mountains. Seven northwest Ohio counties were declared snow emergency areas with travel limited to emergencies In Georgia, meanwhile, record floods sent homeowners fleeing, and the Northeast was pelted with freezing rain. The Midwest's second storm, which turned into sleet today over the eastern Ohio Valley, caused fewer problems than earlier storms that have pasted the area this winter .. r think everybody learned his lesson." said Monroe County, Mi ch . sheriff's dispatcher Betty Miller. "Most people took cover this time " Experts were called lo the Easte rn Missouri Correctional Center in Pacific, where the roof of the new S25 million facility began to sag under nearly two feet of snow. In Indiana. 15 members of the Ball State University men's baseball team and six members of the track team escaped injury when a fieldhouse roof caved in. The Howard County Civil Defense maintenance garage in Kokomo collapsed . Justice leaving SACRAMENTO <AP> -State Supreme Cousl Justice Frank Newman plans to resign, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. said today. Brown appointed the former UC Berkeley law school dean to the court in 1977 About 30 seconds later, PeUt's f inal words lo Wheaton reportedly were, "We're going down, Larry," and Wheaton responded, "I know it." Seventy-four of the 79 people on the jetliner, inc luding Wheaton and Pellt, were killed when the plane hit a busy commuter bridge and smashed into the icy Potomac Four people on the bridge were killed FAA regulations slate that ·'no pilot may take o ff an airplane that bas frost , snow or ice adhering lo" engines, windshields. wings, control surfaces or. with plstoo-eni\ne aircraft, the µropeller lee or 1mow can reduce the lifting power o f wings. lnvl'stigators have s aid that 1about 43 minutes elapsed between Flight 90's last de-icing and the takeoff. As the plane sped down the ruowat at National Airport, the pilots' words Indicate they were worried they w e re not accelerating fast enough, according to t.tie Post. One sourpe was quoted as sayine that preliminary electronic analysts of the jet noise recorded on the tape indicates the engines were producing only 80 percent of normal power. HANDICAP LEADER -Hard working crew of the 40-foot sloop Saeta. owned and s kippered by Rogelio Partida of the Cl ub de Yates de Acapulco held the handicap lead after three 0.-,"" .... .., AIMlaL--., days of sailing in San Diego Yacht Club's fourth biennial San Diego-to-Manzanillo race. Saeta is a Class C entry. For today's update. see Sports, Page C2. • First Lady's china surv1ves $290 ,000 set comes through dinner debut intact WASHINGTON (APJ -Nancy Reagan's new china set survived its White House debut intact. Nary a $48 cup was broken. And despite its $209,000 price tag -paid with a donation from the non·profit Knapp Foundation -theri! didn't seem to be a critic in the house. Even the butlers loved it, according to chief usher Rex Scouten. The 4,372·piece set, which the firs t lady had said was so "badly. badly needed," was unveiled Wednesday night at a slate dinner honoring President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt. It was the first thing he mentioned in hls after-dinner toast. •·Before I start, let me first congratuJate Mrs. Reagan for the new china which is very elegant," Mubarak said. The 120 dinner guests applauded and the first lady laughed. Mubarak wasn•t the only one with compliments. The butlers ··are miehty pr<>l14 of it, .. Scouten said. "They are thrilled lo death. It's beautiful." Vice President George Bush called it fine china and said It was outrageous to criticize the' rirst lady since she acquired It at no cost to the taxpayers. ORANGE COAST WIATHIR Variable cloudiness today through Friday morning, becoming fair Friday afternoon. Highs both days 62 to 66. Lows tonight 46 to 54 PSA officials said m a recen~ letter to Riley that use of Orange. County Airport on the blllboar~ and signboards on Orang(\ County Transit District buse~ was short-term in nature anq was aimed at persona who might. not be aware of the airport's name change, such as tourists. Court rules on assumable loans The 220-place service was ordered seven months ago and arrived by truck TueadtY lo time to be band-washed for Wednesday nieht's dinner. The Ivory china with a red and gold border was the showcut for a d.lnner of fUet of mountaia trout farcie with fleuro11•.1 supreme of chicken with. t9llS peppers and white rice, IJ'MD beans amandlne, port aalut c h eese, watercr111 ant mushroom salad. chocolate mousse and petlta foura. INSIDE TODAY Boz tops, trading 1tamp1 and coupona are the I.ate.I promotions being uaed by atrhM• lo win pcusmg~n. A6 llDfX . I,. Buyers can take over mortgages at old interest rates O'Malley-pointed out that the SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The bu) k or the airlines other California Supreme Court today advertising about its service to extended to private lenders and Orange County makes reference commercial property its ruling lo John Wayne Airport. t h at buyers can assume a For example, a recent edition mortgage at old and lower of PSA 's infllgbt magazine interest rates if their credit isn't contained a centerfold ad that impaired. · reads, "Now PSA presents smile The unanimous decision by service from J ohn Wayne Justice Allen Broussard makes Orange County Airport lo the it a clean sweep for some Bay Area." PSA operates two property buyers who challenged Oranee County-San Francllco stale and federally chartered BayAr~~Oigh~daUy. banks, uvlngs and loan O'MaUey said the atrllne ~~ _assowllons,. and pl'ill.at• not tryfng lo ~nh1oii1ze lenders. anyone by uslng Oranae County T h e c o u r t a a I d a I I Airport ln selected advertllln1. non·insUtutlonal le nders and Asked if be fell Riley was sellers of commercial p~ beln1 a ntaaonlsUc over the must comply with ltli 1171 luue, O'Malley replied, "I let Wellenkamp declslon. That that impresalon. • • . r u l l n g • a i d l t w a a a n .. unreuonable trade restraint for banks and savings and loan associations to "calt in" old loans In the sale of real property, thus forcing new negotiated loans at today's higher interest rates. The pract.lce of enlorctn1 loan note du~·sale clauses allowed lenders to refuse to accept continued mortgage. payments from new buyers at the old Interest rates, demand payment of the old loan {n full and file notice.of default l~ paW.-- , 'We conclude that no substantial reason has been shown to treat private lenden differently than institutional lenders In respect to tbe restraint on alienation <transfer of title) ruulune from en rorcemenL of due-on.sale clauses," said the court. In this case, Dawn Investment Co. aod Gert.rude Robinaon sold a 16·unlt apartment house in Los An1eles to Edith and Don Beck lo March 1977. As part of a purchase prtce tbey eot an old $34 ,000 note with a due~.-ale. clause. But Dawn Investment refused to accept payments on the note, called the loan and then nled not.lee of def a ult and election lo MU. A-bos-~rtof""CtRD't 1ranted an btjuncUon a1alnat tho sate. Borrowin& Crom Welleftkamp, the Supreme Court Hld that lonatk>n a'nd tJtht money tw retulled In a abort aupply ol real estate loan mCJM1. . Each place settiq conailta OI 19 pieces, but only H ftll ,..... used Wednesday: service platAt, salad plate, dinner plate, naa. plate, dessert plate, demituae cup and saucer. The other pleeea are: toQ plattr, ftrqer b9wr plate;-1MMf plate, tea cup and aauce,. boulllon cup, cream ~ ~ 'and stud. berry bowl, cenll bowll ramekin, and coettall ~. In aadltloa, eo extra ._mltalie CUP9 and t.ucupe Wen ~. alant with 12 i.r,e platten. - .. •••••• e Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thurad8'/, February 4, 19&2 Shooting • jm eatery ;probed· Cheep shots make typo worse Suspect denies ·kiJJing ' Weatmlo1ter police are l nveatl1aU01 the 1bootln1 W edneeday nl&ht of a customer In a local Vietnamese , restaW'ant. · Police aald the customer, 'Tbon1 Quoc Duong, 21. of Santa Ana , wa s lrealed at · Weatmlnaler Community Hospital ror a severe lle1b 'wound in tbe"neck and was released. 1 Tbe incident occurTed at 10: 15 p.m., when lbree to six men 1 described as Orientals lo their · mid-208 entered the Dong Thanh · restaurant, Bolsa A venue and ; Ward Street. Westminster police Omcer Earle Graham said. ' Graham said one or the lntruders fired a single shot j from a .38-caliber handgun, then the group fled. He said no motive for lbe s h ooting ba s yet been determined. etzger nuuaing LOS ANGELES <AP> California Ku Klux Klan leader Tom Metzger has declared be is a candidate for lhe Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate and will run .against Gov. Edmund G . Brown Jr., among others. The dftlaration was made Wednesday. Bv STEVE MARBLE OllM~ .......... If l never hear the word "canary" agam. I'll be happy. Real happy. You might say I've bee n eating canary I mean crow -most of the week. I've endured what can only be described as a relentless attuck of bird calls. bird jokes and general bird humor. Alfred Hitchcock would have had trouble directing the sort of bird scene I've been facing in the Daily Pilot newsroom. A zoo keeper should have .it so rough. An explanation is in order. It all s tarted when I wrote a short feature about a Costa Mesa woman who sells reclaimed aluminum cans then divides her profits arttong four charities. At least that's the way I wrote it. I'm positive of ~hat But that's not the way it came out in the paper Monday . The story, as it was printed , had the can-collecting woman dividing up her profits among four canaries. . That's canaries as in birds. little feathered things with wings. · The following morning. the jokes started. I should have seen them coming. ( ? ~ DEFENDANT TESTIFIES -Herbert Barclay me away,'' during testimony in Superior Court today. Baetz said that he gave his mother a lethal <dose of cyanide after she begged him "put ( ., From Page A 1 j ·~MOTHER 'ASKED FOR DEATH'. • • sand itching. , Describing the events or the tevening ror the jury, Baetz said he told bis mother emotionally, <t"We 've got to figure out I something to do about all this." h Saying that they both were 'f growi.Dg angry, the witness said his mother told him, "Barclay a put me away. It's lime to put me ·1 away now." ·( Baetz told the jury in Superior n Court Judge Everett Dickey's courtroom that he believed his mother was serious and that be went upstairs lo get the cyanide after she told him repeatedly. "Put me away. Put me away." Baetz said he screamed back at her, "Shut up, shut up. I can't lake it anymore." Baetz said he went upstairs and brought down a bottle of cyanide that he had purchased about a year earlier and mixed a ' half teaspoonful into a glass or orange juice. "I said, 'Mother are you really serious about this business'," he said, and she responded, "Barclay just put me away." Baetz said he gave her the , drink and that she look one sip or it by herself as be stood by watching her. The witness said he betan to panic because he reared his mother had not sipped enough or . lhe cyanide to' kill her. l Baetz said he told her, j "Mother, damn lt all, let me ON WITNESS STAND Murder defendant Baetz testified his mother was annoyed by a nightmare she had in early 1981. give you some more." However, be t.esllfied, she wu non-responsive and appeared to be unconscious. Aaked by bis lawyer why be wu so panicked, BaetJ said, c1 ... ..t.cs H¥.,..•'"' 114JMz.M7i All otti.r depemMnts f42~21 MAINOFFICE m Wt•-.,. St.. c.te Meu. CA. Ma11.-..:ao.1teo,c..u-...CA.-. I ' TESTIMONY Baetz, of Newport Beach , said his mother asked him what was the best way to end her life. "Supposing she wu revivable? What would she come back as? She just wanted to pass away." The prosecuUon is seeking a murder conviction aeatnat the Newport Beach resldent. But, defense lawyer Grant haa asserted that Baetz never intended to kill his mother but waa onlf respondln& to her request to end her life. Previous witnesses called by the prosecution testified that Baetz, who is twlce divorced, artued heatedly wtth hls mother on many occqions. He move;d in with her in um. ERA Setback RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -A lelial1Uve committee voted 12·'1 today not to ,..port the Equal Rl•hta Amendment to the floor of tbe Vlrclnta HouH of Dele1atea, almost certatnl1 kJllin1 ERA'a chance ot p....,. In ~General AaMmblJ. Steve Mitchell, a fellow reporter. wanted to know this: "What happens ll one of the birds dies. Do the others divide up the money or . . . More laughter, more bird calla and bird imitations followed. I couldn't escape lt. "What h~s eight legs and weighs 1,000 pounds and chirps?," one of my colleagues wanted to know I wasn't sure. "Four 250-pound canaries," he laughed. slapping h is knee. Then a curious reader gave me a phone call. "Are you Steve Marble?" he wanted to know. I told him I was. ··well,'' he continued. "about those canaries . Even he was laughing and I didn't even know the guy. But that was just the start. My boss took to flapping his arms like some kind of out-of-control bird (a canary, I guess) and several othe rs started cutting out bird stories a nd leaving the m on m y desk. I tried to explain that it was some other bird-brain that made the canary goof. That only brought more bird whistles. Even in the restroom I heard the bird calls But I figured my wife would understand I was wrong. She read the article. doubled up in laughter and immediately called several friends to s hare the JOke !:>he said they laughed too. But being the good humored. thick-s kinned guy·l am, J didn't get m y beak out of shape over any of this You might say I didn't even get m y feathers ruffled But someday . Kennedy library has secret tapes ,. BOSTON <AP) President John F . Kennedy secretly recorded conversations and telephone calls with world leaders, congressmen and aides while in the White House, the director of the Kennedy library said today. "I have no reason to think they knew they were being taped," Dan Fenn Jr .. the library director, said of the people recorded in 100 to 140 hours of taped meetings and conversations. The tapes are being examined in Boston al the library in preparation for their release to the public, possibly this summer. • Feno aaid 250 telephone conversations and 32S meetings in the Oval Office or Cabirlet Room in the White House were recorded from mld-1962 lo Nov_ 7, 1963, 15 days before Kennedy was assassinateJ. Among those recorded in telephone calls were Marshal · Tito of Yugoslavia , Gen . Douglas MacArthur, evangelist Billy Graham and Adlai Stevenson, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations under Kennedy. Tbe list includes members or Co ngres s, according to an index or the tapes that Fenn had. The Washington Post said today that an index or the recordings it obtained also shows Kennedy taped conversations with members or his family, including his wife. Jacqueline. The subjects or the conversations included Vietnam. lhe Cuban missile crisis, the integration or the University or Mississippi and civil rights in general. "I haven't the vaguest idea why Kennedy used the tapes or saved them," Fenn said. Material from the tapes was not available. "When they're available, they'll be available to anyone, Junior high school students , Arthur Schlesinger or anyone ... Any potentially classified material wilf'be referred to the originating agency. which will decide whether lo keep it classified or allow the museum to re lease it, Fenn said. ·'There was no attempt to hide the existence or this material," Fenn se.!d today m en interview at his Lexington, Mass .. home. "We said those tapes did exist. ·'I think one reason for all the excitement is that some people expect great big secrets lo be exposed." Schmitz flays party leaders · as 'eunuchs' SACRAMENTO <A P ) -State Sen . John Schmitz says California Republican Party leaders are "moral eunuchs" for condemning his attack on aborlion·rights advocates as anti-Jewish. Schmitz. of Corona del Mar. is seeking the Republican nomination for the U.S. Senate. H e issued a s tatement Wednesday in response to a condemnal.ion by seven top officials or the state GOP at the California Republican Party convention last weekend in Monterey. Al the convention, party leaders sidetracked a formal resolution condemning Schmitz thus avoiding a possible floor right. But they issued a personaJ state ment accusing Schmitz or anti-Semitism and bigotry. How to avoid By DA VU> IUJ'T'ZMANN Of .. Ol9Y ......... A previously convicted Mll offender charaed with kiWnl a 12 ·year-old An a belm boy admitted to police laal Ausust that he sexually mole1ted the child and eventually ''host.led" him before leavin& him In a remote area in Loa Anaeles County. But, accordin& to Oranae County Grand Jury lran.acrtptl released Wednesday , Robert Jackson Thompson, 35, denied that he killed young Benjamin Lee Brenneman, whose body was round in the Rancho Palo. Verdes area a day after be dlsappeared from an Anabelm apartment complex on Aug. 25, 1981. . The youngster, a newspaper delivery boy for the Orange County Register, died of strangulation. Thompson was scheduled lo be arraigned today in superior • court on an indictment which accuses him or murder , kidnapping, sodomy and sex • perversion . Specia l ~ circumstances also are alleged which could lead lo impositlon of the death penalty ii Thompson is convicted. In testimony before the grand JUry last month, Anaheim police detective David Tuttle said Thompson asked to speak with investigators several days after his arrest. Tuttle quoted Thompson as saying: "I didn't mean lo do it When I left him he was alive " Tuttle said Thompson went on "He <Brenneman) came into my apartment. I made advances and he got scared. I tied him up. I didn't want l6 hurt him. I just drove around. 1 gol scared. I didn't know what to do." Young Brenneman, who would have started junior high school last faJl, was going door lo door at the Oakwood apartment complex seeking new subscribers to the newspaper. The apartments are localed at the corner or Broadway and Brookhurst in Anaheim. Other witnesses who lived at the apartment said they saw tbe you ngs ter taliting with • Thompson at the doorway of his unit During his interview with officers on Aug. 30 at Anaheim police headquarters, Tuttle said Th o mpso n volunteered information about the case. At o ne point during the interrogation, the investigator said. Thompson "broke down, was crying, was very emotional, was upset." · Tuttle said he asked .the s u s p~ ct . ' ' Did you put (Brenneman) in the trunk?" "Yes , God forgive me. He was alive when I dropped him off," Thompson responded. Tuttl e said Thompson admitted putting the boy in the lar ge blue trunk at his apartment. Witnesses had seen him movmg the trunk out or bis unit Earlier. the defendant had told 'police he was simply moving clothing back to his mother's home in Bellflower. Thompson , according to Tuttle, said he drove down B rookhurst Street to Pacific Coast Highway "and drove around in an area that was secluded " At this point, Brenneman was apparently removed from Uae trunk, tied up and then put back in the container. the costly mistake of buying the wrong diamond. In the world of precious gems. true quality is never synonymous with ·•cut" prices or "discounts." The best and most economical place to shop for fine diamonds is always a fine jewelry store. We are diamond specialists. We've built our reputation by offering only the finest qualizy gems at fair. competitive prices. Every day. Vear after year. We urge yoo to ask questions. Compare price and qualizy. The more you know about diamonds. the more yoo'll appreciate the difference between flne qualizy stones and Inferior grades. OUr experts will be happy t.o explain the "Foor C's" that make up a diamoncfs characteranct determine values: color, clarity. cut and carat You'll see. a diamond "bargain" ls no bargain at all if yoo sacrifice the qualities that make a diamond beautiful and valuable. Whenever you shop for diamond.5. remember the "Foor C's." And the "Fifth C." Confldence. That's the most important tNng we sell. ---:.-JI· -.~~~V·IC K'S--~---· Whtt-t ~ be$t surprlus begin. ,..,.., *"' (714) 14+ 1380. Nlwpolt leed\ :Mio~ Lal An9IM •Sir\ '*GO• Lii ~ \ Otange Coatt DAILY P1LOT/Thur9dey, February•. 1982 11 ----------------------------------------------------------~- Leasehold lawsuit may not be solution 1 It hardly came as a surprise latte last week when four unhappy N~wport Beach homeowners filed a lawsuit against the Irvi ne Company. The suit has been predicted for weeks by members of the Committee of 4000, a group claiming to represent th~ 4.000 residents who lease land from tht> development firm. Filing of the suit had been prefaced by a serie~ of offers. cou nteroffers .• threats and counterthreats trade d bv the residents and the firm. · Since the committee and thi! Irvine Company never sat down face -to-face to has h over the dis pute, the media -newspapers in particular were used to pass a long lhe latest offer or threat. So the suit was not un· expected. In the suit. four families who claim to re present the interests of hundreds of others in Newport a nd Irvine challenge the Irvine Company's method of appraising land. The s uit cont e n ds the development firm s hould be appraising the land at its "raw value" and should give residents who've been leasing the land credit for improvements made both to the property Itself and the <'Orn munit y Such things as schools and cultural programs should be considered as part of the contribution . the suit charges. The Irvine Company. which branded the suit a public r(>- lations ploy and predicted it will be tossed out o! court. has stuck by its procedure for appraising land. It says that procedure will not c hange. It is safe to say the two sides are far apart and that an immediate solution to ttw dispute is not in sight Maybe a Judge or Judges can find some way to resolve the matter. But legal actions of this complexi ty have a way of dragging on for years Yet, until the iss u e b resolved. a pall hangs over the community that will adversely impact not only the leaseholders and the company . but c ity government and the community as a whole. There mus t be a better wav Trail concept worthy The big question in the wake of Irvine Cit y Council approval of a plan to develop more than 40 miles of hikmg and equestrian trails in Irvine is : Wh ere·s the money going to come from·1 It is going to cost $800,000 to buy land for the trails. $400.000 to build them and at least $36 .000 per year to maintain them The only r ea d } cas h available for the trails is $15,000 the Irvine C1tv Council has allocated · Irvine's horse lovers are nov. examinin.e possible additional city allocat1ons. user fee!>, land donation s from the Irvi n e Company . state money and fina n cial gran ts a s wavs of financing the trails system Irvine has already become well known for its beautiful park ~ystem and its extensive bicycle trails. No" the c1t\ has the opporturuty to deveiop a model system of equestrian and ·hiking trail s . This opportunity should not be abandoned. The Irvine Company a nd others have suggested that the city can get b.'t with less than the complete system of more than 40 miles. Il may have to be done m phases. but the concept ought to be preserved T~e complete S.'t ~tern will allow for s ubstantial retention of a rural fabr ic amid the l'lty·~ urban environ ment. Such a trail system along with city parks. open space and bicycle trails are elements which will allow Irvine to continue to be an attracti ve' place to h ve Preserving past days It ma~ look like much to buildings for the park the casua asserby. but the The East Irvine area stands turn-of-th ~entury buildings in a s testimony to an earlier, Eas t lrvfoe are the oldest s impler time on the Irvine Ranch structures m the cit~ and are before agriculture gave wC:ty to • worth saving. land development as the primary So far, the best proposal for business in Irvine. saving t~e East Irvine area _has The time. effort and money been a ired by the I_rv_in e needed to ensure that East Irvine Compan_y. owner of the bu1ldmgs is preserved will be well spent. in q uest1on w h i I e m a n y m o d e r n The company has pro~ed ~o developments look like o ne help create a two-acre historic a nother. there is nothing in park for the ~truct~res. The park 1 rvine quite like the charming would be built at the corner of Irvine Country Store. the quaint Sand Canyon Avenue and Burt blacksmith s hop, the old Irvine Road where the Irvine Country Hotel and the r epresentative Store now stands. farmhouses. All these structures Other structures would be would be saved under the Irvine moved to.the park at the e?'pense Co mpany proposa l for the of the Irvme Company. which has . . r offered to donate the land and histonc pa k. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other view s ex-pressed on lt11s page dre those ot 1ne1r autnor!. and artist!. Reader comment is invtt· ed. Address The Daily Pttot P 0 BolC 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Pt"lone <7141 b4~·4321 LM. Boyd/ Quake warning The Japanese back in 1932 noticed that catfish suddenly became lively right before an earthquake. The Chinese in 1975 took seriomly the yelping ol dogs, surfacing of snakes, racing of rat.s and waking or chickens in the night to evacuate tens of thousands of peopJ& in time to save them from the devutat.ln1 Haicben1 quake. Virtually all the animals acted up at Marine World/ Africa USA in Redwood City, the nitbt before the 5.9-Rlcbter ecaJe tremor thereabout.a in um. Many specialist.I now believe that just about every animal s pecies, except man, can foretell earthquakes. One out of 10 Am erican householders almost never lock their doors. • Women ol Swlturland only woo tbe ritbt to vote 10 yean aao. Bvt when tbey rnme, thole S•lu movt awUUy. Recent lqlalation there aave Swill ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat women the honorable right to equal pay ror equal work Overall only about 8.5 percent of the dead In this country are cremated. So how do you explain the remarkable statistics out or Marin County north of San Francisco? There. SO percent are cremated. Q. How many e11s does a female alligator lay? A. About 40 maybe«>. They're as big as g005e ell(s. She buries them six inches deep in a mud nest. Did you know an alllgator embryo will drown lf ita egg is turned over? More about alli1ator eggs 111 demand warranta. Stand by. Lobster Thermldor was named by Napoleon after the month ln which he wu rlrst served said dtsb. The French calendar of that Ume listed it u the eJevent.b month from July 19 to Aucust 17. Thomas P. Haley P~bllSher TIM]mfl A. ~Int Editor· 8ar0.ra Krelblch Edttorlal P• Editor • 'Integrity' panel data probed WASHINGTON -The President's Council on Integrity and Errlciency, or all thi n gs , is the target o f a congressional investigation Its integrity and efficiency have been called into question The council was formed with great f a nfare by President Re agan to coordin a t e th e e fforts of the government's inspectors general -the "junkyard dogs" the administration s acced on crooks and incompetents in the federal bureaucracy. It is made up of the IGs themselves , plus additional representatives from the far corners of the administration. The man in charge 1s Edwin Harper. No. 2 man in the Office of Management and Budget THE PRESIDENT h1msell appeared in the White House press room last December to express hi s pe rsonal delight with the council's work. .. J promised we'd follow every lead, root out every incompetent and prosecute every crook that we found cheating," Reagan said. "That pledge has been kept." · Indeed, the council's first two rep<>rts depicted a triumphant cam paign against the pernicious and the profligate. Astonishing increases in the percentage of indictments. convictions and recoveriPc: d1Jring the previous six months were claimed. The number of telephone tips had nearly doubled, JACI AllDf RBDll General Charles A. Bowser, asking that he set the General Accounting Office's own Junkyard dogs loose on the council. My associate Lucette Lagnado has seen the letter · · 1 am concerned that the quantitative data contained in the First and Second Summary Rep<>rts and the fact sheets accompanying such reports may not reflect adequately the performance of the Offices of Inspector General," DingeU wrote. He asked that the GAO "determine the accuracy of this data so that Congress gives it appropriate weight when evaluating the performance of the JG Offi ces and in allocating budgetary ~nd pcrsonne: resou1 n::> lo s uch Offices " Here are some of the specific points that Dingell asked the GAO to look Into -The possibility that the statistics were mistakenly or knowingly inflated by "double counting" when more than one agency's JG worked on the s ame case Dingell wants lo know if the results claimed by each JG on a particular joint investigation were combined as they should have been, or were added together as if they were separate cases. • -THE LACK OF hard data on which the glowing percentages were based. Dingell noted that t he fact sheet accompanyiog t he s~cond report claimed "a 46 percent increase in recovenes. a 59 percent increase in indictments and a 28 percent increase in convictions over the past six months." But the congressman complained: "Unfortu n ately , o ne cannot independently verify these percenta~e increase fi gures " -The second report's claim that 'phoned-in tips of possible wrongdoing were up 80 percent" over the previous six months Dingell wants to see some documentation to support this assertion Footnote A spokeswoman for the OM B said· "The council welcomes the GAO audit " She added that, if anything, the council erred on tne side of caution , and its rigures were "too conservative." Legislation can't force responsibility To the Editor I would like to express my view on your JaJ). 22 editorial on "Bill Defeat Costly." First I would like to thank you for your ability to observe. You definitely should have doubts about the concept of requiring a refundable deposit on drink container s The MAILBOX environmentalists have once again missed the important fact Individuals have to be responsible you can't legislate responsibility! The individuals who litter will still litter an act of legislation certainly will not deter these people YOUR POlNT 1s well taken on the cost. However , we the consumers in addition to paying the dep<>sit will even pay more if this legislation is enacted Who do you think will pay for all the additional handling of these containers? The consumer' I suggest that we take a hard look al the states which already have this law they are experiencing s torage , handling, health hazards and are only taking care of 15 percent to 17 percent of the litter problem Educate the people. encourage the recyclers and each of us can set go6d examples and not litter. DOL.LY STOKES Gestapo tactics To the Editor Re : Sen John G. Schmitz vs Senate Rules Committee . The issue in this case ls not a matter of what Sen. Schmitz said or didn't say. The big issue is that Sen. Schmitz was not given a fair hearing by an impartial group, as is usually accorded to even common criminals . If Gestapo tactics can be used by the state Senate lo "purge" therMelves of opposition, with no consideration given to t he constituents who voted the politician into office, then this state i.s in blg trouble. T e rms s uch a s "unus ual" and "unprecedented" have been used In articles to describe this action. Sen . Schmlt:i was stripped of the following Important PoSilioos by the Senate Rules Committee: Chairmanship of tbe Constitutional Amendmenta Commlttet. vlce chairm a n of the Industr ial R e-latlons Co mm ittee and hh membersh ip in the a d visory Commission on the Status of Women. Thla is a preuy steep penalty for respondlna neaathely to the humiliating Inc ident of feml ntu attorney Gloria Allred '• publicly throwinc a c hastity belt at lhAt Senator. She set. the trap and he fell Into llt ·But Uberty &od Ju.attce deuMI lbat thb blatant vtolatJon of clvil Obertlel abould DOt co uncb1Uen1ed! PoUUd.ana or o rdinary citizens s hould not be silenced and intimidated if we are guaranteed freedom of speech under the Constitution. All viewpoints deserve lo be heard, otherwise are we no different from Communist countries? JACQUILINE STUBBINS Precious lettuce To the Editor . I had to say this ... signs of the limes. I really don't know what is more expensive, a head or lettuce or a stack of dollar btlls. At a dollar a head I expect to see an engraving of George Washington on the next head I buy. Perhaps that kindly old father of our country looking up at me with those big sad eyes will do something to control my diet Of course I don't enjoy eating alone I wonder what George would like -house dressing, Roquefort, blue or Thousand Island dressing'' Finally I was wondering what kind of dog eats lettuce? I saw a lady ask for a doggy bag and then stuffing it with her uneaten salad. Oh well, as my daughter would say, "let us" get onto something else' JAMES DELMONTE Fight fairly To the Editor: The so·called Committee of 4000 urging leaseholders to dishonor their contracts with the Irvine Company after enjoying s mugly the benefits of their low lease rates for 2S years In s kyrocketing land values is disgraceful. but to ·be called <Pilot, Jan. 21 ) "selfless" ls almost amusing. The Los Angeles Times rightly denounces the Committee of 4000 for a "s habby $Cene" in resorting to "political blackmail" in an unrelated action against the Irvine Company. But the personal attack on Jim Wood by Louis E. Scott, (Pilot Jan. 21 > Is In my opinion, even more shabby. I have no connections wlU. either the lrvtne Company or Jim Wood, and (mercifully) with the Committee of 4000r but I do know that J im Wood bas elven his lime to serve the City or Newport Beach and personally haa given money and service to various c1,1ltural activities for this community, without recornttlon or reward. F OR TWO DECADES I have watched t he popular target, the Irvine Company, give 1,000 acres for a untverait.y, offer 10 acres In Newport Center ror a Cultural Center. ollet.. park and road acre11e. make weJl-planned community viUa1es and pa.y bu1e taxes. Thclr main drawback seems to be that they desln to make .. prollt for • l•I left lfl"' tNderl Mii ftK-TM titM t• , ... _let tefl 10 Ill ~· t# tMll'llMI• llMI 11 ,_ ..... IAttWt .. - _._ t# 1-w1H .. Oiftll _,.._,_, Al"lllten-"' ..._ , ............ -,.,., !Niii .. ---toll -..... Wtll'!Mlf tfl ,...., It lllfflCIWll "4-"~ """" :~~~=:--,._;::::..~~=~-==~~, • .,1t1Cotiell fMK_.t. their investors, much of which goes back into worthwhile endeavors by the Irvine Foundation. to this community and others around us. If profit making is so repugnant lo the Committee of 4000 and their supporters. there are places like Russia to go, where "profit" is still a dirty word. Free enterprise and contracts made Amenca great U the committee is unaware of escalated land values over the last 25 yea rs , a nd disag r ees with the appraisers who have much more land comparisons than leaseholds on which lo base their values, the.n let them fight honorably and fairly and not try to smear all those who disagree with their tactics. and try Lo get recogni:ied , certified appraisers to revalue their leased land LADISLAW REDAY Housing sales To the Editor· Jerry Collins of the Irvine Company has been quoted as saying "Newport Harbor Board of Realtors figures show that 2.200 residential properties were sold in Newport Beach in 1981." Hal Pinchin, executive vice president of the Newport Harbor Costa Mesa Board of Realtors. reports a total of 2,250 sates for all members. a figure which includes sales out of the area of Newport Beach property, such as Costa Mesa, Santa Ana . Huntington Beach, Long Be ach o r a ny other_ areas. Certainly this information is available to Mr Collins and the Irvine Company REALTORS su ppo rting the Committee of 4000 made a thorough study of all reported sales published in the sales books for 1981. The realtors considered sales only for the Newport Beach area. They found the following : Total sales 8SO minus income unit.s of 72, rPported Sales, lease options WOUid be again subtracted, 27, or a total of 751 sales for 1981 ! The Irvine Company was only off by 1,400. But then 11ain the company has a tendency to exa11erate numbers and manipulate figures. Tbtte times the actual rigure ... doesn't that seem familiar! ANIELLO DI CRJSCJ llUIYlll Sometimes I think people wantiD.I to 1et on any or tbe clt.Y councils in Oran,e County must bave wanted to Joi.ft a circus when they.,,.. JO'.Ull. l .V. _____ ........ __ _ c· Of'lnge Ooaat DAILY PILOT!Thuraday. February 4, 1982 •} 'Election change hit . by legal challenge A San Francisco attorney's ·decis ion this week to continue c hallenging the right of city offk1als to extend their terms of of(1ce ha s some modest relevancy to Costa Mesa Residents in the Bay Area are hopping mad about their city council m ember s voling to increase their tenure. attorney , Lynda Martyn contends. , Ms. Martyn's petition to the , California Supreme Court was turned down last month And Tuesday she filed another 1 petition challenging the • constitutionality of Senate Bill '230 that allowed city council '• members to change their terms to correspond with either general or primary elections. HardJy a murmur was heard when the Costa Mesa C ity Council voted last November to change its elections from April to November. This means two council members will serve an t>xtra six months this one time. On the surface it sounds like a great idea. The city will sav~ about $19,000 and voter turnout 1s ~xpectecl to increase from le'>:, than 20 percent to 70 percent Ms. Martyn now argues that city officials' voting to extend their own terms of office conflicts with laws forbidding elected officials to vote on matters that affect them economically . It all strikes us as a bit academic considering that 1t does not affect the entire council, but only the two seats. and on a one-time basis. But it does point up tht.• fact that. in making changes of th is fundamental naturt·. city councils would be wise as Councilman Ed McFarland suggested to put the change to a vote of the ci tizens. It avoids some arguments. suspi('ions and possibly court tim<' Early city benefactor As President Reagan moves to make good his promise to trim social programs helping the poor and the elderly. we 're taking a look back at a woman who lived in Costa Mesa 50 years ago Her name was Fanny Bixby Spencer. She was the daughter of Jotham Bixby. who owned nearly all of Long Beach The arrival of the eccentric heiress in Costa Mesa in 1919 created a s tir that did not diminish until her death in 1930 She was in the words of Laguna Beach historian Ellen L ee a ··on e person soc i al service ... Decades before s ocial programs became as common as laxes. the wealthy heiress was donating money to the PTA for a hot lunch program She gave money for the city's first ltbrary. a women's club and the land where Lions P ark is today She and her husband Carl Spen cer took many fostl'r children into their home. Over the years the spirit of individualism s hown bv Mrs Spencer has been replaced bv a growing bureaucracy or SOCl<JI programs Man y of us. alread v overburde ned by the taxes to pay for such programs. have not felt the need to become personallv involved m the task of helping neighbors and our community But as the pres ident talks about s hifting $47 billion worth of social programs from the federal to state and local governmenb. the time may come for individuals to take a more active mterest in the welfare of their neighbors in the style cf F'annv Bixby Spencer. And come to think of It . maybe it 1s time for Costa Mes\1 lo consider doing something to honor this l.'arly benefactor. " Basis f Qr pay talks It is time for Newport-Mesa Unified School District officials and representatives from the Newport-Mesa Federation of Teachers to sit down again Union leaders weren't doing a lot of cheering this week when a fa ct -finding report recommending a 6 S percent cost of living pay hike for teachers was made public The fact-finding panel was called in after teachers voted Nov. 18 to reject a 6 percent pay hike offered by the district Included in the 25 page report written by state appointed panel member Douglas Collins are dissenting reports from both the dis trict and the teachers· union. Although the fact finding panel's decis ion is not binding, it does put both sides on the spot • And it is obvious that neither side 1s satisfied with the outcome. The panel's decision calls for a 4 percent salary increase for teachers retroactive from July 1 and a 9 percent increase effective Feb. I , for an annual pay raise or 6.5 percent The dissent report filed on behalf of the district called the pay raise too high and of course the dissent report filed b) tht' teachers· union believed the offer was too low. Superintendent John Nicoll's decision to meet with union leaders after the school board con siders the report is a good one. The fact that neither side agrees with the panel's findings indicates that more talks are needed The fact-finding report should narrow the discussion Opinions expresseo 1n the space above are those of the Dally Pilot Other views ex pressed on tn1s paqe are those 01 their authors and artists Reader comment is 11lv11- ed. Address The Dally Pilot. P 0 Box 1S60, Costa M ew, CA 92626 Phone (714) 6,:l-4321 L.M. Boyd I Quake warning The Japanese back in 1932 noticed that catfish suddenly became lively right before an earthquake. The Chinese in 1975 took seriously the yelping ol dogs, surfacing of snakes, racing of rats and waking of chickens in the night lo evacuate tens of thousand& ol people lo time to save them from the devastating ltalcbeni qu a ke. Virtually all the anlmala acled up at Marine World/ Africa USA in Redwood City. the aJ1bt before the 5.9-Ricbter scale tremor there1boutl in 1979. Many apedalilta now believe that Just about eveey animal species, except man, ea.n foretell earthquakes. One out o r 10 American housebolden almost never lock lbeir doors. Overall only about 9.5 perc«ll ol the dead la tbh e o ulltr1 are crem ated.. So bo1' do you npl.aln the ORANGE COAST: Daily Pilat remarkable statistics out of Marin County north of San Francisco" There, 50 percent are c remated. Women or Switzerland only won the right to vote JO years ago. But when they move, those Swiss move swiftly. Recent legislation there gave Swiss women the honorable rtght to equal pay for equal work. Our Lan&uage man Is still trying to come up with the word with letters that can be alTanCed to make the most other words. "Spare" seems to be a pretty faJr candidate. Spear. Pears. Pane. Pa.res, Rapes, Reaps. Apers. The Ust get.I loo•. Lobster Tbermidor was named by Napoleon after the month la wbJch he was firat aerved said dlab. The French calendar of that time Uated It u the eleventh month from July 19 to Auauat 11. Thom.al P. Haley Pub II Shir T_..,_ A. Mll..,.lne Editor · Barw1 Krelbfch ,Edltorl•I Page Ed itor 'Integrity' panel d8ta probed WASHINGTON The President's Council on Integrity and Efficiency, of all things, is the targe t or a con~re ssional investigation Jls integrity and effiraency have been called into question The council was formed with great ra nfare by President Reaga n to coo rdinat e the eCforts of the government's inspectors general the "Junkyard dogs" the administration sicced on crooks and incompetents in the federal bureaucracy. It is made up of the IGs themselves, plus additional representat1 ves from the far corners of the adm1rustrat1on The man in charge 1s Edwin Harper, No 2 man an the Office of Management and Budget THE PRESIDENT himself appeared an the White House press room last December to express his personal delight with the council's work. "I promised we'd follow every lead, root out every incom petent and prosecute every crook that we found cheating," Reagan said "Thal pledge has been kept." · Indeed, the council's first two reports depicted a triu mpha nt campaign against the pern1c1ous and the profhgale Astonishing increases an the percentage or indictments, convictions and recoveries durlnJt the previous six months were claimed The number of telephone lips had nearly doubled, according to the reports. The statistics were so astonishing, in fact, that they aroused the suspicion of Rep. John Dingell. D-Mich . the professional skeptic who chairs the House Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations. On Dec 22, Dingell sent a confidential letter to Comptroller G -JA-Cl-A-ID-IR-S0-1 -~ General Charles A. Bowser. asking that he set the General Accounting Office's own junkyard dogs loose on the council. My associate Lucette Lagnado has seen the letter 'I am concerned that the quantitative data contained in the First and Second Summary Reports and the fact sheets accompanying such reports may not reflect adequately the performance of the Offices of Inspector General," Dingell wrote He asked that the GAO "determine the accuracy of this data so that Congress gives it appropriate weight when evaluating the performance of the IG Offices and in allocating budgetary and personnel resources to such Offices." Here are some of the specific points th al Dingell asked the GAO to look mlo: -The possibility that thf' statistics were mistakenly or knowingly infl ated by "double counting" when more than one agency's JG worked oo the same case Dingell wants to know if the results claimed by each IG on a particular joint investigation were combined as they should have been, or were added together as if they were separate cases. -T HE LACK OF hard data on which the glowing percentages were based. Dingell noted that the fact sheet accompanying the second report claimed "a 46 percent increase in recoveries, a 59 percent increase in indictments and a 28 percent increase in convictions over the past six months." But the congressman complained : "U nrortunately , one can not independently verify these percentage increase figures " -The second report's claim that "phoned·m tips of possible wrongdoing were up 80 percent" over the previous six months. Dingell wants to see some documentation to support th.is assertion. Footnote A spokeswoman for the OM B said "The council welcomes the GAO audit .. She added that, if anything, the council erred on the side of c:aution. and its figures were "too conservative " Legislation can't force responsibility To the Editor. I would like lo express my view on your Jan. 22 editorial on "Bill Defeat Costly." First I would like to thank you ro r YOU1" ability to observe You definitely should have doubts about the concept of requiring a rerundable deposit on drink containers The MAILBOX environmentalists have once again missed the important fact · lnd1v1duals have to be responsible you can't legislate responsibility ! The individuals who litter will still litter -an act of leg1slat1on certainly wall not deter these people. YOUR POINT is well taken on the cost. However . we the consumers in addition to paying the deposit will even pay more af this legislation is enacted. Who do you think wall pay for all the additional handling of these containers? The consumer' I suggest that we take a hard look at the states which already have this law they are experiencing storage, handling, health hazards and are only taking care of 15 percent to 17 percent of the lttter problem. Educate the people, encourage the recyclers and each of us can set good examples and not litter. DOLLY STOKES Gestapo tactics To the Editor Re: Sen. John G. Schmitz vs Senate Rules Committee: The issue an this case is not a matter of what Sen Schmitz said or didn't say The big issue is that Sen. Schmitz was not given a fair hearing by an impartial group, as is usually accorded to even common criminals. If Gestapo tactics can be used by the state Senate to ··purge" themselves or opposition. with no consideration given to t he consliluents who voted the politician , into office, then this state ls in big trouble. Terms such as "unusual" and "unprecedented" have been u•ed in articles to describe this action. Sen Schmitz was stripped of the t0Uowin1 important positions by the Senate Rules Committee: Chairmanship of the Constitutional Amendments Committee. vice chairman or t h e Industrial R e·I ations Comm I tlee and bis membership in lbe advllory Commission on the Status ol Women. Thls ls a pretty 1teep penalty for responding qe1atively to tbe humlllallnt inclctent of femlnlat attorney Gloria Allred'• publlaly tbrowtna a chutlLJ belt at the Senator. Sb• set the tri p f nd be reu IAto It I But llberty and JuaUe. deerw that tbJ• blalani violation of dril Ubeftles •hould DOl IO uncballengedl PoUUdam or ordinary citizens s hould not be silenced and intimidated if we are guaranteed freedom of speech under the Constitution. All viewpoints deserve lo be heard , otherwise are we no different from Communist countries? JACQUILINE STUBBINS Precious le ttuce To the Editor: I had to say this .. signs of the times. I really don't know what 1s more t>xpensivc, a head of lettuce or a stack of dollar balls. At a dollar a head I expect to see an engraving of George Washington on the next head I buy. Perhaps that kindly old father of our country looking up at me with those big sad eyes will do something lo control my diet Of course I don't enjoy eating alone I wonder what George would like house dressing, Roquefort, blue or Thousand Is land dressing? Finally I was wondering what kind of dog eats lettuce? I saw a lady ask for a doggy bag and then stuffing it with her uneaten salad Oh well, as my daughter would say, "let us" gel onto something else' JAMES DELMONTE Figh t fairly To the E<Jitor. The so-called Committee or 4000 urging leaseholders to dishonor their contracts with. the Irvine Company after enjoying smugly the benefits of their low lease rates for 2S years in skyrocketing land values is disgraceful, but to ·}>e called (Pilot, Jan. 21) "selfless'' is almost amusing. The Los Angeles Times rightly denounces the Committee or 4000 for a "s habby scene" in resorting to "political blackmail" in an unrelated action against the Irvine Company. But the personal attack on Jim Wood by Louis E. Scott, <Pilot Jan 21) ls in my opinion, even more shabby. I bave no connections wJth either the Irvine Company or Jim Wood and ( merci!Ully) with the Committee of 4000~ but I do know that Jim Wood has civen his time to serve the City of Newport Beach and personally hu liven money and ser vice to varloua cultural activities ror this commuoJty, without .recognition or reward. FOR TWO DECADES I have watched the popular target, the Irvine Com~ny, clve 1,000 acres for a university, ottel" 10 acres in .Newport Center f-or a CUitural Center, offer park and road acrtap, make we.ll·planried c:ommu.n.lty vtll,... and pay l\u.ge ta.xea. Their main drawback 1eema to be that they dellre to make a pl"Otlt tor • ~.u, ... .,_ ,_,-. .-.c..,.. , .. , .... ,..,.._-. lttt i. tit ...-C• tr ttllftlla• ti-.. It,......... ~fl/I .. _.. ti._. wltt .. _.,.... ....... llMt AA""'9ft ,.._. i..c ~·-Mf!Wll= INlll .. .-,_ Wl.~.8Wf .. wit~«'\ lt ....... tc .. ..._la ...... ......, will .,.e.. U IMn-y ................. ~; H•-... ,,_ _..," -'""''**' ....... """" tM -lllC"-191........ --' their investors. much of which goes back into worthwhile endeavors by the Irvine Foundation. to this community and others around us H profit making is so repugnant to the Committee of 4000 and their supporters. there are places like Russia to go, where "profit" is still a dirty word. Free enterprise and contracts made America great If the committee isA.<&1naware of escalated land values o~r the last 2S years . and disagrees with the appraisers who have much more land comparisons than leaseholds on which to base their values. then let them fight honorably and fairly and not try to smear all those who disagree with their tactics. and try to get recognized, certified appraisers to revalue their leased land LADISLAW REDAY Housin g sales To the Editor Jerry Collins of the Irvine Company has been quoted as saying "Newport Harbor Board of Realtors figures show that 2,200 residential properties were sold in Newport Beach in 1981." Hal Pinchin. executive vice president of the Newport Harbor Costa Mesa Board of Realtors. reports a total of 2,250 sales for all members. a figure which includes sales out of the area of Newport Beach property. such as Costa Mesa. Santa Ana , Huntington Beach, Long Beach or any other areas. Certainly this information is available to Mr Collins and the Irvine Company. R EALTORS supporting the Committee of 4000 made a thorough study of all reported sales published in the sales books for 1981. The realtors considered sales only for the Newport. Beach area. They found the following : Total sales 850 minus income units of 72, reported sales, lease options would be again subtracted, 27, or a total of 751 sales for 1981! The trvine Company wu only orr by 1,400. But then again the company has a tendency to exauerate numbers and manipulate figures. Three tintes the actual ficure ... doesn't that seem familiar! ANIELLO DI CRISCI llllJL'lllt THURSDAY, FE8. 4, 1982 Anthony Hopkins portrays the Hunchback of Notre Dame in television remake of Victor Hugo classic. See P.age 84. D a CAVALCADI; 82 llVllE TELEVISION 84 STOCKS 87 Riley tells airlines he opposes added flights lb FaEDE&JCK SCBOEMEBI. °' .. ~ ........ Commerclal airlines wan&ng to either Increase or initiate iervlce at John Wayne Airport are drawln1 opposition from Orange Count y Supervisor ThomuRUey. The supervtaor, whose district Includes the airport, baa sent letters to three of four carriers involved w~ich suegest Riley HB sets arcades limits -By PATIUCK KENNEDY °' .. .,...,,... .... New electronic game arcades in Huntington Beach have to be at least one half mile from schools ·because city officials don't want youngsters cutting class and putting their lunch money into the machines. City Council members also ordered that new arcades be located only in commerciaJly zoned areas at intersections with traffic stop lights for safety of the children. The new ordinance also states that arcades must be separated from homes by a "buffer" including buildin1s, streets, or open space of at least 100 feet. Mayor Ruth Finley says she baa "mixed feelines " about regulating arcades, but she says police otflcials contend children get "addicted'' to the elect.rooic screens and sometimes commit petty crimes for coins. ·'The police department absolutely swears there are more petty crimes committed by children who use those things," Mrs . Finley said. "They say that some of the kids who bang out at the arcades also are the ooes developing records for petty crime. ''Somewhere down the line, it's up to parents to tell their kids not to spend all their money on these games," she said. Councilman Ron Pattinson said, "J..see kids putting all their lunch money into these machines and I want to restrict them." Councilman Jack Kelly was 'the only official opposed to the ordinance, which defines an arcade as a business with at least four machines. Kelly said arcades are supervised by adults, but be objected to machines placed in liquor stores near alcohol and adult magazines. He suggested the city should put controls on each machine and that a fee could be levied to generate revenue for the cAy. wlll not support m1hl level increuea. In two of the letters. the supervisor said the airlines were l&norlng "larger community goals" to reduce noiae impacts on airport-area residents by proposin& rugbt level increases. ilac1t\c SOuthwest Airlines .. wblcb now operates two Oigbta dally from Orange County to the San Francisco Bay area, bas said it iDtends to opera~ six SAN JOAQUIN HILLS TRANSPORTATION COARIOOR additional ftJa,hta by Jwie 1. Western Alrlines, whlch now serves Salt Lake Clty with two rtl1ht1 daily from Oran1e County, wants two more departures. Phoenix-based America Weal Airlines, a new carrier not now aervma Orange County, wants to belln daily servic~ from John Wayne to its home city with four rughts. And, Continental Airlines, also CORRIDOR PLAN Map indicates special lanes for mass transit in new free way proposed from Corona del Mar to San Juan Capistrano. Freeway to have mass transit lane By GLENN sC01T Of ... o.Mf,.... .... A new freeway throup the San Joaquin Hills llnkin1 Corona d e l Mar with San Juan Capistrano will include apedal lanes in the median for a mua transit system, accordln1 to the latest Ora nge County government plana. The lanes will have thelr own on and off ramps and will be inaccessible to other vehicles, said Herbert Nakasone, chief ol public works planning for the Environmental Management Agency. They probably will be built at the same elevation as the freeway to serve as a bu5way, he said , although a light rail" system also will be considered. The County Board o f Supervisors concurred this week with the agency's. proposal ~ locate mau trana1t 1y1tem m the middle of the freeway rather than along a sbouJder. "Nowadays, when you do future freeway planntn1. you are required to look lnto future 1uldeways," Nakasone explained. The freeway's first use, however, will be for cars. The majority of the 14-mile thoroughfare estimated to cost '250 million will have eight lanes. be said, although some sections will have six lanes. The freeway is designed to begin at MacArthur Boulevard where the extension or the Corona del Mar Freeway ends. It will cross Irvine Company property until it reaches Laguna Canyon Road, then will continue on property owned al most exclusively by other large development corporations until it links with the San Diego Freeway at Avery Parkway just north or San Juan Capistrano. EMA Director Murray Storm told the supervisors in a letter this week that "fl.nt priority" in constructing the freeway will be given the portion east of Laguna Ca nyon because land development is expected to occur faster there than on Irvine Company land. • Irvine 1late1 Yalentine dance To speed up the planning process, the land developers, including the Aliso Viejo Co .. have hired C!ruen Associates us head a coalition of consulting firms in preparlne initial engineering studies. Junior high school teen-agers are invited to a Valentine's Day dance Friday night al Turtle Rock Community Park , 1 Sunnyhill, Irvine. Those wishing to attend the dance sponsored by lbe Irvine city Community Services Department will have to s how their junior high school identification. Admission is $2 at the door or $1.50 admission tickets can be bought al the park before the dance. • Turtle Rock to hold pet 1how Turtle Rock <..:ommunity Park, 1 Sunnyhill. Irvine, ·wm bold a pet show on Tuesday from 3:45 p.m . to 4:45 p.m. Categories for competition will Include the Sm!llest, Largest, Most Unusual, Best Groomed and Best Trained. Ribbons and the Best of the ·show Award will be •presented . For more information c~l 752-6078. . • Irvine 1enion •et luncheon The Irvine Active Senior Clti1ens' Club will hold a ~alentine's Day luncheon meetlng oo Feb. 13 at the Irvine Senior Center, 3 Sandbur1 Way, Irvine. Admiaslon ts i:J. Rosemary Balley will entertain on the Hammood Organ. For more information call Ml~. • · Saddleback •eta benefit walk The Saddltback Colle1e Learnlo1 A11l1tanc• Prwam la .eekJnt pledaea of flnandal 1upp0ft for each mUe walked by ha tutora and 1t•U-membera durlo,._. benefit walk ~al:. C'1led a Lap-A·TbQa, Ute tuadl-allm' evmt la a 10.mUe I trek th!_OQib Mlutafl Vjejo ua '"El 'l'arO.r ltacb Wi.ltefll bela1 uked to 1atber. pled&ea ot tt 'or mo~ per mile walked from frtenda, relaUvM and others in the communlty. Bud1et ratrtcUOJlt bav• aaveral.J .curlall.e.4... lbe pro1ram'• actlvtUe1, wblc could be cut alto•etber' wltbln a month if out.aide 1up7ort ltn't fortbcomln1, ufi lclall aa1 . Por loformatloD, call lllik• MerrttWd a~ Al.Ult. An exact centerline for the freeway is expected to be released soon, sources.say. Nakasone said small se1ments or the freeway already have been graded at Aliso Viejo. Land dedication and grading for the freeway bas been a condition set by the county government for approving adjacent land for development. The Irvine Company al.so is expected to prepare parts ol the freeway when it build.a Pelican HUis Road over the coastal billa to Pacific Coast HJ1hway as a condltlon for subdlvidln1 sections of ita valuable Irvine Coast property, Nakasone Hid. Despite the preliminary wort. county offlctala attll haven't •freed on ~to ft.nance much o the pavinJ for the freeway. Medical library gete donation The 8oGI ol Italy Grand Loae el Calllornla IMll rlMm ~,IOO lo. the UC lrvlne lledlcal C.ter to •tabllab. blrth de(edl llbr'1'Y. The 1l1irar1 wlll provl'Cfi current publlcatloH and periodlcala tor .. br pb,.sd.ul9 and medical ltadeDtl eoaC°ti'Dld with tM treatment "' ~ ,~th blrtb clefec:U. a newcomer, wanta four Oia,bta daily. Two OJa,bta, accordlna to the airline, would go to Denver and two to Houston. Bott) routes would Involve intermediate a tops. Continental'• request was distinct from the others ln that the carrier w~ta to u.ae larger and heavier Boeing 7Z7 jetliners.~ Boeing 7Z7s never have been approved for use at John Wayne Airport. Airlines are required to fly either DC-9 Super 8011, DC .9.305 or Boeinl 737s Jn a repiy letter to PSA, Riley said the airline's plans "will lead PSA and lbe county of Orange not down a path of beneficial cooperation in the ruture, aa I had hoped, but ooe that leads to an acrimonious relation.ship." . · 'l would counsel that you adopt a greater level of cooperation with the Orange County Board of Supervilon," Riley said in a letter ln respome to Weatern's propoeal to add two ru1bta. He sald any conslderaUoo of Increasing Western'• fll1ht allocaUooa would be done "over ·my strem.~ua objections." Other airlines and thelrr exiating allocaUona are AirCal.' 23 .5, Republic , 11 .~. and Frontier. two. Irvine lllring industry New panel offering financial incentives to companies By AlatAllD GREEN of .. DllltY ........... Irvine's fledgling Industrial Development Authority is preparing to offer financial incentives to lure new industry to the city. A ulhority directors wiU meet at 4 :30 p.m. Feb. 11 in City Hall to consider applications from companies seekins tax-free financing to build plants in Irvine , said Michael McNamara, city director of administrative services. Bond interest on tax-free bonds reportedly is relatively low In this form of financing. However, the bonds are said to be attractive to investors because no tax must be paid on bond interest. Companies seeking this advantageous form of financing to build plants in Irvine must a pp I y to the toe al authority, which reviews the application and forwards it to the California Jndus tr l al Development Financing Advisory Commission. This commission bas final say on the applic~tion . The co m mission allows for tbe issuance of $200 mtlllon In tax-free bonds ye.arty lhroua,bout California. A provision of the federal tax .code allows the issuance of tax-free industrial development bonds. El ~rtmdo-based Wyle Labs and the Subaru Co., which bas its West Coast headquarters in Sacramento, are among those companies planning to file applications with the authority which was formed late last year. Hontington man health care chief The directors or the authority are Craig Scott Galbraith, 121 Rockview Drive, Irvine, a UC Irvine faculty member; Jacques Warshauer, 5 Redwood Tree Lane, Irvine, a consultant with Long Beach-based Belmont Financial·Corp., and Michael A. Oswald, 2S Morena, Irvine, an attorney with the Irvine law firm , Capretz and Kasdan. McNamara said that he d~~n·t beheve the authority will lead to a heavy influx or new industry, since it is able to orrer only limited rinanciaJ incentives. 'f bese tncentives come in the form or tax-rree bonds that can be iasued through the authority. Sale of these bonds would provide up to $10 million in the form of a loan to a qualifying lndustriaJ company seeking to build a plant in Irvine. The company would be responsible for paying off principal and interest on the bonds Huntington Beach resident Dr. Charles Kerns has been named to head Orange Co unty government's new Health Care Agency, which has a $60 million annual budget and about 1,200 employees. Kerns, 34, was appointed Wednesday by the County Board of Supervisors over about 100 applicants who were recruited na1ionwide. A clinical psychologist who joined the county in 1976, Kerns was the interim assistant director or mental health in the county's Human Services Agency The health care position was created when county supervisors voted last November to split the giant Human Services Agency into two smaller agencies. Kerns' Health Care Agency will administer public healtli programs , men tal health programs and medical s,>roerams w_hicb serve lb~ indigent. Social 'Services, the other new agency. will handle welfare, day care and other indigent programs. _ He is scheduled to make hia recommendations on the matter tonight prior to the school board's vote. Division of the old Human Services Agency, which spent more than one-third of the county's annual $763 mlllion budget, is to be completed July 1. . Supervisors have already . appointed the former Human Services director , Larry Leaman, to bead the new Social Services Agency. .Kerns, who bad been eaming $50,280 per year in bis old post, is from Marylan~. where he received bis doctorate in psychology from the University of Maryland in 1973. Off shore leases war declared Laguna letters ammunition to fight oil, gas proposals The City of Laguna Beach has declared war on proposed oil and gas leases off the city's coastline and officials plan to use letters from citizens as ammunition. C ity council members unanimously approved sending a press release to new~papers urging Lagunans to write to a v-.riety or state offices and legislators seeking deletion of tracts offshore for sale. The U.S. bas issued a notice of sale or oil and gas leases in the outer continental shelf, in an area encompassing 892,000 acres in Southern California. Several of those tracls proposed in the lease sale would be off Laguna's co~sUine. Newport .Heacn as also on record opposing the lease saJe, but. to date, has launched no acUve campaign to stop the sale off that city's shore. Concerns raised by local officials include the visual blight they say would be imposed on coastal r8 ldents and visitors, with oU rigs located as close as .1three miles off the sand. And, with Laguna's thousands or residents who live on hillsides with unobstructed views of the ocean, the unsightly rigs would be visible for miles . ln addition, the city bas concerns about the potential for. oil spills, which could damage or destroy . the city's many tide pools ar:d fish and fowl habitat. A spill could alSO devastate an underwater ecological reserve designated by the state off L~guna. Laguna Beach has eatabliabed five oceanfront i>arks totallnr nearly 15 acres which serve up to 3 mUlioo visitors each year. A substantial spill could affect revenues derived from those tourists and visitors, the City Council said. Specifically. the city is urlial citizen! to write to the state's Office of Plannin& and Research, the state Coastal Commission, Sens . Alan Cranston and S.I. Hayakawa and Rep. Robert Badham. Artist Irving Manoir, 91, dies Coast painter lived in Corona del Mar since 1939 lrVtng Manoir, an artist whose life spanned nine decades -and ·two continents, died early Tuesday in bis Corona del Mar home at the ace of 91. Manoir and ha wtre, Huel, first came to Orange County in 1929, where they establlabed a . studio and gallery in Fairywood Canyon of Laauna Beach. After several years abroad in Europe and a brief stay in Cblcaao, tbey took up permanent residence in Corona del Mar in 1939. He WU born in Cblca10 in 1881 and took hi.s first job aJ an artist in the eqravtn1 department ol Moataomer'Y Ward depart.meat •tore . Fruatrated oy commercial art, Manoir enrolled to the Chica10 lnatilut.e of Art and. WU CJ'aduated thftle yeara later. He took' tucbiDI poeltklft at t.be lmtitute tbortl.J after IJ'audaUon, and In ltll marrled-cme al .. .,.pe.,-H.-i--...... b111 Artist lrvlng Manotr of 'Corona del Mar ls dead at Ii aMlf '1 style •• a' artllt waa lnllueoeed by the paJntert be met oa hl1 tnvel1 -Pablo Plcabia ln St. Tropes, Dtqo Rivera ID Acapuko -amaaa tbem. Maoolr beUned tllat modern art "wu a 1tru1tl• t. 91. • ••~ID~ tbe tyrann1 of ll•• object, IDd ln bla won bl tlW to _capture h\I own emotkel regarding the subject matter aa well as the subject it.self. He enjoyed commercial success from the early~ 30a on, offerin& much of bis work for sale through the llanball Flekl & Company Gallerift of Cbica10. Manolr's work wu exhibited at the Part.a Salon ot 1930 and at the Salon Autome o( Paris a year later. His moat . pralaed work. '.'Aapen and Snow," was reeently aold bJ a Hou.aton &allery for *30,000. Durtnc the lut yeara al ~· llle, Manolr worked leu wttll paints and more wltb all "enamel" proc.u be lnveatecl ~ bil atudlo. Tb• aubatance. nicknamed Blonam-el (bla name •ap•U•d backwarcb), aeta to remarkable bardaHI and 1mootbn• ww.o..t UM.w of a kila. Ullal Uitdmade moldl. llanolr would e&at ttae. Olltm~ 1111 ttlkW IUJll ... later pe.lM daem. · Mr . .Manolr li auntffa bJ 1161, wldow. Hutt· UM ~bed 8Q children. iil1 ••hHKI= • bGrled .. a.In .... tater tt1i1 welk. _. 90 lrill be Miii; 'r .... • Ylll.11111111 llllY NPll. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 4 . 1961 ORANGE COUNTY . C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS ~ Florida tapes suggest pilots aware of • ice WASHINGTON (AP) -Tape recordin&a from the Air Florida jet tbat crashed loto the Potomac River last month support theories that ice or snow on the winp made it stall -and sll'onpy suggest the pll0'8 knew of the problem before taking off, accor.ding to today's Washington Poat. The cockpit volce tape suagests the pilot and coeUot had seen a buildup of lee or snow on the Boeing 737'1 wlnp but went ahead with the ill-fated m1ht anyway, an unidentified source close to the National Transportation Safety Board investigation told the newspaper. NTSB spokesman Ira Furman and Francis McAdams, head of the NTSB investigation, could not be reached for comment on the report Wednesday night. According to a preliminary transcript DI the tape, pilot Larry Wheaton and copilot Alan Petit spoke to each other repeatedly about the heirvy snow falling Jan. 13 u they prepared to take off. the Poat said. One source told the newspaper that their words suuest they at one point looked out their windows specifically lo check for snow on one of the winp, noted there was some, but took off anyway. Reagan 1naps plan on housing slmllp WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan will announce in the next two to three weeks a plan to nelp the housing industry, a top adviser said today. Edwin Meese Ill, counselor to the president , made the comment in regard to a question on what steps Reagan would take to spur housing, one of the most depressed sectors of the· economy. He did not explain whether the plan would be aimed at mort~age interest rates or at all interest rates. But a presidential aide said later Mees e was referrinit to the housing industry rather than interest rates. Meese's comments came at a breakfast speech to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce on the administration's legislative priorities for 1982. "We have a s eries of meas ures that are under consideration now ," he said in regard to housing. "The main thing we have to do though ... is do everything possible to bring down l;he interest rat~. "This is why you'll be seeing some specific action on that in the next two or three weeks by the presidenL" The administration has been openly critical in the past few wet>ks or the actions by the Federal Res erve Board to restrict the nation's monetary supply, saying the Fed's lack of precision in meeting its growth targets was responsible for currently high interest rates. 'The prime rate jumped again Tuesday as banks responded to e conomic pressures such as Increased borrowing by the Treasury to finance the government's growing deficits. Meese earlier sala tnat the high interest rates were the result or a "lack of confidence" by investors that "any government can hold to their course." And be said the Reagan .administration had no intention or deviating from its tax cut and budget cut plans. "This administration will stay on course," he said. "We will not be giving in to the vagaries of the stock market. . . . " 'Mother begged me,' SnoW/all murder suspect says paralyzes 8 DAVIDKUTZMANN called paramedics to the home Midwes·t :: ... o.11y,,_, .. ,. at 1211 W. Bay St. Murder defendant Herbert During his first day on the Barclay Baetz. told a Superior witness stand Wednesday, Baetz Court Jury today that be eave · had testified that bis mother his 87-year-old mother a lethal asked him if be would help ber dose of cyanide last September end her life about nine mmitha after she begged him, "Barclay, before she died. just put me away." The defendant bas said that be In bis second day on the realized that his mother wu witness stand, Baetz, a balding serious and that, "yes, I felt I 57 -year-old chemist, testified had agreed to something, but I that he mixed the potassium dido 't feel I would be called on cyanide in a glass with orange to ca IT}' it out." ,. ju\ce and gave it to .Tanette H owe v er , in today • s Baeb as she sat in the living test! mony, the bespectacled room of her Newport Beach Baetz said that bis mother asked home last Sept. 10. him on the night of her death Questioned by defense lawyer ··Bar c I a y can · t you do Stuart Grant, the defendant said something for me?" his mother took one sip or the Baetz said that the two began lethal drink and then convulsed, to quarrel, as they had in the lapsing into unconsciousness. past, over her refusal to take The woman was eventually pain medications for a nerve1 pronounced dead at Hoag ailment that caused her pain Memorial Hospital after Baetz <See MOTHER, Pa1e AZ> PSA vows to fix off ending billboard A Pacific Southwest Airlines billboard that has raised the ire of Orange County Supervisor Thomas Riley because it does not refer to John Wayne Airport will soon be changed. John O 'Malley Jr., the airline's government affairs di rector, said the bill board, which makes reference to Orange County Airport, is scheduled to be repainted within 30 days. He said the airline bas no plans to either remove the sign or have it repainted sooner because of contract provisions with an outdoor advertising firm. Riley, who proposed that Orange County Airport be renamed to honor John Wayne, objected to the billboard in a Jan. Z7 letter to O'.Malley. A similar protest had been lodged by Riley in October when the billboard was located on Main Street near the Santa Ana-Orange border. O'Malley said the billboard recently was moved to the new location alongside the Santa Ana Freeway at Valley View A venue in Santa Fe Springs. By TM Auociated Preaa Wlde areas of the Midwest were Lmmobilized by up to two feet ol snow that cnaahed roofs and forced acbools and buaineaes to close in the second heavy snowfall t.bia week. More misery waa in store aa a third storm began moving in from tbe Rocky Mountains. Seven northwest Ohio counties wel'e declared snow emergency areas with travel limited to emergencies. In Georgia, meanwhile, record floods sent homeowners fleeing, and the Northeast was pelted with freezing rain. The Midwest's second storm, which turned into sleet today over the eastern Ohio Valley, caused fewer problems than earlier storms that have pasted the area this winter. "I think everybody learned his lesson," said Monroe County, Mich., sheriff's dispatcher Betty Miller. "Most people took cover this lime.'' Experts were called to the Eastern Missouri Correctional Center in Pacific, where the roof of the new $25 million facility began to sag under nearly two feet of snow .. In Indiana, 15 members of the Ball State University men's baseball team and six members of the track team escaped injury when a fieldhouse roof caved in. The Howard County Civil Defense maintenance garage in Kokomo collapsed.~ Jmtiee leaving SACRAMENTO <AP ) -Slate Supreme Coull Justice Frank Newman plans to resign, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. said today. Brown appointed the former UC Berkeley law school dean to the court in 1977. About :.> 1econda later, Pet.it's final words to Wheaton reportedly were, "We're aolnl down, Larry," and Wheaton retpooded, "I know lt .. " Seventy.four of the 79 people on the jetliner, includina Wheaton and Petit, were killed "'hen the plane hit a busy commuter bridge and 1maabed into the icy Potomac. Four people on the brid1e were killed. FAA regulations state that "no pilot may take off an airplane that has frost, snow or ice adhering to'' en1ine1, wind1hields, wln11, control surfaces or, with pi.aton-enline aircraft., the propeller. Ice or snow can reduce the lifting power or wines . Investl1ators have said that ,a bout 43 minutes elapsed between Flight 90's last de-icinl and the takeoff. As the plane aped down t.be runway at National Airport, the pilots' words indicate they were worried they were not accelerating tast enou1b, accordine to ~e Po.t. One source was quoted aa saying that preliminary electronic analysis of the Jet noise recorded on the tape indicates the engines were producin1 only 80 percent of normal power. HANDICAP LEADER -Hard working crew of the 40-foot sloop Saeta, owned and skippered by Rogelio Partida of the Club de Yates de Acapulco held the handicap lead after three Deify ......... " ..... ~ days of sailing in San Diego Yacht Club's fourth biennial San Diego-to-Manzanillo race. Saeta is a Class C entry. For today's update. see Sports, Page C2. • First Lady's china surVIves .$290,000 set comes through dinner debut intact WASHINGTON <AP> -Nancy Reacan's new china set survived ill White House debut intact. Nary •$'8 cup was broken. And despite its $209,000 price tag -paid with a donation from the non-profit Knapp Foundation -there didn't seem to be a critic in the house. E~en the butlers loved it, according to chief usher Rex Scouten. The 4,372-piece set, which the first lady bad said was so "badly, badly needed," was unveiled Wednesday n11bt at a state dinner bonorin(I President Hosoi Mubarak of Ecypt. It was ·the first thing he mentioned in bis after-dinner tout. "Before I start, let me first congratulate Mrs. Rea1an for the new china which ls very elegant," Mubarak said. The 120 dinner guests applauded and the first lady laughed. • Mubarak wasn't the only one with compliments. The butlers "are mighty proud or it," Scouten said. "They are thrilled to death. It's beautiful." Vice President George Bush called it fine china and said it was outrageous tO criticize. _the, first lady since she acquired it at no cost to the taxpayers. 111151 COAST lllTHIR Variable cloudiness today through Friday morning, becoming falr Friday afternoon. Highs both days .62 to 66. Lows tonight 46 to 54. PSA officials said m a recen\: letter to Riley that use of Otangt\ County Airport on the billboar~ and signboards on Orang~ County Transit District bus~ was abort-ferm in nature anq was aimed at persons who mitb' not be aware of the airport's name change~ such as tourisb. Court· rules on assumable loans The 220-place service was ordered seven month.a a10 and arrived by truck TuesdtY la time to be band-waabea for Wednesday olgbt's dinner. , The ivory china with a red and ,gold border wu the abowcue ,for a di.oner ol ftlet ol mountaia trout farcle with fleuronaz 111181 TIDAY Boz tope, t1'0dOlc1 atomps . aftd c:ouPOI"' . ore tlw loUlt promOtM>nl bftftQ uaed br . cmUM• to m JIOIHf'Qft'•· A§. :11111 \ 0 ·Malley -p0inted out that the bulk of the alrllnes other advertisinl about its seflice to Orao1e County makes reference to John Wayne Airport. - For example, a recent ediUon or PSA's infll1hl ma1ulne contained a centerfold ad that reads, "Now PSA preaenll smile service from John Wayne Oranae County Airport to the Bay Area." PSA operates two Oran1e County.San Fnneilco Bly Area fti&hll dally. o· Malley saici-uae.. altllne WU not tryln1 to "anta1onbe" anyone by Ullnt Onn1e Comity Airport in aeleet.ed adverUalq. Asked 1f be felt Rlley wu beln't aata1onl1tlc o•er the luue, O'llalley replied, "I pt lbat lmPtWlloo." \ Buyers can take over mortgages at old interest rates SAN FRANCISCO <AP)-The California Supreme Court today ext~nded to private lenders &Ad commercial property ill naU.q that buyers cao a11ume a mort1a1e at old and lower ~terest r.tes if their credit isn't impaired . The unanimous declalon by Justice Allen Brouuard makes it a clean sweep for some property bu.Yen wbo cbaUeqed atate and federally charte~ banlta, 1avln11 ind loan ••lt0clation1, and PT'h'st• lenders. 'Tbe court aald all non·ln1Ututtonal lenders and tellers ol commerclaJ property mu1t comply with tt1 1971 Wellentamp dect1ton. That .rulln1 1ald lt ••• aa I unreuonable trade reatraint for enforcement of due-on-aale .supreme of chicken with. reca banks and savings and loan clauaes," said the CClurt. peppers m4 •bite rice, ,.._ aasociatJons to "call ln" old lo tbia cue, Dawn Investment beans amandine, port Hhat loans in th• sale of r••l Co. and Gertrude Roblneon eold cheese, watercre11 an4 property, thus forcin1 new a lS·unlt apartment bouae In Loi mushroom aalad, chocolate ne10Uated loans at today' a AA1eles to Edith and Doo Beck mousse and pttill tour&. bi1ber interest rates. ln llarcb im. Aa part of a Each place settint couiltl o( Tbe practice of entorctna loan purchue price they Sot an old 19 pieces but only HftD wen note du4kln·•al• clauaea allowed $M,OOO ocq with a ctue.-...ie.. uaed w;inttday: aemce plM4t. .lenders to refuae to accept clause. But Dawn lnye,t.aMat salad plate, dJnner Pia... aa conUnued · mortta1• pa1menta •refused to accept paymenU OG ..._ from new buyers at th• old tbe n_~t called the loan and pJate, dMMrt plate, u.mltalM lntertlt rat., demand J)a)'llNllt tben OMG notice ~ default llDd ·cup and Nvc:er. of the Old loM in f\&11 and ftJe elecUon to sell. ~ ~~'!n':"""" Tb• otber ~ ..,;..,..:.Miii notlce--af'difnh ll 9* paid, --' A Loi AiijWii SijjiiiOf Pli(e--;-fliiji bow& ,._, ~ · ••we conclude that no 1ranted an bijuitcUoft a1ililit plate, tea cup ••• aa.aeet, 1ub1tantlal reaapn bH been the tale, • i»ioblHcia eu,., 'cNili ~ ... . 1bown to tteat private I_... 8onvwlq from Wel ... ka... luad ltMd. fleriY ...... .... 'dlffereaU1 tban luUtuUooal UM luprea1e court sild ia°i bowl, r....-., pd~-., leaders ln re1peet to tbe mn.u. aad u,bl W7 Mi ID • ..-. • aln ... 11111 NeUaADt OD .U..U. (tnFI'• ,........taaalll0rt1upp1Jaf...a eu.-md &tee .......... ... of lltle) u1alt1a1 from -... ... _,. .._. ... .,.._..,..... • ._ • .. .. ,.. ..... . I Shooting • m eatery ) 'probed Westminster police are lnveatl1at1oi the shooting • Wednesday n11ht or a customer ' In a local Vietnamese J restaurant. Police said the customer. I Thong Quoc Duong, 21, or Santa Ana, was treated at Westminster Community Hospital ror a severe flesh wound In the neck and was released. The incident occurred at 10: lS p.m .. when three to six men described as Orientals ln their \ mid-20s entered the Dong Thanh restaurant, Bolsa A venue and Ward Street, Westminster police Officer Earle Graham said. 1 Graham s aid one or the " intruders fired a single shot ' rrom a .38-caliber handgun, then l the group fled. He said no motive for the shooting ha s yet been determined. Metzger nmning LOS ANGELES (AP> California Ku Klux Klan leader Tom Metzger has declared he is a candidate for the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate and will run against Gov. Edmwtd G. Brown Jr .. among others. The d~,elaralion was made Wednesday. Bv STEVE MARBLE Of'bie 0...-, ......... If I never hear the word "canary" again. I'll be happy. Real happy. You might say l've been eating tanary I mean crow most of the week. I've endured what can only be described as a relentless attack of bird calls. bird jokes and general bird humor Alfred Hitchcock would- have had trouble directing the sort of bird scene I'"e been facing in the Daily Pilot newsroom. A zoo keeper should have it so rough. An explanation is in order. It all started when I wrote a short feature about a Costa Mesa woman who sells reclaimed aluminum cans then divides her profits af!long four charities. At least that's the way I wrote it l'm positive of :hat But that's not the way it came out in the paper Monday. The s tory. as it was printed . had the can-collecting woman dividing up her profits among four canaries. That's canaries as in birds. little feathered things with wings. · The following morning, the Jokes started. I should have seen them coming. ~ DEFENDANT TESTIFIES -Herbert Barclay Baetz said that he gave his mother .a lethal dose or cyanide after she begged him "put me away ," during testimony in Superior Court today. r From Page A1 MOTHER 'ASKED FOR DEATH'. • • and itching. Describing the events of the 1 evening for the jury, Baetz said he told his mother emotionally, ., ''We've got to figure out 1 something to do about all this." Saying that they both were • growing angry. the witness said bis mother told him. "Barclay ~ put me away. It's lime to put me J away now." 1 Baetz told the jury in Superior ,1 Court Judge Everett Dickey's courtroom that he believed his mother was serious and that he went upstairs to get the cyanide after she told him repeatedly, "Put me away. Put me away." Baetz said he screamed back at her, "Shut up, shut up. I can't take it anymore " Baetz said he went upstairs and brought down a bottle of cyanide that he had purchased about a year earlier and mixed a half teaspoonful into a glass of orange juice "I said, 'Mother are you really serious about this business·," he said, and s he responded. "Barclay just put me away." Baetz said he: gave her the drink and that she look one sip of it by herself as he stood by watching her. T he witness said he began to panic because be feared bis mother had not sipped enough of the cyanide to k.ill her. Baetz said be told her, "Mother, damn it all, let me ON WITNE SS STAND Murder defendant Baetz testified his mother was annoyed by a nightmare s he had in early 1981 give you some more." However. be testified, she wJs non.responsive and appeared 1o be unconscious. As ked by his lawyer why he was so panicked, Baet1 said, O"ANOI COASl Dilly Pilat ClaHlfi.d advertlatng 7141142-.Mri All oth•r departm•nta 142-4321 IJ TESTIMONY -Baetz, of Newport Beach. said his mother asked him what was the best way ~o end her life. "Supposing she was revivable? Whal would she come back as? She just wanted to pass away." The prosecution is seeking a murder conviction against the Newport Beach resident. But, defense lawyer Grant bas asserted that Baeh never intended to kill his mother but was only res~omlin~ to her request to end her Ule. Previous witnesses called by the prosecution testified that Baetz, who ls twice divorced, arglled bealed.ly with bls mother on many occasions. He moved ln with her In Um. -~=~:.~P).~A le1lllaUve committee voted J!!!t- today not to report tbe Equal Rlabta Amendment to the floor of tbe Virgin ia Rouse of Dele1ates, almost certainly klllln1 ERA's chance of PUl.IC• In tbe General Alaembly. ' Steve Mitchell, a reUow reporter, wanted to know this: "What happens If one of the birds dies. Do the others divide up the money or ... More laughter. more bird calls and bird imitations followed. I couldn't escape it. •·What has eight legs and weighs 1,000 pounds ana chirps?," one of my colleagues wanted to know. I wasn't sure. "Four 250-pound canaries," he laughed, slapping his knee. Then a curious reader gave me a phone call "Are you Steve Marble?" he wanted to know. I told him I was. "Well,\' he continued, "about those canaries Even he was laughing and 1 didn't even know the guy. But that was just the start. My boss took to flapping his arms like some kind of out-of-control bird <a canary, I guess l and several others started cutting out bird stories and leaving them on m) desk. 1 tried to explain that lt was some other bird brain that made the canary goof Thal only brought more bird whistles. Even in the restroom I heard the bird calls But 1 figured my wife would understand "~s wrong. She read the article. doubled up tn laughter and immediately called several friends to share the JOke ~ne said they laughed too. But being the good humored. thick-skinned gu) I am. I didn't get my beak out of s haJ>(! over any of this You might say I didn't even get my feathers ruffled But someday . Kennedy library has secret tapes BOSTON <AP) -President John F . Kenne d y secretly recorded conversations and telephone calls with world leaders, congressmen and aides while in the White House. the director of the Kennedy library said today ·'I have no reason to think they knew they were being taped," Dan Fenn Jr . the library director. said of the people recorded in 100 to 140 hours or taped meetings and conversations The ta~ are being examined in Boston at the library in preparation for their release to the public, possibly this summer. Fenn said 250 teleJ>.hone conversations and ~ meetings In the Oval Office or Cabtnet Room in the White House were recorded from mid-1962 to Nov. 7, 1963, lS days before Kennedy was assassinated Among those recorded in telephone calls were Marshal Tito of Yu goslavia , Gen . Douglas MacArthur. evangelist Bill).'. Graham and Adlai SteveD.son, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations under Ke nnedy. The list includes members of Congress . according lo an index of the tapes that Fenn had. The Washington Post said today that an index of the recerdings it obtained also s h <:Tw s Ken n e d y ta p e d conversations with members of his family . Including his wile, Jacqueline. The su bje c ts or tbe conversations included Vietnam, the Cuban missile crisis, the Integration of the University of Mississippi and civil rights in general. "I haven 'l the vaguest idea why Kennedy used the tapes or saved them," Fenn said. Matenal from the tapes was not available. "When they're available, they'll be available to anyone. junior high school students. Arthur Schlesinger or anyone " Any potentially c lassified rr.atenal will be referred to the orig mating agency. which wtll decide whether lo keep it classified or allow the museum to releruie it. Fenn said. ·'There was no attempt to hide the existence of this material," Fenn qaJrl today in a11 jr.te. ... "'.ew at his Lexington, Mass .. home' "We said those tapes did exist. • • J think one reason for all the excitement is that some people expect great b1R secrets to be exposed ·· Schmitz flays party leaders · as 'eunuchs' SACRAMENTO IAPJ -State Sen John Schmitz says California Republican Party leaders are "moral eunuchs" for condemning his attack on abortion-rights advocates as anti-Jewish. Schmitz, of Corona del Mar, 1s seeking the Republican nomination for the US Senate. H e issued a s tatement Wednesday in response to a condemnalion by seven lop orricials of the state GOP at the California Republican Party convention last weekend in Monterey. At the convention, party leaders sidetracked a formal resolution condemning Schmjtz thus avoiding a possible floor fight But they issued a personal statement accusiog Schmitz of anti-Semitism and bigotry. H ow to avoid Suspect 'denies killing By DA VlO IUJT'ZllANN Of_O-,,... ..... A previously convicted sex otrender charged with killln1 a 12-yea r -ol d An a helm boy admitted to police last Aueuat that be sexually moleated the child and eventually "bollied" him before leaving him ln a r e mote area in Los Angeles County But, according to Orange County Grand Jury transcripts released Wednesday , Robert Jackson Thompson, ~. denied that be killed young Benjamin Lee Brenneman, whose body was found In the Rancho PaJos Verdes area a day after be • disappeared fi:om an Anaheim apartment complex on Aug. 2S, 1981 The youngster. a newspaper d elivery boy for the Orange County Register, died of strangulation. Thompson was scheduled lo be arraigned today in superior court on an indictment which ac.-cuses him or murder , kidnapping, sodomy and sex perversion . Special circumstances also are alleged which could lead to imposition of the death penalty ii Thompson is convicted. In testimony before the grand Jury last month, Anaheim police detective David Tuttle said Thompson asked to speak with investigators several days after his arrest. · Tuttle quoted Thompson as saying "l didn't mean to do it . When I left him he was alive." Tuttle said Thompson went on: .. He (Brenneman> came into my apartment. I made advances and he got scared. I tied him up. I didn't want to hurt him. I just drove around. I got scared. I didn't know what to do." Young Brenneman, who would have started junior high school last rail, was going door to door at the Oakwood apartment c.-omplex seeki ng new s ubscribers to the newspaper. The apartments are located at the corner of Broadway and Brookhurst in Anaheim. Other witnesses who lived at the apartment said they saw the yo ungs ter talking with Thompson at the doorway of his unit During his 10terv1ew with officers on Aug. 30 at Anaheim pohce headquarters, Tuttle said Thompson volunteered mformation about the case. Al one point during tbe interrogation, the investigator said, Thompson "broke down, was crying, was very emotional, was upset." Tuttle s aid he asked the sus p ec.-t, ''Did you put <Brenneman> in the trunk?" "Yes, God forgive me. He was alive when I dropped him off," Thompson responded. Tuttle said Thompson admitted pulling the boy in lhe large blue trunk at his apartment. Witnesses had seen him moving the trunk out of bis unit. Earlier, the defendant had told, police he was simply moving clothing back to his mother's home in Bellflower. Thompson. according to Tuttle. said he drove down Brookhurst Street to Paciric Coast Highway "and drove around in an area that was secluded." At thlS -point, Brenneman was apparently removed from Uae trunk, tied up and then put back in the container. the costly mistak e of buying 0 the wrong diamond. In the world of precious gems. true quality 1s never synonymous with "cut" prices or "discounts." The best and most economical place to shop for fine diamonds is always a fine jewelry store. We are diamdnd specialists. We've built our reputation by offering only the finest quality gems at fair. competitive prices. Every day. Year after year. We urge you to ask questions. Compare price and quality. The more you know about diamonds. the more you'll appreciate the difference between fine quality stones and inferior grades. Our experts ~II be happy to explain the "Four C's" that make up a diamond's character and determine values: color, clarity. cut and carat You'll see. a diamond "bargain" is no bargain at all tf you sacrffice the qualities that make a diamond beautiful and valuable. Whenev~r you shop for diamonds. remember the "Four C's." And the "Afth C.'' Confidence. That's the most important thing we sell. ...;;;=-:·-s-~~v1eK·s ----'-- ""' JilMllrl ~ f9t7 I ,4ll• N Orange Cout DAILY PILOTffhuraday. Februa.ry 4, 1182 11!"'"9---------------------------------------------------------ll :.Leasehold lawsuit may not be solution It hardly came as a surprise nlate last week when (our unhappy ·Newport Beach homeowners filed a lawsuit against the Irvine 'Company. The suit has been predlcll!d for weeks by members of the 1' Committee of 4000. a group claiming to represent the 4.000 residents who lease hrnd from the , development firm. Filing of the suit had been preCaced by a series of offers, 'counteroffers, threats and counterthreats traded by the residents and the firm. Since the committee and the Irvine Company never sat down 1 face-lo-face lo hash over the dispute. the media newspapers in particular were used to pass along the latest offer or threat So the suit was not un· expected. In the suit . four families who claim to represent the interests of hundreds of others in Newport and Irvine challenge the Irvine Company's method of appraising land. . The s uit contends th e development firm s hould be appraising the land at its .. raw value" and should give residents who've been leasing the land credit for Improvements made both to the property itself and the community. Sqch things as schools and cultural programs should be considered as part of the contribution. the suit charges . The Irvine Company, which branded the s uit a public re lations ploy and predicted it will be tossed out of court, has stuck by its procedure for appraising land. lt says that procedure Wlll not cflange. It is safe to say the two sides are far apart and that an immediate solut10n lo the dispute 1s not in sight Maybe a judge or Judges can find some way to resolve the matter. But legal actions of this complexity have a way of dragging on for year s. Yet, until the i ssue 1s resolved, a pall hangs over the community that will adversely Impact not only the leaseholders and the company. but city government and the community as a whole. There must be a better wa~ 'Art' ruckus petty ,,,.. It 's hard to tell what members of the Newport Beach Arts Commission and the Friends of the Arts Commission are fighting about -but it sure isn't art. An ongoing s pat between the two groups heated up last.month over charges that one group was trying to put the other out of business and had scheduled an "illegal meeting" to do so. For the r ecord, the Friends is a group of art supporters that was formed to raise monev for the Commission. · The fight between the groups has a long and complicated history. Much of that history is not even worth going into. The lates t spat centers on the Commission's desire to put the Friends out of bus iness . Commission members feel that the Friends has become more or a hindrance than a help to them To accomp li s h this , a member of the Co mmission called a meeting of the Friends The agenda for that meeting included .. dissol vi n g " the Friends. That 's when th e ruckus started. The end result was that the meeting was not called and the Friends remam m business. Thankfully. the City Council has s tayed an arm ·s dis tance away from the debate and has asked the city attorney's office to attempt to sort out the facts. We believe that this whole affair is little more than a personality fight and those involved have strayed far from what should be their real concerns. It ls time for members of both these groups to mend the wounds and gel back to worrying about art. IC they can't , they s hould step aside. Basis for pay talks ll is lime for Newport-Mesa Unified School District officials and representatives from the Newport-Mesa Fed e ration of Teachers to sit down again. Union leaders weren't doing a lot of cheering this week when a fact -finding report recommending a 6.5 percent cost of Ii ving pay hike for teachers was made public. The fact-finding panel was called in after teachers voted Nov. 18 to reject a 6 percent pay hike offered by the district. Included in the 25 page report written by state appointed panel member Douglas Collins are dissenting reports from both the district and the teachers· union. Although the f act-finding panel's decision is not binding. it does put both sides on the spot. • And it is obvious that neither side 1s satisfied with the outcome. The panel's decision calls for a 4 percent salary increase for teachers retroactive from July l and a 9 percent increase effective Feb. 1. for an annual pay raise of 6.5 percent. The dissent report filed on behalf of the district called the pay r aise too high and of course the dissent report filed by the teachers' union believed the offer was too low. Superintendent John Nicoli's decision to meet with union leaders after the school board considers the report is a good one. The fact that neither side agrees with the panel's findings indicates that more talks are needed. The fact-finding report should narrow the discussion. Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot Other views ex- pressed on this page are those ot their authors and artists Reaoer comment 1s 1nv1t ed. Address The Da11y Pilot, P.O. Box ISW. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone !714) 642-4321 . LM. Boyd / Quake warning The Japanese back in 1932 noticed that catfiab suddenly became lively rl1ht before an earthquake. Tbe Chin~ ln 1975 took seriously the yelpin& ol dop, 1urf acln1 ol anaket, racln1 ol rat.a and wakln1 ol cblckem in the nl1bt to evacuate ten.a of thouaanda of people lo time to 1ave them from the devutatiq Halcheaa quake. Virtually all the an.imaJ1 acted up at Marine World/Mr1ea USA in Redwood City, tbo nl1bt before the 5.9-Ricbt.er acale tremor thereabouts in 1m. Many spedallltl no• ~ that juat about e..-y animal Qeeles, except man, can foretell eartbqua.kes. Overall only about 8.5 perc-.rt ol t he dead In thll country are ORANGE COAST DailJPilat ' cremated. So bow do you explain the remarkable statistics out of Marin County north of San Francisco? There, SO percent are cremated. Bi11est beast ever to walk the earth -the ultru~uru1 -had two braln."l, one In Its head and one in its behind. What kUJed it off, I presume, were committee deelsloos. Did I t.ell you ~lrcwt Ll1era are bathed in coconut oil soap? · Lobcter Thermldor was named by Napoleon after the month ln wblch be was first served said dish. Tbe French calendar of that Ume li•ted It aa the eleventh month from July 19 to Auruat 11. 111ornas P. Haley Publlshff ~ .. A.Mu,,.Jft~ I Editor · Barbara Krtlblch Edltorl1I P~ Editor 'Integrity' panel data probed WASHINGTON The President's Council on Integrity and Efficiency. of a ll things, is the target or a congress ional i nvestigation. Its integrity and efficiency have been called into question. The council was formed with great fanfare by President Reagan to coordinate t h e e fforts of the government's inspectors general -the "junkyard dogs" the administration sicced on crooks and incompetents in the federal bureaucracy. It is made up of the lGs themselves, plus additional representatives from the far romers of the administration. The man in charge is Edwin Harper, No 2 man in the Orftce of Management and Budget THE PRESIDENT himself appeared in the White House press room trust Dece mber to express his personal delight with the council's work. "I promised we 'd follow every lead, root out every incompetent and prosecute every crook that we found cheating," Reagan said. "That pledge has been kept " · Indeed, the council's first two reports depicted a triumphant campaign against the pernicious and the profligate. Astonishing increases in the percentage of indictments, convictions and recoveries during the previous six months were claimed. The number of telephone tips bad nearly doubled. according lo the reports. The statistics were so astonishing, in fact, that they aroused the suspicion or Rep . J ohn Dingell, D·Mi ch .. the professional skeptic who chairs the House Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations. On Dec. 22, Dingell sent a confidential letter to Comptroller G. -JA-Cl-Al-D-IR-SD-1 -~- General Charles A Bowser. asking that be set the General Accounting Office's own junkyard dogs loose on the council. My associate Lucette Lagnado has seen the letter. .. l am concerned that the quantitative data contained m the First and Second Summary Reports . . and the fact sheets accompanying such reports may not reflect adequately the performance of the Offices of Inspector General," Dingell wrote. He asked that the GAO "determine the accuracy of this data so that Congress gives it appropriate weight when evaloating the performance or the IG Offices and in allocating bud(etary and personnel resources to suc h ~ Offices." Here are some of the specific points that Dingell asked the GAO to look into: -The possibility that the statistics were mistakenly 'Or knowingly inflated l by "double counting" when more than one agency's JG worked on the same case. Dingell wants to know if the I r esults claimed by each IG on a particular joint investigation were ) combined as they should have been, or were added together as if they were separate cases. -THE LACK OF hard data on which the glowing percentages were based. Dingell noted that the fact sheet accompanying the second report claimed "a 46 percent increase in recoveries, a 59 percent increase in mdictments and a 28 percent increase in convictions over the past six months." But the congressman complained: "U nfo rtunat e ly , o ne cannot independently verify these percentage increase figures " -The second report's claim that . phoned-in tips of possible wronedoing were up 80 percent" over the previous six months. Dingell wants to see some documentalton to support this assertion. Footnote A spokeswoman for the OM B said "The council welcomes the GAO audit " S he added t hat, if anything, the council erred on the side of caution. and its figures were "too conservative •· Legislation can't force responsibility To the Editor: I would like lo express my view on your Jan. 22 editorial on "Bill Defeat Costly." First I would like to thank you for your ability to observe. You definitely should have doubts about the concept of requiring a refundable de posit on drink containers. The MAILBOX environmentalists have once agatn missed the important fact : Individuals have to be responsible -you can't legislate responsibility' The individuals who litter will still litter -an act of legislation certainly will not deter these people .· YOUR POINT is well taken on the cost. However, we the consumers in addition to paying the deposit will even pay more if this legislation is enacted. Who do you think will pay for all the additional handling or these containers'> The consumer! I suggest that we lake a hard look al the stales which already have this law -they are e xperiencin·g storage, handling, health hazards and are only taking care or 15 percent to 17 percent of the litter problem. Educate the people, encourage the recyclers and each of us can set good examples and not litter. DOLLY STOKES Ge8tapo tactics To the Editor: Re: Sen. John G. Schmitz vs Senate Rules Committee: The issue In this case is not a matter of what Sen. Schmitz said or dldn't say. The big issue Is that Sen. Schmitz was not given a fair hearin& by an Impart.Jal group, as is usually accorded lo even common criminals. If Gestapo tactics can be used by the state Senate to "purge" themselves of opposition, with no consideration given to the constituents who voted the politician into office, then this state is in big trouble. Terms s uch aa "unusual" and "unprecedented" have been used In articles to describe this actJon. Sea. Schmill was stripped of the following important poeltions by the Senate Rules Committee : Chairmanship of the Constitutional Amendmenl.s Committee, vice chair man of the Industrial R eiatlons Co111mtttee and bla ,membership in lhe advisory Com mission on tbe Sutu.s ol Women. Tbl~ is a pretty steep penalty for reapondln1 oe1atlvely to the humlll1ttn1 lncldoot of feminl1t attorney Glorla Allred'• publlcly throwln, a ch.aatJty belt at Ule Scmator. She aet Uie trap and he fell into it I But liberty and J'11Uce decrw that thl1 blatant mlatlon ot dYil llbertiel 1hould rllOl Co uncballen1ed! PoUUciana • \I .. or ordinary citizens should not be silenced and intimidated if we are guaranteed .freedom of speech under the Constitution. AU viewpoints deserve to be· beard, otberwise are we no different from Communist countries? JACQUILINE STUBBINS Precious lettuce To the Editor: I had to say this . . . signs of the times. I really don't know what is more expensive. a head of lettuce or a stack of dollar bills. At a dollar a head I expect to see an engraving of George W ashingt.on on the next head I buy . PerhaJ)6 that kindly old father of our country looking up at me with those big sad eyes will do something to control my diet. Of course I don't enjoy eating alone I wonder what George would like -house dressing, Roquefort, blue or ~ousand Island dressing? Finally I was wondering what kind of dog eats lettuce? I saw a lady ask for a doggy bag and then stuffing it with her uneaten salad. Oh well , as my daughter would say, "let us" get onto something else! JAMES DELMONTE Fight fairly To the Editor· The so-called Committee or 4000 urging leaseholders to dishonor their contracts with the Irvine Company after enjoying smugly the benefits of their low lease rates for 2S years in skyrocketing land vaJues is disgraceful. but to ·be Oiled (Pilot, Jan. 21 ) "setrless" is almost amuslng. The Los Angeles Times rightly denounces the Committee of 4000 for a "shabby scene " in resorting to "political blackmail" In an unrelated action against the Irvine Company. But the personal attack on J im Wood by Louis E . Scott, (Pilot Jan. 21 > is in my opinion, even more shabby. I have no COMecUona with either the Irvine Company or Jim Wood , and (mercifully) with the Commlltee of 4000~ but I do know that Jim Wood has 1lven bis time lo serve the City of Newport Beach and penonally bas given money and service lo verlous cultural activities for t.bla community, without recognition OI' reward. · FOa TWO DECADES I have watched the popu~a.r t.araet, tbe Irvine Company, give 1,000 acret for a un\venity, ofter 10 acres ln Newport Center for a Cultural Center, otter park aod road acr·ea1e. make well·plaDl'led commwllty vU1a1es -and pay bus• taxca. Their main dl'awbact aeema to bt that th y desire to make a proftt ror .. L.•ttffalrtfft,._,.,.w.it-T"9r._.\t.c.,.-•· ltU te Ill .-<• 91' •1111\lMI• lllM! It,_.,.._ Lettwa .... -•• w .... wttt bl fl-•~· Ali.ten.ft -I• cllMM atgMturt .... -111 ......... N -lllltY .. •l~Mr~lf~,_ .. ......,..,......., Wl11_'9.....,.. ~-, .. , ............. ~ Ht-Mil.,._ -el tN ,.,,,."'_, l'IWlll .. fl-~ ... 111u11e11,..,...., their investors, much of which goes back Into worthwhile endeavors by the Irvine Foundation, to this community and others around us. If profit-making is so repugnant to the Committee of 4000 and their supporters. there are places like Russia to go , where "profit" is still a dirty word. Free enterprise and contracts made America great If the committee 1s unaware of escalated land values over the last 25 years , and di sagrees with the appraisers who have much more land comparisons than leaseholds oo which to base their values. then let them fight honorably and fairly and not try to smear all those who disagree with their tactics. and try to get recognized, certified appraisers to revalue their leased land LADISLAW REOAY Housing sales To the Editor Jerry Collins of the Irvine Company has been quoted as saymg "Newport Harbor Board of Realtors figures show that 2,200 residential properties were sold in Newport Beach in 1981." Hal Pinchin, execullve vice president of the Newport Harbor Costa Mesa Soard of Realtors, reports a total or 2.250 sales for all members, a figure which includes sales out of the area of Newport Beach property, such as Costa Mesa. Santa Ana, Huntington Beach, Long Beach or a ny other areas. Certainly this information is available to Mr. Collins and the Irvine Company R EALTOR S s upporting the Committee of 4000 made a thorouch study of all reported sales published in the sales books for 1981. The realtors considered sales only for the Newport , Beach area. They found the following: Total sales 850 minus lncome unJt.s of 72, rP.ported sales, lease options Would be again subtracted, !7, or a total of 751 sales for 1981 ! The Irvine Company was only off by 1,400. But then a1aln the company has a tendency to exaaierate numbers and manipulate fisu.res. Three times the actual figure . . doesn't th\l seem familiar! ANIELLO DI CRISCI • .. lllllYlll •• N,. • Dow Jones Final UP 2.00 ~ CLOSING 847.03 care costs explode We no loo1er can afford to divide the health cue system into those wbo cure, lbme who pay and those who are cared for. As American Hospital Alaociatloo President J . Alexander McMahon wama, "It la Ume that all partlclpanta in the private sector become actively involved in evaluatin1 and determinln1 which benefits of our health cue system we want to keep, which we want to grow and which we feel are no longer cost-effective." The appeal could not come at a n more opportune time. Health care .,. ,. costs have exploded J soaring i2 .sn1111A PllTl~­percent in 1981 on top L ~ of an astoundine 1s.2 ,,,,0 ________ _..,..i-c_.._ percent in 1980, an all-time record. Our annual spendin1 of $247 .2 billion in medical outlays of au kinds now amounts to 9.4 percent of our total output for goods and services, or an incredible average of Sl,067 for every man. woman and child in lhe United States. To tackle lhe problem, six national organizations -the AFL·CIO, American Hospital Association, American Medlcal Association, Blue Cross and Blue Shield Associations, Business Roundtable and Health Insurance Association of America -met in mid-January to endorse the potentials of voluntary coalitions on a local, state and regional basis and to encourage their members' participation In such coalitions. No other segment of our economy bas gone through so sharp a rise in reeent years as health. care. Estimates are that lhe per capita cost of medical care will almost triple to $3,057 by 1990, when the nation's medical bill could reach a whopping 11.S percent of our output. Much of the increase is lhe price of progress: Technological innovations such as"'\ntensive care units and artificial kidney machines have made lhe treatment of illnesses increasingly effective. but also more costly. A fact.or related to the rise in costs i.s Americans' ~i:uiHn:ruug iiie span, which bas increased the number or America's elderly, who are the more prevalent victims of costly, long-term diseases. The quantity, as well as the quality, of health services bas also increased, and hence costs. Pushing up the coat of health care dramatically, too, is the lack of price competition and the fact that most health care bills are paid by health insurers, employers or the government. This leaves few incentives or consumer demands for holding down these bills. ' Yes, there have been payoffs. M04t Americans are living longer than ever before. Today, one out of nine Americans -2S million of us -are over 6S, or 5 million more than in 1970. And infant mortality Is now the lowest in our nation's history. Yet, olher findings point to inequities lhat raise the question or whether the nation Is spending too much for the health care we get and how we get it. For instance, although infant mortality is declining, black infants still die at nearly twice the rate of white infants during their first year. And non-whites can .expect to live four to five years fewer than whites. It's no surprise that our minorities receive inferior health care, reports a study released by the pretigious Institute of Medicine. Blacks are less likely lhan whites to see private physicians, the study found, regardless or income or type of insurance - and are twice as likely as whites to visit physicians at cllnics or hospital emergency rooms. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS UPS AND DOWNS i -\11 ::,a I :.::" H -v. Ii : ~ -\II + '--\It .~ 4 +114 O\li -- NIW~~-------­~°',_ __ acl_...___.. ~ -•-"'O "~ •• -- 1 ,, I ' . 1 METALS N•W YOllK IAPI -Sc>ol ....... ,,,_ ,_tel ptbs todey. C•• ... , 7'-11 unu • pound, U S. dntlnetlenL LeM II~ a.,.,.___ bK 41-4 <.mt. pouftd, ..... _..... Ttlt '7Allt ~ WeM ~lte Ill A......_1•nc...na....-,H v. Sltww .... trey-·· NYC-a ..... tnOftUICloM-. ' ~----"-· "9--DW•troyOI.., N.Y SILVER .. ..